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#1
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Well, now that the Communists have total control of Congress, they've managed to gain control of the banks, at least some of the means of production, they're working toward controlling health care (including the introduction of the "Kill the elderly" legislation), and now they're going to be going after the airwaves.
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#2
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Cool, media censorship!!! Just to put it out there, the FCC are a bunch of Nazis in the first place. Now in conjunction with a blue agenda they will surly achieve their ultimate goal: strike down the First Amendment. And it's all a sham. The blue team seems to forget that they too have some wildly left wing hosts on their side of the line (ie: Chris Matthews and Ed Schultz). And have they not forgotten this past election year? The liberals owned the media. It was a liberal media frag-fest with the first black president, a hot Alaskan governor (don't lie), and a pretty screwed up situation in the Middle East. Not to mention the rise of a leader that matches that of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, only on a slightly smaller scale...
You know we could probably satisfy the liberals 'positive media' fix by simply doing some 'over the isle' deals like $500,000 dog parks in California to stimulate our economy...
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#3
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Let's define conservative radio as variable "c" and liberal radio as "l" An equation for all radio with an ideological slant would be c+l=1 (conservative radio + liberal radio = 100% of stations), thus c=1-l so increase of liberal shows does mean decrease in conservative ones... (I know this was all obvious; I was just bored.) |
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#4
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#5
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Not to point out the nearsightedness in the views expressed, but 'the media' to which the ineptly yclept '(un)fairness doctrine' would apply - strictly in theory, of course - is hardly limited to 'talk radio': Were it implimented as preached, it would require television propaganda programs - er, 'news broadcasts' - to be similarly 'fair and balanced', as it would print 'journalism'...had the handful of 'pretend conservatives and sprinkling of 'real' ones still left in government the intestinal fortitude to demand the equity so preached. You and I both know that this is slightly less likely than Barack Hussein dispensing with Air Force One and flying by flapping his otherwise (apparently) non-functional auditory receptors.
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#6
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In Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367 (1969), the U.S. Supreme Court upheld (by a vote of 8-0) the constitutionality of the Fairness Doctrine in a case of an on-air personal attack, in response to challenges that the doctrine violated the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The case began when journalist Fred J. Cook, after the publication of his Goldwater: Extremist of the Right, was the topic of discussion by Billy James Hargis on his daily Christian Crusade radio broadcast on WGCB in Red Lion, Pennsylvania. Mr. Cook sued arguing that the FCC’s fairness doctrine entitled him to free air time to respond to the personal attacks.
Although similar laws had been called unconstitutional when applied to the press, the Court cited a Senate report (S. Rep. No. 562, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., 8-9 [1959]) stating that radio stations could be regulated in this way because of the limited spectrum of the public airwaves. Writing for the Court, Justice Byron White declared: A license permits broadcasting, but the licensee has no constitutional right to be the one who holds the license or to monopolize a radio frequency to the exclusion of his fellow citizens. There is nothing in the First Amendment which prevents the Government from requiring a licensee to share his frequency with others.... It is the right of the viewers and listeners, not the right of the broadcasters, which is paramount. The Court warned that if the doctrine ever restrained speech, then its constitutionality should be reconsidered. However, in the case of Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U.S. 241 (1974), Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote (for a unanimous court), "Government-enforced right of access inescapably dampens the vigor and limits the variety of public debate." This decision differs from Red Lion v. FCC in that it applies to a newspaper, which, unlike a broadcaster, is unlicensed and can face a theoretically-unlimited number of competitors. In 1984, the Supreme Court ruled that Congress could not forbid editorials by non-profit stations that received grants from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (FCC v. League of Women Voters of California, 468 U.S. 364 (1984)). The Court's 5-4 majority decision by William J. Brennan, Jr. stated that while many now considered that expanding sources of communication had made the Fairness Doctrine's limits unnecessary, "We are not prepared, however, to reconsider our longstanding approach without some signal from Congress or the FCC that technological developments have advanced so far that some revision of the system of broadcast regulation may be required." After noting that the FCC was considering repealing the Fairness Doctrine rules on editorials and personal attacks out of fear that those rules might be "chilling speech", the Court added, “Of course, the Commission may, in the exercise of its discretion, decide to modify or abandon these rules, and we express no view on the legality of either course. As we recognized in Red Lion, however, were it to be shown by the Commission that the fairness doctrine [has] the net effect or reducing rather than enhancing" speech, we would then be forced to reconsider the constitutional basis of our decision in that case.” This is going to be interesting. How the DEMs are going to bend the constitution to fill their agenda.
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Not a Grunt! |
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#7
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In the 110th Congress (January 2007 to January 2009), where Democrats held a majority of both Houses, no legislation to restore the Fairness Doctrine was introduced. In 2007, Senator Norm Coleman (Republican of Minnesota) proposed an amendment to a defense appropriations bill that forbade the FCC from "using any funds to adopt a fairness rule." It was blocked, in part on grounds that "the amendment belonged in the Commerce Committee’s jurisdiction". In the same year, the Broadcaster Freedom Act of 2007 was proposed in the Senate by Senators Coleman with 35 co-sponsors (S.1748) and John Thune (Republican of South Dakota) with 8 co-sponsors (S.1742) and in the House by Republican Representative Mike Pence of Indiana with 208 co-sponsors (H.R. 2905). It provided that the Commission shall not have the authority to prescribe any rule, regulation, policy, doctrine, standard, or other requirement that has the purpose or effect of reinstating or repromulgating (in whole or in part) the requirement that broadcasters present opposing viewpoints on controversial issues of public importance, commonly referred to as the `Fairness Doctrine', as repealed in General Fairness Doctrine Obligations of Broadcast Licensees, 50 Fed. Reg. 35418 (1985). None of these measures came to the floor of either house.
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Not a Grunt! |
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#8
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Seesh, more people watch Television than listen to Radio Talk Shows, and the Liberal's dominate Television. Let's give a big hoorah to the Democrats on expanding their Imperialism.
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#9
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Not to get nit-picky here, but "imperialism" is the spreading of international influence and power through colonization. I'm can't think of a term that specifically describes an attempt by a party to gain nearly complete and invasive power off the top of my head, but this is certainly a hallmark of any totalitarian movement.
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#10
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Try 'censorship' or 'prior restraint'. As bad as it may be when the liberals control the majority of media outlets and are out of power, the fact that they cannot tolerate dissent - or truth - when they control both the legislative and executive (and still, the majority of media outlets) says more about their corruption than their paranoia.
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