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The power of Secondhand information This is commentary from James Brown.
¶ The Nature of Opinion and Information
Walter Lippmann once wrote something that haunts me to this day. It is often very illuminating to ask yourself how you got at the facts upon which you base your opinion. Who actually saw, heard, felt, counted? Name the thing about which you have an opinion. Think about that for a second. How much of what you know did you actually experience? How much came from someone else, and how much came from someone who heard it from someone else?
¶ The Illusion of Expertise
In today's world of viral tweets and forwarded articles, Lippmann's words hit differently. We're all experts now, aren't we? Experts on Ukraine, experts on Gaza, experts on whatever's trending. But have we seen it? Do we actually know what's going on? Or are we just parroting what we've heard in many cases, without admitting the plausibility that we might be listening to the wrong people?
¶ The Influence of Media on Perception
Here's what keeps me up at night. Lippmann wrote this a century ago, before social media, before 24 hour news, before algorithms decided what we see. If he was worried, if he was worried in 1922, what would he think now?
¶ Reflections on Witnessing and Belief
What's the last thing you believe strongly that you actually witnessed firsthand? Because increasingly I wonder. At least that's what I experienced. What do you think? Share your thoughts on jamesbrowntv.substack.com and before I go, a big thank you to all of my new followers on Substack, YouTube, Spotify, Overcast and other platforms. It means a lot, your support, monetary or otherwise. Keep me going. So if you like all this share with a friend.
¶ Conclusion and Farewell
On that note, I'm James Brown and as always, be well.
