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I spent a lifetime in printing and publishing, mostly in educational materials. I don’t want my daily newspaper to go away (″Eight more community newspapers soon will vanish,” Opinion Exchange, April 10). I’m not going to sit on my computer chair in front of a screen and try to find everything I want to read. It’s inconvenient, time-consuming, not user-friendly and it doesn’t have the “meat” my daily has. We watched my wife’s hometown of Duluth lose its daily newspaper as Forum Communications from North Dakota forced people on to online. They print the paper twice a week.
I do disagree with the idea of the government paying for our news. No. If communities want papers, their citizens and businesses must find a way to keep the papers alive. Our government cannot bail out every losing business in America. It’s up to us. If we want a paper, subscribe. If we own a business, advertise. Charge affordable amounts so whole communities can afford to subscribe. The future of newsprint is up to us.
Jerry Carroll, Roseville
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Excellent commentary by newspaper man Reed Anfinson outlining the harm to Minnesota communities and democracy with the loss of our local newspapers. We are fortunate to be able to see the documentary, “Stripped for Parts: American Journalism on the Brink,” at our Minneapolis-St. Paul international Film Festival at the Main Cinema on April 16 at 7 p.m. or April 18 at 12:10 p.m.
Learn how investment firm Alden Global Capital buys up Minnesota newspapers and newspapers around the country, then purposefully dismantles them, creating a void for fake news and special, corporate and political interests to fill. Citizens’ participation must push our state and federal governments to protect the financial sustainability of our community newspapers and promote an informed electorate. Democracy is at a crossroads.