Posted on 06/21/2005 9:04:44 PM PDT by Tom_Busch
Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), ranking member of a House panel on telecommunications, called at a rally yesterday in support of public broadcasting for the resignation of Kenneth Tomlinson.
In his zeal to impose his own view of political balance, said Markey, Ken Tomlinson has lost sight of his core mission to protect the childrens-television network of the Public Broadcasting System of America. And he should resign from his position as the head of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).
Tomlinson has come under fire recently for hiring an ombudsman to gauge perceived biases in PBS shows such as Now, previously hosted by Bill Moyers. Liberals say such an action is tantamount to government censorship.
Markey also called on Tomlinson to resign as chairman of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, which oversees the Voice of America, Alhurra and other government-sponsored international broadcasting operations.
Rep. Maurice Hinchey (D-N.Y.) echoed Markeys sentiment, calling Tomlinson a propagandist.
At the rally in front of the Cannon House Office Building, House and Senate Democrats presented Congress with more than 1 million signatures calling for the restoration of full funding for public broadcasting. The fiscal year 2006 labor-HHS-education appropriations bill sent to the House floor for debate this week mandates cuts in excess of $100 million for public television and radio, including a 25 percent cut for the CPB.
Joined by stars of PBS childrens programming, including Clifford the Big Red Dog, Maya & Miguel and Between the Lions, Democrats hailed the educational nature of public broadcasting, especially in contrast to the content of commercial broadcasts.
Markey said that, while PBS stations offer up to 12 hours per day of nutritious, beneficial childrens programming, commercial broadcast networks program shows like Jerry Springer, Montel Maury, Judge Hatchett and Divorce Court.
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) agreed that commercial networks are not providing sufficient educational programming, noting that, according to the National Television Violence Study, children are exposed to six acts of violence and hour, and violence on the so-called commercial childrens shows is on the rise.
The idea of taking away the money for children is particularly offensive, said Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-N.Y.).
Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.), founder of the Bipartisan Congressional Public Broadcasting Caucus, emphasized that the cuts would hurt what he sees as a unifying force in the country.
Today, because of the multiplicity of choices, we really dont have that national voice that once united us, Blumenauer said. NPR, PBS are as close to a national voice as America has any more.
Blumenauer added, The areas that will be denied public broadcasting services if this scheme is allowed to go forward will be areas of rural America, small-town America, where its more expensive to broadcast and where there isnt the population base to make up the difference.
Rep. John Dingell (D-Mich.), ranking member of the Energy and Commerce Committee, said, We have a message today for the Republicans: dont mess with public broadcasting.
Tomlinson and a spokesman for the House Appropriations Committee could not be reached for comment by press time.
Sounds like Tomlinson is doing a great job; they're screaming like stuck pigs. Full speed ahead!
Thought this was a joke.......Well,in reflection, it still is.
Not MY voice.
Liberal lies - good; conservative truth - bad. /sarcasm off
You'll never find a stronger advocate for PBS's children's programming than I am. However, I also believe in free market economics. I honestly believe that PBS could still thrive with commercial sponsors and at least lessen it's dependency on the federal government, if it wasn't eliminated completely.
A supporter of PBS and NPR has just admitted, that these two entities speak with one voice, and one sided opinions.
Isn't Kenneth Tomlinson a Clinton appointee?
PBS ping!
In other words, he's saying that private media has to conform to the same standards as public media. I'm reminded of all the times the Democrats have played nanny for society. V-Chips in TV's, parental labels on CD's and video games, and ratings systems for shows.
Air America TV
The Dems are into "for the children" mode over this.
PBS kids' shows are responsible for as much kiddie merchandise all year long as Mattel is at Christmas. Let PBS negotiate better merchandising deals. Let the kids turn off PBS and go out and play.
(Kids who grew up in the '50s got along fine without PBS. None of the kid shows back then relied on taxpayer money.)
Yes, he's a Clinton appointee and once headed the Voice Of America Radio at the USIA, before landing a chairmanship at PBS/NPR.
Just more '60s survivors making all of us pay for their impending old age.
If kids weren't watching Howdy Doodee back then, they were getting their arms scraped in the dirt or climbing trees, or throwing rocks at one another outside.
bttt
LMBO!! The scumbags are trotting out "the children" again!
The glaring irony, of course, is that these very same scumbags are also unabashed abortion enthusiasts.
Beam me up....
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