Non Sequitur by Wiley Miller for May 30, 2024

  1. Missing large
    rmremail  4 months ago

    Substantiated news is rare in any medium.

     •  Reply
  2. Badger 4 360
    sirbadger  4 months ago

    It looks like traffic lights and parking meter in a pedestrian plaza. I don’t see a street.

     •  Reply
  3. Figaro 1
    Wilde Bill  4 months ago

    As long as it conforms to what I already believe, I call it substantiated.

     •  Reply
  4. Unnamed
    The dude from FL  Premium Member 4 months ago

    A lot of people like their news straight out of trumps butt

     •  Reply
  5. 3dflags usaal1 5
    Alabama Al  4 months ago

    In the “Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News Network” defamation case, FOX News admitted that the news network knowingly lied about voter fraud and a lot more. One might have thought that FOX News’ credibility would have plummeted … but no. That confession doesn’t seem to have fazed the average FOX News viewer in the slightest.

    Fox News Network said they did the misreporting about the 2020 election because they feared if they didn’t their viewers would defect to another conservative news network, where the “reality” was more palatable.

     •  Reply
  6. 1628996 t1
    enigmamz  4 months ago

    No market for this.

     •  Reply
  7. Brain guy dancing hg clr
    Concretionist  4 months ago

    Our local potentially paper paper has now raised it’s subscription for ONLINE readers to more than $1 per day. ($36.95 if I recall, which I don’t, clearly). Spouse is considering whether it’s worth it, since there’s not even a usable crossword puzzle (the pen that marks on the screen is REALLY hard to clean off).

     •  Reply
  8. Patches
    Its just me  4 months ago

    I’ve often seen where war pics etc are either verified or not verified.

     •  Reply
  9. Bluedog
    Bilan  4 months ago

    TV news can be just as sensationalistic as social media these days.

     •  Reply
  10. Trollspry
    Enter.Name.Here  4 months ago

    Sensationalism sells.

     •  Reply
  11. Crop
    Olden Woof Premium Member 4 months ago

    Unfortunately.

     •  Reply
  12. 2006 afl collingwood
    nosirrom  4 months ago

    A slow business day every day.

     •  Reply
  13. Img 0536
    akachman Premium Member 4 months ago

    Sad but true. Give me the NYT any day of the week.

     •  Reply
  14. Mr haney
    NeedaChuckle Premium Member 4 months ago

    Republicans are up in arms as the FCC is trying to stop Fake AI posts about Biden.

     •  Reply
  15. Missing large
    Mainesailah Premium Member 4 months ago

    Do they still have those news sales booths on the streets of major cities anymore? (I don’t get out much these days.)

     •  Reply
  16. Th 9
    Count Olaf Premium Member 4 months ago

    For many people today (we know who you are) News is substantiated specifically by seeing it on the internet.

     •  Reply
  17. Ignatz
    Ignatz Premium Member 4 months ago

    Part of the problem is that print media has largely decided they don’t want to do that anymore. If a politician says it, they uncritically repeat it. They’re stenographers, not reporters.

     •  Reply
  18. Ss 100419 volcano lightning 05.ss full
    chaosed2  4 months ago

    Ever notice that there is a small but very vocal group on these message boards that spend way too much time exclusively attacking one party/person? Many of them are even premium members – it’s almost like they are working on an agenda to try to influence voters ahead of the election by making it seem public opinion is different than it really is.

     •  Reply
  19. 0023
    GentlemanBill  4 months ago

    Substantiated by whom?

     •  Reply
  20. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  4 months ago

    My name for some kinds of social media is sucker media. Recent studies show that the most negatively affected are children between the ages of 4 and 14. They can become both victim and antagonist. Another article points out that, when schools began requiring phones to be put into shielded pouches and locked until end of day, student social interaction and behaviors improved in a very obvious fashion. They stopped ‘anticipating’ a post from a friend and also ‘dreading’ a derogatory post from another person. They stopped being prey for hunters and trolls. Their classroom attention spans improved.

    One can only hope that these changes will spread across elementary and secondary systems and that they will become the theme for newer generations.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    dflak  4 months ago

    I get my news from a news feed that normally carries several versions of the same story from various sources. I could not do that with a newsPAPER.

    However, there are some stories of interest that I have to dig deep to find.

    My best approach is the “shotgun” my viewing across various news sources so the bot doesn’t serve me up the point of view it thinks I have. Besides I like to see what lies FOX News is printing on any given day.

     •  Reply
  22. Panda 2024
    Redd Panda  4 months ago

    I call these poor fools Phone Zombies . It seems they’re always searching for something and seldom finding it.

     •  Reply
  23. Missing large
    tenebraesum  4 months ago

    As Captain Eddieonce said ‘if technology’s not a good then how come folks is always praying to the phones?’

     •  Reply
  24. Morning cuppa
    Wizard of Ahz-no relation  4 months ago

    wiley is getting really grim in his tone over the last few months

     •  Reply
  25. Missing large
    david_42  4 months ago

    And it’s all behind firewalls. At least with physical newspapers and magazines you could buy one to sample the writing. Now you have to buy a year’s subscription to read a single article.

     •  Reply
  26. Images
    BilboDaddy  4 months ago

    Wouldn’t that be something? Just imagine…

     •  Reply
  27. Jax 1
    ms-ss  4 months ago

    Sunday night, our local TV station had exactly one news story in the half-hour show. They had weather, one news story, more weather, “veteran salute,” and sports analysis. Interspersed in this they had at least 10 commercials for injury lawyers, 6 for furniture stores, 8 for medications to cure diseases you never heard of, 4 car dealers. Then came the ending banter, “we’re all out of time for tonight.”

     •  Reply
  28. 250px wallace and gromit
    majkmushrm Premium Member 4 months ago

    Substantiated news – as approved by the US government.

     •  Reply
  29. Missing large
    phileaux  4 months ago

    Nuff said

     •  Reply
  30. Screenshot 20180802 120401 samsung internet
    Kurtass Premium Member 4 months ago

    Fake news, it goes against my bias.

     •  Reply
  31. Triscele
    txmystic  4 months ago

    #sad

     •  Reply
  32. 1
    John Lamb Premium Member 4 months ago

    So, neither Facebook nor Truth Social.

     •  Reply
  33. Missing large
    tpcox928  4 months ago

    There’s the rub: The only news most people get is false. Read a newspaper, listen to the national news.

     •  Reply
  34. Clipboard 1
    Rista  4 months ago

    I terminated my TV with extreme prejudice in 1994, I have never missed it. I learned in 2010 just how easy it was to hack FB and other social media) when I watched my supervisor casually asking a coworker to “use the spider” and check on what a potential new hire really believed. Asked coworker what a “spider” was and it had nothing to do with arachnids. It was a small easy to use program that could dig behind FB’s password wall with amazing ease. Yes, it’s illegal, no they weren’t and won’t ever be prosecuted. 10 minutes after her comment to the coworker he had the potential new hire’s passworded FB account up on screen and was digging to see what all they’d liked or tagged. Scary… This comic site is about as far as I go into social media now.

     •  Reply
  35. Kirby close up with poppies behind   close cropped
    mistercatworks  4 months ago

    This is why “professional wrestling” gets monumentally higher ratings than Olympic Greco-Roman wrestling.

     •  Reply
  36. Pupil
    Ka`ōnōhi`ula`okahōkūmiomio`ehiku Premium Member 4 months ago

    Smartphones are the dumbest idea yet.

     •  Reply
  37. Missing large
    leemorse9777  4 months ago

    In breaking news, what Harry and Meghan had for breakfast and the latest Kardasian event.

     •  Reply
  38. Missing large
    LNER4472 Premium Member 4 months ago

    Here’s a simple but “inconvenient” fact:

    News outlets choose what qualifies as “substantiated,” and what news to even bother to substantiate, let alone run.

    Further, news “consumers” will choose what “news” to believe uncritically and what “news” requires “substantiation,” accepting some sources without hesitation while condemning others as “biased” or “lying.” (As seen in these comments.)

    News “bias” is largely executed by decision of what news to cover and how thoroughly, and which news is to be excluded as “inconsequential” or irrelevant TO ITS AUDIENCE. A decision not to report on the bankruptcy of a small company in Thailand or Belgium? Irrelevant to nearly all Americans. A decision not to report on Hunter Biden’s laptop? Bias. A decision to repeatedly being up repeatedly alleged (and ultimately unproven) “Russian collusion” with Trump? Whatever it was, it wasn’t “news.”

     •  Reply
  39. Missing large
    KevinCarson  4 months ago

    Actually a news story at a major newspaper of record, or any other news source, that’s linked in a social media post is just as substantiated as the same story if it’s read anywhere else. The problem lies with the reader and their lack of critical thinking capacity.

     •  Reply
  40. Missing large
    sincavage05  4 months ago

    Some of my gratest memories are of reading the sunday comics, in color, pages spread out on the floor. Can’t do that with a computer screen.

     •  Reply
  41. Profile 6
    dot-the-I  4 months ago

    “Trust, but verify,” a traditional Russian language rhyme taught by Suzanne Massie, a scholar of Russian history, to Ronald Reagan.

    Nowadays, it should be, “Do not trust and always verify.”

     •  Reply
  42. Camera1 016
    keenanthelibrarian  4 months ago

    I think the newspaper-seller has shut the barn door after the horse has bolted.

     •  Reply
  43. Amazing fox photos 25
    eddi-TBH  4 months ago

    I’m amazed he’s still open.

     •  Reply
  44. Missing large
    sisterea  4 months ago

    lots of sources out there, sample them all, only way to have hope of actually getting the facts.

     •  Reply
  45. Missing large
    aunt granny  4 months ago

    There is no such thing as substantiated news.   The best you can do is to find two news outlets sponsored by tribes that hate each other’s guts.   If they agree, there’s an off chance that it really happened.

     •  Reply
  46. 1682106 inline inline 2 mel brooks master
    Can't Sleep  4 months ago

    Reality is getting harder and harder to find these days. Look at that guy who was on trial – he bribed a porn star he slept with and lied again and again about it, and then compared himself favorably to Mother Theresa. Reality ended where he opened his mouth.

     •  Reply
  47. Straycat 1
    MFRXIM Premium Member 4 months ago

    It’s tempting to see how FOXis covering the verdict… but, nah!

     •  Reply
  48. Img 0634
    Beowulf 406 Premium Member 4 months ago

    Getting very hard to find; and now you don’t even know if you’re reading legitimate lies of random junk pull from the air by some artificial “intelligence”.

     •  Reply
  49. Missing large
    aussie399 Premium Member about 1 month ago

    As the ridiculous left, and the loony right, say, never let the facts get in the way of a good story

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Non Sequitur