If an elected official decided to bail out a torch company in response to rising competition from flashlight makers, the public would be incensed. No such outrage ensued, however, when Rep. Marlin Schneider, D-Wisconsin Rapids, proposed to make properties owned by newspapers tax-exempt.
Newspapers in this country have seen a steady decline in readership and profit since the 1970s. The simplest explanation for this, and the one embraced by snooty European types, is that Americans do not like to read. With the rise of non-print media (network television, cable and the Internet) many believe Americans would simply rather click on the remote, crack open a cold one and watch their favorite cable news anchor. Reading in modern America is viewed as tedious and elitist. There is some validity to this argument, but it does not tell the entire story.
Newspapers, when faced with increasing pressure from TV, began writing shorter, less articulate and less analytical articles. Let’s resuscitate the opening metaphor: It is like a torch company trying to make a torch that lasts longer and is more portable to compete with flashlights, instead of carving a market niche among medieval quest fanatics and anti-battery Greenpeace hippies. Americans may not like reading, but to assert they dislike reading because they stopped reading increasingly inadequate newspapers is an unfair assumption.
Even if both arguments had equal validity, Schneider’s legislation would still be silly and wasteful. If newspapers are failing because Americans detest reading them, then why are we supporting a company that is doomed to failure? It would seem paying property tax or not paying property tax would be inconsequential to a company that makes a product no one wants. Failure is inevitable.
If the problem with newspapers is not their readers, but their ownership, then this proposal is just as foolhardy. It is absurd for the government to give a company a tax break if it cannot turn a profit due to idiocy in its business model.
A fair counterargument could be made by those who believe in a liberal democracy: Regardless of its ability to prosper economically, a free and open press needs to be nurtured and allowed to thrive, thus making Schneider bill not only sane but also a necessity. The flaw in this argument is a newspaper being given government tax breaks infringes on their independence and without newspapers free press will shrivel and die.
To be independent, a newspaper cannot have a “special” relationship with government. Newspapers often flourish when they partner with government — Trud, a Soviet-era Russian daily had the widest circulation of any newspaper in the history of the world — but they are in no way an expression of the free press. Schneider’s legislation may seem fairly harmless when compared to Soviet-era propaganda rags but it is nonetheless a corrosion of freedom of the press.
The other major flaw in the “freedom of the press” argument is it assumes without newspapers, inquisitive journalists will lose the ability to investigate and question government. Modern technology has proven this argument to be ludicrous. In recent years many scandals and protests have almost completely bypassed newsprint. In 2002, it was the blogosphere that brought former U.S. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott’s sympathy for racist presidential candidate Strom Thurmond to public consciousness. Twitter gave us more information about election protests in Iran this year than any major newspaper did or could have. Anyone who screams about the vitality of newspapers to free and open press must ask themselves — how do newspapers continually get beat to important scandals by independent journalists or collectives of independent journalists from the blogosphere?
While the Wisconsin state budget falls increasingly deeper into the red, someone please ask Schneider why he wants to bail out the torch factory.
Max Manasevit (manasevit@wisc.edu) is a sophomore majoring in philosophy.







IP hash: af9ecbd8
Yo dude,
“Let�s resuscitate the opening metaphor: It is like a torch company trying to make a torch that lasts longer and is more portable to compete with flashlights, instead of carving a market niche among medieval quest fanatics and anti-battery Greenpeace hippies”
If you want to maintain your credibility when writing a column, remember that this is not a metaphor, but a simile. Making a mistake like this just detracts from your argument as a whole. Also, how did the copy desk not catch this?
IP hash: b6076807
From http://www.copyblogger.com/metaphor-simile-and-analogy-what%E2%80%99s-the-difference/:
A simile compares two different things in order to create a new meaning. In this case, we are made explicitly aware that a comparison is being made due to the use of �like� or �as� (He�s like a shell of a man). For fun, the next time someone corrects you and says �That�s a simile, not a metaphor,� you can respond by letting them know that a simile is a type of metaphor, just like sarcasm is a type of irony. Resist the urge to be sarcastic in your delivery
IP hash: 6ee7f1f4
I think there’s a mistake in this headline. If you’re using it as a verb it’s “bail out”. “Bailout” is a noun.
IP hash: b6076807
You’re correct, but we’ve left it for the sake of permanent links. Thanks!
IP hash: bdd0d104
12:06,
How old are you, 12?
IP hash: a1d6a449
You’re argument is lacking some impact due to the fact that it is printed in a newspaper.
Also, a tax-break is not a government interference of freedom of press. No one is telling them what to and not to print.
IP hash: 6fabc93d
I agree with Jacob. Churches get tax breaks, too.
IP hash: e220d3a7
Tax breaks for churches should all be repealed. Why should I be forced to support religion? My taxes are higher because the churches pay nothing.
PS. The big mega-churches with all the fancy facilities really fry my bacon.
IP hash: e3748b4d
Totally agree