You want millions of station members to vote for the NPR Board of Directors? Really? How would they do that?
By the way, elected by whom? The so-called "member stations" want your money but "members" don't get to vote for the board. It's a closed club; a tight little elite group of one-percenters who go to the same places, know the same people and belong to the same clubs. It's like the House of Lords.
Let's look at the commercial model for a minute. As a stockholder in a company, one of my main roles is to vote for the Board of Directors. However, my choices come from a pre-selected list of people who have already been approved. Typically, when I look at that list, I don't actually know most of the candidates. They provide bios to help, but I don't have a lot of information to make my choice. It's not like these candidates are campaigning for my vote. That doesn't happen.
I think the same thing would happen if you open NPR Board voting to the station members. The place for their input is at the station level. When I ran a station, we had many tiers of members, based not only on amount of donation, but also on amount of involvement. Those who attended our local Board meetings, who took part in planning our fundraisers, who had ideas for running the station were in a different tier from general paying members. The active members were the ones who might get elected to our local Board. So even at the station level, pure democracy is hard to manage.
Ultimately the Board of Directors at any company, even a non-profit, isn't about politics. The Pacifica situation is unique. And even there, the Board isn't elected by the station membership.
Once again, BigA twists things and then argues against his twisted version.
What I said was station members (people who give money) should elect the station board.
I understand what you said. My question (which you ignored) was how would that happen? In point of fact, station members (people who give money) currently don't vote for their own local station boards. Why should they have that right for a national syndication service?
I don't know. I didn't say they should. Apparently you don't understand what I said.
Read what you wrote. You said "they should." Maybe you don't understand what you said.
You lie. Let me try to make this so clear even you can't twist it. Station members (people who gave money above a specified amount in a given year) should elect the station's board. Station board. Get it? Station board. No donation without representation.
Is that what all this is about? Or have I set the bar too low? Only if you have given a million dollars to the station should you be able to have a voice in who manages the station and who picks the programming?
From the press releases I've seen when somebody is appointed to station board positions, the boards primary - maybe sole - concern is fund raising. Not programming. Not personnel.