A quick question,...if some one accused you of being an idiot, and gave you a venue to disprove the allegation,...would you attend ?
FAST
If you accused someone of being a lying maggot and they gave you a venue to prove your accusation and discredit them publicly, … wouldn't you attend?
In spite of all the clowns still slavering to see the video and/or declaring their not seeing it is evidence of something, this latest resurrection of the Rob's a Crackhead Story is about journalism. The Rob's Innocent Case has only two elements so far. A single late, flat and sweeping denial that addressed none of the published and still unrefuted circumstantial evidence (the photo at the crackhouse f'rinstance) and 'they're a buncha maggots out to get me'. So far Rob's offered no evidence to support his accusations about the Star's malice or irresponsibility. This was his chance.
The Press Council deals with the journalism standards and practices only, deliberately and emphatically separating the the story content out. If ever there was a forum for factual, calm presentation and consideration that the Crack Story was a perversion of good reporting or of the so-called Star Vendetta, this was it. But that would require Rob to present a rational case, supported by more than emotion, prejudice, pleading and bluster.
From his DUI drug bust through the conflict of interest and libel court cases, and the City Hall stuff of ignoring integrity rules and ethical standards of behaviour, obsessing over plastic bags and putting trolleys in tunnels, with a leaderless Council foundering while he mindlessly chants of "Subways, subways, subways" rational cases never been his style. Not that his fanboys will care that he made no case, and thus leaves the obvious implication standing.
We'll see what the Press Council says in due course, as the Star is required to print their every word. It was interesting to note that both the complainants cited not naming sources and those who confirmed them as the journalistic sin they wanted addressed, saying that left the credibility of the story entirely and irresponsibly in question. At the risk of hyperbole and an overly blunt metaphor, I must ask 'What were they smoking?'
It's the citizen-reader's task and burden to constantly assess the credibility of whatever news they get. It's why they call it 'news'. By the time it's publicly proven beyond a doubt it will be old and tired. The difference between real news from real news media that have professional standards, and the sort of 'news' that some anonymous guy posts in an unmoderated forum, or tells you on the subway, is what credibility
you can assign that news/gossip because of the source.
If the only information you want is proven and judged fact, with all the evidence spelled out in detail then you're demanding the news media be as impartial and thoroughgoing as the Courts. They take years and hundreds of unreadable pages to provide that reliability. That reliability is available for the complainants already but not from any daily newspaper. So far no one has asked the Courts for it.
What the Press Council will say is that the Star and Globe did get 'news' just as anyone might. But that unlike just anyone, they then dug for supporting or disproving detail, went out to find confirmations or denials from others who knew, matched everything up and decided they wre on the right side of the law and responsible reporting of new information the public wanted and needed to know. What they'll also say is whether that process was all that professional standards and the public's expectations require.
Those who only want to read proven fact shouldn't be reading anything but science textbooks, and even those with deep skepticism.