Friday, July 29, 2016

Rolling Stone has gotten no credit for having asked to be investigated by the Columbia Journalism Review.

July 29, 2016


This is a picture of the beginning of Bill Wyman's Twitter this morning:



This is the address for Mr. Wyman's Twitter:



This is a picture of Business Insider's description of Abby Jackson, the writer to whom Mr. Wyman's Tweet is referring:





This is the address for the Business Insider page that has that description and that also has links to articles written by Ms. Jackson:




Ms. Jackson is also not a crime reporter. Not only is she not a crime reporter, these are pictures of sections of that page that correspond to articles written by Ms. Jackson:




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I added the line to separate pictures of the article which are not contiguous at that page.

Being a black female does not guarantee that you are not racist, misogynist or otherwise morally corrupt.  There's no reason that a white man can't write intelligently about the investigation of sexual crime, which is why it's unfortunate that so many white men choose not to write intelligently about the investigation of sexual crime.  

These are pictures of the entire article written by Ms. Jackson about Rolling Stone:

















Except for the picture of the Phi Kappa Psi house, Ms. Jackson's article provides no dates for anything pertaining directly to the Rolling Stone article, anything written about the Rolling Stone article, or any of the lawsuits filed against Rolling Stone.  Someone who hadn't already read about the situation wouldn't know when the Rolling Stone article was published or which Columbia Journalism Review report happened when, or that reporters at the Washington Post led the media attacks against Rolling Stone as soon as the Rolling Stone article was published or that it was Rolling Stone, in deference to the media attacks, that asked the Columbia Journalism Review to investigate Rolling Stone's reporting methods, resulting in the Columbia Journalism Review's first report about the situation, published on April 5, 2015, or that Eugene Volokh writes for the Washington Post.



Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, July 29, 2016 @ 12:46 p.m.