Originally posted by: shrumpage
2. The double standard. Talk radio has to much power?, yet Craig cites Cronkite as swaying national opinion on the Vietnam war, and that this was a good thing. Its okay for Cronkite to do it but Rush to sway opinion? Thats bad.
What is your question? Cronkite was under the fairness doctrine, and Limbaugh isn't.
If you are arguing that the fairness doctrine prevents any political speech, then your equating the influence of Cronkite to Limbaugh above proves you wrong.
On the other hand, Cronkite's Viet Nam comments were an exception, a few minutes under 1% of his broadcast, while Limbaugh spouts opinion for thousands of hours, ~100% of his.
You are bouncing around unable to pick a position - one minute, the fairness doctring prevents political speech, the next you are aguing it was just as strong as now.
The simple fact is that the right-wing monied interests have created a market for political speech, with years and billions of effort, that didn't exist then.
You need to be careful on cause and effect, because the political efforts of right-wing leaders, including their money, are what caused a lot more than the fairness doctrine.
6. Why the Hell did you bring up Ann Colter? She wouldn't be affected by this - she doesn't have a radio or TV show. She is just a writer.
Because we were comparing the leading commentators under the fairness doctrine and now, and I wanted to point out that the culture the current atmosphere with the new huge right-wing radio market has inflenced has allowed for the rise of an Ann Coulter to be a leading national voice. It seems the sort of poisonous effect of the incubation of the right-wing nonsense for the millions who are immersed in it, with little outside (and more accurate) information.
I agree with you - if I didn't say it already - that she is not an issue for the fairness doctrine directly, much.
7. Corp control vs. Content. You don't like Corps owning everything in a market, fine - i can get on board with that. But you need to separate the two issues. Government regulating ownership is much different then regulating speech and content.
We may find common ground here. I, too, prefer the government to protect diversity, and oppose consolidation, of ownership than to have any hand in the content.
(With exceptions, e.g, PBS).
The last thing I want is the government having the power to be a propagandizing voice in the media. For all the right-wing noise, PBS avoids that role.
We may or may not agree that it's a problem whether the media are dominated either by the government or by corporate interests.
I want corporations to have 'a voice', I want little old ladies to have 'a voice', and everyone in-between.