I'd probably be more convinced if the source was independent. To immediately trust the information you are given because it is given is not the approach I take. I view it as important to verify within what bounds one practicably can.
At this stage I lean more towards the truth of the message, but it is not possible to discount doubt is 'baseless'.
Doubt is not so much "baseless" as a special kind of naiive, and my belief in the accuracy of the reports is based on more than just blind faith. You may have heard that eyewitness testimony is more reliable than circumstantial evidence; in fact, the opposite is true, and the circumstances here strongly suggest that the administration is telling the truth.
There are two ways the reports could be wrong about ObL being dead (as opposed to merely accurate in describing his death, which some have already been).
First, the administration could be simply, honestly wrong. This has become a one in a thousand chance: the DNA testing compared the dead man's genetic material with that of known, non-terrorist members of ObL's family. The result is a close match. Ergo, it's either ObL or his brother (or a bizarre coincidence). Since ObL is a black sheep without good ties to his family, it's almost certainly ObL.
Second, the administration could be lying its collective head off. This is the conspiracy theorist angle, and believing it requires more faith in human foresight, loyalty (albeit to a nefarious purpose), and ability to impose order on chaos than I can summon on my most optimistic day. The real governmental lies, the ones perpetrated by autocracies (or democracies going through a bad spot), tend to be simple, straightforward statements that can be repeated over and over again without elaboration: "the pro-democracy activist took money from the CIA," "there are no innocents held at Guantanamo," "we need to study this matter further," and so on. Any detail given is a thread that has the potential to be pulled, so good political liars stick to emotionally-satisfying generalities.
I find it particularly hilarious when people think Democrats are up to something, like, say, conspiring to impose socialism. The core Republicans have an honest-to-goodness message machine, central figures who spread talking points to the troops. The Dems have no such thing (not for want of trying on some people's parts), largely because hardly any of us will take marching orders-- we're collectively determined to be "free thinkers," and we're self-critical to a fault. One of our favorite pastimes is eating our own.
And incidentally, the Republicans, organized or not, couldn't even manage to keep the lid on a campaign office burglary.
That's the world I believe we live in. The more complicated the web of lies, the more difficult it is to keep it all together.
The current situation has none of the hallmarks of official mendacity: no sloganeering, no attempts to condense a complicated situation down to a message that can be hammered into people's heads. And if this is a lie, it's an
extremely complex one; they're virtually loading us down with juicy details.
And some of those juicy details aren't even quite consistent, which is not the thing you want to have going on if you're trying to establish a false history. Turns out he didn't use a human shield, for starters, and he wasn't armed, though he was resisting.
I guess they didn't get their "unambiguous surrender."
Knee-jerk disbelief is as bad as knee-jerk belief. One is as dangerous a sickness as the other. I prefer to weigh information and situations as they appear, and the balance on this one overwhelmingly favors a living Osama bin Laden having been shot dead in Pakistan, more or less as described.