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Hudson Common Sense holds itself to the standards of a serious newsroom and the conduct of a serious neighbor. The masthead is smaller. The discipline is not.

Inspired by professional standards from outlets like The Wall Street Journal and the Associated Press AP’s “Telling the Story” guidelines, we aspire to follow a few simple but essential principles.

Our Political Stance: While we regularly endorse local candidates and engage in sharp political commentary, our ultimate goal is an evenhanded, non-partisan city. We are neither blue nor red. We are small-r republicans who believe in the necessity of a well-functioning civic framework, and we believe deeply in small-d democratic action. Whenever possible, we encourage, elevate, and endorse independent candidates who prioritize competence, transparency, and community over party lines.

  1. Where possible and especially with close acquaintances, we ask contributors to separate personal and professional communications. Dedicated email and phone lines for professional use help maintain boundaries, privacy, and professionalism.

    E.g. We jointly agree that iMessage is social. Work email is professional and on the record, unless agreed to being off the record.

  2. We’re transparent about what we do, why we do it, and if we have any conflicts of interest; if we’re covering a local issue, readers deserve to know our role (beyond being a property tax paying resident) and any affiliations we may have that could inform or compromise our perspective. As a rule we do not donate to any political candidates or causes. For the most part we are a mix of City of Hudson residents, lawful immigrants, and taxpayers, who can't yet vote (read and hold onto your tea bags: taxation without representation). We disclose relevant commercial interests. From an editorial perspective our byline is “The Editors.”*

    ***Why “The Editors” and not individual names? ****

    Hudson Common Sense attempts to speak with one voice, shaped by editors and contributors who debate and refine pieces. With the exception of clearly marked Guest Op-Eds and intentional pen-name pieces, we do not sign our work; the ideas must stand on their own, judged by readers rather than résumés. A tradition rooted in the Founding era and refined during America’s newspaper golden age.

    Additionally, some of us work in London, New York, Washington, or Kinderhook. Like many in such roles, we prefer not to mix international and national vocations with local life. We are not seeking office or attention, only a more non-partisan, efficient, and equal town.

    Read more: Nieman Foundation on The Economist’s quasi anonymous hive byline.

Read more from the WSJ on News Literacy and the difference between News & Opinion.

Read more from the WSJ on News Literacy and the difference between News & Opinion.

Watch this video and explainer on the difference between News & Opinion from the WSJ

  1. Accuracy before speed: we always strive to verify information before publishing. We also try to avoid breaking news and stick to ideas and commentary, and at most may publish some investigative details that are important but not time-sensitive. We leave that to Gossips, the Times Union, NYT, and various comment sections. We are by design slow followers, we provide commentary on the news, we don’t break it. This principle stems from lessons learned the hard way, and also because in Hudson facts often only emerge after developing stories… develop.

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    FAQ: Talking to Reporters: On the record vs. off the record vs. on background

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  2. Respectful engagement, especially online. We welcome feedback and questions, and answer in kind. This is also America, where satire is a civic instrument. The Shallot, signed Benjamin Irving, runs in the lineage of Jonathan Swift, Benjamin Franklin’s Silence Dogood, and Washington Irving’s Diedrich Knickerbocker. It must always say something true.

  3. Finally, we respect the physical safety and privacy of ordinary residents. However, we believe public officials, candidates, and those who voluntarily lobby the government are subject to a higher standard of scrutiny, and we will not shy away from forcefully critiquing their public actions and ideas. See our piece on The Threshold Test, and why we believe it is ok to relentlessly and lawfully criticize and investigate bad faith public servants.

These aren’t just policies, they’re habits that help build trust.

We hold ourselves to the standard we would want applied to us if we ran for office, drew a public salary, or lobbied the public purse. We will fall short occasionally. This page exists because we already have. In the early days, candidates worried about HCS’s “influence” and the blur between resident, neighbor, and editor. They had a point. The process tightened in response.

We hope that you will let us know right away if you believe we fall short of these standards (editors @ HudsonCommonSense.com), and that you will always consider sharing your perspective on Hudson Common Sense via Guest Op-Ed, or on your own medium, and we will gladly link to it.

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Agreement is welcome. Disagreement is vital. Nuance is rare and therefore prized. Common Sense exists to sharpen arguments, not settle them. Submit your guest op‑ed HERE.

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Hudson Common Sense is the only outlet in town that actively seeks out opposing views and invites its critics onto its own platform. Every editorial, Op-Ed, and column carries a footer requesting corrections and inviting counter-speech.

*Backstory: Challenging Power in a Town That Prefers Silence

When we started Hudson Common Sense, it took a few months to find our footing. Most honest local candidates and lobbyists initially like what we do. But that sentiment usually ends the moment the spotlight swings toward them or one of their friends. Turns out, many of the people who run our town have never been challenged by a serious question or considered conflicts of interests. Ask for a public document. File a lawful IRS Form 990 request. The very definition of lawful inquiry. You can still be met with threats or accusations of harassment.

On the other end are the polished and supposedly credentialed professionals who talk a big game about dialogue and “curiosity,” but treat ordinary debate and highlighting hypocrisy as if it were persecution. They invoke “emotional safety” and “hold space” for self-serving definitions of “community” or “neighborliness” to demand special treatment for personal stories they themselves chose to share in the public square … all while they run for office or lobby the public purse. Push back on their proposals and they act as if you have attacked who they are rather than what they argued.

Both extremes miss the point. Residents want fairness. They want public debate that respects personal privacy but does not shy from scrutiny of ideas and public actions. A community unwilling to question its leaders will never govern itself honestly.

https://www.instagram.com/p/DBKVvTBRKq2/

We dare intimidate and “harass” elected folks and lobbyists with… books as gifts!