belvdr
No longer interested in living
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2013
- Messages
- 2,567
Interesting points. I would "like" your post but they don't seem to be enabled in this forum.There are two basic theories of law in play here. Most people think the federal government has this all-powerful regulatory magic. There's rule of law and color of law. Much of the federal government runs on color of law; making the people believe that they have more authority than they really do to gain compliance. I was with a regulatory enforcement federal agency for 20 years. Almost everything was handed over to local authorities (if any existed at all) for follow-up even if it started with us. In the end, almost 100% of anything we'd pursue ourselves resulted in filing a lawsuit in federal court to get a judicial decision on whether or not the situation violated federal law. In the end, most of it is smoke and mirrors. With the FCC, there's a whole lot of color of law going on. They have the most leverage when interference occurs with a licensed entity or it becomes interstate/international (which is within the scope of their authority). Federal government has no authority to act on something that happened wholly within the bounds of a state unless a governmental entity has invited them to become involved or they've created a foothold such as through a "license." Too many movies portray the feds as "we're here now and we're taking over." That' not the way local/state/federal government works. Now, when it comes to executive agencies, that's a whole different thing that gets really grey.
I'm curious about your local pirate station, though. If they are interfering with licensed broadcast stations, why did they stop pursuing? They were called there by some entity or found it themselves.