70°F
weather icon Clear

LETTER: 24/7 news cycle, social media lead to excesses

Updated July 5, 2020 - 9:19 pm

“It’s always something” was one of the tag-lines of the late, great, Gilda Radner, who was a cast member of “Saturday Night Live” in the 1970s. I’m reminded of her at times when I consider what now passes for news, 24/7.

I do follow the news. But I don’t remember everything being so urgent or confusing or contradictory in nature compared to just a few decades ago. For younger people, it may seem civilization might be coming to an end. It isn’t. The hysteria we are experiencing daily hasn’t really revealed much of anything new. It’s just that there seems to be so much more of it these days. Social media?

Today’s radical drive to erase any history that “offends” does a disservice to the young. If they aren’t made aware that many of today’s problems are just reruns of those of past decades, then it’s no wonder so many are terrified.

Don’t give up. “It’s always something” might also be followed by another saying: “And this, too, shall pass.”

LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
SPONSORED BY BEST MATTRESS
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
LETTER: Soros funding campus protests

George Soros would like nothing more than to see a complete deterioration of the United States.

LETTER: Criminals make us change our habits

In response to your Saturday story on credit card skimming: I was a scammed three times at the gas pumps.

LETTER: Rail line to California

This is progress? Four years and billions of dollars to build a roughly 200-mile stretch of rail from California to Nevada.

LETTER: Misinformation on inflation

The Biden administration is going all out to convince people that inflation is not as bad as it really is.

LETTER: A Trump-Biden cage debate

I would love to see a debate between our two presumptive presidential candidates. Just the two of them, one-on-one.

LETTER: Groundbreaking on a rail line to California

I’m voting against every politician who — in the picture at the groundbreaking shown in the Review-Journal — celebrated pouring our tax money down the drain.