As a subscriber to two newspapers and multiple magazines who is fast reaching his dotage (I am almost 36), I often have conversations with people in their twenties who laugh at my "affectation" of reading print, when almost everything is available online for free, instantaneously. As the saying went in the 90s, "the information just wants to be free." My lawyer wife points out the absurdity of this, of assuming that a news article or radio or video feature "wants" to be given away for less than it cost to produce. As she put it, can you imagine a grocery store with the slogan "the food just wants to be free"?
But the techno-Pollyanna argument continues that by the time the newspapers arrive on my doorstep at 4:30 AM, the "digital natives" have already read everything interesting the night before.
But there is a counter-argument to that too, that living suffused in a perpetually updating news cycle precludes the ability to think or synthesize what we've learned. Instead of digesting and mulling over, say, the issues and disagreements at the nuclear summit, we're instead bombarded with the next 150 stories of the day. There's a reason that philosophers and other serious thinkers lock themselves in quiet rooms.
There's even an argument that the news is useless, a distraction from the hard work of living our actual life. I'm not willing to go that far, but in some moods I do find the position appealing. Here's a distillation of the position from media critic Henry Thoreau, who I think is some kind of unpaid intern at the NRDC:
And I am sure that I
never read any memorable news in a newspaper. If we read of one man
robbed,
or murdered, or killed by accident, or one house burned, or one vessel
wrecked, or one steamboat blown up, or one cow run over on the Western
Railroad, or one mad dog killed, or one lot of grasshoppers in the
winter
— we never need read of another. One is enough. If you are acquainted
with
the principle, what do you care for a myriad instances and
applications?
To a philosopher all news, as it is called, is gossip, and they
who edit and read it are old women over their tea. Yet not a few are
greedy
after this gossip.
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