Thanks for your time and response, but perhaps the meaning of my sentence was not clear. "In the same vein" means I do not believe a telephone or a car are necessities for everyone. They are certainly a convenience. They are certainly necessary for some people and some businesses. But they are not a right, or an entitlement. Like the internet, phones and cars are a commodity.
Some people have come to depend on the internet for convenience, and it does offer that. I'm one of them, and I understand. It would be inconvenient to do without it, or go back to dial-up speeds. So I pay for the fastest I can get.
But think about the provider. A good example is the road described above. Existing equipment does not have an infinite capacity. Increased traffic slows operation. So as the provider, what do you do? You would like to install, and perhaps even develop better equipment. That takes money, (ie. profit).
But as the provider, what do you do in the meantime? It will take time and money to expand for the heavy traffic. And it's likely not a one-time thing. Data usage will probably continue to grow, so upgrading equipment will probably be an ongoing exercise, and will continue to take time and money.
So how do you make the money to pay for it? Should you charge everyone, light and heavy users, the same thing? Does the guy who streams Netflix or plays online games pay the same as the guy who looks at a forum a couple times a week? If everybody only used 1GPS, would you still need to expand? Maybe 1GPS is plenty for one person, another wants 5GPS and another wants 100GPS. Should a law require that they all pay the same thing? I don't think so.
As for the fine print, that is neither a cause nor result of internet speeds or providers. Caveat Emptor. (How long has it been since any civilization spoke Latin?) I agree that few actually read the fine print, and companies make their products look golden in their advertisements. So what else is new?
So in short, internet access and speed are commodities. You want the best, you pay for it. If the best is not available to you, you get the best that is available and that you can afford. There is nothing unfair about that.
(Y'all keep those "dumbs" coming. Good thing we're not in one of those "Safe Spaces" you seem to like.)