The difficulty for the New Zealand public is the speed of the - TopicsExpress



          

The difficulty for the New Zealand public is the speed of the authority in their respective fields is not consistent with the speed of the emergency that can be seen in approach. This is to say that the dishonesty looks as if it will be perpetuated. This was a bold approach to the conundrum exposed in the first day of the Coroner’s Court inquest into the death of Venessa Green. It would have been better for eth reporter to have said nothing as appears to be the case in Wellington. There seems to be no news item. Interestingly there was only one journalist apparent in the hearing. A friend told me he had read a report that commented on how Venessa Green was killed saying that she was running parallel. This could not be concluded as that information has not been the topic of conversation. It was not an item in the court either rather than discussion on how the information was still to be qualified. nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11356206 Personally this demonstrates the ill discipline of media. One journalist means one take on the information in my book on limited journalism. I am uncertain if the journalist was able to record the detail for others to disseminate. If in fact this one journalist was from the Herald why weren’t other public mouthpieces present? Maybe my friend got it wrong. Certainly there is no such account in the linked article. The real point here is that there is no plan for what is about to be divulged. If the fact is that the road is physically too narrow and a behavioural scientist employed to analyse the information agrees with a judge that: if the claim of the road being too narrow is correct and Wellingtonians are (today, right now) exposed to wing mirrors sharing their head space on level territory that there is a wing strike problem with safety, then there has to be a Plan B. What Plan B? The article says that infrastructure includes… but excludes for some strange reason road width. Mr Winston Peters – my apologies, I mean the Honourable Winston Peters – do you not have a Plan B? My reward was when His Honour advised the good doctor that what I was asking was genuine. He sounded like an alien. In Her Majesty’s name Benjamin.
Posted on: Tue, 11 Nov 2014 21:11:10 +0000

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