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7 votes
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'First feline' Larry marks fifteen years as Britain's political top cat
16 votes -
Swedes searching for their Colombian mothers forty years after their adoptions – government acknowledges processes were plagued with irregularities, from theft of babies to falsified documents
10 votes -
The ten best and ten worst US foreign policy decisions
15 votes -
Human-driven global warming could cause the collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, a powerful ocean current system, and throw Iceland into a deep freeze
18 votes -
The King got this “illegal” whisky — The distiller got threats | Blind Booze
2 votes -
itch.io: No ICE in Minnesota Bundle
48 votes -
Moderna won’t run phase III vaccine trials as skepticism grows in US
22 votes -
Europe’s $24 trillion breakup with Visa and Mastercard has begun
64 votes -
Finland opens Europe's first lithium mine – will create about 350 jobs and offers Europe's only production chain of its kind, reducing reliance on Chinese imports
15 votes -
‘It’s emptiness’: banned Ukrainian athlete accuses International Olympic Committee of fuelling Russia’s propaganda
23 votes -
US Food and Drug Administration declines to review Moderna's mRNA flu shot
30 votes -
Economic ideas and policy implementation: Evidence from Malthusian training in British Indian bureaucracy
10 votes -
US Federal Aviation Administration reopens El Paso airport hours after saying it was grounding flights for ten days
16 votes -
Finland's poetic masterpiece, the Kalevala, has roots in two cultures and two countries
9 votes -
EU says TikTok faces large fine over "addictive design"
32 votes -
Delilah Bon - ILLEGAL ALIENS (2026)
3 votes -
Wolves killed more than 2,100 reindeer in Finland last year – herders suspect Russian wolf numbers have exploded after hunters were sent to the frontline in Ukraine
11 votes -
The Boring Company faces Nashville tunnel criticism
24 votes -
Alphabet plots big expansion in India as US restricts visas
20 votes -
I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back.
23 votes -
Michigan anti-trust lawsuit alleges oil companies colluded to “capture and kill” clean-energy and electric-vehicle efforts
20 votes -
China to ban hidden door handles on cars starting 2027
46 votes -
US judge allows last of five offshore wind projects halted by Donald Trump to proceed
42 votes -
New York City congestion pricing’s unexpected winners: suburban drivers
22 votes -
Notepad++ hijacked by state-sponsored hackers
55 votes -
How Norway accomplished a near-total electric vehicle transition – almost 100 percent of new cars registered in November were electric
27 votes -
'Right-to-compute' laws may be coming to your state this year
20 votes -
Why there's no European Google?
38 votes -
In the 1930s a radical conservative faction almost pushed Finland into full authoritarianism
8 votes -
Amazon’s promotion of ‘Melania’ has critics questioning its motives (Amazon has spent 35M on marketing on top of its 40M budget)
34 votes -
Silver plunges 30% in worst day since 1980, gold tumbles as Kevin Warsh pick eases US Federal Reserve independence fear
33 votes -
Finland looks to end "uncontrolled human experiment" with Australia-style ban on social media
27 votes -
Sweden's ruling class is flirting with the idea of adopting the EU's single currency, seeking safety in numbers to insulate itself against geopolitical tension from both sides of the Atlantic
14 votes -
Newcastle council is looking into restoring a ferry route between the UK city and Bergen in Norway – it last operated in 2008, when it was cancelled due to rising oil prices
20 votes -
Waterparks - ICE (2026)
11 votes -
‘Rage knitting’ against the machine: the hobbyists putting anti-US Immigration and Customs Enforcement messages into crafts
8 votes -
Gold tops $4,900/oz; silver and platinum extend record‑setting rally
32 votes -
Bruce Springsteen - Streets Of Minneapolis (2026)
16 votes -
European nations issue warning to Russia-linked shadow fleet
18 votes -
Finland is the undisputed world leader when it comes to icebreakers – Finnish companies have designed 80% of all those currently in operation, and 60% were built at shipyards there
26 votes -
Government payments drive US farm income surge in 2025
20 votes -
Buffeted by political storms and excluded from continental federations, Greenland find their chances are limited but a futsal tournament in Croatia is a priceless opportunity
5 votes -
New California law means big changes for real estate listing photos
16 votes -
US Democrats successfully strip all anti-trans riders from final appropriations bills
78 votes -
Why America needs fewer bus stops
26 votes -
How North Carolina erased medical debt for 2.5 million people
12 votes -
Norway's approach to getting kids reading has much to teach us this year – from government support, to innovation with libraries themselves
13 votes -
Gadgets for people who don't trust the government
37 votes -
Does anyone else find CBS News particularly stressful?
I may be in the minority on Tildes who still watches cable news. My mom is the one who puts it on and I'll usually ignore/forget about it when I'm home alone, but I find it's a good way to keep...
I may be in the minority on Tildes who still watches cable news. My mom is the one who puts it on and I'll usually ignore/forget about it when I'm home alone, but I find it's a good way to keep track of major headlines. Also, our usual choice of national news, ABC with David Muir, tends to end every broadcast with some feel-good story which is just... really appreciated in these times. (Though tonight they played a soundbite of Martin Luther King Jr.'s final Sunday sermon, and the choice of that particular soundbite feels very pointed.)
A couple months ago YoutubeTV and Disney got into a contract disagreement though, so ABC was removed from the lineup for a bit. For a while we watched CBS News, and... Something about it just genuinely stressed me out. Of course the news is very stressful lately, but usually I can deal with it. At worst, I leave the room for certain stories that make me particularly angry.
Something about CBS just left me really agitated and stressed though. I can't say what it was exactly, maybe the delivery, or a heavy focus on the worst parts of US politics? All I know is every night I was getting increasingly worked up, the way I only ever did with the most absolutely infuriating news stories, until we switched to NBC until ABC returned to air.
This came to mind again after my mom put on CBS last night since ABC was starting late due to some sports program. It agitated me until I just snapped.
So my question: does anyone else find CBS particularly stressful compared to other cable news? If so, does anyone have any ideas on why that is? And are there any regular watchers who've noticed a shift in tone? I never really watched CBS before, but I'm wondering if maybe it's somehow tied to Bari Weiss's influence given the stuff with 60 Minutes.
22 votes