Margaret Sullivan, The Washington Post; 
"Roberts,
 the Times article and Florida Man all point to the same thing: A lot of
 Americans don’t know much and won’t exert themselves beyond their echo 
chambers to find out.
This is the way a democracy self-destructs...
Subscribe to a national newspaper and go beyond the headlines into the 
substance of the main articles; subscribe to your local newspaper and 
read it thoroughly — in print, if possible; watch the top of “PBS 
NewsHour” every night; watch the first 15 minutes of the half-hour 
broadcast nightly news; tune in to a public-radio news broadcast; do a 
simple fact-check search when you hear conflicting claims.
For those who can’t afford to subscribe to newspapers, almost all public libraries can provide access...
As
 Walter Shaub, former director of the U.S. Office of Government Ethics, 
noted Tuesday on Twitter, it was on Nov. 19, 1863, that President 
Lincoln challenged his fellow citizens to rise to a “great task.”
Americans
 must dedicate themselves to ensuring, Lincoln urged in the Gettysburg 
Address, “that government of the people, by the people, for the people, 
shall not perish from the earth.”
So, too, in this historic moment.
After
 all, authoritarianism loves nothing more than a know-nothing vacuum: 
people who throw up their hands and say they can’t tell facts from lies.
And democracy needs news consumers — let’s call them patriotic citizens — who stay informed and act accordingly.
Flag-waving is fine. But truth-seeking is what really matters."