[HT:
Patterico.] Check out
the headline from the November 14, 2008, column by Los Angeles Times
"media critic"
James Rainey:
Right-wing radio sounds false alarm on 'Fairness Doctrine':
Impose a mandate on broadcasters to balance their political views?
That would be onerous indeed. But memo to Rush: Nobody's asking for
that.
"Nobody's asking for that"? Not quite. As
Patterico and
Hot Air's Ed Morrissey have pointed out with video testimony, Sen.
Chuck Schumer, for one, is quite hip to the idea.
Interestingly, in his article Rainey cites Schumer as "another
lawmaker who has expressed an interest in bringing back the rules." So
what gives with the bogus headline about conservatives' concern being a
"false alarm"? Why does Rainey say this concern is, "as Archie Bunker
liked to say, a pigment of [conservatives'] imagination"?
Well, Rainey seeks to calm conservatives' fears by asserting that
Obama "as a candidate last summer, said unequivocally that he did not
support reimposing the Fairness Doctrine." Apparently, we're all
supposed to feel better by this. Patterico adds an excellent point:
I’m plenty amused by Rainey’s contention that
we need not worry about this because Obama says
he’s not going to pursue it. Obama
said he wasn’t going to run for the Presidency
— and then did. Obama
said he wasn’t going to reject public financing
— and then did.
So you’ll have to pardon me if I’m not
particularly reassured by Barack Obama’s claim
that he’s not going to try to impose the
Fairness Doctrine. Based on his history, that’s
a pretty strong indication that he will.
Right ... on.