> Thanks for an excellent post -- you expressed my feelings
> regarding Peppertree's post very effectively.
>
> I'll just add a note that the reason that broadcasting is
> regulated to begin with is that broadcasters begged for
> regulation so that new stations couldn't just pop up on the
> air where ever and when ever they felt like.
>
> For those who want to truly get away from that evil
> socialistic regulation and embrace the concept of
> deregulation, here's a few things that we would have to do
> to get there related to broadcasting:
>
> 1. Eliminate licensing completely. Anyone who wants to go
> on the air can do so...and if it causes interference to
> another station, tough. After all, interference standards
> are just another form of arbitrary regulation. Let the
> station with the biggest...transmitter win!
>
> 2. Eliminate copyright laws, which are also an artificial
> government constraint on the marketplace. Let's turn the IP
> marketplace into a free-for-all with folks taking and
> rebroadcasting what IP they can on the one hand, while the
> content producers flail about to find the appropriate
> anti-copy technology to provide them the protection that
> copyrights will no longer give.
>
> 3. Of course it is a given that any content standards must
> go. Obscenity and pornography? No problem. False
> advertising? Not the government's concern -- let's bring
> back the days of "Doctor" Brinkley advertising his goat
> gland operations. Slander and personal attacks? Let it
> go...who are we to have the government intervene. Payola
> and plugola? Yeah, you know...unrestrained market can
> handle it.
>
> With these simple changes to our regulatory environment, we
> can truly enjoy a broadcast business that epitomizes the
> finest the laissez faire libertarian economics has to offer.
>
Thank you for the kind words.
When you mentioned Dr. Brinkley, something in my memory clicked. After a little searching, I learned that Dr. Brinkley was denied renewal of a broadcast license to push his goat gland cures in 1930, during the Presidency of Herbert Hoover, not FDR.
The agency that denied Brinkley's license renewal was the precursor to the FCC, the Federal Radio Commission, which was formed after passage of the Radio Act of 1927, during the reign of that radical socialist, Calvin Coolidge. The FRC was created to regulate radio use "as the public convenience, interest, or necessity requires."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Radio_Commission