That Universal Service Fee we pay as part of our
phone bill each month has helped double the number of "free
Obamaphones" in the hands of people in Ohio since last year to more than 1
million. While the mainstream media has ignored this story, the Ohio
press is covering it. Maybe interest in the You Tube rant of the now
infamous Obamaphone
Lady, now at 2.2 million views in three days, will help get out
the story of how this program skyrocketed in a key swing state. Then
there is the issue of the dubious ethics of having
private businesses both actively promote a
government welfare program and name it after an elected figure in their
marketing materials
From the Dayton Ohio
Daily News.
The program in Ohio cost $26.9
million in the first quarter of 2012, the most recent data available, versus
$15.6 million in the same timeframe in 2011. Compared to the first quarter of
2011, the number of people in the program nearly doubled to more than a
million.
Growth could cost everyone who owns a phone. The program is
funded through the "Universal Service Fund" charge on phone bills -
usually a dollar or two per bill - and the amount of the fee is
determined by the cost of this and other programs.
A growth of $100 million in this program could result in an
increased fee of a few cents on the average bill, according to officials
from the agency that administers the program. The total cost of the program
nationwide was $1.5 billion in 2011, up from $1.1 billion in 2010.
Growth in the program is fed by the 2008 decision to extend
it to prepaid cellphone companies, which get up to $10 every month that someone
is subscribed. The number of cellphone companies offering the service in Ohio
grew from four in 2011 to nine currently, with seven more awaiting approval
from the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio.
The left is freaking out over this. In addition to
maintaining it is racist to show a black person making a fool of herself they
are screaming to high heaven that the program began under Ronald Reagan. That
is true, but they fail to note that in the 1980s it was proposed as a very
limited program to provide land line service to those who could show both
financial need and a reason they needed a phone, such as medical conditions
that would require them to call emergency services. As is common, once in
place the program expended until by 2008 some 7.1 million were enrolled.
Then in 2008 it was revised to include cell phones and actively marketed
by cell phone providers to people on a variety of government assistance program
regardless of need. Today 12.5 million free phone accounts exist.
It's the active marketing of this program by cell phone providers that is most problematical. In The Shady Ethics of 'The Obama Phone' Timothy Dalrymple writes:
It's the active marketing of this program by cell phone providers that is most problematical. In The Shady Ethics of 'The Obama Phone' Timothy Dalrymple writes:
Imagine, for instance, that it were
the government itself that advertised the phones as Obama phones, starting in
2009. This would be, at the very least, deeply misleading. It would be
taking credit for a program begun under predecessors. It would be similar
to President Bush in his first term, if he had come to office after Clinton
initiated a program that gave free cars to welfare recipients, seeking
electoral advantage by advertising them as "Bush cars."
But clearly (?) that's not the case here, right? A
visit to FreeGovernmentCellPhones.net -
which calls itself "a small publishing company and the
authority on the U.S. government's Lifeline Assistance program as it applies to
mobile phones" - decries the "false rumor" of Obama Phones,
which it calls an "incorrect term" because the cell phone program
began several months before Obama's election. Case closed.
Or maybe not. Visit ObamaPhone.net and here's what you
see (I suspect they'll make changes soon, if they haven't already, so I took a
screenshot):It gets even more interesting.
When you click the link at
ObamaPhone.net to apply for a free cell phone, you're redirected to...wait
for it... Free GovernmentCellPhones.net. That's right. The same
website that decried the "false rumor" and "incorrect term"
of The Obama Phone Program has another website, surely desired to attract
search engine traffic, that advertises The Obama Phone Program. Nice.
UPDATE: The website has already been changed!
Visit Obamaphone.net now,
and you'll get something like a blog with no pictures of Obama, as though
they're in the process of dismantling the site. But surely there's
nothing to see here, folks! Let's talk about Mitt Romney's tax forms!
That the administration did this isn't surprising, It's long
been the Chicago way to put the mayor's name on everything from the Welcome
sign at the city limits to the trucks that pick up the garbage. I think
they'd change the name of the airport with each administration if they
could. What is surprising is the complete lack of interest not only in
why at least one key state is now awash with taxpayer paid cellphones but who
paid for the extensive web marketing of this program. As Dalrymple notes:
Who funds the companies like
FreeGovernmentCellPhones.net and
ObamaPhone.net?
Did they begin calling it "the
Obama Phone" before or after the rumors of Obama phones began to spread
through email? Do they have a profit-share arrangement with the wireless
telecoms that receive money (albeit indirectly) from the government to
distribute free cell phones? Are they paid by the federal government
to help spread the word about the free cell phone service program?
These websites are hard to penetrate, so I don't know the answer, but it's a juicy question: Is the Obama administration effectively paying a company to advertise the free cell phones as Obama Phones? Or was the administration aware of the practice, and have they done anything to stop it? I'm sure the mainstream media are hard on the case, investigating the Obama administration in that relentless way they do.
Just how extensively has this program been marketed?
Here is how one multimillionaire Democrat Senate from a swing state reports how
she became a
critic of the program. These websites are hard to penetrate, so I don't know the answer, but it's a juicy question: Is the Obama administration effectively paying a company to advertise the free cell phones as Obama Phones? Or was the administration aware of the practice, and have they done anything to stop it? I'm sure the mainstream media are hard on the case, investigating the Obama administration in that relentless way they do.
Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., received a mailed solicitation last year informing her she was eligible for a phone, leading her to question the program.
"I am troubled by the expansive potential for the program to be abused," McCaskill wrote the FCC in December. No kidding.
Source: American Thinker, September 30, 2012, Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/09/your_universal_service_fee_at_work.html#ixzz27yGsZLYM
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