I think I've found a TKC handbook



It's also handy for just about every political post I've read in the past week.

Here's a quick review from Boing Boing:
Farhad Manjoo's True Enough: Learning to Live in a Post-Fact Society is a breezy-but-engrossing look at the increased polarization of news in the 21st Century. Manjoo convincingly argues that our own capacity for selective perception (show two groups of partisans footage of a political debate and both will swear it was biased for the other side; show the same footage to someone who doesn't care and they won't see bias for either side) combined with the Internet's capacity to network affinity groups and spread fragmented, selective media are a perfect storm, with the truth right in its path.
Put simply, you're lying to yourself and the Internet is helping.

Cory Doctorow claims that the Internets has simply facilitated the self-deception . . . Sadly, I noticed print media news people were happy when they were the leaders of this act, so I guess there is a downside.

Trust no one . . . Tinfoil is more stylish than you think.

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