<<Yea, has reported, NOT, here's what Hersh has determined to which I agree with, or anything close to such a reference>>
OF COURSE, "has reported." That is what Hersh DOES, he is a reporter. How could Hersh "determine" anything? You are really getting desperate, aren't you?
Here's another remedial reading lesson for your obviously challenged pea-sized brain:
If I say, "Hersh has reported that walnuts grow on trees," it means just what it says. Hersh has reported something and what he reported was that walnuts grow on trees. The sentence is a simple declarative one, and it declares only what Hersh has reported.
If OTOH I say, "As Hersh has reported, walnuts grow on trees," what we have is a simple declarative sentence (Walnuts grow on trees,) modified by a simple modifying clause, ("As Hersh has reported.") The declarative sentence (Walnuts grow on trees) could stand by itself, but the speaker has chosen to modify it. With or without modification, the speaker has uttered a declarative sentence and those are his words, that is his declaration. He could make it Hersh's declaration simply by omitting the modifying clause: Example, "Hersh has reported that walnuts grow on trees." Then it becomes the speaker's declaration, not that walnuts grow on trees, but that Hersh has reported they do.
Anyway, I get the sense I am wasting my time arguing with a moron. You get it or you don't. Sorry, pal, I've got better things to do with my life. Have a nice day.