That's a misrepresentation. The Fairness Doctrine requires that you must present more than just one side of an issue, if you are giving airtime to one opinion or advocate of a particular policy or issue. Which, as I have stated many times, is just basic journalism.

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SCOTUS
The state claimed that the law had been passed to ensure press responsibility. Finding that only freedom, and not press responsibility, is mandated by the First Amendment, the Supreme Court ruled that the government may not force newspapers to publish that which they do not desire to publish.
I have never proposed a complete re-embrace of the Fairness Doctrine exactly where we left it back in the 1980's. It wouldn't work, anyway. The news industry has changed too much and become heavily privatized and interwoven with entertainment. Hey if you wanna go off about how mainstream news crafts only one or two "narratives" about America and it doesn't reflect everyone or all the viewpoints out there, I'm with you. But I fail to see how a fully unregulated for-profit system has made this any better.
You missed the point. Here it is, simplified:
The "fairness doctrine" stipulates both sides of an issue be represented. There are hardly any issues where there are just two sides. Grouping complex issues into only two camps lowers the level of discussion in America.
Your mind is made up that any government involvement in anything is evil.
Wrong.
This is made even worse by the fact that most media in the U.S., both radio and television, is owned by a very very very small number of corporate business interests. That was, in fact, precisely the legal reasoning behind the original equal airtime regulations.
Wrong. This isn't 1949. The available sources of information are numerous.
It would, of course, create a significant obstacle for partisan hackeries posing as major professional news providers. Which seems to be closer to the real cause of your panic over something like equal airtime regulation.
Wrong. It's been used by democratic and republican presidents to suppress opposition views:
Telecommunications scholar Thomas W. Hazlett notes that under the Nixon Administration, "License harassment of stations considered unfriendly to the Administration became a regular item on the agenda at White House policy meetings."
As one former Kennedy Administration official, Bill Ruder, has said, "We had a massive strategy to use the fairness doctrine to challenge and harass the right-wing broadcasters, and hope the challenge would be so costly to them that they would be inhibited and decide it was too expensive to continue."
But I suppose your completely surprised when the government abuses its power!
The FCC also found your opinions about how the fairness doctrine ensured anything good is wrong:
FCC officials found that the doctrine "had the net effect of reducing, rather than enhancing, the discussion of controversial issues of public importance," and therefore was in violation of constitutional principles.
and
In reaching that conclusion the Commission invoked essentially the same grounds as it has in the present action--chiefly, that growth in the number of broadcast outlets reduced any need for the doctrine, that the doctrine often worked to dissuade broadcasters from presenting any treatment of controversial viewpoints, that it put the government in the doubtful position of evaluating program content, and that it created an opportunity for incumbents to abuse it for partisan purposes.
Why? It's simple; if stations risk being fined or punished for not doing the correct thing about airing opinions, then they won't air any opinions.
CR
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