I’m enjoying Lemmy so far, for the most part.

Everything here is pretty good save for the fact that all the news and politics I can find is dominated by the same few accounts.

Half or more of the accounts have a very clear agenda. They modify headlines. Lie. Spread disinformation. And generally are just extremely toxic groups.

It doesn’t seem to be a secret here either. And moderators appear to have no interest in putting a stop to it.

So, where are you subbed to for reliable news and US/Global politics?

  • Meow.tar.gz
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    13411 months ago

    More to the point: where does anybody go for any reliable news? It seems like most news is now using hyperbole to make it entertainment. We have old man Rupert to thank for basically destroying a respected profession. That’s my 0.02 anyhow.

    • Frank J. Zamboni
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      10811 months ago

      While not perfect AP and Reuters are ok. The news they report is honest but their shortcoming is what they don’t report.

      • @[email protected]
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        4611 months ago

        This is how I do it as well. In general, understanding the overall bias of each news organization is more important to keeping yourself informed. You can combat the echo chamber effect by knowing what the biases of each source is and using differing sourcing to try to get as complete a picture as you can.

        I would add to your list to check BBC, Al Jazeera, and NPR if you’re US focused.

      • @PeleSpirit
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        deleted by creator

      • Meow.tar.gz
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        711 months ago

        Those are pretty good examples. They are still not great places to go but they certainly suck a whole lot less than the others. Hell, even the weather is now being reported as entertainment.

      • MrPear
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        711 months ago

        I wish for AP to have RSS feeds, but they don’t. I think they and Reuters are aome of the better outlets out there and I’ve been (re)discovering RSS lately, but AP is one of the few news outlets that don’t seem to support it :(

        • @pensivepangolin
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          611 months ago

          RSSbridge may have you covered there! They’ve got a bunch of instances running you can check!

          • @[email protected]
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            411 months ago

            Quite right, AP do have rss news feeds (rsshub is one - amongst others) - there are posts on lemmy related to this topic.

          • MrPear
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            411 months ago

            Interesting! I’m going to look into it, thanks!

    • @Zarxrax
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      2911 months ago

      I find these two to be good for finding sources with different perspectives:

      https://www.allsides.com/

      https://ground.news/

      After some time, you might see that there are a few specific sites that you like, and you can just start going to them directly.

      • @HailHodor
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        1511 months ago

        +1 to Ground News. I browsed them with a free account for a short time before subscribing to the middle tier. Their tools are really terrific at getting me to look at multiple sides of the same stories, and the blind spot feature is fantastic. I’ve been very satisfied with it and go to it multiple times a day.

      • @[email protected]
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        611 months ago

        The Flipside is also excellent at providing balanced views and counterpoints. It’s a newsletter rather than a site though. (Full disclosure: that’s a referral link. I figured why not).

        I’m also partial to The Week which also presents a wide array of views - though it admittedly leans left.

    • Kalkaline
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      611 months ago

      AP and Reuters run the stories and everyone adds their opinions on top of that, or they rehash some Twitter thread. NPR tends to take those news stories and at least bring in competent analysts in to speak about them. I’d stick with those 3, for the most “fair” view of the happenings in the world.

    • Marks
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      111 months ago

      I subscribe to WSJ, NYT, WAPO, and my local newspaper. You need to read all sides of a story in order to get a reliable take.

      Also recommend: Memeorandum to see multiple sources to same story.

  • @utopianfiat
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    13311 months ago

    Half or more of the accounts have a very clear agenda.

    Everyone has an agenda; if this makes you uncomfortable, strengthen your critical thinking skills.

    The desire for a neutral source is a desire to stop thinking critically about the information you consume.

    • 5 Card Draw
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      5011 months ago

      Well said and yea if you find a “unbiased source” for news, you’ve only fallen for their bias.

      Be critical even of what interests you, and read things you don’t like as well.

      • @[email protected]
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        1311 months ago

        This is just wrong as a general statement.

        Across the world there are a lot of news sources that give their best to be neutral and objective.

        • @OhthereyouareOP
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          1011 months ago

          After reading all the comments here I’m starting to realize that Lemmy is very jaded. Explains why things are such a mess maybe.

            • @[email protected]
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              2811 months ago

              They focus on America, as such have a broadly Western bias. Are they less biased than others? Probably. But you cannot report the news without some form of bias. The act of looking at an event and deciding what facts to include and what to leave out introduces some level of bias. As it is impossible to include every detail of an event, especially in text form, you’ll end up with a biased retelling

              • @[email protected]
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                411 months ago

                Almost all of the news sources around the world have news sites. I cannot keep up unless I only read those sites that have excellent reputations for being factual. Al Jazerra, BBC, The Guardian, the Independent, LeMonde, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washinton Post are on my political list. (Yes, it leans left). Credibility problem has made it harder to find right sources that I can trust.

                My favorite lists are for STEM subjects. Facts, science and economics will shape how our world looks. Facts are the focus in this realm. If I only looked at Pulitzer Prize winners, I would have a good list

                FWIW, my bias is our environment. Screwing that up makes most other biases moot.

                • @[email protected]
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                  811 months ago

                  You listed a bunch of neoliberal ideology reinforcing news sources and then said you lean left. If those are your news sources you’re on the right my friend.

            • @praz4lemmy
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              511 months ago

              And the BBC (though I know there are some concerns about their UK coverage)

          • @SomeoneElse
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            611 months ago

            Ground news is pretty good.

            • @[email protected]
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              611 months ago

              I love ground news. But they just give you information on the bias of their sources, they aren’t unbiased themselves. You get a better picture but you are still getting it from biased sources

              • @SomeoneElse
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                311 months ago

                True. It’s interesting to read a right leaning perspective and a left leaning one of the same story though.

                • @[email protected]
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                  211 months ago

                  the theory that neutrality is objective is fucking mind numbing. the right wing reactionary perspective is never, has never been, and will never be grounded in anything resembling facts. they consistently disregard actual evidence to promote bigotry and divide the working class.

        • @Viking_Hippie
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          That’s something that a lot of people miss, though: in many cases you can’t be both neutral and objective. If one assessment of an issue is objectively true and the other is preposterous, neutrality itself is a subjective bias.

          Non-exhaustive list of topics where a false equivalence neutrality actually distorts reality: climate change, evolution of the species; poverty and the roots thereof; racism and other discrimination; crime and the “justice” system in general.

    • @[email protected]
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      1911 months ago

      Why is everyone talking to me as if I have no idea what I’m doing?

      This whole thread has such a weird feel. Everyone is acting as if it’s the media’s fault that people on Lemmy are modifying headlines and posting lies.

      The media isn’t perfect. Not by a long shot. But, there’s sources you can trust, for the most part. As far as I’m concerned, at this moment, Lemmy is devoid of anything reliable.

      I suppose if that’s what Lemmy is, then maybe it just isn’t the place for me.

      • @Lifecoach5000
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        911 months ago

        Yeah I’m not sure why you’re getting the biz from some on here. I am in your camp. I like reading articles posted on lemmy or Reddit and then I also like to read the comments and people’s take on the article. Discussion is why we’re here to begin with.

        • @OhthereyouareOP
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          311 months ago

          Exactly yes. A well moderated news aggregation site is valuable.

          Comments can be insightful. That was the difference between Reddit and the rest. Reddit had its problems to be sure. But, in an imperfect world, it was a good place to stay informed on topics with input that “sometimes” adds value.

          I’m not worried about “bias” because fox news is right and NPR is left. Everyone in here acting like we’re incapable of digesting information.

          The problem here on Lemmy is that you nefarious actors running around unchecked

      • @nieceandtows
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        211 months ago

        I used to go to moderatepolitics on Reddit to get a balanced take on both sides. I think there’s a moderatepolitics here too.

        • @KombatWombat
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          311 months ago

          Neutralnews was also good for stuff that isn’t necessarily political. They were very involved in evaluating source bias and fact-checking on reddit. Sadly there doesn’t seem to be an active community in the fediverse that I can see.

      • @PineapplePartisan
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        211 months ago

        Lemmy is no better or different than Reddit when it comes to astroturfing from political activists, state actors, and a variety of other groups. The astroturfers don’t care one whit about community standards or any lofty altruistic goals of the Lemmy community. They are simply here to sway opinion and shout down opposing views. Your best option is just to block all communities that are even tangentially related to politics.

        I will be happy once regex blocks are available. That way I can recreate what I had at Reddit to block almost all political posts.

      • @WindyRebel
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        111 months ago

        In a way, it kind of is. For a long time now the media has figured out the clickbait and enraging headlines get clicks, so that’s been the norm. The public then does the same to convince people to click in and read their posts.

      • @_cerpin_taxt_
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        111 months ago

        Yeah, I really don’t understand why OP is getting so much flak from condescending assholes on here. OP just asked where the reliable news is on Lemmy; not for a lecture on media bias. This place is starting to feel pretty toxic already.

      • @FlickOfTheBean
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        011 months ago

        I’m going to sound mean, but it’s because you sound like you’re lost. If reliability and neutrality are what you’re looking for, traditional media is the place for you. The internet should be treated as a propaganda machine first and foremost.

        If you thought traditional media was bad, imagine all the pitfalls of traditional media but with fewer guardrails. That’s what the internet is.

        You seem to expect more rigidity than what is required here, and few people will be rigid of their own accord.

        All that said, if you want to spin up your own instance and run a moderate politics/no headline modification news feed, no one can stop you, and I’m sure at least a few people would come with you. Lemmy is what you make it, but it takes doing to make it so, you know?

        Tldr; don’t let your dreams be memes, this is a diy community at heart right now, you have infinite potential to create this thing that you want to have.

        • @OhthereyouareOP
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          111 months ago

          Honestly, I’m surprised. Lemmy seems to lean towards the older demographic of the internet. But the collective maturity of Lemmy doesn’t seem to match the age of the userbase. For now anyway.

        • @S_204
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          111 months ago

          If reliability and neutrality are what you’re looking for, traditional media is the place for you.

          Lololol. I’m hardly a conspiracy guy but this is pretty hilarious all things considered. Other than AP, what Western news organization is neutral?

  • @[email protected]
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    3311 months ago

    I would argue trying to find news on social media is the big mistake. It’s absolutely bad on Lemmy, but it’s not that much better on other platforms. Any story that isn’t a “win” for the larger portion of people on the platform will naturally struggle to get attention.

    There’s a whole rabbit hole to go down in trying to find a way to get a solid, rounded and accurate view of current events, but imo step one should be to throw away social media as a news source. It’s only popular because the algorithms on other platforms will tell people what they want to hear.

    • @[email protected]
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      311 months ago

      God damn that’s a great point.

      News is only remotely viable when done by a professional organization that at least tries to be impartial. You don’t want your news to be filtered by upvotes at the end of the day. Never really considered that.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      Yup, especially on sites like Reddit or Lemmy where voting exists. The news you see will be the news that agrees with the majority opinion of the site. This isn’t inherently negative as long as one is aware of it, but it seems too many people are unaware of their own echo chambers.

  • Butt Pirate
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    2411 months ago

    Easy. Don’t get your news from social media.

    Get your news from Reuters or The AP or something. Come to social media to discuss the news but step 0 is go somewhere else.

  • @colonial
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    2411 months ago

    This is unhelpful, but… I just don’t look at the news. If something actually important happens, I’ll hear about it indirectly and go look it up if I care, but I’ve found that not being tapped into the news (and especially political news) all day every day does wonders for my mental health.

    • @kenbw2
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      811 months ago

      Same

      If you don’t read the news, you’re uninformed. If you read the news, you’re misinformed

  • @[email protected]
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    2211 months ago

    Probably not what you want to hear but I’ve been absolutely bombarded with the right wing perspective my entire life and I’m pretty glad to have a place that doesn’t try to both sides everything. Where do I get my news? Twitter mostly I come here if I want to see something discussed further

  • @[email protected]
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    2011 months ago

    As others have said, you have to think critically about every piece of news you read. Ask yourself what the opposite side on a story might think, or look for an alternative opinion. If you’re reading an article in The Economist, read an article in Le Monde Diplomatique on the same subject. If you’re reading something about Russia in the Washington Post, read an article in RT on the same topic. Think critically, and the truth is likely somewhere between the two opposing points.

    International mass media is a form of soft power for countries to exert influence. It’s not a conspiracy it’s a tool available to governments which is why you have the BBC, CGTN, RT, PressTV, CBC, etc. That the mass media in the USA is mostly private doesn’t change that fact and make it more independent, because the USA is essentially an ogliopoly.

    • @OhthereyouareOP
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      -611 months ago

      Did you apply your critical thinking to this answer?

      If you did, I’m gonna have to advise you to take your own advice, since this answer in no way answers the question.

      So, if I think critically, the truth is somewhere in the middle?

      • @[email protected]
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        611 months ago

        Apologies if I said something to invite your passive aggressive response. You do seem quite passively calling out a few accounts but won’t mention them, I’m curious as to your politics now. Do you think it works like your neighborhood association where if you don’t say the word that people will get it and it will protect you from revealing your bias?

        • @OhthereyouareOP
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          -211 months ago

          You came here and explained a bunch of nonsense. That’s why you got a passive aggressive response.

          Your comment is not only jaded and wrong, but it’s also not what I asked. You just came here to pontificate about your conspiracy theories about the media.

          Which, for the record, is exactly sort of stuff this post was inspired by. Hyperbole and dribble. You didn’t say anything of substance. You just talked down to me and rambled on about how nobody can trust the news. And that, is nonsense.

          • @[email protected]
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            611 months ago

            Replace the word “news” with “historical document” and OP is discussing how to conduct academic research.

            • @OhthereyouareOP
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              -211 months ago

              Man, this whole thread has tried my patience. It’s as if not a single Lemmy user thinks that current events are worth following.

              I’m not sure where everyone is getting their information, but this response is sorta terrifying.

              • @[email protected]
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                311 months ago

                Current events are certainly worth following and Lemmy could be a great place to add comments, ask questions and find additional context. A bot to scrape a relevant subreddit if content is needed.

                Complaining about bias is what I was addressing. You can get unbiased media. Al-jazeera is surprisingly good for world news.

                • @_cerpin_taxt_
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                  011 months ago

                  Isn’t Al-Jazeera a state-owned Saudi network? I’d trust them about as much as RT, Fox, CNN, or TikTok.

                • @OhthereyouareOP
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                  -111 months ago

                  I wasn’t complaining about bias though. That’s the thing. I was asking for reliable news aggregation on Lemmy. Big difference

                  Nobody here seems to understand that though. Or, very few.

                  I know news is bias. That isn’t the point. It’s the posting of blogs, YouTube videos, altering headlines, using alts to brigade voting and push an agenda… Here, on Lemmy, not in the media.

                  The media is a known commodity. If I read an MSN article, I know their bias. If I read a fox news article, I definitely know their bias.

                  A bunch of edgy “communists” and qanon accounts manipulating the large news and politics community ON LEMMY is the point. Not the news

          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            You didn’t say anything of substance.

            He actually did but your mind is rejecting it.

            Nobody can trust the news. That’s not nonsense, it’s a fact. There are no reliable news sources.

            You can either deal with it or pretend that the source you find most comforting is the absolute truth and totally unbiased. But then you’d be lying to yourself, which is usually what makes people get defensive 🤔

            • @OhthereyouareOP
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              -511 months ago

              Your definition of the word fact is seriously questionable.

              • @[email protected]
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                -111 months ago

                What is the news? How can you arrive at a definition of what constitutes the news without introducing bias?

                • @OhthereyouareOP
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                  411 months ago

                  Okay. Fine. So, what is the solution then?

                  Nobody should pay attention to anything? Where should I get my information? Should I visit all the people and ask them?

                  How am I going to find out what happened today at the NATO Summit? Should I have gone to Lithuania and attended the summit in person?

                  Is it alright if I read the article on NPR that explains what legislation past the Senate in the US? Or do I need to go visit the Senate myself so I can eliminate NPR’s bias?

                  I’m very interested in science. Climate change and physics specifically. Where should I find out about the latest discoveries in science? Do I need to read all of the journals myself? Cuz, if so, I’m fucked. I don’t have that sort of time.

                  And, admittedly, even though I consider myself well informed, I’m just not up to speed on all of the equations in astrophysics. So, now, I’m really fucked. Do I need to know a physicist personally so I can ask them?

  • @Master167
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    1411 months ago

    I read the Newsletters from NPR and Morning Brew. If something catches my eye, I’ll look it up on ground.news then find something marked “center” to get more details.

    • @OhthereyouareOP
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      1611 months ago

      But, isn’t that sort of the point of Lemmy? Link aggregation?

      I’ve been going to all the individual sites as well since leaving Reddit. But, only because the news and politics culture in Lemmy is so atrocious.

      Despite its faults, Reddit did an okay job of moderation. It’s a shit show here. The posts are all either bots or edgy 8th graders from troll communities. It’s a mess.

      • @PeleSpirit
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        deleted by creator

        • @OhthereyouareOP
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          Ha, man, finally, 20 comments in and someone understands the question.

          Based on all the responses so far I’m assuming a well moderated place doesn’t exist on Lemmy yet, which is disappointing. I was hoping I just hadn’t discovered it yet.

          • @PeleSpirit
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          • @[email protected]
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            211 months ago

            Yeah, it just doesn’t really exist yet. I’m not sure a really well-moderated community for news content can exist yet on Lemmy, due to the culture that’s slowly springing up, but if it did it’d have to be on a dedicated instance, I expect - one with a very, very dedicated set of moderators with relatively strict rules regarding what is sufficiently-well-sourced content, and all other communities on the instance being held up to the same bar in their specific niches in order to encourage that kind of posting culture.

            Honestly, I don’t think Reddit ever achieved a really good result either - the news subreddits were all dumpster fires to varying degrees - but Lemmy’s immaturity worsens the issue here, I think. It’s pretty appallingly obvious. I’d look elsewhere for news opinion aggregation, for the time being.

            • @OhthereyouareOP
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              111 months ago

              I think Reddit did a better job than you give them credit for. The may not have achieved eutopia, but they outperform all others who’ve tried up until this point.

              Lemmy has more promise than Reddit, IMO, for well moderated news aggregation because they’ve seen the reddit model and can replicate it without the bondage of Reddit administration.

              The problem, as it seems to me currently, is that Lemmy, specifically in the news and politics realm, lacks moderation of any quality. And, that’s not necessarily a shot at moderators either. They’re either new to the roll or there aren’t enough of them.

              They also don’t have the benefit of year of users bitching and shaping the rules that govern a community, as Reddit has had.

            • @OhthereyouareOP
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              111 months ago

              Kind of, yes? I’ve commented on it more than once here.

              This is the point you’re missing. Although, I guess I’m glad you’ve stuck around… For some reason…

              A place where you have a variety of well vetted sources. A place where you don’t have to wade through a sea of “Hunter Biden’s laptop”, “lizard men” and Infowarriors.

              Does news have a slant? Yes. Am I well aware of that? Yes.

              The difference is, there’s no longer a “both sides”. I’m not interested in what some qanon blogger thinks about the Senate. And, here on Lemmy, that goal is achievable. And, I would argue, close.

              However, the problem here is that you have bad actors operating unchecked. That is a problem of an immature platform, not an inherent problem with news in general as you’ve spent a lot of time and words intimating to me.

              So, as we bring this bad boy around full circle and I put this behind me; the question is, is there a place for reliable news and politics? The answer to that question is, apparently, not yet. But, I’ll hold out hope that it happens because Lemmy is a promising platform that has a lot growing up to do.

              • @[email protected]
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                011 months ago

                What you’re looking for doesn’t exist and will probably never exist in our lifetimes. If you want some (USA) sites that aggregate news and provide an interpretation on it; nakedCapitalism, ZeroHedge (you won’t like), The Register, Breaking Points, MintPress News, RealClearPolitics.

                • @OhthereyouareOP
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                  011 months ago

                  Sigh… Nevermind. Thanks for trying. You and I live in two different realities. God speed

  • @[email protected]
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    1211 months ago

    I don’t get my news from any social media platform, including lemmy, no offense to lemmy. I used to do that with reddit, but it’s just too unhinged getting your news that way.

    I stick with Associated Press, Reuters, and The New York Times, in that order. I also use Google News specifically for local news, but I don’t even peek at the main world news feed there.

    More generally speaking, I stick to the old school human editorial board for my news. News that’s presented to me on AP, for example, has already been filtered by a board of humans who are smarter than me and whose opinions I trust on the state of the world. Opening up your selection of news to an easily gameable social media algorithm is just more trouble than it’s worth, in my opinion.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Even the NYT has been pretty shady recently. Particularly in regards to their trans coverage. Here’s the story from GLAAD and on NPR.

      • @[email protected]
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        211 months ago

        Sorry, I have to admit that I’m not the best at keeping up with LGBTQ+ news, so I wasn’t aware of that controversy. I’ll keep an eye on that and see how it shakes out. If NYT continues to stir controversy, then I can switch. I’m not particularly attached to them. Washington Post would be a good replacement, and I saw that GLAAD article mention that WP’s LGBTQ+ coverage is better.

  • @[email protected]
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    1211 months ago

    This doesn’t ask your question, but this may be of useful to people, anyway.

    I’ve just joined ground.news, a pay site. The great part about this site is that it rates news as to left, center, or right leaning, and rates the “factuality” of the sites. Filtering out non-factual knocks out a large part of the outlier’s lies, and shows who the people are, who push them. like knowing the players pushing their agenda. One caveat is that some that push lies still slide through by quoting the people who spout lies without disclaimers of the reliabilty of their false claims. One rule of thumb that I find helpful is that I mentally filter out any pleas to emotionalism. Manipulating readers/viewers emotionally is the opposite of informing. Sites that try to be centrist and ignore whether the sources are reliable about facts, end up being half lies or propagandsa. It is useful to keep in mind that blatently propaganda sites work in some truth to give themselves some plausibility. Only the highest reliable news are worth letting in to your news sphere.

    This is a worldwide problem as paid propagandaists muddy the news sphere. Welcome to our cyber warfare world.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 months ago

      I learned on Reddit not to trust any world news or political news posts. I was tricked a couple of times by fake posts. I still browse the posts, but I take everything I read with a grain of salt.

      I use news apps for my news.

    • @OhthereyouareOP
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      711 months ago

      Thanks for the list

      Some of those are exactly the places I’m talking about. [email protected] is filled with accounts from troll farms. The #4 post there right now is by the worst of the group.

      And, if it wasn’t bad enough that post fake and misleading stuff, they brigade the votes and manipulate the posts that way as well. It’s a disaster.

      • @[email protected]
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        011 months ago

        So far for me, the only place in the fediverse with news and politics communities that are okay but not great are the ones on beehaw.org.

        Everywhere else I’ve checked so far has a very naked agenda. Beehaw still leans left, but not in a way that feels icky.

    • @_cerpin_taxt_
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      211 months ago

      You are quite literally the only person that actually answered OPs question. Thanks for these!

  • @lynny
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    911 months ago

    I don’t. Lemmy seems to have the same issue as Reddit where people are towards the extremes with the only moderate people being those who don’t want to talk about politics in the first place.

    I like to listen to CSPAN while at work, especially their morning show “The Washington Journal” where most of the content are regular Americans calling in to talk directly to guests or about issues they feel are important.