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Howard Stern's the Immoral One??? by Marc Stevens Infinity
Broadcasting was given a
"proposed
forfeiture" by the
so-called “FCC.” This
was because Howard Stern did a show alleged to be "lewd
and vulgar, and that it appeared to have been used to pander, titillate
and shock." Excuse
me, but who’s really in the wrong here?
Let’s
examine how both Howard Stern and the so-called “FCC” do business
using two objective standards: 1)
Is the service provided voluntarily or violently; and 2)
does the provider deliver the customers what was promised. Howard
Stern and his associates provide services to their customers on a mutual
voluntary basis. As far as I
am aware, Howard Stern has never used physical violence or threats of
physical violence to get any of his customers.
The people who pay Howard do so voluntarily, as do the people who
listen to him. Just as
important, people are free to not listen to Howard. Howard
Stern does not, to my knowledge, employ armed men to force people to
listen to his show. If
Howard did, I’m sure no reasonable person would argue that is a
“moral” way of doing business. I
think rational people agree doing business at the barrel of a gun is, at
best, “immoral.” At the
very least, most would agree it’s not the way civilized people do
business and certainly not the way they would want to become a customer. Does
Howard Stern provide the service or product he promises to give?
Given the fact he is voluntarily renewed, I would say he does. There
is nothing fundamentally wrong with the manner in which Howard Stern
does business; it’s “moral,” civilized and honest.
Howard does business on a voluntary basis and delivers what he
promises. Now
let’s look at the so-called “FCC” and see if they are consistent
with these two objective standards. Like
the Contrary
to the way Howard Stern does business, the men and women doing business
as the Howard
Stern allegedly did something that “appeared
. . . to pander, titillate and shock."
Okay, and
what’s the intent of those so-called “laws” providing for the
“forfeiture” of homes and prison sentences for people who do not pay
for the wonderful services the men and women doing business as the
United States provide? Isn’t
that to induce fear and terror? Which
is “immoral,” something meant to “pander,
titillate and shock” offered on a voluntary basis you can turn off, or
something imposed violently meant to induce fear and terror you cannot
turn off without the risk of being killed? Do
the men and women doing business as the “The
constitution is a charter of negative liberties; it tells the state to
let the people alone; it does not require the federal government or the
states to provide services, even so elementary a service as maintaining
law and order.” Bowers
v. Devito, 686 F.2d 616. If
your car gets stolen, can you sue the police department or the
“state” for failing to protect you?
The men and women doing business as the The
men and women doing business as the The
so-called “FCC” fails both objective standards.
Howard Stern does business on a voluntary basis and keeps his
word, while the FCC does business violently and doesn’t keep their
word. Who is the
“immoral” one here? And
this does not take into account the value Howard Stern creates as
opposed to the so-called “FCC,” which creates nothing of value it
can voluntarily trade. You
may hate Howard Stern and his show, but no rational person can dispute
the fact he creates value people are willing to voluntarily pay for. Stripped
of guns and violence, the so-called “FCC” is nothing more than a
group of men and women with nothing to voluntarily trade and no way to
force themselves on others. Compare
that with the value Howard voluntarily creates and has created over the
course of his career. Just
imagine the men and women doing business as the But
let’s not leave out the “morality” of those who support the
so-called “FCC” and/or file “complaints” to it about Howard
Stern. This issue is settled
with the following question: Do
you have a right to pick up a machine gun to stop Howard Stern from
voluntarily doing business with his customers? Who’s wrong here? Is it those who rely on violence to do business, those who, directly or indirectly, violently force their opinions on others, or those who create value and trade voluntarily? discuss this column in the forum Marc Stevens is the author of Adventures In Legal Land, the controversial and humorous new book that exposes the government hoax. He can be reached at www.adventuresinlegalland.com. |