Tag: media punditry

  • Fox News Perceptions and Clout

    I came across a Facebook comment that ironically declared Fox News had 35% more viewership than CNN because they report the truth.  Fox News indeed draws the most viewers (30%) of any single corporate mainstream media. This gives the only mainstream media created for a political purpose the single greatest influence on perceptions and clout

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  • Civilized War Perceptions

    The information on foreign war casualties and perspectives I provided contrasts the influence of personal experience versus news media.  The tragedy of war understandably makes us skeptical about its necessity.  However, media punditry can change civilized war perceptions can to overcome this skepticism. At the time of World War I people got their news from

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  • Foreign Wars Casualties and Perceptions

    This response to the current bombing of Iran interrupts the miniseries on democracy with a perspective on foreign wars. My faith in being human over being civilized derives from research I started in 2005 in response to threats of war with Iran.  Because I believe in humanity I believe that when properly informed citizens can

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  • Personal Wisdom

    Personal Wisdom is the fifth and last entry in the miniseries. Most of this wisdom miniseries focused on collective wisdom.  We can achieve collective wisdom by removing barriers such as systemic bias and misinformation.  Elections or referendums then aggregate the knowledge of an electorate.  Yet we can enhance our collective wisdom further by becoming wiser

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  • Systemic Party Bias

    This is the fourth entry for a miniseries about wisdom. I am an unaffiliated citizen.  Parents belonging to different parties contributed to my independence, as did the tendency of the parties to change principles.  During my lifetime the parties switched over “shock and awe” tactics.  They switched over choice and abortion.  They switched over state

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  • Collective Wisdom Conditions

    This is the third entry in a miniseries about collective wisdom. In The Wisdom of Crowds, James Surowiecki detailed the four conditions for collecting wisdom from a population.  People must think independently of each other, no groupthink.  Their thinking must be decentralized, not influenced by a centralized authority.  Such conditions allow for collecting a diversity

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