It’s Time for NPR to Earn Its Own Funding With Respectable Reporting

I don't want to forced to fund NPR any more than want to be forced to fund Fox News. Uri Berliner served as the senior business editor at NPR from 1999 until his resignation in April 2024. What follows is an excerpt from his article, "Happy Independence Day, NPR." Anyone who has been paying attention knows that he not exaggerating the far-left slide of NPR:

Once fairly evenly divided between liberals, moderates, and conservatives, NPR’s news audience shifted sharply to the left. And by 2023, liberals outnumbered conservatives more than six to one. True to the tote bag cliché, NPR became an accessory for Whole Foods shoppers. Which is sad, because in another era, NPR, and public radio more broadly, developed some of the most creative and entertaining programming anywhere, from Car Talk to This American Life, Planet Money, Radiolab and A Prairie Home Companion.

Thanks in part to this ideological transformation, NPR botched major stories—and damaged its bond with the American people.

To name a couple of prominent examples: It repeatedly insisted that the lab leak theory of Covid had been debunked and it refused to cover Hunter Biden’s laptop. NPR’s reporting on the most contentious issues of the day—climate change, youth gender medicine, and the war in Gaza—leaned on moralizing and emotional certitude more than on rigorous factual analysis.

Embracing the mantras of the Great Awokening, NPR became a caricature of itself with headlines like these:

Microfeminism: The Next Big Thing in Fighting the Patriarchy

Which Skin Color Emoji Should You Use? The Answer Can Be More Complex than You Think

Black Women’s Groups Find Health and Healing on Hikes, But Sometimes Racism, Too

Bringing Diversity to Maine’s Nearly All-White Lobster Fleet

Diet Culture Can Hurt Kids. This Author Advises Parents to Reclaim the Word ‘Fat’

These Drag Artists Know How to Turn Climate Activism into a Joyful Blowout

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News You Can and Cannot Trust

"Everything you’ve been told about everything is bullshit,” Rogan declares, urging people to see the pattern. It’s not about dwelling on past grievances but recognizing the manipulation baked into every major issue.

Why, Rogan asks, were borders flung open? Why were people handed money and moved to swing states? Why do bills sneak through Congress loaded with “crazy stuff”? The answers lie beyond the polished scripts of news anchors.

Mainstream commentary, he argues, is a distraction—a cacophony of nonsense designed to obscure truth. To find real answers, you must bypass the noise.

Rogan points to voices like Glenn Greenwald, Matt Taibbi, and Michael Shellenberger—journalists who cut through the fog with raw, nonpartisan facts.

These are the people digging into primary sources, exposing what’s hidden, and delivering unfiltered reality. “If you want the truth,” Rogan insists, “you have to seek it out yourself.”

I agree with Joe Rogan here. The legacy media's highly coordinated mass deception has been apparent to me only because I've consciously tracked the legacy news and spotted the patterns, documenting the patterns and the hypocrisy hundreds of times on my website. Otherwise, I wouldn't have believed what was happening. Closely tracking the lies and sophisticated "news" manipulation is how I stopped being a consumer of news. Legacy news outlets don't offer you facts and invite you to think for yourself. Rather, they put you into a constant state of tribalistic apprehension and tell you how to think. If you don't get this problem deep in your every bone, you are no longer self-actualized, no matter how things might feel to you, because your feelings have been hijacked. You have become someone else's pawn:

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A Tale of Two Informational Ecosystems

My guiding assumption is that people rationally make decisions based upon the information they digest.  Thus, change their informational (media) ecosystem and you will change their beliefs and behavior, yet they will be convinced that they never changed--that they are the same person as always.

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