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lkrubner · 2021-06-15 · Original thread
This subject feels like the mirror subject to the question that was discussed on HN 2 days ago: "Do we live in political echo chambers?"

My response: Who cares? I know what my values are, I know which side I'm on, I know what I fight for.

If you're looking for new philosophies or perspectives, I strongly suggest two things:

1. fiction

2. history

I don't think day-to-day news coverage can ever be written at a level where it might affect your fundamental values; among many other problems, it is typically written in a hurry, with a lack of context, and so it lacks long-term perspective.

In terms of books that have changed my perspective on some subject, here are some important ones I've read over the last year:

Reading Lolita In Tehran, by Azar Nafisi

https://www.amazon.com/Reading-Lolita-Tehran-Memoir-Books/dp...

Thieves of State: Why Corruption Threatens Global Security, by Sarah Chayes

https://www.amazon.com/Thieves-State-Corruption-Threatens-Se...

The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism, by Andrew J. Bacevich

https://www.amazon.com/Limits-Power-American-Exceptionalism-...

The Emergence of China: From Confucius to the Empire, by E. Bruce Brooks and A. Taeko Brooks

https://www.amazon.com/Emergence-China-Confucius-Ancient-Con...

Azar Nafisi's book is both a true life action story, and it's also an intellectual journey, a consideration of how authoritarianism slowly takes over.

Sarah Chayes book is remarkably ambitious, not only did I suddenly see corruption as a global issue, but she connects it to religious extremism and then reviews the corruption of the Catholic Church in the 1400s and how that lead to Martin Luther and that era's own explosion of religious extremism.

Andrew J. Bacevich's book is a sober look at all the things the USA probably cannot do, even though it has the worlds most powerful military

The Brooks book about China was eye opening for me. I previously knew nothing about the Warring States period, or the intense intellectual debate that occurred over the meaning of the state and the duties of the leader to the people. I wish more Westerners knew this story.

Should I expect this kind of writing from the daily newspaper? Absolutely not. It's ridiculous. It's a category error. That's now what the daily newspaper is for. That's certainly not what the 24 hour news cycle is for.

Sometimes I want actionable news I can use, which is partly a matter of knowing which candidates might have the best chances of advancing my goals. Especially during primary races, day-to-day political news is useful to me when it gives me the information I need to decide who of many candidates I should donate money to.

But when I want new perspectives and philosophies? I turn to books.

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