Point taken.Wow...One can watch the Olympics on Directv's multi screen service. They can watch highlights on line..One buy a Prius at any used car dealer that sells them.
HULU and Roku make watching tv outside the reaches of the pay providers.
Let one thing be perfectly clear. The government is ALREADY involved. The lobbyists hired by the pay TV lobby have cajoled, wined, dined and flooded political campaign coffers with cash to get votes on stuff the programmers and providers want.
There is no lobbying firm representing the consumers.
If the government was not involved there would be no need for legislation to offer the consumer a choice. He would already have that choice.
I submit that all those who support the status quo are either so fearful of change they would gladly see their rates continue to skyrocket or they are niche channel viewers who fear the loss of the seldom viewed service.
The bottom lie is the current system is merely a welfare system funded by the customers.
Why the hell should anyone subsidize another person's viewing preferences?
So please, do not be so naive as to claim the government is not involved.
Consumers are free to lobby on their own. Contact your lawmakers. Get your friends to do the same. Heck, start your own lobbying group.
As far as why anyone subsidizes another's viewing preferences? Answer that yourself. If you have cable or satellite, YOU are doing exactly that. Did anyone force you to sign up for service?
As for me, I get the service in order to watch the programming I want to watch. If it gets too expensive (and it does get closer and closer to that point), it's my choice to drop the service.