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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Thu Apr 25, 2013, 09:01 AM Apr 2013

Four Reasons to Worry About the Potential Koch Takeover of Tribune Co. Newspapers

http://www.thenation.com/blog/174043/four-reasons-worry-about-potential-koch-takeover-tribune-co-newspapers

***SNIP

1.) Koch Known for Peddling Politics Through Every Aspect of Business, Philanthropy: One way the Kochs have influenced policy is through large grants to universities and students to pursue research relating to the Koch's view of how society should operate. Unlike most other academic donors, Koch attaches strings to their grants, dictating how faculty are hired and which research programs can be pursued, as was the case with the controversy at Florida State University. Notably, most Koch 'philanthropic' activity is coordinated by the Charles Koch Foundation, which is led by Kevin Gentry and Richard Fink, two Koch Industries executives who double as leaders of the Koch corporate lobbying office, known as Koch Public Sector. As Mike Elk reported, Koch took the extraordinary step of encouraging their employees to vote for Republicans in the last two elections. Even during the fight last year over control of the Cato Institute, Koch attempted a takeover by nominating company lobbyists and loyal neoconservatives to the board of the famously libertarian nonprofit. If Charles Koch is to be believed when he said this year that he would do "everything" he can to persuade politicians, how will the Tribune Company papers maintain independence?

2.) Koch Distorts Science for Profit: Some of Koch Industries' core businesses -- fertilizer, chemical plants, coal shipping, fracking, heavy crude oil refining, cement, and petroleum coke -- contribute millions of tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere and are the reason that Koch is the fifth biggest air polluter in the country. Though this pollution will ruin the lives and property of many Americans, Koch avoids responsibility by funding a large array of propaganda outlets and think tanks dedicated to distorting the science related to Koch pollution in a bid to stave off regulation. Back in the day, this meant funding efforts to claim acid rain (caused in part by Koch pollution) was a "hoax." Now, Koch sponsors carnivalesque moon bounces for children to encourage their parents to oppose the EPA's power to enforce the Clean Air Act, a pledge signed by most GOP lawmakers to avoid action on global warming, as well as many think tanks to provide an ideological or academic veneer for their lies about climate science. “If we win the science argument, it’s game, set, and match,” said Tim Phillips, the political operative hired by David Koch to fight efforts to curb carbon pollution, among other goals. How will Tribune Company newspapers continue their award-winning environmental journalism?

3.) Will the Tribune Reporters Continue to Investigate Koch Influence?: Tribune Company reporters have led in the way in uncovering Koch Industries' influence in politics and policy. In February of 2011, the Los Angeles Times revealed that David Koch met personally with John Boehner on the first day of the new Congress in the Speaker's chambers, and that Koch's political spending during the midterm elections helped shape the Boehner's policy agenda. Last year, the paper reported on a Koch-connected non-profit that skirted California campaign disclosure laws to funnel $11 million to back two major state-wide propositions. Will the papers continue to investigate Koch Industries' outsized influence in society if the Koch brothers purchase the Tribune Company?

4.) Koch Finances Hate: Koch's premiere grassroots organizing group, Americans for Prosperity, has funded rallies where health reform has been compared to the Holocaust. The group routinely invites speakers who are known for spreading hatred and and conspiracy theories, including anti-immigrant zealot Russell Pearce (who was given an award by AFP) and leading "birther" Jerome Corsi. AFP was exposed by Politico for helping sponsor shock jocks like Mark Levin. Moreover, Koch has been highly involved in the anti-gay Council for National Policy, a group devoted to promoting the homophobic activism of Focus on the Family, Rev. John Hagee, and the Family Research Council. The Tribune Company papers have served as a watchdog for hate in society; how will their reporters cope with being in league with such extremism? In fact, every September, Koch Industries' employees celebrate "Founder's Day," a celebration of Fred Koch, the founder of Koch Industries and an early leader of the anti-civil rights John Birch Society. Will Tribune Company employees join the festivities honoring a man who warned: "The colored man looms large in the Communist plan to take over America."
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Four Reasons to Worry About the Potential Koch Takeover of Tribune Co. Newspapers (Original Post) xchrom Apr 2013 OP
One reason not to worry Tempest Apr 2013 #1
Good, b/c that's exactly what I'll do if they buy the Trib - cancel. Thanks. kysrsoze Apr 2013 #3
History Lesson: "The Newspaper that Said “No” to Murdoch" frazzled Apr 2013 #2

Tempest

(14,591 posts)
1. One reason not to worry
Thu Apr 25, 2013, 09:45 AM
Apr 2013

Newspaper subscriptions are declining significantly.

The L.A. Times, for example, has been bleeding subscribers ever since it was bought by a right winger and their content reflected it. The same will happen to any paper Koch buys and turns hard to the right.

kysrsoze

(6,019 posts)
3. Good, b/c that's exactly what I'll do if they buy the Trib - cancel. Thanks.
Thu Apr 25, 2013, 10:19 AM
Apr 2013

Same goes for watching anything on WGN Chicago.

frazzled

(18,402 posts)
2. History Lesson: "The Newspaper that Said “No” to Murdoch"
Thu Apr 25, 2013, 10:18 AM
Apr 2013
On September 17, 1982, the newspaper guild of the Buffalo Courier-Express voted to do something no other media outlet in the U.S. had done or would do: It voted to turn down an offer from Rupert Murdoch’s News America Publishing Company to buy the failing Buffalo morning daily. The vote meant that Buffalo would be left with one newspaper, The Buffalo News. And it meant that the Courier-Express’s 1,100 employees would be out of a job.

To the guild, being bought by Murdoch was about more than saving their livelihoods. It was about the future of journalism. I was the reporter assigned to cover that vote and the end of my own newspaper. I will never forget the emotionally charged night meeting, or the words of Richard Roth, a Courier-Express reporter and guild international vice president.


It seems almost quaint now, but Courier reporters believed that experience should count for something in a newsroom, that there was a value and a dignity to working for a newspaper and learning a beat and a community. They also believed that reporters should have the freedom to write the truth, without fear of reprisal.


They did not want the Courier-Express, whose past editors had included Mark Twain, to be transformed into a sleazy tabloid. My colleagues and I wanted the 137-year-old daily to be remembered with dignity.



http://www.cjr.org/behind_the_news/the_newspaper_that_said_no_to_murdoch.php


I was living in Buffalo, NY when this happened, and I remember being both stunned and proud that 1,100 people, from reporters and editors down to the pressmen and janitors decided to vote themselves out of a job rather than become a Murdoch mouthpiece. I now live in Chicago, and I would love to send the workers at the paper a reminder of what their forebearers did back in 1982.
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