A mainstay of financial advice is to cut out subscriptions, and to instead use the internet to get information and entertainment for free. However, the last few years have all but convinced me that quality journalism (investigations, not republishing famous people’s Twitter feeds) is important. There is simply no other way to forge agreement on the facts, uncover local corruption, or make society function.
An acquaintance just messaged to say he sold all his stocks and anticipates a civil war because the election outcome means we are certain to descend into Communism and live like people in the Soviet Union, East Germany, or Cuba. He says he looks forward to killing people in this war. Where does he get his news? Twitter and YouTube. He had all sorts of material to cite as evidence- all social media.
Quite frankly I don’t want to be deluded like that. Yet I can also observe that the people who believe everything the algorithms tell them don’t know they are misinformed. Therefore, I could be misinformed just like my acquaintance - just in a different way - and not know it.
CONS TO SUBSCRIBING$35 per month. $420 per year. $10,500 in savings required to support this spending in retirement per 4% rule.
Quality journalism (at the national level) can be found for free on some ad-supported internet platforms. See
https://www.adfontesmedia.com/There’s a case to be made for a low information diet, rather than even a quality information diet.
What if free library books could replace time spent online?
A physical newspaper creates lots of trash / physical waste.
PROS TO SUBSCRIBINGI read the paper at a relative’s house today and it was full of useful info about local elections, tensions in my city’s police department, local business expansions where I might apply, local events, and planned bridge construction projects on my commute, for example. I realized despite the hours I spend online, I am situationally unaware. Plus it was enjoyable.
Given that I’m the kind of person who is hungry for information, I’m going to either read the paper or the internet. Subscribing to a quality information source is like paying more for veggies instead of fast food.
I want to reduce my screen time, which is running over 3h per day (a hair on fire emergency IMO). Going analog could wean me off of this bad habit. Perhaps if I was confident about being informed, reading the paper for an hour a week could help me save many hours of lost time on my phone. I think FOMO on current events drives much of my internet addiction. Plus, the paper is not as addictive as online media / social media (see The Social Dilemma and many other sources).
If print advertising is less effective than targeted online ads, then by switching to print I could in theory reduce the effect of ads on my spending, offsetting some of the damage from the subscription.
If quality information leads to quality decisions, and misinformation leads to bad decisions (e.g. my tinfoil hatted acquaintance who thinks the apocalypse is here) then one’s choice of information sources could determine a lot of one’s life outcomes. If better info led me to make a better decision on my career, real estate, investing, and real-world social engagement or if it led me to feel less pessimistic overall, then the subscription could quietly pay for itself many times over.
If I’m not paying for my info, someone else is.
What do you all think about the concept of paying for journalism?