FEC Rules Bloggers Are Journalists 363
Dotnaught writes "The Federal Election Commission today issued an advisory opinion that finds the Fired Up network of blogs qualifies for the 'press exemption' to federal campaign finance laws. The press exemption, as defined by Congress, is meant to assure 'the unfettered right of the newspapers, TV networks, and other media to cover and comment on political campaigns.' The full ruling is available at the FEC site. A noteworthy passage: '...an entity otherwise eligible for the press exception would not lose its eligibility merely because of a lack of objectivity...'"
Duh! (Score:4, Insightful)
> its eligibility merely because of a lack of objectivity..."
Well of course not. Otherwise they would have to close down CBS and Fox News right off the bat. And then come back and get CNN, ABC and NBC the next day. On the third day they would shutter the NY Times, the Washington Post and pull the plug on the EIB Network's sat feed.
Of course by day four folks would show up in Washington with their 'Sporting Goods' and voice their 'opinion' about Campaign Finance Reform, reminding Congress that in the end the 1st Amendment, along with the rest are ultimately preserved by a willingness to exercise the 2nd Amendment.
Re:Duh! (Score:5, Insightful)
These mostly got bought up or run out of business, until now when only a relatively small number of much larger papers and media companies run everything.
The bloggers are kind of like a return to that old model for print media in the U.S., I think, except way harder to buy out or run out of business, since most of them aren't even really in business. Biased indie papers are nothing new, and blogging is just the latest version of it. It was media then, it's media now.
Re:Duh! (Score:5, Insightful)
I think when some people think of "Media", they think of NYT, USA Today, ABC News, CNN, and their locally circulated newspaper, news stations, etc.
There's a lot more to media than just this. There are a great number of publications that are extremely biased, small indie newsletters, mini magazines and who knows what other formats. There are publications geared toward the military, toward eco-friendly folks, and everything up down and in-between.
And what's more amazing, is that most libraries carry these for their surrounding communities. Check it out sometime
Brice
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
Almost everyone could tell you the difference between a "small independent paper" with a bias, and a paper published by the NRA or ACLU and designed to reflect the official positions of those organizations.
My belief is that the Blog issu
Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2, Insightful)
CBS - left
Fox - right
CNN - left
ABC -left
NBC -left
NY Times - left
Washington Post - right
EIB - right, but never claims to be "press", usually comments on "press". Certainly not a "primary source"... I'll give it 1/2 right.
So, from this sample we have 2:1 left bias in the media.
Is the ruling pro-right, pro-left, or just correct?
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:4, Insightful)
The Washington Post has a bias toward the right? I'm not sure I can agree with that. I consider myself pretty allergic to any strong conservative bias; few things pain me more than sitting through the O'Reilly Factor. I've never considered the Washington Post to have any such bias. If they do, it's either too clever or too weak for me to pick up on.
I would also argue that simply tallying up "left versus right" bias is useless with regards to determining the state of our mass media. By its very nature, political bias is anything but a black-and-white issue.
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:5, Interesting)
However, I can read the Washington Post and WSJ without any problem. Same for our local ABC affiliate.
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:5, Interesting)
My number one news source, however, is the News Hour. I don't watch network TV news: CNN is filth, CBS, NBC, and ABC are fluff (even if everyone says they're left leaning, I don't care, they lost THIS liberal), and FOX is made up of a bunch of neoconservative lobbiests—seriously, half of their stuff is made up of former conservative political advisors... Yes, I'm looking at you, Bill Kristol! The News Hour, and the other PBS news shows (Washington Week, Now, and Charlie Rose) feel like the only TV news that doesn't talk to me like I'm in 6th grade, and doesn't try to compress complicated events into 1 minute soundbytes. And when I watch news, I don't need to be entertained. I'm honestly excited and interested in learning about events at hand. Tell it to me straight. PBS is the only one that really does this anymore, the rest is just entertainment.
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:4, Insightful)
In an ideal, black body radiation sort of way, it's impossible to find a reporter who is completely without bias. And you wouldn't want to read him if you found him. Ultimately, journalism is partly about reporting and partly about synthesizing and interpreting events. And events have many interpretations.
Good journalists are fair-minded. They're more concerned with what is true than who is right. They aren't in there to change your mind, just to let you in on what's happening in the world. They'll have a bias, but they know it, acknowledge it, and work extra hard to ensure that their coverage isn't tainted by it.
Bad journalists follow the creed of Cargo Cult Science. That is: "I already know what's true, now let me go prove it." They may be right sometimes, but their process is tainted and you won't know when they're right. And, really, they don't either. They're in journalism because they want to change the world, and protect people from evil bad guys who tell lies. There are bad conservative journalists, and bad liberal ones, but until the rise of Fox, most journalists were liberal, so most bad ones were too.
It's no accident that journalism scandals came up right as blogs were getting big. A rise of a massive citizen journalism, biased individually but usually not collectively, suddenly put the news empires on the spot. Liberals insist that blogs are primarily a liberal movement, and conservatives claim that it's mostly conservative. The truth is that you read the blogs you agree with, so you feel like your side is huge. We don't really know where the overall centroid is.
Incidentally, I think that programmers are both artists and engineers-- which I think is why programmers still don't fall easily into a political category, even though we are all definitely on the same wave lengths... even when we disagree.
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2)
NPR - left (sometimes far left)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:3, Funny)
I invoketh the power of CleverNickName (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2)
Re:Always the geek. Running the numbers... (Score:2)
I got some advice for you:
Don't trust the little endians. They're all communists!
-Laxitive
Not "left" at all! (Score:2)
Own post reply... a disclaimer (Score:2)
I don't watch/read/listen to any of the named "news" sources. I kind of listen to my local new-radio station (or push the button to indy radio) and glance at the local newspaper, but don't really give a shit about any of political stuff.
I was just curious what kind of response I would get. heh. [BTW - "flamebait" was the correct response]
I was modded +5 insightful for a bit, but am dropping fast. That was kind of fun, I might do it more often, if I don't ha
hive-minds (Score:2, Funny)
Is that so wrong?
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
It always amazes me how many people really believe that the American people could, with their piddly collection of what amounts to a pile of pea-shooters in comparison to the arms of the Federal Government, actually over
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
The U.S has numerous National Guard amories scattered across Anytown USA. The people in charge of these armories answer to the Governors and to the President in times of war. But they also live, work and raise families in
Offtopic 2nd amendment question (Score:2)
I always wondered about this one. I ask what's it good for, and get something like, "So we can rebel against our governement if it goes bad." Uh, yeah, I see. But not having a second amendment didn't stop the US Revolution against the British in the first place, did it? And the trouble over in France showed guns all over the place, but they're forbidden to have guns, too, aren't they? And you'd not be rebelling against a government unless
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
You got your tenses wrong. Some of the worst excesses in government in the past half century are happening now and they are sitting on their arses doing nothing.
Re:Duh! (Score:3, Insightful)
The "fair and balanced" comes in during the real news broadcasts. They give both sides a chance to talk about the issue, which is a LOT more than ABC, NBC, or CBS does. Usually they just get one side to talk about what the other side is doing, and they don't give the other side a chance to answer any of the charges. That, frankly, is biased crap.
People might not like the fact that the "other side" gets a chance to speak on thos
Re:Duh! (Score:3, Insightful)
B.
Re:Duh! (Score:5, Insightful)
That being said; the fact is, unbalanced or not, FOX has the right to broadcast whatever message suits their purposes. It certainly isn't the government's job to dictate how politics are covered. Not that profit motive or the free market will dictate a plan of action that guarantees intelligent broadcasting or commendable journalism. Hell, in a counrty where Britney Spears and reality TV can dominate the airwaves, popular opinion and commercial support aren't worth all that much in the intellectual domain.
The media cannot be counted on to provide us with an intelligent view of the world. That is on our own shoulders. Liberal, conservative... it doesn't matter. They have all got their morons and those that have a clue. Just learn to watch with doubt- all that takes is an ability to smell bullshit when its presented to you. Then, maybe, the media could really be held accountable.
Tooba
Re:Duh! (Score:2)
Re:Duh! (Score:3, Informative)
Wow. I just read the Fox version. It wasn't the original version that I had read. Here's [counterpunch.org] the one I read. The difference is subtle but interesting. A round of spin for everyone!
Bias is OK (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course they aren't balanced. Which, in a sort of paradox, makes them balanced since they now singlehandendly counterbalance the 'progressive' biases of the rest of the nets. Sort of a TV version of Limbaugh's infamous "I don't need equal time, I am equal time!".
Personally I don't mind bias all that much as long as it is in the open and Fox does often admit that while they make an effort to present both sides, they do come at issues with a conservative viewpoint. Neither Bill O'Reilly or Maureen Dowd bother me since both are pretty open about their position advocacy. What pisses me off is when asshats like Dan Rather or Helen Thomas claim with a straight face to be impartial in their reporting when they are as biased as Rush Limbaugh or Al Franken.
Or take the Sunday morning yak yak shows. I don't get Face the Nation over my local CBS station, but both NBC's Meet the Press and ABC's This Week program are hosted by former Democratic Party aparatchiks with no major experience in journalism prior to taking the helm at their respective high prestige posts? Harmless Coincidence? We are supposed to believe both are presenting a 'balanced' view of politics?
Re:Duh! (Score:2, Flamebait)
I find it amusing that you think Fox News is somehow more worthy of scrutiny than CBS; a representative of which intentionally used forged documen
Why this is necessary (Score:4, Insightful)
McCain/Feingold campaign finance laws, which limit the Freedom of Speech of anyone with a political opinion, forces us to define what types of speech should remain legal.
It's sad and disappointing.
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
This has got to be the most rediculous statement I have ever read here. Since when does campaign finance reform==freedom of speech? Give me a fucking break. What it does do (to some extent) is limit the quid pro quo (aka legalized bribery) that is rampant in DC. Just because Mr.Big Business wants to be able to finance their Pocket Politic
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
by always trying to screw the 'big evil guy', it invariably trickles down to the little guy who has con
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
B.
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
A ban on supposedly non-partisan "issue ads" funded by soft money from corporations and labor unions - those referring to candidates for federal election without expressly advocating their election or defeat -- in the 60 days prior to a general election, or 30 days prior to a primary election.
so once one of those two contribute to your campaign it gets sticky. might get charged with money laundering.
the money in politics just flow through se
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:5, Informative)
I think it was about the time when they started considering public speech supporting a candidate a form of "campaign contribution". Why do you think the bloggers needed an exemption in the first place?
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:3, Insightful)
But, for ever 100 why we should get rid of free speech, there is one or two why we shouldn't. And those are always the large one. For every "I did insane thing x to piss people off but they can't get mad because I call it art" one comes across, there is
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you?
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2, Insightful)
In addition, money does not vote, nor does the abundance of money increase the number of votes allotted to any one citizen. The poor college student has the same one vote that the rich oil tycoon has.
What is it you want to prevent? Voter fraud? That has nothing to do with campaign financing.
If you are saying that monetary contributors to campaigns ought to be restricted because of the
Re:Why this is necessary (Score:2)
Eliminating the effect of money in elections is a fantasy. These laws don't in any way, shape, form, or measure stop money from effecting elections. What they do is ensure only the richest and most politically powerful can get the FEC exemption so that only the rich and powerful are allowed political speech. They have the absolute opposite effect that they are intended to have. But even assuming that
Wow! (Score:3, Insightful)
A decision by the FCC that I can actually agree with and think is good for everybody. Will wonders never cease?!
Re:Wow! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Amendment I (Score:5, Insightful)
Freedom of speech applies to political speech. Campaign finance laws are blatantly unconstitutional. This ruling is offensive because it implies that only established and recognized "press" entities qualify -- and the government, whose interest is markedly not neutral, gets to decide who is and isn't "press".
Re:Amendment I (Score:4, Insightful)
This is about freedom. Fuck politics. We can say what we want. If that one fact is no longer true, then this is no longer the same America I thought I was growing up in.
Re:Amendment I (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Amendment I (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Amendment I (Score:2, Interesting)
This argument is profoundly naive. Follow the bouncing ball, boys and girls:
The point of the first amendment was to allow dissent. Monarchs and other ruling parties had a bad habit of throwing peo
Re:Amendment I (Score:2)
Congratulations. You win.
Re:Amendment I (Score:3, Insightful)
Not all speech is created equal. See, in order for people to hear what you're saying, you have to put it in some kind of medium. And media are private, for-profit entities, which means more money=more message
If this were true, then I might be able to tell you what was on CBS last night. I can't. I chose not to watch it because I liked what was on another channel better. If CBS had absolute freedom of speech, they might have aired porn last night; but so would have all the other networks. It's not t
Re:Amendment I (Score:3, Insightful)
No. You are the opinion that counts. You are the final authority.
Or at least, you used to be, until you gave that up and assigned that right to someone else.
The amendment, as written, is intended to give everyone an equal voice in the eyes of government, not to allow the rich and/or powerful to steamroll the country because they're louder and have flashier commercials.
The amendment, as written, is to ensure that gove
Re:Amendment I (Score:2)
The bottom line here, is that we are losing freedoms. You are ok with that. That's fine I guess...but it makes me sad, angry, and some other emotions I'm not sure I can describe.
I'm sorry--since when could I rewrite the Constitution without being a member of Congress or winning a Supreme Court case?
First of all, the Supreme Court was never supposed to be able to "rewrite the Cons
Re:Amendment I (Score:4, Insightful)
The most beautiful five-word phrase in the English language.
Re:Amendment I (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, yes and yes. This is the exact reason why a shield law is detrimental to journalism and why one cannot be effected: forcing the government to define "press" means the definitnon could be manipulated so that only pro-party outlets are recognized and other publications can have their staff thrown
This is encouraging, but (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This is encouraging, but (Score:2)
It's odd that so many things are "free speech" and people will rush to defend them as though the country would fall apart without them (many pieces of "art") yet are silent on real free speech (some journalistic blogs). Whether that is due to ignorance ("All blogs are just people writing about what their cat did today and other pointless stuff"), an agenda ("I support the views of the
Re:This is encouraging, but (Score:2)
In order to live in a society where the freedom of speech means anything, we have to protect the integrity of the political process. When our politicians owe more to their financers than they do to the Constitution, the voting public, or society as a whole, the ensuing corruption becomes impossibl
Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalists (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess this is just part of the price of free speech. I do wonder if there's a good interface for "moderating" blogs, so that, for example, if one is sponsored by Candidate X in a sneaky way, and someone finds out, it can appear beside the name of the blog.
I'd also like to point out a fundamental difference between bloggers and journalists. I have worked at a newspaper, and spent all day calling people, attending government meetings, doing research and asking more questions before I wrote something. Bloggers tend to link to the work of real reporters, then offer comments, or worse, just repeat rumors as fact. At best, they are information scavengers, feeding on the facts hunted down by others.
Because a newspaper has advertisers and subscribers, it has to protect its reputation as being truthful. A blogger has nothing at stake. A newspaper also expects to get sued and tries to have a "truth defense" ready - to cover their butts by being accurate. They might not always succeed, but they have reason to try. I don't know whether any bloggers have been sued for libel yet, but I bet some will be. If you're going to "publish" something, you really do need to check your facts, and that usually takes more time than a hobbyist has.
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:2)
Considering what various blog sites have found out about the "facts" that the news papers have dug up and reported, I wouldn't be so proud about everything that newspapers have done.
And the reason I say that is that the journalists that are supposedly reporting the facts of stories interject their own opinions into news events. That'd be fine if it were an opinion piece; but frequently you'll see there's a bias (
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:2)
I'm no blog cheerleader but I think you are being too harsh. At best, they do create something of real value... hunting down information and publishing it. What you specified is the typical behavior, not the best the field has to offer. Which I admit is a microscopic portion, but such details are important.
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:2)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/10/07/06 26254&tid=153&tid=123&tid=17 [slashdot.org]
Bloggers have been sued and won...At least partly.
B.
Re:Free speech good, bloggers ARE TOO journalists (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd much rather deal with 'blog who make no pretense. I'll do my own fact checking rather than rely on unseen gnomes to do it to my satisfaction.
I wish politicians would set up REAL blogs (Score:3, Interesting)
Too bad the only ones they want to hold accountable are others...
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:2)
You know, kinda like Slashdot.
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:2)
This seems to be saying that any two newspapers expending the resources necessary to adequately research a given issue or event will produce the same story; that is, except for the Op/Ed pages,
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:3, Insightful)
Is that different than when real journalists just re-hash everything from a press conference? Or when journalists pick and choose which expert testimony they want to go forward with if they have dissenting testimony?
Don't put journalists on a pedestal. The days where journalists did hard digging to get out th
Re:Free speech good, but bloggers AREN'T journalis (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment B: "Bloggers [...] At best, they are information scavengers, feeding on the facts hunted down by others."
Er, um, weren't you just feeding on the facts told to you by the people you called, the meetings you attended, and the answers to questions you asked? You're an info scavenger!
Also, you're confusing "editorial commentary" wit
Re:Ah... so only the moneyed may speak? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm lost... (Score:2)
Good precedent (Score:3, Insightful)
Freedom of the press must survive though, so this seems a fair response to our evolving times.
A Woodward Moment... (Score:2)
Why is this news? The entire media is that way. Except Slashdot, of course.
Nice of the FEC to licence free speech... (Score:2)
Re:Nice of the FEC to licence free speech... (Score:2)
Obligatory "In Soviet Russia" comment... (Score:2, Funny)
In Soviet Russia, government decides who is a journalist and who is not.
Oh wait...
well..... (Score:2)
this may be a good thing in long run.......
Blogger no more. (Score:3, Funny)
Paid bloggers wouldn't even work here (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd imagine that there are two broad sides in all of this: those who are independent regardless of ideology and those who shill for the bifactional ruling party know as the Republican and Democratic parties. Who cares if the RNC or DNC pays someone to sing the praises of their candidate? Unless they're outright lying, they'll just garner the attention of the party faithful. The bloggers in the first category and most of their friends and readers won't buy into it because they're on the opposite side of the philosophical fence.
But what is amusing here is that blogging is just a way of maintaining a website. Most bloggers are not journalists because of the simple fact that their work cannot be considered journalistic. Perhaps Michelle Malkin's blog should count, but it'd be a cold day in hell that I'd consider the average blogger to be a journalist. If you're not a professional jouralist, then you aren't one IMO. The concept of a "citizen journalist" is redundant. The point of using "citizen" as a modifier is to show that you are a civilian doing a government job. Hence "citizen soldier" for example. That's a miltiaman, a man who fights as part of a civilian army organized in a military-like hierarchy. He's a soldier, but not a government soldier thus he's a "citizen soldier." Since America has only a lame-brained attempt at state media (*cough*CPB*cough*) there is no way you can qualify as a "citizen journalist." Either journalism is your career or it is something you amateurishly ape.
FEC madness.. (Score:3, Insightful)
> If a reporter or editor wants to endorse Bill Gates for president, they can do it. They can write a 2,000 word puff piece about how great he is and publish it in the New York Times.
> Unless of course, they quit their job and want to pay the New York Times to run the exact same article, word for word. This would now be a violation of campaign finance laws, because only reporters and editors are allowed to have opinions. If a private citizen has an opinion, he's trying to destroy the democratic process.
> Unless the non-reporter's name happens to be Bill Gates, in which case it becomes legal again. The Supreme Court has said that you can always spend money campaigning for yourself.
End result: Rich people can finance their own campaigns without any limits (see Ross Perot), but middle-class types are breaking the law if they buy ads endorsing a candidate they would like to see elected. That, and the First Amendment is flushed down the toilet.
Re:FEC madness.. (Score:2)
Surely people should NOT be able to pay to have ads for some politician in the paper. Do you really want to mafia or Haliburton or whomever legally able to pay for ads to be placed in newspapers? At least if they donate directly to the candidate, there is a record (ideally) of every single donation in one place, and it can be made public record. If you let everyone pay to put ads in the papers or on TV, no one would have any idea who's paying what for whom. It would be way too open to abuse;
Re:FEC madness.. (Score:3, Insightful)
"Freedom of speech", to my ears, sounds a lot more like "freedom TO speak" than "freedom FROM speaking", or even than "freedom FROM other people's speaking."
Likewise, "freedom of the press" would seem to be a lot closer in my mind to "freedom TO run a press" then "freedom FROM those running the press".
And given the (admittedly imperfect) freedom of opportunity in the U.S. (that's a freedom TO opportunity, not a fr
News Fits (Score:3, Insightful)
Great (Score:2, Funny)
Is this really good for free speech? (Score:3, Informative)
In fact, free speech doesn't really apply to journalists. I'm speaking as someone who has worked in journalism for the past ten years. Let's say I hate Microsoft. As a journalist, if I wrote something like "Microsoft is crap and I'm not just saying that because Bill Gates likes to sleep with young boys and small furry animals" I would be in a load of trouble. Sure, it's an obvious joke, but Gates would have me dragged into court in less time than it took Windows98 to flash a BSOD. Now I could argue satire, but unless I got lucky and had a jury full of Mac addicts, I would probably lose.
The example doesn't even need to be that extreme. News organizations have been sued for defamatory stories about corporations, even though everything in their story was accurate. Once upon a time, journalists could rely on the truth as their defense. This is not always the case anymore. You can be sued for defamation even if the facts are on your side, and you will lose if the jury sides against you.
The only so-called journalists who come close to getting away with things like that are tabloids, and they're being sued left and right. They're losing, too.
Add to that the fact that most bloggers aren't affiliated with big corporations or other entities with loads of cash. Most of them are regular people, who couldn't afford to defend themselves in court even if they were 100% accurate with everything they wrote.
Of course, I haven't talked about political speech, which IS what this ruling is all about. However, if the government really starts treating blogs like other journalistic media, it will have to apply the same standards to all of them. At the very least, blogs could eventually be vulnerable to the same legal actions as traditional media.
I guess what worries me the most is this: As a journalist, I am not at all free to say whatever it is I want to say--nor should I be. Some stories are so heavily "lawyered" to avoid lawsuits, they read like a Microsoft EULA. Most of us couldn't afford to have a legal team on retainer to protect ourselves. Even if we could, what kind of "freedom" is that?
Only if your malice can be proved (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Is this really good for free speech? (Score:3, Insightful)
You speak of the "government" as if it is one monolithic entity that actually knows what all of it's hands are doing. The FEC decided that bloggers were journalist - not any other government agency. For FEC purposes they are journalist. This does not mean that, for example, the Supreme Court thinks of bloggers as journalist or that any other part of the government thinks of blog
Dig Deeper (Score:4, Insightful)
This is about money that the parties and candidates spend paying "bloggers" to write about how good they are.
The issue here is not free speach. It has been spun. The issue here is if someone is being paid to write something in a blog, then they should have to make that clear on the blog. There is a difference between an opinion piece and propaganda.
If 500 people all write in support of an issue and it turns out that they have been paid to all support that issue, it isn't really a grass roots support movement, is it?
This boils back down to the same issue as the gov. paying "journalists" to create fake news reports about certain issues.
I have no problem with parties and candidates paying people to write good things about them, I just want to know if what I am reading is someone's opinion or a campaign ad.
Jurnalist! (Score:5, Funny)
ruling? (Score:3, Informative)
jrockway rules that the FEC is irrelevant (Score:3)
Re:Oh, the dictators in power (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Oh, the dictators in power (Score:4, Insightful)
It's time to quit the petty left/right bullshit. We have more important matters to deal with, like simple freedoms we used to have. Let's deal with those important issues, then get back to our petty bickering.
Thanks.
Re:Oh, the dictators in power (Score:2)
Your quote says nothing about entities losing eligibility because of undesired objectivity.
Re:Oh, the dictators in power (Score:2)
If I remember, the crux of the Democrats' legal case was that the use of Sinclair's media holdings to broadcast blatant propaganda constituted a donation to the Bush campaign, the value of which put Sinclair waaaaaaaay over the legal limits.
Re:Oh, the dictators in power (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
Re:So everyone who has a blog is a journalist? (Score:3, Funny)
That's easy. Low pay, bad hours, little job security, lots of crank phone calls, and predictable abuse from wingers of all stripes.