BuddyRey
Member
- Joined
- May 20, 2007
- Messages
- 11,172
OK, so you guys are successfully re-educating me on quite a few issues (school vouchers, gun control, etc.) but I'm still just a wee foundling, a "limp-bertarian" if you will. I can at least partially grasp the concept of government intervention in business and services leading to a decline in quality, but I think I've found an ENORMOUS example that flies in the face of this axiom; public television and libraries. What got me thinking about this was watching a YouTube video of Fred ("Mister") Rogers speaking at the U.S. Senate in 1969, asking to have the funding for public television continued rather than used to fight the Vietnam War.
Commercial television has been debased and degraded to the quality and consistency of liquid excrement. It's constantly pandering to the lowest common denominator, becoming dominated by petty gossip shows and "reality TV." There is virtually nothing of informational or educational substance for discerning viewers who are, sadly, a minority of the public and don't have as much of a voice in a demand-based market. Where there's no demand for intellectually stimulating television, none will exist.
On the other hand, public television (public radio too, for that matter) consistently provides great programming of intellectual substance for all ages, provides much fairer political forums/debates (if you don't believe me, watch the Democratic debate that PBS hosted recently. Gravel and Kucinich got near-equal time to the frontrunners!), and doesn't feel the need to program mindless drivel and T&A for ratings.
A Republican form of government (which is what most conservatives and libertarians seem to advocate) holds as one of its core tenets the belief that individual rights should not be subject to the whims of large "groups" or majorities. This is a commendable position that I personally agree with, but how can the interests of individuals be protected and their voices/messages heard when majority demand dictates the quality and content of the media?
The same flaws of commercial television could concievably present themselves if public libraries were privatized. Right now, I could log on to the website of my local library and browse through obscure, wonderful books that absolutely NOBODY reads, because they're there anyway. I enjoy that freedom of choice, and this freedom simply wouldn't exist if a market dictated what books a library would carry and what books it would not, based on public demand.
So I just wanted to know what the free market thinkers of this board thought of public television and libraries, and what, if anything, they would do to insure the quality of these institutions in a system with considerably less government funding.
Commercial television has been debased and degraded to the quality and consistency of liquid excrement. It's constantly pandering to the lowest common denominator, becoming dominated by petty gossip shows and "reality TV." There is virtually nothing of informational or educational substance for discerning viewers who are, sadly, a minority of the public and don't have as much of a voice in a demand-based market. Where there's no demand for intellectually stimulating television, none will exist.
On the other hand, public television (public radio too, for that matter) consistently provides great programming of intellectual substance for all ages, provides much fairer political forums/debates (if you don't believe me, watch the Democratic debate that PBS hosted recently. Gravel and Kucinich got near-equal time to the frontrunners!), and doesn't feel the need to program mindless drivel and T&A for ratings.
A Republican form of government (which is what most conservatives and libertarians seem to advocate) holds as one of its core tenets the belief that individual rights should not be subject to the whims of large "groups" or majorities. This is a commendable position that I personally agree with, but how can the interests of individuals be protected and their voices/messages heard when majority demand dictates the quality and content of the media?
The same flaws of commercial television could concievably present themselves if public libraries were privatized. Right now, I could log on to the website of my local library and browse through obscure, wonderful books that absolutely NOBODY reads, because they're there anyway. I enjoy that freedom of choice, and this freedom simply wouldn't exist if a market dictated what books a library would carry and what books it would not, based on public demand.
So I just wanted to know what the free market thinkers of this board thought of public television and libraries, and what, if anything, they would do to insure the quality of these institutions in a system with considerably less government funding.
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