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Brent Bozell
L. Brent Bozell
25 May 2012
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Time to Cut off NPR

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National Public Radio continues to define itself in every way as a taxpayer-funded nest of leftism. NPR couldn't just supportively report on the Occupy Wall Street protests. A fire-breathing spokeswoman for the "Occupy D.C." protests against capitalism was also an NPR host.

From late 2000 to early 2002, Lisa Simeone was an NPR anchor for their weekend version of the newscast "All Things Considered." Now this radical was leading protests as she hosted a radio documentary series called "Soundprint" and an arts show, "The World of Opera."

Liberals have focused on the opera show so as to dismiss criticism from conservatives. Time magazine TV writer James Poniewozik joked, "Have you long worried that your station was undermining capitalism through its broadcasts of the Ring Cycle? Tired of having your children brainwashed by the socialistic messages of La Traviata?"

OK, so put the shoe on the other foot. Imagine an NPR opera host working the weekends for the Tea Party. Time magazine writers would require smelling salts.

They are focusing on the opera angle in order to dodge the much larger issue. In an era of trillion-dollar deficits, how much longer are we going to pretend that it is an essential function of government to prop up the wholly unnecessary NPR to spew on the air the same warmed-over '60s bilge the OWS rabble spews on the streets? It's time for Congress to cut the umbilical cord and stop bankrolling this rogue political operation.

The narrower question about Lisa Simeone was whether NPR was going to live up to its own ethics rules, which forbid attending protests, let alone organizing them and serving as public relations staff for them. The "Soundprint" series, which is not produced by NPR but is a current events show, fired Simeone. That decision was a no-brainer.

But the opera show, also not produced by NPR, but by an affiliate station in North Carolina, arrived at a different solution. NPR announced it would no longer distribute the program to the 60 stations that air it.

Instead, the local station would. That's merely solving an appearance problem and nothing more.

It is inexcusable that NPR didn't fire Simeone long ago. It did nothing to stop Simeone before the story blew up in their faces. Simeone appeared in a YouTube video uploaded three months ago, declaring with an angry face that, "The time has come to stop these wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and all the other places we're now bombing with our drones and other equipment, and to demand that money that's being spent and wasted on slaughter come home here to spent in the U.S. on human needs."

Simeone promised she and her gang was going to sit on the cold ground for months to demand radical "reforms" in American government. A quick Google search found Simeone was all over the news as a spokeswoman in the first weeks of the protests. It was only when The Daily Caller exposed this radical that NPR acted.

In this atmosphere of controversy, one of NPR's current news anchors, Michele Norris, announced that she would temporarily step down from the anchor chair (and political reporting) for a year while her husband, Broderick Johnson, works as a senior advisor to Obama's re-election campaign. She'll still report, just not fry the political hot potatoes.

This is hardly shocking. The former NPR news boss Ellen Weiss — the one that hastily fired Juan Williams for his Fox News appearances — had a husband who served on President Obama's advisory council on faith-based issues. The notion that NPR is attached at the hip to ultraliberal Democrats isn't just something you hear on the air. It's an attachment that includes marriages, deep friendships and long-standing quiet political alliances.

It's natural that in this spotlight, NPR would try to avoid appearances of a conflict of interest. But the entire enterprise is a massive conflict of interest - created, funded and protected from scrutiny of its "news" product by Democrats. With today's massive debt, the government could not only remove the subsidies, but also sell off all the property and fancy equipment it's subsidized for decades. It's a compromise to merely turn off the spending spigot and call it...uneven.

L. Brent Bozell III is the president of the Media Research Center. To find out more about Brent Bozell III, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM


Comments

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Ignore NPR's politics for a bit and think about what a great disservice you would be doing to take them off the air. Commercial radio does nothing but play the same handful of songs over and over again. The only radio stations are actually worth listening to are public ones and college radio. Unfortunately, college radio can only be listened to if you are near the college in question. If anything, there should be more public radio stations since promoting the arts is important and something that the government should pay for even in tough times.
Comment: #1
Posted by: Clucri
Wed Oct 26, 2011 10:03 AM
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