I am having trouble figuring out whether you want to talk radio, or talk politics.(***) How nations work, and what are the ground rules is very fluid. But you speak of nations, immigration and legal precedent as though the values and concepts are fixed and ageless.
To refresh your memory, this is the launch post. Note what I have highlighted.
AM radio is approaching the graveyard. HD AM won't help.
other nations are moving AM station to FM it seems.
When will the USA do it ?
The anonymous launcher of this thread is asking about when the US government will move the surviving AM stations to FM.
That is a political question. If the board moderators didn't want a thread about the politics involved in government decisions about licensing radio, they wouldn't have approved the lurker's launch post. Since they approved the launch post, they are clearly not opposed to a discussion of the political ramifications of licensing AM radio stations.
As for any values being ""fixed and ageless", the only one I've suggested is "fixed and ageless" is the one that any sovereign nation has the right to determine its policy regarding immigration, and to change it if it chooses.
OK, can somebody declare this thread officially dead?
How about declaring joebtsflk1 dead.
Not true. In my experience, immigrants wanted their children to retain the language and culture from their ancestors.
So? This isn't about what people moving to America want. It's about what American citizens expect immigrants to do in order to be permitted to enter and remain in this country. If immigrants really want their children to retain the language and culture of their ancestors, they can remain in their ancestral homelands. No one is forcing anyone to come to the US.
Talk about a non-sequitur!
In point of fact, right now one of the few things keeping AM radio alive is conservative talk radio. If we are to use your POV as a guide, perhaps it is in the public interest to require conservative radio stations to offer competing points of view. Federally licensed AM radio stations that narrowcast to a particular ideology should have a clause in their license that requires them to provide other points of view. How would you feel about that?
I'm not a liberal. I don't base my actions and reactions on how I
feel, I base it on what I
think.
And what I think is that if American citizens want to talk about American politics in English, then let the government try to stop them.
And finally, there's the practical matter of it: do we really think that if the U.S. somehow created an English-only rule for radio stations that immediately all the millions of people here who speak different languages would suddenly be speaking English? I really doubt it. And I don't think an AM station broadcasting in Punjabi or Viet or Spanish is enabling people to stay away from learning English.
No one is suggesting an "English Only" rule. We're just saying that a primary goal of any station that targets non-English speaking foreigners should include a significant amount of content designed to help those immigrants learn English.