this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2024
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I disagree. Back in maybe the 60s the public broadcast networks were not fully beholden to investors, did not have competition from the internet, and didn't have to do 24 hours of news. As a result, they had time to do responsible reporting. The current power structure encourages news media to do whatever it takes to grab your attention and hold it, and the best way to do that is fear.
I have not fully cut out the news from my life. There are some channels on YouTube that do good reporting like Sir Swag and of course Phillip DeFranco.
Another thing to point out is that, assuming you are American, we are in an election year. News companies really ramp up the fear mongering on election years.
What part are you disagreeing with? We sound the same, kinda, to me.
I don't think the amount of information is the problem, just the way it is presented to us.
IMHO, my mental health improved significantly after substituting Lemmy for Reddit and Mastodon for facebook/insta/etc. Or maybe I've just gotten better at being unattached to digital life and social pressure
Well, I'll say this much.
You certainly know how to gling.
Thats a reference to a relatively famous linguistics study lol. A bunch of children were given questions such as "This is a man who knows how to gling. He is glinging. He did the same thing yesterday. Yesterday he _____." or presenting them with a wug and then asking what the plural of wug is. The children had very consistent answers to these nonsense grammar questions, showing that grammar rules are mainly learned through experience instead of being memorized for each word.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
relatively famous linguistics study
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Huh! I might have guessed that, but it's always good to get a study to back up things.
So, "I have glinged", or "I have glung?"
Glang was common, but so was glinged.