I’ve reached a point where my trust in both social and traditional media is deeply shaken. Too much of what passes for “news” today is not careful reporting, but opinion-driven narrative, framed to provoke emotion rather than convey truth. Facts are often secondary to sensationalism, and complexity is sacrificed for clicks, outrage, and speed. When stories are presented as moral verdicts instead of verified information, the public is not being informed — it’s being steered. What concerns me most is how this environment fractures our shared reality. Social media amplifies the loudest voices, not the most accurate ones, and news outlets too often follow that noise instead of challenging it. This creates division where nuance should exist and hostility where dialogue is needed. A nation cannot function when its citizens are constantly pushed into opposing camps based on incomplete or slanted information. History shows that strong countries are rarely destroyed from the outside; they weaken from within. When media and platforms reward outrage, distrust, and tribalism, they do our adversaries’ work for them — without a single shot fired. If we value our democracy and our future, we must demand higher standards: fact over narrative, evidence over emotion, and truth over influence. A free press is essential, but credibility is earned, not assumed.