However this started originally, public radio does not need government money now.
The distinction between commercial and non-commercial stations, however well intentioned it might have been originally, is archaic. As pointed out in another current thread, the line is between commercials and underwriting announcements is a fine one and open to wide interpretation. Public radio stations take money from clients and deliver messages for them. Clients pay this money because they think the messages will (1) increase business, (2) build public image and good-will, which is also good for business or (3) both 1 and 2. Public radio stations often have enough money left over to (1) Pay executives big bucks, (2) Buy the newest and best equipment, (3) Have nice, fancy buildings in good locations and (4) Start for-profit subsidiaries. "Commercial radio" should be doing so well. Drop the non-commercial classification and let "public radio" play by the same rules as everybody else.
End all "welfare" payments to public radio. Yes, including rural and community radio. The boondocks get more in government funds than they pay in taxes. The biggest welfare consumers live on farms, not in urban neighborhoods. They get subsidized phone service, subsidized Internet and on top of that (and all the farm payments) they want subsidized radio (the rest of us pay for). Sorry, no thanks.
@BigA: Come on. Do you really believe elected representatives ever reflected what people want? Maybe that was the correct answer on your middle school civics exam but nobody believes that in the real world. In fact, that's about the only thing tea-baggers and progressives agree on.