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The
Left Tries to Muzzle Free Speech
Bringing back the Fairness Doctrine?...
[by Roger
Aronoff] 2/13/06
George
Clooney has talked about returning to the days when everyone
had the
same "fact level." By that, he means he wants to return to
the "good old days," as he sees them, when "The News" was a
neat package presented from on high by Walter Cronkite, who
fed us the liberal line and disguised it as the only version
of the news worth hearing and objective truth. What Clooney
fears is the increasing number of news outlets geared toward
news of interest to conservatives. These news organizations,
on talk radio, on the Internet and some on cable news, have
undermined the liberal media monopoly that used to exist.
Realizing
they are losing influence and are on the defensive, liberals
are moving to re-establish the Fairness Doctrine, a Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) rule that required broadcasters
to offer equal time to opposing views of those expressed on
the airwaves. The result would be a government bureaucracy
monitoring what goes out on the air and making broadcasters
and commentators reluctant to discuss controversial political
issues.
Accuracy
in Media founder Reed Irvine had opposed the scrapping of the
Fairness Doctrine, believing as many conservatives did at the
time that it actually provided an opportunity for conservative
voices to be heard. But after the Reagan Administration dropped
it, conservatives were able to get their views out and succeed
through de-regulation of the media marketplace. It was a tremendous
victory for true media diversity and free expression. And
that is what scares the liberals.
Indeed, the
dumping of the Fairness Doctrine led to the boom in talk-radio,
which preceded the Internet, the Blogosphere, and the success
of Fox News, a mostly center-right leaning alternative to the
mainstream broadcast and cable networks.
Brian Anderson,
the editor of City Journal, the online publication of the Manhattan
Institute, has written an outstanding
article that examines the implications of so-called "campaign
finance reform" and the efforts to restrict our speech, and
access to the Internet and certain talk-radio shows, all in
the name of fairness and equal access. It is chilling, it is
frightening, and it can potentially happen, though ultimately
I believe it will fail.
Anderson,
also author of the book South Park Conservatives: The Revolt
Against Liberal Media Bias, says that the "irony of campaign-finance
reform is that the 'corruption' it targets seems not to exist
in any widespread sense. Studies galore have found little or
no significant influence of campaign contributions on legislators'
votes. Ideological commitments, party positions and constituents'
wishes are what motivate the typical politician's actions in
office."
He says that
McCain-Feingold, the latest incarnation of campaign finance
reform, is a scary step toward the regulation of politics.
It "makes it a felony for corporations, nonprofit advocacy
groups, and labor unions to run ads that criticize—or even
name or show—members of Congress within 60 days of a federal
election, when such quintessentially political speech might
actually persuade voters." This ultimately led to the explosion
of spending by the so-called 527 groups (for their IRS designation)
and spending, by groups like MoveOn.org, in which the money
is much harder to track, and the accountability is vastly reduced.
Anderson
also explores the move to restrict speech, including talk-radio,
perhaps Fox News, and even the Internet, by talking about "fairness," whether
as part of the Fairness Doctrine, or by utilizing the Federal
Elections Commission (FEC) to determine what writings on the
Internet might unfairly benefit one politician over another.
"What's really
happening," says Anderson, "is that the Left, having lost its
media monopoly, has had trouble competing in a true 'marketplace
of ideas' and wants to shut that marketplace down." To back
this up, he cites Democratic National Committee chairman Howard
Dean, who in a 2003 interview railed against Rupert Murdoch,
the head of Fox. Said Dean: "I believe we need to re-regulate
the media...so we can be sure that the American people get
moderate, conservative, and liberal points of view." And Anderson
cites another mainstream Democrat, Al Gore, who complained
of the hollowing out of the American "marketplace of ideas." He
blamed it on the repeal of the Fairness Doctrine "after which
Rush Limbaugh and other hate-mongers began to fill the airwaves."
Part of the
irony here is that Rupert Murdoch supported Al Gore for president
in 2000, even helping to raise money for him at a high-profile
fundraising event.
To demonstrate
how real this is, Democrats introduced two bills in Congress
last year to reinstate the Fairness Doctrine. Louise Slaughter
of New York state, who introduced one of the bills, said that "Fairness
isn't going to hurt anyone," while she blasted conservative
talk-radio and cable TV, calling them "a waste of good broadcast
time, and a waste of our airwaves."
The effort
to regulate the flow of information is under way. In this case,
liberals are trying to muzzle conservatives. The liberals are
not so liberal when it comes to allowing views that trump their
own. -one-
copyright
2006 Accuracy in Media
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