Opinion

Cut off their taxpayer funds

In the wake of commentator Juan Williams’ firing by National Public Radio, supporters on the Internet sounded a rallying cry: “Free Juan!” But Williams has now been liberated from the government-funded media’s politically correct shackles. It’s taxpayers who need to be untethered from NPR and other public broadcasting.

Public radio and TV are funded with your money to the tune of some $400 million in direct federal handouts and tax deductions for contributions made by individual viewers, not to mention untold state grants and subsidies. Supporters argue that this amounts to a tiny portion of state-sponsored media’s budget and an even tinier portion of the federal budget.

If it’s so negligible, why do NPR’s government-subsidized “journalists” cling so bitterly to the subsidies? Leverage. The government imprimatur gives NPR and PBS a competitive edge, favoritism with lawmakers and the phony appearance of being above the fray.

The Williams debacle gives definitive lie to the dulcet-toned façade. Without cause or notice, NPR announced Williams’ termination on Twitter. Williams, who is a Fox News contributor, had committed the deadly sin of expressing public concern about traveling with “people who are in Muslim garb . . . identifying themselves first and foremost as Muslims.” Confessed Williams on “The O’Reilly Factor” Tuesday night: “I get worried. I get nervous.”

Williams later emphasized in the segment that a distinction needed to be made between “moderate” and “extremist” Muslims. But left-wing bloggers, the p.c. police and Fox-hating organizations weren’t listening. Think Progress, the same outfit that is waging war against the GOP-leaning US Chamber of Commerce, decried Williams’ remarks. The liberal Huffington Post piled on.

The granddaddy of all grievance-mongers, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, pressured NPR to “address” Williams’ feelings. CAIR, of course, is notorious for “addressing” its talk radio and TV critics — from the late Paul Harvey to Dr. Laura — by launching witch hunts to kick dissenters off the air.

Upon firing Williams for violating the public-radio station’s “editorial standards,” NPR CEO Vivian Schiller shamelessly attacked Williams’ mental health. At an Atlanta Press Club event, she said Williams “should have kept his feeling about Muslims between himself and ‘his psychiatrist or his publicist.’ ”

NPR accused Williams of undermining its credibility. But vindictive Vivian Schiller and her colleagues have undermined state-sponsored radio’s credibility for years with impunity — from NPR legal correspondent Nina Totenberg publicly wishing for the late GOP Sen. Jesse Helms to die a painful AIDS-induced death to NPR affiliate employee Sarah Spitz pining for radio talk-show giant Rush Limbaugh’s death on a journalists e-mail list.

NPR and PBS have no problem raising money from corporations and left-wing philanthropists, including billionaire George Soros, whose Open Society Institute just gave $1.8 million to pay for at least 100 journalists at NPR member radio stations in all 50 states over the next three years.

Not one more red cent of public money should go to NPR, PBS and CPB. Free the taxpayers!

malkinblog@gmail.com