Dems: Don't Outsource Our Propaganda!
The Voice of America, that purveyor of comatose, sub-Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty programming that costs Americans $160 million a year, has decided to move a whopping 8 of its 1,400 employees to Hong Kong. This has Democrats, including John Kerry, hopping mad:
In a strongly worded letter to VOA Director David Jackson, 14 Democratic senators said the shift would undermine VOA's mandate to "present a balanced and therefore comprehensive projection of significant American thought and institutions." […]
"We find it difficult to believe VOA will be able to satisfy its mission of projecting 'significant American thought' through non-American citizens," the letter said.
The Chicago Tribune article is full of laughs, including the complaint by the American Federation of Government Employees that the outsourcing "is financially motivated." Noooooo!!! (Link via Romenesko.)
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
that's 1.75 senators per relocated employee.
I'm sure Taiwanese contractors can advance American propaganda efforts just as effectively as Iraqi security forces can advance our military efforts.
Would Reason allow its articles to be written by people who aren't libertarians if they could write more cheaply? VOA doesn't stick Barbie heads on Barbie bodies, you know.
right joe, b/c Tocqueville did such a horrible job writing on American thought and systems.
There's a NYT article in my local paper today about a N. Korean defector who wrote a book about spending 10 years in a N. Korean gulag. Pres. Bush read the book and invited him to the White House last week. The defector said in the book that people in PRK rely on foreign radio programs for motivation. Hmmm...
B.P. -- I've met many residents of current or former totalitarian countries who were eternally grateful for the piped-in radio.
You people raise good points about the effectiveness of using foreign (to us), which is to say local (to them), content providers.
Ahhhh, the "strongly worded letter", that oh-so persuasive tool of policy.
joe -- The most effective employees of Radio Free Europe back in the day were exiles from Central Europe, who worked in Munich. After the Cold War, the whole HQ of RFE was "outsourced" to Prague, where it now pipes in programming to effed-up Middle Eastern and Central Asian countries. I think there are statutory restrictions preventing our Concerned Senators from demanding that the facility be re-located to Omaha, and at any rate I think that wouldn't be the most clever idea.
I wish the link wasn't to a subsciption-only site, because the heart of this controversy seems to be, which jobs?
why hasn't lou dobbs done a story about this yet? he can call it "broken voices, broken choices" or something like that, and do a TV poll of his sheep-like viewers about whether this threatens our "security". unfortunately he can't blame mexico for this one, but china is almost as good a scapegoat for him.
joe -- I didn't notice it was registration. Try http://www.bugmenot.com, or do a news.google.com search on "Voice of America" and "Hong Kong." The jobs have to do with the night shift, if memory serves.
Jackson said VOA has processed transfer requests for all eight employees, and that no jobs will be lost during the transition.
So then, in addition to keeping eight American employees with their salaries and benefits, VOA is actually adding eight more in HK, right? It can hardly be considered a "financial decision" in that case.
B.P. -- I've met many residents of current or former totalitarian countries who were eternally grateful for the piped-in radio.
My grandfather used to listen to it religiously, back in the U.S.S.R. It was the only way to find out what was really going on in the outside world.
Why not move them to Guantanamo Bay . . . that's officially not part of any country.
What they're talking about moving is 8 English-language staffers, who'll in Hong Kong be doing the equivalent of VOA's "overnight shift," thus earning regular pay... as compared to the current overnighters, who get a government-set premium for, you know, clipping headlines.
It's the English global service, not the Mandarin branch (or the Cantonese branch), so the Chinese fears are overblown.
Union, of course, is screaming (and other journalists, knowing as they do the actual skills necessary to rewrite a press release, are terrified.) But this will likely not go through.
English-speaking employees of VOA are by far the least valuable, with at times adolescent journalistic standards, sub-par writing skills, etc. (You'll note most of those who praise VOA likely heard the news in their native tongue).
I used to listen to the english Radio Peking when I was out floating around on the taxpayer funded USS Lawrence (ret.). It was always fascinating to hear lists of how many tractor gears had been produced at the various factories in various provinces. Is VOA programming more interesting than that?
that's 1.75 senators per relocated employee.
In terms of total IQ, or what?
Showing the work on the math was particularly helpful, since once these eight jobs are filled, there won't be any consideration of the other 1400 American VOA employees' jobs.
B.P. -- I've met many residents of current or former totalitarian countries who were eternally grateful for the piped-in radio.
My grandfather used to listen to it religiously, back in the U.S.S.R.
"You don't know how lucky you are, boy..."