Opinion Biden gave $90 billion to red America. The thank-you went to spam.

Columnist|
February 23, 2024 at 7:30 a.m. EST
A Viasat internet satellite dish is seen in the yard of a house in Madison, Va., in March 2021. (Al Drago/Bloomberg News)
12 min

Not long after my wife and I bought a farm in the Virginia countryside, we decided to stream a movie with our kids. This was a perilous undertaking.

With internet download speeds of no more than 15 megabits per second in our home — compared with speeds of 100 or even 1,000 mbps in the city — the internet sputtered and stalled, even on a good day. And this was not a good day. Early in the film, the TV screen froze, then went blank. We checked our phones and laptops: no internet connection. I called the service provider (on my copper-wire landline) to report the outage, the latest of several, and got a recorded message saying the office was closed for the weekend. The internet didn’t come back on for days this time, and then only intermittently.