One of the challenges of current day is that many of us believe we know the truth and anyone who does not believe what we believe and react similarly does not know the truth. They are either ignorant or evil.
The challenge is that so much news isn’t news; it’s bias in public form. And it’s not, most typically, some secret undercover plot to manipulate and get you to believe what we believe; it genuinely feels like their God-honest perspective… albeit one not open to nor aware of the validity of coexistent angles.
Hence, as a current events blogger — and only a semi-humble one at that — my desire is to read and listen to multiple resources and angles. AllSides.com has been an excellent provider of such. Allow me today to share an excerpt from them as to why and how they do what they do…
“AllSides provides balanced news to help you to get the full story, spot media bias and misinformation, avoid partisan manipulation, and think for yourself. Our editorial team’s primary goals are to:
- Offer you more perspectives and context than other news sources
- Reveal stories that are outside your bubble but are important to the nation or other communities
- Highlight bias, misinformation, or diverse viewpoints in coverage of major stories and issues
What Are Headline Roundups?
Headline Roundups show you headlines side-by-side and summarize the different context and perspectives on the issue. By showing a swath of coverage from different sources, you’ll see information you may have missed or notice how journalists and commentators spin, slant or sensationalize an issue.
An individual Roundup usually takes one of three forms:
- Today’s Headlines: how top stories of the day were covered across the political spectrum
- Conflicting Reports: when sources are reporting different “truths”
- Diverse Viewpoints: when there’s a wide range of opinions on an issue, especially when the views are underrepresented in media
Sometimes, the three articles we choose are all news reports. Sometimes, all three are analysis pieces or op-eds. We try not to cross-compare these — news is compared to other news, and opinions are compared to other opinions.
We might want to show how different sides of the news media are covering a particular subject, or we might want to show how different sides of the political aisle are thinking about and/or acting on it. The Roundup is useful in both situations.
The AllSides news team — made up of news specialists who have biases across the political spectrum — curates and writes Headline Roundups every day. This small group is politically balanced and has members who identify as being on the left, right, and center.
We know you have a wide range of interests. But we also believe that what might be the most important information for you to know isn’t always what’s most clickable, viral or “interesting.”
With that in mind, our daily news team covers big national news that’s being covered across the spectrum, but also niche perspectives and specific examples of bias or underrepresentation. The goal is to make you more informed, more engaged in the civic process, and more prepared to interpret and interact with viewpoints that differ from your own.
While we provide balanced news, we believe everyone is biased — including us. It is important to be transparent about bias…”
AllSides goes on to express how at times they publish a “lopsided” headline, one that only features articles from singular sides; they do this because often one side lasers in on one story. We’ve seen this on CNN, FOX, MS Now, etc. When this happens, no less, AllSides will note the coverage disparity. That coverage disparity is typically indicative of bias.
Awareness of bias is helpful in continuing to foster genuine, respectful dialogue. Genuine, respectful dialogue prompts both honor and solution, two things that ease the tension in the world today.
Respectfully…
AR
