As a footnote in keeping with the spirit of the thread, when we "choose which witness to believe" we must be sure, a) their statements have been accurately recorded, and b) that their statements may have been edited.
Alas, all Inquest testimony has been edited, even the Official version.
Alas, all Inquest testimony has been edited, even the Official version.
Can you explain how we can be sure of either of the above?
Unless you think that the police officer taking the statements of witnesses might be considered unreliable, surely such witness statements can be considered accurate - in terms of recording, that is? Certainly contemporary witness statements given to the police/at an inquest are the most accurate source of information available to us in this context - far more so than any press report, I would think.
Of course, an accurately recorded police statement or transcribed inquest statement doesn't tell us whether the witness was accurate in their account, but that's another matter.
Incidentally, how do you know that 'all inquesst testimony has been edited'? And edited by whom?
There is a distinction to be drawn between the reported inquest testimony found in the press (even the Times) and the official inquiry proceedings - is this what you mean by the 'official' version?
Fascinating as contemporary press reports are, I think it must be borne in mind that the prime motivator for the press was not accuracy or truth-telling - it was profit. Yes, press reports are a contemporary source of information, and useful up to a point; but obviously less so than the documentary evidence arising from the mechanisms of the state.
Incidentally, a witness who only appears in the press should be given the least credibility of all - particularly mysterious anonymous witnesses. What's to say that such a witness isn't simply an invention of the press?
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