• PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    6 hours ago

    I remember in 2004, as a kid, my mother (very conservative at the time) teaching me to go through OnTheIssues with the presidential race coming up and examining the policies of each candidate, and to consider whether I agreed with each individual stance in making an overall opinion, not just to presume which one was good and bad by political allegiance.

    She taught me good citizenship. Many people aren’t so lucky - or didn’t take the lessons to heart.

    • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      People like us are the abysmally small minority.

      The average adult American has the reading comprehension level of a 5th grader.

      Less than 10% (possibly less than 5%) of adult Americans are capable of objectively reading multiple stories about the same topic in different newspapers and being able to figure out which bits of info are objective, which parts are editorialized, what information is left out… and why different sources include or disclude those elements.

      Turns out if you destroy public education, you get idiots, and idiots are very easy to mislead, responding almost entirely to pathos, misjudge ethos, and actually become angry when presented with logos.

      We are a largely, functionally illiterate society.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 hours ago

      Ah you young whippersnapper! When I turned 18 in 1995, the best way to find out about local candidates was a pamphlet you could get at the library for free (and probably elsewhere too) put out by the League of Women Voters. Sadly, there were always lots of pamphlets not taken.