August 4, 2018

"I have challenged a number of friends overloading on politics and permanently 'bad' news to try reading nothing but science and technology news for a week or two, then compare it to what they had read or watched prior to that."

"Almost invariably they found the science/tech news was quite positive and uplifting while 'regular' news was negative and a buzzkill."

Wrote DCE in the comments to "Start with a politics cleanse: For two weeks — maybe over your August vacation — resolve not to read, watch or listen to anything about politics."

The post title is a quote from the NYT op-ed by Arthur C. Brooks, "Need a Politics Cleanse? Go Ahead and Treat Yourself/Overwhelmed by current events? You can skip a few weeks without losing track of the plot."

Yesterday, we were talking about the demise of Upworthy, a website that was founded on some sort of idea of presenting news stories in a way that would meet psychological needs for the warm and fuzzy (while delivering a liberal, activist message). As the NYT columnist David Carr wrote in "New Site Wants to Make the Serious as Viral as the Shallow" (2012):
... Upworthy... is using strong visuals along with arch, but serious, curation to find the sweet spot between things that are both “awesome” and “meaningful.” Among the memes they’d like to start, the “17 sexiest pictures about income inequality.”

If that sounds too cute by half, remember that these are the people who took a monthsold, earnest video about gay marriage and helped it go viral with 17 million spins on YouTube by putting a clicky head — “Two lesbians had a baby and this is what they got” — on what was essentially a video of Congressional testimony.
The founders of Upworthy had their own ends, and your psychological needs were part of their process of achieving their ends. Of course, everyone writing on the web is serving interests of his own, and you need to look after your own interests (including which of the interests of others you're going to pay attention to). You can choose what websites to visit and which stories to read, making selections moment by moment and getting good at deciding what not to click. I suspect what happened to Upworthy is that readers got better and better at resisting clickbait. What worked for the site originally became deadly because the clickbaitiness was obvious.

If you're reading this blog, perhaps you can sense that I've been writing all along — since 2004 — for the intrinsic value of the experience of finding things I want to read, writing about them in real time, making a space for other people to join me in writing about the same things, and selectively reading what you write. If this blog gives you something that you select to read, thanks! That's part of the intrinsic pleasure.

ADDED: Though I write this blog continuously, I also take breaks all the time. What I do, you can do too: I make different selections. For example, yesterday, I went wandering around in The Utne Reader and wrote about hopelessness and forest bathing. Meanwhile, there are many prominent stories that I won't read beyond a glance at the headline. For example there's something about a Russian woman that has something to do with Trump troubles. I refuse to figure out what looks like a complicated tangle that the news media are promoting because it might turn into something that could hurt Trump.  If it ever does, I'll be able to get up to speed in 5 minutes. It will become simpler. But it might just as well melt away into nothing, and if I'd learned about it, I will have forgotten what I knew.

I have good skimming and selection skills, so I have a lot of control over my time and my psychological wellbeing. I won't sit in front of the television letting CNN or Fox or MSNBC control the time and continually tell me to worry about this and then this and then, after the break, this. I know what they're doing because I overhear some of it when Meade watches. I'll sometimes ask how he can watch it. He says finds it amusing, so okay. I'm very sensitive to the awful aesthetics. Like the other day, I did sit down to watch CNN with him for a few minutes and the main thing I saw — the only thing I talked about — is that the background CNN put behind all the talking heads was slanted. Slanted to the left, by the way. An unintentional metaphor. What was intentional, I'm sure, was the creation of a sense of anxiety — of a world out of kilter. They'd like that to work only subliminally, but I won't let them do that to me.

48 comments:

Just asking questions (Jaq) said...

Yet the Democrats have decided that their electoral strategy requires them to keep their voters in a constant state of fear and agitation. Even though their followers are complaining that it is ruining their quality of life.

Mike Sylwester said...

During July I spent two weeks in Lithuania, where I had relatively little access to the Internet.

I read the ancient historian Polybius, a Greek who wrote mainly about Rome's initial expansion outside the Italian peninsula. Basically he wrote about the First Punic War and the Second Punic War, both against Carthage.

Polybius's description of Hannibal's invasion across the Alps and through Italy was amazing.

I also began reading Shakespeare's play The Winter's Tale.

Bay Area Guy said...

The entire Democrat Party should do a "politics cleanse" and then follow up with one giant collective colon blow.

LincolnTf said...

I take a break every few months. Sometimes for a couple weeks at the Cape, other times just a long weekend at home. It allows for a lot of free space in my mind to actually enjoy things.

LincolnTf said...

I think it would be much harder for a Liberal to get away from politics, because so much of their self-worth and self-image is tied to their political views. For so many of them, their politics are just a social pose, not informed by experience or principle, but that pose defines them. Without it, they'd have no identity.

Just asking questions (Jaq) said...

I don’t find politics so distressing that I need a break from it, but neither do I follow Trump on Twitter. I see that if you get retweeted by @realDonaldTrump, or whatever his handle is, you end up being disappeared, or at least made all but impossible to find. So Twitter is doing its part to keep these lefty snowflakes well cosseted.

Just asking questions (Jaq) said...

... Upworthy... is using strong visuals along with arch, but serious, curation to find the sweet spot between things that are both “awesome” and “meaningful.” Among the memes they’d like to start, the “17 sexiest pictures about income inequality.”

Thinking like this is why Netflix gave Obama millions and millions of dollars to spend making “non political’ content. By “non political” of course they meant it wasn’t going to be used to explicitly cover elections, just to constantly push a political point of view. There is so much content besides Netflix that it was sort of a pleasure to cancel my subscription.

Confused said...

Love your blog, professor! You are original and refreshing. Not that long ago lots of interesting writers had their own blogs (Volokh Conspiracy, Ed Morissey, Postmodern Conservative) and eventually they all migrated to corporate platforms that, while not necessarily changing the writing, changed my experience in reading their work. Not you, and I love it. Keep it up!

Henry said...

My suggestion: read out-of-date histories. That follows along with Mike's suggestion, in a way. But mostly my reading is 50 to 100 years old instead of 2000. I just finished Wallace Stegner's Beyond the Hundredth Meridian: John Wesley Powell and the Second Opening of the West.

This is illuminating in multiple ways. First there's the actual topic of the book. Then there's the inescapable fact that political history recycles. It did in Powell's long career and after his death. Stegner calls it "The Corkscrew Path of Progress," or more floridly, "the truly vortical corkscrew path of human motion." Even the tangential stories are illuminating. For example, Stegner explains how the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers got entangled in domestic waterworks. The levees of New Orleans would not fail for 50 years after his book, but here is a case against them. Finally, there's the oddness of the author himself. Stegner is fully captive to the mythology of the progressive movement, yet his belief in progress and even a kind of American exceptionalism identifies him utterly as a product of the 1950s. His liberalism precedes Vietnam. He still believes.

Henry said...

I should be clear -- Stegner has nothing to say about New Orleans. His case is against the overlapping jurisdictions of civilian and Army authority over water and mineral resources that had its base in the earliest mappings of the West.

jaydub said...

Porn can also provide this kind of escape, except every time I see a seriously over-boobed "starlet" I think of Stormy Daniels, which reminds me of CNN, which brings to mind Trump bashing which gets me thinking about Chuck, and I hate effing Chuck.

Instead, I have taken to listening to classical music and rereading some of the Greek philosophers. Nothing about serious music or logic makes me think of Chuck.

MadisonMan said...

I did not enjoy running across the word 'curation' in the description of the now-dead site. I am happy that that word has been passed over by time.

Browndog said...

I just spent the last week totally unplugged due to moving into a new house, deep in the woods. Initially, it didn't look like we would have any internet service at all.

I was happy when the Direct TV was hooked up a few days ago--until I turned on the tv, and heard the word 'Russia' within minutes. Turned it off.

We finally got satellite wifi, and now only read a couple sites before bed--Althouse being one of them, naturally.

Dear corrupt left, go F yourselves said...

Regular News: Jim Acosta is butthurt.

narciso said...

Polybius Interesting, I've read some of daily at who was a caesar partisan and thucydides of the periclean clan.

Tank said...

The best way to avoid politics and bad news is … vacation ! First the pre-planning (the concept, i.e. what country, what area, etc), then the planning (the details, hotels, flights, must-see "attractions"), then the vacation itself, then the post vacation kvelling and kvetching and looking at pictures and sharing and, finally, the memories, both good and bad (often the bad becomes the best stories)..

Otto said...

Read the Gospels and then end with Romans 8:38,39. It will give you peace beyond understanding.

narciso said...

5here is certainly great eisdom in pauls post pharisean revelation.

Big Mike said...

And you did your forest bathing without anyone stealing your clothes. Well done? Or just lucky?

Original Mike said...

I used to spend 2 weeks in the mountains or canoe country every year. The decoupling from society was a big part of the experience.

Leland said...

As a person who works in the Science and Technology field; I can tell you it is far from an escape from politics.

May I recommend a cruise?

Ralph L said...

I had no TV for over a year in 2012-3 and no home computer 2013-2017. Saw a little news at work but was otherwise cleansed un-archly. Didn't like or understand Trump at all and was totally bemused when I caught a few minutes of Rush supporting him. I should have known my information had been curated by the enemies of the people.

I'm glad I got back online for these interesting times, but I really need to get other things done, so you can all be boring and tiresome if you want. Chuck War all day will do it.

wildswan said...

Yes, I think over a period of time what keeps people following this blog and others like it is sincere interest in what is being said. I also think that this contrasts right at this moment with a totalitarian moment on social media. In totalitarian countries in the old days everything was political - sports, beauty pageants, TV shows, news, movies. Furthermore it was required that one constantly attend rallies and participate in mass frenzies of hatred against some internal or external enemy or love for some political figure; and constantly bear in mind that hatred in mind so as to be ready to express it at any necessary moment - but not to the point of inconveniently remembering past hatreds or loves when not needed. In totalitarian society the TV is never off and never turned down and the canned laughter and cheering never stops but it's you who must do it all endlessly. And so in America right at this moment a section of the media is now requiring that totalitarian citizen response from liberals and Democrats, that acceptance of an invasion of continual frenzy of disturbing emotions fed by a steady stream of terrifying stories. And people are just getting tired of it. And, unlike the totalitarian state-sponsored media, totalitarian social media can be turned off and so it has to be enticing. So we have the Frankenstein of totalitarian social media alternately cooing and making uncouth gestures meant to suggest friendship, love, beauty and humanity for all and then screaming out rage and insults like a caged teased pit bull. And, as I say, this isn't the state (yet) and people are getting tired of it and all they have to do (so far) to shut up this crazy neighbor is - walk away. And don't vote frenzy into power over yourself.

Oh Yea said...

I've heard the NYT has a bright new contributor that covers technology on its editorial board that has some uplifting things to read.

Owen said...

Great comments, especially wildswan on the totalitarian state, or proto-state (our infotainment industrial complex). Thanks for the plug on Polybius and Stegner. Another great read on US Army Corps of Engineers’ becoming embroiled in water “management” and development of the dry lands is “Cadillac Desert” by Marc Reisner.

I come here for the company. Best conversations ever.

Michael K said...

I'm working my way through World War I. I think that event determined most of the 20th and 21st centuries.

Sort of like the 30 Years War which resulted in the nation state.

rehajm said...

I'm skeptical- science and technology writing is infected with leftie politics, too.

It seems more about frustration that the left is not winning and so they are testing and probing to find something that works. Someone on the Arthur Brooks post thoughtfully noted Brooks has a podcast so I went and listened to 'Tell Me a Story', where he and some chap- who sounds exactly what I imagine Pajama Boy would sound like if he spoke- were lamenting that if only we found a more effective way to communicate we'd still be in the Paris climate accord and we'd have 'engaged' people in the Syrian refugee crisis, or some thing, oblivious to the possibility that perhaps the big problem was their ideas just suck and people were smart enough to reject them.

narciso said...


But of course:

https://themarketswork.com/2018/03/09/victoria-nuland

Just asking questions (Jaq) said...

Yeah, their idea of reaching across the aisle is to get both sides to join in to solve “income inequality” I would have thought that reducing wage pressure on low skilled workers by cutting off the flood of scabs from Mexico would be a start there, but that line of argument is not allowed, outside of the permission structure for the discussion.

Trump really trashes the “permission structure.”

I care about poverty, absolute standards of living, but this jealousy of what other people make never made any sense to me. It’s about control and I am not a control freak the way liberals are.

Phil 314 said...

I just finished Victor Davis Hanson’s “The Second World Wars”. Less a history and more an analysis from multiple angles. Many surprising facts/insight.

In the chapter on “The dead” this one surprised me the most:

“Yet by war’s end, Poland would suffer between 5.6 and 5.8 million dead, the highest percentage of fatalities (over 16 percent) of a prewar population of any participant of World War II”

Owen said...

Tim in Vermont: “...It’s about control...”. If you are deeply worried about your inadequacies and the uncertainties that keep upsetting your life, you compensate by trying to control other stuff, which almost always means other people’s stuff, which really means other people. Projection and displacement or, as an old book said, criticizing the mote in your neighbor’s eye while ignoring the beam in your own.

I need to spend (a lot more) time with the Bible, just trying to appreciate its wisdom about psychology and sociology.

Owen said...

If people are reading about WW1, “Dead Wake” by Erik Larsen is a great account of the sinking of the Lusitania. For WW2 buffs, “Code Girls” gives a remarkable look at US efforts to decrypt Nazi and Japanese message traffic using an ARMY of young women with amazing math skills. But not really math or certainly not just math. A terrific bunch of people who were sworn to secrecy about all they did until it was almost too late to hear their stories.

Sebastian said...

"I have challenged a number of friends overloading on politics and permanently 'bad' news to try reading nothing but science and technology news for a week or two, then compare it to what they had read or watched prior to that. Allmost invariably they found the science/tech news was quite positive"

Hey, lemme try that with economics:

"I have challenged a number of friends overloading on politics and permanently 'bad' news to try reading nothing but economic and market news for a week or two, then compare it to what they had read or watched prior to that. Almost invariably they found the economic/market news was quite positive."

High growth, low unemployment, higher incomes, earnings solid, stocks doing well, tax cuts working, Apple at $1 trillion.

On second thought, under Trump, positive news is negative for your average prog.

Michael K said...

If people are reading about WW1, “Dead Wake” by Erik Larsen is a great account of the sinking of the Lusitania. For WW2 buffs, “Code Girls” gives a remarkable look at US efforts to decrypt Nazi and Japanese message traffic

Read "Dead Wake." The sub skipper was about to return home due to low fuel. The Lusitania was running slowly as she was early for the arrival. Lots of "What Ifs."

A great book about code girls, is "Between Silk and Cyanide." It is about the SOE and the SOE agents in Europe in WWII.

buwaya said...

This is a historic time.

Its a shame to NOT pay attention, because what is happening is, for us, near real-time rollout of a significant story in world history. There were periods where one could sort of sleep through the news, maybe. But thats not now. We are witnesses, if we understand what we are seeing.

I have always been a news junkie. It comes naturally, our lot always has been.
This is a good time to be one.

Michael K said...

Its a shame to NOT pay attention, because what is happening is, for us, near real-time rollout of a significant story in world history.

Sometimes it is better to look back, like reading about the July 1914 crisis, when we know how it ends.

I remember during Watergate, I was worried about Nixon out of control. Looking back I realize that was all a fake narrative behind an FBI/leftist coup d'etat.

Roosevelt used the FBI against his domestic enemies. None of this is new.

Bay Area Guy said...

For the Left, politics is their religion. The NYT is kinda like the Bible; drinking a Starbucks Cappuccino with a croissant is like the body and blood of Christ.

I'm not sure they can take a politics cleanse.

James K said...

In the chapter on “The dead” this one surprised me the most:

“Yet by war’s end, Poland would suffer between 5.6 and 5.8 million dead, the highest percentage of fatalities (over 16 percent) of a prewar population of any participant of World War II”


Not surprising--weren't Jews about 3 million of those dead?

todd galle said...

Mike, I've got a fair library of WW1 books, mostly from the English side. I would recommend anything by Lyn Macdonald, she uses first person accounts incredibly well. Her "1914" is phenomenal. Also find "A Rifleman Went to War" by Herbert McBride. He was an American who was so pissed off at Wilson not entering the war (he was in the US National Guard) he joined the Canadian Army. His is somewhat an unusual account, as he seems to have enjoyed the time he spent in the trenches. Pershing's two volume account is also of interest.

Tyrone Slothrop said...

Where does one find science/technology news that isn't slanted toward politics? I have tried watching nature documentaries almost exclusively, but every single one, whether about the fauna of Madagascar or the rise of genus Home, ends up being a jeremiad against 'global warming'. There is no escape. Books maybe.

Michael K said...

I'm reading more about the origins of it.

So far, "The Sleepwalkers." Next A biography of Grey. Then "Germany's War Aims."

I read Buchanan's "Unnecessary Wars" in which he blames Churchill and Grey. He may have a case with Grey.

I'm looking for a book on the relationship between the Boer War and WWI. I think they are related.

Tolkien has a pretty good book on WWI.

Tyrone Slothrop said...

I liked Barbara Tuchman's "The Guns of August".

PresbyPoet said...

World war one was the product of the assumption that the side that mobilized first must win. So once you started to mobilize you did not stop. An interesting alternative history would be one where Germany understands the lesson of our Civil War and stands on the defensive against France. No need to invade Belgium.

So many changes. Great Britain does not enter the war. Russia falls quickly. Germany controls everything East of the Rhine. The Middle East, Caspian Sea and all their oil is controlled by Berlin. America never profits from WW1. Lenin never takes his train trip.

In the middle of reading "Black Chamber" by S.M. Stirling. an alternative history where Taft dies in 1912, and Roosevelt is president in 1916, likely to become president for life. Republican Progressives in charge, not the democrat progressive racists. I enjoy thinking of what ifs?

Kevin said...

I refuse to figure out what looks like a complicated tangle that the news media are promoting because it might turn into something that could hurt Trump.

Isn't that why we have Inga?

Michael K said...


Blogger Tyrone Slothrop said...
I liked Barbara Tuchman's "The Guns of August".


That is the conventional version with a lot of anti-German sentiment.

"The Sleepwalkers", which I am reading now, is a revisionist history by a Brit Historian and blames France. Max Hastings has some French anecdotes that suggest they had a role.

For example, the French armed Russia and Serbia with loans for military equipment which, of course, had to be bought from France.

Germany, once the war began, behaved like Germans do, but they may not have been the real aggressors.

France wanted revenge for 1870. There are some pretty good arguments.

Roughcoat (I think ) suggested "Germany's War Aims; 1914," which is at least as Germanophobic as Tuchman but I'm going to read it.

Pat Buchanan's book, "Unnecessary Wars" is an extreme on the other side. He blames Churchill and Grey. He may have a point with Grey.

I have read Churchill's "The World Crisis," and that gives a pretty good history of the war itself.

Michael K said...


Blogger PresbyPoet said...
World war one was the product of the assumption that the side that mobilized first must win.


We have had a discussion thread at Chicagoboyz on this.

There was a way to reverse the German train direction even though Moltke told the Kaiser there was no way to do it.

Moltke was a weak Chief of Staff. He altered von Schlieffen's plan.

Spaceman said...

Science is always neutral. It is what it is.

todd galle said...

Honestly, any European treaty system that had Serbia as a possible trip wire is just mega-ass-stupid.