I said I would try to serve the truth in its full complexity. I told her about the politically polarized house I'd grown up in, my father's blind progressivism, my mother's faith in corporations, and how effectively the two of them could poke holes in each other's politics.
"I could tell your mother a thing or two about corporations," Anabel said darkly.
"But the alternative doesn't work, either. You get the Soviet Union, you get the housing projects, you get the Teamsters union. The truth is somewhere in the tension between the two sides, and that's where the journalist is supposed to live, in that tension. It's like I had to be a journalist, growing up in that house."
"[...] Start a magazine like nobody else's. Not liberal, not conservative. A magazine that pokes holes in both sides at the same time."
"The Complicator."
basically my modus operandi. though tbh the implicit characterisation of "liberal" and "conservative" as being equally valid stances that deserve equal amounts of hole-poking is problematic