Research today isn’t hard. It’s overwhelming.
Our Research tool surfaces only what’s relevant, while our Fact Checker filters out what’s not. We built these tools so you can sift through the noise and do more with less.
Learn more at https://t.co/fZyk9uoi8K
“Americans are fed up with inflation.”
vs.
“Some Americans claim inflation fatigue.”
Same topic. Different story.
Tiny word choices shape your editorial lens — often without you realizing it.
See your bias in real time → https://t.co/fZyk9uoi8K
Here’s the bias breakdown: @dylan.page, analyzed with no bias filter.
32 videos. Every word, counted.
📊 Bias score: 19.53%
📊 Percentile: 20th (less biased than 80% of the sources we review)
#BiasCheck#DylanPage#MediaAnalysis
Turns out Americans blame everyone for the shutdown. 🙄
A new AP-NORC poll shows that Americans are spreading the blame around:
58% say Trump and Republicans in Congress are responsible.
54% say Democrats aren’t off the hook either.
#GovernmentShutdown
Meanwhile, everyone’s still pointing fingers and it’s not making anyone look good.
Public opinion of both parties have not shifted significantly since the shutdown.
#Congress#Trump#PublicOpinion
5️⃣ Bottom line:
A shutdown isn’t just politics—it’s paperwork, paychecks, and long lines.
The longer it drags, the more impact it has.
🧠 Know someone confused by it? Send them this thread.
4️⃣ How does it end?
Here are the main options:
Short-term funding bill
Bipartisan negotiation
Full appropriations deal
One side caves
Emergency executive action (rare)
🧵 We analyzed 50+ videos from @AaronParnas to measure political bias.
Zero assumptions. Just flagged words, lean scores, and percentile ranks. Here’s what we found:
👇