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Friday, February 06, 2009
Dan Gainor :: Townhall.com Columnist
Final Deadline Looms for U.S.A.'s Newspapers
by Dan Gainor
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Once newspapers were the answer to the riddle: “What is black and white and read all over?” They’re no longer just black and white, but they are red all over. Red ink spills off nearly every page onto balance sheets across America.

The newspaper business is bleeding to death. Hidden amidst the other obits at the back of the Metro section should be “R.I.P. American Newspapers b. 1690 d. Soon – from self-inflicted wounds.” On Feb. 15, the Baltimore Examiner becomes the latest sad casualty of an industry racing headlong to its death.

It is not something to celebrate. For all of its many faults, the news industry is essential to our democracy and newspapers have been the best and most comprehensive examples of journalism for 300 years. But it is a death brought on by hubris and incompetence on the part of too many in the news media – from top to bottom. Now the rest of us might end up paying for it.

Rather than learn from bad business decisions, journalists want Wall Street style rescues. Both the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News were working with Pa. Gov. Rendell to get the two largest state employee pension funds to help bail out the papers. Lawmakers in Connecticut recently tried to save The Bristol Press and The Herald.

Back in September, the industry magazine Editor & Publisher argued against a newspaper bailout idea that was scarily gaining credibility with the press. “[T]hose talking up a government bailout also include such respected newspaper veterans as Seattle Times Publisher Frank A. Blethen and editor-turned-academic Geneva Overholser,” wrote the magazine.

But government support of media, while anti-democratic, isn’t unusual. Look at the hundreds of millions of dollars we throw at PBS or NPR each year. In return, we get taxpayer-funded, left-wing propaganda. Many in the media see that as the Promised Land.

That’s not the only option. The New York Times recently published an opinion piece by two financial analysts arguing that wealthy individuals need to turn news into nonprofits because “we are dangerously close to having a government without newspapers.”

Based on history, it’s highly unlikely newspapers will be savvy enough to save themselves. When the Internet gained popularity, news outlets were slow to cooperate and even slower to make money. Job ads moved online to places like Monster because new Web sites could react faster and better than stodgy news outlets. Classified pages were unable to compete against Craigslist, which does their job for free.

Instead of trying to revolutionize the news business, owners milked their cash cows until the cows died. Instead of embracing new tech, unions battled changing job rules and entrepreneurs launched competitors instead of dealing with such bureaucracy. That was poison in a good economy. With a major downturn, it is likely fatal.

Sure there will continue to be well run local print news outlets. But they are few. Even the Examiner’s scrappy local content wasn’t enough to buck the tide of an advertising slowdown and the loss of 43,000 industry jobs in the last two years.

It’s not just the Internet that’s taking a toll, either. Newspapers have been shedding circulation for years, but no number of fancy charts and color photos has addressed the core problem for the news media – a loss in credibility.

The media’s Obama obsession in the last election reminded Americans that too many in news can’t be trusted. The Pew Research Center for the People and the Press released a 2008 study that declared: “virtually every news organization or program has seen its credibility marks decline.” Just 25 percent of The Wall Street Journal readers said they “believe all or most of what the organization says.” The New York Times, Associated Press and USA Today all rated even lower.

The industry solution? Several executives have banded together to start a Web site – www.newspaperproject.org – promoting the industry and combating “negative, gloom-and-doom stories about newspapers.” The site attempts to whistle past the graveyard for an industry trying desperately to pay its bills. Strong readership numbers online are not turning into enough dollars to run things the old way. And even the old way didn’t always work.

The industry’s death throes are also a reminder that sometimes life imitates art imitating life. In 1952, Humphrey Bogart played a crusty newspaperman trying to save a dying paper in the movie classic “Deadline U.S.A.” It was patterned after a real life newspaper closing where Bogart’s paper, The Day, fights one last crusade against corruption before it too passes away.

Bogart’s character issued warnings that resonate even today – that “a free press, sir, is like a free life, it’s always in danger.” Thankfully, Bogey knew that danger could come not just from closing down, but from a government handout. Today’s journalists need to do a good Bogart impression.

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About The Author
Dan Gainor is The Boone Pickens Free Market Fellow and director of the Media Research Center’s Business & Media Institute.
 
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Save the trees
Shut down all newspapers.
Trees produce oxygen.
Newspapers produce confusion.

If you blog - you helped the situation
Take me for example - I remember reading the morning and evening newspaper way back when.

1 The web and cable tv are in another league.
2 The L.A. Times is a fish wrapper.

It's Easy: Tell The Truth Objectively
If newspapers want to save themselves then they must start reporting the truth objectively whether in print or on-line or on the air. The American people who read newspapers and the news on-line are savvy about world events and seeking the truth. They aren't interested in "glistening pectorals" and slanted news stories or stories that trash people because they can buy tabloids or watch those programs and that's a totally different audience than those who read for information. The American people don't believe much of what is printed in major newspapers any longer because they aren't getting both sides of the story and objective views about the issues; thus they flock to talk radio and the internet and what could be considered underground news articles. It's when the controlled news blatantly favors and blatantly attacks that people will seek alternatives for the truth. In my opinion, it's important to keep the presses moving and support them because the internet could be shut down unexpectedly because of a glitch or some sort of disaster. Plus, it's important to have documentation in black and white for review. So, hopefully, they'll re-think they're papers and print stories that provide all of the facts.

Left vs Right
People like to see ideas clash together so they can judge for themselves.

People like to toss insults at each other for fun or to blow off steam.

That’s why the right wing media is going to win out.

The left wing media is scripted more then the right wing is.

I like watching the news from people trying to sell me stocks because the money channels outlook is $ rather then politics.

Ain't that the truth
Howard (#11):

Born in Atlanta, and know the Journal-Constitution well. So, that Marxist Cynthia Tucker is still there, huh... heard she won a Pulitzer Prize not long ago. That's how debased that award has become - that a hack like her can get it.

Paleocon (#12): I agree with you, even though I am a lover of newspapers as theuy once were. Learned to read partly on the daily paper, in fact. My heart hardened against these folks long ago; they have dismissed the crucial responsibilities of the 4th estate in our system of government, in favor of blatant parisanship, pseudo-news, and dumbed-down content. Sometimes, arrogant people and their businesses have to be taught a lesson by the markets, and pushed aside in favor of new institutions and people that serve their constituents and customers well, and not with contempt.

I hope the feds don't give them any money. Let 'em work for an honest living for a change.
The good people in the journalism field will land on their feet somewhere, the others - too bad for them. Hard-hearted as that seems, maybe if they'd done their duty as reporters, they'd still be in business.

RICH D.----- BIRDIE WHAT?
YOUR COMMENT ABOUT BIRDIE POOH HAS ME ROARING!
IAM STILL LAUGHING...... CAN'T TYPE......
THANKS I NEEDED THAT !!!
HOW HAVE YA' BEEN?
TCB...
ELVIS

Their death is good for the birds!
My birds stopped dying of constipation when I stopped lining the cages with the NYT and LAT.

Self-inflicted Mortal Wounds
With the exceptions of conservative talk radio-TV, some of the Internet and of all things tabloids like the Nat'l Enquirer that persisted in the Edwards love child fiasco until other media had to report it, U.S. and some foreign media are dying of self-inflicted wounds.
The wounds include faked photos, videos, Jayson Blair of NY Times fame stories and such. Only dumbed down Liberal Democrat Obamaniacs are still reading, watching and listening to the nonsense pushed at them by the massiveinfoentertainment media (MIM). Check out the MIM ownership for proof of the reason they have earned the MIM name.
Mark Twain said it well: If you do not read newspapers you are uninformed. If you do read newspapers you are misinformed. The same applies to most radio-TV and other print media in our times.

An angler's great dilemna
WHAT will I wrap my fish in?

-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

the failure of the msm
strange why they went from reporting the news to trying to be the news.

For reasons only they can explain they were more interested in being part of getting the messiah elected than simply reporting the news and doing their job of investigating the various charges and rumors concerning who the messiah was and his relationship to various haters and terrorists.

And after becoming primarily supplicants to the messiah cult of personality the media showed they wanted to be a part of history.

But how will they explain and justify not only his unfitness for the job but his failure to understand the job and his many coming failures.

Meanwhile in phoenix we have what is more akin to a local shoppers news. A few paragraphs about various blurbs from around the country and full page ads for stores and sales.

About the only section that seems to get much coverage is the sports section, as if that matters more than what is happening to the economy and the failures of the clueless clown and the impotent congress to address the issue.

When the end comes the msm won't understand they were the instrument of their own destruction

Just prints the AP
My 2 papers pretty much just run AP wire stories (well, one runs Gannett stories, but Gannett is pretty much content-free). One just announced layoffs and shifting from broadsheet to tabloid format. The Gannett one raised newsstand price from .50 to .75, is still losing money, and announced 10% wage cuts.

The only paper I see with real content worth buying is WSJ.

LET THEM SINK !
I DON'T GET THE PAPER ANYMORE ! I HAVE ALL THE CHARMIN I NEED IN THE HOUSE !
SOMEONE WILL COME ALONG AND REPLACE THEM !YAWN.
I GET MORE RELIABLE INFO ON A BOX OF CHERRIOS!
ELVIS

One more thing...
What wonderfully insightful comments... thanks to all.

Another reason tis bibliophile no longer gets the Chicago Tribune or the weekly general interest magazines is the rise of infotainment, and the glorification of celebrity culture. I am profoundly uninterested in the latest adventures of Paris, Lindsey, et al. Who cares? Not I and I won't pay for a publication that wastes ink on these people. Let the "Tiger Beat" set do that.


Hey again
Nickel, m, and Russ: Many thanks. It's reassuring to know that not everyone thinks I'm out in foul territory.

Incredulous: By gum, you're right. There hasn't been a single impassioned defense of the Cretaceous media on this thread. Maybe their supporters are learning to recognize a lost cause.

M.L. Bushman: As "a writer/editor for a local weekly," you have my profound sympathy. Your lot is probably no easier than that of a military recruiter in San Francisco. It was obvious that newspapers were headed for the ditch when they started getting rid of the people who had kept them in business -- writers who write things worth reading, editors who actually edit, fact-checkers, proofreaders -- to make room for quasiliterate, but more ideologically pure, j-school drones.

Judith
I think you are spot on.The libs control the newsless papers,so their next step is to shut down talk radoi.Bring back the small town papers and the Town Crier.

Glory Days???
Could it possibly be that the left-biased papers are hoping that the new Socialist administration will silence talk radio, then clamp down on internet news (I have heard rumblings of this!)? If so, and if they could only hang on long enough, then they could return to their rightful glory days!!
Could they possibly be that ignorant of the American citizens'intelligence?
My guess is YES.

Irrelevant
Every post I've read thusfar is indeed spot-on. I've not come across a single Lib-trying to defend or promote a strategy to make newspapers relevant. I must then surmise that the Lib(s) know that indeed the demise of newspapers is primarily because of their overt left-leaning bias. This is further borne out in the left's glaring failure(s) of enterprises such as "Air-Amerika" et.al. It becomes so boorish for most Americans' to constantly read/hear about the victimization perpatrated against defensless AmeriKans' by those evil Repubs. and neocons. I subscribe to the old aphorism, "No news is good news," with the caveat that I'm able to get the real truth from other sources which are more balanced.

Wow!
I can't remember ever reading so many spot on comments to an article. While I read the article, I had thought of some comments to make. They were all here. Paleocon made most of them, but far more eloquently than I could have.

Propaganda Purveyors
I suspect that the reason newspapers are tanking is that people are uninterested in reading propaganda. Newspapers and major television networks are all equally at risk because I believe most of the public is tired of reading the lies of the Left. I, personally, do not care if newspapers and all other purveyors of propaganda fail.

A dying horse
I work as a writer/editor for a local weekly. The publisher thinks more pictures in color and less content is the key to his success. But he doesn't read, even his own newspaper. Refuses to let me write anything of substance. For example, when the new credit card regulations were announced, could I write the shortest story about it? No. Despite the fact that nearly everyone in the area has at least one credit card. He doesn't want to hear anything from me except blind obedience--write what I tell you to write. He's too smart to know he doesn't know what I should be writing. Everything is high school and church groups, a paper that's all fluff and advertising. He likes to tell anyone who'll listen that he's signing up one or two new subscribers a week, despite the fact that our circulation numbers have not risen one iota in the last four months. In our area, cattle ranching and farming are the main livelihoods--but do we report on what's happening within these industries? No. Do we report on State government? No. Do we investigate anything suspicious in the way city, county or state business is run? No. He either ignores or avoids the fact that population in town is declining and has been for years; school kids he features each week will grow up and move away; while the competition in another town nearby is actually doing some journalism, reporting on issues not only county, but state-wide that affect the citizens of the area.

I used to believe newspapers stood for something, that reporters stuck their necks out to get the truth to the people because truth was their mandate. Now they are simply fluff, good for starting fires in the wood stove in winter, but not much else.

I'm riding a dying horse. I'd dismount, but I have a daughter to support and jobs here as elsewhere are increasingly hard to come by. I'm disillusioned to the point that I'd rather scrub toilets than work for this paper, if only I could find the job.

Self inflicted--NY Times will die!
The NY Times made a conscious decision to be the propoganda arm of the democrat/socialist party, and failed to represent the opposing political view. They deserve to go out of business.

Also,with the advent of the internet, we all should consider the devastating effects of newspapers and magazines like the NY Times & "US" magazine have on the environment. We have the ability to express our First Amendment rights electronically, like we have here. Therefore, I have no reservation to say it is time to be environmentally conscious and stop paying for print media.
Think about the trees that would be saved, as well as the energy consumed printing, circulating, recycling and disposing of such a wasteful and irrelevant rag like the NY Times. .
Do the right thing for the environment!! Don't buy the NY Times.


"Mainstream media" needed too
Dan Gainor suggests (and I'm sure a lot of conservatives agree with him) that a loss of credibility stemming from left-wing political bias is a major cause, perhaps *the* major cause, of the decline of newspapers. I'm not so sure. No doubt political bias and angry readers turning to more politically congenial "new media" sources (such as this website) plays a role, but I suspect higher costs, lost advertising revenue, and a younger generation losing the habit of reading *anything* (at least on paper) are more important causes.

Anyway, I myself regularly read Townhall and other right-wing and libertarian websites, but I also read my local daily newspaper, and I'll be sorry if it disappears, even though I often grind my teeth about its biases. I figure I need both to balance each other. Anyone who depends for news and opinion either only on the "mainstream media", or only on politically partisan online sources sharing their own leanings, is in danger of losing touch with reality.

Its supply and demand
Papers are not supplying what consumers demand. If a paper can supply something worthwhile, people will pay for it. Imagine a government bailout for the whale oil lamp industry. I imagine a changed industry with some visionaries, unless out of envy, a successful new idea is taxed out of business in order to provide a stimulus.

Demise of the Press
Yes, the newspapers are losing out to advancing technology, although that should not bring on a complete collapse. The problem is that the press has lost contact with the public in several ways; one being the lack of updated material. Another cause is rather simple, however it is a fact; Our newspaper carries sport information from only local or short distance regional colleges. They seem to believe that everyone that reads the paper is from the local area, while in fact,their populaiton is a mix from everywhere and needs to know how their former college or university is doing in the sports world. The sport page is or can be the driver in keeping up interest in the "Rag"

There is an upside
No more of our intelligence secrets on the front page of the NY Slimes.

Paleocon
VERY well put.

HERE AND THERE

Here # 1
For years I have been approached by representatives of newspapers when I enter stores trying to sell me subscriptions. I always tell them that I would subscribe if they (the newspapers ) would come to my house and pick up the old newspapers. It's just too much paper for me to deal with and I do not care for the hassle of disposing of all that paper. All they would have to do was pick up the old paper when they bring the new one. They said they couldn't do that. So I never subscribed.
Here # 2
As far as freedom of the press goes, we lost that years ago. The Soviets in their heyday, with Pravda and Tass and the Polit Bureau, could only hope to dream of having single party domination of the press the way the Democrat Party has over the press in the USA. It is no wonder that Red China sends students to our so called “journalism” schools. When it comes to single party domination of the press, the Democrats wrote the book.
There # 1
Was Will Rogers or Mark Twain who said something like if one doesn't read the papers, one is uninformed, if one reads the papers, one is miss-informed?
The last There (and may favorite)
A group of reporters were taunting Willie Joe Namath the week before the Super Bowl. One asked “Joe, is it true that you majored in Basket Weaving at Alabama?” Joe said, “Oh no! Basket Weaving was much too hard, I majored in something much easier!” The reporter asked, “What could be easier than Basket Weaving?” Joe shot back, “Journalism!”

Biased
After 33 years as a suscriber to my local paper I dropped the weekly edition. The paper has become so biased that it is no longer objective. We had a Veterans Day event that drew over 8000 people and it was reported in a short article with no pictures. The group that was protesting the fact that gay marraige wasn't allowed (less thatn 200 people) got a half page story and pictures. After the coverage of the last election where there was no objective anaylsis of Obama. I had had enough. I still would like local news objectively reported. Report the facts and let us decide.

Failures of the MSM
I say let them all fail.
They've all become the darlings of the liberal agenda and certainly are not "fair and balanced" if such could ever be the case.
When you have liberals in control and liberals as so-called commentators and editorial writers and reporters, what else can you expect.

There are no "newspapers" any longer...
What used to be called newspapers has become, in many area, nothing more than advertisement & coupon delivery systems.
The irony is that so many of their editorials decry the harvesting of trees and use of carbon-based fuels while their "industry" absolutely depends on both.

MSM (and others)
Truth and politics do not mix well, if at all.

That is the problem faced by news media controlled and staffed by ideologically committed people – regardless of which ideology they are committed to. The twin filters of omission and commission render them completely unreliable and unbelievable. Coupled with competition from the internet, that dooms them.

How about this...
As an ex-newspaper reader I want to thank Redlac and Paleocon for their excellent comments. Their insights helped me conceptualize what exactly had been bothering me about the local and national newspapers for so long. Thanks. I guess this proves that the new medium of online has clearly overtaken the old print media in content, timeliness, and value even if it comes from other readers.

No Solution - No Future
The first step to the end of print journalism began with television, as people could get their news without needing to read a newspaper. However, TV could not provide a medium for buying and selling. So newspapers continued, even though the underlying justification was not the news - it was advertising. Now, advertising has moved on-line. Indeed, these days, every business has a web-site, and every one promotes its products and services on that web-site. And, entire industry's, such as real estate, do the same thing. A local newspaper can only provide local advertising - but the web enables us to shop everywhere all the time - and no newspaper can even remotely compete with that.

At the same time, on-line news is also available, and that news has advantages over both Television and Newspapers. After all, it offers all the columnists - not just a few. Multiple sources of sports commentary - not just one. And so on. It is, in a sense, a "complete" newspaper offering all information and opinion" - not just a slice of information as provided by one newspaper.

Newspapers, like many other industries, have become obsolete. So, they will die - and no amount of subsidy will ensure their survival - anymore than subsidy's enabled other obsolete industries to survive.

The web is by definition local, national and international - all at once.

Combine this with the vast proliferation of Television options due to cable and satellite, all of which is merging into one's computer, and the last justification for a "local" newspaper is being eliminate as local news will now no longer be connected to a print media.

The writer tries to make the case that newspapers should have seen this coming - and could survive if only they had changed their business model.

This is an incorrect perspective. They have become redundant and obsolete. There is no place for them in the future. There was, in turn, nothing to change to.

Bogart fictional paper fought corruption
Bogarts fictional paper fought corruption.
Todays real papers support corruption.
Did any major paper take any time to research the O's history? Instead they sent hundreds of investigators after Palin.

After all these tax cheats you would think the major papers would be on that like white on rice.
How many current and former legislators and other government officials haven't paid their taxes. Might make interesting reading.
You want to bet nothing will be pursued? Government can't be made to look bad if it's going to be taking care of everything.

Jerseyvet
Obituaries are news. Further, I'm old enough to read that section first.

One problem with newspapers is their business model, if I may dignify anything so haphazard with a 50-cent term. Years ago they stopped selling content to subscribers and started selling the subscribers' attention to advertisers. Devoting 75 percent of their space to ads became the norm. Thus they gave themselves a condition similar to severe combined immunodeficiency (boy-in-the-bubble syndrome). A 24-hour bug afflicting advertisers could prove fatal to newspapers dependent on them.

Subscribers enjoyed lower rates than they might have had to pay otherwise. But the declining amount of content provided fewer reasons to subscribe. And the bargain gave subscribers less of a stake in the publication. Newspapers are normal goods at high prices; but below a floor price, demand _drops_. The natural culmination of this strategy is the weekly shopper dumped on millions of lawns and usually discarded: 100 percent ads, no subscribers, and little or no perceived value.

When advertising dries up, desperate publishers have to raise subscription and newsstand prices -- as the Norfolk _Virginian-Pilot_ did recently. I'm not the only reader to mutter "Two bucks for this junk?" and buy gasoline instead.

To make things worse, the shrinking content of newspapers has gotten steadily worse. Opinion -- a lot of it disguised as news -- fills too much of the space not given over to syndicated features and unedited press releases. Fluff is less risky than a six-month investigation of mayoral shenanigans that may amount to nothing. Canned content never leaves a copy hole to be filled at the last minute. But none of this has the enduring appeal of real news.


Another dynamic
The "dead tree" media is seeing a decline in readership all across the board these days. I agree that many of the larger left-leaning outlets have destroyed their credibility and have been losing subscribers as a result — but technology, IMO, is the real underlying culprit. By the time a daily newspaper is written, paginated, processed, printed, and delivered, the information on its pages is already old news. When people can access the internet from their desktop computers and hand-held devices such as Blackberries or cellphones and receive up-to-date news at any time, there is no reason to subscribe to print media anymore. And when circulation declines, advertisers are not as eager to spend as much money on print ads and the papers' advertising revenue (what really pays for the paper) also goes in the tank.

I'm a ten-year veteran of the print media, both newspaper and magazine, and I've been witnessing a significant decline in subscribers with all the publications we produce — none of which take a left or right stance on any issue.



Newspapers Need a Makeover
The Star-Ledger in New Jersey is an example of what not to do. It still publishes comic strips and pages of obits but you have to look long and hard for national and international news. It has great coverage of sports at the local level but fails to satisfy as far as national and international events are concerned. My recommendations:

1.Fire 75% of your columnists and beef up the news without editorial bias.
2. Strengthen the links between the physical product and the online publication.
3. Make over the entire publication to bring it up to the 21st Century.
4. Cut the comics and reduce the obituaries.
5. Add more photographs and graphs and use color liberally.
6. Summarize the day's top stories in a box on the front page with notice of the jumps to the inside of the issue, much like the Drudge Report.

One wonders how successful the Drudge Report would be without all those feeds from wire services, local newspapers, and Internet blogs.

I'm confuzzled
You admit that newspapers brought about their own demise, but you say, "It's nothing to celebrate." Is a reversal for haughtiness, incompetence, bias, mendacity, and double standards (or outright rejection of standards) something to mourn? Do we need newspapers, or do we need _good_ ones?

This crop of newspapers has failed, and it ought to be plowed under. If newspapers are essential to freedom and prosperity, someone will plant more and, with luck, get better yields. The wheel replaced the travois. Aspirin and penicillin replaced leeches. Windows, Linux, and MacOS replaced DOS and CP/M. It's hard to predict what will replace the _New York Times_ (to say nothing of CBS and the other dinosaurs). But there's reason to believe that we shall get by somehow.

Newspapers
I live in the Atlanta area where the Atl.Journal Constitution holds sway. The AJC used to be two newspapers but the evening Journal was dropped (the more Conservative of the two) so now we have one far-left paper for an area touted to be 15,000,000. I dropped any hope of two sides to any issue and stopped subscribing. The editorial page is ruled by Cynthia Tucker (should it be YUCKer?) and mostly other left-wingers. We also have the "Prize-Winning" cartoonist Luckovich (YUCKovich?)Too much for me!

Not just the newsPAPERS
...the entire news business is following the horse and buggy into oblivion. Partly it's the march of history, but the media was destroyed by the rabid socialist ideologues who took over most of the business and like the cancer they are they killed the very body that fed them.

Unfortunately this is also the story with most institutions in this country. There are no Ronald Reagans and no miracles left. Nothing can keep this rusted tub from sinking.



Conservatives: buy failing newspapers
Americans would still be reading newspapers if they had any credibility at all. I get most of my news on the internet now, but that is only because my local paper is completely socialist/communist. All a successful newspaper would require would be an approach like that of Fox News, fair and balanced. Conservatives need to buy up these failing papers and turn them around and give Americans the other side of the argument for the first time in 30 years. Urge any wealthy conservatives, or groups of conservatives to buy up these papers for a very low price.
Patricia A. Helvenston, Ph.D.

Collins, Specter & Snowe just SOLD OUT..

BREAKING NEWS:

Senators Collins, Specter & Snowe just sold the United States out. Calling them "RINOs" is an insult to RINOs.


http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D966EEQ80&show_arti cle=1

WASHINGTON (AP) - With job losses soaring nationwide, Senate Democrats reached agreement with KEY REPUBLICANS Friday night on an economic stimulus measure at the heart of President Barack Obama's plan for combatting the worst recession in decades. "The American people want us to work together. They don't want to see us dividing along partisan lines on the most serious crisis confronting our country," said SEN. SUSAN COLLINS of Maine, one of two GOP senators who signaled support for the bill.

Officials put the cost of the measure at $780 billion in tax cuts and new spending combined. No details were immediately available, and there appeared to be some confusion even among senators about the price tag as floor debate continued late into the night.

The agreement capped a tense day of backroom negotiations in which Senate Majority Leader HARRY REID, joined by White House chief of staff RAHM EMANUEL, sought to attract the support of enough Republicans to give the measure the needed 60-vote majority.

In addition to COLLINS, Sen. ARLEN SPECTER, R-Pa., said he would vote for the bill. Sen. OLYMPIA SNOWE, R-Maine, remained uncommitted." (cap emphasis mine)


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Thanks to these three SELL-OUTS (Collins, Specter and Snowe), a few years from now, our country will be forced to default on its debt obligations.

That’ll be after hyper-inflation has destroyed the value of our currency.

These 3 Traitors have enabled the Leftocrats to BORROW nearly a TRILLION DOLLARS, and flush it down the toilet on wasteful pet pork projects.

A trillion dollars.

That’s 1,000,000,000,000.00

If any of these three American Traitors (Senators Collins, Specter and Snowe) happen to be YOUR Senator, please, FIRE THEM.

Too Many Ads
I subscribe to two daily papers. One is ideologically Democratic and the other is ideologically Republican. I don't always agree with what they write, but that's not the reason I may discontinue my subscriptions. What burns me up is that both papers are now, by fiat, at least 50% ads. News is sandwiched in small amounts in between big ads (sometimes full-page) for cars, shoes, jewelry, insurance companies, discount stores. I am getting sick & tired of paying to read ads.

They waste a lot of resources
You may be right that papers shot themselves in the foot and died. It started when they were targeted by our cold war enemies and influenced at first and taken control of at last. These are not nice people and they are better off collecting welfare. It is not likely any will do manual labor. We will be better off paying them to do nothing rather than paying them to join our every enemy in her attacks against America.

Personally,
I believe the closing of all but small local newspapers would benefit the country greatly. And mean as this may sound, it warms my heart to think about all those "journalists" out of work.

Shills
When the newspapers became shills for socialism and global warming nonsense, they committed suicide. The loss of these rags is a gain for the U.S.A. After Obama and his 12 tax cheating disciples get through putting us into a depression, the left will be tarred and feathered and run out of the country on a rail.

How to Reverse the Decline in 1 Sentence
Investigate BHO with the same fervor they did GWB.

Today's Pravda
Pravda has become more credible than the NYT...

NEWSPAPERS
THEY ARE HISTORY BECAUSE THEY HAVE DECIDED TO HIDE THE TRUTH. EVERYTHING THAT'S GOING ON IN THIS COUNTRY SHOULD BE HEADLINE NEWS,BUT THEY HAVE SQUASHED THE TRUTH!
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