In reply to volvoclearinghouse :
As far as the left-right divide, it seems that there is a difference in exposure. Those who listen to right-leaning sources know they are right leaning, and are also aware of the opposing view, as they are generally exposed to it in some way. Those on the left, however, view their source as more-or-less "the center" and are only aware of the existence of the right-leaning view as characterized by their own left-leaning sources.
This sums up exactly the differences as I see them.
Left leaning sources tend to be traditional "news" sources- Network TV news and newspapers. The average person sees it as the "regular" news, and the editorialization is more subtly mixed in with the reporting, in between the weather and the sports scores. One opinion is shared as fact without so much as a hint that there is even an opposing opinion, unless they are calling it "wrong." But most glaring is the omission of big stories that don't even appear on the "regular" news. There is a strong normalization of one opinion and suppression of another. Even worse, rather than just report the news, some outlets have taken it upon themselves to actually create the news. They have purposely reported quotes out context to create a story where none existed. They have edited audio and video to mislead their audience. There has been a lot of "the end justifies the means" to reporting. It's not dissimilar to a cop planting evidence on a suspect "because they just know they are guilty." This all happens because the newsrooms lack a diversity of ideas, there is often no one willing or able to stand up and say "This is wrong."
Right leaning sources are not without fault, but the practice and degree is quite different in my opinion. Most of the editorial and opinion is clearly shared as opinion. It can be very biased, but they come right out and tell you they are biased and why, and they don't disguise it as news. While it can be one sided, they often tell both sides and explain why they believe they are right and why the opposition is wrong, leaving it up to the listener to come to their own conclusion. It can be heavy handed at times, but it's still a stark contrast to the mainstream "there is only one opinion." I've also found the right leaning outlets to be much more likely to challenge their own side, an extreme rarity with left leaning media that appears to just fall in line. They can be just as guilty about taking things out of context and making a story out of nothing, and they are definitely pushing a product.
The reality is that you should question everything you hear, regardless of the source. It's all more marketing than news, and we are the product. Trusting blindly is like going into a car dealership and saying "give me whatever the salesman recommends." Don't form an opinion until you get all of the info from various sources. On controversial stories, it can take days-weeks-months to get all the info. Once you form an opinion, seek out conflicting rather than confirming reporting and see if your opinion holds up. Unfortunately most people just regurgitate what they originally heard from whatever biased source they heard it from.
As bad as all the above is, social media is many times worse. It's a minefield of misinformation. Not only are we working hard to divide ourselves, but foreign adversaries are doing a tremendous job of driving in the wedge. And we are taking the bait, hook, line, and sinker. And no, it's not because so in so is pro this side and these guys are pro the other. They are all playing both sides to sow division. Worse yet, much of this is targeted towards our children, trying to turn them against their own parents and government. The fact that we as a people fall for this so ignorantly now leaves me really worried about an AI future.