The Economist sees these problems arising ...
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It will make life increasingly difficult for telecoms firms, naturally.
But it will also hurt all business that require landlines, as bills
rise and business models are disrupted. No less seriously, the
withering fixed-line network threatens the work of the emergency
services, such as the police and fire brigade.
The danger, says Mr Moffett, is that regulators will introduce new
taxes on wireless and broadband services. Revenues from new services
would then be used to keep an obsolete infrastructure alive—a recipe
for lower growth. At that point, he says, the “wireline problem” really
will be everyone’s problem.
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Worry wart
that I am, my thoughts center on how many satellites the ChiComs have
to destroy in order to shut down all digital communication? And will a gummint run by San Francisco hippies fund a national defense effort to protect them [Duh]?
I mean, what the hell. If the Obamunists would scrap what I
think is the single most important, and promising defensive program the nation had, nothing is safe. Like I said, buy crossbows while you can. They're a bitch to make.
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