The Laura Index

With all due apologies to Harper’s. Please don’t sue me.Two incomplete lists…Things I have been asked to donate money to in the past month:

NPR and PBS

National, international, and local independent journalism outfits

NPR and PBS via my local alternative monthly paper

Legal defense funds for illegally deported immigrants

Food pantries

Individual fundraisers for people suffering crippling medical bills (and the income they’ve lost to their illnesses)

Colleges and universities I attended

Arts organizations

Libraries

woman in a radio studio“In the Wisconsin Public Radio studio.” by Ann Althouse is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0.Things to which I have not been asked to donate money (beyond the taxes and bills I already pay):

Highway maintenance

Wastewater treatment

Garbage, recycling, and compost collection

Military and police equipment

ICE

Urban and rural electrification

Traffic cameras

AI powered surveillance systems in schools

Subsidies to big ag farmers and ranchers

two bridges crossing the Mississippi River“Mississippi Bridges from the top of the Arch” by ahisgett is licensed under CC BY 2.0.

If you are not of the opinion that libraries, educational institutions, and affordable healthcare are public goods on par with safe highways and clean drinking water, nothing I say here is likely to convince you otherwise.

If you are frantically entering credit card information or PayPal passwords or sending checks to support the former category, well, yes, that’s probably about all we can do at the moment. Heck, I do it too.

Years ago Ira Glass used to do a lot of spots for Chicago Public Radio fund drive week in which he talked about how beautiful it was that public radio was the one medium completely funded by its listeners, and how wonderful it was that we could support this medium all on our own. It always made me want to scream. Yes, public broadcasting has come to rely more and more on private donations over the years. I think that is a bug, not a feature.

Public goods are meant to be paid for by us all and used by us all, whether they are solid bridges that don’t collapse, arts education in schools, public libraries, or healthcare that keeps everyone safe, healthy, and able to participate in the world.

Perhaps you think ICE is a public good. I disagree—but if you want to argue that it is, I hope you think long and hard about just what other services you’re willing to give up. Enjoy your sewer sludge.

Agree? Share! Disagree… well, that’s your choice.

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NOT a photo of sewer sludge. “Manhattan Skyline and Newtown Creek Wastewater Treatment Plant at Magic Hour – NYC” by ChrisGoldNY is licensed under CC BY-NC 2.0.

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Published on July 19, 2025 17:27
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