Gust Hubb, on 01 December 2017 - 01:34 AM, said:
Khellendros, on 01 December 2017 - 01:16 AM, said:
Gust Hubb, on 30 November 2017 - 11:41 PM, said:
H. D., on 30 November 2017 - 11:30 PM, said:
Gust Hubb, on 30 November 2017 - 11:22 PM, said:
That's cheap. It's the same thing I said earlier about sources but more nuanced and particular.
Why does this rile you up so much? What investment do you have in this other than to protect a friend? (See how that comes across? Not well.)
Perhaps, but I am getting a little more of a personal vibe off of what Nevyn is saying, hence the question. What you said earlier was also discussed eloquently by EM. I know I am pressing buttons here, and i have guesses as to why, but I still am not entirely sure from where the rage comes.
Moreover, your early comment was very confrontational. I am not sure why you are accusing me of playing cheap.
I don't see any rage. Nevyn's comment struck me as perfectly sensible. Perhaps a little frustration that you don't seem to see that the same things you ascribe to the media could as easily be applied to you, your friend, or any individual or group. The notion that news groups report the news but also may favour a certain point of view is not new or surprising. The idea that anyone independent of a professional media organisation could do an objective or 'factual' job is naive, even when compared to the blatant political mouthpiece organisations - people report and spread the news which is of interest to them, and therefore consciously or unconsciously put something of themselves into that reporting. And that's a response with no investment in this and no connection to or with journalism Perhaps only a historian's background, trained to always be asking my sources: 'Why are you telling me this? What's in it for you, and how can I find that out?'
Ah but I do. I barely, if ever, trust myself, let alone other people or organizations. That is why I am always double checking and asking others their opinions. I try to get as much info as possible.
And there, right there, is your problem. If you find yourself unable to at least trust yourself and your own judgement, you are standing at the top of a downwards spiral into conspiracy and mistrust towards everyone and everything around you. Unless you want to give up everything that is your current life to trawl the world's news sites day in and day out, 24/7, and learn all the languages out there, you need to accept that you will never reach the level of understanding of the world you are craving right now (and let's be honest, even doing that 24/7 would not give you that understanding). A responsible consumer of news sources trusts their own judgement to find sources they trust as much as they can, while being aware of the way the source's biases slant and the fact that only so many people can work there producing only so much content and that content is often chosen for a gazillion of reasons over other content (local news over international unless it's hugely important - American hurricanes are closer and more immediate news to the Western part of the world than Asian typhoons and chances are, it was the other way around in Asian news media; news which create more add revenue over those which don't, as unfortunate as that is; and so on).
Another problem with your apparent inability to trust your own judgement is that you perceive insult where there is none and expect others to provide you with the solution to your problem of - as you perceive it - a lack of reliable news sources, when the issue is that you are throwing ALL journalism into the same pot as Breitbart and Fox News. Journalism, at its core, is NOT about providing you with the truth and if you expect that, you're on the track to, as has been said above, citing Youtube videos as 'truth'. 'Truth', in this context, is an illusive concept predestined to reinforce biases, and journalism, at its core, is about providing you with all the facts available to put you in a position to make up your own mind about what is going on. I don't know about America, but here we are taught in school to read between the lines and ask ourselves whether what we perceive from a piece of communication is really what the person doing the communicating might have meant and that communication is not as straightforward as many people think. By being prejudiced against ALL media you are shooting yourself in the foot in that regard rather than being as open as you claim to be. Individuals with an internet connection are by far less reliable as there are exactly zero checks on what they're claiming (I like to cite that hilarious Breitbart article where someone claimed Muslims had tried to set a church on fire on New Year's Eve, a church I walk by almost daily and it's doing just fine, really) and everyone is biased no matter how much they may claim otherwise. It's human nature.
Madness lies in the direction of second guessing everything. You can be a responsible consumer of media and news without working yourself into that.
This post has been edited by Puck: 01 December 2017 - 11:09 AM