In other words, the media watchdogs are actually the lapdogs of the
burglars they are supposed to barking at.
The Fox is the henhouse guard.
McCain came to the home of the first primary
to declare that a new president cannot break
"special interest" government in Washington
without first destroying "a campaign finance system that is nothing less
than
an influence-peddling scheme in which both parties compete to stay in
office by selling the country to the highest bidder."
SN:] Boy, he said it!!!!!!! He would know!
Tauzin "Turns
up the heat" on the FCC"
As seen in this link:
FOLOWUP
POINT: Naked Power Grab: A merger between two
communication's giants have to get past three Federal agencies,
the Federal Communications Commission (with President
Clinton's appointment of Mr. Kennard, the first
African-American Chairman ever), the
Department of Justice and the Federal Trade Commission
(the last two essentially controlled by
pro-corporate-power-concentration Republicans)
(Bloomberg News 5/26/99) "Two influential Senators introduced
legislation that would limit the U.S. Federal Communications Commission's
authority to review mergers. The bill, sponsored by Senate Commerce Committee
Chairman John McCain(R-AZ) and Senate Judiciary Committee
Chairman Orrin Hatch (R-WA), would forbid the FCC
from blocking a transaction that either the Department of Justice
or Federal Trade Commission has cleared. "
The Federal Trade Commission is overseen by the Senate
Commerce Committee (Chaired by Senator John McCain)
and the Department of Justice is overseen by the Senate
Judiciary Committee (Chaired by Senator Orrin Hatch).
As if that wasn't bad enough!!
(R&R 9/15/99)
Broadcast Ownership Reform Act' Introduced
"Though the aim of Sen. John McCain's bill is to "assure timely,
rational and complete FCC resolution of all pending proceedings
re-examining the current radio and TV broadcast station rules," it
looks as though the bill will affect TV more than radio. The legislation
would, however, eliminate the newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership
ban. It also seeks to raise the limit on the national TV networks'
audience reach from 35% to 50% and allow the FCC to raise it further
if public interest warrants it."
SN] What "Public Interest" is served by destroying the last
vestiges of competition?
McCain's support of the onslought of mergers is especially
odd given:
Washington Post article continues, "He said the Telecommunications
Act of 1996 -- which he was the only senator to oppose on
final passage -- was written in a process where "every company
affected had purchased a seat at the table with soft money"
while consumers were left outside. As a result, he said "lower
prices that competition produces never materialized. Cable rates went up.
Phone rates went up. And huge broadcasting giants received for free
billions of dollars in digital spectrum property that belonged to the
American people."
"We are all shortchanged by soft money, liberal and conservative alike,"
McCain said. "All of our ideals are sacrificed. We are all corrupted."
A rave party "is a place you can go up and give somebody a hug and
introduce yourself and have no problem," says Steve "Elmo" Gordy, 19,
an art student from Frederick, Md. "People who are not accepted . .
.
come to raves and their self-esteem is raised so high. The acceptance you
feel is life-altering."
The Channel 5 broadcast featured some Buzz-goers and a police officer
saying people were on Ecstasy, the popular name for MDMA, an
amphetamine derivative that induces euphoria. The ravers respond that
there is no more substance abuse per capita at a rave party than
elsewhere in society.
"Name me one youth culture where there's no drugs," says Tiffany
Melton,
18, whose family lives on Andrews Air Force Base. "Name me one frat
party where people aren't drunk."
Channel 5 officials did not return telephone calls for comment.
All the same, some ravers defend Ecstasy. At the rally, a 32-year-old
computer industry professional from Washington says his experiments with
the $25 pills have been positive. In moderation, he claims, the drug
produces heightened sensations and eagerness to communicate with
others. "It helped me reach an emotional state I've had trouble reaching."
The soundtrack of the rave scene is electronic dance music often called
techno. It can be pumping, spacey, mesmerizing. The stars are the
deejays, who construct endless instrumental dramas through the artful
selection and melding of tracks recorded on vinyl.
The music emerged in the 1980s as influences from black and gay dance
clubs of Chicago, Detroit and New York blended with the electronic
avant-garde of Europe. Aficionados favor particular subgenres, such as
trance, jungle, drum 'n' bass, happy hardcore, progressive house, etc.
"