Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Juan Williams’ Firing Might Produce Desired Results
Juan Williams’ Firing Might Produce Desired Results
Jan 27, 2026 3:58 PM

Published today in Acton News & Commentary. Sign up for the free weekly email newsletter from the Acton Institute here.

Juan Williams’ Firing Might Produce Desired Results

By Bruce Edward Walker

It was a tough few days last week in Radio Wobegone. And it promises to get tougher in the days, weeks and months ahead. The base of operations for Prairie Home Companion and Car Talk is in serious hot water.

National Public Radio dismissed newsman Juan Williams for an on-air discussion he conducted with Fox News host Bill O’Reilly in which Williams confessed fort when observing fellow airline passengers dressed in Muslim garb. Although the conversation occurred on another network, NPR’s reaction was swift: Williams was fired, and a hailstorm ensued.

Imagine if HBO’s Bill Maher had made a similar confession: That, as an atheist, he was disturbed to see Lake Wobegone’s Pastor Inkfist boarding a plane, wearing Lutheran clerical garb. Oh, wait, Maher takes potshots at clergy, church and religion, in general, whenever his lips are moving. True, the ABC Network fired Maher shortly after 9/11 – but his remarks were far more egregiously offensive than Williams’.

Perhaps an unfair analogy, since Maher is ostensibly ic and Williams a newsman, but it does present parative basis on how thin-skinned and politically correct the suits at NPR have e. When it serves their purposes, that is.

You see, I don’t believe ments caused his firing. His words only granted cover for his firing, a move long-desired by NPR’s leadership in light of Williams’ too-often straying from the leftwing party line. Whatever the reason, it is NPR’s method that is especially deplorable. One would be more inclined to understand the executives’ decision if only they would have considered their actions in relation to the dignity that their employees deserve. Pope Leo XIII, writing in his 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum, provided a perfect vaccine against NPR’s current public relations debacle.

Leo wrote: “Should it happen that either a master or a workman believes himself injured, nothing would be more desirable than that mittee should be posed of reliable and capable members of the association, whose duty would be, conformably with the rules of the association, to settle the dispute.” In other words, Leo called for employers to demonstrate a basic level of respect for the people prise pany. Dismissing Williams out-of-hand without following such simple advice has left NPR open for legitimate negative criticism.

It has also raised the issue of cutting government subsidies for the entire Corporation for Public Broadcasting enterprise. And it’s about time. Although relatively pared to other government-financed boondoggles, NPR should be allowed to sink or swim based on its own merits in the marketplace. Massive public fundraisers as well as corporate donations and sponsors foot the majority of NPR’s bills already. Liberal fat cat George Soros recently bequeathed $1.8 million of his personal fortune to NPR for the hiring of state-based reporters.

Indeed, NPR’s existence as a government-funded entity is an affront not only to secular free-market principles, but to Judeo-Christian views on subsidiarity as well. Succinctly stated, providing public monies to a petitor of private industry is morally wrong.

Williams, fortunately, was able to land on his feet. Fox News Network hired the revered analyst in the wake of his firing. NPR, however, may not be so lucky.

NPR’s hubris may yet be its undoing as a freeloader on the public dole. We can only hope.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Income inequality is not a problem for government to fix
Taxing the rich to make others richer is a recipe for e stagnation, petition. Read More… Implicit in concerns about rising e inequality is a critique of the underlying system that generated that inequality: a free market regulated petition. In a free market, people are rewarded with earnings that correspond to the value they create for others. For this to happen, however, everyone ideally has an equal opportunity to earn an ever expanding e. The perceived problem is that such...
Just a Minute: Tracy Letts’ new drama defies logic and plausibility
When a Pulitzer- and Tony Award–winning playwright can’t get his historical facts straight, there must be a reason. It can’t be as simple as all Native Americans are interchangeable, can it? Read More… In the past 90 years, there have been three periods during which the American intelligentsia has been dominated by the most radical leftists. The first was in the Great Depression. This was when it monplace to say that capitalism had failed and the great hope of the...
Your job is not your vocation
What we do to sustain life and what we’re called to do for the good of the gospel and our neighbor are two different things. But the first can be put in the service of the second. Read More… It is sometimes claimed—wrongly—that until the Reformation, the only vocations known to Christian teaching were monastic and/or clerical. One might be called to a monastery or called to the priesthood, but ordinary work, family life, secular singleness—these are the things of...
Fix America’s broken schools before it’s too late
A new book is very good at pinpointing what’s gone wrong with our public school system. However, when es to concrete solutions, it’s missing in action. Conservatives especially need to do better if their voices are going to be heard. Read More… There’s a currently a revolution erupting in public school districts across the country. For quite some time, students haven’t been learning, teachers haven’t been teaching, and educational leaders have only been making things worse. In response, parents have...
Chinese oppression of the Uyghurs goes global
Even when this ethnic and religious minority finds safe haven outside China, the Chinese Communist Party still manages to harass and threaten them. The United States, as well as other nations of goodwill, should not tolerate the exporting of repression by a foreign power. Read More… Under Xi Jinping, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has returned to its Maoist past. Both Xi and Mao Zedong promoted party and especially personal rule. Both sought to extinguish even the hint of...
The Catholic Church is the West’s best ally in the Pacific
The tiny region of North Bougainville in Papua New Guinea may not be on many people’s radars, but it could hold the key to the West staving off further Chinese aggression in the Pacific. But the West will need help. Enter the Catholic Church. Read More… It was the Cold War, and Portugal’s empire was collapsing. The dictatorial regime established by António de Oliveira Salazar was enduring a revolution, and thus the once great colonial enterprise that ruled some of...
The Right look at American conservatism deserves your attention
In his new book, Matthew Continetti details the 100-year history of the battles between the “Right” and conservatives, between populism and neoconservatism. In short, there were more than a few Donald Trumps before 2016, and Conservatism Inc. isn’t dead yet. Read More… In January of 1992, the libertarian theorist Murray Rothbard published an untimely reflection in the traditionalist journal Chronicles. The conservative and Republican elite had effectively scuttled former Klansman David Duke’s bid to e governor of Louisiana. In the...
Jurassic World: Dominion is transhumanism as entertainment
If only men weren’t necessary for reproduction is the theme of the latest installment in the Jurassic World trilogy. Fun for the whole family, so long as, you know, there are no dads. (And yes, spoiler alert.) Read More… There’s a new Jurassic World movie out in theaters, to round up the post-Spielberg trilogy that began in 2015 and continued in 2018, a long time for a trilogy these days—the Star Wars sequel trilogy came out in four years, as...
Norm Macdonald is gone and there’s nothing funny about that
edian’s last Netflix special was recorded in his home by himself during COVID lockdown, out of concern he would not live long enough to tape it before an audience. What he has to say in these 86 minutes is more than ics manage in their entire careers. Read More… Norm Macdonald was the edian in his time among those who stayed out of political controversies. His specialty was pointing out how fortable we are facing the reality of our human...
Twitter will be no worse with owner Elon Musk, and probably no better
Who buys the 17th-most-popular social media platform in the world is a cause of great concern to relatively few people, who unfortunately have the loudest voices. That’s the real problem, and one Musk almost certainly cannot fix. Read More… Elon Musk has already created the first truly successful electric car. He wants pany SpaceX to put men on Mars. Musk himself has occasionally joked that he wants to die on Mars, just not on impact. Successfully landing and establishing an...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved