Cruentus
Grandmaster
One thing I notice as discussions flare up in here is that when someone presents a source that says something outside of ones worldview, often that person scoffs it off, saying, "Well...that's a biased perspective!"
The assertion seems to be that the information that they have is the "true" or "real" information, and that other stuff...well...is just "biased."
To me, this notion only illustrates utter ignorance. When I was in school (like, 6th grade) we learned that when you write a report of any kind, you have a "thesis," or a point your trying to assert. Heck...we even had "thesis statements" that we had to include in our outlines for our papers. Well...the fact is, every news story and documentary out there, regardless of the end of the political spectrum it is coming from, also has a "Thesis." So....all media and political works are "biased," including the one that comfortably fits your worldview, because they all assert some sort of thesis.
There is nothing wrong with this, just as long as the facts that back the thesis up are not fabricated. However, the expectation in this country seems to be that News stories and Documentaries are not supposed to have a thesis. So people aren't listening to stories with an alert ear, and finding out what the thesis of the story IS, so that they know what the assertion and facts are trying to support, so they can formulate their own viewpoint without having it be steered by the writer/narrator.
This is part of the degeneration of critical thinking in this country, as people have become zombies to advertisements and media. People get a comfy worlview (usually very "mainstream" conservative or liberal, but both ends resulting in the idea of buying more stuff then your neighbors), so anything they hear that fits in with this worldview is thought to be unbiased and "fair and balanced," while other stuff is thought of to be "biased" (which translates to "untrue" in their minds) with little to no realization that all sides have a thesis that they are trying to assert. By this behavior, most people are easily steered by media and PR, allowing others to formulate their opinions.
Ignorance? Yes. Problem? Hell yes.
Thoughts?
:idunno:
The assertion seems to be that the information that they have is the "true" or "real" information, and that other stuff...well...is just "biased."
To me, this notion only illustrates utter ignorance. When I was in school (like, 6th grade) we learned that when you write a report of any kind, you have a "thesis," or a point your trying to assert. Heck...we even had "thesis statements" that we had to include in our outlines for our papers. Well...the fact is, every news story and documentary out there, regardless of the end of the political spectrum it is coming from, also has a "Thesis." So....all media and political works are "biased," including the one that comfortably fits your worldview, because they all assert some sort of thesis.
There is nothing wrong with this, just as long as the facts that back the thesis up are not fabricated. However, the expectation in this country seems to be that News stories and Documentaries are not supposed to have a thesis. So people aren't listening to stories with an alert ear, and finding out what the thesis of the story IS, so that they know what the assertion and facts are trying to support, so they can formulate their own viewpoint without having it be steered by the writer/narrator.
This is part of the degeneration of critical thinking in this country, as people have become zombies to advertisements and media. People get a comfy worlview (usually very "mainstream" conservative or liberal, but both ends resulting in the idea of buying more stuff then your neighbors), so anything they hear that fits in with this worldview is thought to be unbiased and "fair and balanced," while other stuff is thought of to be "biased" (which translates to "untrue" in their minds) with little to no realization that all sides have a thesis that they are trying to assert. By this behavior, most people are easily steered by media and PR, allowing others to formulate their opinions.
Ignorance? Yes. Problem? Hell yes.
Thoughts?
:idunno: