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noname223

Archangel
Aug 18, 2020
6,531
It would be better I had a more sophisticated one.
I like to get the opinion of Marxists like Slavoj Zizek and I am interested in the things Douglas Rushkoff says.
But usually I have certain figures/outlets to get the news from or in-depth analyses.
I came to the conclusion that follow the money is one of the most important advices when following the news.
And all the pundits and alleged experts only want one thing: money. And maybe attention. Because why are we posting on SaSu? I think getting paid for posting on here is difficult. Are we searching for the truth or rather for distraction? The intentions probably vary. Pundits also try to increase their reach and strengthen their brand.
I think I am pretty critical of billionaires at the same time I am not fully against capitalism. Show me an alternative system that works properly.

A framework helps me reduce noise, it is a filter of blending and smoke bombs. The goal is to reduce bias blind spots and gives criteria for judging a story.

Some questions are: Who benefits from the story? Who is speaking and why? Is there a conflict of interest? Staying open minded towards new information. What is the framing and consider agenda-setting. Check the sources. And differetiate between them. Does the story fit into a certain narrative? Is the sole goal of the story to further a narrative? And are the feedback loops, unintended consequences and downstream effects that follow the story. Which language was used? Were the facts chosen selectively and are certain parts faded out?
Which biases could you have when following the news? I think most of us are susceptible for the confirmation bias.

I am not sure whether I am good at reducing the noise. It is hard to follow the full spectrum from German and US politics. And when there something big happening in Russia, China, Japan, France, UK I also want to follow that. There are some outlets I don't follow anymore because they spread too much propaganda. But that leads to blind spots for sure.
I watched media lectures. And I try to read scientific journals but sometimes for example on Israel-Palestine they have the same agenda than German media outlets. And make no difference.

I wish I was a savvy student of the Franfurt school. Maybe I should decrease my time spending on the news and read more political theory. But in college media analyses and international relations interested me more. I have the feeling there is so much propaganda in most outlets that it might be a waste of time. You can never be sure whether that what's delivered is really actually the truth or just a spin. Like the Maduro abduction. How detailed the meda covered it sounded suspicious. So where did they get these details from? Government employees? Were they part of the operation? If yes, then there is a massive conflict of interest. And the fact the NYT and Washington Post did not report about this planned violation of international law made them complicit. If they reported about it prior to the operation, the lost their access to new stories. And then there is the fine line between being over paranoid and being skeptical of new information.
 
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DarkRange55

DarkRange55

Let them eat cake! 🍰
Oct 15, 2023
2,259
A framework like: don't believe anything the government tells you and also don't take too seriously the news media AKA the unwritten fourth branch of the government who often act as an unpaid PR for the Department of War? Is that what you're talking about? Or just follow the money?

🙃 🍰

All of the news is a narrative. Read 1984. Not direct control: newspeak.
 
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DarkRange55

DarkRange55

Let them eat cake! 🍰
Oct 15, 2023
2,259
I guess my question, what is the fascination with current events, the news, international affairs, political science?
There seems to be less emphasis on history and philosophy and science and business. But thats just an observation, not a criticism at all, just curiosity. You mentioned that it interested you most.
Would you major in political science, international affairs, economics, political economy, history?

I'm not republican or democrat, I prefer to stay neutral. I don't take sides in that dogfight.
 
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noname223

Archangel
Aug 18, 2020
6,531
I guess my question, what is the fascination with current events, the news, international affairs, political science?
There seems to be less emphasis on history and philosophy and science and business. But thats just an observation, not a criticism at all, just curiosity. You mentioned that it interested you most.
Would you major in political science, international affairs, economics, political economy, history?

I'm not republican or democrat, I prefer to stay neutral. I don't take sides in that dogfight.
I will answer this is a private conversation.
 
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InevitableDeath

Member
Jan 4, 2026
61
It would be better I had a more sophisticated one.
I like to get the opinion of Marxists like Slavoj Zizek and I am interested in the things Douglas Rushkoff says.
But usually I have certain figures/outlets to get the news from or in-depth analyses.
I came to the conclusion that follow the money is one of the most important advices when following the news.
And all the pundits and alleged experts only want one thing: money. And maybe attention. Because why are we posting on SaSu? I think getting paid for posting on here is difficult. Are we searching for the truth or rather for distraction? The intentions probably vary. Pundits also try to increase their reach and strengthen their brand.
I think I am pretty critical of billionaires at the same time I am not fully against capitalism. Show me an alternative system that works properly.

A framework helps me reduce noise, it is a filter of blending and smoke bombs. The goal is to reduce bias blind spots and gives criteria for judging a story.

Some questions are: Who benefits from the story? Who is speaking and why? Is there a conflict of interest? Staying open minded towards new information. What is the framing and consider agenda-setting. Check the sources. And differetiate between them. Does the story fit into a certain narrative? Is the sole goal of the story to further a narrative? And are the feedback loops, unintended consequences and downstream effects that follow the story. Which language was used? Were the facts chosen selectively and are certain parts faded out?
Which biases could you have when following the news? I think most of us are susceptible for the confirmation bias.

I am not sure whether I am good at reducing the noise. It is hard to follow the full spectrum from German and US politics. And when there something big happening in Russia, China, Japan, France, UK I also want to follow that. There are some outlets I don't follow anymore because they spread too much propaganda. But that leads to blind spots for sure.
I watched media lectures. And I try to read scientific journals but sometimes for example on Israel-Palestine they have the same agenda than German media outlets. And make no difference.

I wish I was a savvy student of the Franfurt school. Maybe I should decrease my time spending on the news and read more political theory. But in college media analyses and international relations interested me more. I have the feeling there is so much propaganda in most outlets that it might be a waste of time. You can never be sure whether that what's delivered is really actually the truth or just a spin. Like the Maduro abduction. How detailed the meda covered it sounded suspicious. So where did they get these details from? Government employees? Were they part of the operation? If yes, then there is a massive conflict of interest. And the fact the NYT and Washington Post did not report about this planned violation of international law made them complicit. If they reported about it prior to the operation, the lost their access to new stories. And then there is the fine line between being over paranoid and being skeptical of new information.
Fine some alt media outlets, trusted journalists who go truth digging - grayzone is good, max and aaron. WSWS too. dissident voice, declassified. You likely know most of these, but they'll all tell you what the nyt and wapo dont
 
DarkRange55

DarkRange55

Let them eat cake! 🍰
Oct 15, 2023
2,259
I will answer this is a private conversation.
Sure thing.

Have you looked at WSJ or FT or Bloomberg or Reuters or AP or The Economist or CBN for specifically legacy media?

Voice of America News which is the US government's official funded foreign news source. It's a rather obscure website type thing most people don't look for Voice of America News. It's primarily directed towards the international consumer. But that will tell you the official narrative haha
 
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noname223

Archangel
Aug 18, 2020
6,531
Sure thing.

Have you looked at WSJ or FT or Bloomberg or Reuters or AP or The Economist or CBN for specifically legacy media?

Voice of America News which is the US government's official funded foreign news source. It's a rather obscure website type thing most people don't look for Voice of America News. It's primarily directed towards the international consumer. But that will tell you the official narrative haha
I think Voice of America is literally warmonger propaganda. Sometimes, I look what Reuters reports and I read some articles you send me from WSJ.
The German version of Voice of America is Deutsche Welle. I can recommended that.

Since I watched Ghost in the Shell I started to do research on Guy Debord, next will be Jean Baudrilla and maybe Marshall McLuhan.
This video of a fellow German was decent.


I guess Trump's escalation with his attacks on Powell seems to be a good development for me.
 
DarkRange55

DarkRange55

Let them eat cake! 🍰
Oct 15, 2023
2,259
I think Voice of America is literally warmonger propaganda. Sometimes, I look what Reuters reports and I read some articles you send me from WSJ.
The German version of Voice of America is Deutsche Welle. I can recommended that.

Since I watched Ghost in the Shell I started to do research on Guy Debord, next will be Jean Baudrilla and maybe Marshall McLuhan.
This video of a fellow German was decent.


I guess Trump's escalation with his attacks on Powell seems to be a good development for me.

Lol but thats exactly what I mean about VOA 😂 🇺🇸
I've read Marshall McLuhan
FT seems to be very factual and accurate for international reporting. Reuters and AP are the newswires so it is original reporting that the big companies and others will pay to get access to use in their stories, but not really so much in depth reporting.
I'm very familiar with DW

News from other countries is interesting.
It's just that we're living in managed reality, our version of the Truman Show. I've talked about this on here before.

That whole thing with Powell is part of the show.

This movie is getting good.


For business it's important to listen to the federal reserves speeches — Understanding the federal reserve and what it is thats going on with monetary policy and how it is that they can deliver specific words and sentences that will then be quickly incorporated int asset prices is very important to understand - The federal reserve in conjunction with the administrations and the mainstream media do to delivery information that gives you a particular thought or feeling or idea that then gets incorporated into asset prices that either eases or tightens financial conditions. Philip Jefferson in his speeches talks about monetary policy and how they use their words more than their actions. Credible threats. Listen to the FOMC. Why did they choose Sunday night to release this information? What are you trying to take attention away from? What are they communicating? I'm not saying anything, these are rhetorical questions 🥞 🤭
There are a lot of narratives in markets. Wall Street and commentators love a story, and stories are powerful. But plenty of the stories people repeat are wrong or oversimplified.
But I also have said, study history.
 
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