You know it really isn't even that NPR or Big Bird is the point. People are losing sight of the criticism here. Cut funding to NPR and that makes up less than .001% of the deficit. Meanwhile, Mr Romney is promising to lower taxes, change medicare, change social security, get rid of Healthcare reform, and increase defense spending which all require money to do. When asked repeatedly for specifics, his response is NPR, which is niether high up on dollars recieved, nor going to cover even a pittance of the debit side of his equation.
Sure we can have the discussion on whether NPR and similiar programs should recieve government funding. However, if we are talking how to offset the spending that Mr Romney plans, the discussions should include far, far, greater programs than NPR. "Trust me" or "it would take too long to explain the math" are not adequete substitutions for real specifics.
Yeah, it really is the point. The point is not Romney. The point is cutting government spending.
We mention PBS and NPR, which get government funds (tax dollars) and there are two primary objections.
1) They provided useful and education services which benefit all.
2) They are such a drop in the bucket that they won't affect the overall deficit at all, so why cut them?
The first point is easily dealt with. Simply because something is education and provides a benefit to the public is not and has never been a reason to mandate government financing of it. And, in cases where the government does pay for it, the government also controls or provides oversight of it. Simple as that; one or the other. Nobody gets free tax dollars and then gets to do whatever they like. PBS and NPR are not an exception to the rule, they are not special.
The second is an attempt to distract. When I work on my family budget, I don't say
"Oh, I won't cut out the money we spend on chocolate bars, because that's such a minor part of our grocery bill." Nonsense. Everything is on the table, and the things I can live without go first.
The bucket is made of drops, if you look at it that way. No, we will not balance the budget by cutting out our contribution to PBS and NPR. On the other hand, it will reduce the content of the bucket by those droplets. That's low-hanging fruit. Easy to remove, and then move on.
Think about it. The entire notion that the reason to keep funding something that is that it doesn't represent an overall fix is ludicrous on its face. If that's the best argument anyone has, it's far, far, from enough. It's not even an argument; logically it doesn't hold together for even a cursory inspection.
As I've said on numerous occasions, I don't like Romney and won't vote for him. But he is right that funding for PBS/NPR and frankly the entire National Endowment for the Arts has to be cut completely. Gone. I don't care who does it. Obama, Romney, or Professor Harold Hill.
And as I've also said, the budgets of PBS and NPR are clearly not dependent upon government dollars; they'll take a hit, but they won't cease to be if the government stops funding them. All the more reason to stop funding them. Anyone who wants to make up the difference with tax-deductible donations is of course free to do so and I'd encourage it.