FCC Chair Wants Networks to Pledge Loyalty for America's Big Bday

(gizmodo.com)

61 points | by geox 18 hours ago ago

58 comments

  • afavour 18 hours ago ago

    The level of insecurity is something to behold. It's unfathomable that one of the major networks was ever going to run "Here's why America is Bad" as part of a 250th anniversary celebration. This entire pledge is nonsensical.

    • jasomill 12 hours ago ago

      I hope it's just insecurity. My fear is that it's a deliberate attempt to incite polarization, as if we don't have enough of that already.

    • Terr_ 16 hours ago ago

      I'm imaging an upcoming wedding that seems to be going well, until the mother of the bride starts sending out messages such as: "Everyone is expected to meet at least a 'silver' contribution level of approved items on the gift registry. This is easy for anyone who deserves an invitation for this special occasion."

      It would be pretty foolish to just... ignore the subtext.

      I suppose in this case, an angered "momzilla" can get you fired, freeze your bank account, etc.

    • stickfigure 17 hours ago ago

      It's a broadcast of tribal affiliation and has nothing to do with sense.

      Time to re-read this: https://www.slatestarcodexabridged.com/The-Toxoplasma-Of-Rag...

  • tzs 12 hours ago ago

    Here's is what Carr is asking:

    > That is why I am inviting broadcasters to pledge to air programming in their local markets in support of this historic national, non-partisan celebration. As an example, this could include:

    > • Running PSAs, short segments, or full specials specifically promoting civic education, inspiring local stories, and American history.

    > • Including segments during regular news programming that highlight local sites that are significant to American and regional history, such as National Park Service sites.

    > • Starting each broadcast day with the “Star Spangled Banner” or Pledge of Allegiance.

    > • Airing music by America’s greatest composers, such as John Philip Sousa, Aaron Copland, Duke Ellington, or George Gershwin.

    > • Providing daily “Today in American History” announcements highlighting significant events that took place on that day in history.

    > • Partnering with community organizations and other groups that are already working hard to bring America’s stories of unity, perseverance, and triumph to light

    With the exception of the one with the Pledge of Allegiance, those bullet items are things I would be completely unsurprised to find on a local PBS station. They would actually be pretty good things to include in a country's 250th birthday celebration.

    • cucumber3732842 10 hours ago ago

      Seems like a list of stuff nobody had to ask fore because it was already being done for the 200th.

  • hedora 17 hours ago ago

    Well, at least they're creating an easy litmus test the majority of the population can use to filter out propaganda sources.

    Ratings of news networks with Trump-mandated censors are already in free-fall. This pledge will provide additional public signal to help viewers know which channel to switch to.

    It's amazing to me that censors still don't understand the Streisand Effect. I guess we should just take the small wins at this point.

  • josefritzishere 17 hours ago ago

    This is very creepy. It's right out of 1984.

  • mindslight 18 hours ago ago

    How do you celebrate someone's birthday when their wife just died? You still do, but it's more somber and bittersweet than joyous. Just like America's 250th with these fascists busy destroying our cherished societal institutions.

    • cdrnsf 17 hours ago ago

      It does feel odd celebrating the birth of an institution that's never looked so mortal.

      • joezydeco 17 hours ago ago

        Or celebrating a Declaration of Independence when we've pretty much returned to rule by royals.

        • kelseyfrog 17 hours ago ago

          I'm not against celebrating the Declaration of Independence. Especially this part:

          He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.

          He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

          He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.

          He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

          He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.

          He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation.

          For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us.

          For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States.

          For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world.

          For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent.

          For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury.

          For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences.

          • water-data-dude 4 hours ago ago

            It's been a while since I read the actual text of the Declaration of Independence. It definitely hits different nowadays.

          • mrguyorama 17 hours ago ago

            Most of the Signers of that document were slaveholders.

            They didn't care about ideals any more than modern administrations. They were well connected opportunists who saw a chance to create a world that worked more for them: rich white guys.

            • jasomill 12 hours ago ago

              I can't speak for the other signers, but Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration, was an idealist who didn't always live up to his own ideals, including but not limited to slaveholding.

              Jefferson, 1789: I am not a Federalist, because I never submitted the whole system of my opinions to the creed of any party of men whatever in religion, in philosophy, in politics, or in any thing else where I was capable of thinking for myself. Such an addiction is the last degradation of a free and moral agent. If I could not go to heaven but with a party, I would not go there at all.

              Also Jefferson, 1792: (founds political party to oppose the Federalists)

              Machiavelli, ca. 1513: for many have pictured republics and principalities which in fact have never been known or seen, because how one lives is so far distant from how one ought to live, that he who neglects what is done for what ought to be done, sooner effects his ruin than his preservation; for a man who wishes to act entirely up to his professions of virtue soon meets with what destroys him among so much that is evil.

            • mindslight 16 hours ago ago

              > They didn't care about ideals any more than modern administrations

              They obviously did, just like recent past presidential administrations both D and R did - by at the very least paying lip service to them. There was real value in that, and we took it for granted. The current regime is just as (if not more) performative, but they're signalling vices rather than virtues. Following that example makes for a worse society, regardless of how much we actually live up to the virtues in practice.

            • kelseyfrog 17 hours ago ago

              Everyone knows that. How does that change anything?

  • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

    I'm disappointed by the discussion on this submission. Here's a list of things that would be encouraged by the main text of the request [1]:

    - The national anthem / pledge of allegiance (explicitly suggested by the text)

    - Civics-related stuff -- information about voting, how laws are passed, the branches of govt, the separation of powers, etc.

    - Arts that are "truly" American -- Blues, Jazz, Rock n Roll, etc. I know there will be disagreement about what counts as "American", but it's clear that there are some art forms that wouldn't exist without America's unique mixture of cultures.

    - Things about America's history -- speeches from George Washington/Lincoln/MLK/Other significant figures, the musical Hamilton, the emancipation proclamation, the text from the statue of liberty, discussion of Japanese internment camps, the history of Hawaii/Peurto Rico/Alaska/Any relevant state, etc

    I think those would all be positive. I'm sure there will also be some less inclusive parts that will endorsed by some broadcasters (I think discussion of that is good, but not endorsement). Carr's message is not asking for that, it's just encouraging an increased focus on America.

    [1] https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf

    • mzajc 17 hours ago ago

      > Things about America's history -- speeches from George Washington/Lincoln/MLK/Other significant figures

      Is there a source for this? I'd be little surprised if they encouraged airing MLK's speeches, but the linked document doesn't mention MLK, or encourage airing historical speeches of any kind.

      • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

        Here's the relevant section [1] (emphasis mine):

        > “That is why I am inviting broadcasters to pledge to air programming in their local markets in support of this historic national, non-partisan celebration. As an example, this could include:

        > • Running PSAs, short segments, or full specials specifically promoting _civic education, inspiring local stories, and American history_.

        > • Including segments during regular news programming that highlight local sites that are significant to American and regional history, such as National Park Service sites.

        > • Starting each broadcast day with the “Star Spangled Banner” or Pledge of Allegiance.

        > • Airing music by America’s greatest composers, such as John Philip Sousa, Aaron Copland, Duke Ellington, or George Gershwin.

        > • Providing daily “Today in American History” announcements highlighting significant events that took place on that day in history.

        > • Partnering with community organizations and other groups that are already working hard to bring America’s stories of unity, perseverance, and triumph to light.

        MLK's speeches are certainly included in civic education, inspiring local stories, and American history.

        [1] https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf

        • DonsDiscountGas 16 hours ago ago

          In other words you're incredibly naive and are just taking the Trump administration at their word

          • pinkmuffinere 15 hours ago ago

            mzajc asked for a source, and I provided a source from the main text.

      • Jtsummers 17 hours ago ago

        No, GP is making things up to try and paint the request in a positive light. They're just bullshitting, safe to ignore folks like that.

        • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

          Hi Jtsummers, please do me a favor and read Carr's request: https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf

          • Jtsummers 17 hours ago ago

            Hi pinkmuffinere, please do me a favor and consider the context surrounding this request and Carr's behavior in general. Others have provided it, you've chosen to ignore it. Choosing to be ignorant does not help here, you can do better.

            • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

              You claim that the request does not encourage "speeches from George Washington/Lincoln/MLK/Other significant figures". I believe I've provided quotes and sources proving otherwise. I am not here to discuss more generic American politics, I'm here to discuss the main text referenced by the submission -- to wit, the Gizmodo article misrepresents the main text. I'm defending that (fairly narrow) claim.

              • ImPostingOnHN 14 hours ago ago

                > I am not here to discuss more generic American politics

                This entire submission is about generic American politics. If you don't want to comment on this submission and participate in discussions about it, that's okay, but I think folks are confused by your insistence on discussing generic American politics (this submission) while omitting other generic American politics about the very same topic (the context of this submission).

                If you want to discuss a thing, you should be okay with thinking and talking about the critical context around that thing. As an engineer, I'm sure you can understand.

                • pinkmuffinere 11 hours ago ago

                  I guess I am interesting in discussing the much narrower question. And I can see you are not yet sick of replying to me :P, so I'd like to ask your view ImPostingOnHN -- do you feel that the text of Carr's request seems on-net good? If not, what is it in the text that you object to? To be clear, I actually do find one line objectionable (and maybe you'll show me others). He calls on broadcasters to air "patriotic, pro-America content". I feel 'patriotic' is just on the line of making me uncomfortable, and 'pro-America' slightly crosses over it. I think the right to criticize the powers-that-be is quintessentially American, and asking for explicit pro-America content betrays that. But I can also see ways that both of these could be interpreted in a positive-for-humanity way, even though they don't naturally jump out to me in that way.

                  • ImPostingOnHN 11 hours ago ago

                    There's really no good reason for me (or you) to exclude critical context from the announcement, given that they're both "generic American politics". Plenty of bad reasons though.

                    If you want to discuss "generic American politics", however, I have some questions already posed to you earlier which you thusfar have ignored because they were "generic American politics".

    • undefined 16 hours ago ago
      [deleted]
    • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago ago

      "I think these would be positive"

      is fine. The problem is the rest of the sentence:

      "...and I am the government, and I order you to broadcast my message, and also you can't say these other things I dislike, or I will revoke your ability to operate at all."

      It's disappointing to see this point missed: this isn't a random person sharing their opinion, it is both government-mandated speech and literal censorship.

      • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

        Did you read the text? It _does not_ order such broadcasting, your quote is made-up. Here's the closest quote I find:

        > Chairman Brendan Carr issued the following statement: ... "I am inviting broadcasters to pledge to air programming in their local markets in support of this historic national, non-partisan celebration."

        • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago ago

          Are you aware that this government, and indeed this government rep which we're discussing, has threatened to revoke broadcasting licenses from companies for airing content the government disagrees with? Or worse? On multiple occasions?

          If you don't have that context, none of my post will have made sense to you, which it appears is what happened.

          • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

            This submission claims to be about this announcement [1]. It is not about the full context of American politics right now. In fact generic politics is off-topic for HN [2]. I am responding to the main text of the announcement, not to general American politics.

            [1] https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf

            [2] https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

            • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago ago

              So you AREN'T aware that this government, and indeed this government rep which we're discussing, has threatened to revoke broadcasting licenses from companies for airing content the government disagrees with? Or worse? On multiple occasions?

              The omission of that critical context might be why none of my post made sense to you: you would be unable to realize that the 'invitation to participate' we're discussing involves a degree of coercion, based on those threats. If you threaten somebody to give you their money 3 times, and then a 4th time you 'invite them to participate in giving you their money', that is 4 threats total, not 3.

              Of course, anything in the world can be justified if you omit enough context, even government-compelled speech and government censorship. Just omit the context of the 3 times you threatened your mugging victim to comply, and all you have left is a polite invitation to share money. Totally okay, right?

              • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

                My claim is -- the main text of the announcement is _good_. I make no claim about the larger context. Obviously I don't like Trump. But IMO that kind of generic discussion is not what HN is for.

                • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago ago

                  Right, and I am adding the critical context that the 'invitation to participate' in spreading government propaganda and silencing government-disliked speech, is actually a veiled threat couched in numerous previous explicit threats made by the same party, making it both government-compelled speech and government censorship.

                  As for your personal politics, you can have whatever ones you want. I'm focusing on the issue here, not you personally. Hope I didn't say anything that came across as too personal.

                  • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

                    It's not too personal, but it is against HN guidelines [1]:

                    > Off-Topic: Most stories about politics, or crime, or sports, or celebrities, unless they're evidence of some interesting new phenomenon.

                    ...

                    > Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith.

                    [1] https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

                    • ImPostingOnHN 17 hours ago ago

                      Feel free to downvote or flag my comment if you personally feel that way, the mods here are pretty reasonable.

                      Indeed, feel free to flag this submission, and not comment in it, if you feel it is too political for HN. HN thrives because of a multitude of views, of which you are a part.

                      In the meantime, feel free to respond to the substance of my comments rather than complaining because I added critical context to an already-existing submission/discussion.

                      • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

                        thanks! ya, I don't want to discuss generic American politics on HN, I get too much of that already every day, and I think the HN guidelines are good.

        • Analemma_ 17 hours ago ago

          [flagged]

          • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

            I am obviously not wholesale endorsing the administration. The request as-issued is a positive thing, and indeed _would encourage_ discussing why we have term limits, why we should push back against autocrats, bigotry, etc. If they go around arresting people for not obeying their request, I'll feel differently.

            • mindslight 15 hours ago ago

              The only use for lofty values or nuance that fascists have is for distracting from their plain agenda. At the point we're at, it's prudent to wonder why someone would help carry water if they don't support the regime.

              Also, setting your criteria at "arresting people" seems like straightforward denial, especially as we're talking about broadcasters where the actual threat being wielded is to shut down their transmitters.

              I'd say the GP comment was entirely appropriate, despite it being flagged by the tone police. The context is very important here, and you seem to be deliberately ignoring it.

              • pinkmuffinere 15 hours ago ago

                > The only use for lofty values or nuance that fascists have is for distracting from their plain agenda.

                “Only a Sith deals in absolutes”

                • mindslight 14 hours ago ago

                  Even Jar Jar was wise to treachery.

  • mikestew 18 hours ago ago

    Could we just link to the original source instead of Gizmodo’s editorialized bad take?

    https://docs.fcc.gov/public/attachments/DOC-418890A1.pdf

    I’ll start by saying that it pains me to have to defend anything out of Carr’s mouth, but “loyalty” isn’t anywhere in that doc. Carr calls for a pledge to air PSAs and what have you, not loyalty. And when he complains of civic illiteracy, is he wrong? Ironically, how do we think we got into this mess of the current administration? Is Carr wrong in calling for the airing of things like School House Rock? Is it so bad to start the broadcast day with the national anthem? (Trick question, because when I was a kid some 50 years ago, I remember the broadcast day ending with the national anthem. Was never up early enough to find out what they did at the start of the day.)

    The way Gizmodo words it, you’d think Carr is requiring that all broadcasters air blatant government propaganda. And maybe the FCC document is just a dog whistle, I don’t know. Maybe I’m wrong. But the original document takes about five minutes to read, and I strongly suggest you read it and judge for yourself, rather than get all riled up from TFA’s editorializing.

    • hedora 17 hours ago ago

      "The Pledge America Campaign enables broadcasters to lend their voices in support of Task Force 250 and the celebration of America’s 250th birthday by airing patriotic, pro-America content that celebrates the American journey and inspires its citizens by highlighting the historic accomplishments of this great nation from our founding through the Trump Administration today."

      Even ignoring the context (Trump censoring things, limiting private institutions speech, murdering people because their state's governor said mean things, etc, etc), the text of the page you link to clearly says broadcasters will need to air pro-Trump programming.

      If you take context into account by looking at how the administration has redefined many of the words they use in the document (I guess you'd call that a "dog whistle"), then it's even more clear this is the Trump's attempt to force the news media to air a coordinated propaganda campaign during a pivotal election year.

      • tzs 12 hours ago ago

        >> "The Pledge America Campaign enables broadcasters to lend their voices in support of Task Force 250 and the celebration of America’s 250th birthday by airing patriotic, pro-America content that celebrates the American journey and inspires its citizens by highlighting the historic accomplishments of this great nation from our founding through the Trump Administration today."

        > Even ignoring the context (Trump censoring things, limiting private institutions speech, murdering people because their state's governor said mean things, etc, etc), the text of the page you link to clearly says broadcasters will need to air pro-Trump programming

        Where does it say that? The part you quoted is using "Trump Administration today" as an interval endpoint, not a specifier of content.

    • pinkmuffinere 17 hours ago ago

      Thankyou for your well-moderated reading of the text, you're absolutely right that Gizmodo's article is blowing it out of proportion. The actual ask is not so absurd. My reading of the text is that all of the following are encouraged:

      - The national anthem / pledge of allegiance (explicitly suggested by the text)

      - Civics-related stuff -- information about voting, how laws are passed, the branches of govt, the separation of powers, etc.

      - Arts that are "truly" American -- Blues, Jazz, Rock n Roll, etc. I know there will be disagreement about what counts as "American", but I think it's clear that there are some art forms that wouldn't exist without America's unique mixture of cultures.

      - Things about America's history -- speeches from George Washington/Lincoln/MLK/Other significant figures, the musical Hamilton, the emancipation proclamation, the text from the statue of liberty, discussion of Japanese internment camps, the history of Hawaii/Peurto Rico/Alaska/Any relevant state, etc

      I'm sure there will also be some less inclusive bits of history that are endorsed by some broadcasters. But Carr's message is not asking for that, it's just encouraging an increased focus on America. America is a melting pot, and has a great history of including downtrodden people, as well as a long history of injustice. A focus on America _doesn't_ mean we endorse the injustice. If anything, I think the injustice should be discussed, because they make the big shifts even _more_ palpable. There are people alive today that went to segregated schools. That's insane, and personally I do think that knowledge changes my behavior. I'd be very happy to be reminded about those things by public radio.

      There is one line that I felt was a bit concerning, but I think it really depends on your reading of the text (emphasis mine):

      > The Pledge America Campaign [encourages broadcasters to air] ... _pro-America_ content"

    • hypeatei 17 hours ago ago

      Carr threatened ABC's broadcasting license by saying they could go "the easy way or the hard way" after Jimmy Kimmel made a joke that offended MAGA. Why would we give the administration the benefit of the doubt here?

      They're obviously not a unifying force looking to make people love America again by making it better; I would liken them to a North Korean PR team.

      • cdrnsf 17 hours ago ago

        They used similar threats to dissuade Netflix from buying Time Warner, influencing coverage at CBS News and so on. Carr is a sycophant in service to a narcissist with an incredibly fragile ego.

    • tracker1 17 hours ago ago

      Even then... the social cohesion in this country has lapsed so much in my half century of life that I can't help but think maybe we could use a little propaganda to come together more as a country.

      I can't help but remember one example of my youth to my son's youth a few decades later. When I was in school, the position on fights is if you have the ability to intercede to stop it, you have a responsibility to do so... by the time my son was in school it was, "don't get involved, get a teacher or call the police."

      It's just such a stark contrast to me that it's hard to fathom where things are now a couple decades further still from when I was a young kid in later elementary school and Jr. High. Without a shared society and cohesion, we're largely doomed as a society. I realize that some people actually want this, but I really don't.

      I want our nation and our people to be successful.

      • Terr_ 17 hours ago ago

        I too am very concerned about a collapse of cohesion, mainly focused on agreement that "lies are wrong", "people given authority should be held to higher standards", "taking bribes should be punished" and "dictatorship is a bad idea". These principles are in trouble these days, as a shocking segment of people have spent a few years demonstrating they don't care. [0]

        In fact, those same issues apply to your school scenario! (For the sake of argument, let's wave-away other factors like larger school-sizes, general nostalgia, easier access to deadly weapons, etc.)

        Consider: Why are kids being instructed to run off and get a teacher?

        It's not because eagle-eyed Mrs. Frizzle is trusted to take in the battlefield at a glance, unsheathing the old yardstick by the whiteboard, this tan-colored Excalibur falling upon the necks of the wicked in defense of the just. Well, at least not where I went to school.

        It's actually the opposite, school authorities [1] are summoned because they are not trusted! They are not trusted to carefully investigate and rule fairly when it comes to the former-bystander "doing the right thing." Or, for that matter, trusted to prevent retribution and escalation.

        _________

        [0] Or at any rate, they weirdly place those principles beneath other stuff like "gay people can't partner up" or *checks notes* "the largest deportation operation in US history".

        [1] Teachers, staff, but also indirectly the parents of those involved.

      • hedora 17 hours ago ago

        Trump forced the Boy Scouts to eliminate the Citizenship in Society badge.

        Just saying.

        • tracker1 17 hours ago ago

          Why turn this into a divisive Trump thing? I'm literally talking about trying to bring the country closer together and the response is just more divisiveness...

          • hedora 14 hours ago ago

            The article is a divisive Trump thing about how we cannot have free media anymore because the FCC is censoring stuff.

            Your comment about citizenship and tolerance makes sense, but that's also under direct attack by the Trump administration. They literally just forcefully coerced the scouts into dropping the exact things you are advocating for from their program.

            There's no real path towards tolerating that and also having a tolerant society. This is the main weakness of liberal democracies, and it's being exploited to tear our institutions down.

        • bigyabai 16 hours ago ago

          I say this as a former First Class scout, the entire thing is a racket. The "point" of Boy Scouts is to make you associate pointless meritocratic flair with actual accomplishment. It is a conditioning and propaganda pipeline with the purpose of stimulating enlistment.

          The Boy Scouts were not an apolitical fun-fair, which became pretty glaringly obvious when the Army recruiters came by to meet with middle-schoolers. If you didn't enlist, you probably didn't stick around to earn your Eagle scout.

          • tracker1 16 hours ago ago

            I think there's some value basic survival skills, but this is pretty removed from modern scouts. It's mostly a recruitment tool and tbf the shift has been awkward in trying to capture the market that "Girl Scouts" carved out.