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  3. How do you keep up to date on current events?

How do you keep up to date on current events?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Asklemmy
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  • H [email protected]

    A combination of Lemmy and The Economist.

    The Economist is very anti-Russian, but I find they don't pull punches regarding how economic policy will fuck with the working class in Western countries.

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    Guest
    wrote on last edited by
    #17

    Rolling Stone is good too sort of in that regard.

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    • S [email protected]

      There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

      To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

      So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

      curlywurlies4all@slrpnk.netC This user is from outside of this forum
      curlywurlies4all@slrpnk.netC This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote on last edited by
      #18

      I use an RSS app called Feeder, and Lemmy. I find I go back to The Conversation a lot as I find it covers topics in a calm tone of voice and with a level of academic rigor that I appreciate.

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      • S [email protected]

        There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

        To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

        So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

        S This user is from outside of this forum
        S This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by
        #19

        Keep a tab of text.npr.org open and occasionally peruse it. No pictures, no ads, and what I perceive to be less sensationalistic.

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        • S [email protected]

          There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

          To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

          So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

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          Guest
          wrote on last edited by
          #20

          I enjoy Democracy Now, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Zeteo, Dropsite News, and some others.

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          • S [email protected]

            There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

            To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

            So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

            ? Offline
            ? Offline
            Guest
            wrote on last edited by
            #21

            my boy Philip DeFranco has never led me astray

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            • S [email protected]

              There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

              To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

              So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

              0xtero@beehaw.org0 This user is from outside of this forum
              0xtero@beehaw.org0 This user is from outside of this forum
              [email protected]
              wrote on last edited by
              #22

              I generally try to use RSS feeds, but I've come to realize this doesn't really work too well with current-/world news, because it becomes a firehose that drowns my entire feed. So these days, I just have my other interests in RSS feeds and use the BBC and The Guardian front pages to quickly get a summary of current events. I also visit my local newspaper site for headlines (they put their stuff behind paywall though, so it's just headlines).

              I've culled my social media to Lemmy and Mastodon and I use pretty aggressive word filtering on Mastodon to get rid of topics I'm not very interested in.

              It's not perfect by no means, but I haven't really found anything else that works. I wish I had some better way to follow European and African news and commentary, but everything (apart from manually visiting sites) seems to always result in a firehose of news that drowns all other sources.

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              • S [email protected]

                There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

                To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

                So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

                N This user is from outside of this forum
                N This user is from outside of this forum
                [email protected]
                wrote on last edited by
                #23

                what a great way to Segway to our sponsor grind news

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                • curlywurlies4all@slrpnk.netC [email protected]

                  I use an RSS app called Feeder, and Lemmy. I find I go back to The Conversation a lot as I find it covers topics in a calm tone of voice and with a level of academic rigor that I appreciate.

                  E This user is from outside of this forum
                  E This user is from outside of this forum
                  [email protected]
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #24

                  I use Feeder, but even with filters to try and remove as much stuff as I'm not interested in, there's still too much for me to keep up with. I imported all my feeds to Nunti to filter things down more. Nunti allows you to either upvote or downvote articles, and that information is used by the app with a transparent, relatively simple algorithm to try to predict what type of things you want to see vs don't want to see. It doesn't give much priority to breaking news, and it doesn't have the article snippets or built in reader mode like Feeder does, so i still use Feeder.

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                  • S [email protected]

                    There's so much so-called "news", but most of it is just noise. In this situation, it seems easiest to either A) get consumed by it, trying to follow everything and reading every "he said what?"-piece posted or B) become more or less apathetic and avoid news altogether.

                    To be able to make proper choices and help move things in the right direction, B) is not an option, as you need to understand current events to at least a minimal level, but A) leaves you just as clueless, overflowing with useless information, with a heavily worn-down ability to be source critical, not remembering where you read any given "fact".

                    So how do you keep up to date with current events? Have you found a good way? Am I mistaken in my above assessment?

                    yogthos@lemmy.mlY This user is from outside of this forum
                    yogthos@lemmy.mlY This user is from outside of this forum
                    [email protected]
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #25

                    I find I like to follow what analysts like Ben Norton report to get some context around the news. I evaluate whom I pay attention to based on their track record, and how well their predictions align with the way things actually developed.

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                    • 0xtero@beehaw.org0 [email protected]

                      I generally try to use RSS feeds, but I've come to realize this doesn't really work too well with current-/world news, because it becomes a firehose that drowns my entire feed. So these days, I just have my other interests in RSS feeds and use the BBC and The Guardian front pages to quickly get a summary of current events. I also visit my local newspaper site for headlines (they put their stuff behind paywall though, so it's just headlines).

                      I've culled my social media to Lemmy and Mastodon and I use pretty aggressive word filtering on Mastodon to get rid of topics I'm not very interested in.

                      It's not perfect by no means, but I haven't really found anything else that works. I wish I had some better way to follow European and African news and commentary, but everything (apart from manually visiting sites) seems to always result in a firehose of news that drowns all other sources.

                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                      S This user is from outside of this forum
                      [email protected]
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #26

                      I wonder if this could be a good use-case for an LLM: feed it that fire-hose of an RSS-feed and have it group and spit out a short and sweet summary per group with the original links. It's something I would want from actual journalists, but while they are busy writing about Trump's latest tweet, this might be a usable substitute?

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