By R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. on 7.5.07 @ 12:07AM
Democrats thinks it is up to government to decide what the sides are in a debate.
WASHINGTON -- At first the liberal Democrats were coy about
reports that they wanted to impose government control on talk
radio. When it was reported that Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton had
discussed the matter with Senator Barbara Boxer, both denied it.
That is characteristic. They lied to the public. Now the Democrats
admit to this assault on the First Amendment. There was no point in
continuing to lie when it was time to take action against the Rush
Limbaughs of this world. Washington's energetic newspaper covering
the federal government, the Hill, has quoted Senate
Majority Whip Dick Durbin as saying "It's time to reinstitute the
Fairness Doctrine. I have this old-fashioned attitude that when
Americans hear both sides of the story, they're in a better
position to make a decision."
Well, at least he admits that he is old-fashioned. Unfortunately
for him, history really has moved on. The so-called Fairness
Doctrine, used for years to keep diversity off the airways, was
instituted when all we had in the communications system was radio
and fledgling television. Perhaps in those days it was admissible
to believe that there were only two sides to a "story," as Durbin
puts it. Today there are many sides to stories, and no government
body is equipped to judge what should be on the broadcast media and
what is too marginal.
In other words, it ought not to be left to government to decide
what the sides are in a debate. That is anathema to free debate.
Moreover, we now have cable television, AM and FM radio, Internet
sites, blogs, satellite radio, and more communications systems are
oncoming. Does Durbin really envisage a government regulatory
agency that could fairly monitor all these sources, all these
voices, and not become totalitarian?
I have said for years that American liberals live in a bubble,
an exalted state of megalomania that does not allow them access to
the world as it is or to people who disagree with them. The
consequence has been a historic slide in liberalism's place in
America. It has been losing the political battle for four decades.
Now it is slowly losing the cultural battle. The cultural losses
have been slower because the culture is under the control of
mandarins, not the people as a whole. Wherever democracy -- or the
economic equivalent of democracy, markets -- holds sway, liberalism
usually loses.
This effort by liberals to limit free speech by imposing
government control over radio and presumably over television
reveals just how out of touch the liberals are -- and how impatient
they are with a free society. They would use the so-called Fairness
Doctrine to order talk radio to balance conservative talkers whom
listeners have voted for by tuning them in with presumed liberal
talkers, whom listeners have usually voted against by tuning them
out. Air America, the liberal alternative to conservative talkers,
endowed by millions of dollars from liberal investors, went belly
up last fall because not enough listeners wanted to listen. Now
Durbin and his ilk will force listeners to listen, or at least they
will force talk radio to carry these money-losing talkers.
So our liberal bullies are going to coerce free speech and free
markets. Now who doubts that they are the enemies of freedom in
America?
I suspect that a large number of Americans are doing to be
roused against this blatant act of coercion. Conservatives who
number in the millions have already voted for conservative talk
radio and they will not want to lose their voices on radio or their
right to tune in whom they chose. Independents will recognize the
harshness of the liberal politician's expedient and the assault on
the First Amendment. Perhaps some liberals, too, will recognize the
threat to traditional American freedoms.
The fact is, history's wheel has ground on. There are so many
outlets for free expression. No government agency ought to be put
in control. Let the people decide, the listeners, the viewers, the
bloggers too.
topics:
Television, NATO