Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Do you commute to work? Listen to NPR. They have the news. Or get the NYT app on your phone. You can scan the headlines easily.
I've had my share of stressful events in my life, and I've found that it's not lack of listening/reading news that makes me appear uninformed. It's the fact that I somehow develop amnesia surrounding a stressful event. I remember the event, but whatever else was happening at the same time just disappears!
NPR and NYT are two of the most heavily biased news sources, they are hardly solely "fact" based. They will tell you things, strictly from their interpretation and both will be incredibly selective in what they tell you in order to feed a narrative, rather than facts. The decline of both as reputable news sources has been quite sad. But it is what it is.
I find the overseas presses slightly better in being more factual rather than biased. And Bloomberg is better and more factual than NYT/WaPo and especially NPR.
As an informed listener or reader, there news sources you can easily absorb and self-edit in your mind as necessary, such as NPR and the NYT, because of their calm mode of communication. Same for WSJ, but I didn't recommend it because DCUM doesn't tend to be the target audience. You can also look at BBC News, but avoid the magazine part of their website, it's a bit dramatic. I do not recommend WaPo just yet, although with their second new editor under Besos ownership, they've improved and might be great at some point in the future. Still needs to increase writing quality, and still needs to tone down rampant subjectivity.
What you don't want is CNN, MSNBC, FOX, etc. Their tendency to catastrophize actions from the other side is exhausting and you'll need a lot more self-editing.
I know you're probably a troll, PP, since it's not objectively possible to claim that NPR and NYT are overly biased. They are left of center, just like WSJ is right of center. Some pieces by some authors are better than others, but they're all trustworthy and reputable news sources. You've got to learn to distinguish between reporting, opinion pieces and editorials.