Why doesn't anyone trust the news anymore?: Trust agnostics
The question behind the question
My mother calls me every Sunday to ask whether something she saw on Facebook is real. She is seventy-three, has a master’s in education, taught high school for thirty-one years. She is not gullible. She is navigating an information environment that was not designed to be navigated.
I stopped answering her question directly. I started asking a different one: what would you need to see to feel confident either way? That conversation changed everything. Not because I gave her a method — because she already had one. She had been triangulating sources her whole career. She just forgot she knew how, because every platform she touches is engineered to make triangulation feel unnecessary.
Neither trust nor distrust
The institutional reformers want us to trust better institutions. The citizen journalists want us to trust our own verification. The platform designers want us to trust transparent process. We have noticed that all three camps are selling trust.
We are not buying. Not because trust is worthless — because the word means different things in each camp and nobody has reconciled them. For some, trust means deference. For others, verification. For others, process confidence. These are different cognitive acts wearing the same label.
What we want is simpler and harder: infrastructure that makes the cost of lying higher than the cost of telling the truth. Prediction markets. Adversarial collaborations. Skin-in-the-game forecasting. Systems where being wrong has consequences and being right has a record. Not because people are trustworthy. Because the architecture makes trustworthiness advantageous.
Where we concede ground: Most people want someone to tell them what’s true, not a verification toolkit.
What would change our mind: An institution earning ten straight years of trust growth on hard contested questions.
Read the full synthesis: Why doesn’t anyone trust the news anymore?