[24 Million Americans Don't Have Access to Broadband-Why Isn't It an
  Election Issue? - Motherboard
  (https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/d3kdmx/is-access-to-broadba
  nd-an-election-issue)

    Yet few candidates, from local mayoral races all the way up to the
    Senate, provide lip service to the fact that millions of Americans
    still lack access to broadband, and even fewer flesh out a robust
    policy to address it. At a time when politics is more divisive than
    ever, basic issues such as access to the internet are being
    overshadowed by the massive ideological clashes happening across the
    country.

    "If you were to ask people what issues they're voting on, first and
    foremost they would say 'pro-Trump or anti-Trump,'" said Susan
    Boser, the Democratic candidate seeking to replace Republican House
    Member Glenn Thompson in Pennsylvania. "Next would be guns and
    abortion, then the needs of the area, which are jobs and the opioid
    epidemic."

    Boser told me a lack of access to broadband is a huge problem in her
    district, which is a large, predominantly rural swath along the
    northwestern edge of the state; its largest town, Indiana, has a
    population of less than 15,000.

  (Via Motherboard)

  This is not an insignificant number of people even as a percentage of
  the population. And this issue has the added advantages of:
    * No political polarization
    * No impact on either moral, ethical, or religious issues
    * Good for the economy
    * Relatively easy to address and quickly if the community will is
      there

  And yet …

    In Tennessee, broadband access has faced progress and setbacks.
    Chattanooga found economic revival after building city-owned gigabit
    internet, but was quickly prohibited from expanding the network to
    surrounding communities because of a Telecom-backed state law.
    Efforts to fight those limits have failed, making it difficult for
    municipal internet providers to expand and offer services to smaller
    communities.

    A Tennessee Democratic Party spokesperson told me the broadband
    battle is being drowned out by more contentious rhetoric.

    "We've got a governor race with a highly contested Republican
    primary, so you've got all those candidates out there with
    television ads focused on immigration and other issues," he told me
    over the phone. "That's where voter attention is at the moment."

  So many people get wrapped up in causes they can't hope to impact to
  the exclusion of local issue they can impact.
  Also on:

  [1]Twitter
    __________________________________________________________________

  My original entry is here: [2]8% of the US lacks Broadband. It posted
  Sat, 16 Jun 2018 14:30:55 +0000.
  Filed under: tech,

References

  1. https://twitter.com/prjorgensen/status/1007993973615616000
  2. https://www.prjorgensen.com/?p=1225