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by kaon123 1039 days ago
As a regular reader of The Economist, that switched to the Guardian last year to due circumstance, I can only concur. My god is The Guardian a poor "newspaper". All they do is whine about problems without providing any analysis or solution. So yeah, why even look up the source if the standard of your output is abysmal?

Edit: FYI gave up my subscription after a couple of Months. Now I read the New Scientist. Significantly more optimistic news :).

4 comments

Same. I am thankful that for some unexplicable reason, my residential IP has free access to The Economist [1]. I still click on The Guardian by habit, but it has become a left-leaning clickbait site, far from the glory days of the Snowden revelations.

1: even as an "anarchist" I confess that op-ed journalism like The Economist's is often more objective because of its economic point of view, than if it was driven by political ideology like the vast majority of newspapers. Another decent one is Financial Times.

If I have to blindly believe someone, I'd rather it be Wall Street than the White House.

If you want optimism, check out the FutureCrunch newsletter. It is truly incredible. I’m a paid subscriber, but they have a free version.

https://futurecrun.ch/

Got anything for objective analysis of facts to uncover trends and cause-effect relationships? Preferably in a weekly or monthly circulation.
Very much still true: "Who reads the papers?" - https://youtu.be/DGscoaUWW2M?t=54
The Guardian used to be notorious for slipshod copyediting, earning the nickname of "The Grauniad".
Interestingly, that was (allegedly) because the Guardian was printed in Manchester, and therefore had to be delivered to London by train overnight, meaning that in London (where most of the press and other media who could write jokes about "the Grauniad" were), the copies would be earlier editions that had more mistakes in the highly manual typesetting and proofreading process. The London papers, printed in London, would use the more-corrected later editions for distribution in London.