After the 1994 Republican
revolution, Congress did some talking about the end of the Public Broadcasting
Service and National Public Radio. After all was said and done, public television
and radio stuck around.
Both NPR and PBS are organs of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).
CPB was formed by Congress in 1967 to encourage "the growth and development
of non-commercial... programming that will be responsive to the interests
of the people."
Like most other socialist programs that emerged from Lyndon Johnson's Great
Society, the CPB acted in the "interest" of the people only after it robbed
them from acting in their own interest.
There is a role for taxpayer money in media that is in our interest.
Yet, PBS and NPR are not in the "interests of the people." The free market
is always responsive to the interests of the people through the wondrous
operations of supply and demand.
While driving through Montana on Interstate 90, I've observed that the Big
Sky radio market is much more saturated with country music than is the Seattle
radio market. The folks in Montana like their country music, and we Puget
Sounders have more diverse musical tastes.
If there is a television demand for Big Bird and Mr. Rogers and Teletubbies,
and Black Adder and other British comedies, along with various historical
and nature documentaries, surely the free market will pick it up.
If on radio there is a demand for relaxing jazz music and in-depth news and commentary, the market will pick that up too.
Yet, of programming on PBS and NPR, supporters of public broadcasting cannot simply say, "Don't watch it if you don't like it."
Though we are accustomed to speaking in terms of the free market, such lingo
crumbles with public broadcasting. Between state, local and federal jurisdictions,
the public covered nearly 42 percent of the revenues that flowed into PBS
and NPR last year, according to calculations based on the PBS and the NPR
Web sites as well as the NPR 2002 annual report.
It is no coincidence that the political forces that have sustained this evasion
of free enterprise are able to mold the issues and programming of public
broadcasting to fit their very Leftist ideals.
PBS became
the object of outraged citizens when it broadcast a blatantly anti-Boy Scout
documentary called "A Scout's Honor" in 2001. And last December, "Mohammed:
Legacy of a Prophet" was more an infomercial for Islam than an objective
documentary.
To a greater extent even than PBS, NPR has become a mouthpiece for the radical
left. Conservatives have their talk radio and Christian stations while liberals
occupy the mainstream media. But the radical Left has found its home at NPR.
Though NPR's budget has a smaller portion of taxpayer dollars than PBS does,
its funding is primarily derived from major foundations, many of which hail
from the far Left. Top donators of NPR include the John and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation, the W. Alton Jones Foundation, and the Overbrook Foundation.
Leftist intellectuals and not-so-intellectuals appear on an audio archives
search engine at npr.org with great frequency. Noam Chomsky brings seven
hits. Alan Dershowitz gets eight. Howard Zinn, 11. Michael Moore, 20.
Meanwhile, mainstream conservative names like William F. Buckley, P.J. O'Rourke,
Ann Coulter and Michael Medved result in, "Sorry, we were unable to find
exact matches for your search." Most mentions of Rush Limbaugh occur negatively
in the same context that favorable attention is given to Al Franken.
Nothing is illegal about Leftist propaganda so long as it plays the game
of the free market. But don't ask the rest of us to pay for it.
Hans Zeiger is a Seattle Times
columnist and conservative activist. He is president of the Scout Honor Coalition
and a student at Hillsdale College in Michigan.