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The Media Cornucopia: Too many choices! Or too few!
WSJ Opinion Journal ^ | Wednesday, April 18, 2007 | Adam D. Thierer

Posted on 04/18/2007 8:26:51 AM PDT by Politics4Fun

Throughout most of history, humans lived in a state of extreme information poverty. News traveled slowly, field to field, village to village. Even with the printing press's advent, information spread at a snail's pace. Few knew how to find printed materials, assuming that they even knew how to read. Today, by contrast, we live in a world of unprecedented media abundance that once would have been the stuff of science-fiction novels. We can increasingly obtain and consume whatever media we want, wherever and whenever we want: television, radio, newspapers, magazines and the bewildering variety of material available on the Internet.

This media cornucopia is a wonderful development for a free society--or so you'd think. But today's media universe has fierce detractors, and nowhere more vehemently than on the left. Their criticisms seem contradictory. Some, such as Democratic congressman Dennis Kucinich, contend that real media choices, information sources included, remain scarce, hindering citizens from fully participating in a deliberative democracy. Others argue that we have too many media choices, making it hard to share common thoughts or feelings; democracy, community itself, again loses out. Both liberal views get the story disastrously wrong. If either prevails, what's shaping up to be America's Golden Age of media could be over soon.

(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: consolidation; fairnessdoctrine; media

1 posted on 04/18/2007 8:26:53 AM PDT by Politics4Fun
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