TiredSam
Committee Member
I'm not saying she should reveal her sources. I'm saying that if she can't, she shouldn't expect us to accept her evidence without question.I think someone who contacts Valerie Smith with delicate information will do so because he/she will know that she'll keep to her word and treat this information with the needed care. It is known that whistleblowers don't have an easy life after they whistleblew, so I can understand that the person who provided the data wants to remain secret.
Critical readers will want to weigh up the evidence, so I think it's a fair analogy.This is not a trial before court, it's a blog.
It is, I've seen it in action.Everyone who's regularly before court as a lawyer - even "new" lawyers - tell me that's how it is.
I haven't referred to the fact that I'm a lawyer because I don't think it's relevant to this discussion. VES has taken a different approach, and mentions the fact that she's a lawyer repeatedly as if it gives her a special status or makes her a PR expert, and uses words like "allegations" or tries to sound vaguely menacing if someone disagrees with her. It's a problem, because as @chrisb has said:
Approaching PR, or even sharing your views on a blog, as if it's an adversarial undertaking is not appropriate and is not going to work. Different skills are needed to communicate and do PR work than are needed when trying to win a legal case. Emphasising "warring factions" and treating feedback from fellow ME sufferers as if it's an adversarial battle to be won isn't appropriate. In fact I think it could do a lot of damage.VES worked in an adversarial environment