Ah, the old pretense of 'you didn't answer'...
Followed by a comment on the answer. Woops.
You seem to believe that without a gov't plan in place, that those who compete will not know what to do until directed by the guiding hand of the gov't.
Without the government in place with a plan to ENSURE competition in the first place, we would all be wage slaves to Standard Oil to this day. You do know that, do you not?
Without a "government plan" in place, people would be burnt alive in over crowded cotton mills with the only exit door locked.
This used to be a nation with great political willpower to be able to ensure competition, and to spur innovation.
The problem is, you keep hounding and hounding that "There needs to more competition!"
Yes! There does need to be more competition! I am not saying otherwise! You are failing to say how, exactly that competition will come about! And your "Moar Competition" repetitive argumentation, is NOT an argument against NN! It's just a strawman.
And also, you seem to be against "government regulation." If a new private company does not want to start up, or does not have the capital to start up and we cannot use government to allow a new company to start up.....how is your "Moar Competition!!" argument even useful to begin with?
I don't know the rules all over the nation. I live in Austin, TX, and as I have said earlier, there are two companies (including Google) that are brining fiber and/or high speed internet to homes but are restricted by the PUC (not sure if it's local or state rules) from bringing it to the neighborhoods of their choosing because they must bring it to low income neighborhoods first, and only after gaining a minimum market share are they allowed to expand into other neighborhoods. These rules have essentially blocked one older company from establishing widespread access in Austin and Google is currently only available in a few areas in town.
Somehow, I doubt that your local area has a rule in place that says they must bring fiber and/or high speed internet to poor neighborhoods first. That doesn't even make any sense.
I also notice that you mentioned "only two companies." That is the entire point! Laying high speed and fiber optics to no small or cheap task! Only huge corporations have the capital to even begin such a venture. And, only companies that are into this industry to begin with. (Meaning, Wal-Mart is out.)
You completely fail to realize that very, very few companies have the ability to even consider providing high-speed internet access to people. If you do not want it to be considered a utility, then a private business must do it on their own dime. If a private business does it, then there is necessarily and naturally going to be very little to no competition in this particular industry. You can't exactly have a bunch of little mom-and-pops doing it! And that private business will want to lay cable to only the most highly profitable areas. Local governments, such as counties, will want to have most of their citizens hooked up to the internet. So those local governments make deals with the ISP.
Furthermore, once Google announced it was coming to Austin, ATT immediately started installing fiber in order to stay competitive but they aren't in every neighborhood yet, either because they don't need to be or because they aren't allowed. That's what competition does.
Why do you presume that cost is such a prohibition? Who put the current infrastructure in? Companies did and other companies would also do the same. Google and other companies are doing that right now.
That's a strawman argument. You are assuming that all companies could only exist side by side in competition by using their own equipment. Companies could choose to lease access to their lines to their competitors (and don't pretend that couldn't or wouldn't happen), and other companies could choose to install or negotiate a lease. For example, Google could lay fiber and sell their own service directly to consumers or if it found it to be better economically, let others handle the end service.
But, your entire premise that it's too expensive is demonstrably false considering that companies have already been doing this for years.
Too bad the only examples you gave, are ATT and Google. The only other huge national company I think of off the top of my head is Comcast.
Yes, companies have done it. But not "for years," as if you are talking a hundred years or something. We are only talking about a decade to 15 years at most. Infrastructure-building Is Very Very Expensive! And it can be very, very risky.