Why Trump Was Right to Defund NPR And PBS
Public media became leftist propaganda—and America is better off without it
When news becomes narrative, and truth bends to ideology, something has to give.
For years now, public broadcasting—once a source of neutral information—has drifted so far left it’s become indistinguishable from progressive activism.
Every morning on NPR, and every evening on PBS, we hear the same agenda: climate alarmism, racial division, gender ideology, and thinly veiled contempt for faith, patriotism, and traditional values.
That’s not public service.
That’s propaganda.
President Trump’s recent executive order to defund NPR and PBS was bold—but necessary.
And for millions of Americans who’ve watched these institutions abandon balance for bias, it was a long time coming.
The people never voted for this propaganda
Public broadcasting has been living off taxpayer money for decades—even from the very people it disrespects.
NPR and PBS routinely portray conservatives as backward, Christians as bigoted, and anyone who supports the Constitution as a threat to democracy. All while being subsidized by those very same Americans.
Imagine paying the salary of someone who mocks your values daily. That’s been the reality for countless families across this country.
Even children’s programming hasn't been spared.
Classic shows like Sesame Street now echo the same talking points you’d hear in a college gender studies class. It's not education anymore—it's indoctrination, and it's being pumped into homes under the guise of harmless entertainment.
Trump stood up when others stayed silent
Most Republicans feared the backlash. They wrung their hands and said, “We can’t touch PBS—what about Mister Rogers?” But Trump, as always, ignored the media pressure and acted on principle.
With one signature, he pulled the plug on federal funding to both outlets. Critics screamed that it was authoritarian.
But the real question is—why were we ever funding these outlets in the first place?
Private media companies compete for ratings, sponsors, and relevance. NPR and PBS got a taxpayer safety net while pushing an anti-American worldview.
It’s not censorship. It's accountability. The government has no business financing an ideological narrative—especially one that works against the founding principles of this nation.
This is what taking our country back looks like
Trump’s defunding move sends a strong message: the era of subsidizing elitist, left-wing institutions with conservative tax dollars is over.
That funding should go to causes that unite the country, not divide it. To veterans. To infrastructure. To securing our borders. Not to million-dollar studios in D.C. pumping out content that sneers at the very people footing the bill.
Let NPR and PBS survive in the free market.
If their content is as essential as they claim, let donors and supporters keep them afloat. But no more compulsory giving.
No more pretending that progressive messaging is “neutral” just because it’s said in a calm, soothing voice.
Final Reflection: A Turning Point for Common Sense
America didn’t lose anything when Trump defunded NPR and PBS. We gained something far greater clarity.
We were reminded that just because something has been around a long time doesn’t mean it deserves our loyalty—or our money. Public media had its chance to serve all Americans, and it chose sides. Trump simply chose to stop pretending otherwise.
And maybe that’s what leadership looks like in times like these—not appeasing institutions, but breaking their grip.
Thank you…may God bless America. NO MORE COMMUNIST/MARXIST PROPAGANDA. Let’s get back to playing in the dirt…right after we ‘clean it up’.
While Mister Rogers was making his shows, he studied via correspondence courses to be an ordained pastor. If he ever made "Pastor Roger's Neighborhood" after that, it would have been an upgrade, not a downgrade.