This is rare for me, but I think this is how they'd see it. I don't echo this, but they would say that most of net neutrality—the speeding up, the blocking, and all of that—is actually quite local.
The way they usually do it today is at the exchange point. It would happen somewhere in Ottawa. I don't know where. There is some point where all the Internet traffic reaches Ottawa and is exchanged to all the local Ottawans. That's where the blocking or degrading would happen, or inside the local office nearer to your house.
I guess that is the idea. It's that the backbone is more or less untouched but it's the stuff nearer, near consumers. Does that make sense?