I haven't read in too much detail about it but I find the expansion of internet access appealing. However for my full support on that issue, one of the things I would most like to see is a reform of Federal cable laying laws. I'm aware of this issue thanks to a US TV show called Adam Ruins Everything. In the
episode on point he ruins the internet by explaining that current cable laying laws greatly benefit cable companies due to outdated laws which essentially create cable monopolies at the financial expense of the government.
From memory: When Cable TV was invented iirc the 60's and cable was being laid, the US government greatly hastened it's spread by subsidizing the wirelaying which still persists to this day. Along the way the cable companies lobbied for an even sweeter deal, where any company the cable was paid for by the government, the company owned and controlled the cable. This of course means that if the cable is laid to a town, that town has one choice for cable provider, whose services will be priced to be just barely tolerable to the consumer rather than priced to compete. That's not even touching the throttling issue that is also mentioned in that episode that explains why in the US oftentimes the internet speed is a "burst" or "turbo" speed that is described as what you are paying for... for about 5 or 10 seconds and then it throttles down to enough to render a youtube video at max or close to max video resolution, which is about the most demanding thing the average user will commonly do as far as requiring download speed. That's why big steam games take like 4 hours to download. According to that episode, if I was so fortunate as to live in Romania for example, it would maintain the high speed and finish in minutes for the simple reason that the laws in that country foster cable company competition by having cable be open for all providers. Frequent US internet throttling also has an effect on multiplayer games, especially first person shooters as latency is a factor in COMPETITIVE E-SPORTS such as those may be. It's pretty minor but it is a disadvantage.
I also note that some large cable companies are more closely allied to the Democratic party than Republican, though I imagine money goes both
right and left to some extent in the large donor political campaign finance system. The words "legalized bribery" come to mind, but I'll argue that some other time if the politicians ever make an attempt to reform it.
I would strongly suggest to Democrats that in this bill is an opportunity to change the cablelaying laws so that cable laid with government funding must be open for use for all internet and cable TV providers to foster competition rather than monopoly. The government doesn't need to own the wires to do this, just force them open, or at least future government funded cable laying. It would go a long way towards not being labelled a big business bailout by opponents of a big bill, and opening the cable monopoly system up for competition would be something voters can understand, because remember if there is one thing both liberal and conservatives both certainly share it is disgust with what must appear to people (who do not happen to also be corporations under US court precedent) that big business is able to reliably shape legislation to benefit the corporate interest.
The internet access expansion should still be done because that does seem to be a very good thing, even if cablelaying monopolies can't be reformed, but I will be less pleased about how it was done than I could have been by it.
EDIT: Here is a basic breakdown of the spending:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/03/31/upshot/whats-in-bidens-infrastructure-plan.htmlThat looks pretty good to me so far, though there isn't much detail there.The bit about semiconductors I wonder about, but there is a shortage of components right now in some industries, such as the automotive sector. Apparently it's hard to buy top of the line graphics cards right now too, but that might be unrelated. Good thing I built mine at the start of the pandemic (before those came out). The shortage then on Newegg at least appeared to be cooling fans for some reason. I thought maybe the supply was being bought up to craft ventilators or something.