Abstract
The very conflict over obscure points of law and regulation and their relation to the First Amendment hides for broadcasters in the United States the far more serious plight of broadcasters in other American nations. The conditions in Nicaragua fluctuate between complete repression of objective news programing and a limited amount of freedom. In other countries, notably Cuba, broadcasting has suffered greater loss—not merely in repression or physical damage, but in its own professional ethic, its reason for existence.
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