The
pattern repeats itself – an industry in chaos, companies going
bankrupt, thousands of workers losing jobs. It’s time for government
intervention. That’s been the Obama administration’s model for Wall
Street, insurance giant AIG and the auto industry. Now it could be
the same for the American media. Congress, the Federal Trade
Commission and the FCC are all looking at ways to “help” journalism.
On Sept. 20, President Obama threw his support to the concept by
saying: “I’ll be happy to look at” bills aiding the industry. That
fits the Obama mindset, who said in a Sept. 22 interview that big
government wasn’t the problem with Wall Street. “We had too little
government, too little regulation,” he explained.
There’s no question that the news industry has
fallen on hard times. The rise of the Internet, plummeting
advertising and more have contributed to a broad decline, especially
in newspapers. But even prominent journalists are so desperate to
save their profession and their own jobs that they are heedless to
the overall dangers inherent in Government Media.
Instead, journalists are working hand-in-hand
with left-wing media groups including the Huffingtonpost.com and
George Soros-funded Free Press to plan how government can expand its
media influence. Both Free Press and American Public Media, which
owns and operates 780
public radio stations in the U.S., joined top media experts in an
August session on the future of journalism. That event included
extensive discussion of ways government could aid the news business,
from to tax policy to “direct government subsidies for media.”
With
Congress looking into a media bailout, here are some important
aspects of the debate that must be considered:
- Government Aid = Government Control:
As soon as Obama bailed out Detroit, he forced out GM
Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner. The White House also gave
majority ownership in Chrysler (55 percent) to the UAW. Wall
Street bailouts resulted in overnight government regulation –
even salary controls. Government intervention in media gives
Obama the same opportunity to control the news. Seven major
newspaper chains have gone into bankruptcy. If he uses the same
strategies he used for Detroit, that would let Obama control
major media outlets across the nation and he could dictate the
news.
- BBC or Pravda, Does It Matter?:
Liberal supporters of government involvement argue the U.S. pays
less for public media than other major nations. But the liberals
have it exactly backward. One cannot have a successful democracy
without a free press. Or put it another way, the less government
controls the media, the more free the people are. As such, it
should be our goal to have the U.S. government pay nothing for
public media.
- Left Wants a ‘PBS on Steroids’: The
cornerstone for government involvement in media is more money
for public broadcasting. Liberals and media executives want to
use the “existing infrastructure” to promote local news media –
through public media. These attempts ignore repeated analysis
showing the left-wing tilt of public broadcasting. Speaking in
front of a left-wing media group, FCC commissioner Michael J.
Copps raised the idea of funding a “PBSS – Public Broadcasting
System on Steroids.”
- Liberals Advocate $60 Billion for
Government-Funded Journalism: At a time of massive
government growth and trillion-dollar deficits, liberal
groups are calling for a “bridge” to the future of journalism.
They want $60 billion over three years for everything from
subscription subsidies to postal “reforms.” Much of that funding
would, of course, go to NPR and PBS. The Corporation for Public
Broadcasting is slated to get $420 million in the 2010 budget.
If all of the new money went to public broadcasting, that would
be a more than 4,700 percent increase.
Recommendations
Increasing government involvement in the media
is wrong-headed and dangerous. The government is already too
involved in media. The 1st Amendment clearly states:
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press.” Getting government more involved in
the media – either through regulations or outright funding – would
have horrible long-term consequences.
The biases of the traditional media have been
long established in numerous studies. Making journalists more
beholden to the politicians and government officials they are
supposed to cover would further undermine the integrity of the
Fourth Estate.
Instead, the Business & Media Institute has
several recommendations on the future of journalism:
- Just Say No: Journalists have to
draw a clear line in the sand and say they neither want nor need
help from government. This should include the overt help of
direct subsidies and the more subtle forms of aid such as
specific tax breaks and antitrust assistance.
- Trust in the Marketplace: The
future of journalism won’t be exactly like anyone envisions it.
It will depend on what people want, not what the media elites
want, and wants change with time. Readers and viewers might not
want news the way it has been traditionally delivered. News
organizations need to first focus on ways to make money – online
and off. Then, essential areas that aren’t easily funded – such
as foreign bureaus – can be aided through nonprofits and
foundations.
- The Media Are Not the Message: The
reporting of a free press is essential to a thriving democracy.
How that reporting reaches its audience – TV, radio, print,
Internet or text message – is inconsequential. Journalists need
to recognize that the day of print is changing. Secondary
newspapers continue to fold as they have done for decades and
some mismanaged larger outlets are closing as well. But just
because newspapers die doesn’t mean the news will. The print
newspaper is just a vehicle. The information is what is
important. Too many in the industry and in government are stuck
on the old way of delivering information.
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