Think your local newspaper going out of business or your state newspaper’s shrinking newshole doesn’t have an impact on your education? Think again. According to a new report by “The Chronicle of Higher Education,” the news media’s plummet – down profits and closing up shop – has everything to do with how educated we are as a society. As the media industry struggles and more people turn to the Internet for information, we’ll see fewer perspectives and, on the whole, be less enlightened, Harry Lewis, a Harvard professor, told “The Chronicle.” He explained how “The New York Times” recently ran a story about 15th-Century war and Afghan counterinsurgency. On the Internet, we tend to seek only more of what we already know, or people who see things the way we see them. Newspapers put it all in: The stuff we don’t know and don’t agree with. And we are the better because of it.
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