Talk_Dude said:I'd like to observe that many of the things you mention are paid for by state and local governments, not the Federal government.
We can talk about broadcasting and the philosophy of broadcasting; should broadcasting serve ONLY the biggest possible audiences for each station, or should broadcasting be set up in such a way that small specialized audiences are also served. We know that if government backs off and leaves broadcasting to be just one more business enterprise floating around in the sea of unfettered free enterprise, what we will have is radio managed just like a Quiznos sandwich shop, or Batteries Plus or Toyota or a Wall Street Bank. The delivery of news, the delivery of music, the delivery of public discussion is part of what makes our society different than say North Korea or some African nation at the mercy of war lords heading up opposing religious factions.
If you insist on making this a discussion of what form of government is permissable in this land of ours, then be prepared to defend and support positions. If we are going to discuss (which we aren't) what activities are allowable for state and local government but not politically acceptable for the federal government, I don't know why you would excuse states and cities for spending tax money on a museum or park but the feds can't. Please take that issue to some discussion board where their charter is to discuss forms of government.
Talk_Dude If the American people want museums said:Here is part of what the people who value "public radio" have to mentally work their way through, come up with philosophy, and sell that philosophy to the public, to charitable organizations and to legislators.
The rules, the policy, the philosophy of 50 or 100 years or 200 years ago may not fit the circumstances of today. 50 years ago we had locally owned banks with officers and stockholders right in our communities. 50 years ago we still had department stores that were locally owned with officers and stockholder right in our communities. 50 years ago we still had relatively small manufacturing companies where the officers and stockholders lived in our communities. 50 years ago we still had utility companies that had offices and faciltites and management in our communities. Back then it seemed like local responsibility for "cultural" voices: libraries, museums, newspapers, broadcasting was very logical, very American.
Fast forward to today: My utility bills come from offices in neighboring states and I send my checks their. My monthly bank statement may come from a city three states distant. My wife buys a dress in an Atlanta suburb and I get the credit card bill from Milwaukee!
Today we all live in this billowing sea of giant national and multinational corporations. Little hometown charitable organizations are like a flea on the back of a grasshopper floating on some seaweed in the middle of the ocean. Right or wrong, our legislators have decided that maybe these fleas trying to operate radio in the communities of America need some organization at a national level to help keep the seaweed from capsizing, and to keep that organization at a national level from being capsized by some less than charitable large broadcasting operations, maybe the federal government needs a little bit of involvement in that process.
You have made it clear that as a political and philosophical being, you don't of approve of ANY amount of federal money going into that. We hear you. Many of us are saying that we struggle amongst ourselves to come up with "how much federal participation should there be?" We discuss: "Is THIS the time for that funding to go away, or is this the time it is needed worse than ever?" Do you hear us? Discussion is a two-way street. Come join the traffic. It's more fun than always driving on a one-way street.