As noted, "we have an abundance of thinkers and writers here," Heyday. You make a valid point. The bell cannot be un-rung, (the genie is out of the bottle, the horse out of the barn, etc.)
Still, the Commission deserves to hear from people on both sides of the table. Do I think it will make a difference? My first inclination is no. But much depends on who writes, how the case is framed and how it's argued.
For example, SirRoxalot offers a legitimate consideration as it might apply to multi-platforms in relation to news"papers." The value of "news," particularly in relation to WBEN-AM-FM-TV & The Buffalo Evening News has been discussed here by noteworthy local contributors such as Bob1370 and others. Yet, I'd offer that given the opportunity to explore and take advantage of multi-platform exposure, most companies in the game today wouldn't, or they'd do it on the cheap. Or bungle it completely.
And guys like Bob Savage, who've invested more than their money in making a local news, community service and revenue-generating operation work, might get eaten or brushed aside. No disrespect to Bob and his professionalism, expertise and years of service. But look what he's up against with the monoliths peddling I-Hash. Yes, it could be argued that he'd be free to enter into an agreement with the D&C or boldly affiliate or merge with any one of the TV stations, which might lead to him swimming in gold.
Let's bring this back to the topic at hand. With all due respect to the many professionals who labor under very trying conditions at Channel 7, is there a radio operation in town that wants to be affiliated with this TV station in its present condition? It might very well be the answer to some AM-FM news operation's problems. This is a question, not a statement.
The bell having been un-rung, the days of WKBW-AM / TV as it operated during the CapCities era, when Irv, Tom and Rick were consistently #1 are not to be seen again. Understandably and agreeably, because it's 2010, not 1990.
As two Buffalo operators have proven beyond a measure of a doubt, trying to own everything all at once doesn't necessarily lead to serving the listeners, advertisers and shareholders any better than they were served prior to the Telecom Act of 1996.
Your non-confrontational response is welcome.