<<You speak of deeds and copyright law, but you're missing the obvious point here that in most cases people buy their land and property from one another, not a license from the government. >>
You obviously don't know much about how people buy real property. In Canada, they pay a lawyer to conduct a search of title in the registry office and make sure that when their money is handed over when the deal closes, their own deed will be registered at the same time, same as all the other deeds were before them. In the U.S.A. they buy through a title insurance company, whose own lawyers can certify the title to the property because they have already conducted the necessary searches in the registry of deeds. In both cases, the government-maintained registry is the key to the entire transaction.
<<And the McDonald's logo is covered by trademark law, not copyright. >>
Big deal. So I got the name of the law wrong. The principle is the same - - the big evil government maintains the framework against which the right to the property is registered and through which any infringements are prosecuted. If it's a trademark, my argument is even stronger, since the Big Bad Government has to maintain a searchable registry of trade marks and as a matter of fact I think it also maintains a copyright registry as well.
<<And again, McDonald's did not buy the logo or a license for it from the government. They paid the government to protect the trademark.>>
So what? That's like saying they built their own house and didn't buy it from the government. Don't matter where they got it or how. The logo they created wouldn't be worth shit if every Mom and Pop greasy spoon could put one on their roof. The logo's value comes from its restricted use, and that depends on a whole governmental infrastructure of trade mark registry offices and judicial anti-infringement sanctions.
<<So again I put forth the question: Is government selling frequency privileges really the only way to solve this problem? I think it is not so.>>
NO, of course not. A better solution would be anarchy of the airwaves. Whoever has a transmitter, let him broadcast on whatever frequency he chooses, and may the guy with the strongest transmitter win. For that matter, why paint lanes on highways, or even centre lines? Fucking commies trying to restrict my right to drive wherever the fuck I wanna drive, and on the public highway no less! Can't they just trust me and the other drivers to use our common sense and work it all out ourselves? Well guess what? NEWSFLASH, Prince! That's the way it was in the beginning - - unregulated. Land ownership was unregulated. Roads were unregulated. Broadcasting was unregulated. And it just. Didn't. Work. There was anarchy, land grabs, claim jumping, car crashes, people getting killed and some kind of order arose, had to be imposed. By the only organization that could claim the undivided universal obedience of all the stakeholders and be held accountable for exercising its jurisdiction impartially. The [evil wasteful oppressive . . . etc.] Government.
<<I am sure you did not mean the common good according to Dr. Dobson, but I suspect you meant the common good according to you if no one else. My point being that the common good is not an objective concept. So when you say the government must exercise its power for the common good, the question is, according to whose opinion of what constitutes the common good? It's all well and good to assume that diversity of opinion is something most people agree upon, but even that is vague. What constitutes a diversity of opinion? And what constitutes a threat to society? >>
Nice attempt to change the subject, Prince. The subject is broadcasting, and how the concentration of ownership narrows the range of opinions broadcast. Specifically, in the context of a seeming preponderance of extreme right-wing opinion on talk-show radio. The common good came up in the narrow context of: it is consistent or inconsistent with the common good that the range of opinion expressed through radio broadcasting on publicly-licensed airwaves be a wide range of opinions from left to right, or a narrow range of opinions, either left wing or right-wing? In setting broadcast licensing policy, should the government stick to a policy which the study shows has tended to narrow down the range of opinions expressed, or should it revert to a policy which had led to a broader range of opinions expressed.
You wanted to turn the discussion into a more general one of who should be allowed to determine the common good but that's a fool's game because it would involve us in an across-the-board free-for-all, dragging in foreign policy, abortion rights, freedom of expression, racial equality, etc., etc., etc. For the record, and just so that you'll know, I happen to be the person who should be allowed, in general, to determine the common good, simply because I know best, but for the purposes of this discussion, I think all that we have to determine is whether or not it's in the common interest for the range of radio broadcast opinion to be a wide range from left to right or a narrow range of right-wing opinion.
<<You're the one who insists that Cuba is fully justified in abridging the right of free speech for Cuban citizens to protect "the Revolution." So obviously you're willing to see some diverse opinions silenced given certain situations. >>
True.
<<So am I supposed to trust you to determine the the common good? Or to determine when certain diverse opinions should not be given opportunity to be heard?>>
Of course not. This is, after all, a debating forum. You already know what I think about free speech here and in Cuba. So the question is, what do YOU think? Given that the government IS going to be licensing radio broadcast frequencies now and for the foreseeable future, should that licensing power be exercised as it has been in the recent past, which the study shows has tended to concentrate ownership and narrow the ideological range of broadcast opinions - - or should it revert to the way in which it had previously exercised its discretion, which the study shows led to a diversity of ownership and a wider ideological range of broadcast opinions?
<<So we gloss over evidence to the contrary by acknowledging it exists and then dismissing it as irrelevant. Wow. Now it's my turn to be not impressed.>>
The contrary evidence that I "glossed over" was your anecdotal (and, IIRC, completely undocumented) "evidence" which always exists in any empirical study that shows less than 100% adherence to a rule. It's exactly as if you commented on a study of the effectiveness of seat-belts by quoting stories of un-belted occupants who survived crashes which killed belted occupants. You can't undermine the effectiveness of a professional, well-conducted study by citing individual examples falling outside the general conclusions of the study. The study itself recognizes that its conclusions apply in most but not all cases. You act as if the exceptions invalidate the rule. That's nonsense.
<<The consolidation of radio ownership began as a result of FCC regulations to save radio from (supposedly) too many radio stations competing for ad dollars. >>
That's exactly what I said - - but you just chose to leave out that in their competition for ad dollars they were broadcasting on common frequencies and drowning one another out.
<<Have you seen the FCC website? Here, take a look. You talk as if there are no regulations, and that simply is not the case. >>
That's total bullshit. I never denied that this was a heavily-regulated industry. It is immaterial how many regulations there might be, or even that some of them might be unnecessary. This subject began with sirs' complaint about the proposed reversal of licensing policies that had allegedly led to a concentration of ownership that in turn had allegedly led to a preponderance of right-wing ideas in talk radio shows. It was not a generalized rant about over-regulation of the industry. There was a very specific aspect of the regulation that was objected to.
<<The FCC has cracked down on unlicensed radio stations, most them small, less than 100 watts. And pretty much all of those stations are unlicensed because the FCC won't issue licenses for stations at 100 watts or less. (Though this situation may change in the future.)>>
So what? This debate has nothing to do with licensing 100-watt-or-less stations. It's about an increasing uniformity of opinion in the stations that are licensed.
<<Even some folks who want to establish larger stations cannot do so because the costs of navigating the bureaucracy to get a license is far too expensive for most people. >>
Then they shouldn't be in the fucking business. Let them work in the industry for 20 years, save up a few bucks, get a good credit rating, make a few key allies and THEN try to start up a station. Who told them it had to be handed to them on a silver platter?
<< Have you ever looked into the total costs associated with starting up a broadcast radio station? To start station can cost upwards of $50,000 and to operate for just a year can cost in the neighborhood of $150,000, and that is for a relatively small station. And that doesn't even account for all the legal fees involved. >>
Cry me a river. If they're looking for a business they can start on a shoestring, they should try a roadside lemonade stand.
<<And don't even try to start your own satellite radio company. You can't do it no matter how much money you have. The National Association of Broadcasters convinced the government to license only two companies, XM and Sirius. You want more competition there, you can't get it.>>
Well, that's good for another thread - - satellite radio licensing. Meantime back here on earth, the subject was the increasing dominance of right-wing opinion on talk radio shows (apparently there are still some of those left around, Sirius and XM not yet having grabbed off ALL of their listeners) and the issue was (remember?) whether licensing policy should be aimed at concentrating ownership and restricting range of opinions or broadening ownership and broadening range of opinions.
<<And you're talking to me about how this is all some example of deregulation diminishing competition? >>
No, I was talking to you about how concentrating ownership was diminishing competition. In talk radio. Remember. YOU suddenly brought satellite radio into the picture and a whole different set of issues.
<<You must be joking. >>
I try.
<<So long as groups like the NAB and the government are working together to regulate the industry, competition will be stifled. >>
Yes, of course. But if government can get the NAB off its back long enough to reconsider its policy on station ownership, should it or should it not decide to limit the number of stations one owner may have, in view of the study's conclusions?
<<Ideology blinding one to the facts indeed.>>
What I actually meant (and, I believe, actually said) was that YOUR ideology had blinded you to the fact that a deregulation of ownership restrictions had in fact decreased competition, as shown by the study's conclusions. You have not managed to rebut that statement.