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No News Is Good News?

Started by mongers, April 25, 2025, 05:28:55 PM

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Have you considered or tried not watching or reading about the news?

Yes, tried this
7 (33.3%)
Yes, I'm thinking about doing it.
4 (19%)
No, I consume news as part of daily life
4 (19%)
No, I'm a new junky (Languish option)
4 (19%)
Not given it any consideration at all.
2 (9.5%)

Total Members Voted: 21

Duque de Bragança

Quote from: Maladict on April 26, 2025, 08:20:35 AM
Quote from: Syt on April 26, 2025, 12:55:59 AMI avoid comment sections.

That's the trick. I have a couple of browser extensions that hide them, works pretty well.

Lemonde.fr hides them for non-subscribers which is perfect.  :P

Avoiding 24-hour news channels is easy, as well.

Bauer

Yes the 24 hour news channels, social media, and comment sections are the best things to avoid.

Also the standard associate press stuff repeats itself with little insight.  The best sources are the ones you pay for that actually put on their thinking caps.

Savonarola

Quote from: mongers on April 25, 2025, 05:28:55 PMHave you considered not listening/watching or reading about the news for an extended time?

If so what did you find were the benefits and costs?

Is there a moral position as regards being engaged with the news?

Yes, I just gave up reading the news for Lent.  The thing that really surprised me is how little changed in that time (between early March and late April.)  The wars are still going on, Trump is still making unreasonable demands on Zelensky, Trump's on again/off again tariffs are still happening, Elon Musk is still running amok, Trump is still pardoning corrupt politicians, Trump and academia are still feuding.  Each news cycle had seemed like a momentous chaotic event when viewing it in real time; but taking a few weeks off it seems the Trump administration is  more like Groundhog's Day.

So the benefit was perspective and certainly a much less stressful life.  The cost was not knowing the exact reason why my 401(k) was taking a beating (though I had a pretty good guess why.)

I do think that there is a responsibility a voting citizen has to be informed; but being hyper-connected wasn't working for me.  It probably would be best to quit reading online news entirely (other than weather reports) and just getting a subscription to The Miami Herald; but I'm not ready to take that step yet.
In Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace—and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock

mongers

Quote from: Savonarola on April 26, 2025, 03:01:01 PM
Quote from: mongers on April 25, 2025, 05:28:55 PMHave you considered not listening/watching or reading about the news for an extended time?

If so what did you find were the benefits and costs?

Is there a moral position as regards being engaged with the news?

Yes, I just gave up reading the news for Lent.  The thing that really surprised me is how little changed in that time (between early March and late April.)  The wars are still going on, Trump is still making unreasonable demands on Zelensky, Trump's on again/off again tariffs are still happening, Elon Musk is still running amok, Trump is still pardoning corrupt politicians, Trump and academia are still feuding.  Each news cycle had seemed like a momentous chaotic event when viewing it in real time; but taking a few weeks off it seems the Trump administration is  more like Groundhog's Day.

So the benefit was perspective and certainly a much less stressful life.  The cost was not knowing the exact reason why my 401(k) was taking a beating (though I had a pretty good guess why.)

I do think that there is a responsibility a voting citizen has to be informed; but being hyper-connected wasn't working for me.  It probably would be best to quit reading online news entirely (other than weather reports) and just getting a subscription to The Miami Herald; but I'm not ready to take that step yet.

Wise words, Sav.

Because I've been doing a bit of traveling in recent weeks, I've had days were I've not seen any network news programmes and because I prefer to look out of train windows rather than looking at a smartphone screen, I've had several days were I haven't read, seen or heard any news all day.

Can't say I've missed it, though I have recorded some broadcast news to catch up on later day.

And this is an evolving pattern for this month, I think I've five "No news days" out of eleven so far this month, so maybe just ignore the news every other day and possibly catch up a bit on the next day will work for me?
"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"