Originally posted by aldo_14
Are you suggesting that, being an Israeli, you're in a position to refute any report from any independent reporter/media person (which is subsequently carried on international media) in the Palestinian territories, simply by dint of being in the same country?
I have no doubt that it's possible for inacurracies to creep into reporting; but I would say it's false to suggest living in a country automatically makes a person able to invalidate any 3rd party report simply by dint of being in that country.
Nope, that's not what I'm saying, and frankly, I'm disappointed that you either innocently think that's what I was saying, or even worse, are putting words in my mouth. You're generally much sharper than that, dude.

Read what I said. I never even mentioned being in the same country. I said "people in the middle of a situation" once, and referred to a local as being someone able to verify things with his own eyes and ears
three times. Direct, personal observation. Not relying on the media reports of whatever country is in question; those can be (and usually are) just as biased as the more "international" level of media.
Originally posted by aldo_14
How can one person - any person - claim to have an in-depth knowledge than the collated knowledge of people whose very job is identify news stories?
News stories, you might want to clarify, that bring in the highest ratings. Which include death, destruction, atrocitites, and general mayhem, unusual acts of kindness, abnormal events (usually to do with nature), etc. They don't report on all the shootings and mortar attacks that go on here, for example. Understandably, in a way, since they would not be left with any time or room to report on anything else if they did. But it never even gets mentioned; why? Because in 95% of those incidents, nobody gets hurt, only property damage. And that kind of story is
boring.
So you get a seeming lack of incidents reported on, a seeming "peace", during the recent "hudna/ceasefire" - entirely misleading, an impression that can be easily verified as erraneous, yet the general public worldwide doesn't bother, since they have no reason to believe that they're missing anything.
Originally posted by aldo_14
My whole point is that TM can't personally verify all these claims - documented by multiple neutral observers from the UN, Helsinki Human Rights Federation (forget exact name), US embassy, etc because there is no way he could physically observe all of them. If anything war clouds the flow of free information, not clarifies it.
Now see, here you're getting into a realm I said repeatedly I am not specifically referring to, and know nothing about: the specific whatevers you guys were debating. You really disappoint me here, man - it's the first AND last thing I said.

I did not read the previous X amount of pages of this thread, only the post I referred to, and my response was reflecting ONLY the contents of that post.
Originally posted by aldo_14
Althought I'd note your cited example of the Phildelphi route could be the result of a miscalculated automatic spellchecking. The BBC uses Philadelphi, though, which is where I get most information from. I'd suggest that a place name in a foreign country being misspelled by a single letter is somewhat different from multiple eyewitness reports from named (and testifying in court) indivuals.
Quite true; I hadn't even thought of the spellchecking angle. I did say that "the situation has improved lately", however, so it no longer surprises me that news sources get it right.
However, this brings up an interesting point. I never saw any news sources issue a correction regarding the Philadelphi/a spelling thing. Not that I was looking for such things 24/7, mind you, but still, did any of you? It's not a big deal at all, certainly, but it makes you wonder, if they never issued a correction, how many other "inconsequential" mistakes have gone uncorrected.
Originally posted by karajorma
My point is that local information can give you a perspective on the view that can't be gained via the mass media. If you can stay objective and use that in addition to the knowledge you gain from the media that means that you should be able claim greater knowledge.
I see you missed
my point as well - the one I (hope) I clarified above, addressed to aldo.
Originally posted by karajorma
That's a big gamble however. Proximity to events can also give you a biased point of view and few people can remain objective about events they witnessed. If you want to be able to demonstrate greater knowledge you have to prove that neutral observers with less bias are also expressing the same thing. Trashman failed to do that on every single count and that's why his local knowledge is can be pretty much dismissed as bias.
Again, I have no idea what you were arguing about, nor do I particularly care - it's irrelevant to the point I was making.
And pardon my French (and mark the time and date - Sandwich is gonna swear!), but it's for DAMN sure that direct personal observation of an event is gonna be more accurate than a condensed, 7 second soundbyte shoved in between reports on the Worlds Largest Chocolate Chip Cookie baked in Nowheresville, AZ, and the latest tsunami scare due to an earthquake on Jupiter's moon, Io.
It's how one
conveys the events one was witness to that's crucial to differentiating between accurate, unbiased reports and exciting, biased ratings inflaters.