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A pile of newspapers with the headline "Local News"
Rickey Cole writes that people should support local news to ensure evolved and accurate information gets disseminated throughout our communities. “We need a new paradigm for local news. For those of us who still have local news sources, it's up to us to support those efforts,” he writes. Photo by Depositphotos.com

Opinion | Strong Local News Sources Make Strong Communities

Everything changes. The longer we live, the more changes we see happen.

Before the turn of the current century, there were two major sources of record for news of current events in Southeast Mississippi that were available for a few cents, freshly delivered seven days a week. Sure, there were TV stations and local papers and even local radio, but the regional news of record for the Coast and the Pine Belt came from two buildings: one on DeBuys Road in Biloxi and one on Main Street in Hattiesburg.

Folks complained about The Sun Herald and The American. Some complaints were legitimate, and some were just the background noise of our culture. But we relied upon these robust institutions to keep us current and informed on what we needed to know to live in these places in those times.

“We now have a trillion sources of information at our fingertips, seeming to update every millisecond,” Rickey Cole writes. “A few may be reliable, but those are needles in a haystack.” Photo by Jeremy Bishop on Unsplash

Like abandoned palaces after a devastating war, these empty shells are stark reminders of how much life has changed in 30 years.

We now have a trillion sources of information at our fingertips, seeming to update every millisecond. A few may be reliable, but those are needles in a haystack. Nevertheless, folks gobble greedily from this miasma of disinformation, misinformation, malinformation, and non-information and spew it out upon us all like a virus.

Create New Paradigm For Local News

I used to think that knowledge was power, and when information came to us in manageable streams from reliable sources, it was. As Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan said, in the last century people were entitled to their own opinions, but not their own facts.

Today, reality itself is subjective and cutting through the torrent of propaganda, stupidity and bloviation every day is a Herculean task.

Sometimes I wish I could just read the paper, watch John Chancellor and Randy Swan, and feel as though I have heard enough not to worry about the rest.

We need a new paradigm for local news. For those of us who still have local news sources, it’s up to us to support those efforts. When we are involved, we gain the power to help those sources evolve and report accurately. Otherwise, we are cast to sit by and watch those without our communities’ best interests at heart take the reins and means of our information sources. Unfortunately, that world may be closer than you think.

This MFP Voices essay does not necessarily represent the views of the Mississippi Free Press, its staff or board members. To submit an opinion for the MFP Voices section, send up to 1,200 words and sources fact-checking the included information to azia@mississippifreepress.org. We welcome a wide variety of viewpoints.

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