This is what I have learned over many years in the age of information overload. I never would have believed that we'd be here where the conspiracies of QAnon are being increasingly accepted by usually reasonable people... 1. Check sources of every article you see come through your feed, know their slant...(for instance, The Atlantic has a center-left bias but high factual reporting. Knowing this, I know to look for corroborating information from sources with little bias - such as newswires, or even a center-right commentary for a different perspective). 2. Avoid questionable sources and extremely biased sources (even if the lean is in your preferred direction) - those don't want you to think critically or think for yourself and usually don't provide sourcing - or if they do, it's other questionable sources and hearsay. These outlets count on human laziness and human tendency toward confirmation bias. 3. If you see a Twitter thread that sounds like the person is kn...
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So, I read the Shack, in re: your earlier bloggish recommend. So are you going to the book club meeting on it at VCC on the 20th?
Cheers,
Julie
Hope you liked the book! I didn't know about the book club meeting...Is it July 20th? If it is only one night I may check it out...can't commit to a weekly meeting though - too far of a drive and busy with Vineyard Westside coolness! :) :)