Quote Originally Posted by Roth_Trailfinder View Post
I’m really not sure what a visit to court would or could do, TBH.

These are the guys who get to write the rules. That means, they’re allowed to change them, whether someone else likes the changes or not. A ruling that they cannot change the rules could then be used to point out that if they lack that power, then the FCC had no power to put them in in the first place, resulting in no NN laws anyway. That’s speaking logically, anyway.
Individual states are suing because the FCC has said that the federal government does not have the right to regulate ISPs, but has ALSO said that it is not something that a state may regulate, either.

This is blatantly unconstitutional, because all powers not explicitly granted to the government are reserved for the states (10th Amendment.)

So either the FCC is wrong about the federal government having no authority to regulate ISPs, or they are wrong about states having no authority to regulate ISPs. The authority has to rest in at least one of them.