> What is wrong and unfair to the American people is the fact
> that they are compelled by force to financially support a
> public radio network whether or not they have any interest
> in its programming. If NPR is as valuable as you claim it
> is, it ought to be able to survive without the benefit of
> government monetary largesse. As it is, it's the Amtrak of
> the American broadcasting industry.
The thing is, the majority of funding from public broadcasting comes from listeners and private, non-governmental or corporate sources, not from tax dollars. The compelled by force argument is just nonsense. I don't like corporate ownership of the airwaves - freely licensed to radio and television stations to serve the public interest and rake in enormous profits. But most radio and TV stations offer programming I don't want or like. I wouldn't hear them if the government didn't hand out licenses for miniscule sums in comparison to profits taken... sounds like a subsidy to me.
I personally believe public broadcasting has lost focus on what it is supposed to be - a service for the underserved, the ignored, or the unprofitable. There is no reason we should see Lawrence Welk on PBS. There is little need for Wall Street/business programming when we have multiple outlets doing the same thing.
There are public stations that serve minority communities, American Indians for example. Others offer compelling educational programming that does not simply have tie-ins with commercially sold products. There are all types of viewpoints on offer on PBS, but they have definitely been toned down in order to achieve corporate underwriting. I like the idea of a refuge on the radio dial that plays music commercial radio won't, that will allow long form news and analysis programming, and that will cover topics commercial broadcasters won't touch in a politically charged America.
If NPR is doing its job, it should -NOT- be able to survive on its own. That's the entire point.
> that they are compelled by force to financially support a
> public radio network whether or not they have any interest
> in its programming. If NPR is as valuable as you claim it
> is, it ought to be able to survive without the benefit of
> government monetary largesse. As it is, it's the Amtrak of
> the American broadcasting industry.
The thing is, the majority of funding from public broadcasting comes from listeners and private, non-governmental or corporate sources, not from tax dollars. The compelled by force argument is just nonsense. I don't like corporate ownership of the airwaves - freely licensed to radio and television stations to serve the public interest and rake in enormous profits. But most radio and TV stations offer programming I don't want or like. I wouldn't hear them if the government didn't hand out licenses for miniscule sums in comparison to profits taken... sounds like a subsidy to me.
I personally believe public broadcasting has lost focus on what it is supposed to be - a service for the underserved, the ignored, or the unprofitable. There is no reason we should see Lawrence Welk on PBS. There is little need for Wall Street/business programming when we have multiple outlets doing the same thing.
There are public stations that serve minority communities, American Indians for example. Others offer compelling educational programming that does not simply have tie-ins with commercially sold products. There are all types of viewpoints on offer on PBS, but they have definitely been toned down in order to achieve corporate underwriting. I like the idea of a refuge on the radio dial that plays music commercial radio won't, that will allow long form news and analysis programming, and that will cover topics commercial broadcasters won't touch in a politically charged America.
If NPR is doing its job, it should -NOT- be able to survive on its own. That's the entire point.
