cc333 - they are not duplicating signals but trying to get their message to everyone. It is not gluttony or hypocrisy. Neither apply here. The FCC does have an issue with the number of signals covering a certain area owned by a single entity.
If I was to question motives, I can easily say your writings are based on hate or at the very least negativity. Usually in such cases a person has been harmed or traumatized by that they speak so negatively about. So what's your story? I realize there are lots of Christians in name only. In fact I find those tht hve to constantly remind you they are tend to be nothing like those that are.
I can see how I come across that way, but that wasn't my intent.
There's nothing wrong with Christianity, nor have I been particularly harmed by it. I have some good friends who identify as Christian, in fact.
I just don't care much for the attitudes of those relative few who like to preach on the radio and insinuate that I'm somehow a bad person because I don't believe what they believe.
Likewise, I haven't been particularly harmed by these organizations' seemingly relentless thirst for more stations. And one of the major reasons
why I don't like it is that it seems like they're crowding out other potential station owners and formats that could serve a wider, non-Christian audience, such as, for example, public radio, which up to now has been protected (or, at the very least, propped up), and thus largely spared from being bought out and subsumed into these extensive religious radio networks.
It's hard enough for the small, independent operators as it is. Why make it worse by cutting their funding and crowding them out by outspending them 10:1?
Which returns us to the main topic at hand: These religious organizations lobbied for the rescission of CPB funds, and now that they got what they wanted, they are now hoping to gobble up now-vulnerable public radio stations and use religion as an excuse for doing it, basically because they can.
c