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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1986033-Kits-Korner/day/9-3-2019
Rated: 13+ · Book · Inspirational · #1986033
I’d rather write than talk. Nobody interrupts! Posting monthly or less now--see below.
My original purpose for this blog, which I started in August of 2019, was to see if I could maintain consistency, to discover what I want to write about, and to find my writing voice. In January, I started a "niche-less" blog at Wordpress.com where I've published weekly. -- Kit’s Kontemplations  .
--

I'm preparing to start a Catholic blog on Wordpress.com where I'll post weekly, and another site to put the rest of my writing. I also want to spend more time reading other blogs and offering thoughtful comments, both here on WDC and elsewhere. At most, I will publish once a month at no set time in this blog starting in September of 2020.

Thank you to those who have read and rated any posts on this blog. I really appreciate it.

I did NOT want to write “about” me on this blog. I wanted to share my interests, discoveries and maybe a few useful insights. If anything I've written helps even one person, whether or not they respond to the post, then this blog has been successful.
September 3, 2019 at 4:20pm
September 3, 2019 at 4:20pm
#965486
It would be hard enough to motivate myself to follow the news if I could trust either what I read or watch. According to Pew Research, U.S. adults blame political leaders and activists for creating fake news and they hold journalists responsible for not fixing the problem. The needs of the news media industry and government leaders are combined in the generation of fake news. The media needs the drama and the government leaders need the appearance of resolving crises.



What hinders truthfulness in the news:

*Bullet* It is driven by the “attention economy” rather than by the motive of providing accurate and unbiased information

*Bullet*It is either “advocacy journalism or peddling crisis and controversy”. This article by a Catholic author who gave up news and social media for Lent, contains some very thought-provoking quotes by G.K. Chesterton.http://blog.adw.org/2013/07/unplugged-but-not-uninformed-pondering-how-to-stay-i...

*Bullet*The motive behind the content is to appeal to the target audience

Certain facts are emphasized, others are eliminated, conjecture is used to fill in the spaces left between facts, panel discussions are one-sided, and so on. All of this is done to appeal to the target audience, which makes sense economically but creates the negative externality of a national discourse devoid of a common set of facts and a reliable judge of what is and is not True. —http://www.aei.org/publication/advice-to-news-consumers-keep-your-head-on-a-swiv...


Though I know it is important to be informed, I am not yet willing to sacrifice any of my activities to consume news that I can’t trust for accuracy. I have never given time to actively pursuing the news, believing that if there is really important news that I need to know, it will find me through the conversations I hear around me. I will never be a news junkie, but I realize that I should find a balance between constant consumption and absolute avoidance.



Monique from Ottawa, Canada

No matter what, WRITE!




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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1986033-Kits-Korner/day/9-3-2019