He’s done it again.

“Last Week Tonight” host John Oliver on Sunday issued another powerful rallying cry to save net neutrality protections, and, repeating the outcome of his 2014 plea, his viewers flooded the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) site, causing it to temporarily crash.

Net neutrality, he said, is “about more than speed” of internet content. “At its heart is the principle that Internet Service Providers (ISPs)  […] should not be able to engage in any sort of fuckery that limits or manipulates the choices you make online. It also helps ensure a level playing field so that big companies cannot undermine small companies before they can take off.”

But, as it was before the FCC ‘s 2015 reclassification of the internet under Title II of the Communications Act in 2015, net neutrality is again in trouble, Oliver said.

That’s due in large part because of FCC chairman Ajit Pai, who previously promised to take a “weed whacker” to FCC regulations and declared that net neutrality’s “days are numbered.”

Unsurprisingly, he announced last month plans to roll back the protections, and Senate Republicans appear willing to help move such action forward as well. Craig Aaron, president and CEO of open internet advocacy group Free Press, adds:

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