You'd have Ford charged with 9/11 if you could fuji. Your arrogance is appalling and your tunnel vision w.r.t. Ford is laughable.
Nope, I would not, and this just goes to show how stupid your responses to me are, and how you are incapable of processing information. You haven't read and comprehended well enough to know what my problem with Ford is, which is typical of you--not reading and comprehending well. And while I know this will piss you off a little, I'm a blunt and direct person: It is not arrogant for me to tell you that you're wrong, when you are honestly wrong.
- The Star reporter showed up unannounced at Ford's private residence at 7:30 pm (hardly broad daylight as you have claimed).
In fact 7:30 is broad daylight. The sun doesn't set until 8:30 at this time of year. You simply don't know the facts. In Toronto it is quite bright out until an hour AFTER sunset, at 7:30pm in May it's broad daylight in Toronto. Period. It's a fact, suck it up.
I agree the Star reporter showed up unannounced, but it would be a little more accurate to say he showed up at the public park besides Ford's residence. He was not on Ford's property.
I have no idea why you think he should "announce" anything to Ford, though.
The reporter was caught by the neighbour peering over Ford's fence. The neighbour then notified Ford.
Yup, and that's a very normal, ordinary thing to do. What SHOULD have happened next is Ford should have calmly wandered out to say "hello" and ask what was going on. That's what I would do. I assume that's what you would do, and what any normal person would do. Going to check out why there's an individual behind your property is normal. A neighbour calling to let you know is normal too. The reporter doing his job was also normal, and if Ford had been a normal person it would have ended with a normal conversation.
I do notice that you are trying to sidestep the actual key facts here, by diverting the conversation to a bunch of other less fact-based issues, presumably because you are uncomfortable with these facts:
1. The reporter was doing his job
2. The public has an interest in the things he was investigating
3. It was a normal time of day for reporters to work
4. It was broad daylight
5. He was fully within his rights to be where he was, doing what he's doing