So how does it begin? The St. Joe News reports,
Franklin D. Roosevelt took office with about 10 percent of rural households having electrical service. The vast majority of city homes had it.
“Cold figures do not measure the human importance of electric power in our present social order,” the 32nd president said.
In 1935, Mr. Roosevelt created the Rural Electrification Administration. Seven years later, nearly half of the nation’s farms had been wired for power.
Skip ahead seven decades and argue the parallels, but broadband Internet access has become the latest rural equalizer in the newest New Deal.
Read more here: "Broadband Could Be Expanded in Region Due to Stimulus" by Ken Newton.
Overall, President Obama's making broadband a priority in rural America is rural America's chance to get competitive with the urban areas of our country.
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