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http://yawningbread.wordpress.com/2013/10/03/brompton-bikes-before-the-real-story-gets-erased/
Today newspaper’s story about the prosecution of the officer behind NParks’ Brompton folding bikes purchase merely hinted at the origins to the case. It said that there had been “questions over whether the agency got value for its purchases.” By comparison, the news story carried more words about National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan ordering an audit last year, and how the ministry “said it had uncovered some discrepancies suggesting the possibility of bias in the procurement”.
Reading it, I became concerned that the real history of the case was being erased in preference to a new version that gave more credit to Khaw’s alertness and intervention and to the ministry’s internal rigour, than was deserved.
....With that incident in mind, I feel it is important to create a concise record — “concise” is relative, of course, and it’s 2,900 words here — of what happened in the Brompton bikes case before it is quietly erased. The case is a salutary example of the positive effect of digital media and crowd intelligence. It is important to have this record at hand when the ruling party next boasts about their wonderful record of good governance or when it next demonises social media and its freedoms.
Today newspaper’s story about the prosecution of the officer behind NParks’ Brompton folding bikes purchase merely hinted at the origins to the case. It said that there had been “questions over whether the agency got value for its purchases.” By comparison, the news story carried more words about National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan ordering an audit last year, and how the ministry “said it had uncovered some discrepancies suggesting the possibility of bias in the procurement”.
Reading it, I became concerned that the real history of the case was being erased in preference to a new version that gave more credit to Khaw’s alertness and intervention and to the ministry’s internal rigour, than was deserved.
....With that incident in mind, I feel it is important to create a concise record — “concise” is relative, of course, and it’s 2,900 words here — of what happened in the Brompton bikes case before it is quietly erased. The case is a salutary example of the positive effect of digital media and crowd intelligence. It is important to have this record at hand when the ruling party next boasts about their wonderful record of good governance or when it next demonises social media and its freedoms.