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Antonia Malchik's avatar

I can see how this kind of writing plays into the tribalism dynamics, but these specific examples seem to me to be more of an ongoing problem with journalism itself. It's cognitive bias, but journalists are meant to be trained to push all sides of a question really deeply and to continually check their own biases. I get what you're saying, but a long time ago, when I was a Not-Good Journalist, my first boss taught me what was gospel at the time, which was, when you're interviewing someone, to always ask "Why is this m-- fu-- lying to me?" It sounds confrontational but the point is to not accept what you're being told at face value. Like many other outlets, the NYT has succumbed to access journalism on many fronts, and protecting access at all costs means sacrificing the actual journalism. Whatever role these examples play in tribalism, I don't think you can fix that without shaking up journalism itself.

That said, I gave this a lot of thought and one thing that occurred to me is that, while I am obviously a left-wing person, I don't think of NYT as part of my tribe. They've gotten enough things flat-out wrong over the years that I don't trust their reporting in general (part of the problem being the aforementioned access journalism), but I also find their characterizations of regions like mine -- conservative, rural, intermountain West -- to be so off-base that it makes me question how they portray everywhere and everyone else.

Which is only to say that I wonder if better cognition can be found in probing the kinds of disconnects between what is considered one's tribe or not. It seems a generative area to work in. No matter how much I don't consider NYT or Rachel Maddow part of my "tribe," the conservative people around me certainly do so I have to contend with that anyway. The kinds of articles you're describing actually do a lot of damage. But I can't change the NYT's journalism, so put my energies in building relationships that can somewhat mitigate the effects of this kind of "reporting." It gets harder all the time.

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Ted's avatar

I've been thinking some about this lately. Whenever "our side" says, "I wish the red-staters would get their information from some source other than Fox News," I reflexively agree. But then, I step back and realize there's NO WAY we, in our household, are ever going to watch Fox News. Ever. If we won't watch Fox News, how can we ask Fox Newsers to watch CNN or MSNBC?

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