I do find it interesting how the BBC word headlines to avoid any possibility someone might accuse them of being wrong.
Double_Collection155 on
A gun was fired and a man was injured? How did that happen? Was it the recoil of the weapon? Was it the smoke that went into someone’s lungs and caused them to choke? Did the loud sound cause someone to collapse and hit their head on the ground?Â
Because obviously if they were shot they’d say so in the title. So it can’t be that
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I do find it interesting how the BBC word headlines to avoid any possibility someone might accuse them of being wrong.
A gun was fired and a man was injured? How did that happen? Was it the recoil of the weapon? Was it the smoke that went into someone’s lungs and caused them to choke? Did the loud sound cause someone to collapse and hit their head on the ground?Â
Because obviously if they were shot they’d say so in the title. So it can’t be that
https://www.gmp.police.uk/news/greater-manchester/news/news/2026/january/officers-appeal-for-information-following-firearms-discharge-on-higher-road-urmston/
How long before BBC headlines become something like:
‘A person’s body occupied the same space as a discharged bullet’
At this point I’m convinced you have to fail an intelligence test to get a job with the BBC.Â