Night of the Living Dead Newspaper
by
Bill Walker
by Bill Walker
Previously
by Bill Walker: Our
$100 Trillion National Debt
On July 13,
2009 (Monday The 13th), the Claremont Eagle-Times died. Diagnosis
was Internet Deficiency Disease, complicated by obesity. The body
was properly interred in Chapter 7 Acres; the funeral was attended
mostly by the 66 full-time and 29 part-time former employees. But
E-T didn't stay dead.
On October
12 the Claremont Eagle-Times mysteriously reappeared. The
front page featured a picture of New Hampshire's Democratic governor,
together with a congratulatory letter from him. Why did he deserve
this free publicity?
Because the
chilling secret ingredient of the voodoo potion that reanimated
the Eagle-Times is... taxpayer money. (Wow, you didn't see
that surprise twist coming, did you!) The State of New Hampshire's
Department of Chaotic Evil, the Business
Finance Authority, issued a loan guarantee for $187,500 to the
Transylvanian* corporation that owns the newspaper.
So, does anyone
see anything wrong with taxpayer-supported newspapers? Not Governor
Lynch; when questioned about the obvious conflict of interest, he
said “It’s really
more of a job development, economic development type of issue.”
As we all know, it is the government's job to confiscate money from
us and use it to fund economic development. If government didn't
do this, where would jobs and economic development come from?
The competing
newspapers who didn't receive a subsidy were less sure of the benefit
to humanity as a whole, and themselves in particular. The Nov. 15
Manchester Union Leader said:
“You
will get no argument from us about newspapers' value to a republic.
But the civic services journalists perform are beside the point.
A newspaper is a private enterprise. The state's duty is to spend
taxpayer money on legitimate public services that only the state
can provide. Bankrolling a business – any business – is not one
of those functions.
This loan guarantee
is far from the state's first. The Business Finance Authority obtains
state guarantees for private business loans all the time. This is
an obvious misuse of taxpayer-backed credit.
Any public
benefit that accrues from the success of a private business will
be tangential to the benefit that accrues to the owner. One could
argue that there is no public benefit at all in the case of the
Eagle Times because when the paper closed, several others, including
this one, stepped in to take its place. The state is doing nothing
more than subsidizing one among many competing businesses.”
But is this
really a big deal? The letters to the Union Leader were split
between pro- and anti- zombie-newspaper views. The anti-zombie letters
were all pretty similar, complaining that government-backed media
has been linked to violence, financial malfeasance, and brain eating.
They all recommended the traditional zombie home remedy (an externally
applied cranial kinetic energy injection).
The pro-zombie
group were more in a spirit of compromise and good feeling. They
asked why newspapers should be singled out as the only industry
that doesn't get to have zombies. There are zombie banks, zombie
farms, zombie car companies, universities etc. etc. So in their
view, trying to keep government from reanimating newspapers is either
anti-newspaper or possibly even a cover for anti-Undead-American
bigotry.
There were
also a few letters from actual zombies. Some of them claimed that
loan guarantees “aren't subsidies,”
so I took down their names and put them down as co-signers on my
mortgage. Others suggested that most newspapers have been intellectual
zombies for years, and should be covered by some sort of grandfather
clause.
What is so
viscerally horrifying about zombie newspapers? If trillions of dollars
can be confiscated from the productive class and pumped into zombie
banks, should we be concerned about $187,500 going to a town paper
in New Hampshire with a circulation of 7,900? After all, newspapers
are supposed to be a dying industry; isn't it OK to have
a few of their picturesque corpses staggering over the media landscape,
feeding on the living economy?
Well, you may
think that one zombie is OK, even cutely hideous. But as your mother
told you when you brought that zombie home for a pet, zombies multiply.
The same is true of subsidies. First one newspaper gets a subsidy,
then another, then they're all zombies and their propaganda-loaded
pages are being hurled through your windows at 3 AM and consuming
your neurons. After all, media is the only industry where the whole
output goes directly into human brains.
You'll be hearing
a lot more proposals to “save newspapers”
by transfusing dead ones with money from the living. And it will
happen. There will be business sections full of articles supporting
zombie bank bailouts, stories ghostwritten by the industries
and political organizations they cover – even cartoons drawn by
dead guys (hard to believe, I know).
So stockpile
some snacks, board up the windows, and get ready to pass the ammo.
The Attack Of The Zombie Newspapers is about to begin.
*OK, they CLAIM
to be Penn-sylvanian. Even worse, if true.
November
23, 2009
Bill
Walker [send him mail]
is a research technologist. He lives with his wife and four dogs
in Grafton NH, where they are active in the Free State Project.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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