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The defunding of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is long past overdue. No president, including Ronald Reagan, has seriously pushed an immediate winding down of this corrupt and outdated waste of taxpayer funds. Who would have ever imagined that Donald Trump would be the first to do it?

His first budget proposal takes that step, not just to save of ton of taxpayer money ($450 million is a lot of money) but also to establish a principle about our leftist media. It's simply not appropriate for the federal government to fund Democrat propaganda badly disguised as news.

Is it any surprise, then, that the media have come unglued?

CNN anchor Martin Savidge suggested Sunday that this proposal sounds like "conservative revenge." In September, we will mark the 50th anniversary of the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967, which laughably proclaimed that the taxpayer-funded TV and radio stations of America would seek "strict adherence to objectivity and balance in all programs or series of programs of a controversial nature."

There's no way to measure precisely how many billions of dollars or hundreds of thousands of hours of broadcast time conservatives would need to accomplish a tiny fraction of "revenge" for this long half-century march of leftist propaganda.

If it is "revenge" for conservatives to demand an end to this charade, then we are guilty as charged.

On CNN's "Reliable Sources," PBS President Paula Kerger was offered a platform to make ridiculous statements about how PBS is all about educating small children before kindergarten, and how the public should pay no attention to all the liberal "educating" they undertake in prime-time.

Kerger made preposterous arguments with no rebuttal. Try the one where she said, "Our entire programming operating budget is less than Netflix spends on the production of 'The Crown.'"

She is picking possibly the most expensive television show ever made, with an estimated production budget of $130 million, but no matter. Now look at the 2016 Public Broadcasting Service and Subsidiaries financial statement. Under expenses, programming was listed as $380.3 million. In 2015, it was listed as $382.9 million.

Kerger is playing accounting games with the term "operating budget" or the money sent to "subsidiaries." But for the people who watch PBS stations and pay the bills -- involuntarily -- it's a difference without a distinction. It's also their typical obfuscation. In a press statement, Kerger claimed that PBS is blandly defined as "increasing school readiness for kids 2-8, support for teachers and homeschoolers, lifelong learning, public safety communications and civil discourse."

"Civil discourse" is not the term many conservatives would associate with PBS. In reality, the harshest attacks on conservatives often come from the so-called Republicans on this network. Last year, "PBS NewsHour" pundit David Brooks slashed Sen. Ted Cruz for supposedly speaking in "dark and satanic tones." Brooks said, "If you watch a Cruz speech, it's like ... we're going to stomp on this person, we're going to crush that person, we're going to destroy that person."

Over the years, there have been many wild leftist statements. PBS host Tavis Smiley insisted that Christians blow up people "every day" in America. In 1995, NPR's Nina Totenberg wished Sen. Jesse Helms or one of his grandchildren would die from AIDS as "justice." PBS omnipresence Bill Moyers proclaimed that Republicans wearing U.S. flag pins after 9/11 reminded him of Chinese communists carrying Mao's "Little Red Book." Moyers also oozed over paintings glorifying the Marxist revolutionaries ruling Nicaragua, saying, "The white dove of freedom soars with the Sandinista revolution, whose heroes included Jesus Christ, George Washington and the nationalist hero Augusto Sandino."

Let the left-wing billionaires fund this left-wing propaganda. Conservatives are tired of funding our own (literal) demonizers.