I don't have a problem with journalists being embedded in military units. But, there is certainly a problem with the good-times "let's party" attitude that a lot of them seem to have. Journalling a war is not intrinsically a bad thing, but it's not being done properly.
I don't think you can look to one source for anything. You have to look for sources that you trust as a "this is what's happening" source, and then you have to parse the information yourself and form an opinion from that. You can get off to a good start by not watching CNN or reading the Toronto Star. I'm not sure what looking to this Bowl will give you. It's a bit like reading the Toronto Star. For the most part, you'll just be looking here to get confirmation of what you already believed and make yourself feel like you were right all along.
An important thing to keep an eye on is the "initial report". Many initial reports report truth fragments here and there and are later buried when they are framed as part of "the story". If you can properly assemble the "initial reports" in your mind as they are reported and not forget about the loose ends when they are overwhelmed by "the story", you have a better chance of painting a reasonably informed picture of what is really going on. But, it's not enough by itself.
Now... how can a good newspaper be a nation talking to itself? That assumes a lot, perhaps most importantly that the nation has the information it needs to make any kind of informed decision. I'm not sure that that information is readily available, and you will never get it from one source (and I consider the great unwashed population to be "one source"). It assumes that various levels of government and other "people in the know" are contributing to the conversations inside the nation and this isn't the case.
The plumbing that would have allowed a nation to freely converse had a brief window of opportunity when the Internet began gaining popularity, but most of the forums of discussion are now controlled or moderated to some degree (this is not necessarily a bad thing, but ideally open, centralized forums of discussion such as Usenet are being buried so as to be inaccessible to a lot of people. The forums are now scattered, under various degrees of control and have no useful level of interconnection).
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