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jakobnissen | 14 days ago

That is because The Atlantic is not a monolithic hive mind, but employs journalists of different persuasions, who each cover their story from their own world view. So what you’re seeing is not The Atlantic being hypocritical, or flip floppy, but them covering the same topic from multiple points of view.

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aurareturn|14 days ago

They do not cover the same story with different views. If they did, they would publish 2 stories that contradict in message simultaneously. They don't do this.

They won't publish a story that says AI is about to crash and another that says AI is about to make everyone jobless at the same time. They spread it apart.

Therefore, they want readers to think that they have a united opinion.

hshdhdhj4444|14 days ago

According to you the only definition of “covering something with multiple points of view” is if you provide different perspectives in the same time period.

But really, you’re arguing the semantics of “covering multiple points of view”. Whether your restrictive opinion about that is right or not, you completely ignored the actual substance of what the person you replied to said. That the Atlantic is not a monolith. It employs different people who bring different viewpoints. And they may write different articles with different perspectives and/or conclusions, often completely opposing ones at the same or different times.

And your final conclusion does not follow from anything you’ve said or any other evidence presented.

We actually know what publications that try to present a single viewpoint look like. The most famous example of this is the Economist, which as a key part of this ethos refuses to have bylines for their articles. The Atlantic, on the other hand, looks nothing like that. Every article is bylined with details on each author’s bio.