Ask HN: What trustworthy sources of general news do you use?

4 points by JacobEdelman ↗ HN
What trustworthy sources of general news do you use?

10 comments

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John Stewart is probably the least biased, most accurate 'news' I run across.
I use Reddit's Worldnews subreddit /r/worldnews for a nice crowdsourced news source. It will often contain breaking news at incredible paces.

The news agency Al Jazeera in English is an amazing news source. They stream 24/7 and it's free to watch. Very daring journalists whom approach the happenings moreso than most other agencies. Very rarely biased.

Google News, while old, is still quite good.

Al Jazeera English and BBC International.

I don't really trust any of the US news channels. Frankly US news to an outsider sounds like raw propaganda most of the time (and that is aimed at the so called "non-bias" news channels in the US, not just Fox News and MSNBC). And the rare times they aren't spreading propaganda, they're seeding fear into the population.

The only decent source of news coming from the US is a handful of newspapers and comedians (e.g. Daily Show, Last Week Tonight, etc).

The Guardian. You can sign up for emails which arrive every weekday morning, summarising relevant headlines. If you like a story you can click it to learn more. This mail arrives just in time for my morning commute so I can read it on the train, or at my desk before I start work.
Reuters is super-unbiased. It does have one bias though, an anti-climate-change bias, which doesn't matter to me as I read more than enough science news to counter that.
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Really you need to read a bit of everything. Each news source will have its bias in certain topics, so you can't really stick to one.