February 2020 doesn’t feel heavy only because the news is heavy. It feels heavy because the interface is. The feed delivers politics as a reflex, preloading judgment, manufacturing urgency, and turning outrage into a daily ritual that fits neatly into spare moments. A small experiment, a two-minute pause, is a rebellion against a system that…
In January 2020, politics doesn’t arrive as a newspaper or an evening broadcast. It arrives as a push alert. The attention economy has reshaped civic life into an endless stream of click-shaped urgency, rewarding visibility over integrity and reaction over reflection. The result isn’t just polarization. It’s a citizenry trained to live without “later.”
December 2019 closes with impeachment, primaries, and a country that feels permanently on edge. But the deeper story isn’t just what happened. It’s how the feed trained us to consume politics in fragments, perform identity, and treat constant emergency as normal. Before 2020 arrives as a “reset,” it’s worth asking what the attention economy has…
American politics in 2019 is less a town hall and more a group chat with no moderators. Impeachment becomes content, campaigns become mood rings, and every institution gets filtered through the attention economy. The deeper crisis is not just what leaders do, but what the feed trains citizens to become.
