<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote>Originally posted by: Craig234
Apart from the real issue of the fairness doctrine, I see righty after righty making a basic error in their rhetoric - calling the fairness doctrine "government control of the media".
That's hyperbole that confuses the "communism", yet another type of error made by piasabird, of a govermment control like Pravda under the USSR, with the fairness doctrine enforced by the US government in the 1960's and 1970's (and early 80's).
It just goes to show how wrong they are on the basic concept involved. Their equating *any* government role in the content of media, such as the fairness doctrine, with the government completely running the media can be seen as foolish when you notice the implications of the 'no government at all' standard.
Who do they think bans porn on Saturday morning tv? Who do they think enforces laws punishing illegal slander on evening tv? Who do they think enforces the laws for copyrighted material from being broadcast, protecting the creation of content? On and on, there's a government role that's helpful. But they're ignorant ideologues, so...
If PBS didn't exist and were suggested, they'd go nuts arguing how horrible an idea it was because it would turn the nation into the USSR, it's a communist thing to do, it'd create the total government propagandization of the people at worst, and irresponsibly compete with private, makret-drive media at best, and so on.
The fact that PBS has existed for decades with all of that false, with nice nature shows, the best documentary series on TV Frontline, good childrens' programming and such, disproves their ideological claims, but doesn't make them notice it. Instead, they'd *still* be happy, for the most part, to see it shut down for ideological reasons.
Don't ever accuse them of being rational.
I suggest they watch more PBS, and learn how they're wrong.</end quote></div>
I don't think you get the picture. You can have non-partisan arguments about banning porn on tv. You can have non-partisan arguments about the regulation of indecent words on radio, tv, etc.
You can have the government enforce indecency in a non-partisan way.
You cannot push a law with a partisan backing expecting it to be non-partisan. It doesn't work for either side.
And still, nobody is going to dare answer the previous question on who decides.
Doesn't that seem wrong? America decided that conservative talk radio show are good in the ratings, and you want to regulate what listeners want?