applecorped
Banned
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2008
- Messages
- 20,145
Are radio talk shows such as Rush & Savage considered entertainment (in general, not personally)?
I would ask how you Conservatives would feel about it if every major broadcast network and 80% of all radio outlets were in the hands of Democrats who had no incentive to either sell stations to you or to allow your side any access to the public airwaves?
The fact remains that the RF spectrum is a Commons. If we allowed it to be unregulated, then nobody would ever be able to hear anybody because of course there would be a "arms race" to build the most powerful transmitter.
Now, given that, we have to regulate it. And since we cannot just allow some person with a unrepresented political opinion to set up a broadcast station, spectrum and hence licenses being finite, we need to make sure that opinion, if it represents a sizable fraction of the country, can be heard.
I would ask how you Conservatives would feel about it if every major broadcast network and 80% of all radio outlets were in the hands of Democrats who had no incentive to either sell stations to you or to allow your side any access to the public airwaves?
I am damned sure that you would be raising a hue and cry of epic proportions.
Again I will point out that kiddie porn is illegal outside of any FCC policy.
You can't complain about restricting free speech in one case, and then endorse the restriction of free speech in another.
Well, you can, but that would be hypocritical.
More thoughts on the "analogy" of obscenity filter vs political filters.
Why does the JREF forum have an obscenity filter?
Why indeed do most internet forums and games have some kind of chat filter?
Are you saying it would not, necessarily, be hypocritical to support one non-FCC restriction on free speech but to oppose a FCC restriction? If so, why?
I have a hard time accepting that hard core pornography should be aired on a children's TV show
Cleon's rule of internet forums:
If someone starts a question with "are you saying that..." what follows is inevitably a strawman.
What on God's green earth makes you think it would be?
I really don't understand why you keep bringing this nonsense up. Do you seriously believe that if the FCC stops regulating broadcast content we're going to start seeing orgies on Sesame Street?
I would prefer a return to restrictions over how many frequencies a single company can own in the same market.
What does that have to do with the FCC?
The Commons *is* a basic right. I no more want to force right wing radio off the air than I want to force morning shock jocks off the air. I detest both of them pretty much equally, but there is room for them on the airwaves. And I am deeply offended by that false characterization. What there is not room for is single-party control of the airwaves.
Hitler had that.
The Volksempfänger was designed to make sure that ONLY local and strong stations could be heard so that Germans would not have to trouble themselves with hearing the BBC or any other non-Nazi source of information. In fact he ultimately made listening to foreign broadcasts illegal, and in occupied territories there was a massive program to seize all radios.
That is what you get when you allow a single political party to control the dissemination of information - you ensure that all information is propaganda.
And yes, a fairness doctrine would ensure the end of the "Liberal Radio Station" because it applies to all, but I don't think anybody wants a world in which only the Left provides information without responsible opposing points of view any more than they want a world where only the Right does.
Wow, Godwin times 30. The problems with this post are so obvious I can't believe you typed it with a straight face. Namely: nobody is forcing radio stations to carry right wing talk shows except the listeners themselves. To try to pretend this is some kind of Nazi-esque scheme is laughable.
No, listeners largely have no say in the matter
how do you prevent a complete takeover of one point of view without a fairness doctrine?
No, listeners largely have no say in the matter, first, and second how do you prevent a complete takeover of one point of view without a fairness doctrine?
The Commons *is* a basic right. I no more want to force right wing radio off the air than I want to force morning shock jocks off the air. I detest both of them pretty much equally, but there is room for them on the airwaves. And I am deeply offended by that false characterization. What there is not room for is single-party control of the airwaves.
Hitler had that.
The Commons *is* a basic right. I no more want to force right wing radio off the air than I want to force morning shock jocks off the air. I detest both of them pretty much equally, but there is room for them on the airwaves. And I am deeply offended by that false characterization. What there is not room for is single-party control of the airwaves.
Hitler had that.
The Volksempfänger was designed to make sure that ONLY local and strong stations could be heard so that Germans would not have to trouble themselves with hearing the BBC or any other non-Nazi source of information. In fact he ultimately made listening to foreign broadcasts illegal, and in occupied territories there was a massive program to seize all radios.
That is what you get when you allow a single political party to control the dissemination of information - you ensure that all information is propaganda.
And yes, a fairness doctrine would ensure the end of the "Liberal Radio Station" because it applies to all, but I don't think anybody wants a world in which only the Left provides information without responsible opposing points of view any more than they want a world where only the Right does.
No, listeners largely have no say in the matter, first, and second how do you prevent a complete takeover of one point of view without a fairness doctrine?
But why? Why the hell does it matter if it's on the radio or not? If someone wants an opinion, there's a plethora of blogs, sites and whatnot that will assuredly cover the range of opinions. Nevermind the fact that people are listening to conservative radio because they want to, even if they hate the show in question. Why has liberal talk radio largely been a failure if it had opinions that "represent a sizable fraction of the country" that people wanted to hear?
Where's the demand for legislation to offer equal word counts in print media for "underrepresented political opinions?"
*sigh* The Fairness Doctrine is an FCC thing. As such, print media would not be affected.
I approve of this post. As if my opinion is of any value.I'm not a fan of the Fairness Doctrine. It creates an incentive to supply shallow content solely for the purposes of compliance.
"And now, to fulfill our equal time requirements, here's Mort Dingleweenie to explain why we have to spread the wealth around and have government take over healthcare."
I would prefer a return to restrictions over how many frequencies a single company can own in the same market.