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Monday, February 04, 2008
Stuart Epperson :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Law of Unintended Consequences: Well meaning efforts to target indecency could come back to haunt us
by Stuart Epperson
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On January 19, 2006, Salem Communication's Chairman of the Board, Stuart Epperson presented testimony to the Senate Commerce committee on the FCC's involvement in regulating decency. It is as relevant today as it was then

On behalf of Salem Communications Corporation, I want to thank Chairman Stevens, Inouye, and the other Members of the Committee for conducting this hearing on the very important issue of Decency in the broadcast and cable industries.

My partner Ed Atsinger and I founded Salem Communications Corporation, which owns and operates commercial radio stations in virtually all the major markets in this country. Salem owns and operates over 100 radio stations, with a strong presence in 24 of the nation’s top 25 markets. These stations provide Christian teaching and talk, contemporary Christian music, conservative news talk, and other formats to millions of listeners each week. The Salem Radio Network syndicates over 150 hours of daily original programming to nearly 1,900 affiliated radio stations in over 200 markets nationwide.

We are in this business primarily because we have a point of view. Moreover, we think our views are well received in the marketplace of ideas. Our editorials emphasize limited government, free enterprise, a strong national defense and traditional moral values. These principles are also, in general, the views of our talk show hosts. We have both local hosts and nationally syndicated hosts. Indeed we syndicate far beyond the reach of the stations we own.

Not only are we conservative in our politics but we also operate within the Judeo-Christian moral framework as did our founding fathers. Given that background, you might assume that we favor legislation now pending in Congress to heighten penalties for violation of content regulations applicable to over-the-air radio and television stations. Not on your life!

Today, we enjoy almost unprecedented freedom in religious broadcasting and public policy discussions that the First Amendment was designed to promote largely because of one historic act in 1987: the FCC repealed the so-called Fairness Doctrine, which had imposed government control of content. (The Fairness Doctrine was quickly dubbed the “Blandness Doctrine” because it resulted in timid, don’t-rock-the-boat broadcasting.) Thankfully, repeated attempts by Congress to disinter the Fairness Doctrine have failed.

Now conservative Christians and other conservatives too are being sucked into applauding measures that would have government much more severely penalizing content infractions and shutting down stations that violate standards, just as many well-meaning conservatives supported the Fairness Doctrine. It’s important to remember that in spite of the overwhelming liberal bias of the large media only one broadcaster ever lost a license because of the Fairness Doctrine—a small Christian radio station in Media, PA.

Don't get me wrong. I deplore the low moral standards of our culture. I am working in every way I know how to change it. I think what is being passed off as entertainment these days is an outrage, but I am serious when I say we support limited government.

Many have cheered the end of Howard Stern’s over-the-air broadcast programs since he switched to paid satellite service to escape constant regulation. I wouldn't listen to his programs if he were the last broadcaster on the face of the earth. I'd rather be without radio, and that is a drastic statement since radio is my business.

Mark my words, however. If impending government action can cause Howard Stern to leave broadcasting for a paid subscription service, imagine a bill that would give the FCC power to so penalize content infractions that after three fines for violating standards set by fiat, a station could lose its license. Let us suppose that Congress, reacting to a justified outrage such as the Super Bowl halftime fiasco and subsequent incidents, passes such a bill. And let us suppose the President, watching the polls that say the public wants action against the filth masquerading as entertainment, signs the bill. (After all, the current President signed the McCain-Feingold campaign law even though he thought it was unconstitutional.)

Sure, right now an FCC in the hands of reasonable people wouldn't do anything drastic. But let us suppose that with this bill on the books the nation has elected a President who strongly believes that the entire government---including the public airways---should be completely stripped of any and all references to the Christian beliefs espoused by our Founding fathers.

Let us also suppose—and it is no stretch of the imagination to believe this—that this future President appoints politically motivated individuals to the FCC who are opposed to conservative viewpoints. With the precedent established that the FCC can revoke licenses over content, these Commissioners could determine that conservative views constitute hate speech and that hate speech equals profanity. For example, we are strongly supporting a Constitutional amendment that defines marriage as a union only between one man and one woman. Let us suppose that these Commissioners declare that such a position is against national policy and constitutes discrimination and hate speech, and violates the prohibition against profanity.

Of course the homosexual lobby would mobilize hundreds, perhaps thousands, of complaints against stations advocating our point of view. Armed with these complaints, the FCC would have no problem finding an excuse for shutting down the voices broadcasting what they would call homophobic views.

But the examples need not be confined to moral and religious questions. Continued...

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About The Author

Stuart Epperson, Chairman of Salem Communications Corporation.

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Judeo-Christian Ethics?

Epperson claims that " we also operate within the Judeo-Christian moral framework". Maybe this is true of his radio stations, but it's certainly not true of Townhall.com. This site is in large part a hate site. The columnists attack a rotating set of target minority groups (gays, muslims, liberals, socials, women, academics, immigrants, and so on) with the intent of inflaming anger and hatred in the readers (who of course eat it up). This hatefulness is not remotely Christian.

He claims that these are "well-intended attempts to target indecency". Unfortunately, the dishonest and inflammatory nature of the articles and commentary demonstrates otherwise.

Hitchhiker
"Many libertarians still use the term fiscal conservatism to denote a core value."

Yes, some of us still see liberty as the traditional core value to conserve.

"lets use social conservative to denote the type you wrote about"

Lately I've heard the phrase running dog liberals to denote that, for there are social conservatives who favor limiting government interference in virtue and values.
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