Prickly City by Scott Stantis for February 28, 2020

  1. Albert einstein brain i6
    braindead Premium Member over 4 years ago

    Same as yesterday: #TraitorTrump

    Winslow, you are now better informed than any Trump Disciple.

    .

    Some Trump Disciple will now explain that it was the Democrats who overruled CDC officials and ordered those infected with the coronavirus to be transported to the U.S. instead of being left in quarantine. And how, now that Pence is in charge, the virus will just disappear, miraculously. Unless it’s the rapture that Pence craves.

     •  Reply
  2. Img 1931
    Sanspareil  over 4 years ago

    Pence did well in his state regarding the HIV virus!

    Oh wait a minute, he didn’t!

    Never mind.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    fuzzbucket Premium Member over 4 years ago

    I can tolerate the politicians, but the hate speech bugs me. Let’s just enjoy the comics and see real news instead of some jerk telling us everybody on the other side is horrible.

     •  Reply
  4. Ironbde
    Carl  Premium Member over 4 years ago

    GIGO

     •  Reply
  5. Ignatz
    Ignatz Premium Member over 4 years ago

    Because there’s no differentiation between good information and bad information. That’s what a journalist’s job is.

    And it isn’t just Trump. They’ve been doing it for a long time now. Saying that Rush Limbaugh was as valid a source of information as NPR, for example. Newt Gingrich and the Republican Congress ended media monopoly rules for the purpose of allowing an Australian named Rupert Murdoch to own both a major newspaper and a TV station. He was also fast-tracked to citizenship so he could own an American news channel. He’d already turned British news into a pile of tabloid garbage and propaganda, so they new he’d do it here.

    I remember looking at an English newspaper in the 1980s. I couldn’t believe how awful it was. It was like the National Enquirer, except that it was a real newspaper. I didn’t think our newspapers would even get like that. I was wrong.

     •  Reply
  6. Cheshirecat chandra complg 1024
    Silly Season   over 4 years ago

    The possibility of a global pandemic will reveal our inability to make and distribute the things people need—just in time for a presidential election.

    Affluence politics is not the politics of being wealthy, though, but rather the politics of not paying attention to what creates wealth in the first place. That is to say, it’s the politics of ignoring our ability to make and distribute the things people need.

    Regardless, the end of affluence politics means focusing on whether medicine is on shelves, not bitter disputes over bloated and wasteful hospital and insurance billing departments.

    It means caring about bureaucratic competence in government, and accuracy in media, not because these are nice things to have but because they are necessary to avoid immense widespread suffering.

    It means understanding that pharmaceutical mergers that benefit shareholders while laying off scientists are destructive, not just because they are unfair, but because they make us less resilient to disease. (Shareholders, as it turns out, also have lungs.)

    Finally, it means recognizing that wealth, real wealth, is not defined by accounting games on Wall Street, but the ability to meet the needs of our own people.

    We came to these realizations once before in 1932, and created a vibrant democratic state over the following few decades—one that rapidly expanded our life spans, defeated the Nazis, and helped create Silicon Valley. The convergence of the Covid-19 outbreak and the presidential election will force us to do it once again. We’ve lived in the world of unreality for far too long.

    As Richmond Federal Reserve Bank president Tom Barkin recently put it, “Central banks can’t come up with vaccines.” It’s time to get ready for what that implies.

    https://www.wired.com/story/covid-19-will-mark-the-end-of-affluence-politics/

     •  Reply
  7. Coexist
    Bookworm  over 4 years ago

    Some Rules of Thumb I use as information filters: “They say” means “I heard it in a bar,” “I’m no expert, but . . .” means “My opinion is not based on any facts,” “It goes without saying” means “I have no idea but I’m going to say it anyway,” “Everybody knows” means “Nobody really knows,” and my personal favorite “It’s common knowledge” means “I just made it up.”

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    William Robbins Premium Member over 4 years ago

    Democratization of publishing unfortunately means you’re free to consume fantasy instead of verifiable reality.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    danielmkimmel  over 4 years ago

    Because they’re watching FOX Noise?

     •  Reply
  10. 20200905 155502
    Ryan B Premium Member over 4 years ago

    The web is just like money. Use it wisely.

     •  Reply
  11. 5f3a242a feac 42cc b507 b6590d3039f7
    Plods with ...™  over 4 years ago

    Seems people only access what makes them feel good or right.

     •  Reply
  12. Pine marten3
    martens  over 4 years ago

    I just finished “Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire” by Kurt Andersen. It traces the various strains of fantasy in the American psyche over 500 years to see how we got to where we are now.

     •  Reply
  13. Image001
    dogday Premium Member over 4 years ago

    What you get from the web is not necessarily information. It is data == unverified, unqualified, unvetted, unanalyzed, un-critiqued, it is just un-information. What you get from social media is less than that.

     •  Reply
  14. Missing large
    Wibly_Colorado Premium Member over 4 years ago

    How does the web get it’s information – the tooth fairy?

     •  Reply
  15. Popeye
    adrianrune  over 4 years ago

    One definition of information is “facts”. Unfortunately, too much of what is available on the internet has little to do with facts. And too many people are unwilling (or incapable) of determining if what is posted is accurate, true, or factual. They just find something that confirms their personal bias and accept it at face value.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Prickly City