Washington Examiner  home delivery | classifieds | autos | jobs | real estate | home listings | advertise
   
Passport to the Podium
View today's E-Dition

Sunday, August 1, 2010 | Last Update 3:45 EDT
click for forecast
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Classified Cars Homes Rentals Remodel
Nation World Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays Opinion Zone Capital Land Weather Mobile Site RSS Feeds Contact
Nation World Science Education Video Technology
Beltway Confidential Yeas & Nays White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York Chris Stirewalt
Capital Land DC Virginia Maryland Local Opinion Zone Crime Transportation People Education Real Estate
Editorials Beltway Confidential OpinionZone Nate Beeler Columnists Mark Tapscott Dave Freddoso Mark Hemingway
Your Money Real Estate Technology K-Street
Cheers & Jeers Redskins/NFL Wizards/NBA Caps/NHL Nationals/MLB United/MLS Colleges Golf
Yeas & Nays Art Movies Television Health Food Music Scoop Theater Wheels Video Events Calendar
Jobs Buy Stuff Post Free Ad Personals Events
Automotive News New Used Certified Pre-Owned
Real Estate News Rent a Home Buy a Home Home Makeover

Jay Ambrose
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Clinton joins government censors on Fairness Doctrine

By: Jay Ambrose
Examiner Columnist
February 24, 2009

Bill Clinton, easily among the most immature, do-nothing presidents the United States has ever had, really ought to quit buzzing around the nation on behalf of speech-suppression and self-aggrandizement.
 
He’s against the First Amendment, you know. Wants to bag the thing. Toss it overboard.

Asked on a liberal Talk Radio show recently about the Fairness Doctrine, Clinton said "well, you either ought to have the fairness doctrine or you ought to have more balance on the other side, because essentially there has always been a lot of big money to support the right-wing talk shows."

Sure, he and other Democrats who speak glibly of restoring the Fairness Doctrine say it’s “balance” they want on radio programs, and no doubt they do – the kind of balance that would put Rush Limbaugh out of business.
 
They might try reading the amendment, which says Congress “shall make no law  . . . abridging freedom of speech,” not that it shall assure that somehow every side of an issue will get heard.
 
The Founders used this language for a reason. They knew that any government regulation of what gets said could be used to quiet critics. While theirs was a time of one-sided, often vitriolic pamphleteering, they figured quite correctly that this outspokenness could be antidote to governmental waywardness and that the best means of assuring differing points of view was simply to allow them.
 
The Democrats yelp that radio is different because the airwaves are limited and publicly owned, but that’s been a phony, Constitution-ignoring argument from the start and is especially ridiculous at a time when radio voices abound and there is an immense variety of other opinion outlets from cable TV to the Internet.
 
True enough, talk radio is more conservative than not, and I know that sends shivers up the backs of some, but liberal views are in fact heard frequently there and liberalism dominates newspapers, magazines, Hollywood, the academic world and network TV even in supposedly straight reporting that ought to aim for objectivity.
 
This incursion on free speech would be one of the gravest civil rights affronts of modern America, and Clinton should be ashamed for the dalliance with despotism. Of course, the man knows no shame.

As much was made clear when he also said in a recent interview that if he and his great economic team had been in power instead of George W. Bush the past eight years, we wouldn’t be facing the present economic crisis.
 
It’s interesting, isn’t it, that this miracle-working team did not work miracle enough to  prevent the “dot-com bubble?” You may recall that it got going during his first term as investors bet big-time bucks on unproved Internet companies and began its decline during his last year in office, causing headaches aplenty.
 
More importantly regarding the point at hand, we now know that a factor in the current economic crisis was the government’s role in prompting and allowing mortgage loans to bad risks and that Clinton himself happily joined this venture into chaos.
 
From New York Times stories, we are reminded how he went along with Henry Cisneros, his secretary of Housing and Urban Development, in a massive national program to loosen “mortgage restrictions so first-time buyers could qualify for loans they could never get before,” and that the  that the administration pressured Fannie Mae to extend mortgages to people who would not ordinarily qualify.
 
There was some worry even then that the Fannie Mae policy could eventually lead to a governmental bailout, but that apparently did not faze Clinton anymore than offshore terrorist attacks moved him to any steps decisive enough to help deflect 9/11 or the entitlement mess moved him to address that major issue.
 
He did some good things, but his administration was mostly noted for a scandal, and what he owes us now at the very least is a sense of decency in what he says.
 
Examiner columnist Jay Ambrose is a former Washington opinion writer and editor of two dailies. He can be reached at: Speaktojay@aol.com.


More from Jay Ambrose

  • Summer of Recovery? It's a sham
  • Overcriminalization makes a joke of justice
  • Show trials for BP executives
  • Drilling critics missing the point of oil spill
  • Hugo Chavez can give Hollywood big thanks for delusional praise

Topics

President Bill Clinton , Fairness Doctrine , Talk Radio , Free Speech , First Amendment , Freedom of Speech , The Washington Examiner



Examiner Opinion Zone
How do bureaucracies work?

One respectable answer is that they don't. Many an op-ed has been written to elaborate the point, but this won't be one of them. Such answer is neither useful nor reassuring...

—Jason Kuznicki

Communist Monarchies

Outside of the Arabian Peninsula, where in the world do you think absolute monarchies still exist? A strong clue is given in this Daily Telegraph story about the fate of the...

—P.J. Gladnick

A different path to regime change in Iran

“The republic has no need of science or of chemistry.” With these words, a French tribunal confirmed its 1794 sentence of death on Antoine Lavoisier, the great...

—Neil Hrab

More Examiner Opinion Zone posts...

To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. Chris Matthews' daughter tackles the deficit
  2. WaPo buries Dem fundraiser’s fraud, highlights GOP fundraising scandal
  3. To historians, Obama pledged to ’speak less often’ in future
  4. It’s not just Rangel — Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., to be tried on ethics charges
  5. Hapless SEC can now hide its secrets
  6. Obama unemployment news conference featured Va. woman convicted of drug fraud
  7. NYT: ‘No more disputing’ economic recovery has slowed down, jobs outlook ‘discouraging’
  8. Growing ‘independent’ nature of electorate is helping GOP
  9. Top GOP campaign donors charged with $550 million fraud
  10. Obama’s auto policy: All in the Democratic family





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.


blog comments powered by Disqus

RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Intern | Video | Maps | Mobile | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Rack Locations | Advertise