Oroville Mercury-Register

NPR leader showing her true colors

- Christine Flowers is an attorney and a columnist for the Delaware County Daily Times, and can be reached at cflowers19­61@gmail.com.

John Paul II once stated that “there can be no rule of law … unless citizens and especially leaders are convinced that there is no freedom without truth.”

Katherine Maher, the CEO of National Public Radio, has a slightly different take on the issue, noting recently that “Perhaps, for our most tricky disagreeme­nts, seeking the truth, and seeking to convince others of the truth, might not be the right place to start. In fact, our reverence for the truth might be a distractio­n that's getting in the way of finding common ground and getting things done.”

She went on to note that there are “many different truths.”

Aside from the fact that John Paul II is now a saint, I tend to give significan­tly more weight to his opinion than that of a Silicon Valley girl who is worried about hurting the feelings of a diverse and increasing­ly touchy audience of listeners.

I do not hate NPR. I love their television programmin­g like “Masterpiec­e” and the Saturday afternoon cooking shows, and the often-mocked but soothing cadence of the presenters is appealing when compared to the screaming amateurs on cable and many podcasts.

I've even been interviewe­d on the old “Radio Times” and “Here and Now” shows, and appreciate their range of topics.

But range is not depth, I can get just as many great British programs on BritBox, and if I need to know how to keep my pie crust flaky the Food Network can step in.

The truth is non-negotiable, and if NPR is no longer in the truth business, they don't get mine. I emailed my local NPR affiliate, WHYY in Philadelph­ia, and let them know I would like to terminate my membership.

I doubt that this will be shattering news for the company, especially since they just saved a nice chunk of change when veteran editor Uri Berliner resigned this week after being chastised by management.

His crime?

Suggesting in an op-ed for another news organizati­on that NPR was prioritizi­ng identity over quality.

His critique was something that conservati­ves, moderates and even honest liberals have known for years: NPR takes sides, massages the message and places agendas over neutral reporting. Add to that an effort to replace unbiased journalism with “diverse voices” and you see why Berliner touched a nerve.

I know that diverse voices are important. I mean, of course they are, right?

We are a nation of immigrants, something I know a little bit about, and the crazy, beautiful quilt of our shared ethnicitie­s and faiths is what sets us apart from every other nation on Earth where membership usually requires a

DNA link, even attenuated.

Our DNA link is composed of intention, hope and a desire to belong.

Sadly though, NPR isn't interested in the sort of diversity you cannot see and cannot fit into tidy slogans like “Black Lives Matter,” “MeToo” and “Trans Rights are Human Rights.”

It certainly isn't interested in the type of diversity that fits into this slogan: “Make America Great Again.”

For all of its talk about diversity, NPR seems to want to limit that concept to epidermal things like, literally, skin color and “lived experience.”

It's not interested in divergent viewpoints, as Berliner uncomforta­bly pointed out in his essay published at the Free Press. As CEO Maher clearly expressed, the company is now focused on “glorious chronicles of human experience and all forms of culture,” as long as those “glorious” things align with their liberal mindset.

To be honest, I have no real problem with any private person or organizati­on setting up its own rules and metrics for operation.

While I strongly disagreed with Kellyanne Conway's awkward suggestion about “alternativ­e facts” — the Blueberry Princess of South Jersey had ingested too many berries — I had no problem with her saying it.

My tax dollars weren't subsidizin­g her position, at least not directly. And if NPR were, say, Breitbart or the Daily Wire, I'd be fine.

The problem is that NPR is supported in large part by taxpayer funding in addition to their monthly panhandlin­g from viewers and listeners.

I willingly gave them my subscripti­on money. I didn't agree to also supplement them with my taxes. And the thing is, I can cancel my subscripti­on, as I'm doing.

I can't, however, refuse to pay my taxes. Al Capone tried that, and it didn't work out too well.

So I hope that those who agree with me and St. John Paul that the truth matters will send a message to NPR that, for the foreseeabl­e future, they actually don't.

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