Topic: As world burns, G8 leaders fiddle ... with the Internet. Ser
mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 12:15 PM
Sarkozy, Obama, and the other leaders at the G8 should be evaluating the policies that have brought them to the brink of financial ruin. Unfortunately, their attention will be elsewhere: on Internet regulation, for one thing.

President Obama will join other G8 leaders today at the posh, French seaside resort of Deauville. On the agenda: proposed global regulations for the Internet, post-tsunami Japan, and military escapades in North Africa. Bizarrely absent from the top priorities listed by hosting head of state Nicolas Sarkozy is the most urgent issue of all: the need to rein in massive government over-spending and debt.

One needn't travel to France to get a clear view of this problem. Here in the US, for example, federal revenues will top $2 trillion this year, but federal spending will approach double that amount. Such reckless spending has set the stage for a battle royal between Democrats and Republicans over raising the national-debt ceiling.

House Speaker John Boehner (R) of Ohio has correctly warned that increasing the debt ceiling without a firm commitment to slash spending would signal to investors that America still is not serious about kicking its spending addiction.

Meanwhile international credit rating agencies are threatening to do the US Federal Reserve's job: taking the punch bowl off the table and telling people the party is over. America's vaunted "Triple AAA" credit rating is no longer a given in global finance. If the US loses it, federal borrowing - now more than 40 cents of every dollar spent - will become much more costly.

It all provides a rather tumultuous backdrop for Mr. Obama's trip to the G8 Summit. But he's not the only participant facing a bumpy ride.
Europe's day of reckoning

Europe also faces its day of reckoning after decades of overspending and overpromising. The Eurozone, as currently fashioned, appears to be on the verge of collapse. This helps explain the continental frenzy over the arrest of former IMF Chief and French presidential hopeful Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Europeans had been counting on him to funnel yet more IMF billions to Euro-deluded deadbeats like Greece and Portugal.

Mr. Sarkozy and the rest of the European leaders at the G8 have some explaining to do: If they won't offer a plan to right the world economy, they should at least engage in an honest evaluation of the policies that have led so many countries to the brink of financial ruin.

Unfortunately, their attention will be elsewhere. Internet regulation, for one thing. Sarkozy calls it a "moral imperative" needed to "correct the excesses and abuses that arise from the total absence of rules."

Internet censorship harms economies, freedom

Certainly, improving information infrastructure, technology, and access is integral to the development of modern economies. But letting governments control or even censor information is counterproductive.

Unfortunately, Sarkozy's G8 proposal toes the statist line. He wants governments to intervene in cyberspace markets with intrusive regulation and taxes that could limit consumer choices and seriously distort both pricing and investment decisions.

A micromanaging G8 also could threaten press freedom. New media Internet outlets can be invaluable in exposing political corruption and guarding against bribery, extortion, nepotism, cronyism, patronage, embezzlement, and graft. Yet disturbing acts of censorship, attacks on press freedom, and denials of Internet service are on the rise. The World Bank reports that bloggers in Burma, Iran, Syria, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Tunisia, China, Turkmenistan, and Egypt are harassed and sometimes imprisoned.

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 04:03 PM
"Unfortunately, Sarkozy's G8 proposal toes the statist line. He wants governments to intervene in cyberspace markets with intrusive regulation and taxes that could limit consumer choices and seriously distort both pricing and investment decisions. "


thats what happens when a government sees someone making money, they want some of the action and thats when prices start going up.

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 04:11 PM
Hey didnt invictus already cover "as the world burns" i only recall because i gave him props on a play on words from as the world turns? Not knocking, but its so funny, ialways think of the soap opera and wondering if same topic.

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 04:14 PM

Hey didnt invictus already cover "as the world burns" i only recall because i gave him props on a play on words from as the world turns? Not knocking, but its so funny, ialways think of the soap opera and wondering if same topic.


if he did, i didn't know... all of that is straight from the website, name included...

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 04:16 PM
I heard amazon is going to have to start with the taxes now, since they were online, and I think there are a lot of issues with these online companies getting away with this. I still think they should start taxing marijuana as well.

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 04:32 PM

I heard amazon is going to have to start with the taxes now, since they were online, and I think there are a lot of issues with these online companies getting away with this. I still think they should start taxing marijuana as well.


that's fine, i grow my own anyway...

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 07:43 PM
is that legal in texas?smokin

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 07:55 PM

is that legal in texas?smokin


nothing is legal here...lol republican led state....

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:02 PM
These are legal in TEXAS lol.

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:10 PM

These are legal in TEXAS lol.



yea, most guns are... just about anyone can have a gun here now...

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:17 PM
see you said nothing was legal in texas, and GUNS are legal, and chewin tobacco....wait are we straying off topic...laugh drinks

mightymoe's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:24 PM

see you said nothing was legal in texas, and GUNS are legal, and chewin tobacco....wait are we straying off topic...laugh drinks

thats ok, i like straying off with you...:banana: :banana:

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:41 PM
Dem Crayzee Texanssss

Simonedemidova's photo
Fri 05/27/11 08:46 PM

Sarkozy, Obama, and the other leaders at the G8 should be evaluating the policies that have brought them to the brink of financial ruin. Unfortunately, their attention will be elsewhere: on Internet regulation, for one thing.

President Obama will join other G8 leaders today at the posh, French seaside resort of Deauville. On the agenda: proposed global regulations for the Internet, post-tsunami Japan, and military escapades in North Africa. Bizarrely absent from the top priorities listed by hosting head of state Nicolas Sarkozy is the most urgent issue of all: the need to rein in massive government over-spending and debt.

One needn't travel to France to get a clear view of this problem. Here in the US, for example, federal revenues will top $2 trillion this year, but federal spending will approach double that amount. Such reckless spending has set the stage for a battle royal between Democrats and Republicans over raising the national-debt ceiling.

House Speaker John Boehner (R) of Ohio has correctly warned that increasing the debt ceiling without a firm commitment to slash spending would signal to investors that America still is not serious about kicking its spending addiction.

Meanwhile international credit rating agencies are threatening to do the US Federal Reserve's job: taking the punch bowl off the table and telling people the party is over. America's vaunted "Triple AAA" credit rating is no longer a given in global finance. If the US loses it, federal borrowing - now more than 40 cents of every dollar spent - will become much more costly.

It all provides a rather tumultuous backdrop for Mr. Obama's trip to the G8 Summit. But he's not the only participant facing a bumpy ride.
Europe's day of reckoning

Europe also faces its day of reckoning after decades of overspending and overpromising. The Eurozone, as currently fashioned, appears to be on the verge of collapse. This helps explain the continental frenzy over the arrest of former IMF Chief and French presidential hopeful Dominique Strauss-Kahn. Europeans had been counting on him to funnel yet more IMF billions to Euro-deluded deadbeats like Greece and Portugal.

Mr. Sarkozy and the rest of the European leaders at the G8 have some explaining to do: If they won't offer a plan to right the world economy, they should at least engage in an honest evaluation of the policies that have led so many countries to the brink of financial ruin.

Unfortunately, their attention will be elsewhere. Internet regulation, for one thing. Sarkozy calls it a "moral imperative" needed to "correct the excesses and abuses that arise from the total absence of rules."

Internet censorship harms economies, freedom

Certainly, improving information infrastructure, technology, and access is integral to the development of modern economies. But letting governments control or even censor information is counterproductive.

Unfortunately, Sarkozy's G8 proposal toes the statist line. He wants governments to intervene in cyberspace markets with intrusive regulation and taxes that could limit consumer choices and seriously distort both pricing and investment decisions.

A micromanaging G8 also could threaten press freedom. New media Internet outlets can be invaluable in exposing political corruption and guarding against bribery, extortion, nepotism, cronyism, patronage, embezzlement, and graft. Yet disturbing acts of censorship, attacks on press freedom, and denials of Internet service are on the rise. The World Bank reports that bloggers in Burma, Iran, Syria, Cuba, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, Tunisia, China, Turkmenistan, and Egypt are harassed and sometimes imprisoned.



last night i watch Casino Jack, have you seen it? i saw the movie and then I also rented the documentary, they were both very good.