NationStates Jolt Archive


Sign a Petition, Save Public Radio

Czardas
14-06-2005, 23:23
An e-mail is now circulating around, and a friend from the USA just sent it to me. I read through it and it did seem pretty scary. I therefore encourage all Americans (and some non-Americans, if you want to) to sign it.
You know that email petition that keeps circulating about how Congress is slashing funding for NPR and PBS? Well, now it's actually true. (Really. Check the footnotes if you don't believe us.)


A House panel has voted to eliminate all public funding for NPR and PBS, starting with "Sesame Street," "Reading Rainbow," and other commercial-free children's shows. If approved, this would be the most severe cut in the history of public broadcasting, threatening to pull the plug on Big Bird, Cookie Monster and Oscar the Grouch.


Sign the petition telling Congress to save NPR and PBS:


http://www.moveon.org/publicbroadcasting/?id=5663-3176094-Z19E9gh2VwgOkpPxu6C57w&t=3


If we can reach 250,000 signatures by the end of the week, we'll put Congress on notice. After you sign the petition, please pass this message along to any friends, neighbors or co-workers who count on NPR and PBS.


The cuts would slash 25% of the federal funding this year—$100 million—and end funding altogether within two years.1 In particular, the loss could kill beloved children's shows like "Sesame Street," "Clifford the Big Red Dog," "Arthur" and "Postcards from Buster." Rural stations and those serving low-income communities might not survive. Other stations would have to increase corporate sponsorships.


This shameful vote is only the latest partisan assault on public TV and radio. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which exists to shield public TV and radio from political pressure, is now chaired by Kenneth Tomlinson, a staunch Republican close to the White House. Tomlinson has already forced one-sided conservative programs on the air, even though Tomlinson's own surveys show that most people consider NPR "fair and balanced" and they actually trust public broadcasting more than commercial network news.2


Tomlinson also spent taxpayer dollars on a witch hunt to root out "liberal bias," including a secret investigation of Bill Moyers and PBS' popular investigative show, "NOW." Even though the public paid for the investigation, Tomlinson has refused to release the findings.3


The lawmakers who proposed the cuts aren't just trying to save money in the budget—they're trying to decimate any news outlets who question those in power. This is an ideological attack on our free press.


Talk about bad timing. Every day brings another story about media consolidation. Radio, TV stations and newspapers are increasingly controlled by a few massive corporate conglomerates trying to maximize profits at the expense of quality journalism. Now more than ever, we need publicly funded media who will ask hard questions and focus on stories that affect real people, instead of Michael Jackson and the runaway bride.


As the House and Senate consider this frightening effort to kill public broadcasting, they need to hear from its owners—you.


http://www.moveon.org/publicbroadcasting/?id=5663-3176094-Z19E9gh2VwgOkpPxu6C57w&t=4Before you accuse me of using a 'biased' source (MoveOn.org), this is not just left-wing propaganda. It stated sources.

1. "Public Broadcasting Targeted By House," Washington Post, June 10, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=745


2. "CPB's 'Secrets and Lies': Why the CPB Board Hid its Polls Revealing Broad Public Support for PBS and NPR," Center for Digital Democracy, April 27, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=746


3. "Republican Chairman Exerts Pressure on PBS, Alleging Biases," New York Times, May 2, 2005
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0502-01.htm

And come on. The Supreme Ruler of the Universe is signing it. Why don't you? :D

~Czardas, Supreme Ruler of the Universe
Murkiness
15-06-2005, 01:47
An even more powerful act would be to print out the small message you are typing in the e-mail petition and mail it to them. Representatives value individual letters far more than they do petitions.
The Christophel
15-06-2005, 01:51
That's true, no one cares about internet petitions, because people can sign them mutiple times. Some people (like me) use fake names life F*** Y**. (That wasn't directed towards you)
Gramnonia
15-06-2005, 01:53
What do you see in NPR (and PBS)? Are they truly so good that taxpayers' money should be spent propping them up?
Texpunditistan
15-06-2005, 01:54
An e-mail is now circulating around, and a friend from the USA just sent it to me. I read through it and it did seem pretty scary. I therefore encourage all Americans (and some non-Americans, if you want to) to sign it.
Before you accuse me of using a 'biased' source (MoveOn.org), this is not just left-wing propaganda. It stated sources.

1. "Public Broadcasting Targeted By House," Washington Post, June 10, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=745


2. "CPB's 'Secrets and Lies': Why the CPB Board Hid its Polls Revealing Broad Public Support for PBS and NPR," Center for Digital Democracy, April 27, 2005
http://www.moveon.org/r?r=746


3. "Republican Chairman Exerts Pressure on PBS, Alleging Biases," New York Times, May 2, 2005
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/0502-01.htm

And come on. The Supreme Ruler of the Universe is signing it. Why don't you? :D

~Czardas, Supreme Ruler of the Universe
Sources: MoveOn.org, Common Dreams and the NYT?

Nooooooooooooo...they're not biased. *falls over laughing*
Gramnonia
15-06-2005, 01:55
Sources: MoveOn.org, Common Dreams and the NYT?

Nooooooooooooo...they're not biased. *falls over laughing*

LMAO ... I second that falling-over.
Eastern Skae
15-06-2005, 02:04
If you love PBS and NPR, why don't you give them your money, rather than volunteering mine other taxpayers'? You'll probably get a nifty totebag or travel mug if you give enough at the right moment. I have nothing against Sesame Street or Barney or Reading Rainbow. I grew up on that stuff, and it's great. But the first responsibility of teaching children belongs to parents anyway. And the news, well, why don't we just trust any old news the government throws at us. Hey, it worked in the USSR.
Corneliu
15-06-2005, 02:07
PBS went down hill. I don't think its worth our taxdollars anymore.