It's taken seriously, but not as some form of serious journalism. It's a newsletter. Expecting them to have the same fact checking standards as a newspaper or newsmagazine is unrealistic.
I strongly disagree. I was always taught by my father (as most of us were) that if something's worth doing, it's worth doing right.
Society of Professional Journalists website: Code of ethics page said:http://www.spj.org/ethicscode.asp
Seek Truth and Report It
Journalists should be honest, fair and courageous in gathering, reporting and interpreting information.
Journalists should:
— Test the accuracy of information from all sources and exercise care to avoid inadvertent error. Deliberate distortion is never permissible.
It's the VERY FIRST LINE of a journalist's code of ethics. To say that Mr. Steenblik's article falls FAR short of that would be a fair statement.
Jan had no reason to doubt it.
I've never been in the military. I've never worked in emergency services (though my stepfather is a retired paramedic and firefighter). Still, even I can see that to do all the things that Mr. Martins said he did is not physically possible-especially so early in his life. This should have been a HUGE red flag to someone who works with pilots day in and day out. Mr. Nicoll (the DAL F/O who recommended Mr. Martins) didn't vouch for the BS claims...only that Mr. Martins was a good pilot, and a good/prepared FO who was easy to get along with-which may have been the case despite all his other flaws.
I also don't buy into the argument that Prater/Rice/Schwartz/etc., forced Mr. Steenblik to write this story. If you don't want to be associated with something, you shouldn't put your name on it. Most of you would never sign a release and go flying unless you were in agreement with your dispatcher's flight planning, and confident of your aircraft's airworthiness. The passengers/customers expect that from us. Similarly, I see no reason why we shouldn't hold a person in a different field to the ethos established by his chosen field.
I agree that most of this lies squarely on the shoulders of F/O Martins for his absurd claims. But Mr. Steenblik is not without fault. ALPA is paying him a fine salary for professional quality work. This work falls short.