No Fairness Doctrine Needed.....

dieseldiva

Veteran Expediter
They'll bring it through the "back door".....

FCC’s Chief Diversity Officer Wants Private Broadcasters to Pay a Sum Equal to Their Total Operating Costs to Fund Public Broadcasting
Thursday, August 13, 2009
By Matt Cover


Seal of the Federal Communications Commission
(CNSNews.com) - Mark Lloyd, newly appointed Chief Diversity Officer of the Federal Communications Commission, has called for making private broadcasting companies pay licensing fees equal to their total operating costs to allow public broadcasting outlets to spend the same on their operations as the private companies do.

Lloyd presented the idea in his 2006 book, Prologue to a Farce: Communications and Democracy in America, published by the University of Illinois Press.

Lloyd’s hope is to dramatically upgrade and revamp the Corporation for Public Broadcasting through new funding drawn from private broadcasters.

The CPB is a non-profit entity that was created by Congress and that currently receives hundreds of millions of dollars in federal subsidies each year. In fiscal 2009, it is receiving an appropriation of $400 million.

“The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) must be reformed along democratic lines and funded on a substantial level,” Lloyd wrote in his book.

“Federal and regional broadcast operations and local stations should be funded at levels commensurate with or above those spending levels at which commercial operations are funded,” Lloyd wrote. “This funding should come from license fees charged to commercial broadcasters. Funding should not come from congressional appropriations. Sponsorship should be prohibited at all public broadcasters.”

Along with this money, Lloyd would regulate much of the programming on these stations to make sure they focused on “diverse views” and government activities.

“Local public broadcasters and regional and national communications operations should be required to encourage and broadcast diverse views and programs,” wrote Lloyd. “These programs should include coverage of all local, state and federal government meetings, as well as daily news and public issues programming.

“In addition, educational programs for children and adults, and diverse, independent personal and cultural expression should be encouraged,” he wrote.

Dennis Wharton, Executive Vice President of Media Relations at the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) told CNSNews.com that his organization, which represents radio and television broadcasters, supports public broadcasting, but that that support should come from the public in general not broadcasters alone.

“NAB supports federal funding for public broadcasting,” said Wharton. “However, we would oppose efforts to fund public broadcasting through fees assessed against free and local broadcasters who are experiencing the worst advertising recession in 50 years.”

Lloyd wrote Prologue to a Farce while a senior fellow at the liberal Center for American Progress. In that capacity, he co-authored the 2007 report The Structural Imbalance of Political Talk Radio, which concluded that 91% of talk radio programming is conservative and 9% is “progressive.”

The report argued that large corporate broadcasting networks had driven liberals off the radio, and that diversity of ownership would increase diversity of broadcasting voices.
 
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chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
oilerman wrote:

I am UAW member

You say that like you are proud....:rolleyes , i am sure this never happened at GM..lol right....

Video

Video

By the way, my uncle retired from GM as an OILER also, he often talked of doing nothing for most of his day, other then 1 or 2 times a day wheeling a 55 gallon drum of oil with a pump to an old press that needed to be filled....back breaking for sure...:rolleyes:
 

Oilerman1957

Expert Expediter
I am proud, arent you proud to be a driver? I take pride in any job i do, Good for your uncle but i'll bet he wasnt an oiler when he started, have to work your way up to those jobs, just ask him
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
1942 he started as an oiler working strictly on ingersol rand compressors then moved to the pressroom....

as for who's fault it the b/s is, its everyones fault from the management to the line workers and everyone inbetween for not putting a stop to it....the company was afriad of upsetting the union and the workers that did their jobs were afraid of the union thugs,,,the union let it happen and it all came tumbling down...

I grewup in a home home, my dad was a teamster for more yrs then i can remember, from a member to a shop stewart to a committeeman to a business agent and union rep...i have seen and heard all of the stories...unions have overstayed their welcome...they were once for the good of the worker today they are nothing more the a for profit business onto themselves.....

and i am not a driver, like most here i am an owner / operator...a private businessman that runs his own business...and i own and run a few other businesses to...being proud has nothing to do with it, this business is a paid vaction for me, the others are there to generate profit, nothing else...i am hands off as i hore people to perform their jobs...proud nope, profitable, you bet...
 
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chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
its really quite simple, i don't need accolades for what i have done in my life, that can wait for my funeral...those that matter to me know what i am and what i have done...anything more then that isn't needed...besides my ego is big enough to fill a room, i don't need to hear it from others to add to it...:D

And with that it s time to go be the redneck i really am and go eat ribs and watch the nascar race....:D lol that should make Letzrocks day...:D
 

layoutshooter

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
NO government broadcasting, PERIOD!!! We have NO need for a "Pravda" in this country. The government needs to just fade away as much as possible.
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
PBS had a purpose in the 60s/70s/80s when there was no cable and multiple channels. Now with Digital broadcasting, CNN, FNN, Disney and others, PBS should go away.

When we have three networks, limited children's shows and a bunch of non-political non-indoctrination style program, CPB was created to fill a gap that may not have been needed to be filled.

It surely fell under the expansion of the idea that the government should promote and pay for art in this country, which the last time I remember, government sponsored art was no where close of inclusion simply because the self-made system of this sponsorship funding was run by the very people who defined art as an insiders vocation, not to messed with.

The real issues why it still exists is lobbying, the thought of Sesame Street going away brings nightmares to helicopter parents who grew up with it, even though the people have made millions from puppets and much of those millions came from us, the taxpayer.

People don't want to change it, PBS has been the place for people like Bill Moyers and others of his kind to make a career out of their political commentary while not being neutral at all.

It seems that if there is something to be said positive about it, it is that since 1993, for the money we spent, we can hold up PBS and the CPB as one of the shining examples of a government failure.

AND by the way while we are at it, lets ditch the national endowment of the arts - it will help reduce the deficiet in this country greatly.
 

letzrockexpress

Veteran Expediter
I am proud, arent you proud to be a driver? I take pride in any job i do, Good for your uncle but i'll bet he wasnt an oiler when he started, have to work your way up to those jobs, just ask him


So..If I understand what you are saying, you have to work your way up to back breaking work???
 

hdxpedx

Veteran Expediter
Fleet Owner
Russian punk rockers rage against the Putin!!! SAINT PETERSBURG (AFP) – Brashly shouting out his lyrics in crowded, smoky clubs, Alexei Nikonov zeroes in on provocative themes that most musicians here ignore -- authoritarianism and injustice in today's Russia.
Nikonov, the outspoken singer of Saint Petersburg-based punk rock band PTVP, saves much of his venom for Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, referring to him as a "pig" in one of his most strident songs.
"We live in a feudal society," Nikonov fumed in a backstage interview before a recent concert. "Everything is decided by one person, the dictator. The dictator decides everything."
This is not the sort of opinion one can find anymore on Russian television channels or most radio stations, where criticism of the government faded away after Putin became president in 2000.
Though Putin stepped down last year to become prime minister, he is still widely seen as Russia's true ruler.
Meanwhile Russian rock music lost much of its rebellious spirit after being at the forefront of perestroika, the liberal reforms introduced by Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s, musicians and critics say.
Ironically, some of the leading figures in 1980s rock now perform at "patriotic" concerts organised by the Kremlin-- "neutered"!!

sounds familiar! TEA PARTY's going strong and the NEW CZAR's @ FCC trying to SHUT DOWN talk radio!! Heads UP America!
 
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PatriotNow

Not a Member
The government needs to get out of our lives period. Let the strong survive the weak is what is holding us back! Survival of the fittest.
 
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