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Entries in NPR (16)

Wednesday
Oct102012

NR Editorial: Get Big Bird Off of Welfare 

A new NRO editorial, “Vulture Capitalism,” states that the latest Obama campaign advertisement featuring Big Bird demonstrates that “while Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan are rolling out big ideas on taxes, entitlements, and deficits, Barack Obama is clinging to his toys like a frightened child, which very well may be what he is feeling like after his recent trip to the woodshed.”

The complete text of the editorial follows. It can also be found on National Review Online at http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/329846/vulture-capitalism-editors.

For further information contact National Review Publisher Jack Fowler at jfowler@nationalreview.com.

 

Vulture Capitalism

By The Editors

The Obama campaign apparently is being run by a humor-deficient would-be Jon Stewart: On Tuesday, it launched an ill-advised attempt at snark in an advertisement featuring Big Bird. How bad was the ad? Even the yellow fellow himself was embarrassed, and Sesame Workshop, the multimillion-dollar enterprise with the $1 million–a–year president behind Sesame Street, asked that the ad be taken down. Even President Obama’s amen corner in the media was aghast: ABC News’ Terry Moran pronounced it the work of a campaign “in panic mode.” Somebody should remind Barack Obama that he is, for the moment, president of the United States of America, and not auditioning for whichever MSNBC time slot Chris Hayes turned down.

Mitt Romney has promised to end subsidies for public broadcasting, which is an excellent idea for many reasons, beginning with a $16 trillion debt. Those who point out that eliminating mere small-fry outlays like the Corporation for Public Broadcasting won’t balance the budget are undeniably correct — but it is also undeniably correct that we will not balance the budget without eliminating a lot of small-fry outlays like the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. We have to do the big-ticket items and the little ones as well, lest we spare the taxpayer the guillotine only to abandon him to a death by a thousand forgone cuts. While Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan are rolling out big ideas on taxes, entitlements, and deficits, Barack Obama is clinging to his toys like a frightened child, which very well may be what he is feeling like after his recent trip to the woodshed.

Controlling the deficit will entail some difficult decisions. Getting Big Bird off of welfare is not one of them. Caroll Spinney, the actor who has played Big Bird since the dawn of time, earns a comfortable 1-percenter income and nests in a gated estate in tony Woodstock, Conn. Rich-old-hippie welfare is an idea whose time has gone. Public-broadcasting executives earn incomes well into the six figures and sometimes into the seven figures. Sesame Workshop takes in hundreds of millions of dollars from Tickle Me Elmo and other merchandise. Big Bird is beak-deep in birdseed and does not require a half-billion dollars a year from taxpayers. Antiques Roadshow, Frontline, and many other public-broadcasting programs similarly do not require government support. We have excellent reason to believe that people will open their pockets to pay for Downton Abbey: the fact that they already open their pockets to pay for Downton Abbey through on-demand television services. And if Clinton: American Experience or Tony Bennett: Duets II somehow fails to connect with an audience, the sun will rise in the morn nonetheless.

Public broadcasting is the deathless government program par excellence. It may have made some sense a few generations ago, when there were in effect three broadcast television stations, limited radio offerings, and enormous regulatory and economic barriers standing in the way of new market entrants. But that no longer is the case: Anybody with a few thousand dollars and an Internet connection can launch a television series or a radio program today and reach an audience of millions. We have more television stations than we can watch, more radio stations than we can listen to, and instantaneous connections to most of the world’s media. In fact, we could multiply public broadcasting expenditures a hundredfold and do practically nothing to improve on the already vast richness of our media environment. Firing Line is a beloved memory, but in 2012 such programming would not require a public-broadcasting infrastructure to thrive. If PBS doesn’t do it, 10 million others will.

And while PBS and NPR give very little offense beyond their bland, conventional liberalism, the United States is not the sort of country that should have government-run media — or even media that is only 6 percent government run. Public broadcasting, like so much associated with the progressive heyday, is fundamentally un-republican.

We welcome this debate. The Democrats will, as usual, cry that this is about “the children,” but l’affair Big Bird shows us precisely who the children really are.

Saturday
Mar172012

ALG's Daily Grind: U.S. tab for European bailout hits $20 billion--and counting

March 16, 2012

U.S. tab for European bailout hits $20 billion-and counting

Greece can no longer borrow freely at low interest rates without IMF, central bank, and government interventions, that is not any concern of U.S. taxpayers.

Video: North Dakota Is One Step Ahead Of DC, NY and LA

Drilling for natural gas has helped North Dakota drop its unemployment statistics and make its economy boom. Why isn't the rest of the country following its lead? Better yet, why isn't Barack Obama following its lead?

Deconstructing Obamacare

The stated objective of Barack Obama's socialized medicine law is to expand access to quality, affordable health care in America - instead this Orwellian nightmare will have precisely the opposite effect.

DailyKos praises NPR's far left bias policy

They report, they decide. NPR's new code of ethics: "if the balance of evidence in a matter of controversy weighs heavily on one side, we acknowledge it in our reports."

Saturday
Jul162011

NHDP - Guinta and Bass Vote Sets NH to Lose 2K Construction Jobs

ICYMI: Guinta and Bass Vote Sets NH to Lose 2K Construction Jobs

 

Concord, NH - In case you missed it, New Hampshire Public Radio reported Thursday that New Hampshire has been set up to lose 2,000 construction jobs if the Republican Congressional budget is passed.  Both of New Hampshire's Republican members of Congress Charlie Bass and Frank Guinta voted for the reckless plan.  In response Guinta told NHPR that was "why he was sent to Washington."

 

"Congressman Guinta could not be more wrong unless perhaps he voted to destroy Medicare for a third time," said Harrell Kirstein, press secretary for the New Hampshire Democratic Party.  "His complete lack of focus on job creation is why voters have a negative view of his time in Congress and his approval ratings are at their lowest point ever."

 

A UNH poll released last week, found that New Hampshire voters have a negative view of both Congressmen Bass and Guinta.  In the second Congressional district, Bass was viewed unfavorably by 39% percent of voters, over ten percent more than those who had a favorable opinion of him.  In the first district, Guinta was also viewed negatively by a plurality of voters.

 

"As long as Congressmen Bass and Guinta continue their reckless and irresponsible agenda of cutting Medicare and killing jobs they should expect voters will continue to disapprove of them." continued Kirstein.  "Killing thousands of New Hampshire jobs will decimate our Granite State economy."

 

The full text of the New Hampshire Public Radio story can be found here; NHPR: U.S. House Transportation Bill Cuts Construction Jobs.

Thursday
Mar102011

ALG Statement on NPR's Schiller Resignation 

March 9th, 2011, Fairfax, VA—Americans for Limited Government (ALG) President Bill Wilson today issued the following statement responding to the resignation of National Public Radio's Vivian Schiller:

"NPR CEO Vivian Schiller should have been forced to resign months ago after her outrageous firing of Juan Williams because he did not toe their orthodox liberal line.  Her leaving now does not change the glaringly obvious fact that public broadcasting is nothing more than an expensive toy run by pseudo-intellectual snobs who despise the rest of us.  Not one dime of taxpayer's money should be spent to fund public broadcasting, which is nothing more than an elitist soapbox."

Background:

"It's Time for Big Bird to Fly on His Own," by Rebekah Rast, March 9th, 2011.

Letter to the Senate, March 8th, 2011.

"Defund Public Broadcasting Once and For All," by ALG President Bill Wilson, October 25th, 2010.

ALG Praises Boehner's Call to Defund Public Broadcasting, October 22nd, 2010

"Where to cut, you ask?" Video by Frank McCaffrey on Doug Lamborn's legislation, October 19th, 2010.

"The Bare Minimum," by Rick Manning, ALG Communications Director, October 20th, 2010.

"Time to Stop Funding Luxuries, Like Public Broadcasting," by Rebekah Rast, ALG News Contributing Editor, June 14th, 2010.

"Is Public Broadcasting Hurting the Arts?" by Robert Romano, ALG News Senior Editor, June 15th, 2010.

 



Thursday
Mar102011

NRN - Must Reads from March 9, 2011