It’s gratifying that a few of you actually agree with me, so thank you Scott Leffler
et al - please spread the word!
To those who got all hot under the collar about the government dictating what you put on the air – methinks you protest too much. A passionately held sentiment, no doubt, but it has absolutely nothing to do with what I wrote. As you would find if you read it over, I didn’t even
imply anything about the government. So your punches landed on a feather duster.
This isn’t about government control, George Orwell and all that. It’s about washing your hands of minimal standards. It’s about accepting personal responsibility and accountability - favorite words in the conservatives’ lexicon when they lecture the rest of us, but too often AWOL when applied to their own actions, especially when they might stand to be out a buck or two.
If it were legal, would you maximize your profits by using slaves, rather than paying free people to work for you? Others might well do so, but would YOU? If you really believe that the only way you can meet your financial goal is by peddling hate, it indicates a stunning lack of imagination, given that you are in a supposedly creative industry.
There are at least a couple of things wrong with the idea that anyone has an absolute right to say what he/she wants at all times and in any place. Let’s say that I stood in a public place yelling obscenities at passers-by, as I have the constitutional right to do. Sooner or later, possibly in response to a complaint, I would at least be told to move and maybe arrested for disturbing the peace. Also, suppose I was at Eastview Mall, a quasi-public space, and attempted to give a speech – political or otherwise – or tried to pass out leaflets. Since the mall is in fact private property, I would be quickly ejected unless I had obtained prior permission for my actions. Furthermore, even were I granted permission, I would probably be silenced if I violated the conditions under which permission was granted; for example, if I started electioneering when I had undertaken to avoid political matters.
And just try invoking the first amendment in the workplace.
All I’m trying to illustrate is that there is such a thing as insulting or abusive speech that crosses a line in offensiveness, and that nobody’s freedom of speech is constitutionally protected in a radio studio since it is nearly always private property.
In other words, owners who really wanted to quit sheltering cowardly hate merchants on their stations would be perfectly within their rights to do so.
But yes, he does have a right to spew what he wants, stations have a right to air his garbage and everyone else has a right to turn him off if they want.
No problem with that, JohnC; but equally, when stations refuse to demand from their on-air personalities some minimum standards of decency, I have the right as a citizen to call them out on it. The first amendment neither deprives them of their right to demand standards, nor does it absolve them from their responsibility to do so.
I know hate speech when I hear it, and so do its disciples. Ben Franklin talked about us having “a Republic if you can keep it”. Hate speech doesn’t just affect the immediate parties to a broadcast; it hurts all of us by corroding our culture and degrading our political process, and I can think of no better way of reducing the Republic to a mere shell. Which brings me to the puzzle of SirRoxalot, who has no problem expecting political candidates to run clean campaigns, yet vigorously pushes back when broadcasters are told they should clean up their act.
No less an authority than William Kristol admitted that “liberal media” is a myth propagated by the right as a strategy for working the refs. Talk radio, whether of the hate variety or otherwise, is overwhelmingly a Republican Party tool.
Now think about the opportunity cost. Had station owners, managers and schedulers shown any civic spirit and programmed liberal or centrist talk in the slots they devote to toxic talk, maybe an audience not limited to an opinion monoculture might have learned enough to restrain the Washington and Wall Street clowns who brought you deregulation mania. Lacking an informed public to keep them in check, these incompetent, feckless custodians of the people’s money got us where we landed this week. You thought liberal talk would cost your bottom line a few bucks? So how do you like the bottom line of your portfolios – or would you rather not look?
Mr. Savage, I share your attachment to the marketplace of ideas (that’s one reason I enjoy this board, whose contributors show the respect and decency that’s absent from much that goes on the air, while at the same time keeping no subject off limits). So I eagerly await the opening of your particular market stall to a greater range of opinion. You might consider starting with Bill Press and Rachel Maddow – two programs out of several you could choose from that refute your sweeping stereotype of “negative, nihilistic and lacking in content” – in Maddow’s case, spectacularly so.
Over the years, I’ve heard plenty of sins excused by a terse “this is America” – period, end of discussion.
How about “this is America, and we can do better”?