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Americans who get news through social media are least informed, easily deceived
Christian Post ^ | 08/18/2020 | By John Stonestreet and G. Shane Morris,

Posted on 08/18/2020 7:46:05 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

Every single day, approximately 500 million tweets are tweeted, 4 million hours of video is added to YouTube, and 4.3 billion Facebook messages are posted. If a single person were to view all the information uploaded to the Internet just in the last 24 hours, it would take longer than the span of recorded human history.

The mistake is assuming that a deluge of information means that we are better informed. Not at all. In fact, a new report by Pew Research found that what they called “extremely online people,” meaning those who rely primarily on social media for their political news, are among the least-informed and most easily-deceived groups in America.

Reason.com described these findings this way: “Analyzing polls conducted from October of last year through June 2020…Pew found that just 8% of U.S. adults who get most of their political news from social media say they are following news about the 2020 election ‘very closely,’ compared with roughly four times as many among those who turn mostly to cable news (37%) and print (33%).” The Pew study also confirmed these self-reports. When evaluated on their current political knowledge, those who turned to social media for news scored lower than any other group, except those who relied mainly on local TV. Those who relied on a variety of sources, including news websites, cable and print news scored highest.

Interestingly, exclusive Facebook and Twitter users did score higher in their knowledge of conspiracy theories, such as 5G causes coronavirus or Bill Gates planning to inject people with tracking microchips. In other words, what someone finds illuminating vs. Illuminati largely depends on the amount of time they spend on social media.

All of which underscores the fundamental myth of the Information Age: that access to information is the same as knowing, and that knowing about something is the same thing as wisdom. In one of the choruses from the play “The Rock,” T. S. Eliot asked: “Where is the Life we have lost in living? Where is the wisdom we have lost in knowledge? Where is the knowledge we have lost in information?” He wrote that in 1934. What would he say about the information deluge of today?

How is it possible that, in an age when the answer to almost any question is only a few taps or keystrokes away, the least informed are those who do the most tapping and typing? As Eliot suggests, we’ve confused information with knowledge, and knowledge with wisdom.

Unfortunately, shouting the truth more loudly or posting in all caps on social media is rarely an effective response. In fact, Christians who see their job as primarily telling the truth, rather than engaging people with the truth, are often just lost voices among all the noise. I’m painfully aware that, even with my own children, I am but one stop on the information bus of their day… and there are a lot of stops.

For example, it’s far too common for parents to find the faith or moral convictions of their students derailed by anti-Christian claims and pseudo-arguments that are just, well, silly. I mean by claims any apologist or theologian or coherent thinker could debunk in minutes. The answers are there, but they are convinced by a particular set of voices and they’re not hearing the others. Even more often, however, students are just preoccupied with digital diversions that replaced any hunger for finding truth with what Aldous Huxley called an “appetite for distraction.”

These students, like all those identified by Pew as being “very online,” need more information like a drowning man needs more water. The only real antidote, as Brett Kunkle and I describe in the book A Practical Guide to Culture, is discernment, an ability to sort through the excess of information, to identify what is true and good, and then to choose according to wisdom.

Of course, developing discernment is a lifelong process but can begin with a few very simple but careful questions: “What is meant by this?” “Is this true?” “How does the Bible speak to this?” “Will God be honored?” “Will the image of God be respected?” “Is this source trustworthy?” “Is this intended for my good?” and “Is this helping love and care about the right things?”

We identify a series of useful questions for parents and offer other strategies for developing discernment in A Practical Guide to Culture and the new Student’s Guide to Culture. And to be clear, though I thank Pew for the revealing survey, discernment is about more than being better-informed voters. It’s about keeping our heads above water in an age drowning us with information so we can be people of truth, wisdom, and love.

Originally posted at breakpoint.org

From BreakPoint.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: deception; internet; news; socialmedia

1 posted on 08/18/2020 7:46:05 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

And people who get their “news” from the msm are idiots.


2 posted on 08/18/2020 7:48:38 AM PDT by brownsfan (Behold, the power of government cheese.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Well s**t, I reckon I should start watching CNN and MSNBC while listening to NPR


3 posted on 08/18/2020 7:48:54 AM PDT by mrmeyer (You can't conquer a free man; the most you can do is kill him. Robert Heinlein)
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To: SeekAndFind; All

“Is this source trustworthy?” “Is this intended for my good?” and “Is this helping love and care about the right things?”

God bless God


4 posted on 08/18/2020 7:50:08 AM PDT by PGalt (Past Peak Civilization?)
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To: SeekAndFind

5 posted on 08/18/2020 7:51:34 AM PDT by real saxophonist (Masks are not about controlling a virus. Masks are about controlling people.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Sorry, I disagree. "Americans who get news through social media the LAMESTREAM MEDIA are least informed, easily deceived"

There, fixed it.

6 posted on 08/18/2020 7:51:50 AM PDT by A Formerly Proud Canadian (I once was blind but now I see...)
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To: SeekAndFind

well DUH!

I’ve learned that watching Millenials who buy any piece of garbage coming to them through their phones without investing even two seconds into critical thought.


7 posted on 08/18/2020 7:52:45 AM PDT by Buckeye McFrog (Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer.)
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To: SeekAndFind
If they had their way, we'd all have to get the modern day version of the "Volksempfänger"


8 posted on 08/18/2020 7:56:58 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SeekAndFind
If you get your news from:

1. Social Media - You're going to die within one week and end up stark, raving mad right before you impale yourself on a spiked fence after jumping out of a 10-story building somewhere in Europe.

2. CNN - You're already brain dead. You're body is just waiting to follow.

3. MSNBC - You will die and it will feel like a Mexican Cartel is pulling out your teeth one at a time (like they did to that woman from the U.S. recently), putting out your eyes and cutting off your fingers. And, they'll make you admit you love it while it's happening.

4. China - You will go to Portland and join the protests, believing everything about the USA is evil, the police are evil and your fellow protesters are evil. You will eat a pile of dog s__t and kill 2-3 of your fellow protesters.

5. North Korea - You will act as if you have been given a VERY special drug. One that makes you sexually aroused every time you see, hear or read about Kim Jong Un. He will be in your mind the most desirable opposite (or same, depending upon your orientation) sex partner you have ever encountered. You will die shortly because your heart rate can not continue at the pace for more than 2-3 days.

6. Local small town news media - Depending on the outlet, you'll attend the closest BLM/Anti-fa protest in Texas that you can get to and buy/borrow or use your own SKS/AK and point it at drivers knowing that they are too big of pussies to do anything about it. That won't last very long, but you'll die believing you did the right thing.

7. Free Republic - You shall know the truth, and the truth shall set you free. Plus, you get to read about all of the other stuff above.

Disclaimer. I didn't write this stuff. Kamala Harris made me do it.

9 posted on 08/18/2020 8:24:57 AM PDT by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin (Freedom is the freedom to discipline yourself so others don't have to do it for you.)
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To: SeekAndFind

They should watch the “Late Night Hosts” instead. Or maybe the Daily Show.


10 posted on 08/18/2020 8:53:52 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: SeekAndFind
Yes, by all means, to be informed, get your news from the mainstream Goebbels Mushroom(Keep 'em in the dark. Feed 'em bullsh*t.)Media. 😒
11 posted on 08/18/2020 9:15:32 AM PDT by Pajamajan ( Pray for our nation. Thank the Lord for everything you have. Don't wait. Do it] today.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Americans?
That would be most Leftist tards.............................


12 posted on 08/18/2020 9:30:04 AM PDT by cranked
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