It was a more general "you", as in anybody looking to corner the market on all of a community's media
The issue is that in over 50 years of being around Radio, I have yet to meet anyone like this 'you'. I have met all kinds of owners, and I have never met anyone who looked at it as anything other than a way to make a living, to scratch an itch to own a station, or to buy and move signals around because they love the technical aspect of engineering a move. I know some real scumbags, but I swear I have never met anyone who looked at any of their stations as a way to be the sole source of information and control what people hear and believe.
Radio today is such a minute part of the average person's life. A lot of young people have never listened to terrestrial Radio. A lot of people are so distrustful of any media that they don't even use Radio or TV.
To show you just how much social media has dumbed down the listening public, a friend of mine was telling me about reading a story on his local morning news segment that came directly from the county sheriff's office. The official source. Later that night, while he was setting up to do a High School basketball game, a teacher (yes, a mid-50s teacher in the local school district), told him she heard the story and that he was wrong, because she read what really happened on Facebook.. At that point, I'm sure he was not only worried about how pervasive Facebook has become as a source of news, but also that a teacher who has access to young minds believes what she read on social media over an official police report. I wish I was kidding.
If you had said that 1 person cornering the market and deciding the programming and failing to serve a significant demographic within the community is detrimental, I would have said that you may have a point, but, with an explanation. As I'm in the Mid-South, I know that the African-American population in my area has no Radio outlet. It's not because the station owners don't want to program Urban music. It's because, even in 2026, it's a tough slog to get a lot of business owners to advertise on an Urban-formatted station. Same for Hispanics in my area. Only the larger cities are able to serve those demos. No matter how much I'd love to serve those groups, without advertisers to pay the bills, I can't do it. But, just like me being able to buy the stations in the first place, nothing is stopping a Black or Hispanic group from buying those same stations before I do and programming the stations themselves. I'm sure that they've looked at the advertising base and have determined that these markets may never be progressive enough to support Urban or Hispanic programming.
I know there are people who would love to control every source of information that people in a certain region consume, but they will never do it by using Radio. Besides a newspaper, Radio might be the most inefficient way to reach a majority of any population. Most of the owners I know would prefer to own 1 Radio station that reached a majority of the population. Each extra signal they own costs more to acquire, more to operate, and most don't add in new sources of income. No, they mostly shift the existing ad dollars from one signal to the other. You don't get a multi-station discount on fees, property taxes or electricity.