Al Jazeera's Struggle for U.S. Airtime
Andrew Stroehlein, the director of media and information at the International Crisis Group, reflects on why the English language version of Al Jazeera's television news operation "remains unavailable to most Americans." The quality of reporting from what is perhaps the best-funded television news network, he argues, is not the problem. "The hurdle for some [cable companies] is a lingering fear of a public relations backlash -- that some customers might get agitated by their cable company offering a channel whose sister station in Arabic has a reputation for being anti-American," he writes. However, he points out that key administration officials and former White House press secretary, Tony Snow, have given interviews to the station. "If it is worthwhile enough for them to spend their time giving interviews to Al Jazeera English, no one could seriously argue that the American public should not watch it," he writes.
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I would cancel, whats wrong with that??
If DISH chose to add a Al Jazeera channel I would cancel. Say its censorship all you want, I do not want my money going to anti-american terrorists.
Nothing wrong with canceling
No one should (or could) force you to watch it if you don't want to, but it's a mark of foolishness to call something you haven't seen "anti-American" or "terrorist." The issue isn't whether someone will force you to watch it, but whether you (and everyone else) has the right to have access to it.
As Roger Cohen [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/12/opinion/12cohen.html?ex=1352523600&en=747b663f06b77db1&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=permalink recently pointed out] in the New York Times,
I would subscribe if I could get Al-Jazeera
I don't currently have cable, but if a local provider offered Al-Jazeera, I would sign up. It's critical that we get more perspectives on the war -- and other issues -- than are available on U.S. news. That's why I watch French satellite TV for the news.