She shouldn’t have said this, it sealed the deal “Millions of Americans will have less trustworthy information about their communities, states, country, and world with which to make decisions about the quality of their lives.”
She should have said: “Millions of Americans will lose access to information about how great Trump is and how to report who to deport next.”
Jokes aside, the emergency broadcast system makes so much sense as a function of public broadcasting. I have been to several countries that explicitly subsidize radio and tv channels for this purpose. You can have public programming 99% of the time, and a way to get information out in an emergency all ready to go.
She shouldn’t have said this, it sealed the deal “Millions of Americans will have less trustworthy information about their communities, states, country, and world with which to make decisions about the quality of their lives.”
She should have said: “Millions of Americans will lose access to information about how great Trump is and how to report who to deport next.”
Jokes aside, the emergency broadcast system makes so much sense as a function of public broadcasting. I have been to several countries that explicitly subsidize radio and tv channels for this purpose. You can have public programming 99% of the time, and a way to get information out in an emergency all ready to go.
In Spain, while we had the black out, the only thing working to give info was the radio.