The answer to speech you don't like is more speech
The FCC has regulated speech in the past and does so today. I hear tons of bleeps / scrambles of curse words in songs.It's no more absurd than you saying their licenses should be revoked. These stations are not being funded by an enemy of the USA. The stations are selling time. In fact, the entity buying the time is a registered business in the USA. For you to suggest revocation of the licenses is sort of a Putin kind of thing versus American sort of thing. It's sort of like the KKK marching in town. As much as you dislike them, they have the right to do so so you don't violate their rights.
No, the FCC has vague rules about indecency (Janet Jackson) and profanity (Seven Dirty Words) but no list of prohibited terms or practices.The FCC has regulated speech in the past and does so today. I hear tons of bleeps / scrambles of curse words in songs.}
That would be limiting freedom of speech. In fact, even trying to define "propaganda" is a dangerous endeavor.If the FCC lacks authority to order foreign government propaganda programming be removed from U.S. based airwaves, then Congress ought to act, as Rep. Jack Bergman (a longtime former broadcaster in northern Michigan) has suggested.
Where do you draw the line? I was given a free trip to Israel with a personal guide when I was managing a talk station or two. Is that "directly subsidized" by your definition? What I am pointing out here is that our kind of democracy has greater freedom of speech than nearly any other nation in the world; at what point does the government start intervening in business relationships?To be clear, I am not condoning preventing an independent group from expressing support for the Kremlin or whomever. I am condoning barring propaganda that is *directly subsidized* by foreign government agents from our public airwaves.
I'd love to see the 'good ratings'.
There are U.S. imposed sanctions against business relationships involving countries or persons located in countries that are deemed enemies of the U.S.No, the FCC has vague rules about indecency (Janet Jackson) and profanity (Seven Dirty Words) but no list of prohibited terms or practices.
That is not a regulation that affects free speech. It only limits certain words and content that come under the profanity and indecency broad regulations.
That would be limiting freedom of speech. In fact, even trying to define "propaganda" is a dangerous endeavor.
Where do you draw the line? I was given a free trip to Israel with a personal guide when I was managing a talk station or two. Is that "directly subsidized" by your definition? What I am pointing out here is that our kind of democracy has greater freedom of speech than nearly any other nation in the world; at what point does the government start intervening in business relationships?
In the UK, you can't even view the website. Navigating to rt.com just brings up a site not found error. You can work around it using VPNs if you really want to view the content, but it isn't really worth it - same old crappy propaganda. Strangely, while the RT website is banned, the Sputnik website and audio feed work fine.It is interesting how the television service "RT" or Russia Today, has been wiped from American viewing. At one time, it was carried on my Time Warner system. Some radio hosts such as Thom Hartmann and Ed Schultz had shows on the channel. Even Larry King had a program on RT after he and CNN parted ways.
Now it's not available from any cable or satellite service I know of. And you can't get it from You Tube as you can Al Jazeera English, France 24 English and other international news feeds. American political leaders of all parties have criticized RT for its slanted coverage of news. Maybe Radio Sputnik is so small, few politicians are speaking against it.
Budget cuts are a common theme in radio nowadays!Surprised Sputnik lasted this long…not due to being legislated out of existence but that the Russians felt it was a good use of cold hard cash these days.
In fact, Kluge's Metromedia owned private stations in Moscow and St Petersburg in the 90's. At the St Petersburg station, the "vanity panels" on all the desks were made of bullet-proof material so employees could hide there if someone came in shooting.For more than a decade, Radio Liberty (a sister station to VOA targeted towards the former USSR) was heard in Russia over the airwaves of the now defunct since 2008 Radio 1.
Radio 1 was the first radio station in Russia and when it was privatized in the '90s the new owners gladly rented it to the US government to get some easy money.
When Radio 1 closed in 2008, the last song played was an excerpt from the Mission: Impossible soundtrack taken from the Radio Liberty satellite feed.
The programming is funded by an enemy of the USA.These stations are not being funded by an enemy of the USA
The entity is a middleman, whose client is an enemy of the USA.the entity buying the time is a registered business in the USA
dcrtv.com
Is 105.5 airing WFED temporary as well?DCRTV reports the station is now airing Spanish programming:
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New Formats on 1390 & 105.5
As expected, the Russian Government’s LMA on 1390 AM WZHF and translator 105.5 FM ended at 11:59 PM on October 31st.dcrtv.com