That said, I don't read a fashion magazine for its view on international politics, nor do I expect their staff to be experts in such subjects. For entertaining articles, there are plenty in Vogue. Some quite touching first-person articles as well, and lively opinion pieces. But for meaningful articles about wider subjects, I turn to people and publications who have, say, twenty years' experience in the subject and can see beyond this season's trend in both shirts and thoughts, when they're talking.
So for me, there's nothing in any Vogue that I have to read, to be truly informed about the world - so yes, I do dismiss them. I do read them, every one, in any magazine whose language I can read, but I don't attach much weight to them. The purchase of a fashion magazine is a diversion, both in word and image. I'm too stern to see a fashion magazine as an education, not when it's trying to sell you blackhead cleaner on the next page.
In fact, the constant message of "you HAVE to IMPROVE yourself, you imperfect non-stylish non-supermodel" is so strong in a fashion magazine, I think it convinces us that it can improve our minds as well as our appearance. But can it really?