Saturday, February 22, 2014

"Critical information needs"

Mark Steyn has been writing about how corrupt our federal government's regulatory agencies have become, in addition to the corrupt revenue agency and the corrupt justice department. Now he takes notice of the FCC, which has decided to send regulators into newsrooms to determine whether or not news departments are providing information on eight "critical information needs" and "underserved populations."

Steyn writes,
But what if you're a news editor and you happen to disagree that "the environment" is one of the eight most Critical Information Needs. What if you happen to think that "runaway public debt" or "the vulnerability of US diplomatic facilities in Libya" is a more Critical Information Need than "the environment"?

The state has no business determining which news stories have priorities over others, and certainly no business sending monitors into newsrooms to ensure compliance - because the essence of a functioning press is not what the state decrees the citizen has a "critical need" to know but what it doesn't think he needs to know.

Government of the United States is increasingly corrupt. Covering that story is the "critical information need".

1 comment:

Infidel de Manahatta said...

It's only a matter of time before Blogs are regulated to see if they conform to critical information needs.

The day is coming.