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#1
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I've been sending this out to mainly progressive/liberal talkshow personalities, news sites and friends all morning and decided to post it here, as well. I know this is probably a pincushion shot across the bow, but its worth a shot, right? The reason I am not contacting conservatives is because for some crazy reason they are against the fairness doctrine, which irritates me because they have as much to gain from it as anyone else. But I digress ..
On with the letter: I've grown increasingly annoyed by corporate media, commercialism and deregulation (specifically the media's constant focus on the Tea Party and Sarah Palin and its tweetingly shrinking soundbite) and I've wanted to do something about the lies and nonsense for years. Upon researching ideas on how to seriously go about some kind of real change I've decided to start a petition to bring back the fairness doctrine since our fearless elected representatives repeatable fail at this process. People such as yourselves, Thom Hartman, Democracy Now! and the rest shouldn't have to struggle to squeeze a voice into our national debate because corporate radio is dominated by the right, who is not only WRONG but is constantly caught lying and slandering what is decent about America, which includes left-leaning politics. Anyway, I don't have to tell you. You know more than I do, of course. I am simply trying to sell this petition and hopefully get you to mention it to your audience: Bring Back the Fairness Doctrine Petition Thank you for your time. Sincerely, Tony, (location) |
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#2
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We classical liberals prefer that the government no exercise control over content in the news.
You imagine that change will be in a direction you like, but the direction of change would vary with the party in charge. The potential for mischief is great.
__________________
Learn French, the universal language of diplomacy! (All foreign invaders will understand "Je me rends!".) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUjGf2Grrus |
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#3
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The idea is for it to be regulated by all voices and opinions instead of the advertisers and FCC gerrymandering. If what you are saying was true to begin with we wouldn't have had all those dead bodies showing up on the evening news during the Vietnam war.
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#4
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The Fairness Doctrine along with section 315 of the Communications Act of 1937 mandates that all voices are heard, by the way. It is through federal law by the government that the government, FCC or advertisers don't have full control over the airwaves.
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#5
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Whatever value the fairness doctrine had would be reduced today by the plethora of sources we have, eg, the internet, cable TV, satellite radio.
A government mandate that all voices be heard, embodies a requirement that some sources subsidize voices which don't pay for air time. This would have the effect of these sources limiting what their air so as to avoid the liability it imposes. This reduces free speech.
__________________
Learn French, the universal language of diplomacy! (All foreign invaders will understand "Je me rends!".) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUjGf2Grrus |
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#6
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It would as it has always been: the internet would be treated as news papers and editorials were back when it was still law.
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#7
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Quote:
The fairness doctrine was in place during the VN war, yet the war thrived for a long time. Fairness Doctrine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
__________________
Learn French, the universal language of diplomacy! (All foreign invaders will understand "Je me rends!".) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FUjGf2Grrus |
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#8
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Well, yeah. But protests persisted and the public was a lot more educated than they are now. Evening newscasters could even voice their opinions on the senselessness of the Vietnam war since it was in-your-face news coverage. It first came out that America was fighting communism but as the tragedies mounted so did civil unrest back home.
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#9
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People who ran for public office had equal time to voice their platforms and concerns under section 315 of the Communication Act of 1937, which I purposed in my petition.
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#10
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And yeah, the Fairness Doctrine and the laws are not perfect, creating a utopian society - nothing will do that. But I sincerely believe it is better than what we have now on commercial radio and television.
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