Why We Removed the Adjectives

Traditional journalism has traded objective nouns for emotionally charged modifiers. Here is how we write to let you think for yourself.

EDITORIAL STANDARDS

7/1/20261 min read

If you read three different accounts of the same political event, you will likely encounter three completely different emotional realities. This is because modern reporting relies heavily on descriptive modifiers to signal how the reader should feel before they have even processed the facts. Our editorial room operates on a different principle: we cut the adjectives so you can form your own nouns.

The Subtle Art of Bias

Adjectives are the currency of clickbait. Words like devastating, shocking, or historic are rarely necessary to convey the actual weight of an event, yet they dominate digital feeds to drive engagement. By stripping these modifiers away, we present a stark, unembellished sequence of events that respects your intelligence.

Trusting the Reader's Intellect

True editorial independence means refusing to do the intellectual heavy lifting for the audience. We believe that when presented with clean, verified data and clear context, modern professionals are entirely capable of drawing their own conclusions. Our daily brief is not a moral compass; it is a clear window.