If you didn't hear about it, you're not alone. Susan Crawford, who championed Net Neutrality, quietly resigned last week for reasons that appear to be a pattern of leftist radicalism that the White House is trying to pull away from. Rumors circulating within the White House say that her resignation comes about because of reported tension within the Obama administration in regards to just how radical the administration has become when it comes to policy making.
Crawford, who was part of Obama's transition team and then continued on as a key adviser in the technology and communications department, was credited with starting the template that guided the appointments of other radicals, such as Mark Lloyd, in the FCC. She was also a staunch supporter of the infamous Net Neutrality, which would essentially allow the government to control and regulate the Internet, as well as controlling the private sector.
In short, another Marxist radical.
However, the prevalent rumor as to why she has left was because she ended up on the Larry Summer's black list. Summer's supposedly didn't know just how radical Susan Crawford was until her drafts were looked over in regards to Net Neutrality. One White House aide stated, "All of sudden Larry is getting calls from CEOs, Wall Street folks he talks to, Republicans and Democrats, asking him what the Administration is doing with the policies, and he isn't sure what they're talking about. He felt blind-sided, and Susan was one of those people who heard about it."
According to Crawford, she resigned because she needed to return to her tenured position at the University of Michigan. This is a bizarre reason because the university gave her a two year waiver before she signed on to the administration before requiring her to return.
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