Now we have you attacking not only the newspaper, not only the investigative journalist of high credentials, but also his scientific sources. You have aimed to have arrested every source with an opinion different from yours so far.
On the other hand, I try to give an airing to the opposing view, for the record.
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David Rose is a writer and investigative journalist
His awards include the David Watt Memorial Prize and the
One World award for human rights journalism.
His work regularly appears in
The Observer and
Vanity Fair.
Among his books are In the Name of the Law, a widely-praised examination of the British criminal justice system [buy from
Amazon.co.uk]; and A Climate of Fear, an investigation of the Broadwater Farm case and the conviction of Winston Silcott [buy from
Amazon.com,
Amazon.co.uk].
He has also written books on mountaineering, including Regions of the Heart [buy from
Amazon.com,
Amazon.co.uk], a biography of Alison Hargreaves, the British climber who died in her attempt to conquer K2, and he is working on a book about the US death penalty centred on a miscarriage of justice in the town of Columbus, Georgia.
He lives in Oxford with his family.
David Rose
David Rose began writing for
Vanity Fair in 2001 and became a contributing editor in 2002. He is also a special-investigations writer for the U.K.’s
Mail on Sunday. Rose began his career in 1981 as a reporter for
Time Out magazine in London. In 1984, he joined
The Guardian, where he did groundbreaking work on the Guilford Four and Birmingham Six I.R.A. bombing cases. From 1997 to 2001, he made three investigative documentary series for the BBC. Rose has received numerous journalism awards, including a One World–European Union award for journalism in the service of human rights (1997) and the Royal Institute of International Affairs David Watt Memorial Prize (1993). He is the author of six books, including
Guantánamo: The War on Human Rights (New Press, 2004) and
The Big Eddy Club (New Press, 2007), which was short-listed for the U.K. Crime Writers’ Association Golden Dagger.
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Why not give up on slagging off a newspaper with a distribution of over 2,000,000, with sound contributors ; OK - disagree, show where - that I can accept.
I read and write a great deal, I require no instruction from you on that score.