Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label journalism. Show all posts

Apr 1, 2026

Jeremy Hammond on trusting information sources

I often get asked what sources I trust, and my usual answer is: none of them. While it can be a practical necessity to take a source's word for something, we should avoid doing so unless the source has a proven track record of honest and accurate reporting on that specific topic. And just because a source provides good information and insights on one topic doesn't mean it's good on others. A source assessment is required to separate the wheat from the chaff for individual sources, just as it's necessary when comparing different sources against each other. 

Instead of relying too much on any specific sources, it's to get your information from as wide a variety of sources as possible. Seek out alternative perspectives that challenge your own. Avoid the trap of selecting sources to follow because their information confirms your own paradigm. Be cognizant of your own confirmation biases and the limits of your knowledge, and remain open to the possibility that everything you think you know is wrong. Treat your conclusions and beliefs as hypotheses to be tested against opposing perspectives. 

Critically assess each source with consideration for their potential biases. Maintain healthy skepticism and check key claims against cited sources. There mere inclusion of footnotes or links in an article can make a story or argument appear well supported, but this is commonly an illusion. Oftentimes, cited sources fail to support or even directly contradict claims for which they are cited. As you consume news media, identify the agenda being served and consider whether any political or financial interests might conflict with the aim truth-telling. 

Through that process, you'll develop a wider overview of the informational landscape and won't miss the forest for the trees. Determine common ground by identifying key claims that are uncontested. Then synthesize conflicting claims to reconcile the contradictions. Apply your source assessment to determine what seems most credible, and hypothesize an explanation that best fits the available evidence. Conflicting claims can be often be easily reconciled, for example, by simple recognizing that at least one of the sources is demonstrably lying. Through this analytical process, you'll come away with a new working hypothesis to test against new information as you continue to expand your knowledge about the topic. 

With an infinite number of topics to focus on and limited time, you'll also learn to distinguish distracting noise from matters of real importance, and the more you develop these types of analytic skills for news consumerism, the better you'll get at it and the easier it'll become, so you'll eventually be able to rather quickly and easily assess information and draw reasonable conclusions. The effort you put into developing these skills will pay dividends as you acquire actionable knowledge and avoid becoming deceived by the incessant political propaganda that permeates our information environment.

~ Jeremy R. Hammond, independent journalist, www.jeremyrhammond.com

Amazon.com: Jeremy Hammond: books ... 

May 3, 2022

H.L. Mencken on American journalism

American journalism (like the journalism of any other country) is predominantly paltry and worthless. Its pretensions are enormous, but its achievements are insignificant.

~ H.L. Mencken



Jul 1, 2021

Tweet on propaganda

If you repeat a lie often enough, it becomes journalism.

~ Lisa @freedomspeech50, tweet, June 29, 2021



Jan 10, 2021

George Orwell on journalism

Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed: everything else is public relations.

~ George Orwell



Oct 16, 2020

Thomas Sowell on the corruption of journalism

Journalists cannot serve two masters. To the extent that they take on the task of suppressing information or biting their tongue for the sake of some political agenda, they are betraying the trust of the public and corrupting their own profession.

~ Thomas Sowell



Apr 26, 2020

Bethany McLean on intellectual curiosity

The biggest requirement to be a journalist is that you're really curious.  You have to be interested in things.  You have to want to figure things out, and care and be curious.  And you can cultivate your curiosity.  But curious is something we all are.  You just have to open your mind to it and just let yourself be curious.

~ Bethany McLean, "Investigative Journalism with Bethany McLean," YouTube, 4:55 mark, April 21, 2020

Curiosity - Character Lab

Dec 13, 2007

Arnold Wesker on journalism

A journalist is somebody who possesses himself of a fantasy and lures the truth towards it.

~ Arnold Wesker, Journey into Journalism (1977)