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It is time to stop sourcing Wikipedia - List of Liberal bias and misinformation
Conservapedia ^

Posted on 11/10/2007 10:36:50 PM PST by Reform Canada

Edited on 11/11/2007 1:33:36 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

Examples of Bias in Wikipedia

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The following is a growing list of examples of liberal bias, deceit, silly gossip, and blatant errors on Wikipedia. Wikipedia has been called the National Enquirer of the Internet:[1]

  1. For over two years, Wikipedia's entry on Richard Sternberg has falsely stated that a journal "withdrew" a peer-reviewed Intelligent Design paper published in a journal that he edited.[2] In fact, the journal never withdrew the paper. Using a double standard, Wikipedia's entry on atheist Richard Dawkins claims he is the "Simonyi Professor,"[3] a position expressly requiring peer review. In fact, Dawkins has apparently not met that professorship's requirements of peer review.[4]
  2. Wikipedia's entry on the Prodigal Son devotes more words to obscure rock band and liberal media references to it (e.g., "'The Prodigal Son' is the Season 2 opener of the TV series Miami Vice, although it has virtually nothing to do with the parable itself.") than to the parable and its spiritual meaning.[5]
  3. Wikipedia's gossip and policy in favor of edits by anonymous IP addresses struck again: for over two weeks the entry on former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Byron White stated he was the father of former Cowboy great Danny White.[6] The statement was utterly false, but misled everyone who read that.[7]
  4. Wikipedia displays pervasive bias in making liberal statements with citations that do not support the statements, as illustrated by its entry about Conservapedia.[8] Wikipedia states that "Conservapedia has asserted that Wikipedia is 'six times more liberal than the American public', a statistic which has been criticized for its poor extrapolation and lack of credibility." But the two citations for this claim of "poor extrapolation and lack of credibility" are to articles that say nothing about extrapolation or credibility and instead tend to confirm the liberal bias on Wikipedia.
  5. A user named Richard Dawkins apparently edited his own article on Wikipedia,[9] and even linked to a DVD being sold from his personal website. Illustrating Wikipedia's favoritism towards liberals, it took a long time (well over a year after he first edited his own article)[10] for anybody to confront this well-known atheist for this conflict of interest, despite being against Wikipedia's own rules.
  6. Arbitration Committee Chairman Fred Bauder told the Wikien-1 mailing list in regards to Michael Moore, whose official website published attacks on a Wikipedia editor with an open invitation to vandalize Wikipedia [6] and was proposed to be designated as an Attack site, "Obviously we need to make an exception for prominent people whose viewpoint we support. And by the way, I am not joking. Writing this down in black and white is important, if that is what we do in practice. And, if it not clear, I support him too, although I am not enamored of anyone's propaganda. Even that which supports my own position." [7] When asked, "How, then, is this remotely compatible with NPOV?", the ArbCom chairman responded, "Not at all." [8] Wikipedia's Neutral Point of View (NPOV), laid down by founder Jimbo Wales allegedly is "absolute and non-negotiable."[9][10] The editor Michaelmoore.com was urging its viewers to attack and harass is described as "a Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank."[11]
  7. Wikipedia heavily promotes liberals in inappropriate places. Go to Wikipedia's entry on Boy Scouts v. Dale, a conservative Supreme Court decision, and for months you'd see a top-screen promotion for "gay/lesbian rights advocate" Evan Wolfson with a claim that he is "one of the '100 most influential people in the world.'"[11] Wikipedia eventually removed that liberal promotion, but kept its inappropriate emphasis on this attorney who, by the way, lost this case.[12]
  8. Wikipedia has once again deleted all content on the North American Union [12]. The old pages are inaccessible, and re-creation is blocked.
  9. For a long time Wikipedia led with a falsehood in describing Conservapedia: "Conservapedia is a wiki-based web encyclopedia project with the stated purpose of creating an encyclopedia ... supportive of ... Young Earth creationism."[13] That was defamatory in attempting to smear Conservapedia in front of Wikipedia's evolutionist audience. Wikipedia also welcomes edits by anonymous IP addresses to the Conservapedia and other entries, resulting in frequent defamation.
  10. Wikipedia has a lengthy entry on "Jesus H. Christ,"[14] a term that is an idiotic mockery of the Christian faith. Wikipedia calls the term "often humorous," "joking" and "comedic", and relishes in repeating disrespectful uses of the term, without admitting that the phrase is an anti-Christian mockery. Meanwhile, Wikipedia does not describe mockery of any other religion as "humorous".
  11. The Wikipedia article on Eritrea refuses to concede that Eritrea is a one-party state.[15] Another example of Wikipedia liberal bias: "Oh, they aren't really a dictatorship, their charter specifically denies it!"
  12. Wikipedia often inserts bias by downplaying a liberal outrage or fallacy amid thousands of words of nearly irrelevant information. For example, no one credibly disputes that liberals forced Larry Summers to resign as president of Harvard because he dared to suggest that the under-representation of women in math, science and engineering may be due to innate differences between women and men.[16][17] But the verbose entry for Larry Summers on Wikipedia implies that his obscure other positions were more important in causing his ouster.[18]
  13. Wikipedia welcomes and allows edits by anonymous IP addresses, which results in rampant vandalism that is overwhelmingly liberal. Credible wikis, including Conservapedia, do not permit editing by anonymous IP addresses.
  14. For nearly two months, from at least as early as July 15 through September 9, 2007, Wikipedia classified its critics, including Conservapedia, as "Fanatics and Special Interests."[19]
  15. Wikipedia has two million entries, but not one for liberal. Users who go to that term are redirected to the Wikipedia entry on liberalism that conceals the liberal support of gun control and taxpayer funding of abortion, and liberal censorship of prayer in public school.[20]
  16. Wikipedia, its own entries (including talk pages) filled with smears and deceit, features an entry on "deceit (album)" that gushes with a description of it as "austere, brilliant and indescribable" music that is "post-punk".[21] The word "deceit" has no entry on Wikipedia. It was redirected to a different term having a different meaning, and then this redirect was changed 7 times in two days in response to this criticism here.[22] Even now it lacks a clear definition and the numerous examples provided in the entry on deceit here.
  17. Wikipedia promotes suicide with 21,544 entries that mention this depravity, including many entries that feature it (Conservapedia will not provide citations to the more depraved entries on this subject at Wikipedia as Conservapedia affirms the sanctity of life). For example, Wikipedia referred to it needlessly in the very first sentence of distinguished jurist Henry Friendly's entry,[23] and Wikipedia's entry about Zerah Colburn ended with a claim that his distant nephew committed suicide.[24] After this criticism appeared here, these two entries were fixed (and in the case of Friendly, reinstated before being fixed again); there has been no system-wide removal of this bias on Wikipedia. In yet another example, Wikipedia has an entry for "suicide by cop"[25] to discuss attacking a police officer to provoke a suicide, citing an unpublished PhD thesis at an obscure university.
  18. Wikipedia uses guilt-by-association far worse than Joseph McCarthy ever did. Wikipedia smears numerous persons and organizations by giving the false impression that they are associated with the John Birch Society (JBS). Examples have included:
    • pro-life Congressman Jerry Costello, merely because JBS gave him a favorable rating[26]
    • anti-communist Fred Schwarz, merely because JBS agreed with him[27]
    • the conservative Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, by repeating a 40 year old newspaper claim that some of its leaders once belonged to the JBS [28]
    • conservative baseball pitcher Dave Dravecky, a cancer survivor, merely because a newspaper claimed he once belonged to JBS[29]
  19. In response to this criticism, Wikipedia removed ... only the smears against the more liberal targets, such as the Democrat Jerry Costello, or the less influential entries, such as the deceased Fred Schwarz. Wikipedia left intact the smear against the most influential group. After removal of the smear against Costello, it was then was reinserted before being removed again.
  20. Wikipedia's last sentence on Human Life International claimed that a killer "confessed that pamphets (sic) from the group led" him to kill. This is a complete lie designed to smear a conservative group. But this was approved by Wikipedia and remained for over a month.[30]
  21. A devastating critique of Wikipedia by Fox News describes the impact of Wikipedia smears on popular golfer Fuzzy Zoeller.[31]
  22. Smears in Wikipedia's entry on U.S. Congressman Steve LaTourette were totally false.[32]
  23. "Larry Sanger, who founded Wikipedia in 2001 with Jimmy Wales only to leave shortly afterwards, said that even as far back as 2001 the Wikipedia community 'had no respect for experts.'"[33]
  24. The Wikipedia entry for homosexuality is adorned with the a rainbow graphic but fails to mention the following: the many diseases associated with homosexuality, the high promiscuity rates of the homosexuality community, the higher incidences of domestic violence amoung homosexual couples compared to heterosexual couples, and the substantially higher mental illnes and drug usage rates of the homosexuality community. In addition, the Wikipedia article on homosexuality fails to mention that the American Psychiatric Association issued a fact sheet in May of 2000 stating that "..there are no replicated scientific studies supporting a specific biological etiology for homosexuality."[34]
  25. Wikipedia's article on atheism fails to mention that American atheists give significantly less to charity than American theists on a per capita basis.[35] Wikipedia's article on atheism also fails to mention that Christianity and not atheism was foundational in regards to the development of modern science. Wikipedia's article attempts to associate atheism with scientific progress. [36]
  26. Wikpedia's entry on liberal former Vice President Al Gore contains no mention of the drug charges against his son.[37] But Wikipedia's entry on conservative Vice President Dick Cheney prominently mentions his adult daughter's sexuality.[38]
  27. Wikipedia's entry for seven weeks about Thad Cochran,[39] a conservative Republican member of the U.S. Senate, smeared him with an offensive, unsupported quotation not of Cochran, but of a Democratic Mississippi governor for whom Cochran's mother campaigned when Cochran was age 14. The unsupported quote was never spoken or endorsed by Cochran, but Wikipedia featured it near the top of Cochran's entry to mislead the reader into thinking Cochran is somehow a racist.
  28. Wikipedia smears prominent Christian conservatives, including James Dobson and D. James Kennedy, with an allegation that they are part of a grand scheme Wikipedia calls "Dominionism".[40] The term was made up by liberals and this conspiracy theory has no factual basis, but Wikipedia smears these conservatives with elaborate templates in their own entries depicting them as part of this fictional scheme.[41] This edit [13] calls Eagle Forum dominionist, even though there is not even any source that says so.
  29. Wikipedia's entry about the anti-Christian and anti-Semitic H.L. Mencken praises him profusely because he, Wikipedia's words, "notably assaulted America's preoccupation with fundamentalist Christianity."[42] After 3,500 words of adulation, Wikipedia then buries a concession that Mencken "has been referred to as anti-Semitic and misogynistic."[43] Wikipedians like Mencken's hostility to religion too much to admit that his biographer (Terry Teachout) and his close Jewish friend (Charles Angoff) described him as racist and anti-Semitic.[44]
  30. Wikipedia's entries about the 2007 Masters[45] and its champion Zach Johnson,[46] who won an upset come-from-behind victory against Tiger Woods, omitted any reference to Johnson's public statements crediting his faith in Jesus Christ for strengthening him as he overcame enormous odds to prevail. Months later, after criticism here, Johnson's attibution to Jesus Christ was included, but with the Wikipedia trick of placing it late in a wordy entry so that few are likely to see it, and even then with a silly "citation needed" to suggest that the quote may not be true.[47]
  31. Wikipedia asserts that "One 1987 estimate found that more than 99.84% of almost 500,000 US scientists in the earth and life sciences supported evolution over creation science."[48] This statement is false, but Wikipedians won't correct it and it has been repeated thousands of times by other liberals in reliance on Wikipedia.[49][50] The truth is that 700 scientists signed a statement rejecting evolution, but evolutionists then made the illogical claim that every other scientist must support evolution.[51] Under that reasoning, if 1000 persons signed a statement opposing President George W. Bush, then nearly 300 million Americans must support him! Funny how Wikipedia does not claim that.
  32. The 5,400-word Wikipedia entry on The John Birch Society[52] attempts to smear unrelated conservatives who had nothing to do with the society, simply by calling them "allies". Under that reasoning Ronald Reagan, Pope John Paul II, and George W. Bush should also be in that entry! And this is by a resource that criticizes McCarthyism???[53]
  33. Wikipedia has a substantial anti-intellectual element, as reflected by silly administrator names and nonsensical entries. Check out Wikipedia's entry for "duh": "Duh is an American English slang exclamation that is used to express disdain for someone missing the obviousness of something. For example, if one read a headline saying 'Scientific study proves pain really does hurt' or 'New reports show death is bad for one's health', the response might be 'Well, duh!'"[54] How about a new slogan: Wikipedia: well, duh!
  34. Wikipedia recently moved further away from Judaeo-Christian beliefs by complaining that "[t]he average Wikipedian ... is from a predominantly Christian country" and that Wikipedia was built on Christian encyclopedias and "the Jewish Encyclopedia."[55] At the same time, Wikipedia complains about the "enormous significance" given by entries to "Al-Qaeda attacks on the U.S., UK and Spain, killing slightly over 3,000 people."[56]
  35. Wikipedia has a banner to criticize an American treatment of a topic: "The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject."[57] "A worldwide view" is fictional liberal terminology for globalists.
  36. Though Wikipedia is non-profit, the Wikia project of its co-founder is very much for-profit and has raised millions of dollars in investments. Already Wikipedia has been criticized for favoring Wikia. When Wikipedia community voted 61-39% percent to treat all links to other sites equally by removing nofollow (Google-ignored) tags for all of them, the Wikipedia co-founder overruled this decision and Wikipedia now favors Wikia in its treatment of nofollow tags.[58]
  37. Wikipedia is sympathetic to Fidel Castro in its entry about Cuba.[59] Wikipedia blames President Dwight Eisenhower for choosing "to attend a golf tournament" rather than meet the revolutionary Castro in 1959, and then Wikipedia claims that Castro became a communist because of the American-backed Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961. Conservapedia tells the truth up-front: "Cuba has been ruled by a communist dictator named Fidel Castro since 1959."[60]
  38. Often Wikipedia's biased assertions are unsupported by its citations. For example, the Wikipedia entry about Conservapedia states that it "has come under significant criticism for alleged factual inaccuracies."[61] But check out Wikipedia's cited source for that statement: its citation does not identify a single factual inaccuracy on Conservapedia.[62] Thus Wikipedia relies on a factual inaccuracy to accuse someone else of factual inaccuracies!
  39. Liberal icon Bertrand Russell receives glowing adoration on Wikipedia, which calls him "a prophet of the creative and rational life," "one of the world's best-known intellectuals" whose "voice carried great moral authority, even into his mid 90s."[63] After 7,700 words about Bertrand Russell, Wikipedia finally mentions Russell's support of the communist revolution, but pretends that Russell quickly opposed it. Instead, Russell wrote that "I believe that Communism is necessary to the world, and I believe ... Bolshevism deserves the gratitude and admiration of all the progressive part of mankind."[64]
  40. Conservapedia allows greater and easier copying of its materials than Wikipedia does, but Wikipedia's entry about Conservapedia claims that its policy "has led to some concerns."[65] And who supposedly had these concerns? In Wikipedia's citation, it was only the founder of Wikipedia in trying to find a way to criticize Conservapedia![66]
  41. April 24th was the anniversary of Operation Eagle Claw, which was President Jimmy Carter's failed attempt to rescue American hostages in Iran. The Conservapedia entry explains Carter's political motivation for this. But the Wikipedia entry omits Carter's political motivation and instead implies that this bad luck cost Carter the election.[67] In fact, Newsweek did not even mention this after July 14th, and Reagan beat Carter for reasons other than bad luck.
  42. Wikipedia's entry on James Monroe[68] omits any mention of how he was a conservative and omits Monroe's veto of a key appropriation on the Cumberland Road Bill, when Monroe stated that "congress does not possess the power under the constitution to pass such a law."[69]
  43. Polls show that about twice as many Americans identify themselves as "conservative" compared with "liberal", and that ratio has been increasing for two decades.[70] But on Wikipedia, about three times as many editors identify themselves as "liberal" compared with "conservative".[71] That suggests Wikipedia is six times more liberal than the American public.[72] See also liberal quotient.
  44. Wikipedia awarded "good article" status[73] to a biased description of liberal Balboa High School, saying it has "a progressively nurturing environment" undergoing "a steady renaissance marked by academic innovation."[74] Nowhere in Wikipedia's 4,468-word description does it admit that half the 9th graders lacked proficiency on a statewide English test.[75] Instead, Wikipedia editors apparently like how this public school converted its metal shop into a sex-based "health" clinic.
  45. One can confirm that sex-related entries are attracting many to Wikipedia, including young viewers, by viewing Wikipedia statistics. But Wikipedia gives no specific warning to parents or viewers about the pornographic images on popular pages, and Wikipedia would probably be disabled in many homes and schools if a proper warning were given.[76]
  46. Wikipedia's entry on the "Palestinian People" omits any mention of terrorism.[77] Click on the PLO and you'll find no discussion of its connection to the massacre of innocent athletes at the 1972 Olympics in Munich.[78] The Israel News Agency reports:
    No where will you ever find Al-Qaeda, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and Hezbollah described as terror organizations by Wikipedia. Wikipedia will quote the US State Department or the United Nations Security Council as saying that they are terror groups, but Wikipedia itself will only describe these organizations as "militants."
  47. Wikipedia features an entry on "anti-racist mathematics" that "emphasizes the sociocultural context of mathematics education and suggests that the study of mathematics (as it is traditionally known in western societies) does exhibit racial or cultural bias."[79]
  48. In the mid-20th century, a Soviet encyclopedia contained the assertion that Jesus was a myth.[80] Wikipedia's entry on Jesus has the following: "A small number of scholars and authors question the historical existence of Jesus, with some arguing for a completely mythological Jesus."[81] But no credible historian makes such a claim.
  49. Wikipedia's entry for the Renaissance denies any credit to Christianity, its primary inspiration.[82]
  50. About 60% of Americans accept the account of the Great Flood in the Bible.[83]. But enter "Great Flood" into Wikipedia and it automatically converts that to an entry entitled "Deluge (mythology)." That entry then uses "myth" or "mythology" nearly 70 times in its description.[84] Its entry on "Noah's Ark" is just as biased.[85]
  51. Wikipedia editors are about 4 times as atheistic or non-religious as the American public. In a Newsweek poll in 2006, 92% of Americans said they believed in God and only 8% said they did not believe in God or didn't know. But among Wikipedia editors responding to a request for identification of beliefs, 35% described themselves in the categories of "No religion, atheist, agnostic, humanist, secular, other."[86]
  52. Wikipedia's entry on abortion reads like a brochure for the abortion industry. Wikipedia denies and omits the results of 16 out of 17 statistically significant studies showing increased risk of breast cancer from abortion.[87] Wikipedia's entry also omits the evidence of abortion causing increased premature birth of subsequent children.[88]. Instead of providing these facts, Wikipedia blames women by declaring that "breast cancer elicits disproportionate fear in women"![89]
  53. The Wikipedia entry for the Voting Rights Act contained (as of March 9-10) a call to participate in a political march to establish congressional representation for D.C.[90] This is a longtime liberal cause prohibited by the U.S. Constitution. A conservative entry like that would be deleted by Wikipedia editors within minutes, but that entry remained until after it was criticized here.
  54. Initially a Wikipedia admin named "Nearly Headless Nick" deleted, without explaining his decision, an entry about Conservapedia. Later, in response to publicity, Wikipedia posted a new entry about Conservapedia. Wikipedia's entry is filled with obvious bias, numerous errors, out-of-date citations, and self-serving false statements.[91] For example, the Wikipedia entry made the absurd claim that Conservapedia says the "General Theory of Relativity" has "nothing to do with physics." Wikipedia's claim was completely false and unsupported by its citations. After this example was posted here, Wikipedia removed its error but has left other false and outdated claims in its entry, reflecting Wikipedia's pervasive bias.
  55. Wikipedia's entry for conservative physicist Edward Teller promotes the liberal attempt to blame him for the government taking away the security clearance of J. Robert Oppenheimer. Teller testified, "If it is a question of wisdom and judgment, as demonstrated by actions since 1945, then I would say one would be wiser not to grant clearance." Wikipedia first called this statement "damning", and after criticism here replaced its term with "problematic".[92] In light of how multiple spies leaked secrets under Oppenheimer's supervision in the Manhattan Project and spying even worsened afterwards, Wikipedia's spin on Teller's statement is unjustified bias.
  56. Wikipedia's entry for the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, a conservative group, features a rant against the group by a British journalist who was a former press officer for the leftist Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.[93] The only cited credential for the journalist is that he works for a television "programme-production company," and there is no citation for any of the factual claims in his intemperate and misleading description of the group, which were prompted by an independent criticism in England of the journalist's own work. After receiving a complaint about this, Wikipedia trimmed this rant but still kept most of it, reflecting Wikipedia's bias. Preserving this unpublished diatribe is against Wikipedia policy (e.g., NPOV), but it Wikipedia administrators insist on keeping it. Wikipedia's entry also features another liberal journalist's swipe at AAPS from ... 40 years ago!
  57. There is a strong anti-American and anti-capitalism bias on Wikipedia. In its description of the post-war Bell Trade Act of 1946, in which the United States gave the Philippines $800 million in exchange for some free trade provisions, Wikipedia omits any mention of the $800 million dollars and instead lambasts the "wrath of Father Capitalism."[94] The agreement was approved by popular vote on the Philippines, but the Wikipedia article omits that fact also.
  58. Wikipedia distorts the youthful acceptance of deism by Benjamin Franklin by never acknowledging that he later abandoned it. Wikipedia fails to admit the significance of how Franklin, near the end of his life, proposed the saying of prayers at the Constitutional Convention for divine intervention and assistance in the proceedings,[95] an act contrary to the teachings of deism. Wikipedia also omits any acknowledgment of Franklin's praise of Pilgrim's Progress in his autobiography.
  59. Wikipedia's entry on the Intelligent Design court decision in Dover[96] distorts and omits the key facts that (i) the judge awarded over $2 million in attorneys fees to the ACLU's side (not $1 million),[97] (ii) the judge copied over 90% of his opinion from the ACLU's briefs,[98] and (iii) his opinion relied heavily on another decision that was subsequently reversed on appeal.[99]
  60. Gossip is pervasive on Wikipedia. Many entries read like the National Enquirer. For example, Wikipedia's entry on Nina Totenberg states, "She married H. David Reines, a trauma physician, in 2000. On their honeymoon, he treated her for severe injuries after she was hit by a boat propeller while swimming." That sounds just like the National Enquirer, and reflects a bias towards gossip. Conservapedia avoids gossip and vulgarity, just as a true encyclopedia does.
  61. Edits to include facts against the theory of evolution are almost immediately censored. On Conservapedia, contributions that meet simple rules are respected to the maximum extent possible.
  62. Wikipedia has as its official policy the following: "If we are going to characterize disputes neutrally, we should present competing views with a consistently fair and sensitive tone." [100] Yet what does Wikipedia do in relation to its article on Young Earth Creationism? It currently offers am article on the topic under the category "Pseudoscience". [101] What reputable encyclopedia uses such a non-encyclopedic tone for an article in regards to creationism? The log on the article shows that Wikipedia has a history of using the pejorative term "pseudoscience" to disparage young earth creationism. [102]
  63. Wikipedia removed and permanently blocked a page identifying its many biases. Wikipedia omits any meaningful reference to political bias in its 7000-word entry Criticism of Wikipedia.
  64. Wikipedia claims about 1.8 million articles, but what it does not say is that a large number of those articles have zero educational value. For example, Wikipedia has 1075 separate articles about "Moby" and "song".[103] Many hundreds of thousands of Wikipedia articles -- perhaps over half its website -- are about music, Hollywood, and other topics beneath a regular encyclopedia. This reflects a bias towards popular gossip rather than helpful or enlightening information.
  65. The Wikipedia entry for John Peter Zenger links to an incorrect Wikipedia definition of "Philadelphia lawyer," which Merriam-Webster defines as a lawyer knowledgeable in "even the most minute aspects of the law." Wikipedia claims the term comes from the Zenger trial, but Merriam-Webster puts the first use of that term at over 50 years later. Wikipedia is simply unreliable.
  66. Often key facts are missing from Wikipedia entries in favor of meaningless detail. Wikipedia's entry about Indentured Servitude is massive, but it omitted any reference to Bacon's Rebellion, which was the turning point for the use of indentured servants in the New World! Finally, weeks after this glaring omission was noted here, Wikipedia added one line to its entry: "Indentured servants in Virginia supported Bacon's Rebellion in 1676."[104]
  67. Unlike most encyclopedias and news outlets, Wikipedia does not exert any centralized authority to take steps to reduce bias or provide balance; it has a "neutral point of view" policy but the policy is followed only to the extent that individual editors acting in social groups choose to follow it. For example, CNN would ensure that Crossfire had a representative of the political right and one from the political left. In contrast, Wikipedia policy allows bias to exist and worsen. For example, even though most Americans reject the theory of evolution,[105] Wikipedia editors commenting on the topic are nearly 100% pro-evolution.[106] Self-selection has a tendency to exacerbate bias, as in mobs, where there are no restraints. Gresham's Law reflects the problem in economics of bad money driving out good in the absence of corrective action. As a result, Wikipedia is arguably more biased than CNN and other information sources.
    The above paragraph was posted on the Wikipedia entry for "Wikipedia", under bias, but its editors then illustrated their bias by replacing the above with this: "Ojective [sic], or neutrally biased, articles present different opinions as equally legitimate regardless of validity, while unbiased articles focus on accuracy and validity. For example, the evolution article is not objective because it does not present creationism, a counter argument to evolution, as a valid scientific theory. However, this does not make the article biased because evolution is an accepted scientific theory. CNN's Crossfire, on the other hand, was considered objective ... because it had representatives from the political right from the political left."
  68. Wikipedia has many entries on mathematical concepts, but lacked any entry on the basic concept of an elementary proof until this omission was pointed out here.[107] Elementary proofs require a rigor lacking in many mathematical claims promoted on Wikipedia.
  69. The Wikipedia entry for the Piltdown Man omits many key facts, such as how it was taught in schools for an entire generation and how the dating methodology used by evolutionists is fraudulent.
  70. Wikipedia allows the use of B.C.E. instead of B.C. and C.E. instead of A.D. The dates are based on the birth of Jesus, so why pretend otherwise? Conservapedia gives the credit due to Christianity and exposes the CE deception.
  71. Wikipedia's article on Feudalism is limited to feudalism in Europe and did not mention the feudal systems that developed independently in Japan and India until this defect was described here.[108]
  72. Wikipedia's article on the longest-serving and most powerful Maryland official in its history, William Donald Schaefer, contains about 1900 words, but over two-thirds of those words (1400/1900) are devoted to silly gossip, outright vulgarity and National Enquirer-type material.[109] 406 words, which is over 20% of the entire entry, is devoted to a silly dispute Schaefer had one day with the local newspaper!
  73. Wikipedia's article about the late Senator John Tower includes a mean-spirited story whose only point seems to be to indicate the degree of his ex-wife's bitterness toward him. The article spells his wife's name incorrectly, and cites no source for the item. The item has been in that state since it was first inserted in May 2006.[110] No real encyclopedia would print such silly gossip.
  74. Wikipedia's entry for the National Childhood Vaccine Injury Act (NCVIA) reads like an advertisement for vaccine manufacturers, including unsupported and implausible claims about vaccination.[111] Unsupported claims featured there include "Vaccine makers indicated they would cease production if their proposal for the NCVIA was not enacted" and "concern that the NCVIA may not provide an adequate legal shield." Wikipedia's entry omits references to leading pro-parent websites concerning vaccination,[112] and instead Wikipedia's entry lists pro-government and pro-vaccine-manufacturer websites. Wikipedia's entry even includes this entire paragraph, which is unsupported and is little more than an advertisement for drug companies:
    Public health safety, according to backers of the legislation, depends upon the financial viability of pharmaceutical companies, whose ability to produce sufficient supplies in a timely manner could be imperiled by civil litigation on behalf of vaccine injury victims that was mounting rapidly at the time of its passage. Vaccination against infectious illnesses provides protection against contagious diseases and afflictions which may cause permanent disability or even death. Vaccines have reduced morbidity caused by infectious disease; e.g., in the case of smallpox, mass vaccination programs have eradicated a once life-threatening illness.
  75. Wikipedia displays an obsession with English social distinctions, such as obscure royality, and with unexplained academic distinctions earned in the English college system, such as references to "double first degree." The entry on Henry Liddell illustrates this extreme form of Anglophilia that characterizes many entries in Wikipedia.[113]. That entry fails to tell us when Liddell was dean of Christ Church, Oxford and has a grammatical error in its first sentence, yet describes in painstaking detail four obscure royal titles for Liddell's relatives and his "double first degree" in college. The casual reader of that entry wouldn't even notice a buried reference (well after a description of all the royal lineage) to Liddell's primary claim to fame: his daughter Alice inspired Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. The arcane English descriptions in many Wikipedia entries may be due to its copying, verbatim, passages from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica. This copying was not disclosed in the debate in late 2005 about whether Wikipedia was as reliable a resource as the Encyclopedia Britannica.[114]
  76. Robert McHenry, former Editor-in-Chief for the Encyclopedia Britannica, wrote about Wikipedia's bias and included this observation:[115]
    One simple fact that must be accepted as the basis for any intellectual work is that truth – whatever definition of that word you may subscribe to – is not democratically determined.
  77. Bob Schmidt observed on the Illinois Review:[116]
    I just spent some time in Wikipedia checking if my recollections of its bias are correct. The bias is much worse than I had remembered.
    I looked only at topics on business and information technology. Clearly there are enthusiasts for certain vendors who are spending a large portion of their time hyping technology in a way that makes their vendor look good in comparison to other vendors.
    They will set up a set of criteria for the definition of a product that their product will meet. They conveniently omit from the criteria anything that would detract from their favorite.
    In short, Wikipedia is not objective. It is accurate only within its selective use of facts that are convenient to promote a predetermined outcome.
    Even for just one area of knowledge, it would take a major time consuming effort for a person or group to have an impact on reducing the bias and improving the accuracy of the entries.
  78. Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, admitted the following understated bias in an interview in 2006:[117]
    "I would say that the Wikipedia community is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population on average, because we are global and the international community of English speakers is slightly more liberal than the U.S. population. There are no data or surveys to back that." [Conservapedia editor: why not? Wales admitted that only about 615 editors are responsible for over 50% of the edits on Wikipedia.[118] Why doesn't Wikipedia survey these editors? Is this deliberate indifference to bias?]
  79. Many people know how a prominent Tennessee journalist John Lawrence Seigenthaler was defamed for four months on Wikipedia before it was corrected. He described and criticized this in USA Today, concluding with the following:[119]
    When I was a child, my mother lectured me on the evils of "gossip." She held a feather pillow and said, "If I tear this open, the feathers will fly to the four winds, and I could never get them back in the pillow. That's how it is when you spread mean things about people."
  80. What most people don't know is how many Wikipedia editors savaged Seigenthaler afterwards on a Wikipedia talk page for publicly criticizing the falsehoods about him:[120]
    "Mr. Seigenthaler's attitude and actions are reprehensible and ill-formed," said one typical comment. "[He] has the responsibility to learn about his own name and how it is being applied and used, as any celebrity does on the Internet and the world-at-large. Besides, if there is an error whether large or small, he can correct it on Wikipedia. Everyone fails to understand that logic." Another wrote: "Rather than fixing the article himself, he made a legal threat. He's causing Wikipedia a lot of trouble, on purpose."
  81. The co-founder of Wikipedia, Larry Sanger, described "serious and endemic problems" in Wikipedia in a document entitled "Toward a Compendium of Knowledge" (Spet. 2006). Sanger observed that Wikipedia editors do not enforce their own rules consistently or effectively and that it has become an "arguably dysfunctional community" unattractive to traditional experts. Sanger declared the Wikipedia community's response to the Seigenthaler incident to be "completely unacceptable."[121]
  82. Wikipedia's errors spill undetected into newspapers. A Wikipedia entry falsely stated that Rutgers was once invited to join the Ivy League. Although that false statement was eventually removed from Wikipedia, it was not removed before the Daily News relied on it in this story:
    "You don't have to define your college with your football team, but Rutgers long ago decided to give it a try. Back in 1954, when it was considered a 'public Ivy,' Rutgers might have joined the fledgling Ivy League and altered its destiny. But the school declined the offer - arguably the dumbest mistake in its history. Ever since then, Rutgers has scrambled to prove itself worthy of playing football with the big boys." — Bondy, Filip. "They Can Finally Say They Belong Here", New York Daily News, 2006-11-10, p. 92. Retrieved on 2006-12-13.
  83. Wikipedia's entry for Johnny Appleseed, a Christian folk hero, omits a discussion of his strong faith and instead features baseless speculation about his health, a year of death different from that of his obituary, and a silly story designed to make a Christian preacher look foolish.[122]
  84. In an example of pro-homosexuality bias, the category allowing users to self identify as Heterosexual was deleted because it served no useful purpose, yet the exact same category for Homosexuals was kept.

References

  1. "And in that respect Wikipedia is no better than the National Enquirer. We don't quote the National Enquirer on television (unless [it's] for a documentary on aliens or some other conspiracy theory) so why would we do for Wikipedia?"[1]
  2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Sternberg
  3. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Dawkins
  4. See Richard Dawkins.
  5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parable_of_the_Prodigal_Son
  6. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Byron_White&diff=159734800&oldid=154431838
  7. http://www.funtrivia.com/en/subtopics/Are-They-Related-213708.html
  8. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservapedia
  9. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/RichardDawkins
  10. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:RichardDawkins
  11. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Boy_Scouts_of_America_v._Dale&oldid=152256885 (quoting a 2004 liberal list by Time magazine).
  12. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Boy_Scouts_of_America_v._Dale
  13. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Conservapedia&oldid=160604712 (emphasis added).
  14. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus_H._Christ
  15. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eritrea
  16. http://www.davisenterprise.com/articles/2007/09/14/news/114new1.txt
  17. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19181-2005Jan18.html
  18. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_Summers
  19. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Criticism_of_Wikipedia&oldid=144741567#Fanatics_and_special_interests
  20. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Liberal&redirect=no
  21. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deceit_%28album%29
  22. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Deceit&action=history
  23. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Henry_Friendly&oldid=151873451
  24. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zerah_Colburn_%28math_prodigy%29&oldid=147253074
  25. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_by_cop
  26. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jerry_Costello&oldid=142488803
  27. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fred_Schwarz&oldid=143791808
  28. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Association_of_American_Physicians_and_Surgeons
  29. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dave_Dravecky&oldid=155924640
  30. [2] Only in response to Conservapedia's criticism was the smear removed.
  31. In addition to the Fox News report, numerous stories on the Internet describe the smears, which we will not repeat here. "The Wikipedia entry has since been cleansed of the remarks, first posted last August, then again in December before being removed January 2nd. However, several sites like Answers.com have copies of Wikipedia entries, and as of press time still had the defamatory content in place."[3]
  32. http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/1184402220217510.xml&coll=2
  33. http://www.siliconrepublic.com/news/news.nv?storyid=single8794
  34. http://www.cwfa.org/images/content/bornorbred.pdf
  35. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atheism
  36. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atheism
  37. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Gore
  38. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dick_Cheney
  39. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thad_Cochran&oldid=135420256 (revised only after being exposed on Conservapedia, but then the smear was reinserted again before being removed again)
  40. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominionism
  41. See, e.g., D. James Kennedy
  42. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mencken
  43. Ibid.
  44. http://cjrarchives.org/issues/2003/1/mencken-payne.asp
  45. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Masters_Tournament
  46. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zach_Johnson&oldid=154500732
  47. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zach_Johnson
  48. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Level_of_support_for_evolution
  49. http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070519145312AACvfJA&show=7
  50. Talk:Main Page
  51. "By one count there are some 700 scientists (out of a total of 480,000 U.S. earth and life scientists) who give credence to creation-science, the general theory that complex life forms did not evolve but appeared 'abruptly'." Martz, Larry & Ann McDaniel (1987-06-29), "Keeping God out of the Classroom (Washington and bureau reports)", Newsweek CIX(26): 23-24, ISSN 0028-9604
  52. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_John_Birch_Society
  53. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism
  54. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duh
  55. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:WikiProject_Countering_systemic_bias (later "predominantly Christian" was changed to "nominally Christian")
  56. Ibid.
  57. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campaign_finance
  58. http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/04/28/wikipedia-special-treatment-for-wikia-and-other-wikis/
  59. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuba
  60. Cuba
  61. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservapedia
  62. http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=1910
  63. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bertrand_Russell
  64. Bertrand Russell
  65. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservapedia
  66. http://www.thestar.com/sciencetech/article/190501
  67. Wikipedia states, "The operation was a failure, and had a severe impact on U.S. President Jimmy Carter's re-election prospects ...."entry
  68. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Monroe
  69. James Monroe
  70. http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/index.asp?PID=444
  71. Compare Liberal Wikipedians with Conservative Wikipedians
  72. "Liberal bias" can be defined as the ratio of liberals to conservatives in a group, such that no liberals would equate to zero liberal bias. Wikipedia's ratio of 3:1 for liberals to conservatives is six times the ratio in the American public of 1:2 for liberals to conservatives.
  73. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Good_articles
  74. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balboa_High_School_%28San_Francisco%29
  75. Jill Tucker, "Student Successes Defy Urban Trends," San Francisco Chronicle (Aug. 16, 2006).
  76. Wikipedia merely has a general disclaimer that avoids any reference to its sexual images, pornography, and adult content.[4]
  77. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestinian_people (the entry also contained an unjustified picture of children for sympathy purposes, but that was removed after criticism here)
  78. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palestine_Liberation_Organization
  79. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-racist_mathematics
  80. http://www.bede.org.uk/books,jmyth.htm
  81. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesus
  82. Wikipedia has since updated its entry with a backhanded reference to Christianity, but even then not for inspiring the Renaissance but rather for providing subject matter for the works.[5]
  83. http://www.washtimes.com/national/20040216-113955-2061r.htm
  84. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Flood
  85. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah%27s_Ark
  86. http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wikimedians_by_religion
  87. http://www.jpands.org/vol8no2/malec.pdf
  88. http://www.jpands.org/vol8no2/rooney.pdf
  89. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abortion-breast_cancer_hypothesis
  90. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Voting_Rights_Act
  91. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservapedia
  92. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Teller
  93. The version criticized above; the note left by dpbsmith on the article's discussion page; the current version.
  94. This phrase was removed from Wikipedia only after this criticism was posted here. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Trade_Act
  95. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Deist_thinkers
  96. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitzmiller_v._Dover_Area_School_District
  97. ACLU
  98. Id.
  99. Id.
  100. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Neutral_point_of_view
  101. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Earth_creationism
  102. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Young_Earth_creationism&action=history
  103. Simply search "Moby" and "song" together on Wikipedia.
  104. http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indentured_servant&diff=115675763&oldid=113879992
  105. http://www.religioustolerance.org/ev_publi.htm
  106. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Evolution
  107. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elementary_proof
  108. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feudalism
  109. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Donald_Schaefer
  110. John Tower, revision as of Jan 25
  111. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Childhood_Vaccine_Injury_Act
  112. http://www.909shot.com/
  113. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Liddell
  114. http://news.com.com/Study+Wikipedia+as+accurate+as+Britannica/2100-1038_3-5997332.html
  115. http://www.opendemocracy.net/media-edemocracy/wikipedia_bias_3621.jsp
  116. http://illinoisreview.typepad.com/illinoisreview/2007/01/conservapedia_w.html
  117. http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2006/04/email_debatewales_discusses_po.html
  118. http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/02/12/bias_sabotage_haunt_wikipedias_free_world/?page=2
  119. http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2005-11-29-wikipedia-edit_x.htm
  120. http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2006/02/12/bias_sabotage_haunt_wikipedias_free_world/?page=3
  121. http://arstechnica.com/articles/culture/citizendium.ars
  122. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johnny_Appleseed

Guidelines for inclusion:

  • Each entry must include a diff which shows the content being posted, and the user that posted it.
  • Avoid mentioning posts that were made by new Wikipedians or anonymous Wikipedians, unless their biased edits were not reverted after a substantial amount of time.
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TOPICS: Culture/Society; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: bias; censorship; disinformation; misinformation; revisionisthistory; stalinisttactics; wikipedia
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To: Morgan in Denver

Thanks. Do you find the sourcing balanced? I’m not looking for a right wing slant either, I just want a set of sources that will lead to reality and truth...which is more risky with a liberal compromised source.


61 posted on 11/12/2007 9:42:50 PM PST by highlander_UW (I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
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To: Reform Canada

Translation: Please use our site that is merely a clone of Wikipedia, using the wiki code developed by those eeeeevil Wikipedians, which does not have over two million articles but is instead filled (sort of) with a measly few thousand poorly written articles that can only be used via a shady non-open license. :p


62 posted on 11/12/2007 10:04:08 PM PST by Constantine XIII (THE CAKE IS A LIE)
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To: Reform Canada

Also, this is not a place for advertising your pet project. lol.


63 posted on 11/12/2007 10:04:37 PM PST by Constantine XIII (THE CAKE IS A LIE)
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To: RightCenter

It’s an encyclopedia. No one who has graduated the 6th grade seriously uses encyclopedias as a reference for academic work. :p


64 posted on 11/12/2007 10:10:04 PM PST by Constantine XIII (THE CAKE IS A LIE)
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To: highlander_UW

I kind of doubt there are many sources that are totally balanced. That’s not a problem as long as I remember which ones are and to what side they have their bias. Experience will teach you which ones are and to which side. At least that’s been what I’ve been doing for some time now. And yes, I miss bias just as much as everyone else does but I try not to. Heck, I’ve even read something from Scrappleface thinking it was true until I read the source and laughed because it was an obvious spoof.

Others I have learned to rely on, such as Michael Yon, Daniel Pipes and Victor Davis Hansen. I rarely have to wonder if they are fair or misleading me. Likewise I am always skeptical with anything from the NY Times or other liberal syndicated papes.


65 posted on 11/15/2007 4:42:29 AM PST by Morgan in Denver
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To: Morgan in Denver
I’m right with you on all points. The trick is teaching my children to also be wise consumers of information without jaundicing their view of life.
66 posted on 11/15/2007 6:19:30 AM PST by highlander_UW (I don't know what my future holds, but I know Who holds my future)
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To: highlander_UW

I couldn’t agree with you more. Plus they learn it better and it sticks as true if they do it themselves. All I can say is good luck. Your job is one of the hardest I know of.


67 posted on 11/15/2007 7:00:07 AM PST by Morgan in Denver
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I really enjoyed your resources, although I've been learning and building websites with HTML and CSS since 2009. Anyhow, I also noticed that you mentioned a HTML5 “Cheat Sheet” - webmonkey.com/webmonkey/reference/html_cheatsheet/ It used to be an awesome cheat sheet for beginners, but for some reason it has been deleted and is no longer available. Thus, I decided to create a new one with some additional tags. It's located here: websitesetup.org/html5-cheat-sheet/ In case you find useful or helpful to your audience, feel free to update the broken link and help the web developers and HTML5 community :). If you don't have time for that, no problem at all. Once again - THANKS and have a nice weekend, Robert.
68 posted on 09/05/2014 5:23:01 AM PDT by RobertMening
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