Wednesday, 16 Oct 2024

Trump wants the FCC to take CBS’s license away. This is a dark omen | Dennis Aftergut and Austin Sarat

Trump wants the FCC to take CBS’s license away. This is a dark omen | Dennis Aftergut and Austin Sarat


Trump wants the FCC to take CBS’s license away. This is a dark omen | Dennis Aftergut and Austin Sarat

Donald Trump's 10 October attack on CBS for editing its 60 Minutes interview with Kamala Harris - a normal television process - is pure distraction. It is designed to draw our attention away from the fact that he was afraid to give the news magazine its traditional interview with both political candidates. Trump's statement that the Federal Communications Commission should "take away" CBS's broadcast license betrays his ignorance of the fact that the FCC does not license networks and foreshadows a full-on assault on free speech and freedom of the press if he becomes president.

History is clear that dictators move early to take control of the media in order to censor information unfavorable to their people. Our safety requires preventing that control, as Thomas Jefferson wrote two centuries ago: "The only security of all is in a free press. The force of public opinion cannot be resisted when permitted freely to be expressed."

Only Rumpelstiltskin would fail to grasp how much Trump cannot tolerate criticism from the press or anyone. Attacking mainstream media is his way of desensitizing us to the important role of the press in a free society.

If you want a preview of how first amendment rights will disappear if Trump is elected president, look to his home state of Florida where Governor Ron DeSantis, his Maga copycat, runs that government in a way Trump would like to bring to the whole nation. On 9 October, we saw one of the governor's lackeys try to carve away freedom of speech and the press, along with reproductive rights.

John Wilson, the general counsel to the state's department of health, threatened the state's broadcast stations with prosecution unless they removed a campaign ad promoting amendment 4. It's the ballot measure to add abortion rights to the state's constitution.

The amendment 4 ad featured Floridian Caroline Williams saying that she would be dead had the state's six-week ban on abortion been in effect when her health required one in 2022. The irony of the Florida government trying to quash the ad is rich. Here we have a bare-knuckles attempt at censorship from the party that purports to oppose the "cancel culture".

That's not the end of the irony. The health department's letter alleged that the pro-amendment 4 ad violated the state's "sanitation nuisance" statute. This ground for government censorship, based as it is on a statute designed to prohibit overflowing septic tanks or unclean slaughterhouses, fails the laugh test, much less the constitution.

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