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#31
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On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 03:16:28 GMT, "-=jd=-"
wrote: Heck, *one* shot could have sufficed if they just wanted to kill him, but they believed they were trying to prevent a detonation (you places yer bets, you takes yer chances). If, like the officers involved in this shooting you think the guy can detonate a bomb, why risk it? I had the impression that the task of the cop that grabbed him was to pin his arms and hands in case he tried to reach for a detonator, while someone else was responsible for taking the shots. And I'm sure his ears may still be ringing... -=jd=- No bomb. Just panic. |
#32
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On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 00:54:37 GMT, "-=jd=-"
wrote: I'm thinking the media has been duped, not by malice, but by sloppy journalism in the race to be first with the breaking news. I reckon you've hit the nail on the head, there. So what gives? Did a reporter grab some commuter schmuck at the scene and swallow the initial reports (about the padded jacket; attempting to elude; refusing to comply with officer orders) without verifying it? Then that one account made the network rounds until it mushroomed into a near conspiracy? This wouldn't be the first time the BBC and other British media have jumped the gun. The Beeb were recently found guilty of making false accusations against the UK government's reasons for entering the second Iraq war, which may have contributed to the suicide of a government defense consultant. In particular the BBC was criticised for allowing a major story to air UNCHECKED. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hutton_inquiry I do find it a rather laughable situation, after all the BBC are just another government-run broadcaster, no matter how much people would like to play this down by calling their funding a "licence fee" rather than a tax (there's a 10-quid a month "licence fee" for having a television in your house; sounds like a tax to me). Essentially what happened was that one division of the government took another division of the government to court for libel (but they called it a "judicial enquiry"), which is plainly daft and an indicator of just how overburdened with bureaucracy the UK has become. Whilst the UK news media are more serious in their political coverage than their US cousins, there is nevertheless the same hunger to be "first with the news", and the Sky/Fox corporation battle it out with the BBC to be the first to break any news item. The BBC is also particularly fond of digging, digging and digging some more to find dirt on politicians and politics; this has been backfiring frequently in recent years as the desperation to beat Sky/Fox to a news story often means that stories go out unchecked. If an Sky or BBC reporter got an eyewitness spinning them a complete yarn about a major story, they WOULD broadcast it, because they're too busy racing to beat their competitors to the scoop rather than stopping to coroborate the evidence. So I reckon you've got it absolutely correct on about a reporter swallowing an initial eyewitness report without verifying it, and it spiralling out of control. -- Andrew Oakley andrew/atsymbol/aoakley/stop/com Gloucestershire, UK |
#33
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#34
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On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 15:51:52 +0100, Andrew Oakley
wrote: government defense consultant. In particular the BBC was criticised Oh dear, all this taking to Americans is beginning to rub off on me. I did, of course, mean "defence consultant" not "defense consultant". http://www.scit.wlv.ac.uk/~jphb/american.html -- Andrew Oakley andrew/atsymbol/aoakley/stop/com Gloucestershire, UK |
#35
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How his ears are doing? On a fireing range with a bunch of other guys
fireing their Firearms (M1 Garand Rifles,at least) being fired,you only hear the mechanical clicking noise of the Rifle you are fireing.I know that is the way it was when I was at the Fireing Range at Fort Gordon,Georgia in 1962. cuhulin |
#36
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I remember a DI once told us lean mean fighting machines,y'all better
not lose or damage that M1 Garand Rifle because if you do,$164.00 will be dectucted from your pay.I took durn good care of my Rifle that was issued to me. cuhulin |
#37
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It is called New Scotland Yard nowdays.I dont remember how many years
ago it was,but the old Scotland Yard moved into a new building,(or some new buildings) whatever.I think it has been at least twenty years ago,I could be mistaken though. cuhulin |
#38
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I think Sky is better than BBC.Only my opinion.
cuhulin |
#39
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I have known for years about the brit "white paper" they have or did
have about removing all of the Irish folks from the Six Counties.Lots of brit comedies and other brit programs on tv in U.S.A.show how good the brits are at peeking through their window curtains.Most folks in U.S.A.are not window curtain peekers,I always step outside if I want to see what's going on outside.In U.S.A.there are some brit comedies and other brit tv programs on BBCAmerica all the time and also on PBS TV. cuhulin |
#40
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![]() "-=jd=-" wrote in message 8... I'm thinking the media has been duped, not by malice, but by sloppy journalism in the race to be first with the breaking news. I can't find anything that names an authority official as providing the initial reports of the victim wearing a padded coat, jumping the tunstiles, etc. I *have* seen it attributed to anonymous "initial eyewitness reports". For all I know, perhaps Jason Blair provided the info. I sure can't find anything similar to a clear, direct attribution to any "Inspector Joe Schmoe-Clouseau of Scotland Yard". The first round of reports were good, in that they gave the source of the "padded jacket" as a witness, in this story the witness is named: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4706913.stm A different eyewitness in the same story says the guy "appeared to have a bomb belt and wires coming out". Oh, well. The confusion came later, and oftentimes just hours later. News columnists were among those most eager to jumble the few known facts with unreliable eyewitness accounts and jump to their conclusions. That's the liberal media for ya. Next, I hear that Scotland Yard, during their on-going investigation, briefed the family with the information that has been leaked. That tells me that the Yard was not going to, and could not, cover anything up if they were keeping the family informed. So what gives? Did a reporter grab some commuter schmuck at the scene and swallow the initial reports (about the padded jacket; attempting to elude; refusing to comply with officer orders) without verifying it? Then that one account made the network rounds until it mushroomed into a near conspiracy? The reporters don't have to verify a story. They ought to verify their source. Such as -- was the eyewitness really at the station? Does the source seem given to fantasy? Nearly all journalism is some sort of story retelling. But, in this case, it seems the "opinion makers" were the worst offenders in taking the babblings of shocked eyewitnesses as God's Honest Truth. Is it possible for the media to make a traqic event even worse? Yes, and we have yet to hear much from the lawyers, politicians and bureaucrats. Frank Dresser |
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