Posted on 05/20/2020 5:16:11 PM PDT by DeweyCA
Larry Sanger, the founder of Wikipedia says that the project has abandoned neutrality and is now badly biased. Sanger is no longer involved with Wikipedia, and his co-founder, Jimmy Wales, is a far-left activist.
In a blog post on Thursday, Sanger wrote a scathing critique of the bias at his former website.
Wikipedias NPOV is dead, Sanger began, referring to the sites neutral point of view policy.
He specifically pointed to the entries for former President Barack Obama and President Donald Trump as examples.
The Barack Obama article completely fails to mention many well-known scandals: Benghazi, the IRS scandal, the AP phone records scandal, and Fast and Furious, to say nothing of Solyndra or the Hillary Clinton email server scandalor, of course, the developing Obamagate story in which Obama was personally involved in surveilling Donald Trump, Sanger explained. A fair article about a major political figure certainly must include the bad with the good. The only scandals that I could find that were mentioned were a few that the left finds at least a little scandalous, such as Snowdens revelations about NSA activities under Obama. In short, the article is almost a total whitewash.
The founder points out that the entry for President Trump, on the other hand, is unrelentingly negative.
Meanwhile, as you can imagine, the idea that the Donald Trump article is neutral is a joke. Just for example, there are 5,224 none-too-flattering words in the Presidency section. By contrast, the following Public Profile (which the Obama article entirely lacks), Investigations, and Impeachment sections are unrelentingly negative, and together add up to some 4,545 wordsin other words, the controversy sections are almost as long as the sections about his presidency, Sanger explains. Common words in the article are false and falsely (46 instances): Wikipedia frequently asserts, in its own voice, that many of Trumps statements are false. Well, perhaps they are. But even if they are, it is not exactly neutral for an encyclopedia article to say so, especially without attribution. You might approve of Wikipedia describing Trumps incorrect statements as false, very well; but then you must admit that you no longer support a policy of neutrality on Wikipedia.
Sanger explains that articles on religious topics show a similar pattern of bias and used the entry on Jesus as a particularly egregious example.
Likewise, scientific articles, he explained, are filled with liberal bias and unscientific views. He wrote that when the Establishment (or maybe just the Establishment left) is unified on a certain view of a scientific controversy, then that is the view that is taken for granted, and often aggressively asserted, by Wikipedia.
The pages for global warming and the MMR vaccine show particularly strong examples of the bias in this area, he explained.
It is time for Wikipedia to come clean and admit that it has abandoned NPOV (i.e., neutrality as a policy). At the very least they should admit that that they have redefined the term in a way that makes it utterly incompatible with its original notion of neutrality, which is the ordinary and common one, Sanger stated.
However, he concluded by acknowledging that Wikipedians are unlikely to concede any such thing; they live in a fantasy world of their own making. This might finally be having an effect, as Wikipedias Alexa ranking has dropped within the last year from five to 12 or 13.
Sanger has now proposed an entirely new and independent decentralized encyclopedia network called The Encylosphere.
In a speech given at TheNextWebs Hard Fork Summit, MRC reports, Sanger explained that, The Encyclosphere would give everyone an equal voice in expressing knowledge (or claims to knowledge), and in rating those expressions of knowledge. There would be no single, central knowledge repository or authority.
For example just pick some up secure battle from 1115 AD and some OBSCURE part of Europe and IT WILL have lots of details about it
O'Sullivan's Law
"... any organization or enterprise that is not expressly right wing will become left wing over time."
Wikpedia also has an entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_O%27Sullivan_(columnist)#O'Sullivan's_first_law
Why limit to Wikipedia? Are our textbooks not filled with propoganda? Our classrooms?
I pretty much trust Wikipedia for non-political information, which is important to me. For political info I trust my own two eyes, and I "follow the money".
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