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Overabundance of News
This article has it's own 'clickbait' feel to it to begin with some of the wording that the authors chose, but I still found it an insightful read, and I feel I may try to steer clear of 'news' a bit more. It made me realize I spend at least a hour or more reading news a day, and I'm questioning how useful that is to me, or my health.
I'd love to hear others thoughts on this as well, please check out the article below if you're interested!
Also, bonus plug, I read stuff like this at work a lot and there's an addon called ' Readability ' that makes image heavy websites like this easier to read. It strips out images, ads, sounds, and other things which make articles slow to load and harder to read at work (where I read this). Feel free to use it on the above article if you'd like an easier reading experience. :sick:
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Quite simply the reporters/writers have to usually paraphrase stuff so much that often its inadvertently misleading, entirely wrong or just sorta missing the point entirely... haha well a lot of the time. They do seem to focus on what they consider 1 or 2 attention grabbing concepts and getting the attribution correct, and that is it. So I try to know the limits of what I know, and use the media to spot stuff that I can investigate myself to add to that - rather then paying any attention to the narrative of reporters or sources. That is if you cannot give it up entirely
:lol:
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I do a few things to combat this.
One is that I read more local news than any other type. The closer it is to me physically the more I feel it will affect me personally, so I should pay more attention to what's happening at home. For example, while it's sad if there's been an Earthquake in another country, it is more immediately relevant to me that there's been a string of armed robberies right near my office. This can help limit the feeling of the world ending and keep you well informed of goes on next door.
Second, I try to click more on happier news than sad news. If I see a headline about how many shelter animals got put down last year and another article about a six year old who gave all the money he made selling lemonade to a local charity I'm going to click on the lemonade story. This does two things. One, it lets me feel good reading a happy story. Two, it gives a click to a happy story and not a sad one so that maybe, just maybe, it will start to appear that people want to read happy stories more and that will encourage the news to report more happy stories. They give us what we click on, it's up to us to click responsibly.
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Goken wrote: I find reading the news to be a double edged sword.
Very well said! This is the crux of what I struggle with, also. I love being informed, on the 'cutting edge' and always learning.
But on the flip side, it can cause stress, over worry, and all the bad side affects mentioned in the article above.
I like your 'click responsibly' idea though, I should try to keep that in mind when I browse.

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- Cyan Sarden
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In order not to get drenched by wet snow, we can either choose not to step into the snow or we can wear a better coat.
Sent from my SM-G935F using Tapatalk
Do not look for happiness outside yourself. The awakened seek happiness inside.
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- OB1Shinobi
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the author gave us a picture of the difference between news and journalism
Society needs journalism – ... Investigative journalism is always relevant. We need reporting that polices our institutions and uncovers truth.
"police our institutions and uncover truth": thats what journalists do
NEWS is primarily an entertainment industry
News misleads.
News is irrelevant.
News has no explanatory power.
News increases cognitive errors.
News inhibits thinking.
these things are so obvious that i dont understand people who think its some far fetched "conspiracy theory" to believe that there is a deliberate agenda to make people stupid
there might not be a deliberate effort to dumb down and misinform the population, but media and entertainment are effective enough at doing it that there may as well be one, and if there isnt then it is quite a coincidence
"I have now gone without news for four years, so I can see, feel and report the effects of this freedom first-hand: less disruption, less anxiety, deeper thinking, more time, more insights. It's not easy, but it's worth it."
cosigned
BONUS!!
how screen time affects our brains - youtube, 4 mins
how screen time affects our brains - Psychology Today article
People are complicated.
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Tsst.
*Sigh*
The news is awful, and I say this for similar reasons to Adder - Once you know they're full of it in *your* field, it's not a big leap to imagine similiar innaccuracy everywhere.
I try to keep an international circle of friends for that "grass roots" information on what is happening in the world that The News (TM) has no interest in....
Time for the Quote Selection on the subject of News

I love rumors! Facts can be so misleading, where rumors, true or false, are often revealing.
“Sometimes glass glitters more than diamonds because it has more to prove.”
'I'm sure it's all journalism, said William. 'And what is that supposed to mean?' “It means it's true enough for now."
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- Alexandre Orion
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"Disquietude is always vanity, because it serves no good. Yes, even if the whole world were thrown into confusion and all things in it, disquietude on that account would be vanity." ~ St John of the Cross
"Sufficient not only unto the day, but also unto the place, is the evil thereof. Agitation over happenings which we are powerless to modify, either because they have not yet occurred, or else are occurring at an inaccessible distance from us, achieves nothing beyond the inoculation of here and now with the remote or anticipated evil that is the object of our distress. Listening four or five times a day to newscasters and commentators, reading the morning papers and all the weeklies and monthlies -- nowadays, this is described as "taking an intelligent interest in politics." St. John of the Cross would have called it indulgence in idle curiosity and the cultivation of disquietude for disquietude's sake." ~ Aldous Huxley
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Remember, this is not an accurate reflection of the world, just on what they know we'll click on.
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Goken wrote: Remember, this is not an accurate reflection of the world, just on what they know we'll click on.
Well said!
I recently saw a post on-line, I believe on Reddit titled, "If a headline tells you how to feel, it's not news". Your example just reminded me of that, and I really think it's a good one to keep in mind when looking over the news as well.
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