Don C said:
It's not proper for the Federal government to be involved with subsidizing anything, whether it's corn or radio.
If we lived in a perfect world, I would like to agree with you.
Early in the 20th Century this nation was hit by the "Dust Bowl" phenomena which laid many a farmer flat. And then we had the financial upheaval known as The Great Depression. Then as we came out of World War II the giant industrial machine that our nation had become quit making weapons and among other things, turned out a fantastic fleet of farm mechanizing hardware and the munitions industry began producing fertilizer like we had never seen. (As Oklahoma City and Tim McVey reminded us, bombs and fertilizer are close kinfolks.)
And suddenly we faced an economic situation in our nation. We could subsidize farm production (the corn you talk about) and let these farm people (of whom there were now TOO MANY) maintain some amount of dignity and productivity, or we could line them up in the soup lines of the 1930 for the next 50 years and tell them every day how worthless they were.
Its real easy for armchair philosophers and political thinkers to demand a pure, no nonsense, hard line interpretation of the Constitution....
the way they think it should be read.
Are you really suggesting it would have been more American to let people like my Dad lay down in his cotton field and die of starvation than to corrupt some people's view of the constitution and say: "We ain't subsidizing no stinking corn or wheat or cotton or soybeans."
The theory of life is so simple. In practice, life is a bitch!
It would seem to me that what the debate should really be is: How MUCH subsidy for public broadcasting is realistic; should it taper off until it stops; and what is the acceptable use of the subsidy while it still exists?
Part of our problem is this: There are political forces that don't want public broadcasting to get well. As long as we keep them on the subsidy then we can justify keeping them hobbled to where they don't bother anybody... you know, like commercial broadcasters. And, yes, there are public broadcasters who don't want the hobbles removed because they would then face the corrupting forces (as they see them) that drive commercial broadcasting into the swamp where they live.
Lest you think my colorful description of life on the farm is some kind of fantasy.... I am a member of the last generation to actually drag a cotton pick-sack through the U.S. cotton fields and hand pick the stuff. And I have dodged some of those tumbleweeds as they came rolling through like dust-bowl left-overs.