| WESTERN OCCUPIERS BRUTALLY RAPE, MURDER AND EAT AFGHANI CHILDREN |
| July 28, 2008 at 16:52 | |
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Written by aggregator.ca CTV News thinks your mind is a chamberpot, and their staff is lined up to do their business in it.We'll print the article in its entirety to prevent CTV from weaseling out of this with drastic edits. The original is here but may be altered by the time you read it.
Which one of the two children was driving the car? A gunner, apparently fearing a suicide attack, fired a giant round from a 25-millimetre cannon after the car came too close to the Canadian convoy. It WOULD be silly for a gunner to fear a suicide attack from two children. Or would it? Is the entire staff of CTV News unaware that Canadian troops have a universally known safety zone? And that all unidentified and non-CF personnel are to drive slowly or stop, giving ample space for the protection of themselves and those troops? It isn't a state secret when everyone in theatre has been made aware of it. You would think CTV would want to include that in their article.
Ohh, I see. There was an adult driving the car. Well that makes more sense.
Here's our comparison shot of ammunition sizes. A 9mm round is about the size of one joint of your pinky finger and can leave a head wound the size of a silver dollar. A 25mm round would do more than "tear through" a skull or leave an "open wound". Unnamed witnesses giving editorialized descriptions in a moment of shock and grief are not newsworthy, and the wound types are not even relevant. ![]()
In the unlikely event that this man didn't know the protocol for handling situations involving military convoys, we're left with one assumption: he can't understand hand signals and screaming telling him to stop, even when a gun is pointed at him in a show of force.
I wonder what she thinks of her husband?
Even CTV News knows there was a reason.
Leftists and jihadi apologists often blame the West for terrorism, and claim that any intervention in the area will only make things worse. We will, they claim, by intent or accident produce more terrorists by intervening. They must have loved that "hospital visitor's" comment. It's a shame it comes from another unidentified commenter in the midst of the shock and grief of the death of two children--we have no way of knowing if he was already supportive of suicide bombing, or islamic jihad in general, or whether it was a hyperbolic outburst. CTV expends no energy to identify the man, his beliefs or his connections.
It appears as if an editor with at least the slightest conscience got his hands on this otherwise wretched piece before it was printed--that's an almost worthwhile attempt at balance. Unfortunately, the piece continues its descent into anti-Western rhetoric:
We're careless murderers is what we are. It's not like terrorists use men, women and children as human shields--right? CTV reports this factoid without any context to the situation on the ground, or the enemy we face there and his tactics. The enemy who wears civilian garb and hides amongst civilians. In one incident, Canadian troops killed a 90-year-old man who approached a convoy on a motorbike. The man was a respected political scientist and mentor to President Hamid Karzai.
My mistake! I guess they decided to provide some "context".
This story, like all stories, is grown from a seed: a small news item which is, in essence, watered by further research and interviews to provide background and context to the seed. With adequate care the article grows in size and fleshes out the story so the reader properly understands what happened without having to do extensive research himself. He is able to form his own opinion without the writers' and editors' own biases bouncing around inside his head. The problems responsible for the poor journalism in this article -- and the thousand others just like it -- arise during this process of watering. Interviews are poorly conducted and background checks aren't done; research is done quick and dirty, with no opposing views sought; context never finds its way into the article in the first place. And where, oh where, are the editors? Are they not held responsible for the quality of the work they oversee? We detected what we thought was the hand of an editor in a single paragraph of this article, but judging by the apparent lack of journalistic integrity throughout the rest of the piece it is more likely to have been a biblical miracle than the keen eye of a news editor. These considerations have led us to ask serious questions: Is CTV News coming out of the closet as anti-Western/pro-Jihadi? Is this merely an outcropping of the left wing bias CTV has long been accused of? Or is it simply exposing itself as one of the poorest and laziest news organizations in the Occident? |