Not only has poll after poll shown that the worthies of our national news media are overwhelmingly liberal in outlook, they are also thoroughly unionized.
Those national-level journalists in the print media mostly belong to the Newspaper Guild, which got its start in the 1930s with Roosevelt’s National Recovery Act. Guilds originated in the Middle Ages as associations of independent professionals banded together to protect their economic interests. Modern reporters and editors are actually hired hands who have joined a union --- but it sounds so much more prestigious to call it a “guild.”
Back when most newspapers were owned by families and individuals, guilds swung a lot of weight. Since brother unions kept a death grip on a paper’s other major functions --- type-setting, stereotyping and press work --- altogether they literally held the paper’s life in their hands. And many weren’t averse to using that power. The 1970s and 1980s were decorated with the names of old dailies which bit the dust because of strikes and rising costs of production.
In the past month in Birmingham, we’ve seen the Post-Herald daily join the dinosaurs. It might be worthy of mention that the PH was the only Birmingham paper whose newsroom employees unionized by joining the Newspaper Guild. It wasn’t the only reason they tanked out, but it’s for sure the move didn’t help the paper survive and it’s even more certain it didn’t protect employee jobs.
Caught between the unions’ wage demands and reactionary work rules on one side, and the desperate need to fight costs by modernizing, many publishers sold out to chains. These huge organizations had the cash and muscle to automate. In short order most union printers in the newspaper business found themselves out of jobs. Although it didn’t suffer similar attrition, the Newspaper Guild today is about as impotent as the average liberal web site. Its members compensate by larding their news reports with union propaganda and their commentaries with liberal and Democrat insights,
Those national-level journalists in the print media mostly belong to the Newspaper Guild, which got its start in the 1930s with Roosevelt’s National Recovery Act. Guilds originated in the Middle Ages as associations of independent professionals banded together to protect their economic interests. Modern reporters and editors are actually hired hands who have joined a union --- but it sounds so much more prestigious to call it a “guild.”
Back when most newspapers were owned by families and individuals, guilds swung a lot of weight. Since brother unions kept a death grip on a paper’s other major functions --- type-setting, stereotyping and press work --- altogether they literally held the paper’s life in their hands. And many weren’t averse to using that power. The 1970s and 1980s were decorated with the names of old dailies which bit the dust because of strikes and rising costs of production.
In the past month in Birmingham, we’ve seen the Post-Herald daily join the dinosaurs. It might be worthy of mention that the PH was the only Birmingham paper whose newsroom employees unionized by joining the Newspaper Guild. It wasn’t the only reason they tanked out, but it’s for sure the move didn’t help the paper survive and it’s even more certain it didn’t protect employee jobs.
Caught between the unions’ wage demands and reactionary work rules on one side, and the desperate need to fight costs by modernizing, many publishers sold out to chains. These huge organizations had the cash and muscle to automate. In short order most union printers in the newspaper business found themselves out of jobs. Although it didn’t suffer similar attrition, the Newspaper Guild today is about as impotent as the average liberal web site. Its members compensate by larding their news reports with union propaganda and their commentaries with liberal and Democrat insights,
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