The Atlantic

You’re Better Off Not Knowing

The problem with dwelling on news about things you can’t control
Source: Illustration by Matt Chase / The Atlantic

For many Americans, these claims sound self-evidently true: Information is good; knowledge is power; awareness of social ills is the mark of the responsible citizen. But what if they aren’t correct? Recent studies on the link between political awareness and individual well-being have gestured toward a liberating, if dark, alternative. Sometimes—perhaps even most of the time—it is better not to know.

Like taking a drug, learning about politics and following the news can become addictive, yet Americans are encouraged to do more of it, lest we become uninformed. Unless you have a job that requires you to know things, however, it’s unclear what the news—good or bad—actually does for you, beyond making you aware of things you have no real control over. Most of the things we know are a distraction from the most important things that we know: family, faith, friendship, and community. If our time on Earth is finite—on average, we have only—we should choose wisely what to do with it.

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