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December 10, 2006

Stop AT&T Merger which Threatens our Internet Access

By andi novick

Save our internet - stop this merger. It's not good for anyone other than Big Business. It's certainly not good for YOU!

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Dear Friends, This is really important. Our Internet is threatened by the AT&T merger FCC Chairman Martin would like to literally force through before the next Congress comes in. He wants to deliver this little holiday gift to the industry he so proudly has represented that he's trying to force FCC Commissioner McDowell, who had correctly recused himself from voting on the merger, to violate ethical standards in order to break the 2-2 tie. PLEASE TAKE ACTION NOW--SAVE OUR INTERNET--STOP THIS MERGER go to: _http://action.freepress.net/campaign/stop_att_merger_ (http://action.freepress.net/campaign/stop_att_merger) What, you haven't taken action yet? Without the Internet being free and open to us- we will have no way to communicate! We all know how hard it is to be fighting to regain what the broadcast media, in collusion with our government, has taken from us. DON'T LET THAT HAPPEN WITH THE INTERNET! And speaking about fighting to reclaim what's rightfully ours-- our airwaves--our free press-- thank you all for a terrific turn out at FDR's on the 21st and thank you Commissioner Copps for this wonderful Op Ed you wrote in response. We have 13 days left to get our responses into the FCC- if you haven't done that yet- go to our blog and we'll send them in for you and If you're a Dutchess County resident- get your local government to stand up for you-- Go to _http://freepress.net/news/19306_ (http://freepress.net/news/19306) and see County Legislator Joel Tyner's Resolution Asking FCC for Media Monopoly Protection Sought by Duchess County sign the _The Ten-Point Plan for Media Democracy Petition_ (http://www.petitiononline.com/MORMedia/petition.html) PLEASE SHOW UP- MONDAY, DECEMBER 18th, 7:30- AT THE DUTCHESS COUNTY LEGISLATURE 22 Market St. Poughkeepsie -- IF YOU SHOW UP WE CAN PASS THE RESOLUTION-- (WHILE WE'RE ALL THERE MAYBE WE CAN TALK ABOUT THOSE VOTING MACHINES THEY'RE GOING TO HAVE TO BE MAKING A DECISION ON VERY SHORTLY-- MORE ON THAT NEXT WEEK) Thanks to everyone for taking action and thank you in advance for showing up Monday night, December 18th at 7:30, Dutchess County Legislature, 22 Market St. Poughkeepsie, NY. andi novick Northeast Citizens for Responsible Media _www.re-media.org_ (http://www.re-media.org/) This is Commissioner Michael Copps' Inspirational piece on our Public Hearing-- thank you Commissioner Copps. Three weeks ago, I was invited by the Northeast Citizens for Responsible Media and Congressman Maurice Hinchey to visit Hyde Park for a hearing on local media. I accepted immediately. Now I have to admit - this was a little bit business and a little bit pleasure. As a Commissioner at the Federal Communciations Commission, I'm always eager to get out from behind my desk and hear what Americans think about their local media. But I also couldn't pass up the chance to attend a hearing so near the home of that giant of the twentieth century- and my personal hero - Franklin Delano Roosevelt. FDR understood the power of the media and he understood how it could be used for good-to inform the public, encourage discourse, and bring communities closer together. He relied heavily on radio to ensure that his history-making "fireside chats" were broadcast across the nation in order to bring him and his message closer to the citizenry. But he also understood and supported that opposing voices should also be heard and that this new medium of radio could be used to nourish and grow American democracy. He knew that too much media power in too few hands would work to the detriment of democracy and he worked to keep such aggregations of power checked. The importance of the many lessons FDR taught us have not diminished with time. Soon, the Federal Communications Commission - a New Deal creation- will be deciding whether to allow a small number of media giants to buy up the remaining local broadcasters and other media outlets across the land. Three years ago - in a process seemingly designed to exclude public comment - a majority at the FCC voted (over my objection) to scrap many of the ownership limits previously in existence. Instead, the agency's new rules allowed a single corporation to dominate local media markets by merging the community's TV stations, radio stations, newspaper and other outlets. A storm of public outrage ensued. Three million citizens contacted the FCC to express their opposition to the new rules. I didn't know that three million people knew the FCC even existed! But these concerned Americans contacted us out of a strong belief that we desperately need rules to prevent "one-size-fits-all" news from becoming the acceptable standard in our communities. Congress went on record with its opposition, too. And then a federal court found the rules both substantively and procedurally flawed and sent them back to us to rework. Several months ago, the FCC launched a review of these very same rules. So a new dialogue is underway. But this time, it needs to be much more than an inside-the-Beltway discussion between a government agency and a few mega-corporations. Let's remember that American citizens own the airwaves, not TV and radio executives. We give broadcasters the right to use these airwaves for free. They earn profits using this public resource in exchange for their agreement to broadcast in the public interest. But we need to make sure that broadcasters hold up their end of the bargain. I left Hyde Park with a lot of hope in my heart that we're going to win this fight. Hundreds of citizens turned out, through less than welcoming weather, to take part in a truly inspiring meeting. This was due in no small part to the outstanding organizing of Andi Novick and her staff at Northeast Citizens for Responsible Media. But I think it also shows that the citizens of New York are fed up with the current media environment. And- as the famous line from Paddy Chayefsky's Network goes- they are not going to take it anymore! At the end of the day, it is citizen action, involvement and commitment of the sort I saw up in Hyde Park that is going to make the difference. I believe we have the best chance in our generation to settle this issue of who will control our media and for what purposes. But it will take a lot of us, working together, to make it happen. Think about what a sweet victory this can be-because if you and I do what we should be doing, at the end of the debate we can have airwaves of, by and for the American people. We can have a media that reflects and nourishes our democracy. I believe the American people want a New Deal for how their airwaves are used. Let's go get it for them. Michael J. Copps is a commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission.

Authors Website: http://electiontransparencycoalition.org/

Authors Bio:
Andi Novick
Election Transparency Coalition, www.etcnys.org, http://nylevers.wordpress.com/

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