Now I know what you're talking about:

NPR: tripped up by its own elitism
By JUAN WILLIAMS

It just keeps happening. NPR's leader ship keeps tripping over its
microphone wires and then asking everybody else to plug them back in.
I know everybody thinks I must be in a vindictive mood, celebrating
the sudden departure of NPR CEO Vivian Schiller after her handpicked
personal fund-raiser was caught on tape disparaging Tea Party
activists and Jews and taking more shots at me. I'm human and do have
some thoughts, but it's OK to keep them to myself: Schiller's very
public missteps allow everyone to draw their own conclusions about
her.
I'm not being vindictive when I say that NPR's leaders had become
ingrown and arrogant to the point that they lost sight of journalism
as the essential product of NPR. People like Schiller and Ellen Weiss,
the head of news for NPR, who made it her life's work to fire me, came
to think of themselves as smarter than anyone else.

They felt no need to answer to any critic. Any approach at variance
with their own was considered traitorous and a basis for exiling them
to the Gulag -- or, in my case, firing me.
The recent videotape showing NPR chief fund-raiser Ron Schiller (no
relation to Vivian Schiller) is just an open microphone on what I've
been hearing from NPR top executives and editors for years. They're
willing to do anything in service to any liberal with money, and then
they'll turn around and in self-righteous indignation claim that they
have cleaner hands than anybody in the news business who accepts
advertising or expresses a point of view.
Ron Schiller's performance on videotape -- which included lecturing
two young men pretending to be Muslims on how to select wine -- is a
"South Park"-worthy caricature of the American liberal as an effete,
Volvo-driving, wine-sipping, NPR-listening dunderhead.
NPR's many outstanding journalists are caught in a game where they are
trying to please a leadership that doesn't want to hear stories that
contradict the official point of view. I'm not just talking about
conservatives but also the far left, the poor -- anybody who didn't
fit into leadership's design of NPR as the official voice of
comfortable, liberal-leaning, upper-income America.
This just confirms my belief that it is time for our government to get
out of the business of funding NPR. The idea, to me, of
government-funded media doesn't fit the United States.
Journalists should not be doing news to please any party or any
elected official -- out of fear of losing funding. Over the last
several years, NPR's leadership had become so obsessed with the money
issue, as evidenced by Ron Schiller's behavior, that it had started to
corrupt the newsgathering process because non-profit fund-raising has
devolved into an underworld cesspool.
The result is that NPR's leadership under the likes of Weiss and the
two Schillers had been diminishing its own brand. They created an
anti-intellectual environment that took delight and pride in censoring
journalists like me for honestly admitting that people dressed in
Muslim garb make me nervous at airports. They had lost slight of
promoting debates and providing information that is essential for
people who want to be well-informed as citizens of a thriving
democracy.
I am still insulted when I hear Ron Schiller, no doubt reflecting his
boss, Vivian Schiller, making the case that my firing was a good
thing, and that it was just handled badly. This was not a process
problem. I violated no journalistic standard that should have resulted
in my being fired. It's only in the very small world and small
thinking of NPR's leadership that appearing on Fox News Channel and
speaking about a feeling in the context of a larger debate somehow
make for a bad journalist who needs to be muzzled.
My hope is that the great journalists who are at NPR will carry on and
that the NPR audience will support them, especially at the level of
local member stations, where in many places NPR is a community
treasure.
I'm still an NPR fan, but I'm no fan of the self-serving,
self-righteous thinking that is at the top level of NPR in Washington
and that has corrupted a once-great brand.
Juan Williams is a writer, author and Fox News political analyst.

Read more: 
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/opinion/opedcolumnists/npr_tripped_up_by_its_own_elitism_Mb5IhZ6L3QbY0vvkdJWGyM#ixzz1GoJjcAMo


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On Wed, Mar 16, 2011 at 6:49 PM, denstar <[email protected]> wrote:
> Did I imagine you telling Gruss it should really alarm him?  I'm
> pretty sure you used alarm a couple of times, and said how they love
> them some terr'ists (forgetting for a moment the deal about being
> scared to fly with folk on airplanes--  I know!  /that's/ why they
> fired that dude!  Cuz they loves teh terrorz!)

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