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Marty Krasney's avatar

One point that too often gets neglected, including here, in commentary about "even-handedness" (i.e. irresponsibility) at the NYTimes is headlines. That's all that many readers read and much of what they retain. The Times has been egregiously awful in choosing headlines that exacerbate the problem about which Michael writes here and elsewhere, when a revealing article about Trump's predations, pathologies or mindlessness can be eviscerated by a softball headline.

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Susan Linehan's avatar

yes yes yes. Preaching to the converted. The problem I have been having with polls isn't just their methodology but that they never seem to ask the right questions. Instead of "are you better off than you were four years ago" say "2020 was four years ago. How do you remember life in 2020? Would you support once again eliminating a national pandemic response team? Do you know which candidate is supporting that?" Instead of asking about a belief in climate change, ask "have you experienced extreme weather more recently (extreme hot, cold, flooding, tornados, etc). Would you support enacting measures that MIGHT make that worse?

I don't see why polls can't educate at the same time as they ask opinions, particularly the ones that are ultimately "horse race." But simply publicizing how people react to the actual issues facing us, might make more people begin to think about them. We are too entranced with abstract language in asking people what they think. Give them something concrete they can think ABOUT and then ask them what they think about it.

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