Agreed MSM is half the battle.....so contradictory and unverified.
I don't doubt the police checked out the reason for the Wyfold Road entry and deletion. My curiosity is infuriating me though!
Yes, part of the problem with MSM being like that is that people think MSM Is a gold standard source, so "journalists" (the scare quotes are intentional) don't check primary sources, they simply report / repeat what was said in another MSM source. This then gets embedded as "fact" because when people search for information on the internet, they find the MSM sources all quoting each other.
It is just laziness because the "journalists" don't have time or don't want to check the "facts" they are quoting. That is why I was questioning the reporting in the documentary about the house sales rapes. What is the original source of this "fact"?
Wikipedia makes this worse because people use it as a "fact" site, a gold standard, because it quotes and provides MSM sources.
If you want to evaluate information you read in MSM I would implore you to ask:
-- Where the journalist got the information from. DId s/he speak to an actual first hand source? If the article is about JC being responsible for some rapes in Birmingham where does this information come from? Did the reporter talk to a police officer who was authorized to give this information? Are they quoting a reputable source who did that 20 years ago? Don't assume a reporter was on the ground talking to sources first hand because trust me, a lot don't, they just quote another newspapers. Each piece of info should have a trail back to a source that has direct knowledge of events, not a random opinion.
-- Is the story reproducible? Journalists are civilians so there is no secret cabal or secret sources, they have the same resources and access that you do. All information comes from somewhere and so it should be reproducible by speaking to the same sources. If the story has unnamed sources then it's dodgy unless the journalist says why they HAVE to be unnamed. Even then, don't trust it unless the journalist is a well known person writing for a decent paper i.e. not the Daily Mail or Sun etc.
-- When was the info obtained? So the news about Suzy's friend Barbara giving a statement to the police is dateable because a reputable source gives the date on which she spoke to them, and the time when she said she spoke to the police. The Times is a good source, it spoke to Barbara first hand, she is a named person so someone else could also have reproduced the story by calling her and asking her the same questions. So we know when Barbara spoke to the police.
The AS book is often not clear about where his information is taken from for example, although we know he had access to police sources. He should have been clearer on this.