Vixen
Penultimate Amazing
It's weird how much of Vixen's narrative reads like superstition. He was a government minister, so of course he must be informed and competent and honest. He was in the navy, so of course he must be informed and competent and honest. He's a documentary film producer, so of course he must be informed and competent and honest. He's a naval architects, so of course... So much of it boils down to this blind faith in titles and credentials. Selective blind faith, of course.
Well, it is better than anonymous sources, isn't it? There are so many different interested parties in this case, of course, one has to explain their role and viewpoint. The opinion of a journalist will be different from that of a government spokesman, and again a ship's engineer will have experienced a different perspective than a passenger. Pointing this out is to help evaluate opinion from fact. The opinion of someone who was actually there helps indicate what information is valuable from that of someone who knows nothing about the case and deciding 'the JAIC must be right because after all they are the establishment'.
The views of experts on marine collisions and explosions are surely worth more than Fred and Freda Bloggs who get all of their views from the news on tv or the internet.
People want to hear the experts, not Fred and Freda.