Federal Marble Orchard

Flanders

ARCHCONSERVATIVE
Sep 23, 2010
7,628
748
205
The winds of change are blowing to be sure. Big doings are being bandied about by hopeful conservative Americans, while this archconservative dreams about a small doing that has been blowing for a long time: STOP GIVING TAX DOLLARS TO NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO AND PUBLIC TELEVISION.

On the positive side NPR is near death. On the negative side, the federal government has been known to perpetually animate many a stiff in its marble orchard. (I could never decide which one was harder to kill dead. A government program, or the Walking Dead in a Hollywood movie.)

NOTE: “. . . craft content . . .” is doublespeak for propaganda:


_MG_49481423058835.jpg

At NPR headquarters, executives are trying to craft content that will appeal to younger audiences. (Evy Mages/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST)
https://img.washingtonpost.com/rf/i...9481423058835.jpg?uuid=ZVHFWpFMEeW15CebRQHopg

I always ask myself “What are they hiding.?” whenever I see an article citing percentages and not numbers:

“. . . dropped 11 percent . . .”

“. . . afternoon listening is down 6 percent . . . “

“. . . declined 20 percent . . .”

“. . . dropped about 25 percent . . .”

“. . . a modest 2 percent gain . . .”

“. . . an 11 percent decrease . . .”

“. . . a 9 percent decline . . .”​

I guess putting a dollar number to the following percentage was meant to indicate fiscal responsibility:

“. . . annual operating deficit was $2.58 million, a 52 percent increase over 2014 . . .”​

The fact is: Not one tax dollar should finance advocacy of any kind on NPR or Public Television. A penny is a “small part” and whatever “virtually none” amounts to is too much:

“. . . (federal tax dollars supply only a small part of stations’ annual budgets, and virtually none of NPR’s).​

NOTE: Tax dollars were filtered through colleges and universities. I’m betting that the practice has not stopped:

“ . . . public radio was invented by people in their 20s in the 1970s, largely at stations funded by colleges and universities.

NPR is graying, and public radio is worried about it
By Paul Farhi
November 22 at 5:28 PM

NPR is graying, and public radio is worried about it

Admittedly, NPR chows down on hot dogs and beer, while Public Television dines on Chateaubriand and fine Cabernet Sauvignon, yet both raise holy hell the minute there is talk about driving them away from the public trough. Their argument is always the same —— federal funding is a very small part of our budget. They never mention that every public donation is tax deductible; i.e. the public pays for it.

I, for one, do not want to give a red cent to somebody else’s political or religious beliefs. I sure as hell did not want to help Bill Moyers become a multi-millionaire:


Bill Moyers pioneered the charity patronage field. He served as the Peace Corps’ associate director of public affairs in 1961; then as deputy director from 1962 to 1963. No living in Third World mud huts for our Bill. He went from the Peace Corps to working for his longtime patron, LBJ, as special assistant from 1963 to 1967; doubling as press secretary from 1965 to 1967.

I’ll wager that when young Bill hooked up with the Peace Corps he said he “wanted to give something back.” I can’t say how successful he was at giving anything back. Thanks in large part to Public Television he became a multi-millionaire. To Peace Corps graduates like Bill Moyers peace truly means piece —— as in a piece of the public purse.


Finally, with all of the big stuff that has to be undone in 2017, maybe a few conservatives in Congress will make time to squeeze in defunding an important element of liberalism’s propaganda machinery.
 
Both also do fundraising to replace the lost federal funds over the years....Have you never worked for either or listened to them?
 
Finally, with all of the big stuff that has to be undone in 2017, maybe a few conservatives in Congress will make time to squeeze in defunding an important element of liberalism’s propaganda machinery.


The GOP seems to love it also, as it seems those programs of grants, loans and other domestic US aid has been around for a long time...
 
National Progressive Radio should sink or swim on ad revenue, donations, profit from merchandise sales, etc., sans any federally redirected taxpayers' money. Ditto for any TV funding.
 
Both also do fundraising to replace the lost federal funds over the years....
To Moonglow: Fundraising drives are gratuities for the local on-camera people and technicians who do the shows; much like street performers passing the hat. To me, they should get their tips from the people who enjoy free advertising. Years ago I read that merchandising Big Bird of Sesame Street fame earns more money than all of the teams in the National Hockey League combined. The Bird’s franchise owners keep that money, but use the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (tax dollars) to advertise their product.
The GOP seems to love it also, as it seems those programs of grants, loans and other domestic US aid
To Moonglow: I do not know any conservative who loves it:

While Reagan rescued commercial broadcasters from the censoring ways of the Fairness Doctrine, its spirit lives on under a different name at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

PBS Unplugged
President Bush gives us a new reason to wean public broadcasting from the government teat.
By Jack Shafer

How to end public-TV pledge drives.

images
https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/...8eMd:i.ytimg.com/vi/1n-qwweSKm8/hqdefault.jpg

CPB's total annual revenue is up around three billion dollars. Every dollar of revenue contributed by private sector “charities” is indirect taxation. CPB’s direct tax dollar revenue came to $4455,000,000 in 2014.


This is the choker:

Funding for CPB helps to support more than 21,000 American jobs, which contribute more than $1 billion to the national economy.​


If you add up all of the staffs, in all of the office buildings around the country, connected to tax dollar funded television and radio you will end up with a number of tax dollar parasites much higher than CPB’s 21,000 “American” jobs. I have yet to figure out how tax dollar jobs in TV, and Public Radio, contribute to the national economy. Naturally, there no constitutional authority justifying even one of those jobs.

NOTE: In 1967, LBJ signed The Public Broadcasting Act giving Socialists an outlet for their propaganda. Brainwashing had long been practiced in public education, in Hollywood movies, and in commercial television, but direct tax dollar funding designated for promoting Socialism in the all-powerful communications medium became a reality with the new law.

There is plenty of money available in this country to fund necessary government including defense; so it is not fair to make wage earners pick up the slack for those tax deductible dollars that should go to the government for legitimate purposes. Forcing me to support any political philosophy that I don’t agree with is certainly not my idea of representative government. I have often said that I am for limited — necessary — representative government. In short: The XVI Amendment is the root cause of so much unnecessary government in addition to justifying abolishing the Rights that Americans have in the original Bill of Rights.

has been around for a long time...
To Moonglow: Too long.
 
This-is-NPR-Joel-Pollak-Breitbart-News-640x480.jpg
http://media.breitbart.com/media/2016/11/This-is-NPR-Joel-Pollak-Breitbart-News-640x480.jpg

`National Public Radio ombudsman/public editor Elizabeth Jensen has recommended that the taxpayer-funded radio news service bar future live interviews of conservatives who may have controversial views, following an interview Nov. 16 with Breitbart News’ Joel B. Pollak.​

NPR: After Pollak, No More Live Interviews for Conservatives
by Breitbart News
19 Nov 2016

NPR: After Pollak, No More Live Interviews for Conservatives
Not one tax dollar should finance advocacy of any kind on NPR or Public Television. A penny is a “small part” and whatever “virtually none” amounts to is too much:
So how about a little tit for tat from FOX by dumping every double-dipper:

Mara Liasson is an American journalist and political pundit. She is the national political correspondent for National Public Radio and also a contributor at Fox News Channel. Wikipedia​

Assuming FOX is serious about freedom of speech they can send every NPR alumnus back home where they can fight the good fight. This guy should run over Mara Liasson on her way out:

Fox News moved swiftly to turn the controversy over Juan Williams’ firing by NPR to its advantage, offering Williams an expanded role on the network and a new three-year contract Thursday in a deal that amounts to nearly $2 million.

"Juan has been a staunch defender of liberal viewpoints since his tenure began at Fox News in 1997,” Fox’s Roger Ailes said in a statement, first reported in the Los Angeles Times. “He’s an honest man whose freedom of speech is protected by Fox News on a daily basis.”​

Fox hires Williams, right blasts NPR
By Keach Hagey
10/21/10 01:59 PM EDT
Updated 10/22/10 02:38 PM EDT

Fox hires Williams, right blasts NPR
 
When Trump's team is looking for wasteful spending they'll likely zero in on National Panhandler Radio at some point.

Sell ads for whatever meager amounts of revenue your tiny audience can bring you, and welcome to the real broadcast world.
 
Channel surfing stunned me when I saw Juan Williams pop up more than usual. I’m outta there whenever I see him, but his demeanor in a few seconds told me that those few legitimate journalists on panels have to treat him with the same respect liberals get on the alphabet networks.

Just to be fair, Williams never hid his loyalty to the Democrat party’s agenda. Williams always turned my stomach, but to other conservatives he has to be worse than the other FOX liberals because he is the most well-known.

FOX Turning Left

Juan Williams got porky since Murdoch’s sons turned FOX hard left. All the more reason Laura deserves a big attagirl:



Ingraham vs. Juan Williams: Using Term "Radical" For Patriots Like Flynn Exactly Why People Despise Washington
Posted By Ian Schwartz
On Date November 20, 2016

Ingraham vs. Juan Williams: Using Term "Radical" For Patriots Like Flynn Exactly Why People Despise Washington
 
Your disconnect is astounding.

So you don't listen to NPR.

How does that give you the right to shut it down?

Millions listen to it and enjoy it.

Go with your low-IQ Breitbart phony news, Flanders.

We thinkers will listen to real news.
 
UPDATE
STOP GIVING TAX DOLLARS TO NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO AND PUBLIC TELEVISION.
A penny is a “small part” and whatever “virtually none” amounts to is too much:
The record shows that curing cancer is easier than defunding parasites. It is fun to talk about it but always goes nowhere. No matter. Hope springs eternal in the human breast. I can live with 2 years IF IT ACTUALLY HAPPENS:

Defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, an idea floated by the Trump administration, would likely take two years to go into effect.

The funding for CPB, which receives roughly $450 million a year for public television and public radio, is allotted two years in advance. Any appropriations bill that did not include new funding for the CPB would mean that it would not be defunded until fiscal year 2019.​

Defunding NPR Likely Wouldn’t Go Into Effect for 2 Years
BY: Elizabeth Harrington
March 12, 2017 5:00 am

Defunding NPR Likely Wouldn’t Go Into Effect for 2 Years
 
I am a "Conserva-tarian" and often listen to NPR. There is a lot of excellent programming. Diane Rehm has one of the best interview programs I've heard - comparable to Bill Buckley on Firing Line.

But it MUST be listened to with the knowledge that it is a Leftist propaganda outlet, masquerading as a news medium.

I don't think it should be de-funded because I disagree with their slant and hypocrisy, I think it should be de-funded because its very existence is unconstitutional, and because its reason for existence is obsolete.

It came into being when there were few non-commercial news and entertainment outlets, and there was a concern in Congress that objective, non-commercial viewpoints were essential to an informed electorate.

It is to laugh. For the reasons cited above, it should be de-funded. Let it survive on donations and commercial support. Or not.
 
To DGS49: Well said.

One observation:

Let it survive on donations and commercial support. Or not.
CPB/NPR cannot survive without tax dollars any more than Socialism itself can survive on donations.
 

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