tapirrider wrote: ↑Sat Apr 03, 2021 2:56 am
Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Sat Apr 03, 2021 2:39 am
The second doesn’t involve Nelson changing his story over time. It involves different accounts by different witnesses of a complicated home invasion robbery in a foreign country. It’s the kind of event where you’d have to walk each witness step by step through the event, probably using floor plans to track where each witness was. The only witness who spoke the language well left the home to get help, so she did not witness everything that occurred inside the home. She also ended up with a broken arm, although I’m not clear how.
It’s exactly the kind of frightening and confusing event that can generate wildly different accounts from witnesses.
I don’t see a pattern.
Just to keep things straight here, the news stories never once mentioned a gun being held to Nelson's head, the trigger being pulled and the gun failing to fire the bullet. Nelson has been shooting his mouth off with that made for Hollywood type nonsense, and he waited until long after the initial stories were published to come up with that tale.
So come on, let's be rational here, alright? Had that happened, a gun to the head failing to fire, it would most certainly have been in the initial news stories, something like that doesn't stay silent. And if you read those first news stories, it was also quite clear that Nelson and Wendy were not the targets, but to hear them tell it so long after the fact, they have turned the tale into one all about them.
Oh wait, that is what he has done with the aircraft myths too, made women to look hysterical and turned it into all about him. Nope, no pattern here folks.
I’m going to try to do this from memory instead of blow by blow through the articles. First, initial news reports are often wrong, sometimes wildly so. Why? For the very reasons I pointed out. In stressful or chaotic situations, it is very common for witnesses to report wildly different descriptions of the events. The initial reports are often based only on the description of one witness. Only after many witnesses are interviewed does an accurate description occur. Sometimes. Other times witnesses tell conflicting stories that are never resolved.
Second, the media can report only what someone tells them. If a reporter isn’t there to observe the events, he only knows what he is told.
Third, we have no idea which witness was in a position to observe what. We know that one witness, the mission President’s wife, left the house, so she obviously didn’t witness everything that happened to the Nelsons. There were four robbers, which makes it extremely unlikely that a single witness could observe everything each robber did during the entire event. The second news report says that Elder Nelson was kicked in the face, indicating that the victims were kneeling or prone. If they were prone, face down, they weren’t in a position to see much of anything. I don’t think the Nelsons describe what happened to each other. Is that because they weren’t in a position to observe it. Did they keep all the victims in the same room? No one says.
The first press report consists of a press release from Turley, which specifically states that he doesn’t know all the details. The second is Turley’s press release plus an additional paragraph of information that is unsourced. The third is a copy of an e-mail that the missionary President and/or his wife sent to the missionaries. It appears to me to be intended to calm and reassure the missionaries. It says something like “we don’t feel the Nelsons were targeted.” That’s hardly convincing evidence of anything. The Nelsons disagree. It’s not a disagreement over what happened, but a highly subjective interpretation of what happened. Who is right? I dunno. Was there an actual disagreement? Or did the mission President fudge a little to avoid panic among his missionaries. Was the gun not mentioned to keep the missionaries calm? Or because folks thought it made Nelson look too vulnerable? Was he embarrassed at the time that someone was able to put a gun to his head? At least until he figured out how to cast it as a faith promoting story.
What did he actually perceive at the time? Did he see the gun? Or feel something he concluded was a gun? Why does he believe it misfired? Did he see the guy pull the trigger? Or did he hear or feel something that he thought was the guy pulling the trigger. How long was the gun actually pointed at his head? We don’t know any of the information we need to even try to figure out what happened.
And I don’t see how this makes Nelson look strong or the women weak. The dude couldn’t protect his wife. He got kicked in the face. He got held at gunpoint. God had to bail him out. Wuss!