Three observations about West Virginia Public Broadcasting (WVPB):

  • The legislative auditor wants to have it both ways with WVPB.  He wants to control the money that I give the Foundation and Friends groups because state employees solicit and manage my donation.  I don’t mind the State controlling my tax dollars, but I do mind them controlling my donations.  The State should be happy that I entrust some of my hard-earned dollars to support a state program, instead of discouraging me by trying to get their grubby hands on my money.  I should have a right to trust a private foundation that state employees assist to operate with my money if I want.
  • If this is such a big problem, why not simply turn WVPB into a 501(c)(3) organization and provide them with future state funding via a grant?  This is precisely how the West Virginia Department of Education and the Arts funds the West Virginia Humanities Council, another worthy organization that receives a lot of state funding.  WVPB’s grant still would be subject to state appropriation and the conditions in a grant agreement, but they otherwise would be free to do the public good without political interference.  I believe the British handle the BBC using a comparable approach.
  • I make the second recommendation because I am very concerned about a governor or his or her designee serving as chairman of the Educational Broadcasting Authority, a board a governor appoints and thus easily can control anyway.  It’s not difficult to imagine a situation in which an overreaching governor tries to use WVPB as a propaganda instrument.  One salutary effect of quasi-privatizing WVPB: The board itself, not a governor, would appoint new members.

I really hope someone sponsors legislation to quasi-privatize WVPB, while continuing its state appropriation.

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For eight long years, I watched Republicans exploit terrorism as a political issue.  For their efforts, we got into a war with a country that did not present an imminent threat and that had no Al Qaeda terrorists (at least before we got there) or weapons of mass destruction.  And for their efforts, we came to be viewed as a rogue nation throughout the rest of the civilized world as we discarded basic constitutional principles for “detainees” in facilities as diverse as Abu Ghraib, Guantanamo Bay, and a notorious set of “secret” prisons scattered throughout the world.

Guess what?  They’re back!!

After the attempted terrorism incident on Christmas Day, former Vice President Dick Cheney issued a statement criticizing President Obama for his failure to act dramatically in response to a Nigerian’s man’s effort to blow up an airliner landing in Detroit with explosive materials hidden in his underwear:

As I’ve watched the events of the last few days it is clear once again that President Obama is trying to pretend we are not at war. He seems to think if he has a low key response to an attempt to blow up an airliner and kill hundreds of people, we won’t be at war. He seems to think if he gives terrorists the rights of Americans, lets them lawyer up and reads them their Miranda rights, we won’t be at war. He seems to think if we bring the mastermind of 9/11 to New York, give him a lawyer and trial in civilian court, we won’t be at war.

Mr. Cheney has been joined by an array of conservative commentators criticizing the President.

Guess what?  President Obama acted far more swiftly to the underwear bomber scare than President Bush reacted to the Richard Reid, the shoe bomber, eight years ago.

According to Politico,

Eight years ago, a terrorist bomber’s attempt to blow up a transatlantic airliner was thwarted by a group of passengers, an incident that revealed some gaping holes in airline security just a few months after the attacks of Sept. 11. But it was six days before President George W. Bush, then on vacation, made any public remarks about the so-called shoe bomber, Richard Reid, and there were virtually no complaints from the press or any opposition Democrats that his response was sluggish or inadequate.

It’s refreshing when legitimate news organizations do their homework and expose partisan propaganda for what it is.

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As someone who subscribes to several breaking news alerts, I never cease to be amazed by what national and local news media believe to be breaking news:

  • Michaele and Tareq Salahi.  Unless one of the Salahis grabbed a steak knife and used it on White House State Dinner guests, it’s not breaking news that they crashed a party.
  • Tiger Woods.  Unless Tiger Woods’ wife beat him to death with one of his golf clubs for being an unfaithful spouse, (yes, I got my news from the National Enquirer while in the grocery check-out line), it’s not breaking news.
  • Mark Snyder.  When the Marshall University Thundering Herd loses 52-21 to a hapless University of Texas El Paso football team, it’s not breaking news when the coach resigns.
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Media 101: Going to war

Ink Stain

A former employer of mine likes to say: “You should never go to war with anyone who buys ink by the barrel.”  Sometimes people don’t take this sage advice or my advice about avoiding a death of a thousand cuts very seriously:

Mylan Inc. files suit again the Post-Gazette.

Mylan is suing the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette over a series of stories concerning alleged drug safety violations at its Morgantown facility.  The article suggests that Mylan’s lawyers are making some fairly novel legal claims because a straightforward case of libel would be so difficult to make.  Lawyers have tried many novel legal theories to get around libel legal standards over the years, generally with little success.

Well, at least the lawyers will get rich.

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For those of you who have not come to rely on the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette for your northern West Virginia news, please be aware that Patricia Sabbatini and Len Boselovic are at it again, this time reporting that Mylan Pharmaceuticals in Morgantown regularly overrode quality controls in the production of generic drugs.  The story seems to be unfolding in much the same way that another story with which some of you may be familiar unfolded a year and a half ago.  If I were Mylan, I would come clean and quickly to avoid a death of a thousand cuts.

The Morgantown Dominion-Post thus far has remained silent concerning the developing story in its own back door.  The Charleston Gazette has assigned reporter Eric Eyre to cover it.

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