You're mixing arguments, but let's go with this for a moment and ask if NYT and WP should be forced to offer their content for free, in the name of providing quality information for all.
Hang on. I don't think they should be
forced to do anything of the kind. Persuaded maybe, encouraged maybe, facilitated maybe. Forced? No, definitely not.
The rise of Trump is about the cult of the moron. People voted him there, people who think that all arguments are equal. People who equate Google search results with peer-reviewed scientific papers. People who are unable to critically read a piece of information, regardless of where it comes from.
That's about as useless and counterproductive an observation as possible. Lets blame the stupid people? Or better yet, shall we blame the stupid peoples'parents?
I'd much sooner hear some theories as how people in general got to be so stupid. One such theory credibly blames the tabloids for
that as I'm sure you know
along with various other knock-on efffects of commercialism. Or you could credibly take issue with education . Or you might claim that there's "something in the water"... etc. chances are that whichever explanation you go with, it comes down to the underling cause(s) being social and/or political, and the corresponding potential solutions being equally social and political. Which is good news, i think. I mean, it's gotta to be easier to address than the prospect adressing the huge excess of utterly stupid people who just happened, by sheer coincidence, to get born at approximately the same point in history, and asking them to personally take responsibility for their gigantic fuck-ups. I really don't see
that getting us anywhere.
On an educational level, we could perhaps try to implement a system that purposely trains kids in critical thinking. And which provides them with a wide variety of media to practice on
And hey! maybe it's not too late to try that on the adults, too?
And that's about something else entirely than NYT and WP charging us for their services.
Nope, it's all interconnected, IMO, as I hope my above example helps to demonstate?
Like I said, I very much admire the Guardian Online for doing their bit in attempting to turn that journalistic tide; that is by making paid subscription entirely voluntary. That might prove impacticably idealistic , as you point out (though, hang on , the donation mode seems to work for Wikipedia doesn't it? )
Yes and no. It is easy to disrupt Wikipedia for long enough to propagate any kind of news you like. It also doesn't provide daily news, not really. It gets its reports from whatever sources that its editors - anyone who's registered and edited content there in the past, really - read. There are countless example of online papers without enough resources getting their facts from a temp edit of Wikipedia.
Not saying that Wikipedia isn't useful, only that its existence doesn't prove the sustainability of its model when applied to news.
Fair enough.
But it's better to try doing something like that, than just shrug, call the whole deal a "fact of life"and do one's damnest to cling to one's revenue at all costs. If they went the same route as WP, and resorted to hiding their content begind a paywall, then I would cease to regard them as a genuinely left-wing paper, because that really does amount to givng up on one's left-wing ideals , IMO, and allowing the tabloids and suchlike to win the day. Can't find that especially blameworthy in WP's case (as far as I know, they're not left wing?) just a great pity. because if we end up with nothing but the left wing sector allowing free access to quality jourmalism and noth ing left to balance that out but Fox News, the Sun, etc, welll that wouldn't bode well either , would it?
The fact that WP elects to put their content behind a paywall decides their political bias?
No. Try reading that para again, if it matters. I think that a paper which had a
sincere left wing bias
would try to keep their content accessible to all, like the Guardian does; as that effort is consistent with left wing beliefs. I'm therefore guessing that WP is no such paper? Might be wrong (note I put a question mark on that?)
I don't read news based on the ideologies of my sources. I don't think anyone should.
Seems to me that news sources can't help but be biased by political ideology, though not always consciously biased. In the case of the tabloids, bias is flaming obvious, normally. In the case of the quality press, not so obvious, and reveals itself in its selection of newsworthy topics., rather than in its treatment of those topics.
I tend to think that a conscious, acknowledged bias is prefereable to unconscious bias . I'd sooner have no particular bias at all, but I just don't believe that's humanly possible . Next best is to sample a range of conficting biases, ofc. Which is why I'm so keen on the idea of a multi-journal package. And next best , after that, for me, is to go with a left-wing bias, because i find that papers with a right-wing bias are apt to exclude too many stories that i find very relevant and intersting from their pages; and not because those stories are in any way fake, but rather because the average right-wing reader would wish to dismiss them as fake; thus printing at all them might easily amount to economic suicide; maintaining circulation is, understandably, of paramount importance.
Do you really want free education for the masses to cease at age 16, and therafter become a privilege dependant on means? even when it comes to educating people in current affairs? It sounds like you do. But in that case, i don't think that you've thought through the consequences . It's not like the better-educated classes can insulate themselves from the wider social effects by hiding behing a pay wall , is it? Its not like they're happy with leaders like Trump and BJ (Not all of them , anyway)
Nope. I didn't say so, so please don't put words in my mouth.
OK, I'll try to resist. But are you willing to reciprocate?
At least i try not to sound so certain of my misreadings (as it turns out) as you do of yours.
I could just as well argue that you are, in effect, proposing state-owned media. And that's surely a recipe for objective, balanced news, right?
Like I said, I very much admire the Guardian Online for doing their bit in
attempting to turn that journalistic tide; that is by making paid subscription entirely voluntary. That might prove impacticably idealistic , as you point out (though, hang on , the donation mode seems to work for Wikipedia doesn't it? )[/quote]
Yes and no. It is easy to disrupt Wikipedia for long enough to propagate any kind of news you like. It also doesn't provide daily news, not really. It gets its reports from whatever sources that its editors - anyone who's registered and edited content there in the past, really - read. There are countless example of online papers without enough resources getting their facts from a temp edit of Wikipedia.
Not saying that Wikipedia isn't useful, only that its existence doesn't prove the sustainability of its model when applied to news.
But it's better to try doing something like that, than just shrug, call the whole deal a "fact of life"and do one's damnest to cling to one's revenue at all costs. If they went the same route as WP, and resorted to hiding their content begind a paywall, then I would cease to regard them as a genuinely left-wing paper, because that really does amount to givng up on one's left-wing ideals , IMO, and allowing the tabloids and suchlike to win the day. Can't find that especially blameworthy in WP's case (as far as I know, they're not left winfg?) just a great pity. because if we end up with nothing but the left wing sector allowing free access to quality jourmalism and noth ing left to balance that out but Fox News, the Sun, etc, welll that wouldn't bode well either , would it?
The fact that WP elects to put their content behind a paywall decides their political bias?
I don't read news based on the ideologies of my sources. I don't think anyone should.
Do you really want free education for the masses to cease at age 16, and therafter become a privilege dependant on means? even when it comes to educating people in current affairs? It sounds like you do. But in that case, i don't think that you've thought through the consequences . It's not like the better-educated classes can insulate themselves from the wider social effects by hiding behing a pay wall , is it? Its not like they're happy with leaders like Trump and BJ (Not all of them , anyway)
Nope. I didn't say so, so please don't put words in my mouth.
I could just as well argue that you are, in effect, proposing state-owned media. And that's surely a recipe for objective, balanced news, right?
[/quote]
Quite
and no, perish the thought of a state-owned media. I'm not propsing any such thing. Something more along the lines of a state-funded library service would suit me just fine...on condition that "librarians" are perfectly free to choose the content, ofc.