October 9, 2020

"In Democracy Without Journalism? Pickard outlines a series of proposals to create a more robust news media in the United States and thus a more democratic society."

"He calls for the creation of a fund that would support local journalism, especially in the country’s growing number of news deserts, and for stronger privacy restrictions and more regulatory bodies to prevent further consolidation in the industry. All of these policies are perfectly reasonable and, as Pickard shows in the book’s sections on other countries, are currently enjoyed by many other parts of the world. But he also recognizes that the notion of a government-funded media system remains anathema to many in the United States... In his book’s last chapters, Pickard surveys many of the ongoing battles between Republicans and Democrats over the role of the FCC, as well as the prospect of more public subsidies for newspapers, radio, and television. Instead of effective corporate regulation, the Fairness Doctrine—the 1949 replacement for the Mayflower Doctrine, which constrained broadcasters from editorializing—had long served as a consolation prize for media reformers. It required broadcasters to cover socially important issues and to fairly present opposing sides. But even that proved too much for Republicans, who repeatedly framed the policy as an attack on broadcasters’ free speech until it was revoked by Congress in 1987."


So little regard for freedom of speech and what makes America extraordinary. Such easy identification with "other countries" — which ones?! — where government-funded media are "currently enjoyed." You know, it probably is pretty easy for most people to "enjoy" life within the controlled environment of government-funded media. We're already so close to forgetting the free speech tradition.

77 comments:

Sebastian said...

"We're already so close to forgetting the free speech tradition."

We? Forgetting?

No: progs, destroying.

Now that they are achieving cultural dominance, progs want to squelch free speech; and it's not a matter of forgetting but of actively suppressing.

Of course, free speech ain't worth much anyway when in the media and other places, no one has anything deviant to say anymore.

GatorNavy said...

Democracy is mob rule, tribalism, anarchy and ineffective governance. What this person is proposing is one of the tenets of socialism and communism. State run media, that is what this person is proposing.

hawkeyedjb said...

Yeah, when I think of Robust New Media and More Democratic Society the first thing that comes to mind is "more regulatory bodies."

MayBee said...

Enough people are currently ignoring the fact that the party in power in 2016 spied on the campaign of the other party and turned it into a special investigation and "news" story using the FBI and CIA, that I really don't trust another government funded program, least of all one involving the media.

rehajm said...

Not off-topic, I'd like to link to a reminder of the importance of independent voices and the importance of journalists willing and able to expose the dangers and destruction of the United States 'experiment' when journalism and corrupt government actors are allied...

At some point, we need to have a reckoning about the ways that Dems & the media pushed the “Russian collusion” narrative - absent any evidence - and how they’ve refused to revisit it as the narrative has fallen apart.

Just in case you’ve forgotten how bad it was...

John henry said...

Why do so many people think that democracy is such a good thing?

Suppose we actually lived in a "democracy" and 55% of the populace decided to ban gay marriage. Or anything else, for that matter.

Done via a fair, popular, vote and so on.

Or, democratically, repeal the 13th amendment and legalized chattel slavery?

It's "democracy" right? How could anyone complain? At least anyone who thinks that democracy is something desirable.

John Henry

tim maguire said...

The Nation is just working within a standard left-wing framework where their vision of a better life, because it's a vision of a better life, is more important than any other consideration. Which makes sense given that "a better life for all" is the most important goal of humanity. Everything else is just tactics to achieve that goal (the implicit assumption behind the famous Supreme Court-coined aphorism, "the bill of rights is not a suicide pact").

The problem, of course, is that it never occurs to them that the people who oppose them are also pursuing a vision of a better life for all and simply have different ideas of how to achieve it. That is, they can't see beyond their own program and so cannot fairly and productively integrate their ideas with anybody else's.

It's a common problem among partisans and thoroughly baked into left-wing theology.

iowan2 said...

What is different now, from 150 years ago is who owns the platform. While news papers, radio stations, magazines are expensive, they are attainable to the self made entrepreneur.
Media has always been biased. Media with an opposite bias would jump in and add balence.
Today, no person can compete against google, and facebook. Our cruely nuetral host is being harassed by google. Not because she is conservative, but that she refuses to mouth the approve message.

It is not there are no people able to do the work. The problem is the platforms censoring content.
How many here have seen the hand written notes from the FBI General Counsel, laying out the absence of any predicate to investigate, let alone, prosecute General Flynn? That should be leading the news. But google is burying the searches, and facebook is removing posts.
The reporting is there. The documents are there. More investigative reporting is not the answer. Eliminating censorship of the news is the problem, not finding and reporting news.

tcrosse said...

Too bad the ownership of the news media in the USA is in fewer and fewer hands, and those being entertainment conglomerates, thanks to the Telecommunications Act of 1996.

mesquito said...

Well, most legacy media have become agents of the ruling class. Might as well make it official and put them on the payroll.

zipity said...


Journalism is dead.

And unlike Epstein, it was suicide.

gilbar said...

a fund that would support local journalism... and for stronger privacy restrictions and more regulatory bodies to prevent further consolidation in the industry. All of these policies are perfectly reasonable ... are currently enjoyed by many other parts of the world

yes! many (MOST) State Governments have a State Radio. The BBC, Tass, Radio Hanoi
This why NPR was formed: National State Radio; to broadcast the party line, to the party faithful

IF only! If Only we could be More Like Communist China! THEN we'd be able to GET RID OF TRUMP!

Lucid-Ideas said...

NPR Two, Propaganda Boogaloo Part Deux.

Or paraphrasing, "People hate our guts and our industry is dying largely because we killed it so you should pay to keep us employed to sling bile at you everyday. Forever."

Unknown said...

'The importance of accurate information has been all too apparent during the Covid-19 pandemic. Besides charting the devastation of the virus, the World Health Organization has mapped a subsequent “infodemic,” a period of often dangerous and inflammatory misinformation circulating globally'

The word 'China' is not in the article. More propaganda.

gilbar said...

is anyone else completely unsurprised?
that The Nation (a communist organ) would be Demanding a return to Communism ?

JAORE said...


"All of these policies are perfectly reasonable...."

Cue the Lost In Space robot, "Danger Will Robinson, danger!"

Sort of like "Common sense" gun control.

Now who could possibly argue with those?

JZ said...

If it wasn’t for bad ideas they’d have no ideas at all.

Mike of Snoqualmie said...

The Seattle Times has been cheerleading for press subsidies. They've repeatedly published two-page adverts advocating for this plus editorial columns. They're ignoring that once they start receiving government grants, it's the government that will tell them what to publish, or else. They are liberal/leftist paper and employe a SJW columnist, but no conservative columnists. If they were to publish a couple of conservative columnists they could broaden their subscriber base, but the newsroom would probably revolt.

The only worthwhile section of the paper is the comic pages.

rehajm said...

He calls for the creation of a fund that would support local journalism, especially in the country’s growing number of news deserts...

There's presently a news desert created by network, cable and traditional print media. Propaganda and agitrop are not words too strong, too accusatory to accurately describe. Funding them would be counterproductive to our society...

These calls for funding are in response to the US system working correctly. When the populace is rejecting traditional media, those sources being rejected should starve of financial resources and die, while new and improved media emerge and take their place.

A call for taxpayers or US Treasury to prop up media that deserves to die isn't constructive.

Kate said...

NPR in every state. Tiny Desk concerts. Gen Z think they're listening to some cool, cutting edge internet show. The Leftie talking points are just background blurble. Who could object?

If we're going to revisit tired old ideas, what about that Mayflower Doctrine? Remove editorializing. HAHA! I'd love to see them try.

Fernandinande said...

Shorter article: we want more control over "social media".

Fact-checking politicians’ statements can be haphazard,

Rather like the article itself, wherein only non-socialists tell lies.

The misinformation would be laughable if it weren’t so deadly.

If not for misinformation I wouldn't be able to enjoy creative tales of hyper-aggressive super-monster cannibal rats invading homes and destroying cars.

PS: Bat child found in cave!

Levi Starks said...

You want to know how government funded media works?
I’m 61, was a regular NPR listener since about 1984, I tolerated the consistent left wing framing of their news coverage even through Obama’s 2 terms. After Trumps win their coverage (and their choice of what to cover or not) became so openly hostile to anything remotely conservative that it was no longer worth it. NPR is now 24-7 We hate Trump.

Rusty said...

How we can save journalism?
Do your fucking job.

Fernandinande said...

leading to hospitalizations and deaths among people who followed Trump’s advice to drink bleach

I think the authorette meant to say "among people who believed the lie that Trump said to drink bleach, as repeated by the same MSM that we want you to subsidize and which includes me."

Amadeus 48 said...

Shorter version: The Nation is looking for a government handout.

Watch out, The Nation. What the government gives, the government can take away.

TheOne Who Is Not Obeyed said...

"News deserts"? You mean, like those places that have ubiquitous internet access with millions of talking heads spewing information from all over the world out into the ether? Those deserts?

I think he's a overly enamored with the "profession" of journalism and the conceits of its practitioners. Narcissism always finds an argument in favor of others saving it from its own immolation.

mezzrow said...

How about 'Ministry of Truth' as a name for this outfit? Visionary.

This essay has the nuance of a Ted Rall cartoon.

320Busdriver said...

As you have seen Professor, the tech titans power, that which we have freely given to them, is ever broad and increasing and threatens free speech which is exemplified here in your project. How far are we from the point where these powerful people just turn off the speech they dislike to prevent thoughtcrime and promote newspeak? We may already be there.

Birkel said...

The Left, with which you largely identify, hates free speech and would get rid of the First Amendment as it pursues absolute power.

Your inability to express that clearly and disavow the broad Left and all its totalitarian impulses means you will get what you do not want.

And you will be shocked when they come for you and your neighbor hood.

traditionalguy said...

It’s the internet, stupid.Too many truth tellers online to allow a controlled alternate reality narrative. Change nothing.

Joe Smith said...

Another slush fund and wealth transfer for SJW layabouts...

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

"All of these policies are perfectly reasonable.

No.

That phrase is the tell all sign that all speech that goes against "the party" will be suppressed.
oh but, it's all perfectly reasonable, you see. It will be "funded" too. by who? Tech oligarchs with agendas and access to power? tax payers, kept down by the very forces at play?

Free speech doesn't need a fund. Free speech and honest curious journalism come from honest people. Current journalism is filled with dishonest immoral people with agendas, on the take.

Mark O said...

Biden's new 15 person Supreme Court can find "hate speech" in the First Amendment, gut the Second Amendment, and find it Constitutional to make opposition political parties illegal.

One other thing, Supreme Court packing will have the effect of lessening, if not ending faith in the Federal Judicial System. It will be a sign that the Federal Judiciary is a political branch.

Oh, Barr and Durham failed us.

mikee said...

Or, perhaps, a company could be formed using entrepreneurial capital to present the Who, What, When, Where, Why of local, state, national and international events, for public consumption at a small subscription price. If enough people subscribe, perhaps advertisements could be sold to bolster the bottom line. We could call this "news" as it would be "new" every day.

An idea so crazy, it just might work.

As long as nobody starts committing journalism, i.e., the creation of fables, narratives, from the perspective of only one subset of the population, to propagandize and gain social and political power, this sort of venture could go on for decades.

Todd said...

"He calls for the creation of a fund that would support local journalism, especially in the country’s growing number of news deserts, and for stronger privacy restrictions and more regulatory bodies to prevent further consolidation in the industry.

Sure, there is NOTHING better to ensure a free and unrestrained press than Government funding!

Skeptical Voter said...

You know what government funded media looks like? NPR. Do I want another heaping helping of NPR? I don't think so.

wendybar said...

Free speech for you, but not conservatives. Censorship by Progressives has taken over.

mikee said...

If you want to see how an individual right is gutted, read the dissents in the Supreme Court case of Heller v DC. After voting 9-0 that sure, certainly, no doubt at all, the 2nd Amendment guarantees an individual right, the Court split 5-4 on whether the right could, would or should ever be exercised by any individual. Four Justices supported essentially outright banning of exercise of the right of self defense using a firearm by anyone, ever. Stevens and Breyer wrote separate dissents. Both are amazing.

Bizzaro World, Through the Looking Glass, on LSD with a coke chaser amazing. Go, read . And know that the US can be turned into a nation without any "rights" other than paying taxes and silently obeying, overnight.

Temujin said...

The Fairness Doctrine in the hands of Democrats in the 90s, was going to be used as a censor for those opinions who could not be 'balanced out' with opposing voices on the same network. It was brought out as a club when Democrats were trying to figure out what to do about the problem of Rush Limbaugh. This was pre-Facebook, pre-Twitter, pre-social media. It was also just around the time that Fox News came into being.

Prior to Rush and Fox, the Left had complete control over the national press. (with the possible exception of the opinion pages at the WSJ.) Having a different opinion hit the airwaves was bad enough. But the marketplace showed then, and still does, that it wants that other opinion out there.

We currently have government funded news. NPR. PBS. If left to the marketplace, both would be long gone. The market has seen it and does not watch it.

In the UK the BBC is not just known for crime dramas. It is more known for a very pronounced point of view. Similar to CNN here, but far more professional in it's presentation., AND it's 'government approved'! Is this what the author has in mind? Keep the point of view, but give it some governmental stamp of approval?

The way to improve our news and journalism is not to create local, government funded, news teams. It is to clean out the schools, especially the J-schools so that they actually teach how to report, how to research, and what the meaning of the word 'objective' is. The current mess in Journalism and news delivery can be directly attached to what is being taught at those schools.

I Have Misplaced My Pants said...

To these people, journalism = whacking material.

PubliusFlavius said...

Censoring Speech/Thought the every day soup du jour in repressive regimes.

Didn't the CCP do that the other night?

Do we wanna be backstabbing bastards that lie to your face?

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20201008/13041045471/china-micro-censors-vp-debate-most-hamfisted-way.shtml

mikee said...

If you want to see how an individual right is gutted, read the dissents in the Supreme Court case of Heller v DC. After voting 9-0 that sure, certainly, no doubt at all, the 2nd Amendment guarantees an individual right, the Court split 5-4 on whether the right could, would or should ever be exercised by any individual. Four Justices supported essentially outright banning of exercise of the right of self defense using a firearm by anyone, ever. Stevens and Breyer wrote separate dissents. Both are amazing.

Bizzaro World, Through the Looking Glass, on LSD with a coke chaser amazing. Go, read . And know that the US can be turned into a nation without any "rights" other than paying taxes and silently obeying, overnight.

alanc709 said...

Yeah, more government will fix journalism. The comedy never ends.

Howard said...

What we need is affirmative action for conservative journalists

Michael K said...

Suppose we actually lived in a "democracy" and 55% of the populace decided to ban gay marriage. Or anything else, for that matter.

63% of California voters supported Prop 8 which did just that. A gay federal judge ruled it unConstitutional, after which he married his gay lover. That, of course, before the takeover.

tim in vermont said...

What would be nice would be a country withough “Journ-o-lism” but good luck with that.

Bob Smith said...

If we had a real news media there are dozens if not hundreds of pols currently prospering who would be in soup lines. But we don’t.

Anonymous said...

PBS is this weird public radio, paid for by tax dollars, that is consistently to the left. Why is that acceptable?

Instead of defunding PBS or attacking PBS, Republicans should put a conservative in charge of PBS. It doesn't have to be Rush Limbaugh. Although that would be hysterical. But why not Dennis Miller or Tucker Carlson or anybody at all who is right of center?

It's bizarre that there are no right-wing opinions on PBS. Liberals just claim ownership of it. They would be outraged if a Republican was put in charge of PBS and, oh my God, added some diverse thought to that enterprise.

hombre said...

There is no journalism in the “mainstream,” only DNCPravda which will be subsidized by the government when the Democrats take over.

I’m glad we had the Revolution, but I’m not sure that still being governed by the British would be worse than being governed by the Democrats. Either way the Constitution, including the First Amendment, would be passé.
.

rcocean said...

The Press in the USA marches and lockstep and has no regard for the Truth. They are an arm of the DNC. I suggest if they want funding, they ask the Democratic Party.

Kevin said...

Such easy identification with "other countries" — which ones?!

"Other countries already do this" is the siren call of collectivism.

"No country has ever done this" is the music of freedom.

rcocean said...

The internet has caused a decline in newspapers for several reasons. Before, local papers would run syndicated columnists and national wire services. Occasionally, they would have their own reporter in DC that would write stories. All their national editorials just echoed the NYT or WaPo.

Once the internet came along there was no need to read your local paper for international or national news. You could go on line and read the AP wire or the NYT yourself. So, their only reason for existing was local news, which most of them weren't doing anyway. I'd throw in that most local papers were owned by a Chain. IRC, the publishing company for USA Today owned almost 1,000 newspapers. So if these papers go out of business, who cares? They weren't locally run or locally focused. To hell with them.

rehajm said...

More off topic than on topic, but not completely off topic:

Moderator Steve Scully deleted this tweet. Neither he nor the Presidential Debate Commission have addressed why he was asking a Trump loather for counsel on responding to Trump. Horrific problem here for the "independent" debate commission, in their worst year ever.

bagoh20 said...

Isn't higher education supposed to be where the the government supports free exchange of ideas and information? What went so wrong there to the point that it is now exactly the opposite of that. That's what would happen with this too. The left would target, infiltrate and destroy. How fair and balanced is PBS, or The BBC? If your solution is government support and control, you already doomed it to the poison of the left.

Critter said...

The only way to improve journalism is through competition, just as in every other activity. But education has dumbed down people so they don't know how to read with discernment. Why would people with poor reading skills and little depth interest want another source of information? Already we see leftist outlets (CNN, MSNBC) blacking out coverage of news that disrupts their narratives.

The "American" way to grow the number of media outlets would be to provide tax incentives for such startups combined with strong anti-trust rules that prevent consolidation. The stumbling block is how to get income from on-line news sources. It's a big issue that most newspapers have not solved, which has been a big factor in industry consolidation.

rehajm said...

How can we save journalism/ How about a little independence...

'Independent' Presidential election debate moderator queries former (fired) White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci for advice on responding to Trump. Then a Scully surrogate employs the Joy Reid defense by claiming, without any personally known evidence, Scully's Twitter account was hacked...

Moderator Steve Scully deleted this tweet. Neither he nor the Presidential Debate Commission have addressed why he was asking a Trump loather for counsel on responding to Trump. Horrific problem here for the "independent" debate commission, in their worst year ever.

For starters, hows about reviewing the meaning and importance of independent...

John henry said...

Does he say how he would feel about a president Trump controlling the media? No? Didn't think so.

These folk who want govt control of media, financed by the public at gunpoint* always assume that it is their side who gets control.

That's not always the case.

*All taxes are collected at gunpoint. It seldom comes to that but the threat is always there. Remember the guy in NYC killed by cops for selling untaxed cigarettes?

John Henry

Big Mike said...

Zipity (8:32) wins the thread!

Michael K said...

Blogger Howard said...
What we need is affirmative action for conservative journalists


No, they are doing pretty well, just not in what you read. Talk radio and alternative media. You just don't see it. You think "The Nation" is moderate.

John henry said...

In the article does the author address how he personally feels about accepting money taken at gunpoint?

Would he be willing to hold the gun himself and bypass the middleman?

See Bastia "The Law"

He asks why it is OK to use the govt to take someone's money using threat of force but not ok for an individual to do the same thing.

John Henry

John henry said...

In the article does the author address how he personally feels about accepting money taken at gunpoint?

Would he be willing to hold the gun himself and bypass the middleman?

See Bastia "The Law"

He asks why it is OK to use the govt to take someone's money using threat of force but not ok for an individual to do the same thing.

John Henry

elkh1 said...

Govt. paid and totally owned journalists' nirvana is in China where journalists are free to create party line news, pesky righties dare not ridicule them. Go west, go west, you will get there.

rhhardin said...

The news media goes for viewers, which means women, since actual news is uninteresting in general.

John henry said...

Almost 30 years old but a classic. Michael Lewis (money ball, the big short and others) goes to Columbia U to find out what's the point of j school.

Little to none is his answer.

Lewis is always a joy to read on any subject.


https://newrepublic.com/article/72485/j-school-confidential

John Henry

elkh1 said...

China is the nirvana where journalists are paid and are free to create news toeing the party line which is what American journalists are doing here. But they are protected from righties' ridicules. So, go west, American journalists, go west, seek your nirvana beyond the sea.

TrespassersW said...

Brilliant idea, Skippy. What the government funds, the government controls.

DarkHelmet said...

I volunteer to be the one who decides what constitutes a 'news desert.' I think both NY City and Washington D.C. qualify. They seem to get only propaganda.

Also, I should received generous taxpayer support for my pontifications. Fair's fair.

Big Mike said...

The news media would dearly, DEARLY, love to go back to the days when they could function as gatekeepers for the news, but they can’t, for two reasons. First is the Internet, formerly characterized by Hillary Clinton and her sycophants as “a vast right-wing conspiracy,” where there is no reasonable way to impose a censorship regime on it and thus even us deplorables will have access to information that these alleged journalists would rather we didn’t know. Second, is that no one trusts today’s breed of journalists to be even remotely objective. Gone are the days when Wally-the-Wimp Cronkite could turn a hard-fought US victory in the Tet Offensive into a humiliating American defeat with a single sentence. Now you see burning buildings behind an on-the-scene TV news reporter trying to push the “mostly peaceful protests” line and you know that the entire news organization that the reporter belongs to must be full of it.

And that’s even leaving out alleged journalist Nina Burleigh, twenty-plus years ago, offering in print to get on her knees and fellate a President on whom she is supposed to be reporting.

Big Mike said...

What we need is affirmative action for conservative journalists

Yesterday Howard suggested we defund the FBI and today he writes this. See, Howard, even a maleducated fool like you can get good ideas from hanging around Althouse threads.

gerry said...

Yeah, when I think of Robust New Media and More Democratic Society the first thing that comes to mind is "more regulatory bodies."

Thew first thing I think of it more dead bodies, as demonstrated by Communism during the 20th century. We don't want to go there.

Anthony said...

Levi Starks said...
You want to know how government funded media works?
I’m 61, was a regular NPR listener since about 1984, I tolerated the consistent left wing framing of their news coverage even through Obama’s 2 terms.


You did "better" than me, they totally lost me after Bush was elected. Actually, I only listened to Talk of the Nation for a few years. Ray Suarez was actually really good in that role, even though he was definitely a Lefty and it soaked through at times. But he knew his stuff and tried to be balanced. Succeeded most of the time.

Still, every other day the topic was Gay This or Gay That, balanced out by Palestinians This or Palestinians That. They don't call it National Palestinian Radio for nuthin'.

Abominably stupid callers as well. Totally disavowed me of the notion that Liberals were the intellectuals (except in so far as 'intellectual' has come to mean 'abominably stupid'). The host and a guest were having a good laugh about Fidel Castro's latest election win with 99.5% of the vote and some ditz called in to castigate them and that he really really did get that freely and fairly because The People Love him so much!

JAORE said...

I'm in 100% agreement that NPR leans so far left that their elbow is on the ground. I quit it years ago.

But, even if they were not, why the blue blazes is "Public Radio" a function of the Federal government?

stlcdr said...

John henry said...
Why do so many people think that democracy is such a good thing?

Suppose we actually lived in a "democracy" and 55% of the populace decided to ban gay marriage. Or anything else, for that matter.

Done via a fair, popular, vote and so on.


This was what was done with Proposition 8 is California. It passed a majority (I.e. democratically decided) that marriage was between a man and a woman. With nearly 80% turnout, it passed 52 to 47. Yay! Democracy at work. So you would think. Violence ensued against those who supported the democratically passed proposition. It was eventually deemed unconstitutional when a favorable judge was found.

Democracy isn’t fair - but just this time. Otherwise, democratically selection, by a majority vote, is the best way to go for those on the left, only when it suits them.





Martin said...

I have a better idea--overturn Sullivan. v. New York Times, and replace it with standards that require that anyone, "news media" or otherwise, make reasonable efforts to ascertain the truthfulness of anything actually or potentially hamful that a reasonable eprson would hold they did not indpendently corroborate to a degree consistent with its nature.

IOW, shift the burden from being on tyhe person defamed to prove malice, to the defamer having to prove truthfulness or at least reasonable efforts to confirm truthfulness before promulgation.

Just go back to the old Common Law and be more like the UK, which has a far more robust media environment than the monoculture of lies the US has evolved into. There will have to be some cases to better define the exact parameters, but as it would induce news media and others to have SOME concern for truth, it would be far better than what we have now.

Martin said...

I have a better idea--overturn Sullivan. v. New York Times, and replace it with standards that require that anyone, "news media" or otherwise, make reasonable efforts to ascertain the truthfulness of anything actually or potentially hamful that a reasonable eprson would hold they did not indpendently corroborate to a degree consistent with its nature.

IOW, shift the burden from being on tyhe person defamed to prove malice, to the defamer having to prove truthfulness or at least reasonable efforts to confirm truthfulness before promulgation.

Just go back to the old Common Law and be more like the UK, which has a far more robust media environment than the monoculture of lies the US has evolved into. There will have to be some cases to better define the exact parameters, but as it would induce news media and others to have SOME concern for truth, it would be far better than what we have now.

RMc said...

the country’s growing number of news deserts

I read this as "news desserts" and thought, "Gimme a slice of NPR with CNN ice cream. Then bring me a blowtorch."

Bunkypotatohead said...

National Public Internet, pushed out to every cell phone in the country, with no way to block it.