On Monday, the same day the Senate began hearings for Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson, I dare say the most consequential speech delivered didn’t come out of Washington, D.C., but rather Sunset, Louisiana, a town of less than 3,000 people.
There, Vice President Kamala Harris spoke about the Biden administration’s investment in high-speed internet for communities — particularly, rural communities — without access.
I suspect none of you are leaping out of your seats with excitement, but I truly believe that’s because most people have come to think of fast internet solely in terms of their personal computers. We tend to think of what it means for viewing online homework or downloading the new season of “The Blacklist.”
But, Harris alluded, our world will soon be powered by fast internet. I’m not just talking about the so-called metaverse. We’re witnessing a technological revolution, and people who are left without high-speed internet won’t just lack equal access to homework tools and their favorite films — they’ll be cut off from a vital resource that will power everything from the health industry to agriculture to emergency services and more.
Here’s how Harris put it:









