Reason and Tuipulotu
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@Toddy said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
I actually emailed Stuff and queried the statement. Got an email back saying thanks for the email and they stick by Mark's opinion and that his articles are always well researched.
Did you tell them we have an entire thread here dedicated with providing them with constructive criticism?
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@Toddy said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
I actually emailed Stuff and queried the statement. Got an email back saying thanks for the email and they stick by Mark's opinion and that his articles are always well researched.
Interesting that they responded. I contacted them a couple times on a piece that was a complete fabrication, and was proved so a day later..no response and article is still up.
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@MajorRage said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
@Toddy said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
I actually emailed Stuff and queried the statement. Got an email back saying thanks for the email and they stick by Mark's opinion and that his articles are always well researched.
Opinion?
Yeah the article is headed up as an "opinion" piece. And its wrong....
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@Siam said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
But doesn't a piss weak retraction on say, "page" 36 get them off the legal hook?
Doesn’t that only apply if the libelled party agrees? I’m guessing 99% of the time the person who’s been libelled doesn’t have the time or more importantly the coin to take legal action..
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@jegga said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
@Siam said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
But doesn't a piss weak retraction on say, "page" 36 get them off the legal hook?
Doesn’t that only apply if the libelled party agrees? I’m guessing 99% of the time the person who’s been libelled doesn’t have the time or more importantly the coin to take legal action..
best thing PT can do is kick arse in a WC winning AB team....but even that wouldn't shut Reason up....
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We could all lodge one of these
It’ll put his dishonesty on record and damage what little credibility he has.
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So, if anyone wants to submit a complaint, this may be helpful:
What Reason says:
The Blues have struggled with their leadership in recent seasons and the appointment of Tuipulotu is not the way forward. He failed a drugs test in Chicago but was excused when the North American lab botched the 'B' sample. It's not a good look for a Super Rugby captain.
What NZR has published:
New Zealand Rugby (NZR) and the New Zealand Rugby Players Association (NZRPA) received notification today from Six Nations that the results of testing on Tuipulotu’s doping control B sample from the US-based World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA)-accredited laboratory Sports Medicine Research and Testing Laboratory (SMRTL) in Salt Lake City confirmed no presence of a Specified Substance listed on the WADA’s 2016 Prohibited List. The test result is negative and, as a result, Patrick’s provisional suspension has been lifted with immediate effect.
http://www.allblacks.com/News/30338/patrick-tuipulotu-cleared-of-doping
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The articles below contain a good overview of events.
The only possibility for Reason being right is that the American lab has come up with an explanation (as requested) that proves that it was actually the (negative) B sample that was wrong and not the (positive) A sample.
The World Anti-Doping Agency and Six Nations Rugby have demanded the laboratory in charge All Black lock Patrick Tuipulotu's drug tests explain the discrepancy in their results.
I can't imagine that there is such an explanation, as such a statement from the Lab would no doubt have had a lot of publicity and repercussions.
RNZ article:
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And the article posted above:
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I haven't been able to find any media release about this matter from World Rugby, Six Nations, WADA or Drugfree Sport NZ.
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Libel is a pretty new area of law, and generally if someone threatens legal action a retraction will be published - BMac got the media to backtrack a lot when he threatened legal action following the Taylor captaincy saga.
Not to bring American politics into this as that is a toxic barrell of waste, but it will be interesting to see how the defamation case the Covington students legal team has filed against the Washington Post goes and whether that is successful.
A free media is a critical part of democracy, but at the moment they do get away with straight up lies too often.
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@No-Quarter said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
Libel is a pretty new area of law, and generally if someone threatens legal action a retraction will be published - BMac got the media to backtrack a lot when he threatened legal action following the Taylor captaincy saga.
Not to bring American politics into this as that is a toxic barrell of waste, but it will be interesting to see how the defamation case the Covington students legal team has filed against the Washington Post goes and whether that is successful.
A free media is a critical part of democracy, but at the moment they do get away with straight up lies too often.
Those cases are completely different.
Here Reason has made a statement that's either objectively true or false. If it's false, he's liable.
The other case revolves around an interpretation of an event. That is subject to an honest opinion defense (which Reason cannot claim).
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@Damo said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
@No-Quarter said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
Libel is a pretty new area of law, and generally if someone threatens legal action a retraction will be published - BMac got the media to backtrack a lot when he threatened legal action following the Taylor captaincy saga.
Not to bring American politics into this as that is a toxic barrell of waste, but it will be interesting to see how the defamation case the Covington students legal team has filed against the Washington Post goes and whether that is successful.
A free media is a critical part of democracy, but at the moment they do get away with straight up lies too often.
Those cases are completely different.
Here Reason has made a statement that's either objectively true or false. If it's false, he's liable.
The other case revolves around an interpretation of an event. That is subject to an honest opinion defense (which Reason cannot claim).
Not to derail, but they are getting sued because they repeated statements that weren’t true, and had been shown not to be true by video before they published them.
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@No-Quarter said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
Libel is a pretty new area of law, and generally if someone threatens legal action a retraction will be published - BMac got the media to backtrack a lot when he threatened legal action following the Taylor captaincy saga.
It was defamation and the only case I remember was directed toward former John Parker who was making recommendations to NZC in the wake of that, hardly a journalist and hardly someone with the financial backing of a media organization.
edit: and after rereading some articles from around that time it wasn't even a publication, Parker essentially sent a white paper outlining his own thoughts of NZC's frailties around that time including the handling of the McCullum idea. Some of the recipients were in places of power in cricket thus the basis to bring a claim - but essentially it was a fern post sent by email (but properly spell checked and correctly formatted).
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@Kirwan said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
@Damo said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
@No-Quarter said in Reason and Tuipulotu:
Libel is a pretty new area of law, and generally if someone threatens legal action a retraction will be published - BMac got the media to backtrack a lot when he threatened legal action following the Taylor captaincy saga.
Not to bring American politics into this as that is a toxic barrell of waste, but it will be interesting to see how the defamation case the Covington students legal team has filed against the Washington Post goes and whether that is successful.
A free media is a critical part of democracy, but at the moment they do get away with straight up lies too often.
Those cases are completely different.
Here Reason has made a statement that's either objectively true or false. If it's false, he's liable.
The other case revolves around an interpretation of an event. That is subject to an honest opinion defense (which Reason cannot claim).
Not to derail, but they are getting sued because they repeated statements that weren’t true, and had been shown not to be true by video before they published them.
Not only that they didn’t remove the articles from their website after they were found to be false.
Peter Theil is a kiwi , maybe he can do a Gawker on stuff on Tuipulotus behalf?