We can improve politics in America. Here’s how.
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"The single healthiest thing most of us can do for our relationship with politics and for politics would be to deemphasize our connection to national politics and reemphasize our connection to state and local politics," says Ezra Klein.
The media has become overwhelmingly nationalized. To improve your relationship with politics, and to improve politics in general, be intentional about your informational ecosystem.
Klein recommends reconstructing your news diet so it doesn't overwhelmingly feature national politics, rather sign up for local newsletters, subscribe to your local paper, and get involved in community politics rather than yelling at cable TV or lashing out on Twitter.
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EZRA KLEIN
Ezra Klein is the editor-at-large and cofounder of Vox, the award-winning explanatory news organization. Launched in 2014, Vox reaches more than fifty million people across its platforms each month. Klein is also the host of the podcast the Ezra Klein Show, cohost of the Weeds podcast, and an executive producer on Vox’s Netflix show, Explained. Previously, Klein was a columnist and editor at the Washington Post, a policy analyst at MSNBC, and a contributor to Bloomberg. He’s written for the New Yorker and the New York Review of Books, and appeared on many programs including Face the Nation, the Daily Show, and PBS NewsHour.
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TRANSCRIPT:
I think the single healthiest thing most of us can do for our relationship with politics and for politics would be to deemphasize our connection to national politics and reemphasize our connection to state and local politics. Our political system is not built to be the nationalized. One of the very powerful cross cutting identities we’re supposed to have are our regional and our state and our local identities. James Madison said it was just obvious that state political identities would be preeminent over national identities. He turned out in the long sweep of American history to be wrong, but there’s a truth to why he said that, a thing that that was supposed to do for the system, which is you’re not supposed to be in politics just as a national Republican or Democrat. Even if you are doing that you’re supposed to be an Oklahoma Republican or a Missouri Democrat and that there are distinct things your state and your city and your place need not supposed to help discipline just separating into two overwhelming factions. Over time that has weakened, it’s probably weakened because the media has become overwhelmingly nationalized. I grew up outside of Los Angeles California and we got the LA Times, I listened to KCRW, you know, I could listen to the nightly news, but if I were growing up there now I would probably have an online subscription to the New York Times and I would read or listen to Vox and other national podcasts.
And so this is change. I had a very strong California oriented political identity growing up, today I probably would have a lot less of one. So, this is sometimes a hard thing to do for ourselves because the media has nationalized, a lot of state and local outlets have gone out of business or have been weakened or gutted, which is a terrible thing that deserves a lot of solutions and thinking of its own. But usually there is a lot more we can do and so one thing you can do is just be intentional about your informational ecosystem. If you are just getting, and you realize you’re getting 90 percent of your news is national and international and only ten percent is state and local or sometimes less than that is state and local, think about reconstructing a news diet so it doesn’t look that way, sign up for newsletters, subscribe to your local paper make sure that’s on your bookmarks, make sure you’re not over-reading all your news through nationalized social media and instead you’re going to places that are going to give you these very different things. And then when you’re getting involved in politics it’s a real big difference between getting involved in politics by tweeting mean things at pundits you don’t like like me on Twitter and getting involved by organizing people in your local community to make change. Being on Twitter, yelling at the cable news TV screen is really frustrating it’s not a nourishing way of being in politics because you don’t feel listened to, you don’t see any affect from what you’re doing. Whereas working with people in your community to do things it really does move things very quickly.
Watch the newest video from Big Think: https://bigth.ink/NewVideo
Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The single healthiest thing most of us can do for our relationship with politics and for politics would be to deemphasize our connection to national politics and reemphasize our connection to state and local politics," says Ezra Klein.
The media has become overwhelmingly nationalized. To improve your relationship with politics, and to improve politics in general, be intentional about your informational ecosystem.
Klein recommends reconstructing your news diet so it doesn't overwhelmingly feature national politics, rather sign up for local newsletters, subscribe to your local paper, and get involved in community politics rather than yelling at cable TV or lashing out on Twitter.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
EZRA KLEIN
Ezra Klein is the editor-at-large and cofounder of Vox, the award-winning explanatory news organization. Launched in 2014, Vox reaches more than fifty million people across its platforms each month. Klein is also the host of the podcast the Ezra Klein Show, cohost of the Weeds podcast, and an executive producer on Vox’s Netflix show, Explained. Previously, Klein was a columnist and editor at the Washington Post, a policy analyst at MSNBC, and a contributor to Bloomberg. He’s written for the New Yorker and the New York Review of Books, and appeared on many programs including Face the Nation, the Daily Show, and PBS NewsHour.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TRANSCRIPT:
I think the single healthiest thing most of us can do for our relationship with politics and for politics would be to deemphasize our connection to national politics and reemphasize our connection to state and local politics. Our political system is not built to be the nationalized. One of the very powerful cross cutting identities we’re supposed to have are our regional and our state and our local identities. James Madison said it was just obvious that state political identities would be preeminent over national identities. He turned out in the long sweep of American history to be wrong, but there’s a truth to why he said that, a thing that that was supposed to do for the system, which is you’re not supposed to be in politics just as a national Republican or Democrat. Even if you are doing that you’re supposed to be an Oklahoma Republican or a Missouri Democrat and that there are distinct things your state and your city and your place need not supposed to help discipline just separating into two overwhelming factions. Over time that has weakened, it’s probably weakened because the media has become overwhelmingly nationalized. I grew up outside of Los Angeles California and we got the LA Times, I listened to KCRW, you know, I could listen to the nightly news, but if I were growing up there now I would probably have an online subscription to the New York Times and I would read or listen to Vox and other national podcasts.
And so this is change. I had a very strong California oriented political identity growing up, today I probably would have a lot less of one. So, this is sometimes a hard thing to do for ourselves because the media has nationalized, a lot of state and local outlets have gone out of business or have been weakened or gutted, which is a terrible thing that deserves a lot of solutions and thinking of its own. But usually there is a lot more we can do and so one thing you can do is just be intentional about your informational ecosystem. If you are just getting, and you realize you’re getting 90 percent of your news is national and international and only ten percent is state and local or sometimes less than that is state and local, think about reconstructing a news diet so it doesn’t look that way, sign up for newsletters, subscribe to your local paper make sure that’s on your bookmarks, make sure you’re not over-reading all your news through nationalized social media and instead you’re going to places that are going to give you these very different things. And then when you’re getting involved in politics it’s a real big difference between getting involved in politics by tweeting mean things at pundits you don’t like like me on Twitter and getting involved by organizing people in your local community to make change. Being on Twitter, yelling at the cable news TV screen is really frustrating it’s not a nourishing way of being in politics because you don’t feel listened to, you don’t see any affect from what you’re doing. Whereas working with people in your community to do things it really does move things very quickly.
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- 교육 - Education
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