Curiously, one of the first jobs of the Obama Administration is to delay — from February to June — the switchover from analog TV to the beautiful HDTV broadcast format.  6.8% of Americans have allegedly not yet upgraded their televisions because the $40.00USD coupon program offered by the FCC ran out of money.


Delaying the inevitable is always a bad idea.  If the remaining 6.8% were not swift enough to get in line early enough for a free box converter — this HDTV transition has been in the works since the 1990s — then that’s the price they pay for not paying attention to the deadline.

We all know we’ll still have the same 6.8% in June — the lazy in human nature abides no deadline until it passes — and what then, do we delay the HDTV deadline another few months?

The only way to get everyone on board with a dramatic new program of opportunity is to press them into action and then leaving them behind if they refuse to catch up.

$40 is not a lot of money and, please remember, television — ANY TELEVISION — is a delight but not a right. Any emergency information can be delivered via radio and most stations planning to switch to HDTV are also going to keep their analog broadcast alive for a bit to help ease the transition between formats.

Delaying the move to HDTV is precisely what we don’t want in our federal government:  Intervention into a problem that doesn’t need solving.

2 Comments

  1. Pretty sad that people can be so slothful about something that is, to them, free.

  2. That is the core of it, Gordon. They’re getting it for free; they waited too long; now they have to pay; they don’t way to pay; the rest of us suffer another few months for them to get left out a second time.

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