Talk_Dude said:
All of that is irrelevant. It is fundamentally wrong for the Federal government to fund public radio. It is unconstitutional. Whether it is good or bad, needed or unneeded are irrelevant questions. The Federal Government does not have the authority to fund Public Radio. Period.
Talk_Dude said:
The fact and the inconvenient truth is that something that doesn't conform to the Constitution is unconstitutional. In the absence of a Court ruling on an unconstitutional action, unconstitutional laws are no different from unsolved crimes where no suspect is caught or charged. The fact that there is no conviction for the person who committed a crime doesn't mean that a crime wasn't committed. It just means that the criminal got away with it.
Just because you say so doesn’t make it so. It’s somehow fitting that you should refer to the Constitution on the very day that the newly elected House of Representatives made a disrespectful farce of reading it in Congress, skipping over bits they found embarrassing, and not even aware that they had skipped over other parts because some pages were stuck together. But I digress.
Obviously, many aspects of modern life including radio did not exist when the Constitution was written and ratified However, not only does the Constitution, not - either expressly or implicitly - restrain in principle the idea of Federal funding for communications; it actually advances it.
Under Powers of Congress (article 1, section 8 ) one of the items is “To establish Post Offices and Post Roads”. Postal service was the mass communication of the time, and provides an exact parallel to the mass communications of today.
The government established a policy of universal service and broadly universal postage rates for first class mail, which meant that transcontinental delivery was (and still is) heavily subsidized by local service. Even more relevant was the heavy subsidy for printed matter such as newspapers, magazines and books. That again was deliberate government policy since it encouraged the formation of a literate, educated and informed populace. This policy was not specifically provided for in the Constitution but neither was it either expressly or implicitly prohibited. Once the Post Office had become integrated into the fabric of this nation there was never any argument made against such subsidies and, if there had been, it would have been greeted with contempt by the generations of (especially rural) Americans whose lives were enriched immeasurably beyond what they could have been without the Post Office.
And then there's the bit in the Preamble about promoting the general Welfare, a phrase that's repeated in Article 1, section 8, as follows: “The Congress shall have the Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States. . .”
Whichever arguments against federal funding of public broadcasting may have any validity, the Constitutional argument is not one of them. To deny that is to deny a national heritage.
Before superficially citing the Constitution, it would be a good idea to put some effort into understanding it and also understanding some American history.