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ICANN Ignores .History and .TV and .MUSEUM
http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/F/htm lF/fairnessdoct/fairnessdoct.htm
FAIRNESS DOCTRINE
U.S. Broadcasting Policy
The policy of the United States Federal Communications Commission that became known as the "Fairness Doctrine" is an attempt to ensure that all coverage of controversial issues by a broadcast station be balanced and fair. The FCC took the view, in 1949, that station licensees were "public trustees," [sound familiar?] and as such had an obligation to afford reasonable opportunity for discussion of contrasting points of view on controversial issues of public importance. The Commission later held that stations were also obligated to actively seek out issues of importance to their community and air programming that addressed those issues. With the deregulation sweep of the Reagan Administration during the 1980s, the Commission dissolved the fairness doctrine.
By the 1980s, many things had changed. The "scarcity" argument [artificial scarcity?] which dictated the "public trustee" philosophy of the Commission, was disappearing with the abundant number of channels available on cable TV. Without scarcity, or with many other voices in the marketplace of ideas, there were perhaps fewer compelling reasons to keep the fairness doctrine. This was also the era of deregulation when the FCC took on a different attitude about its many rules, seen as an unnecessary burden by most stations. The new Chairman of the FCC, Mark Fowler, appointed by President Reagan, publicly avowed to kill the fairness doctrine.
[ICANN ISOC and ARIN are living in 1949 with senile leaders like Cerf, Crocker, Klensin, Bradner, Curran, Carpenter, Baker, and Murai surrounded by the Postel Workers Labor Union of thugs and groupies ready to defend their ivory tower of fairness which no one trusts.]
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