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"Five Things You Notice When You Quit the News"
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Dec 8, 2016 08:35:20   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 
"Five Things You Notice When You Quit the News"

Posted: 07 Dec 2016 04:50 PM PST

by David Cain

"I grew up believing that following the news makes you a better citizen. Eight years after having quit, that idea now seems ridiculous—that consuming a particularly unimaginative information product on a daily basis somehow makes you thoughtful and informed in a way that benefits society. But I still encounter people who balk at the possibility of a smart, engaged adult quitting the daily news.

To be clear, I’m mostly talking about following TV and internet newscasts here. This post isn’t an indictment of journalism as a whole. There’s a big difference between watching a half hour of CNN’s refugee crisis coverage (not that they cover it anymore) versus spending that time reading a 5,000-word article on the same topic.

If you quit, even for just a month or so, the news-watching habit might start to look quite ugly and unnecessary to you, not unlike how a smoker only notices how bad tobacco makes things smell once he stops lighting up. A few things you might notice, if you take a break:

1) You feel better: A common symptom of quitting the news is an improvement in mood. News junkies will say it’s because you’ve stuck your head in the sand. But that assumes the news is the equivalent of having your head out in the fresh, clear air. They don’t realize that what you can glean about the world from the news isn’t even close to a representative sample of what is happening in the world.

The news isn’t interested in creating an accurate sample. They select for what’s 1) unusual, 2) awful, and 3) probably going to be popular. So the idea that you can get a meaningful sense of the “state of the world” by watching the news is absurd. Their selections exploit our negativity bias. We’ve evolved to pay more attention to what’s scary and infuriating, but that doesn’t mean every instance of fear or anger is useful. Once you’ve quit watching, it becomes obvious that it is a primary aim of news reports—not an incidental side-effect—to agitate and dismay the viewer.

What appears on the news is not “The conscientious person’s portfolio of concerns”. What appears is whatever sells, and what sells is fear, and contempt for other groups of people. Curate your own portfolio. You can get better information about the world from deeper sources, who took more than a half-day to put it together.

2) You were never actually accomplishing anything by watching the news: If you ask someone what they accomplish by watching the news, you’ll hear vague notions like, “It’s our civic duty to stay informed!” or “I need to know what’s going on in the world,” or “We can’t just ignore these issues,” none of which answer the question. “Being informed” sounds like an accomplishment, but it implies that any information will do. You can become informed by reading a bus schedule.

A month after you’ve quit the news, it’s hard to name anything useful that’s been lost. It becomes clear that those years of news-watching amounted to virtually nothing in terms of improvement to your quality of life, lasting knowledge, or your ability to help others. And that’s to say nothing of the opportunity cost. Imagine if you spent that time learning a language, or reading books and essays about some of the issues they mention on the news.

You’ll find that your abstinence did not result in any worse cabinet appointments than were already being made, and that disaster relief efforts carried on without your involvement, just as they always do. As it turns out, your hobby of monitoring the “state of the world” did not actually affect the world.

We have inherited from somewhere—maybe from the era when there was only an hour of news available a day—the belief that having a superficial awareness of the day’s most popular issues is somehow helpful to those most affected by them.

3) Most current-events-related conversations are just people talking out of their asses: “Because it helps you participate in everyday conversations!” is a weak but at least meaningful answer to the “What is accomplished” question. But when you quit playing the current events game, and observe others talking about them, you might notice that almost nobody really knows what they’re talking about.

There is an extraordinary gulf between having a functional understanding of an issue, and the cursory glance you get from the news. If you ever come across a water-cooler conversation on a topic you happen to know a lot about, you see right through the emperor’s clothes. It’s kind of hilarious how willing people are to speak boldly on issues they’ve known about for all of three hours.

It feels good to make cutting remarks and take hard stands, even when we’re wrong, and the news gives us perfect fodder for that. The less you know about an issue, the easier it is to make bold proclamations about it, because at newscast-distance it still looks black and white enough that you can feel certain about what needs to happen next.

Maybe the last thing the world needs is another debate on Issue X between two people who learned about it from a newscast—at least if we’re trying to improve relationships between people from different groups.

4) There are much better ways to “be informed”: We all want to live in a well-informed society. The news does inform people, but I don’t think it informs people particularly well. There are loads of sources of “information”. The back of your shampoo bottle contains information. Today there’s much more of it out there than we can ever absorb, so we have to choose what deserves our time. The news provides information in infinite volume but very limited depth, and it’s clearly meant to agitate us more than educate us.

Every minute spent watching news is a minute you are unavailable for learning about the world in other ways. Americans probably watch a hundred million hours of news coverage every day. That’s a lot of unread books, for one thing. Read three books on a topic and you know more about it than 99% of the world. Watch news all day for years and you have a distant, water-cooler-level awareness of thousands of stories, at least for the few weeks each is popular.

If we only care about the breadth of information, and not the depth, there’s not much distinction between “staying informed” and staying misinformed.

5) “Being concerned” makes us feel like we’re doing something when we’re not: News is all about injustice and catastrophe, and naturally we feel uncomfortable ignoring stories in which people are being hurt. As superficial as TV newscasts can be, the issues reported in them are (usually) real. Much more real than they can ever seem through a television. People are suffering and dying, all the time, and to ignore a depiction of any of that suffering, even a cynical and manipulative depiction, makes us feel guilty.

The least we can do is not ignore it, we think. So we watch it on TV, with wet eyes and lumps in our throats. But staying at this level of “concerned” isn’t really helping anyone, except maybe to alleviate our own guilt a bit. And I wonder if there’s a kind of “substitution effect” at work here. The sense of “at least I care” may actually prevent us from doing something concrete to help, because by watching sympathetically we don’t quite have to confront the reality that we’re doing absolutely nothing about it.

Watching disasters unfold, even while we do nothing, at least feels a little more compassionate than switching off. The truth is that the vast majority of us will provide absolutely no help to the victims of almost all of the atrocities that happen in this world, televised or not. And that’s hard to accept. But if we can at least show concern, even to ourselves, we don’t quite have accept that. We can remain uninvolved without feeling uninvolved. This may be the biggest reason we fear turning off the news. And it might be the best reason to do it.

Have you quit the news? What did you notice?"
- http://www.raptitude.com

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 08:56:21   #
okie don
 
Page,
" Ignorance is bliss ' '(:

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 08:57:13   #
okie don
 
Pafret.
Ignorance is bliss '(: duh

Reply
 
 
Dec 8, 2016 08:58:39   #
okie don
 
Reason to stay informed is to prepair for what's possibly coming. If possible.
Nothing we can do about ' Planet X' or 'Niburon' headed our way tho!

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 09:00:05   #
okie don
 
Three types of people
1. Those that 'Fake things happen'.
2. Those who say " Loo what's happening.
3. Those who say " What the hell happened!

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 09:01:06   #
okie don
 
Guess it depends what catagory you prefer being in.

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 09:02:20   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
pafret wrote:
"Five Things You Notice When You Quit the News"

Posted: 07 Dec 2016 04:50 PM PST

by David Cain

"I grew up believing that following the news makes you a better citizen. Eight years after having quit, that idea now seems ridiculous—that consuming a particularly unimaginative information product on a daily basis somehow makes you thoughtful and informed in a way that benefits society. But I still encounter people who balk at the possibility of a smart, engaged adult quitting the daily news.

To be clear, I’m mostly talking about following TV and internet newscasts here. This post isn’t an indictment of journalism as a whole. There’s a big difference between watching a half hour of CNN’s refugee crisis coverage (not that they cover it anymore) versus spending that time reading a 5,000-word article on the same topic.

If you quit, even for just a month or so, the news-watching habit might start to look quite ugly and unnecessary to you, not unlike how a smoker only notices how bad tobacco makes things smell once he stops lighting up. A few things you might notice, if you take a break:

1) You feel better: A common symptom of quitting the news is an improvement in mood. News junkies will say it’s because you’ve stuck your head in the sand. But that assumes the news is the equivalent of having your head out in the fresh, clear air. They don’t realize that what you can glean about the world from the news isn’t even close to a representative sample of what is happening in the world.

The news isn’t interested in creating an accurate sample. They select for what’s 1) unusual, 2) awful, and 3) probably going to be popular. So the idea that you can get a meaningful sense of the “state of the world” by watching the news is absurd. Their selections exploit our negativity bias. We’ve evolved to pay more attention to what’s scary and infuriating, but that doesn’t mean every instance of fear or anger is useful. Once you’ve quit watching, it becomes obvious that it is a primary aim of news reports—not an incidental side-effect—to agitate and dismay the viewer.

What appears on the news is not “The conscientious person’s portfolio of concerns”. What appears is whatever sells, and what sells is fear, and contempt for other groups of people. Curate your own portfolio. You can get better information about the world from deeper sources, who took more than a half-day to put it together.

2) You were never actually accomplishing anything by watching the news: If you ask someone what they accomplish by watching the news, you’ll hear vague notions like, “It’s our civic duty to stay informed!” or “I need to know what’s going on in the world,” or “We can’t just ignore these issues,” none of which answer the question. “Being informed” sounds like an accomplishment, but it implies that any information will do. You can become informed by reading a bus schedule.

A month after you’ve quit the news, it’s hard to name anything useful that’s been lost. It becomes clear that those years of news-watching amounted to virtually nothing in terms of improvement to your quality of life, lasting knowledge, or your ability to help others. And that’s to say nothing of the opportunity cost. Imagine if you spent that time learning a language, or reading books and essays about some of the issues they mention on the news.

You’ll find that your abstinence did not result in any worse cabinet appointments than were already being made, and that disaster relief efforts carried on without your involvement, just as they always do. As it turns out, your hobby of monitoring the “state of the world” did not actually affect the world.

We have inherited from somewhere—maybe from the era when there was only an hour of news available a day—the belief that having a superficial awareness of the day’s most popular issues is somehow helpful to those most affected by them.

3) Most current-events-related conversations are just people talking out of their asses: “Because it helps you participate in everyday conversations!” is a weak but at least meaningful answer to the “What is accomplished” question. But when you quit playing the current events game, and observe others talking about them, you might notice that almost nobody really knows what they’re talking about.

There is an extraordinary gulf between having a functional understanding of an issue, and the cursory glance you get from the news. If you ever come across a water-cooler conversation on a topic you happen to know a lot about, you see right through the emperor’s clothes. It’s kind of hilarious how willing people are to speak boldly on issues they’ve known about for all of three hours.

It feels good to make cutting remarks and take hard stands, even when we’re wrong, and the news gives us perfect fodder for that. The less you know about an issue, the easier it is to make bold proclamations about it, because at newscast-distance it still looks black and white enough that you can feel certain about what needs to happen next.

Maybe the last thing the world needs is another debate on Issue X between two people who learned about it from a newscast—at least if we’re trying to improve relationships between people from different groups.

4) There are much better ways to “be informed”: We all want to live in a well-informed society. The news does inform people, but I don’t think it informs people particularly well. There are loads of sources of “information”. The back of your shampoo bottle contains information. Today there’s much more of it out there than we can ever absorb, so we have to choose what deserves our time. The news provides information in infinite volume but very limited depth, and it’s clearly meant to agitate us more than educate us.

Every minute spent watching news is a minute you are unavailable for learning about the world in other ways. Americans probably watch a hundred million hours of news coverage every day. That’s a lot of unread books, for one thing. Read three books on a topic and you know more about it than 99% of the world. Watch news all day for years and you have a distant, water-cooler-level awareness of thousands of stories, at least for the few weeks each is popular.

If we only care about the breadth of information, and not the depth, there’s not much distinction between “staying informed” and staying misinformed.

5) “Being concerned” makes us feel like we’re doing something when we’re not: News is all about injustice and catastrophe, and naturally we feel uncomfortable ignoring stories in which people are being hurt. As superficial as TV newscasts can be, the issues reported in them are (usually) real. Much more real than they can ever seem through a television. People are suffering and dying, all the time, and to ignore a depiction of any of that suffering, even a cynical and manipulative depiction, makes us feel guilty.

The least we can do is not ignore it, we think. So we watch it on TV, with wet eyes and lumps in our throats. But staying at this level of “concerned” isn’t really helping anyone, except maybe to alleviate our own guilt a bit. And I wonder if there’s a kind of “substitution effect” at work here. The sense of “at least I care” may actually prevent us from doing something concrete to help, because by watching sympathetically we don’t quite have to confront the reality that we’re doing absolutely nothing about it.

Watching disasters unfold, even while we do nothing, at least feels a little more compassionate than switching off. The truth is that the vast majority of us will provide absolutely no help to the victims of almost all of the atrocities that happen in this world, televised or not. And that’s hard to accept. But if we can at least show concern, even to ourselves, we don’t quite have accept that. We can remain uninvolved without feeling uninvolved. This may be the biggest reason we fear turning off the news. And it might be the best reason to do it.

Have you quit the news? What did you notice?"
- http://www.raptitude.com
"Five Things You Notice When You Quit the New... (show quote)


Good article!!!

I quit the news sometime ago and don't miss a thing about it!! Feels rather nice as a matter of fact!!!

Reply
 
 
Dec 8, 2016 10:39:14   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 
lindajoy wrote:
Good article!!!

I quit the news sometime ago and don't miss a thing about it!! Feels rather nice as a matter of fact!!!


Hi Linda. I stopped watching "the news" about forty years ago. They were usually wrong in reporting facts and just plain stupid when interpreting the effects of the facts. There are a few times I watch the news such as when Comey was announcing the FBI's findings about prosecuting Hillary. I wish I didn't watch, the resultant rage was not good for my health.

In general there are so many sources of news that watching on a regular basis is not necessary. Most news is propaganda and it is not until many years later that you find out what actually happened instead of the manipulated emotion driven beliefs as to what happened.

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 12:05:39   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
pafret wrote:
Hi Linda. I stopped watching "the news" about forty years ago. They were usually wrong in reporting facts and just plain stupid when interpreting the effects of the facts. There are a few times I watch the news such as when Comey was announcing the FBI's findings about prosecuting Hillary. I wish I didn't watch, the resultant rage was not good for my health.

In general there are so many sources of news that watching on a regular basis is not necessary. Most news is propaganda and it is not until many years later that you find out what actually happened instead of the manipulated emotion driven beliefs as to what happened.
Hi Linda. I stopped watching "the news"... (show quote)


Wowww, 40 years ago you already knew what a lying misfit they were...Tells me nothing has changed from then to now other than get worse!!

Was a time when impartial journalism was the expectation, was it not??

I stopped with cancelling my Sunday newspaper as it was filled with nothing but doom and gloom..I remember the day reading it and getting so frustrated I said why do I pay money to read this garbage and ruin my day??. I folded it up, canned it and called and cancelled service as well.. I also did not watch the 6pm news I always made time to see...Didn't miss a thing either...

You are right, so many other avenues if I see or hear of something I want to know about I'll turn it on to see but more times than not I get a lot more right on line or watching BBC, CSPAN etc...You dang near need to watch them all for just a basic understanding of the lies anyway...No Thank You...

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 12:58:41   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
lindajoy wrote:
Good article!!!

I quit the news sometime ago and don't miss a thing about it!! Feels rather nice as a matter of fact!!!


Then how do you know what I'm up to???

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 13:01:56   #
badbobby Loc: texas
 
lindajoy wrote:
Good article!!!

I quit the news sometime ago and don't miss a thing about it!! Feels rather nice as a matter of fact!!!



the biggest problem with the news programs
is the fact that they don't just report the news
They try to make news

Reply
 
 
Dec 8, 2016 13:15:48   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
badbobby wrote:
Then how do you know what I'm up to???


I told you before I have my cameras on you every day....I watch you frequently....

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 13:18:34   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
badbobby wrote:
the biggest problem with the news programs
is the fact that they don't just report the news
They try to make news


Ohhhh boy is that a Trueeeee statement, bobby...

They make more than report on that's for sure too...

Fake News catch your ear???

See where the little Hitler DOJ threaten FBI and google about FAKE NEWS.....lololol...

Boy they sure don't like anything being said...

What's that first amendment thing again?????

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 14:10:35   #
J.A.F.I.1946
 
The most outlandish news gets higher ratings...higher ratings mean higher advertising rates to be paid. More money to the news people. Seems just about everything today is about the almighty dollar. My family didn't get a TV until I was five. We listened to the radio, mostly local happenings etc. occasionally national and international news, but very seldom. Radio did not broadcast 24 hours each day so we could do homework and read or in my case work around the ranch, always work to be done. Not on the ranch now, but still an avid reader...just thinkin'

Reply
Dec 8, 2016 14:28:32   #
pafret Loc: Northeast
 
lindajoy wrote:
Wowww, 40 years ago you already knew what a lying misfit they were...Tells me nothing has changed from then to now other than get worse!!

Was a time when impartial journalism was the expectation, was it not??

I stopped with cancelling my Sunday newspaper as it was filled with nothing but doom and gloom..I remember the day reading it and getting so frustrated I said why do I pay money to read this garbage and ruin my day??. I folded it up, canned it and called and cancelled service as well.. I also did not watch the 6pm news I always made time to see...Didn't miss a thing either...

You are right, so many other avenues if I see or hear of something I want to know about I'll turn it on to see but more times than not I get a lot more right on line or watching BBC, CSPAN etc...You dang near need to watch them all for just a basic understanding of the lies anyway...No Thank You...
Wowww, 40 years ago you already knew what a lying ... (show quote)



Back about that time there were columnists who were journalists. Walter Winchell was a society/hollywood type who could be counted on to come up with juicy scandals from time to time. Others like Westbrook Pegler covered the political scene and he had a particular hatred for Elanore Roosevelt. He constantly referred to her as La Boca Grande. The Big Mouth! Unfortunately for Elanor she had a rather large mouth so it fit, literally and figuratively.

The dean of these columnists was Jack Anderson, he hated everybody and he was enormously effective in puncturing balloons in both political camps. He bedeviled Richard Nixon to such an extent that the plumbers gang plotted to poison him in 1972. This is documented in a book by Mark Feldstein called "Poisoning the Press".

I had read an account of a session in the White House in which Nixon reportedly said "I wish somebody would get rid of him". G Gordon Liddy (the same Gordon Liddy who tries to sell gold) was present and took this as a direct order. He left the office in some haste and ran into Chuck Colson (Nixon's Chief of Staff) on his way out. Colson wanted to know what was up and Liddy told him that "the old man just told me to put a hit on Anderson". Colson had some difficulty dissuading him.

Liddy was typical of the wack jobs that Presidents surround themselves with. Gordon Liddy was the chief operative in the White House Plumbers unit during Richard Nixon's presidency. He was convicted of conspiracy, burglary, and illegal wiretapping for his role in the Watergate scandal. In an interview he was impressing a reporter with his tough guy FBI background (He was a black bag operator). He rolled up his sleeve, put a lit cigarette lighter under his arm until the stench of burning flesh made them cough, all the while staring with a stone face at the reporter.

Now if that doesn't convince you he was tough maybe he was crazy.

The French have an aphorism, "plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose". The more things change the more they stay the same!.

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