- Sep 4, 2005
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Yes. Thanks. I understand your point.
Which is why I brought up the now defunct fairness doctrine where its demise is ballyhooed by one party.
The one that is using the FCC as a partisan weapon.
I don't know that it's fair to pin it all on republicans in that regard.
It's not as if either party has a sincere interest in true fairness.
Rather, they just target the spaces where their own political opponents had a significant footprint.
In this case, we know that the late night network programming arena is heavily left-leaning. The FCC regulations happened to be the most convenient lever to pull.
Whereas, in the podcasting/social media arena (where conservatives have a much larger footprint), the Biden admin used looming threats of modifying section 230, and establishing a "Disinformation Governance Board" through the DHS as a means of trying to target that.
But the intent was the same, that intent being "use whatever institutional power is at my disposal to make my team look really good and the other team look really bad -- or not let people see them at all"
I just don't know how any measure of sincere fairness could be imposed in the current climate that is riddled with insincere actors who'd be undoubtedly looking for loopholes that would allow them to technically satisfy some sort of equal/time fairness provision on paper, but actually just doubling down in practical application.
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