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Broadcasters Being Silenced

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The FCC chair, Brendan Carr, threatened broadcasters over their coverage of the war with Iran.

Carr suggested broadcasters could face consequences — including license issues — if their war coverage spreads what the administration considers distortions.

This is a chilling precedent.

The media is attempting to cover a rapidly unfolding war while operating under massive information gaps and partial blackouts. Carr is essentially warning that if they get the story wrong, they could be punished.

Meanwhile, Tucker Carlson says he is facing criminal threats over his commentary on the war:

Why this is scary…

In times of war, governments have historically tried to shape the narrative to maintain public support and gain control. But when that crosses into threats of punishment against media figures and outlets for what they consider “distortions” or “propaganda”, it risks eroding our civil rights.

The government labels anything not aligned with their wartime narrative as propaganda, but last I heard, propaganda is legal.

Threats and censorship put pressure on journalists by creating a fear of punishment that can discourage reporting that challenges the official narrative. The risk of job loss or even having bank accounts shut down is very real when the government tries to silence those attempting to reveal the truth.

In 2019, Carr said“Should the government censor speech it doesn’t like? Of course not. The FCC does not have a roving mandate to police speech in the name of the public interest.” At the time, he appeared to defend uncensored news coverage. Why the change of heart? Maybe he, too, is being threatened and falling in line to keep his position.

This isn’t about defending the media—they’ve done plenty to destroy their own credibility. The concern is the government openly signaling it may use regulatory power to punish coverage it doesn’t like during a war. Even if the FCC technically only controls broadcast licenses, the message is clear: report something the government disagrees with and there could be consequences. That kind of pressure during wartime is dangerous.

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