Rob Lister
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- Joined
- Apr 1, 2004
- Messages
- 8,504
Ed said:Like Randfan, whils aspects of this episode are annoying I cannot get too upset.
The only thing I find annoying is that a draft of roughly 175 [pdf] pages turned into a a final report of greater than 600 pages. They even had a full section on . . . nevermind, off topic.
I'm not annoyed at the change. Unlike Randfan, I am not yet convinced there was any wrong doing whatsoever. The people complaining (Campbell and an unknown) are former employees and not current employees. Their inputs were changed but so to was the person that sat at what was once their desk. Therefore, is it not just as likely, if not more likely, that the person responsible for the changes was 'the new guy'? Somebody had to do the new analysis of the dataset. What makes this person less correct than Campbell? As far as I can discern:
Both the original draft and the changes were made internal to to the BLF. Blaming the "Bush Adminstration" is technically correct but doesn't carry much weight unless you can 1) prove wrongdoing and 2) prove Bush intentionally instagated it. I'm picturing Bush pulling the SecInt aside and saying something to the effect, "You know that Cattle grazing thing? Make it happen."
The reported statement, "A bureau official acknowledged that changes were made in the analysis . . .," can be confirmed by actually reading the report. The changes in the original draft concerning wildlife were annotated in the resume of changes (pdf p206)
The reported statement by Campbell, "The bureau now concludes that the grazing regulations are 'beneficial to animals.' appears nowhere in the final document. It does make reference to 'beneficial to wildlife' but the statement is in context with qualifiers.
While Campbells specific language [regarding wildlife] was removed, it is impossible to conclude that such removal was not justified. The onus is on him to prove that. I certainly can't draw a conclusion one way or the other.
Nuff said.