Media and Democracy

RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF A BILL OF MEDIA RIGHTS

 

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The American Public has the right to:

 

1)Media That Provide “An Uninhibited Marketplace of Ideas”


 - Journalism that fully informs the public, is independent of the government and acts as its watchdog, and protects journalists who dissent from their employers.
 - Newspapers, television and radio stations, cable and satellite systems, and broadcast and cable networks operated by multiple, diverse, and independent owners that compete vigorously and employ a diverse workforce.

 - Radio and television programming produced by independent creators that is original, challenging, controversial, and diverse.

 - Programming, stories, and speech produced by communities and citizens.

 - Internet service provided by multiple, independent providers who compete vigorously and offer access to the entire Internet over a broadband connection, with freedom to attach within the home any legal device to the net connection and run any legal application.

 - Public broadcasting insulated from political and commercial interests that is well-funded and especially serves communities underserved by privately-owned broadcasters.

 - Regulatory policies emphasizing media education and citizen empowerment, not government censorship, as the best ways to avoid unwanted content.


2) Media That Use The Public’s Airwaves To Serve The Public Interest

 
 - Electoral and civic, children’s, educational, independently produced, local and community programming, as well as programming that serves Americans with disabilities and underserved communities.
 - Media that reflect the presence and voices of people of color, women, labor, immigrants, Americans with disabilities, and other communities often underrepresented.

 - Maximum access and opportunity to use the public airwaves and spectrum.

 - Meaningful participation in government media policy, including disclosure of the ways broadcasters comply with their public interest obligations, ascertain their community’s needs, and create programming to serve those needs.


3) Media That Reflect And Respond To Their Local Communities


 - Television and radio stations that are locally owned and operated, reflective of and responsible to the diverse communities they serve, and able to respond quickly to local emergencies.
 - Well-funded local public access channels and community radio, including low-power FM radio stations.

 - Universal, affordable Internet access for news, education, and government information, so that all citizens can better participate in our democracy and culture.

 - Frequent, rigorous license and franchise renewal processes for local broadcasters and cable operators that meaningfully include the public.


CONCLUSION

These principles are not meant to be all-inclusive. Rather, they illustrate an American media structure that is the American public’s present and future right under the Constitution of the United States.

 

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