That was talk radio during the Fairness Doctrine era. I'm not advocating for or against the Fairness Doctrine, just describing the state of talk radio during that era.
Those who strongly advocated to get away from the Fairness Doctrine expressed a view that licensees should be trusted "to do the right thing" and not be all tangled up in bureaucracy and being held hostage by by gadflies who used the Fairness Doctrine to play legal games.
The state of Talk Radio today could be interpreted to say: Broadcast licensees CAN'T be trusted to do the right thing after all.
But in fairness to the broadcasting industry and folks, we have to say that LISTENERS can't be trusted to do the right thing either.
Any one who got a grade better that "C" in their courses on history and civics has to realize that Talk Radio has become something like an enzyme that has killed the good bacteria in your septic tank, and now the yard "squishes" and stinks as you walk across it.
Yes, I understand and support freedom. If you want to feast on the doctrines of The Right Wing, knock yourself out. But when a communication industry stands by in disbelief and watches one political doctrine suck the life out of discussion of all other political doctrines, how can we groom the next generation to see the full spectrum of political views and discourse?
We had reasonable amounts of civility in broadcasting BEFORE the Fairness Doctrine. When it comes to Talk Radio, taking away the Fairness Doctrine does not appear to have been healthy for civility.