For the same reason I don't want the government to force CVS to carry a certain brand of hand cream. Let the marketplace make those decisions.
Agreed. I just don't want something that few people want to raise the cost of a car, even if it's just a dollar, because you think I should have AM whether I use it or not. If I want it, I'll buy it. If I don't, and fewer and fewer people use it every year, I don't want it force fed. Marketplace decisions should choose.
"Marketplace" includes government regulations, being that nearly everything sold in the marketplace is regulated one way or another by government. Whether you want or don't want something that raises the cost of a car is increasingly immaterial. The days of special ordering your 1972 Ford Maverick with AM radio, AM/FM radio, or no radio; AC or no AC; whitewalls vs. regular tires; and or a choice of stick shift vs. automatic were long gone 20 years ago.
I'd be perfectly happy if they had those as options and let consumers decide if they wanted them included. Make your preferences known to let the marketplace decide.
As I just said, modern day vehicle shopping doesn't have as many options. Providing options costs the manufacturers more money. On the other side of the coin, you don't get to choose which natural disaster may hit your town or region, either. I live in earthquake country. I suppose I could move to Texas -- then I'd be in tornado or hurricane country. But you don't generally get to choose when a disaster strikes. And when such disaster strikes, often such media as AM radio is helpful. You can bet that more people in LA's fire prone areas were listening to KNX 1070 than trying to get info via the cell system, especially when the cell towers were looking like torches, exploding into flames and melting into blobs of plastic and metal parts.
When an emergency gets that far out of hand, local first responders work to evacuate you far from the burning cell towers to sites where the molten metal parts won't be falling. They will also keep you informed of what you need to know and feed you. We can not prepare for every possible scenario, but we can let hundreds of AM stations no one cares about die a natural death and let the survivors live on a less cluttered dial.
My local cell tower is a just over a mile away. Another one up the hill serves a several mile radius. Cell towers can cover a lot of diverse territory. And if you are solely dependent on your cell system, that's putting all of your information sourcing in one box, and no information 'box' is without problems, be it AM, FM, TV, or cellphone based internet. As far as "AM stations no one cares about", obviously some in government and in the US do care about them, just as others care about public radio, which has a lot less stations, and relies on a certain amount of Federal support. Right now the AM bill seems to have been looked at again, and public radio tax support is also being looked at. There are millions who couldn't care less about someone else's favorite public radio station, just as there are people who don't care about someone's favorite AM station. On one side, proponents want mandated AM receivers in cars. On the other side, proponents want a continuance of taxpayer funding for CPB's 1220 stations. Everybody has their pet media they want to save.
I agree, except about expense. If you pay more than $150 a year from Serious XM, you have not negotiated with the difficult to understand fellow in India who answers the phone when you call to cancel. I also suggest that MOST local radio sucks in getting real news on the air. Little Julie the college intern reading wire copy and plagiarized stories from the newspaper is not real news and when a real emergency happens, there won't be much better coverage. When the government takes over the broadcast it will probably be less relevant to the local situation than little Julie adlibbing about it. We've all heard the EBS tones and then the mechanical voice talking about a dangerous thunderstorm approaching a city a hundred miles away from the unfortunate local station that had it's programming (and commercials) interrupted for that nonsense courtesy of the government you seeming believe will keep you informed..
Agree mostly, except a lot of news is going the way of AI ripping and reading, because of the increased costs of having actual staff, and soon enough that sort of news reporting will spread to TV. It's already taken place on the internet. The days of actual news departments are fading. I just listened last night to an AM radio station which is the only remaining local news media in its county. The newspaper went under in September of last year. Social media can only fill so much of the news void. The entire field of news is changing.