And regardless, I'm not sure why you even think that would be a thing that would happen? Most places in the US don't have the option to switch to an ISP that doesn't plan on abusing the hell out of a lack of net neutrality. I'm not even sure if any place I've lived does...
I live in rural Australia and I can understand this. You dont have alot of options out here and you basically have to go with what your given. I suspect this may be true for rural America too.
while Foxnews.com runs abnormally slow.
Oh No!, the horrors!
No, the "only 2 choices, period" thing happens *everywhere* in the US, because of local franchises being the norm.
Basically, a city or state will give a sweetheart deal to a company to build out infrastructure which then gives that company unfair natural monopoly powers over the ability to physically provide infrastructure.
In theory, this prevents radically redundant infrastructure, and helps to prevent having 50 burried fiber bundles under your house that need to be tracked and considered by the civil engineers for the rest of forever.
In practice, it let's TimeWarner and pals keep everyone else out, while selling consumers a bill of goods for high high prices.
This is actually *WORSE* in cities than in rural areas.
The problem with rural areas is that infrastructure is not cost effective to install or operate as the length of cable and size of the deployments is grossly disproportional to the number of potential subscribers.