Not So Fast!
*Do We Need “Progressive” Newspapers?
**Or will entrepreneurs come to the rescue?
*by William L. Anderson
Posted March 03, 2010


I recently read Alex S. Jones’s *Losing the News,* which says if that
American newspapers go out of business, Americans will lose the “iron core
of news” that permits us to be a “self-governing people.” If a few more of
these outfits go under, he says, we’re doomed! Are we?

Let me start by I acknowledging that I worked with Jones 32 years ago, and I
like him. But I believe he does not understand the U.S. economy and the
power of entrepreneurship. Most important, newspapers as we know them are
relics of the Progressive Era, and we can easily do without Progressivism.

Most Americans are taught that the Progressive Era of the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries was a time of great reforms. If we read the
history books (and the newspapers), we are told that American businesses had
turned the country into a cesspool of filth, long hours, low pay, high
prices, and hopelessness, and then, like the White Knight on his steed, the
government rode to the rescue. Jones certainly seems to believe it.

Yet the so-called Progressive Era was not a time of progress at all. In
reality, it was an attempt by political elites, including Big Business, to
destroy what was left of constitutional government and return to a time when
government and privileged businessmen cartelized the economy.

For example, while typical history books paint the government’s successful
endeavor to regulate the railroads and a “good” thing for Americans.
However, the truth is much different from the history-book version.
Government regulation of railroads led to decay of the rolling stock, not to
mention decay of the tracks and railroad service, and the railroads
ultimately did not recover until government controls were drastically
changed in the 1980s.

Progressives did not just want to control transportation and business. The
crown jewel of Progressivism (other than the America’s disastrous entry into
World War I) was the creation of the Federal Reserve System (a banking
cartel) and the implantation of the income tax. The combination of these two
things guaranteed a State that was sure to grow well beyond its means and
the means of the taxpayers that must support it.

Modern newspapers, with their veneer of “objectivity,” also had their roots
in the Progressive Era. Before then, people understood that newspapers
represented political parties and political points of view. However, during
the Progressive Era people who ran newspapers said they would separate their
editorial and news functions to “demonstrate” their commitment to
“objectivity” in presenting the news.

For all of our belief in newspaper “objectivity,” asking a journalist, and
especially a journalist who has a very strong set of views about the way the
world works (and should work) simply to recite a set of “facts” is like
asking fans to assess the “objectivity” of the referees after their team
loses a close game. As the late Michael Kelly, the editor of *Atlantic
Monthly*, once wrote, most journalists view events through a preconceived
template and write their dispatches as such.

Those of us who have been advocates for freedom and free markets know full
well the scorn that our points of view receive from mainstream journalists.
As True Believing Progressives, mainstream journalists believe that only
government can guide that entity known as an economy and that any viewpoint
which holds that entrepreneurs acting freely can do any better is based on
ignorance and outright stupidity and never should be taken seriously.

The real myopia is with Progressives and the journalists who hold such
views. Just as newspapers were the creation of entrepreneurs, so
entrepreneurs also can find other ways to deliver “news” to people who wish
to hear and read it. Has Jones heard of the Internet? He may claim that if
we lose modern newspapers, we will “lose the news,” but that is not so, at
least not while entrepreneurs still are permitted to do what they do best:
serve consumers.

http://www.thefreemanonline.org/columns/not-so-fast/do-we-need-progressive-newspapers/
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