I'm from New York. I have a non, neutral accent. It can go any way you want.
So much of the language that surrounds us - from things like economics, management theory, and the algorithms built into computer systems - appears to be objective and neutral. But in fact, it is loaded with powerful, and very debatable, political assumptions about how society should work and what human beings are really like.
In America our public schools are intended to be religiously neutral. Our teachers and schools are neither to endorse nor to inhibit religion. I believe this is a very good thing.
But even race-neutral policies and recruitment efforts designed to achieve greater diversity are, in the end, not race neutral.
If you use apple in one dish think of using citrus or something more neutral like vanilla in another. You constantly need to be challenging the tastebuds but not assaulting them.
I think the Internet has developed at this incredibly rapid pace because of net neutrality, because of the free nature of it, because a YouTube can start the way YouTube started.
Net neutrality isn't a government takeover of the Internet, as many of my Republican colleagues have alleged.
Net neutrality has been in place since the very beginning of the Internet.
The nature of the Internet and the importance of net neutrality is that innovation can come from everyone.