• Pinboard Links

    Flap’s Links and Comments for March 3rd from 20:23 to 20:32

    These are my links for March 3rd from 20:23 to 20:32:

    • Jim DeMint: Public Broadcasting Should Go Private – When presidents of government-funded broadcasting are making more than the president of the United States, it's time to get the government out of public broadcasting.

      While executives at the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and National Public Radio (NPR) are raking in massive salaries, the organizations are participating in an aggressive lobbying effort to prevent Congress from saving hundreds of millions of dollars each year by cutting their subsidies. The so-called commercial free public airwaves have been filled with pleas for taxpayer cash. The Association of Public Television Stations has hired lobbyists to fight the cuts. Hundreds of taxpayer-supported TV, radio and Web outlets have partnered with an advocacy campaign to facilitate emails and phone calls to Capitol Hill for the purpose of telling members of Congress, "Public broadcasting funding is too important to eliminate!"

      PBS President Paula Kerger even recorded a personal television appeal that told viewers exactly how to contact members of Congress in order to "let your representative know how you feel about the elimination of funding for public broadcasting." But if PBS can pay Ms. Kerger $632,233 in annual compensation—as reported on the 990 tax forms all nonprofits are required to file—surely it can operate without tax dollars.

      The executives at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), which distributes the taxpayer money allocated for public broadcasting to other stations, are also generously compensated. According to CPB's 2009 tax forms, President and CEO Patricia de Stacy Harrison received $298,884 in reportable compensation and another $70,630 in other compensation from the organization and related organizations that year. That's practically a pittance compared to Kevin Klose, president emeritus of NPR, who received more than $1.2 million in compensation, according to the tax forms the nonprofit filed in 2009.

      ++++++

      Agreed

    • The Kochs fight back – Listing Who, What and Why – Faced with an avalanche of bad publicity after years of funding conservative causes in relative anonymity, the billionaire industrialist Koch brothers, Charles and David, are fighting back.

      They’ve hired a team of PR pros with experience working for top Republicans including Sarah Palin and Arnold Schwarzenegger to quietly engage reporters to try to shape their Koch coverage, and commissioned sophisticated polling to monitor any collateral damage to the image of their company, Koch Industries.

      At the same time, through their high-priced lawyers, private security detail and influential allies in conservative politics and media, the Kochs have played hard ball with critics and suspected foes.

      Young environmental activists who pranked them have been hit with a lawsuit seeking more than $100,000 in damages, and the leak of an internal document describing their political activities resulted in an investigation – complete with document analysis and interviews of suspects – that eventually identified the mole.

      Both their new openness and their aggressive – and sometimes secretive – tactics were on display before and during the Kochs’ closed-door, invitation-only four-day annual winter meeting of conservative donors and leaders that concluded Tuesday with a breakfast at the pricey resort that hosted it here in the Palm Springs suburbs.

      +++++++

      Read it all.

      I missed this piece a month ago when I covered the Koch Conference in Ranch Mirage

    • The Enquirer’s Edwards Source’s Story – Observations by Mickey Kaus – Everybody’s favorite Rielle Hunter source, Pigeon O’Brien, tells her story in the Huffington Post.  I learned some things: 1) A lot more people were investigating the Edwards/Hunter sex scandal than I’d thought. It wasn’t just the National Enquirer and Sam Stein of HuffPo. Other campaigns and other publications were calling O’Brien for confirmation. Which raises the question: If so much of the MSM knew or suspected the story was true, why was it subequently so easily cowed by the efforts of John and Elizabeth Edwards to cover it up? 2) After Edwards’ first semi-confession, when he swore he couldn’t be the father of Rielle Hunter’s child, MSM reporters took his side with O’Brien:

      Rielle was flown out of the country and Edwards “confessed” on television (the first confession, the one in which he denied he was Quinn’s father) but included a troubling aside that he’d been with her at the hotel late at night because of her “troubles.” The press leaped on this and my phone rang all night: She’s blackmailing him for Andrew Young’s baby! Appalled, I spoke out and was told again and again, off camera, “Why do you defend her? Edwards says she’s a slut. Who knows whose baby that is?”

      ++++++++

      Read it all

      I first learned of the National Enquirer and the entire flap through reading Mickey's blog

  • Labor Unions,  Mickey Kaus

    2010 Union Membership in United States Falls Below 12% for the First Time



    The good Professor Mark Perry has the sad news for the Democratic Left who are dependent upon the unions for money and manpower to run their political campaigns.

    Union membership in the U.S. fell to an all-time historical low of 11.9% of all workers in 2010, which is less than half of the 24.5% share in 1979, according to new data from the BLS.

    Of course, there has to be some snark from Mickey Kaus the right-leaning Democrat.

    Unions Are Latinos in Reverse: For at least a decade both the Democrats and Republicans have been lectured by journalists, strategists, and assorted members of the Bush clique that the Latino vote is growing, so they’d better do what those voters want (which, we’re told, is give illegal immigrants amnesty). And the Latino vote is growing … But not every voting bloc is doing so well. Specifically, the union vote is shrinking. According to just released numbers, the nation’s unionization rate has fallen to less than 7 percent of private sector workers, and to less than 12 percent of all workers (counting the heavily unionized public sector). The long-term trend of decline is seemingly unrelenting. To borrow a phrase from President Obama, these are yesterday’s voters! If Dems need to suck up to expanding groups, by the same logic shouldn’t they be abandoning shrinking groups?

    Indeed, in California, look what the public sector unions have brought or should I say bought – a majority Democratic Party and a bankrupt state.

    Tomorrow, I will post about the new illegal immigration numbers.

  • Barbara Boxer,  Mickey Kaus

    CA-Sen: Mickey Kaus to Challenge Senator Barbara Boxer in Democrat Primary?

    Blogger Mickey Kaus, Laurence O’Donnell and Michael Sonnenschein

    Well, Mickey Kaus hasn’t filed yet and taking out papers means little for a protest candidacy unless they are actually filed.

    Pioneering political blogger Mickey Kaus took out papers filed to run for U.S. Senate in California, he told LA Weekly. The Venice resident said he’ll run this year against Barbara Boxer for her seat. He said he took out filed papers at with the Los Angeles County Registrar of Voters, although a spokeswoman there could not yet confirm the filing.

    The Democrat has been centrist and even conservative on some of the issues on which Boxer has taken a more left-leaning stand, including immigration: He does not favor amnesty and favors a more restrictive national policy.

    Of course, Boxer with over $6 million in campaign cash will crush Kaus. So, what is Mickey’s real motivation here?

    But, whatever, gives Barbara Boxer campaign angst, is good enough for me.


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