Given the commission's unenviable record of violating it's own rules and of actively suppressing public comment, another comment submission might appear useless. Let us review some past fcc wrongs. In the case of application by university of tennessee for an fm station (1979), the commission agreed that the application was seriously flawed. The commission agreed that a brochure required in the public record was missing. Since the brochure clearly explained public ability to comment and gave proper techniques for doing so, it was critical to public participation in the licensing process, yet the commision approved the flawed application. Even worse, it later revoked requirements for the brochure, thereby making public participation more difficult. Let us now look at the matter of dumbing-down the Extra Class Amateur license requirements by no longer requiring morse code proficiency. The commission admitted that it had Destroyed, Unread, countless thousands of comments. Despite the flagrant violation of its own rules, the commission approved the change. As one can clearly notice, the commission obviously treats public comments as an unnecessary delaying action for rulings that it intends to make, regardless. The commission will surely continue this pattern of disregarding public comments in this matter of "net neutrality". It is clear to many millions of citizaens, including me, that the commission should NOT reverse current policy . The commission could easily determine the above-stated feeling of citizens, that it not reverse this policy, by simply counting the submitted comments. Sadly, citizen comments do not matter to the commission. Ultimately,however, the policy of "net neutrality" will become valid once more and the role of a few unresponsive, dismissive commisioners will be only a bad memory.