from Hacker News

The Headlines Are Evil, and They're Bringing Us Down

by feross on 5/29/25, 6:46 PM with 18 comments

  • by conartist6 on 5/29/25, 7:40 PM

    For me the headline was pretty straightforward: he doesn't have the authority, according to your analysis there was never any good-faith reason to believe that he did have the authority to do what he said he could do.

    The administration's signature move is acting in bad faith then lashing out, so I really doubt they plan to change tactics now.

    Most of us are just watching to see if there still exists a rule of law at all.

  • by kerblang on 5/29/25, 8:10 PM

    A lot of news - arguably the majority - involves articles that are as bad as the headlines. If only the headlines were a problem, we'd be in great shape. The lack of effort is as bad as the bias.

    The author's effort to clarify things is commendable, and yet, if anything, this article has a bad headline... but for the best reason, because it's more informative and specific than I expected.

  • by k310 on 5/29/25, 7:15 PM

    Headlines are clickbait.

    Is the referenced headline an example of same?

  • by paulpauper on 5/29/25, 7:58 PM

    Clickbait headlines are the worst. "Why America is doomed because of {X}" and then the article prevaricates.
  • by KevinMS on 5/30/25, 10:18 AM

    This is pretty much the front page of reddit. click bait titles rise to the top and then thousands of people comment on it without even realize its either wrong or out of context
  • by hyperhello on 5/29/25, 7:11 PM

    The function, or goal, of news may not be to inform. One would have to decide by observation.
  • by polarix on 5/29/25, 7:29 PM

    Sure, those headlines are misleading.

    But all of those other headlines are wrong and misleading as well, in their own way.

    The "court"(s) cannot "block" Trump from doing anything. They don't control the military. All they can do is "say" something about the "legality" of the actions of the commander in chief of the military. The first two headlines that (according to the link) "beg to mislead" are closer to accuracy on this dimension -- the courts said something.

  • by tehjoker on 5/29/25, 7:53 PM

    This is such a 2011 vibe article. We are so far past this style of political discourse I have to chuckle.
  • by cadamsdotcom on 5/30/25, 4:07 AM

    Misleadingly broad title, what about this instead:

    Headlines About Trump Tariffs Are Evil, And They’re Bringing Us Down

    Scopes it more accurately.

  • by ProfessorZoom on 5/29/25, 8:20 PM

    this article is about itself
  • by hypertexthero on 5/29/25, 7:31 PM

  • by kstrauser on 5/29/25, 8:32 PM

    > Axios: “Court says Trump doesn’t have the authority to set tariffs”

    Eh. The article's right that the president does have the authority to set tariffs in general, just not these specific ones. However, it's also universally understood that headlines are radically terse summaries of longer articles. They exist to help you identify longer content you want to read.

    A more accurate headline like "Court says Trump doesn't have the authority to set these specific tariffs for the reasons he gave" still grossly simplifies the longer article, takes longer to read, and probably wouldn't fit the space allotted for it. It would be more accurate, strictly speaking, and yet worse.