ALLIANCE FOR COMMUNITY MEDIA; the Alliance for
Communications Democracy; People for the American
Way, Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION; United States of
America, Respondents,
New York Citizens Committee for Responsible Media; Media
Access New York; Brooklyn Producers' Group;
David Channon; National Cable
Television Association, Inc.,
Intervenors (Two Cases).
DENVER AREA EDUCATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATIONS CONSORTIUM;
American Civil Liberties Union, Petitioners,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION; United States of
America, Respondents.
New York Citizens Committee for Responsible Media; Media
Access New York; Brooklyn Producers' Group;
David Channon; National Cable
Television Association, Inc.,
Intervenors,
Morality in Media, Amicus Curiae.
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, Petitioner,
v.
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION; United States of
America, Respondents,
New York Citizens Committee for Responsible Media; Media
Access New York; Brooklyn Producers' Group;
David Channon; National Cable
Television Association, Inc.,
Intervenors,
National Law Center for Children and Families; National
Legal Foundation, Amici Curiae.
Nos. 93-1169, 93-1171, 93-1270 and 93-1276.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Sept. 14, 1993.
Decided Nov. 23, 1993.
Rehearing Denied; Rehearing In Banc Granted, Judgment
Vacated Feb. 16, 1994.
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I. Michael Greenberger, argued the cause for petitioners in Nos. 93-1169, 93-1171, 93-1270 and 93-1276. With him on the joint briefs were Charles S. Sims, Marjorie Heins, Lisolette E. Mitz, Arthur Barry Spitzer, James Ned Horwood, Andrew Jay Schwartzman and Elliot M. Mincberg. Michael Kenneth Isenman was on the brief for petitioners the Alliance for Communications Democracy and People for the American Way in No. 93-1270.
Gregory M. Christopher, Counsel, F.C.C., argued the cause for respondents. With him on the brief were Renee Licht, Acting Gen. Counsel, F.C.C., Daniel McMullen Armstrong, Associate Gen. Counsel, F.C.C., Stuart E. Schiffer, Acting Asst. Atty. Gen., U.S. Dept. of Justice, Barbara L. Herwig and Jacob M. Lewis, Attys., U.S. Dept. of Justice.
On the brief for intervenor Nat. Cable Television Ass'n, Inc., were Daniel Leslie Brenner, Michael Stuart Schooler and Diane B. Burstein.
On the joint brief for amicus curiae Nat. Law Center for Children and Families and Nat. Family Legal Foundation, were H. Robert Showers, Jr., and James P. Mueller.
Robert Thomas Perry, entered an appearance for intervenors New York Citizens Committee for Responsible Media, Media Access New York, Brooklyn Producers' Group and David Channon.
Paul J. McGeady, entered an appearance for amicus curiae Morality in Media in No. 93-1171.
Before MIKVA, Chief Judge, WALD and EDWARDS, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.
WALD, Circuit Judge:
Petitioners, a group of cable programmers and organizations of listeners and viewers, seek review of two orders issued by the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC" or "Commission") regulating indecent programming on cable "access" channels. Access channels are those channels a cable operator must set aside for public, educational, or governmental use ("PEG access") or use by unaffiliated commercial programmers ("leased access").1 We examine two constitutional questions: First, when the government compels private cable operators to relinquish editorial control over a certain number of "access" channels, making these available for general use by unaffiliated programmers, may it permit cable operators to deny access on those channels to programs that are "indecent," as defined by the FCC? Second, if the cable operator does not ban "indecent" programs from leased access channels, may the government compel the cable operators to place on a separate channel all leased access programs that the programmer, [
I. BACKGROUND
When Congress passed the Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-549, 98 Stat. 2779 ("1984 Act"), it sought, among other things, to "assure that cable communications provide ... the widest possible diversity of information sources and services to the public." 47 U.S.C. Sec. 521. To achieve this goal, the 1984 Act required cable operators to set aside "leased access" channels for commercial use by any entity not affiliated with the cable operator. Id. at Sec. 532(b). It further authorized franchising authorities to require cable operators to provide "PEG access" channels for public, educational and governmental use. Id. at Sec. 531. Because the 1984 Act barred cable operators from exercising any editorial control over either type of access channels, id. at Secs. 531(e), 532(c)(2) (amended 1992), it granted cable operators immunity from liability for any access channel programming, id. at Sec. 558 (amended 1992).
The House Report on the 1984 Act conceived of access channels as "the video equivalent of the speaker's soap box or the electronic parallel to the printed leaflet." H.R.Rep. No. 934, 98th Cong., 2d Sess. 30 (1984), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1984, pp. 4655, 4667. As such, Congress embraced access channels as a way to "provide groups and individuals who generally have not had access to the electronic media with the opportunity to become sources of information in the electronic marketplace of ideas." Id. However, the statute did not grant leased or PEG access to material unprotected by the Constitution. 47 U.S.C. Secs. 532(h), 544(d) (amended 1992). In addition, Congress required cable operators to provide subscribers with a "lock-box" that would allow an adult to "prohibit viewing of a particular cable service during periods selected by that subscriber." Id. at Sec. 544(d)(2)(A).
In 1992 Congress enacted the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-385, 106 Stat. 1460 (to be codified at 47 U.S.C. Secs. 531, 532(h), 532(j) & 558) ("1992 Act" or "Act"). Section 10 of the Act ("section 10") worked two changes, now being challenged before this court. First, it permits a cable operator to prohibit indecent programming on all access channels. Pub.L. No. 102-385, Sec. 10(a) & (c),
[
The regulations have been stayed pending review, and the petitions for review have been expedited and consolidated. Alliance for Community Media v. FCC, Nos. 93-1270 & 93-1276 (D.C.Cir. May 7, 1993) (order filed); Alliance for Community Media v. FCC, Nos. 93-1169 & 93-1171 (D.C.Cir. April 7, 1993) (order filed). Petitioners challenge section 10 of the 1992 Act and the FCC's implementing rules principally on the basis that they violate the First Amendment and the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment.2
II. ANALYSIS
Petitioners charge that both the authorizing provisions of section 10 and the FCC's implementing regulations (i) are not the least restrictive means to further the government's asserted interest, (ii) impermissibly regulate indecency only on access channels, (iii) will chill protected expression, and (iv) impose a prior restraint on speech without the constitutionally required procedural protections. We distill from this two constitutional questions.
First, when the government requires cable operators to set aside access channels for general use on a content-neutral basis, may it constitutionally permit cable operators to ban indecent material from these channels? The government responds that it may, maintaining that any resulting ban of indecent material from access channels would reflect the editorial judgment of private cable operators to whom First and Fifth Amendment strictures do not apply. For reasons set forth below, we reject the government's argument. Relying on our prior ruling in Action for Children's Television v. FCC,
[
A. Section 10's Authorization of Cable Operators to Ban Indecent Programming From Leased Access and PEG Access Channels
We examine first whether the statute and regulations trigger First and Fifth Amendment scrutiny. The constitutional guarantees of free speech and equal protection of the laws protect against incursion of these liberties by the government but not by private persons. Hudgens v. NLRB,
1. State Action in Cable Operators' Decision to Ban Indecent Material from Leased Access and PEG Access Channels
The Supreme Court has not yet devised an infallible test for determining when actions of private parties are so intertwined with governmental action as to be attributable to the government for purposes of a constitutional inquiry. The determination of whether state action exists in such cases is generally the result of a complicated and fact-specific inquiry. "Only by sifting facts and weighing circumstances can the nonobvious involvement of the State in private conduct be attributed its true significance." Burton v. Wilmington Parking Auth.,
We start with the proposition that a state's general regulation of a private industry is insufficient in itself to establish state action. Even if the state confers a license or monopoly power upon a private entity, no state action will be found unless the state is specifically involved in the action being challenged. Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.,
Under the statute and regulations governing cable television, the cable operator is relieved of all editorial control over access channels, 47 U.S.C. Secs. 531(e), 532(c)(2) (amended 1992), except in the case of constitutionally protected "indecent" material, as defined by the government. By granting the cable operators this exceptional authority to ban indecent material totally from access channels, the government expressly furthers an announced policy to limit children's access to such material. 1992 Act, Sec. 10,
The government argues nonetheless that, under the regulations, the cable operator is ultimately free to decide whether or not to deny access to indecent programming. The government maintains that with respect to access channels the 1992 Act simply restores to cable operators a measure of the editorial control they enjoyed prior to the 1984 Act. We do not find that argument convincing. The Supreme Court has consistently held the government responsible for discrimination that it significantly encourages and has refused to allow it to encourage discrimination on the part of private actors on grounds that it could not itself invoke. Reitman v. Mulkey,
In Reitman, a private property owner refused to rent an apartment to a couple based on race. He justified his action by citing to a state constitutional amendment establishing the right to discriminate in housing, which implicitly repealed earlier fair housing statutes. The United States Supreme Court affirmed the state supreme court's decision striking down the state amendment as violative of the Fourteenth Amendment, on the ground that "a prohibited state involvement could be found even where the state can be charged with only encouraging, rather than commanding discrimination."
a. The Immediate Objective of the Regulations
There can be no doubt that the immediate objective of the 1992 Act is to suppress indecent material and limit its transmission on access channels, a purpose the government admits raises First Amendment concerns should state action be present.9 The government argues before this court and section 10 itself states that the purpose of the regulation is to limit children's access to indecent material. 1992 Act, Sec. 10,
b. The Context of the Regulations
The context of the regulations evinces an effort on the part of the government to enlist the cable operator in the suppression of indecent material. The government focuses the cable operator's attention on the only material the government seeks to suppress, and then permits the cable operator expressly to suppress that--and no other--material.
First, the regulations facilitate the identification of material the government wishes to suppress. In the case of leased access the regulations require cable programmers to identify indecent material contained in their programs, Implementation of Section 10, 58 Fed.Reg. at 7993 (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. Sec. 76.701(d)-(f)), and in the case of PEG access the regulations expressly permit the cable operator to require such identification, Implementation of Section 10, 58 Fed.Reg. at 19,626 (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. Sec. 76.702). These requirements of identification apply only with respect to the government-defined material. 58 Fed.Reg. at 7993, 19,626.
Next, the government has stripped the cable operator of any editorial control over cable access channels except for programming [
To sum up, the government first strips a cable operator of editorial power over access channels, then singles out the material it wishes to eliminate, and finally permits the cable operator to pull the trigger on that material only.12
c. The Ultimate Effect of the Regulations
The ultimate effect of this banning authorization is hardly in doubt; the legislative history indicates that many cable operators will eagerly ban indecent programming. See S. REP. No. 92, 102d Cong., 1st Sess. 31 [
We conclude therefore from the immediate regulatory objective, its context, and its ultimate effect, that the total denial of access for indecent material authorized under the statute and implementing regulations constitutes state action and is therefore subject to the same constitutional restrictions that constrain the government if it were to enforce such a ban directly.14
2. Indecent Speech and the First Amendment
Indecent, nonobscene language is protected by the First Amendment, but is not immune from regulation. Sable Communications of Cal., Inc. v. FCC,
3. Least Restrictive Means
The government's interest in "limiting the access of children to indecent programming," 1992 Act, Sec. 10(b),
This court held in ACT II,
The fact that a total ban on indecent programming is not the least restrictive alternative in the case of cable is recognized in the terms of the Act itself. Section 10 of the Act provides the cable operator with the choice of a patently less restrictive means to further the government's interest. The cable operator may transmit indecent material if it places such programming on a separate channel which can only be viewed at the subscriber's express request. 1992 Act, Sec. 10(b),
B. Segregation and Blocking Requirement for Indecent Material on Leased Access Channels
Having found the authorization to ban indecent material from access channels unconstitutional, we turn now to whether the remainder of the indecency regulation passes constitutional muster. Since we believe that the segregation and blocking requirement as applied only to leased access channels is inadequately justified, we express no opinion as to the general viability of a segregation and blocking approach in regulating indecent material in the cable medium.
Petitioners charge, inter alia, that the segregation and blocking requirement impermissibly singles out leased access programmers for regulation, leaving indecent material on commercial channels and (as a result of our ruling) PEG channels unregulated. The government responds that any differential treatment present in the regulatory scheme satisfies the minimal standard of rational scrutiny to be applied in this case. See Respondents' Brief at 30. As we discuss below, the government misapprehends the applicable legal standard.
1. Underinclusiveness and the First Amendment
The Supreme Court has long recognized that the principles of equal protection and of the First Amendment are intertwined. See Niemotko v. Maryland,
While the Supreme Court has recently noted that the First Amendment does not prohibit underinclusiveness per se, see R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, Minn., --- U.S. ----, ----,
2. Florida Star, Bellotti, and League of Women Voters
Applying those constitutional principles to this case, we find that section 10 singles out programmers on leased access channels for regulation, while leaving similar programmers on commercial channels unregulated. Florida Star, Bellotti, and League of Women Voters similarly involved content-based regulations that selectively applied only to some speakers while leaving identical speech uttered by others unregulated.
In Florida Star, the Supreme Court held that a statute prohibiting the publication of a rape victim's name was facially underinclusive because it applied only to "instrument[s] of mass communication," calling into question whether the law advanced the significant interests invoked by the state.
In Bellotti, the statute prohibited specified business corporations from spending funds to publicize their views concerning a state income tax amendment. The Supreme Court affirmed the principle that the "legislature is constitutionally disqualified from dictating the subjects about which persons may speak and the speakers who may address a public issue."
League of Women Voters also struck down a restriction on speech that did not substantially advance the asserted interest. At issue was a prohibition on "editorializing" by noncommercial educational broadcasting stations receiving funds from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting ("CPB").
3. The Underinclusiveness of Section 10
The ultimate question surrounding a restriction on free speech remains, of course, whether the government's interest is compelling and "whether the statute--particularly the challenged classification--is narrowly tailored to serve that interest." Community-Service Broadcasting of Mid-America, Inc. v. FCC,
The government argues that its regulation legitimately targets the "squeaky wheel" of indecency on cable access channels. Respondents' Brief at 29. The only evidence supporting the contention that leased access channels present a particular problem with respect to indecency is first, the Commission's assertion that because "no single editor control[s] ... selection and presentation ... on these channels, indecent programming may be especially likely to be shown randomly or intermittently between non-indecent programs," and second, Senator Helms' statements on the Senate floor invoking anecdotal evidence of exposure to sexually explicit material on leased access channels. First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1000 p 15, 1001 p 20 & n. 20. The FCC proffers no empirical evidence supporting the contention that leased access channels present a special problem of indecent programming that is absent from commercial channels. For example, it presents no evidence that indecent material on access channels takes viewers by surprise in a manner that regular commercial programming does not; there is no evidence that program guides are less helpful in the access context; no evidence regarding the relative prevalence, or severity of indecent material on leased access versus regular commercial channels; and no evidence indicating that children are more frequently exposed to indecent material on leased access channels than on regular commercial channels. Finally, while the Commission may be correct in noting that access channels, unlike pay channels, are part of the basic cable package and thus not individually invited into a customer's home, see First Report and Order, 8 F.C.C.R. at 1001 p 20 n. 20 (quoting 138 CONG.REC. S646 (daily ed. Jan. 30 1992) (statement by Sen. Helms)); see also 138 CONG.REC. S648 (statement by Sen. Thurmond) (same), the same thing certainly is true of the commercial channels that make up the basic cable package and are unregulated by section 10. An indecent program would seem to be equally offensive whether transmitted on leased access channels or commercial channels. Cf. Discovery Network, --- U.S. at ----,
By failing to address the problem of indecent material on regular commercial channels which represent the greater part of the cable medium and reach the same audience (in larger numbers), a serious argument can be made that the regulation selects programmers for regulation by a criterion (i.e., leased access) unrelated to the asserted interest and that the resulting partial regulation does not substantially further the government's asserted interest. This would lead us to hold that the statute and implementing regulations are not narrowly tailored to serve the asserted interest. However, for reasons stated below, instead of striking down this part of the regulation, we remand the case to allow the FCC either to justify or to cure the underinclusiveness of the selective approach to the regulation of indecency represented by the remainder of the regulation after the total ban provision has been struck down. Should it decide to pursue the former path, it must explain the selective regulation of leased access channels in terms relevant to the government's asserted goal and determine the impact of the regulation on the accomplishment of the asserted interests. In so doing, the FCC may examine, inter alia, the relative prevalence and severity of and the relative exposure of children to indecent material on leased access channels.
C. Remand to the FCC
The segregation and blocking requirements apply only to leased access channels. As enacted by Congress, section 10's regulation of indecency exhibited some measure of symmetry among leased access, PEG access and regular commercial channels, because the cable operator could eliminate indecent material from all three types of channels. We have held today that authorizing cable operators to ban indecent material from leased and PEG access channels is unconstitutional. Were this provision to be severed from the regulations, the remainder of the regulations would require indecent material on leased access channels to be segregated and blocked, while leaving PEG access and regular commercial channels free from any regulation. Moreover, while the cable operator would remain free to regulate indecent material on regular commercial channels, the cable operator is now absolutely prohibited from regulating constitutionally protected indecent material on PEG channels. In other words, were we to sever the segregation and blocking requirement, the result would be a regulatory scheme which singles out indecent material on leased access channels alone for regulation, seemingly without adequate justification. We are therefore reluctant to sever that part of the regulations authorizing a complete ban on indecent access programming from the blocked channel portion and to reach out to decide the constitutional issue presented thereby both as to underinclusiveness and as to the blocked access technique itself, without permitting the FCC to decide again if this is a desirable or feasible regulatory scheme.
" 'The cardinal principle of statutory construction is to save and not to destroy.' " Tilton v. Richardson,
The analysis differs little in the context of invalidating provisions of regulations promulgated by an agency. See, e.g., K mart Corp. v. Cartier, Inc.,
The Commission did at one point consider the constitutional ramifications of distinguishing between leased access and commercial channels when imposing the segregation [
III. CONCLUSION
Congress and the FCC sought to create a regulatory scheme in order to restrict children's exposure to indecent material on cable access channels. We do not denigrate its attempt to protect children. However, part of its execution in this case runs afoul of our Constitution. Congress and the FCC authorized private cable operators to ban indecent material from cable access channels in a manner that imbued those private cable operators with state action sufficient to trigger constitutional restrictions on their decision to ban indecent material. As a result, under our prior holding in ACT II,
So ordered.
Notes
In re Implementation of Section 10 of the Cable Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, 7 F.C.C.R. 7709 (1992) (notice of proposed rulemaking); 8 F.C.C.R. 998 (1993) (first report and order); 8 F.C.C.R. 2638 (1993) (second report and order). These orders were issued pursuant to section 10 of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-385, Sec. 10, 106 Stat. 1460
In addition, petitioners claim that the FCC changed its position from an earlier reliance on the efficacy of content-neutral lockboxes to the adoption of the more restrictive rules at issue here, and that this change in agency position violates the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), 5 U.S.C. Secs. 551-706. Joint Brief for Petitioners at 24, 33. Petitioners' reliance on the APA, however, is misplaced, because Congress has intervened and mandated the more restrictive alternative adopted by the Commission. See, e.g., INS v. Chadha,
In Miller v. California,
The FCC, on the other hand, defines "indecent" material as material "that describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by contemporary community standards for the cable medium." Implementation of Section 10, 58 Fed.Reg. at 7993 (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. Sec. 76.701(g)). It would therefore include in its sweep material that does not appeal to the prurient interest or that taken as a whole may be of the highest literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. For example, a truly scientific program--not merely a pretext for showing material that appeals to the prurient interest--that discusses the prevention of life-threatening diseases through the use of condoms could perhaps be considered "indecent" but would hardly seem to lack the scientific or social value so as to lose protection under the First Amendment.
We follow the general usage of the phrase "state action" as encompassing federal, state, or local government action. See 2 RONALD D. ROTUNDA & JOHN E. NOWAK, TREATISE ON CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: SUBSTANCE AND PROCEDURE Sec. 16.1, at p. 524 (2 D ED.1992)
In Franz, we noted that the single most reliable indicator of state action is "significant governmental promotion of the specific conduct." Franz,
Although the title of section 10 of the 1992 Act refers only to leased access channels, section 10 also includes the provisions concerning indecent programming on PEG access channels. 1992 Act, Sec. 10(c),
Section 10(a) authorizes the cable operator to prohibit leased access programming that "the cable operator reasonably believes describes or depicts sexual or excretory activities or organs in a patently offensive manner as measured by contemporary community standards." 1992 Act, Sec. 10(a)(2),
Unlike the case before us, Reitman involved an amendment to the state constitution that also banned future enactment of fair housing laws without an additional amendment of the state constitution. See Hunter v. Erickson,
We also decline to limit Reitman to the context of racial discrimination in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. State action principles developed in the area of racial discrimination are not sui generis. Courts have frequently drawn on race discrimination cases for state action principles and applied them in other areas of the law. See, e.g., Jackson,
Indeed, the government's counsel conceded at oral argument that if the court finds state action, the government loses on the validity of that part of the regulations permitting the prohibition of all access to indecent programs
The significance of the fact that the carrier in Carlin was voluntarily providing billing services to message providers is somewhat buried in the case, but nevertheless obvious. While the Carlin court assumes that the telephone company must offer its service to all alike without discrimination,
Of course the regulations also permit the cable operator to ban "material that is otherwise proscribed by law." Implementation of Section 10, 58 Fed.Reg. at 19,626. For state action purposes the same analysis applies to the cable operator's editorial power over this type of material
The context of the case before us presents an even stronger case for state action than that in Reitman where the amendment left the property owner free to discriminate on any grounds he chose
The fact that cable operators willingly follow the government's encouragement does not immunize the government from taking responsibility for those actions. See Peterson v. City of Greenville,
In the case of leased access, Robinson v. Florida,
Amici Curiae, Morality in Media, the National Family Legal Foundation and the National Law Center for Children and Families, urge that we analyze this ban as merely a refusal of the government to subsidize indecent speech and as such not a subject of strict scrutiny. Brief of Amici Curiae at 12-20. Such analysis would, however, require us to go much beyond existing law in determining whether access channels qualify as subsidies and if they do whether their sui generis nature as a communication media requires different standards from other subsidies. Neither party has raised this issue in those terms and, moreover, the government has conceded that the bans are unconstitutional if they involve state action. Therefore, we do not believe we are required to undertake such an alternative analysis, involving as it would many complex and as yet undecided constitutional questions in its own right
In addition to challenging the authorization of cable operators to ban indecent material, petitioners also challenge the regulations' authorization of cable operators to ban from PEG channels material that is "proscribed by law." Implementation of Section 10, 58 Fed.Reg. at 19,626 (to be codified at 47 C.F.R. Sec. 76.702). Petitioners charge that the operator ban on material proscribed by law is an unconstitutional prior restraint and that the FCC improperly interpreted the underlying statutory language of section 10 which permits cable operators to deny PEG access to "material soliciting or promoting unlawful conduct." 1992 Act, Sec. 10(c),
An examination of the PEG regulation itself also suggests constitutional infirmity. Even if we limited the regulatory language, which permits a ban on material "proscribed by law," to encompass only material that is constitutionally proscribable under Brandenburg v. Ohio,
The absence of such safeguards is similarly evident in the Commission's authorization of cable operators to ban obscene material. See 1992 Act, Sec. 10,
While we might analyze this case solely under equal protection principles, we primarily apply First Amendment doctrine because of the centrality of the abridgement of petitioners' free speech. Cf. Arkansas Writers' Project,
Finding a regulation underinclusive need not imply that the government is surreptitiously attempting to further a different, unarticulated interest, but leads to the ultimate conclusion that the regulation, and in particular the classification employed, is not tailored to serve the compelling interest. Accord News America Publishing, Inc. v. FCC,
The Supreme Court recently noted in R.A.V.:
There is no problem whatever, for example, with a State's prohibiting obscenity (and other forms of proscribable expression) only in certain media or markets, for although that prohibition would be "underinclusive," it would not discriminate on the basis of content.
--- U.S. at ----,
The cited passage from R.A.V. adds little to our case. First, the passage is dictum because R.A.V. held that the statute under review in that case did not pass constitutional muster. --- U.S. at ----,
The Court also noted the statute's overinclusiveness because the statute prohibited corporate speech on the income tax amendment even when expressly authorized by the shareholders. Id.
Of course even if the government's first contention were proven to be true, i.e., that indecent material on access channels takes viewers by surprise because no single editor controls access channels, the FCC remains under an obligation to demonstrate that its regulation presents the least restrictive remedy for that problem. Cf. League of Women Voters,
