> If so-called Christian broadcasters wonder why they get such
> a hostile reception, Daystar's behavior with respect to KOCE
> ought to be Exhibits A, B, C, and D.
I had posted this below and gotten little response, so I'll repeat myself here:
KOCE is more than just a "stick" - it's an ongoing business, with a heritage of more than four decades of providing a specific sort of programming (in this case, PBS offerings and local public affairs) to an audience of viewer/members who have contributed millions of dollars in the expectation that such programming will continue into the future.
Why would KOCE's licensee *not* have the right, as part of any sale of the station, to consider not only the cash value of the offer but also the question of whether the station would continue to operate in the manner in which it's been operated for many years?
That was clearly the intent of the board of trustees in preferring the sale to the foundation; I'll concede that it may not have handled the matter very well, but it seems to me that the board does, or at least should, have the ability to give preference to a sale that will continue the station's operations unchanged over one that will replace the programming with something else, WHATEVER that something else might be. It really has nothing to do with religion, when you get down to it.<P ID="signature">______________
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