|
|
|
|
|
by sneak
627 days ago
|
|
It’s still against the law in the US to transmit on many bands without a license even if you build your own radio from scratch at home. Talking at a distance has nothing inherently to do with commerce. We basically punted on the 10th amendment with things like the FCC and DOE (education, not energy). |
|
Electromagnetic waves transit state lines pretty much constantly. Even though I'm in Texas I'll get radio waves from Oklahoma, Louisiana, and even Illinois from time to time.
> Talking at a distance has nothing inherently to do with commerce.
Talking at a distance does affect commerce when that talking at a distance interferes with other people trying to talk and conduct interstate commerce. Guess I'll have to state it again, electromagnetic waves transit state lines pretty much constantly.
And it would absolutely affect interstate commerce if every state decided on different frequencies for commercial FM radio, different frequencies for cell phones, different frequencies for TV signals, different encodings for those things, etc. imagine needing to buy a different radio for NY as TX or IL or CA. Or if you needed different cell phones as you traveled state lines.
> We basically punted on the 10th amendment with things like the FCC and DOE
People being illiterate definitely affects interstate commerce. People not being able to count definitely affects interstate commerce.