What is Stand Tall For America?

Stand Tall for America is a website in progress - and we're just getting started.

With your help, it will be the online organizing center for Americans who care about progressive policy change that tackles the tough problems facing our country -- including health care, tax reform, net neutrality, and more.

It's sponsored by Senator Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) and paid for by Wyden for Senate, but it's really about you.

We really can tackle the tough problems. But only if we stand together. Only if we Stand Tall for America.

To Contact Us:

Stand Tall for America
P.O. Box 3498
Portland, OR 97208

Phone: 503-230-7115
Fax: 503-230-1128

Paid for and authorized by Wyden for Senate.

Stand Tall For America

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Net Freedom

An easy-to-understand explanation of net neutrality

Powerful interests who own the pipes and access to the Internet are trying to break the Net. These special interests want to expand their control over Internet access to the limitless world of content, and discriminate among providers of online games, tv, music, and high-bandwidth applications.

Net Neutrality

Right now, consumers can get whatever content they want, whenever they want it - without having to worry about having a cable company or a phone company interfering.  After all, consumers have paid for their access to the Net - and they should choose what they visit.

Some of these cable and phone companies are trying to discriminate in the delivery of content. They are saying that instead of making available to everyone the same content at the same price, they want to set up sweetheart arrangements to play favorites.  

This isn’t how the Internet should work.  The network should be neutral.  

And it’s not just about fairness for consumers.  It’s a matter of economic opportunity for everyone - from Internet giants to small startups to young people with big dreams.  Because everyone gets access to the same Internet, everyone has a chance.

Senator Ron Wyden has introduced Net Neutrality legislation that would ensure the network operators treat internet content equally by:

  • Not interfering with, blocking, degrading, altering, modifying or changing traffic on the Internet;
  • Not being allowed to create a priority lane where content providers can buy quicker access to customers, while those who do not pay the fee are left in the slow lane;
  • Allowing consumers to choose which devices they use to connect to the Internet while they are on the net;
  • Ensuring that consumers have non-discriminatory access and service; and
  • Having a transparent system in which consumers, Internet content, and applications companies have access to the rates, terms, and conditions for Internet service.

Net Radio

It’s simple.  Royalties to musical artists should be fair and equal, no matter what technology is used to play their music. 

That’s why Senator Wyden has introduced legislation to protect Internet radio - by giving it the same royalty structure as satellite radio, and protecting noncommercial internet radio, like NPR and college radio. 

Without Senator Wyden’s Internet Radio Equality Act, internet radio will suffocate under the royalty structure that the music industry has imposed on this new venue for musicians.

Net Taxes

The Internet is still an emerging economic force, and we can’t let internet-only taxes stifle innovation.  Senator Wyden sponsored the original legislation that barred internet-only taxes, and continues the fight to protect the Internet.

The Internet has thrived precisely because it is neutral. It has thrived because consumers, and not some giant cable or phone company, get to choose what they want to see and how quickly they get to see it. 

Ready to take action?

Sign up here to Stand Tall for Net Freedom.  We’ll keep you posted on the campaign, and let you know when we have more opportunities to take action.

Saturday, November 22, 2008
  • Political temperature may be just right for healthcare overhaul - Nov 18 - Noam N. Levey and Lisa Girion, The Los Angeles Times
  • Wyden: a future spy czar in the Senate? - Nov 17 - Jeff Mapes, Way West of the Beltway
  • Wyden Objects to Potential Loss of Critical Fighter Aircraft - Nov 10 - Salem-News
  • Wyden seeks to prime slumping economy - Nov 8 - John Darling, Medford Mail-Tribune
  • Gains by Democrats embolden Oregon lawmakers - Nov 8 - Charles Pope, The Oregonian
  • Wyden’s Stimulus Plan Targets Job Creation - Nov 7 - Chris Jones, KTVL-Medford
  • Wyden on board for Pioneer route - Nov 7 - Dean Brickey, Hermiston Herald
  • Wyden touts road projects in Redmond - Nov 7 - Patrick Cliff, Bend Bulletin
  • Walden, Wyden talk economy in Central Oregon - Nov 6 - Kate Paul, KTVZ-Bend
  • Wyden, LaRocco participate in round-table with Valley health care experts - Oct 31 - Colleen LaMay, Idaho Statesman
  • Wyden urges FCC to hold off Election Day vote - Oct 30 - PR Newswire
  • Wyden, other Senate leaders Raise Concerns With FCC’s Telecom Proposal - Oct 28 - Market Watch
  • Wyden sides with fishermen on quota shares - Oct 28 - Cassandra Profita, The Daily Astorian
  • Wyden organizes removal of deadly logjam - Oct 28 - Brad Cain, Associated Press
  • We need health coverage that leaves no child behind - Oct 23 - Editorial, TDN.com
  • Wyden-Blumenauer work to curb illegal logging - Oct 22 - Martin, Vaughan, Wall Street Journal
  • Collaboration between states, federal government key to health care reform - Oct 21 - National Institutes of Health, JAMA
  • Ron Wyden calls out Palin on sending Alaskan LNG to Japan - Oct 21 - Martha Mendoza, Associated Press
  • Wyden catches Palin trying to pick your pocket - Oct 21 - Kagro X, Daily Kos
  • Obama/Wyden support Merkley - Oct 20 - Britten Chase, PolitickerOR

More, more, more...

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