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Greenhut leaving the O.C. Register

Sunday, September 20th, 2009

I know what every government worker in Orange County is doing right now, this evening of Sunday, Sept. 20, 2009: Getting plastered on expensive booze, paid by their massive tax-funded salaries. They’ll be so hung over tomorrow don’t even try to do work with them.

They’re celebrating because the scourge of government in Orange County for 11 years, Steven Greenhut, announced today in his column in The Orange County Register that he’ll be leaving for Sacramento

to start a news bureau and investigative journalism project for a free-market think tank – Pacific Research Institute – as part of the “new wave” of journalistic endeavors sprouting up across the media horizon.

He’ll still be writing a weekly column for The Register, sometimes on Orange County issues. Indeed, I’ve always said he should be a national columnist. So perhaps his new job will lead to that.

But what will be missed are his daily, Rottweiler-tenacious attacks on the follies, waste, and criminality of Orange County government.

The good news is that he’ll be doing that against the state government, right from the belly of the beast. Gov. Arnold is going to wish he had stayed in Hollywood and made Terminator 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, Predator 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, and Kindergarten Kop 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7.

New Greenhut book

You’ll also get a chance to read more Steve when, as he wrote, his new book on rapacious employee unions comes out before Thanksgiving. I’m helping edit it, and it’s a brilliant assault on the greed, power lust, and arrogance of today’s public “servants.” Unlike so many conservative and libertarian books that focus on the national government, Steve’s examines the government workers most of us suffer under every day: the local school, DMV, licensing, regulatory and other officials, and the brutal polizei.

In the meantime, read his book of a few years back, Abuse of Power: How the Government Misuses Eminent Domain. You can pick up for just a couple of bucks at the link on the right.

Freedom Communications, R.I.P.

Monday, September 7th, 2009

A great friend of freedom died Tuesday, when Freedom Communications filed for bankruptcy. Owned since its founding in the 1920s by the Hoiles family, Freedom now effectively is owned by its banks. Long the journalism profession’s major proponent of libertarianism through its 30 daily newspapers and eight TV stations, Freedom’s demise casts uncertainty over the continuation at the newspapers of the “freedom philosophy,” as company stalwarts call it.

R.C. Hoiles (1878–1970) was a flinty old newspaperman who relished a fight into his nineties. He loved to debate public school superintendents, who headed what he always accurately called “government schools” or “gun-run schools.” People encountering R.C. on the streets were left with a libertarian pamphlet on one topic or another.

A 1986 review of his life by Carl Watner in The Voluntaryist described one of his most famous battles:

Hoiles “entered into one of the bitterest newspaper fights in the history of the publishing business in Ohio.” The Hoiles paper in Lorain had exposed the corruption prevalent in the awarding of paving contracts to the Highway Contracting Company of Cleveland. Horowitz, the owner of this company, was eventually shown to be the owner of the newspapers in Lorain and Mansfield, both of which strove to “get even” with Hoiles for his part in exposing the fraudulent practices. The rivalry between Horowitz and Hoiles prevailed till 1931, but in the meantime the front porch of the Hoiles home was destroyed by an explosion in November 1928, Hoiles’ car was wired with dynamite (which fortunately failed to detonate), and a dud bomb was discovered in the office of the Mansfield News. None of this gangsterism was ever explained, but it did motivate R.C. into selling the papers in Mansfield and Lorain.

He moved to California and in bought The Santa Ana Register (later named The Orange County Register), which became the flagship for the company. But even brought R.C. into conflict with corrupt government power:

During the New Deal days, R.C. became a victim of New Deal legislation. He had effected the sale of his two papers in Ohio in 1931, but according to the terms of settlement he was not to receive all of the proceeds until 1935. By that time FDR had devalued the dollar and nullified the gold clause in all private contracts. As R.C. expressed himself in a private letter to Robert LeFevre, written on February 4, 1964, he “had a little experience” with the government abrogation of contracts whereby “I lost $240,000 [at least $10 million in 2009’s inflated money].” It was for this reason, if no other, that, he concluded, government should have nothing to do with money or credit.

Defending Japanese-Americans

R.C.’s perch on the California coast providentially brought him to his finest hour as owner of The Register. During World War II, The Register was one of the few newspapers in America to oppose the putting of Japanese-Americans in concentration camps by Franklin “Dictator” Roosevelt and California Attorney General (later Gov.) Earl Warren. R.C.’s editorials were especially pertinent as he was located in the area where the Japanese were being kidnapped and exiled.

An excellent article describing R.C.’s heroism was published by Register senior editorial writer and columnist Steven Greenhut. It’s worth reading the whole thing. A follow-up article is here.

Greenhut wrote:

What were newspapers saying?

An editorial in the March 6, 1942, San Francisco News argued:

Japanese leaders in California who are counseling their people, both aliens and native-born, to cooperate with the Army in carrying out the evacuation plans are, in effect, offering the best possible way for all Japanese to demonstrate their loyalty to the United States.

By contrast, here was Hoiles on Feb. 5, 1942, before the internment order was announced:

The recommendation of the grand jury to have all alien enemies removed from Orange County calls for a difficult undertaking. Every bit of wealth that these workers are prevented from creating, which we so badly need during the war, will have to be created by the labor of some other worker.

Of course, there is no such thing as absolute security. We must run some risks in every move. Risks are life itself.

“It would seem that we should not become too skeptical of the loyalty of those people who were born in a foreign country and have lived in the country as good citizens for many years. It is very hard to believe that they are dangerous.”

Throughout the year, the Register printed columns that worried, in general, about the state of civil liberties in the nation. By October, Hoiles stepped up the criticism of the internment specifically, calling for a rollback of the order and a rethinking of the evacuation process.

In an Oct. 14, 1942, editorial, the Register argued,

Few, if any, people ever believed that evacuation of the Japanese was constitutional. It was a result of emotion and fright rather than being in harmony with the Constitution and the inherent rights that belong to all citizens.

As Greenhut notes, to this day the survivors of the crimes of FDR and Warren are grateful for R.C.’s efforts defending them.

Libertarian Leader

After the war, R.C. continued his long, difficult fight for liberty. He published such great libertarians as Frank Chodorov, Rose Wilder Lane, Robert LeFevre, Ludwig von Mises, and Leonard Read.

He much respected Mises, but was not afraid to tackle him from a position close to the anarchism of Murray Rothbard. Watner writes:

Once he challenged Ludwig von Mises on his “contention that we have to have monopolistic local, state, and federal governments to protect our lives and property.” The two were personally acquainted as R.C. had at one time in the mid-1950’s invited von Mises to lecture in Santa Ana, at R.C.’s expense. Some years later, in 1962, R.C. directed a letter to von Mises in New York, asking him to reconsider his rejection of voluntary defense agencies. R.C. said that he saw von Mises doing so much good on behalf of free enterprise and free market economics, that he hated to see von Mises “continue to advocate any form of socialism, or any form of tyranny. And when you are advocating that the free market is not the better way of protecting man’s lives and property, I think you are serious in error… .” There is no record of von Mises’ response.

That was pretty cheeky, given that Mises was the world’s foremost economist and libertarian and the scholar who demolished the theoretical arguments for socialism. But R.C.’s stance foreshadowed the total critique of government by Mises disciples Rothbard and Hans-Hermann Hoppe.

Libertarian philosopher Tibor Machan began writing columns for R.C. in the late 1960s, something he has continued at The Register for more than four decades. He recalls how R.C. asked him to drop out of college and come to work at The Register as an ad salesman. Tibor declined, finished his academic studies through his Ph.D., and today is Freedom’s libertarian adviser.

The Next Generations

After R.C.’s death in 1970, his three children and several grandchildren carried on his libertarian philosophy. Unfortunately, a family split developed in the 1980s when son Harry Hoiles didn’t like how the company was being run and wanted to split up the company to get his equity. A long legal dispute was resolved against him.

I joined The Orange County Register in 1987 as an editorial writer hired by then-Editorial Director K.E. Grubbs Jr. I stayed for 19 years until 2006, when I took a buyout as the paper began its decline. The best thing about the paper was that every politician in Orange County knew The Register would oppose all new taxes and regulations. We didn’t win every fight, but won many. This is the reason, I believe, that Orange County’s taxes and regulations are significantly lower, and its employment and economic growth rates higher, than in neighboring Los Angeles, which must suffer the leftist Los Angeles Times’ perpetual yelps for higher taxes and more government.

In recent years, major campaigns have included Senior Editorial Writer Alan Bock’s efforts to legalize medical marijuana, about which he wrote a book; and Greenhut’s efforts against eminent domain abuse, which also produced a book. Both men are well known to LRC readers and to libertarians around the country. (You can get either book now on Amazon for a couple of bucks.)

And I must have written 100 articles pointing out that California’s wild spending couldn’t last, and the state budget would implode during the next recession – which turned out to be the Bush-Greenspan Depression we’re now suffering. I also wrote numerous articles warning about the Greenspan inflation and how it would lead to a bust.

All of us were followers of Austrian economics and fans of Ron Paul, H.L. Mencken, LRC, Antiwar.com, and numerous other great defenders of liberty.

The Commentary section also produced award-winning cartoons by Mike Shelton and illustrations by Art Director Jocelyne Leger. Some of their current work is at PoliticalB******s.com.

Against Bush’s War

But during my tenure, The Register’s finest hour came in 2002–03, when we were one of the few newspapers in the country to oppose Bush’s unjust, unconstitutional, and unconscionable Iraq War. Most of those editorials were written by Bock, with Greenhut and myself chipping in.

As early as August 23, 2002, I wrote an editorial warning about the horrors to come should Bush invade Iraq, as it was becoming clear he would. Bush and his retinue were in Orange County, so I brought up the Weinberger-Powell Doctrine as a last-ditch effort to talk some sense to the Bushies. I didn’t agree with the Weinberger-Powell Doctrine (because it still made war too easy to start), but used it as a way to get through to Secretary of State Colin Powell and others in the administration. It didn’t work, of course. But how many newspapers, seven months before the war began, warned:

One of the major lessons of history is that wars never turn out as planned. Saddam’s troops might collapse quickly as they did in the desert in 1991. But this time, defending their own cities and families, they might be joined by civilian guerrillas and fight like the Somalians did in 1993….

It is Americans whose sons and daughters, fathers and mothers, brothers and sisters would die in a war. The people have a right to be heard on whether it’s necessary to make that sacrifice. In recent weeks, House Majority Leader Dick Armey, Sen. Chuck Hagel and other members of Mr. Bush’s Republican Party have questioned the need to attack Saddam. We believe a declaration of war should be passed by Congress before any war….

Diplomacy still works. Saddam has indicated that he is willing to allow arms inspectors back into his country. This avenue at least should be pursued seriously.

In conclusion, the Weinberger-Powell doctrine means that, despite America’s overwhelming global military power, that power should not be used unwisely. It means seriously thinking through whether other means, especially diplomacy, can be used to achieve an objective, looking at all the ramifications of an action and formulating an exit strategy.

War is not the first-reach answer, even in the new War on Terrorism, even as the anniversary date [9/11] of its horrific opening round comes into view.

I don’t know if Bush or anyone in his regime ever read the editorial. And Bush is famous for being stubborn and ignorant. But it still was a worthwhile effort. Unlike almost every other newspaper in the country, we warned our readers of the horrors to come in Iraq.

Family Feud

Unfortunately, in the early 2000s the Hoiles family feud boiled over again. In 2004, about 40% of the family was bought out by the other 60%. The money was raised through a $500 million loan from Blackstone and other equity firms. This was the height of the Bush-Greenspan Boom, with the Bust seemingly far distant. So the company probably was much over-valued, as was the payoff to the 40%.

Up until that point, Freedom almost never had borrowed money, certainly not such a large sum. R.C. was allergic to borrowing. If the money had not been borrowed, Freedom still would have lost much of its private equity value in the ensuing years, but would not today be in bankruptcy.

The 40% of the family that got the cash did well financially. In a free-market system, that certainly is their right. But the real heroes were the 60% who kept the company so it could still advance the “freedom philosophy” for a few more years. I knew some of these family members and they were great folks who prized liberty. I only wished more family members had been directly involved in the business, instead of hiring outsiders who didn’t know what they were doing.

Almost immediately, the company began suffering problems. The Internet reached the point where it was taking over ad revenues, especially through craigslist. An ad that cost $60 and ran for a week in The Register cost nothing and could be repeated indefinitely on craigslist. Great news for consumers, bad news for newspapers. Circulation also crashed as readers preferred getting their news online, usually for free, shortly after it happened, rather than wait for it to be dropped on their doorstep, at a price, the next morning.

In 2006, a major Freedom management blunder occurred when the company blew $20 million (for starters) on a new newspaper in Orange County, the OC Post. It was a dumbed-down tabloid of the kind popular with subway commuters in New York City, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Except in Orange County there is no subway and almost everybody commutes by car. The paper was canceled just over a year later.

In 2007, the Bush-Greenspan Depression struck hard, cutting ad and circulation revenues even more. Other newspapers – The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, The Rocky Mountain News – started failing. The Ann Arbor News closed and went totally online.

The Register is profitable for now, but that is unlikely to continue. Other Freedom newspapers cannot be doing any better. The eight Freedom TV stations still have value.

Whither Freedom?

Even though I don’t work for Freedom Communications any more, I still feel a strong attachment to the company. It gave me a voice for 19 years. I hope the new owners keep the “freedom philosophy” at what remains of Freedom Communications. But I fear that won’t happen. New owners usually have their own ideas about running things.

Many times over the years, Register readers told me that they only bought the paper for the libertarian editorial page. How much circulation would be lost if the editorial page became a mirror of the leftist L.A. Times, or, worse, a bland, moderate voice like USA Today? It’s hard to say, but I’d suspect 10% or more. Especially nowadays, with so many choices on the Net, blandness doesn’t sell.

Whatever happens, the legacies of the Hoiles Family, Freedom Communications, and The Register are secure as great champions of freedom. If America had only a few more such newspaper companies the past 100 years, instead of so many sycophants to government, we would not have lost so many freedoms. And our fight to regain those freedoms would not be as difficult.

My article on the bankruptcy of Freedom Communications is on LewRockwell.com

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

I just wrote an article on the demise of Freedom Communications, for which I worked for 19 years. It’s on LewRockwell.com.

Update to post on Red County Republicans vs. Greenhut

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

My blog of a couple of days ago defended Steven Greenhut against an attack by Red County Republicans.

Greenhut himself has a new post adding more perspective, especially on one of the Republicans who’s a “Christian Reconstructionist” — folks who basically want to reconstruct Old Testament society, even though the New Testament replaced the Old Law with the New Law, the Law of the Gospel, especially the Sermon on the Mount.

As St. Augustine wrote:

If any one will piously and soberly consider the sermon which our Lord Jesus Christ spoke on the mount, as we read it in the Gospel according to Matthew, I think that he will find in it, so far as regards the highest morals, a perfect standard of the Christian life: and this we do not rashly venture to promise, but gather it from the very words of the Lord Himself. For the sermon itself is brought to a close in such a way, that it is clear there are in it all the precepts which go to mould the life.

Greenhut begins:

The good Republican folks at Red County have published a post accusing libertarians of being extremists and suggesting that we hate America, believe Lincoln to have been one of the world’s biggest war criminals and other such nonsense based on the unidentified statements. Yet one prominent writer at the blog, and someone who has zealously joined in the “libertarians are extremists” commenting has long ties to Christian Reconstructionism, a form of fundamentalist Christianity that seeks to impose Old Testament law on society. Would it be fair, then, to suggest that Red County is in league with those views, which I believe are somewhat outside the mainstream?

Click here for the rest…

Great new political site

Friday, January 16th, 2009

My former colleagues at the editorial page of The Orange County Register just put up a great new site, FreedomPolitics.com.

It features libertarian reporting, insight, and links on Orange County, California, America, and in partibus infidelium.

They criticize Bush for being

Bush: The Great Regulator

To hear Democrats tell it, the past eight years have been a binge of dangerous deregulation. Veronique de Rugy argues Bush was anything but a “hands off” regulator.

Reason: Bush’s Regulatory Kiss-Off

And the site ridcules the Feds’ latest bank bailout (with your tax money or inflated dollars):

Federal Bank of America

Following a new bailout of the bank on Thursday, the US Government is the largest shareholder in Bank of America.

Two weeks after closing its purchase of Merrill Lynch at the urging of U.S. regulators, the government cemented a deal at midnight Thursday to supply Bank of America with a fresh $20 billion capital injection and absorb as much as $98.2 billion in losses on toxic assets, according to people involved in the transaction.

The bank had been pressing the government for help after it was surprised to learn that Merrill would be taking a fourth-quarter write-down of $15 billion to $20 billion, according to two people who have been briefed on the situation, in addition to Bank of America’s rising consumer loan losses.

The second lifeline brings the government’s total stake in Bank of America to $45 billion and makes it the bank’s largest shareholder, with a stake of about 6 percent.

Check it out.

Maybe newspapers should quit being online?

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

linotypeI’ve been saying that, to survive, newspapers should junk their printed editions and go totally online.

But maybe the opposite is true. Maybe offering content for free, with low-paying ads in the margins of the screen, isn’t a good business model. Maybe sticking with print is. A paper in New Jersey is doing just that:

Into the teeth of a historic recession, the newspaper had just published the biggest issue in its history. The product is double-digit profitable, and it has been growing at a clip of about 10 percent a year since it was founded in 1999, right about the time the Web was beginning to put its hands around print’s neck.

Finally, I thought, a story about a print organization that has found a way to tame the Web and come up with a digital business approach that could serve as a model. Except that TriCityNews of Monmouth County, N.J., is prospering precisely because it aggressively ignores the Web. Its Web site has a little boilerplate about the product and lists ad rates, but nothing more. (The address is trinews.com, for all the good it will do you.)

“Why would I put anything on the Web?” asked Dan Jacobson, the publisher and owner of the newspaper. “I don’t understand how putting content on the Web would do anything but help destroy our paper. Why should we give our readers any incentive whatsoever to not look at our content along with our advertisements, a large number of which are beautiful and cheap full-page ads?”

One analogy often used is how passenger train companies went bankrupt (many absorbed by the government’s incompetent Amtrak), never moving into the lucrative new field of passenger airlines. But train freight remained lucrative. Speed and comfort are less important to cows and autos.

Maybe some newspaper should just dump its online edition, go back to excellent journalism in print, and see what happens.

I called end of Register lawsuit

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Back in August, I predicted that a lawsuit by carriers against the Orange County Register, my old newspaper, would end in a settlement. That the union would see no utility in holding out for its demand for $100 million from a company close to bankruptcy.

Bingo.

Yesterday, the company and the carriers settled the lawsuit for $22 million, plus $11 million for the carriers’ lawyers.  The settlement means that the Register management admitted it cheated its own employees.

I hypothetically posited a $10 million settlement. But that wasn’t so much a guess and an example of how things work.

I predicted a settlement …

will clear the decks for selling the company, probably by breaking it up and auctioning the pieces. It’ll be accomplished before Rudolph and Santa alight on your rooftop.

The Hoiles Family, one of the last of the old newspaper families, seems to have given up.

A friend of mine was at the Arizona Republic in the mid-1990s when the Pulliam Family (Dan Quayle’s family) put its newspapers up for sale. He said that the first priority was settling all lawsuits. That way, the new owner couldn’t come back to the old owners in a few years and say, “You owe me more money for those lawsuits you didn’t settle.”

Now, Freedom is free to sell the Register.

Assuming anybody wants to buy it.

O.C. Register abandons free markets for economic nationalism

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

hoilesThe old newspaper where I wrote editorials for 19 years, the Orange County Register, today came out against free markets and for economic nationalism. Libertarian founder R.C. Hoiles (pictured at right) must be spinning in his grave as fast as an old 78 rpm turntable.

The editorial, “So much for gouging: The price of oil drops, a relief for our wallets and for our national security,” is on the recent decline in oil and gas prices. As I wrote on Oct. 10, the major reasons for this decline are the declining price of gold against the dollar (all commodities are tied closely to gold’s price), meaning lower overall inflation; and relative peace in the Middle East, with an attack by the U.S. or Israel on Iran less likely, for now.

I also noted that the price of oil usually falls within the range of 10 to 15 barrels per ounce of gold. That ratio has held up since World War II, despite many wars, recessions, the end of the Cold War, etc.

On Oct. 10, I calculated that ratio at 11.2. Today, Oct. 29, it’s a ratio of 11.1 ($68.40 for NYMEX crude, $760.1 for gold).

So, nothing has changed in 3 weeks — except the value of that funny money we call the dollar.

Foreign mischief?

However, the Register notes that oil’s drop (really an apparent drop)…

has a strong potential of making the world at large a slightly less dangerous place.

Three countries in particular, Venezuela, Iran and Russia, have used a good deal of the money they acquired when oil prices were much higher to bolster their ability to make mischief. If international oil prices stay (relatively) low, they are likely to be less troublesome than their leaders had hoped they could be.

The only reason any of these countries is of concern to America is because of our globe-straddling empire — which has bankrupted us. First, what “mischief” has Russia caused?  The Register says:

Russia’s invasion of Georgia this summer (following Georgia’s attacks in South Ossetia) was met with widespread criticism but no effective action. In part this was because too much of the U.S. military is tied down in Iraq, and in part it was attributed to the growing dependence of Western Europe on Russian natural gas.

At least they note that Georgia started the war. Indeed, a new BBC report just found that it Georgia’s troops committed war crimes — on orders from the close Bush and McCain ally President Mikheil Saakashvili — when they entered the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali. The Russians stopped the war crimes and expelled the criminals.

And anyway, what business is it of America’s what goes on in that region of the world? What does the Register mean by the U.S. being unable to take “effective action”? Should we have sent troops there to fight the Russians? Maybe they would like to volunteer and join the U.S. Army? Maybe they would like to dig me a bomb shelter as protection against Russia’s 10,000 nukes?

We don’t need a new Cold War and the Russians are not communists anymore, nor are they even a remote threat to America — unless our insane government incites them. The Russkies actually are less communist than the USA. The top Russian income tax rate is 11%, America’s is 35% (going up, up, up under President Obama), plus another 10.3% in California.

Venezuelan boss Chavez is a minor mischief-maker and always has been.

Amok on Iran

On Iran, the Reg writes:

If oil prices stay low, Iran may have to cut back foreign meddling and reach some kind of compromise on its nuclear ambitions. President Ahmadinejad, who has been steadily losing popularity anyway, could well be defeated in next June’s elections.

Is Iran going to stop meddling with its Shiite buddies in Iraq? Hardly. And who put the Shiites in power in Iraq, dumping the Sunnis who don’t like the Iranians? Bush and the Neo”conservatives.” Oh.

According to Bush’s own National Intelligence Estimate, Iran stopped its nuke program in 2003.

President Ahmadinejad actually holds a position below that of the mullahs who really run Iran, and is just a loudmouth. The Bush administration itself is working to establish an “interests section” in Iran.

America needs peace, not empire

The Reg editorial seems to have been dictated by Dick Cheney’s office.

The fact is, there is no energy crisis, as I wrote in August.

Further, the United States nowadays has no enemies abroad but those our foul government itself makes. We need to return to our Founding Fathers’ philosophy of no foreign entanglements.

The U.S. government’s immense foreign empire has bankrupted us. It should be dismantled entirely, the troops dismissed to return to their familes, and the money saved returned to taxpayers.

The Register used to understand that.

Newspapers’ future: playthings for billionaires — O.C. Register to be sold to Argyros?

Monday, September 15th, 2008

The Orange County Register, where I wrote editorials for 19 years, could be bought by a billionaire Real Estate tycoon, Ambassador George Argyros, and another local businessman, Larry Higby. So reports to a new article up this night as I write in The Orange County Business Journal. Before I comment on that, a couple of observations.

As newspapers collapse, all that’s left is their brand name. But if billionaires know one thing, it’s brand names. So billionaires are buying these newspapers and playing with them like sports teams. Argyros, for example, once owned the Seattle Mariners baseball team.

An interest in the vererable (to some, not me) New York Times just was sold to Mexican Crony Capitalist  Carlos Slim, the second-richest man in the world ($60 billion worth) after Warren Buffett ($62 billion). Buffett earned his money through brilliant capitalist investing.

slimBy contrast, Slim is a Crony Capitalist — he has a monopoly on Mexico’s telecommunications system, granted him by Mexico’s corrupt government. Steve Seiler reported on Slim:

The only scandals clinging to Slim’s name are business-political, not personal. He embodies the Mexican ruling class at its best.

Which still isn’t so hot.

Although not an innovator, Slim is a competent businessman and manager. He likely would have gotten rich in even the most honest country….

…mix Slim’s financial skills with Mexico’s crony capitalism and you get the richest man in the world.

As New York Times correspondent Alan Riding wrote of Mexico in his 1984 bestseller Distant Neighbors: A Portrait of the Mexicans, “Public life could be defined as the abuse of power to achieve wealth and the abuse of wealth to achieve power.” It’s worth examining how the master plays the game.

The Mexican-born son of a prosperous Lebanese Christian merchant originally named Yusef Salim Haddam, Slim made his big move in 1990 during President Carlos Salinas’ corrupt privatization binge (which was enthusiastically endorsed by the elder President Bush). He bought the government’s telephone monopoly. Interestingly, Slim’s telephone monopoly was written into NAFTA, negotiated during Bush I, granting Slim a decade without foreign competition.

To Slim, buying a chunk of the NYT is pocket change.

Zell buys the Chicago Tribune and L.A. times

Before that, 17 months ago, Chicago real-estate tycoon Sam Zell bought the Chicago Tribune company, which includes that paper and the L.A. Times, for $8.2 billion. He did so too early. Like Sim and (possibly) Argyros, he should have waited a year for the price to drop more and saved himself maybe half that money.

But buy it he did. He also took out a risky loan, which Slim and Argyros probably wouldn’t need. Swimming in his natural habitat, Zell is dealing some of the real estate. He’s continued the L.A. Times’ recent history of editorial shakeups.

But the point is that it’s a plaything for him.

The days of the great newspaper families — the Sulzbergers, the Pulizers, the Pulliams, the Hoileses — are over. Even the days of the conglomerates, like Gannett, are over. This is the day of the billionaire tycoons.

You don’t make yourself a billionaire (as opposed to inheriting it) by being stupid. These guys know the days of printed newspapers are numbered. So, they’re buying the brand name, as I noted earlier, to use online for whatever they want. Maybe it’ll pay off, maybe it won’t. But it’ll be fun playing with it.

Brief interlude on newspapers

I was at a bar tonight (Sunday night) in Newport Beach with some friends. Someone mentioned to two women, about 30, that I “worked for the Orange County Register.” Before I could correct them by pointing out that I took a buyout almost 2 years ago, one woman said, “The Register? What’s that? Didn’t it close years ago?” The second stranger concurred.

One of the friends I was with, also about 30, said he hadn’t read the printed Register in years, instead reading it online.

Printed newspapers: R.I.P.

Argyros, the Register, and Measure R

argyrosGeorge Argyros was a major presence in Orange County even before his contributions to Republican causes got him named ambassador to Spain, a post he left after the 2004 election. In my Register days, I met him several times. At least to me and other journalists, he was cordial, a typical glad-handing businessman.

Chapman University, his alma mater, has so many buildings named after him they might as well call it Argyros University.

After Orange County’s 1994 bankruptcy, Argyros headed a group of businessmen that tried to get passed Measure R, a half-cent sales tax increase to make up for the $1.6 billion the county wasted. Argyros came in to talk to the Register editorial board, trying to convince us of the need for a tax increase. He also was a friend of then-Register Publisher Dave Threshie, a top member of the Hoiles Family, which has owned the Register since 1935. Threshie sat in on the discussions.

Argyros said that the county would be badly damaged without the tax increase. The roads would crumble, the schools would fail to teach, business would flee.

We retorted that Orange County was known globally as a low-tax island amidst the high-tax ocean of California, that tax increases would damage the tax base and send businesses fleeing. Measure R should be defeated and the county government forced to find some other way to make up for its own stupidity.

Threshie, naturally, wasn’t going to break the Hoiles Family tradition of opposing tax increases. He unleashed us to attack Measure R. The tax increase lost heavily. Orange County recovered from the bankruptcy almost as if it hadn’t happened. No tax increase was needed.

Argyros and the Register’s future

If Argyros does buy the Register, he of course will want it to play with it as he sees fit. A Bush-Cheney-McCain partisan, he naturally would ditch the anti-war libertarianism and constitutionalism. It would become just another Republican, Neocon mouthpiece backing unconstitutional wars, torture, the “Patriot” Act and other abridgments of the Bill of Rights, etc.

Another bankruptcy/Measure R situation is unlikely. But he might make the editorial page back the many local school bond and city tax initiatives that come up every election cycle.

At the state level, he might back Schwarzenegger’s calls for tax increases.

Other changes would be made ending 7 decades of libertarianism at America’s highest-circulation libertarian newspaper. A unique voice would be gone. Blandness would take over.

Hoiles Family cashing out

But what’s clear is that the Hoiles Family is cashing out, ending yet another family newspaper dynasty. Reported the OC Business Journal:

“We are having a lot of conversations that in the past in a different environment would have been inconceivable,” said Scott Flanders, chief executive of the Register’s parent company, Irvine-based Freedom Communications Inc….

The situation at the Register and elsewhere at Freedom has raised doubts that the heirs of company founder R.C. Hoiles, who own an estimated 55% of the company, will be able to engineer their hoped-for buyout of private equity investors next May.

That’s when Blackstone Group LP and Providence Equity Part-ners LLC can force the buyback of the roughly 45% stake they bought in 2004. The investment was part of a restructuring that enabled dissident heirs to cash out of the company.

But analysts and others have said it’s possible the private equity firms won’t exercise their “put rights” next May because they’re unlikely to recoup their investment, given the declining values of Freedom and other newspaper companies.

That’s just what I’ve been reporting right here – and here – and here – on this blog, based solely on my analyses of newspaper trends and Freedom Communications’ financial situation.

Gone With the Wind

I recently re-subscribed to the Register after canceling my subscription a year ago. A nice chap at the local Albertson’s convinced me to do so, giving me a $10 food coupon as an enticement. I like getting the paper in the morning. rhettIt reminds me of the Old Days when I worked in the industry, and of my youth when my family got the Detroit News.

Yet I don’t read much of it. The national and world news I read the evening before online. Movie listings I get online, too; it’s easier. I’ll probably keep my subscription until they don’t deliver papers anymore.

As Rhett Butler says when he finally joins the Confederate Army:

I’ve always had a weakness for lost causes once they’re really lost.

I was saying … about newspapers…?

Tuesday, September 9th, 2008

Yesterday I wrote a blog, “Newspapers are dead.”

Today’s articles in Editor and Publisher:

Gannett to Re-Org, Cut 100 Management Positions

Next:

‘Orange County Register’ Studying Switch to Tabloid

When the OC Post — a short-lived tabloid — was announced just over 2 years ago, I was still at the OC Register. I remember that since-fired-cartoonist Mike Shelton predicted that the Register would become the Post. Looks like that’s going to happen.

Now, the Post lasted 18 months. So does that mean the Register, as a printed paper, has 18 months left?