From Vox:
We live in a media ecosystem that overwhelms people with information. Some of that information is accurate, some of it is bogus, and much of it is intentionally misleading. The result is a polity that has increasingly given up on finding out the truth. As Sabrina Tavernise and Aidan Gardiner put it in a New York Times piece, “people are numb and disoriented, struggling to discern what is real in a sea of slant, fake, and fact.” This is partly why an earth-shattering historical event like a president’s impeachment has done very little to move public opinion.
The core challenge we’re facing today is information
saturation and a hackable media system. If you follow politics at all,
you know how exhausting the environment is. The sheer volume of content,
the dizzying number of narratives and counternarratives, and the pace
of the news cycle are too much for anyone to process.
One response to this situation is to walk away and tune
everything out. After all, it takes real effort to comb through the
bullshit, and most people have busy lives and limited bandwidth. Another
reaction is to retreat into tribal allegiances. There’s
Team Liberal and Team Conservative, and pretty much everyone knows
which side they’re on. So you stick to the places that feed you the
information you most want to hear.
No comments:
Post a Comment