Congressional Black Caucus daughter to police press?

Theowl32

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Dec 8, 2013
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New Obama initiative tramples First Amendment protection

BY BYRON YORK | FEBRUARY 20, 2014 AT 5:48 PM


The First Amendment says "Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press…" But under the Obama administration, the Federal Communications Commission is planning to send government contractors into the nation's newsrooms to determine whether journalists are producing articles, television reports, Internet content, and commentary that meets the public's "critical information needs." Those "needs" will be defined by the administration, and news outlets that do not comply with the government's standards could face an uncertain future. It's hard to imagine a project more at odds with the First Amendment.

The initiative, known around the agency as "the CIN Study" (pronounced "sin"), is a bit of a mystery even to insiders. "This has never been put to an FCC vote, it was just announced," says Ajit Pai, one of the FCC's five commissioners (and one of its two Republicans). "I've never had any input into the process," adds Pai, who brought the story to the public's attention in a Wall Street Journal column last week.

Advocates promote the project with Obama-esque rhetoric. "This study begins the charting of a course to a more effective delivery of necessary information to all citizens," said FCC commissioner Mignon Clyburn in 2012. Clyburn, daughter of powerful House Democratic Rep. James Clyburn, was appointed to the FCC by President Obama and served as acting chair for part of last year. The FCC, Clyburn said, "must emphatically insist that we leave no American behind when it comes to meeting the needs of those in varied and vibrant communities of our nation -- be they native born, immigrant, disabled, non-English speaking, low-income, or other." (The FCC decided to test the program with a trial run in Ms. Clyburn's home state, South Carolina.)

The FCC commissioned the University of Southern California Annenberg School for Communication & Journalism and the University of Wisconsin-Madison Center for Communication and Democracy to do a study defining what information is "critical" for citizens to have. The scholars decided that "critical information" is information that people need to "live safe and healthy lives" and to "have full access to educational, employment, and business opportunities," among other things.

The study identified eight "critical needs": information about emergencies and risks; health and welfare; education; transportation; economic opportunities; the environment; civic information; and political information.

It's not difficult to see those topics quickly becoming vehicles for political intimidation. In fact, it's difficult to imagine that they wouldn't. For example, might the FCC standards that journalists must meet on the environment look something like the Obama administration's environmental agenda? Might standards on economic opportunity resemble the president's inequality agenda? The same could hold true for the categories of health and welfare and "civic information" -- and pretty much everything else.

"An enterprising regulator could run wild with a lot of these topics," says Pai. "The implicit message to the newsroom is they need to start covering these eight categories in a certain way or otherwise the FCC will go after them."

The FCC awarded a contract for the study to a Maryland-based company called Social Solutions International. In April 2013, Social Solutions presented a proposal outlining a process by which contractors hired by the FCC would interview news editors, reporters, executives and other journalists.

"The purpose of these interviews is to ascertain the process by which stories are selected," the Social Solutions report said, adding that news organizations would be evaluated for "station priorities (for content, production quality, and populations served), perceived station bias, perceived percent of news dedicated to each of the eight CINs, and perceived responsiveness to underserved populations."

There are a lot of scary words for journalists in that paragraph. And not just for broadcasters; the FCC also proposes to regulate newspapers, which it has no authority to do. (Its mission statement says the FCC "regulates interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite and cable…")

Questioning about the CIN Study began last December, when the four top Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee asked the FCC to justify the project. "The Commission has no business probing the news media's editorial judgment and expertise," the GOP lawmakers wrote, "nor does it have any business in prescribing a set diet of 'critical information.'"

If the FCC goes forward, it's not clear what will happen to news organizations that fall short of the new government standards. Perhaps they will be disciplined. Or perhaps the very threat of investigating their methods will nudge them into compliance with the administration's journalistic agenda. What is sure is that it will be a gross violation of constitutional rights.


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It really is happening folks. Slowly but surely, it is happening.
 
The First Amendment says "Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press…" But under the Obama administration, the Federal Communications Commission is planning to send government contractors into the nation's newsrooms to determine whether journalists are producing articles, television reports, Internet content, and commentary that meets the public's "critical information needs." Those "needs" will be defined by the administration, and news outlets that do not comply with the government's standards could face an uncertain future. It's hard to imagine a project more at odds with the First Amendment.

this is all i needed to read, actually, when i got to this point, "Those "needs" will be defined by the administration," i knew right off, this is one of the purest forms of communism ! :up: :clap2:
 
Weeeeeee. This one is really bouncing off the walls of that echo chamber.

Why would the hypocrites on the left care about the freedom of the press?

Same group that goes ape shit over Nixon spying on 5 democrats and could not give one shit less about their commie in chief spying on all of America.

The fact is it is these type of ignorant assholes that has been used as the pawns they to are to destroy everything that made the country greater than every other country. The fact that so many in ALL of those other countries try to get here as opposed to the other way around is the other obvious clue that is lost on these pathetic left wing, uneducated losers.


Echo chamber is just another little term they all share with each other. Big oil, Tea bagger, right winger, KKK, mouth breathers, are the other ones.
 
I don't care who you are, if you support this "CIN" move by the FCC in any fashion, you are not American. You are a Socialist/Communist.

Every news room and every Journalist in America should refuse to participate in the survey or allow any representative into their building.

Government control of the Press had been, up until the Obama Administration, taboo. IIRC, the closest any administration has every come has been to refuse to give interviews to certain outlets and Pentagon Papers case. Sure every administration has called a paper or network and asked them to sit on a story... but that isn't going into their newsroom with the FCC to "review" how they select their stories and the way they are going to cover them.


This should be headline news everywhere. The outcry of anger from Americans and the Press should be deafening. As much as I detest NBC and MSNBC, I would never support a Republican President sending the FCC in to "review" how they run their news divisions. The people will decide if they like the product, not the Government.
 
Nobody is controlling the press.

Stop being silly.

It is definitely an attempt to control through intimidation. Remember the FCC is the licensing body for all Broadcasters.

It is for this reason that I have stated before, and on other threads yesterday and the day before, that I don't believe the FCC or any such alphabet soup should be allowed to make rules that have the affect or effect of law. That only Congress should be able to do that and the President would have to sign off on it.

That goes double for programs like this. There is no way this could get through Congress and if it weren't for a Republican on the FCC board, we wouldn't know about this right now.
 
Come on, it's a free Country, buy your own Radio network and broadcast whatever you choose. Oh, but you tried that and even had George Soros financing it, and it failed!

You Libtard Democrats tried "Progressive Radio" and was soundly rejected by the PEOPLE! Now you want to force Conservative Radio to feed your garbage to the PEOPLE!

What is it about, "THE PEOPLE DON'T WANT YOUR COMMIE PROPAGANDA!" don't you Leftist retreads get?? GEEEEEEEZE you guys are some special kind of stupid!!
 
Weeeeeee. This one is really bouncing off the walls of that echo chamber.

Funny....liberals are off the wall about this just as are the conservatives.

However, DEMOCRATS refused to speak out on it seeing as the President initiated it.

Which means YOU and others that are not concerned about this are nothing more than sheep following their party.

Quite fucking pathetic.
 
Nobody is controlling the press.

Stop being silly.

The FCC can pull a license.

The FCC has the right to have a network audited on command.

Anything "voluntary" is not truly voluntary.

Open your fucking eyes. There is no reason for this...none whatsoever.

Also....apparently it will cost taxpayers 900K a year.

That would buy a hell of a lot of winter coats for poor children.
 

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