'No One Believes Anything': Voters Worn Out by a Fog of Political News
Source: New York Times
No One Believes Anything: Voters Worn Out by a Fog of Political News
Paying attention to the impeachment inquiry and other developments means having to figure out what is true, false or spin. Many Americans are throwing up their hands and tuning it all out.
By Sabrina Tavernise and Aidan Gardiner
Nov. 18, 2019
Updated 11:42 a.m. ET
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In this volatile political moment, information, it would seem, has never been more crucial. The country is in the midst of impeachment proceedings against a president for the third time in modern history. A high-stakes election is less than a year away.
But just when information is needed most, to many Americans it feels most elusive. The rise of social media; the proliferation of information online, including news designed to deceive; and a flood of partisan news are leading to a general exhaustion with news itself.
Add to that a president with a documented record of regularly making false statements and the result is a strange new normal: Many people are numb and disoriented, struggling to discern what is real in a sea of slant, fake and fact.
Of course, many Americans have the opposite experience: They turn to sources they trust whether on the right or left that tell them exactly what they already believe to be true. But a
new poll released last week found that 47 percent of Americans believe its difficult to know whether the information they encounter is true. Just 31 percent find it easy. About 60 percent of Americans say they regularly see conflicting reports about the same set of facts from different sources, according to the poll, by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and USAFacts.
Now more than ever, the lines between fact-based reporting and opinionated commentary seem blurred for people, said Evette Alexander, research director at the Knight Foundation, which funds journalism and research. That means they trust what they are seeing less. They are feeling less informed.
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Read more:
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/18/us/polls-media-fake-news.html