It amuses me to see bloggers on conservative websites decrying any sort of return to the Fairness Doctrine as "chilling free speech."
Many of the folks on that side of the aisle were big supporters of the congressional crackdown on indecency that drove up fines, bowdlerized the airwaves and intimidated programmers, and chased folks like Howard Stern and Bubba the Love Sponge off to satellite, causing millions of dollars in ad revenues to evaporate and loosening radio's already-tenuous grip on the under-35's.
I argue that if Congress had the right to restrict free speech and do that sort of economic damage to broadcasters (and I think it did), then it certainly has the right to restrict free speech and (maybe, although I think not) do some economic damage and intimidate programmers by encouraging more progressive talk radio stations by a Fairness Doctrine or some other means. The precedent has been set. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. But these anti-FD raves are as self-serving and hypocritical as anything Mel Karmazin is likely to say to a Congressional committee about the XM-Sirius merger.
Many of the folks on that side of the aisle were big supporters of the congressional crackdown on indecency that drove up fines, bowdlerized the airwaves and intimidated programmers, and chased folks like Howard Stern and Bubba the Love Sponge off to satellite, causing millions of dollars in ad revenues to evaporate and loosening radio's already-tenuous grip on the under-35's.
I argue that if Congress had the right to restrict free speech and do that sort of economic damage to broadcasters (and I think it did), then it certainly has the right to restrict free speech and (maybe, although I think not) do some economic damage and intimidate programmers by encouraging more progressive talk radio stations by a Fairness Doctrine or some other means. The precedent has been set. What's good for the goose is good for the gander. But these anti-FD raves are as self-serving and hypocritical as anything Mel Karmazin is likely to say to a Congressional committee about the XM-Sirius merger.