Five Things You Notice When You Quit the News
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.
(Raptitude.com)
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