Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
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Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
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Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
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Well, have they? Have they really try to establish that he was beyond reproach, or did they simply find that he was beyond reproach? And was this something they "sought" or was it something that emerged from their research? There is one hell of a difference between looking for evidence to fit a preconceived conclusion and looking for evidence from which a conclusion is drawn.
You wrote, “For those who do not accept Anderson’s credentials as flawless…” from which one infers that there are those who do accept his credentials as flawless… But who are those people? Martin, who is the kindest of all commentators, hardly presents a picture of Anderson as a man who was flawless.
You then quote Martin, but follow it by saying “Given all the secret service work Anderson was involved in over the years, it is hard to imagine that he did not frequently resort to deception and untruths of one sort or another” and in so doing you imply that Martin did not consider that, yet Martin made that very point himself: “As an ex-Secret Serviceman, he had occasion to make his attitude to mendacity quite clear….”
It's not really a fair or balanced presentation of the pro-Anderson case and is heavily influenced by your idea that people are intent on eulogising Anderson as a paragon of virtue, "flawless".
And whilst the foregoing s critical of you, my purpose in citing it is simply to demonstrate why people see you as anti-Anderson and making unfair comments.
Originally posted by Stewart P Evans
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