no, he is not the editor of a newspaper who was to get everything right. do the editors of newspapers try to get everything right because they 'have to' legally or because they are interesting in gaining credibility?
if you report news on a website, would you like your reporting to more closely resemble tabloid journalism or professional journalism? would you care?
how would you feel if your reporting style turned away JWs seeking answers because information was presented with technical correctness but with emotional verbiage or sensational headlines or misleading statements typical of the grocery store tabloids they see every day and immediately dismiss? (i had this exact experience myself some years ago. i might have been spared much pain otherwise.)
i do not hold a grudge against kent but feel that these are important questions along the lines of those raised lately by kismet. i enjoy many of kents posts. the georgian article with the JW interview posted alongside this one was very good. i do not object to his character and do not see why this should be an issue. please do not make it one.
as to the question of the JW-ness of the counterfeiter, it strains my imagination to believe that i even need to spell this out.
i am not questioning whether this is an official doj press release.
i am not questioning whether the named officials are real.
i am not questioning whether the events happened as reported.
i am not questioning whether or not this actually appeared in a newspaper or not and fail to see the relevance of this.
i would never question the legitamcy of a webpage based on a GRAPHIC that appeared at the top of it. (this assertion frankly baffles me.)
i am questioning the relevance of a man claiming he is a JW in hopes of reducing his prison sentence. this PR says nothing more than that except that the plea was rejected.
mox