I work hard to gather information from a variety of news sources (not you, NewsMax, and OAN; I said news, and you most certainly aren't). With the world at my fingertips on a keyboard, I'm blessed to live in a moment when information rushes like water through a firehose.
The challenge is sorting the real from the surreal (and at breakfast, the cereal as well). What each of us does with the information to convert it to knowledge has everything to do with us and very little to do with the media operators we encounter.
Thanks to President All the Best Words, we have to navigate through two more, 'Fake News," which can mean anything from a flat-out lie to a story/report with which we disagree.
Last weekend here in my corner of the Hundred Acre Wood, one of our local newspapers had a front page above the fold story involving a member of the clergy who's been part of the community since before my family and I arrived here in the autumn of 1991 (=a really long time).
It was not a kind retrospective on the man's career, and reader comments both on the newspaper's website and on their Facebook page were angrily hostile to the article, the writer, and the newspaper, though to my eye, reading them carefully, none of them offered any fact-based counterargument to anything that was in the story.
All of us who consume news/information are always in danger of building our own siloes (see my comment about the aforementioned NewsMax and OAN). The more sources we sample, hopefully, the broader our perspective becomes. Not that we need to become so open-minded that our brains fall out of our heads, but at one time in this country, we strove to listen to others' points of view.
Now we just slap them with a label, ANTIFA or MAGA, and move on. Judging saves us a lot of thinking, that's for sure. Red Pill, Blue Pill, if only Nemo and Morpheus had subscribed to the Weekly World News, their lives, and ours, could have been so much better.
-bill kenny
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