You have to read the best rag of each side.
In my case, I will only read it if they have an impeccable record on facts.
I don’t care whether they take a capitalist stance or a social democratic stance.
My go to rags are the U.K. Guardian, Observer and the Economist.
I would love to read a far right and a far left version - unfortunately neither of those two sides can present their case without blatantly lying.
Internationally, Washington Post and NYT OPINION pieces are worth a read. But their general reporting is full of blatant lying.
Quality of Bangladeshi rags is extremely poor. From presentation, research to insight - collectively poor.
India used to be good but not any more. Except the few southern rags.
LOL.
@Banana Republic
Read this quickly, as I will delete it in two hours' time.
It is difficult to react to that other than with a bitter laugh.
The Statesman was sold by the syndicate that owned and ran it to Palkhiwala's nephew, Cushrow Irani, author of "Bengal: The Communist Challenge", that contained a poem with the unforgettable lines, "Who will halt the clattering train". Cushrow won an international reputation for his defence of democracy; within The Statesman, he destroyed whatever journalism there was, and there was a lot. The paper exists like a pale, post-chemotherapy shadow of its former self.
No point in discussing at length the remaining Calcutta papers. We had the Amrita Bazar Patrika, printed in English, sarcastically claimed by the brown sahib as the best vade mecum to learning Bengali that existed; the Jugantar, that disappeared without trace; the Ananda Bajar Patrika, that earned the revenues to support the family's attempts to raise their profile through first, the Hindustan Standard, then The Telegraph, where a well-known Indian journalist frolicked with his helpless female internes, until everything-Da Rudrangshu ran it for a few days until called to higher office to snivel when the autocrats wanted Sabyasachi Das hounded out.
In Delhi, K. K. Birla, one of G. D.'s sons, ran the Hindustan Times. It remains independent run by a lady of his family, but is watery and vacillating due to the bullying of the government.
The Times of India was an institution to rival, even exceed The Statesman, but the present generation of owners are pimps who will do anything to retain their Sodomic life-style.
There are two others, The Pioneer of Lucknow, owned by the Thapars, and yielded, shall we say, to the Trotskyite campaign manager of Shashi Tharoor at their college elections who saw the true light and became a BJP pillar and the familiar of Advani, before shifting to The Pioneer, where Lalit Thapar saw that God had anointed an Editor through the hands of Lal Krishna, and surrendered the paper to Master Mitra. After acquiring the paper, his ethnicity re-asserted itself, he saw yet another true light and joined the Trinamool Congress. He, Swapan DasGupta and Paranjoy Guha Thakurta were the same batch (ISC 71) and were known to the awed population as 5-6-7, from the points that each got in his ISC; Chandan got his DPhil for a good thesis on the Indian Independence Movement, Swapan is an increasingly hag-ridden mouthpiece for the BJP, and Paranjoy was edged out of the EPW for daring to write against Adani, and now wages guerrilla war against a bemused Adani.
There is an astonishingly good paper printed from Chandigarh, that is not easy to get. I used to read it more than fifteen years ago, and do not know its present condition.