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Subject:
From:
Heidi Carroll <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 8 Feb 1999 06:20:00 PST
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (36 lines)
I do apologize for the errors in my posting about newspapers.
Perhaps I am using this listserv incorrectly, but, to me, this list is a
both an electronic bulletin board and an electronic conversation.  Often
messages read like classified ads or a conversation that includes local
dialects, however crude.  We aren't writing any great works of art that
will be published, we are merely speaking, most often informally, to one
another.  I would like think that the majority of people contributing to
this list do not have the time to edit their messages two or three times
before posting them.  Also, I interpret the blunders found in messages
as emotion.  They are just as important to the message because they hint
to emotions such as anger or frustration.  But from journalists, who
write for a living and have editors to check their work, I expect more!
Perhaps I expect too much by asking professional writers to write
professionally.
Please, if you have found a newspaper or news program that is very
conscientious and unbiased, please let me know.  I would gladly read
such a paper or watch such a program.  Unfortunately, I have not found
that in my local newspapers.

I won't comment of the fleeing comment other than to say that 1.  having
worked in law enforcement, I am very aware of criminal code, and
2. the victim, a criminal running from the law, was putting both the
police officer and the public in harms way and the officer did what he
felt was necessary to protect himself and the public.

Finally, I don't believe everything I read, however, when I read a
newspaper, I expect an account of the facts so that I can make my own
informed opinion.  I don't want to know what the journalist thinks.  If
I want to know that, I'll open to the editorial page.

H. Carroll


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