Jack by the hedge
Safely Ignored
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2009
- Messages
- 23,448
Why should the BBC have an article saying that ...
Citation please, of the BBC article you refer to.
Reading comprehension? We don' need no steenkin' reading comprehension.
Why should the BBC have an article saying that ...
Citation please, of the BBC article you refer to.
Pretty selfish of you to keep that information to yourself, if you don't mind my saying.
It shuffled off this mortal coil a month ago.
Until Vixen nailed it to the perch
Compus
Don't you remember the 911 threads? Or whats-his-name, the shroud of Turin crank?I've never once seen anyone so utterly unable to admit error. It's bizarre.
When a fire ripped through a car park at Luton airport last month it set off a round of speculation that an electric vehicle was to blame. The theory was quickly doused by the Bedfordshire fire service, which said the blaze appeared to have started in a diesel car.
Yet the rumour refused to be quelled, spreading on social media like, well, wildfire. Even when these stories are patiently debunked, they come back as zombie myths that refuse to die.
In Norway, which has the world’s highest proportion of electric car sales, there are between four and five times more fires in petrol and diesel cars, according to the directorate for social security and emergency preparedness. The Swedish Civil Contingencies Agency this year found that there were 3.8 fires per 100,000 electric or hybrid cars in 2022, compared with 68 fires per 100,000 cars when taking all fuel types into account. However, the latter figures include arson, making comparisons tricky.
Ah ha!!! The fjords of Norway which has the world’s highest proportion of EV sales.Don't be ridiculous! It's clearly just pining for the fjords.
I did not refer to any BBC article. You sure do get easily confused.
Ah, so let's see if I understand your argument.
Is this roughly your argument?
- All important developments will be announced via press release and reported by the press.
- Were the assessment of the vehicle as a diesel ICE to move from "pending final investigation" to "confirmed", this would be an important development.
- There has been no report of the confirmation in the press.
- Hence, the assessment is still not confirmed.
- Hence, the announcement that it has been confirmed on the website must be in error.
Yes. None of those is a link to a press release, they are all news sources reporting what someone has said.
Can you provide a link to Hopkinson's press release, please?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Press_releaseA press release is an official statement delivered to members of the news media for the purpose of providing information, creating an official statement, or making an announcement directed for public release. Press releases are also considered a primary source, meaning they are original informants for information.
What "usual press release" are you talking about? The initial statement you cleave to was a live statement made to the press on-site. It was not a press release. (Jenny from accounts does those. Didn't you know?)
You're making up a spurious condition. A hoop you insist they jump through. You're just playing Simon Says and it's frankly stupid.
... asked the person who fails to notice the difference between a press conference and a press release.
Do we now get 20 pages about how you're not wrong about that either?
A press release is something that is released...to the press. Unless you are the press you don't get the memo.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Press_release
<snip irrelevance>
On a related note, an excellent pieCe in The Guardian.
https://www.theguardian.com/busines...ater-fire-risk-than-petrol-or-diesel-vehicles
Ah ha!!! The fjords of Norway which has the world’s highest proportion of EV sales.
Yes, did you note the final sentence in the first paragraph?:
"When a fire ripped through a car park at Luton airport last month it set off a round of speculation that an electric vehicle was to blame. The theory was quickly doused by the Bedfordshire fire service, which said the blaze appeared to have started in a diesel car."
Not even the GUARDIAN claims 'it has been confirmed' or 'determined', it correctly states this is simply speculation as of this stage and there has been no further updates to this since.
Not even the GUARDIAN claims 'it has been confirmed' or 'determined', it correctly states this is simply speculation as of this stage and there has been no further updates to this since.
Do you think you could stop lying?
The fire service states unequivocally that it was a diesel car. Why can't you accept that?
The most interesting thing about that piece, to me, is that it confirms the existence of a community (or communities) of conspiracy theorists promoting this nonsense. I'd even wager that most of the fallacious and ignorant claims you've been presenting here are actually sourced from others in that community.
And I take it you don't want to talk about how your photographic "analyses" are useless because there are literally no controls on the various conditions present when each image was recorded. You can tell us nothing about the exact lighting conditions, camera settings, or even the types of cameras used. The only reason you think you can make any empirical comparisons is because you are completely ignorant of photography.
Vixen, what is a primary source, and what is a secondary source?
Can you answer any of the other questions I've put to you instead of just rudely ignoring me again?
You've still failed to find any proof of diesel to hybrid conversions for example, despite providing three separate websites that did not do that as if they did.
In journalism, a primary source can be a person with direct knowledge of a situation, or a document written by such a person.[1]
Primary sources are distinguished from secondary sources, which cite, comment on, or build upon primary sources. Generally, accounts written after the fact with the benefit of hindsight are secondary.
Just stop with the childish drivel. The car was a diesel Range Rover as we all know.Yes, did you note the final sentence in the first paragraph?:
"When a fire ripped through a car park at Luton airport last month it set off a round of speculation that an electric vehicle was to blame. The theory was quickly doused by the Bedfordshire fire service, which said the blaze appeared to have started in a diesel car."
Not even the GUARDIAN claims 'it has been confirmed' or 'determined', it correctly states this is simply speculation as of this stage and there has been no further updates to this since.