Image:courtesy of Elaine Sanchez; public domain
By Steve Sheldon
If
the Occupy crowd is really against corporations and corporate greed
then they should look no further than Sesame Workshop, a corporation
filed under section 501 (c) 3 of the IRS code where the average salary
of the twenty-one highest paid executives is north of $400,000 and the
top dog brings in nearly $1,000,000.
For the record, I am not against highly paid executives except when
said corporation receives government grants and subsidies, AKA money
taken by force from taxpayers or borrowed from China at interest.
Mitt Romney had it right in last week’s debate when he suggested to
Jim Lehrer, “I’m sorry, Jim. I’m going to stop the subsidy to PBS. I’m
going to stop other things. I like PBS. I love Big Bird. I actually like
you, too. But I’m not going to keep on spending money on things to
borrow money from China to pay for it.”
Liberals howled at the suggestion that Mitt Romney and the evil Republicans would dare kill
Sesame Street.
They decry corporate greed except when it comes to their sacred cows
like the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), National Public
Radio (NPR) and Sesame Workshop. In reality, Sesame Workshop could do
just fine without government largesse.
A quick search of the most recent Sesame Workshop IRS Form 990 (2010)
will reveal that Big Bird and his buddies have a pretty nice balance
sheet. Does a corporation really need government subsidies when it owns a
reported $30,024,016 in securities? These securities include: $5.6M in
“Hedge Funds”, $14.7M in “Fund of Funds”, and $9.7M in “Private Equity”.
The total number of individuals at Sesame Workshop receiving
compensation over $100,000 in 2010 was one hundred and forty-two and the
average pay of the top twenty-one was $403,767. Gary Knell, Chief
Executive Officer earned $988,456 of total compensation in 2010. Not
making the list were Big Bird, Elmo, Bert and Ernie or Oscar the Grouch.
In 2010, Sesame Workshop reported revenues of $133,042,300 and paid
out $64,453,033 in salaries, other compensation, and benefits. Of the
reported income, $46,930,656 was from royalty income. Big Bird, Ernie
and Bert, Elmo, Oscar the Grouch and the gang really need your tax
dollars to help get them through these tough times.
The Corporation of Public Broadcasting, another 501 (c) 3 Corporation
and Liberal favorite, took in $459,877,360 in 2010 according to their
Form 990. It wasn’t so generous to its employees paying its top
executive, Patricia de Stacy Harrison, a paltry $361,895. Perhaps she
should move to a better neighborhood like one located on Sesame Street.
Of the near $460M in 2010 revenue to CPB, all but $11M was from
government grants, otherwise known as taxpayer dollars after being
filtered through the federal bureaucracy and money borrowed from China.
This amount goes well beyond subsidy and should be considered full-blown
underwriting. Maybe when they air the next show that nobody watches
they could recognize the U.S. taxpayer and China as major underwriters.
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting also ostensibly has need of
owning large sums of “publicly traded securities”. Their balance sheet
listed $83,701,376 plus another $25,104,805 of “other securities” which
is later listed as “Promissory Note-Goldman Sachs”.
NPR’s 990 reveals much of the same with its top executive earning
just shy of $600K in 2010 and investing tens of millions in private
securities as well as having a healthy balance sheet.
There is a plethora of children’s shows and educational programming
that somehow make it on their own in the free market and yet we the
people continue to subsidize Big Bird and his gang of lefties.
Name a
program on PBS or NPR worth watching or listening to that doesn’t have a
similar counterpart in the free market that is as good or better.
Liberals will argue that in the grand scheme of the Federal Budget,
cutting subsidies to CPB, NPR, and Big Bird doesn’t amount to much, but
it’s a start. To counter their arguments that the Right has its sacred
cows, I will state for the record that I cannot think of one government
subsidy that shouldn’t end.
Mitt Romney was right. Why should any business or industry that does
not produce improved safety or security for our nation deserve money
taken by force from taxpayers or borrowed at interest from China?
Uncle Sam is broke. If Liberals like these programs so much then they
can get out their checkbooks and pay for them out of their own pocket.
Read more:
http://clashdaily.com/2012/10/occupy-sesame-street/#ixzz28uA8UUWN