Americans grapple with a key coronavirus question: Whom do you trust? An AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll finds two-thirds have lots of trust in the CDC and their own doctor. Far fewer trust the media, friends or the president.
But Manley, 58, a civilian U.S. Army public affairs officer, was skeptical of using a drug not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treating the virus and decided it was a gamble not worth taking.
Or, as Manley frames it: “What is being jammed down our throats in our news? Who is talking about these things? Where do you go to actually get something you can believe?” Contrast that with Michele Cody, 45, a technology manager from Riverton, New Jersey. She’s become so worn down by the crush of information that she’s put herself on a news diet — giving up her early morning newscast and relying more on a roundup of coronavirus news pushed to her inbox., and keep her blood from boiling, is through selective use of the mute button on her TV remote.
Davis said that much of the media has unfairly piled on Trump, overplaying things like the president’s
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