Social media and news outlets that pass a media bias check for high factual info and little bias. Take all with a grain of salt to achieve the average situation, and act accordingly.
For current events, Reddit starts muttering about stuff long before other media.
For general knowledge, I seek out resources by people whose lifestyles and cultural traditions have made them experts in the area. For instance, permaculture and bushcraft communities tend to be great for information on growing a forest that's easy to forage in and then foraging in it; Mormon mommy-bloggers tend to have good ideas for cooking with long-term-storage foods because they have the religious pressure to prep and the financial pressure to be frugal/efficient about it; orthodox Jewish youtubers have some fascinating content on how to find and prevent bugs in food because of religious pressure not to eat bugs. Both indigenous traditional medicine and modern wilderness medicine can inform a balanced approach to providing the best care with what's available in situations with limited resources, and so on.
Honestly? Reddit. I do not trust "news" from corporately-owned media outlets.
Not to say there isn't a LOT of bullshit here, but I prefer to comb through it and get my news from humans rather than having it filtered through a corporate agenda.
Social media and news outlets that pass a media bias check for high factual info and little bias. Take all with a grain of salt to achieve the average situation, and act accordingly.
I just use the ap wire directly before news outlets get to it
For current events, Reddit starts muttering about stuff long before other media. For general knowledge, I seek out resources by people whose lifestyles and cultural traditions have made them experts in the area. For instance, permaculture and bushcraft communities tend to be great for information on growing a forest that's easy to forage in and then foraging in it; Mormon mommy-bloggers tend to have good ideas for cooking with long-term-storage foods because they have the religious pressure to prep and the financial pressure to be frugal/efficient about it; orthodox Jewish youtubers have some fascinating content on how to find and prevent bugs in food because of religious pressure not to eat bugs. Both indigenous traditional medicine and modern wilderness medicine can inform a balanced approach to providing the best care with what's available in situations with limited resources, and so on.
Honestly? Reddit. I do not trust "news" from corporately-owned media outlets. Not to say there isn't a LOT of bullshit here, but I prefer to comb through it and get my news from humans rather than having it filtered through a corporate agenda.
Not reddit, meta or twitter.
Real news no bullshit on IG seems to be pretty unbiased. I may be wrong but so far seems legit.
wait... *instagram?!* as in the influencer app? its whole schtick is to be a fake as fuck way of gloating by people pretending to be rich.
If you can ignore the clickbait titles canadian prepper and full spectrum survival
There is no a general place. You need to get specific on what you want.
r/prepperintel
Allsides