Thank you so much for inviting me here tonight. It is an honor and a privilege for me, as an attorney, a government official, and a public citizen, to be associated with the Media Institute, a group whose commitment to both free speech and liberty is undisputed. And to be here with tonight's award recipients magnifies the honor and privilege. These two gentlemen, James Kennedy and Ralph Roberts, and the two companies they lead, Cox Enterprises and Comcast, exemplify what I want to talk about today -- the commitment and dedication of media companies and their leaders to serving their communities.
Where I work, at the FCC, we regulate a wide variety of money-making companies - at least we trust that their goal is to make money even if it doesn't always work out that way. The vast majority of these companies present us with only typical business issues that can arise in any regulatory agency in Washington. But the companies that represent the media in America,-- many of you,-- present us with a wholly different and substantially unique set of problems because your businesses require me and my colleagues to make decisions that affect the most basic constitutional right, the right of free speech as protected by the First Amendment.
Let me flush out these two considerations. First, with respect to Congressional guidance,
legislation sometimes gives the FCC specific directions on how to balance the right of free
speech against other public interests. We are directed, for example, to protect children from
indecency and to promote their learning; we are directed to promote diversity of viewpoints
among speakers and to increase competition among viewpoints; and we are directed to ensure
that various local viewpoints are not lost in the national din. As a result, the FCC has adopted
clear and explicit regulations on when indecent programming may be aired and how broadcasters
must comply with their duty to serve the educational and informational needs of children. We
also promote diversity in ownership, and we ensure that programmers are responsive to local
public service needs. Thus, where Congress has the constitutional power to protect other very
important interests and has, in a constitutionally permissible way, balanced those other interests
against speech interests, my colleagues and I are bound to follow the Congressional directives. I
respect that they are the national legislators, not me.
In other areas, however, Congress has not legislated. In these circumstances, the
Commission is often pressured to act on its own - to start regulating what is deemed to be
"good" or "bad" messages or what is "good" or "bad" television. Those who encourage us to act
are often motivated by concerns that they truly believe to be morally desirable. But on these
issues the Commission cannot begin to stray across the line to start regulating messages for their
tastelessness. In my view, the Constitution largely prohibits even elected representatives from
making such judgments; and it surely bars unelected appointed officials from rendering such
judgments.
Some might ask, if Congress does not act in these circumstances and regulators do not
act, who will act to influence the moral standards of the nation - to set us on the path to a more
tolerant, more open, yet more disciplined and more morally demanding nation? That is where all
of you - and tonight's honorees come into the picture.
I find that the vast majority of leaders of the media, both print media and
telecommunications media, understand and appreciate the unique role and responsibilities that
their organizations play in their local communities and in the national society. Most media
leaders value their reputations in the community - the members of the media live, work, and
raise their families in the communities, local and national, that they serve. I submit that all of
you - fighting, jousting, pushing in your own ways and with your own moral compasses - will
point toward a much more reliable version of the "good society" than we regulators could ever
bring about by governmental decree.
I also humbly reject the idea that government and the media must be adversaries. The recent tragic events in the Washington metropolitan area show us that
government can properly make requests of the media that the media will reliably respect. When
the Sniper Task Force requested that radio and television stations suspend their commuter traffic
forecasts - so that the sniper would not know which roads were open for his escape - the stations
responded with restraint, even though it may have hurt their "bottom lines" and even though it
may have left their reporters chafing with a desire to be first with the story.
Other problems may be less clearly resolved. Recently, for example, my staff received a
call from a father who was concerned that his children's Saturday morning programming had
been interrupted by a live news conference about the recent shootings. This father was
concerned that the news conference was not appropriate for viewing by his children. Others,
however, may have been very happy to have instantaneous coverage of such fast-breaking news.
In my view, these difficult decisions are rightly placed in your hands, not mine ... and not my
colleagues'.
Finally, let me say that I am not unmindful of the unique capacity the
telecommunications media have for shaping American society in the Twenty-first Century. But
every generation sees its new technology as truly unique and challenging - from the printing
press, to the penny press, to the radio, then television, and now cable, satellite, the internet and
other even newer, faster forms of transmitting news and viewpoints. We trusted the innovators
of earlier generations to carry the news farther and faster, and in my opinion, we can trust
today's generation to do the same.
I am going to do my best, within my sphere of regulatory responsibility, to make
American society the most that it can be and I will always enforce the law and our rules. But the
major responsibility for ensuring that we become a fertile plain and not a wasteland is yours --
you Mr. Kennedy, you Mr. Roberts, and all of the American people who exercise their right of
free speech.