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The wikipedia page is a good place to start but a few important points.
The fairness doctrine does NOT specify equal time be given to both sides of an issue.
Also the FCC did not have to enforce it, but they could in some cases.
And finally it was abolished in 1987 by the FCC, so broadcast media outlets do not have to follow any such rule.
I believe that with the wide variety of different news sources today it is obsolete. The rule was originally intended to affect markets with limited news access, such as an area with only one TV station.
Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine
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I think Wikipedia has a pretty good discussion of this.
Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine
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| February 06, 2009 08:29 PM |
The fairness doctrine does NOT specify equal time be given to both sides of an issue.
Also the FCC did not have to enforce it, but they could in some cases.
And finally it was abolished in 1987 by the FCC, so broadcast media outlets do not have to follow any such rule.
I believe that with the wide variety of different news sources today it is obsolete. The rule was originally intended to affect markets with limited news access, such as an area with only one TV station.
Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine
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Other Answers (2)
February 06, 2009 07:53 PM
At it's most basic level, any licensed public broadcast(TV or Radio) has to give equal airtime to each party or each candidate. I think Wikipedia has a pretty good discussion of this.
Source(s):
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine
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Public airwaves include more than just radio. There is television as well. ABC, NBC, CBS are all liberal-leaning. On cable there is CNN and MSNBC to counter Fox News, what some believe is a conservative-oriented network.
Besides TV and radio, the vast numbers of newspapers, film, music, and stage are politically liberal. And let's not get started on our education system, but that's another story.
And then there is the web. It's everything, as it should be, and what's interesting gets read and what is not does not. That's the way radio should be.
So Talk Radio is one small part of the entire media that serves our country. It's the only one in which conservatism rules. And that is the reason for the Fairness Doctrine: to silience the one outlet that is working for conservatives.
There are many articles at the moment regarding the Fairness Doctrine as it is currently being pushed hard by several prominent democrats. You can read dozens of recent articles, seemingly coming up on a daily basis with this search:
http://www.ihatethemedia.com/?s=Fairness+Doctrine