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The Water Cooler
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James Yeager banned from YouTube
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<blockquote data-quote="Dave70968" data-source="post: 3060673" data-attributes="member: 13624"><p>The Fairness Doctrine has been dead for 30 years (i.e. since before you were born); if you "don't think that should change," then we're just fine. Again, if you'd do a little research--even just reading <em>your own</em> links--you'd know that.</p><p></p><p>As to corporations being allowed to express political viewpoints, I would direct you to something much more modern: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC" target="_blank"><em>Citizens United v. FEC</em></a>.</p><p></p><p>Go. Read. Move your lips if you have to. We'll wait.</p><p></p><p>(Also, corporate businesses are private entities; "publicly-traded" is not the same as "public entity." The latter implies government support, such as a government-sponsored business, government-run utility, etc.; Google is not. It's a private entity, even if its stock is available to anybody who comes with the money to buy it.)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dave70968, post: 3060673, member: 13624"] The Fairness Doctrine has been dead for 30 years (i.e. since before you were born); if you "don't think that should change," then we're just fine. Again, if you'd do a little research--even just reading [I]your own[/I] links--you'd know that. As to corporations being allowed to express political viewpoints, I would direct you to something much more modern: [URL='https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC'][I]Citizens United v. FEC[/I][/URL]. Go. Read. Move your lips if you have to. We'll wait. (Also, corporate businesses are private entities; "publicly-traded" is not the same as "public entity." The latter implies government support, such as a government-sponsored business, government-run utility, etc.; Google is not. It's a private entity, even if its stock is available to anybody who comes with the money to buy it.) [/QUOTE]
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