Help please?
39 minutes ago
There are billions of people and a version of normal to go along with each one of them. No two versions are exactly the same. There will be hundreds of thousands of little things that make up your version of normal. With any luck you can find people that have close to the same idea of what normal is that you do. These are your friends. Anyone else you try to tolerate as best you can. .... The exact definition of normal depends on who's running the asylum.
10 comments:
Links would indeed be very helpful.
Sadly too many articles get dismissed at the moment as 'fake news' if they don't suit the readers prejudices.
Can't trust anyone these days.
Another problem is thanks to "cookies" and what-have-you, news stories tend to be geared to your perceived biases. In other words, these stories seek you out. This can be a problem if they get the bias wrong--maybe you just read something you wouldn't ordinarily read out of curiosity one day--but even if the bias is right and you're being told what you want to hear, you're still being manipulated to a degree. Best to occasionally go to a mainstream news site that regularly gets bitched about by both the Left and the Right, like the New York Times.
By the way, I'm one of those people on the Left who occasionally bitches about the New York Times, but I don't consider them to be out-and-out liars.
THANK YOU!
EC - People are out there that have prejudices?! Say it ain't so!
MD - Sadly true.
K - If you read news with your incognito window, all the cookies get erased when you close the window. Also, I have ad blockers running. The Washington Post (and others) won't let you read a story when your running ad blockers. So I copy the link, open the incognito window, paste, and presto, everything works. And no Washington Post cookies left behind. Plus, I run CCleaner frequently which erases cookies except the ones I want to keep. (there are options)
C - noʻu ka hauʻoli
This is a lot of great information about fact-checking before sharing articles. It's good to know. That is a WHOLE LOT of work, so I guess I won't be sharing any news stories. Wellll, maybe I could just add a DISCLAIMER that I didn't fact-check it. ummmm, I'll think about it.
Wishing you a Happy & Safe Weekend!
I thought these were great tips from AARP and thanks so much for sharing. Hugs, RO
Thanks for sharing!
DG - The disclaimer sounds like a great idea. "I don't know if this is true, but..."
RO - Hugs back, Mike.
MR - I thought it was worth the scan time.
Everyone - There will be a test on this next week sometime. Study hard!
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