6/23/2026 at 1:14:44 PM
So to summarize:he resuggested "WikiProject Intellectual Diversity", a group with the goal to make "Wikipedia more intellectually diverse" and "ensure fair and open decision-making and governance, broaden the range of permissible sources, reinforce genuine neutrality, rein in over-aggressive blocking while holding the powerful to higher standards of accountability", etc, with the implied undertone of preventing Wikipedia from drifting too far to the political left.
This is unpopular because people oppose this on various grounds (mostly that it might be vote brigading and tiling decisions in their favor just by showing up in an organised way around wikipedia). Also the same project was apparently suggested before and rejected in early stages
But then he made a tweet that basically just says "I suggested this, some people like it, some hate it". That's super against the rules, because it attracts people to the proposal who otherwise wouldn't have seen it. Probably in an attempt to sway discussion, because his tweets are obviously seen primarily by people who like his ideas
Which then lead to the vote to ban him from editing Wikipedia. With a total ban getting more votes than a more limited ban, like banning him from participating in articles namespaced for internal matters
Is that about right?
by wongarsu
6/23/2026 at 6:30:43 PM
Well, sure, it looks like one thing, but ...I took a quick look at what the "Wikiproject intellectual diversity" was actually monitoring. Specific articles or categories about things Mr Sanger finds interesting,right? Well, indeed: specifically it's all arbcom, admin elections, policy pages. You can check it out here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Larry_Sanger/WikiProject_...
Then he canvassed people from outside wikipedia to help with that project.
So he claimed to be doing one thing, but in reality it was more of a thinly disguised power play by the look of it.
by Kim_Bruning
6/24/2026 at 12:44:54 AM
This doesnt make sense… ?Clearly all significant names involved with Wikipedia, including admins, have some kind of ulterior motives, to some degree above literally zero.
Unless you believe in literally perfect altruism 100% of the time.
The degree can vary from one to another, but that seems like a much higher bar to confidently pin down.
by MichaelZuo
6/23/2026 at 1:31:58 PM
Yes, banned by the status quo for trying to disturb it. Wikipedia is nowadays highly politicized and more time and energy are spent on politics than on actually contributing with any useful knowledge. I've stopped contributing years ago after a decade of writing because of how bad things had gotten. It's a lost battle, all that remains is scorched earth filled with toxic editors trying to push their POV and banning everyone who exposes them or attempts to change things.by afh1
6/23/2026 at 1:40:16 PM
Yes agreed, for example, there was an interesting table on the starlink page I used to check every so often showing which countries had access to starlink as it was rolled out. Was interesting to see the expansion.Of course, some editor decided it was 'marketing' for starlink so it got deleted despite loads of people protesting. It was the only source I could find easily for showing which country got starlink when.
A huge list of prose is still on the page (not marketing?) showing the updates in a very hard to read and not comprehensive way. Something is really quite wrong over there.
by martinald
6/23/2026 at 2:28:39 PM
And the worst is the cycle:1. There is incorrect information on wikipedia.
2. Legacy news publishes an article, using wikipedia as source (of course).
3. Now the incorrect information is essentially canonized
by ieie3366
6/23/2026 at 3:09:48 PM
On the other hand, some of the best is when a hoax written by a monk in the north of England some time around 1300 is debunked by late 20th century scholarship, and eventually someone makes Wikipedia no longer re-hash a propagandist revision of the Battle of Stirling Bridge re-set in Wales that stood unchallenged for almost 7 centuries.* https://youtube.com/v/mLdB5s7-h0w
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletio...
by JdeBP
6/23/2026 at 5:31:06 PM
If you spot it in Wikipedia, point it out, it does get removed. Leaving a comment on the talk page <!-- or in the article --> gets editors on-board to patrol for accidental attempts to add the incorrect information back in. Wikipedia does not like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citogenesisby amiga386
6/23/2026 at 3:59:01 PM
Circular references. This methodology has been called out by several researchers. NYT, WaPo are key users of this technique.Off the top of my head: https://citationintegrity.org/
Wikipedia features prominently as a defaulter.
by SanjayMehta
6/23/2026 at 5:06:43 PM
Citogenesis, a well-known hazard. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_citogenesis_...by card_zero
6/23/2026 at 5:25:05 PM
or:1: the media has a vested interest in only reporting a certain slant, because it involves criticizing the media
2: because the media is the only source deemed reliable, that slant becomes the truth
by Akronymus
6/24/2026 at 4:06:03 AM
>There is incorrect information on wikipedia.Wikipedia has an article titled “Yahweh.” Now, as I am a Christian,[8] "Yahweh" is the name of my God.[0]
This is one of Sanger's proposed changes and this is not an undisputed fact, more like a dispute among theologicans [1] and with the confidence he wants this change implemented, I am highly sceptical, that misinformation will decrease.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Larry_Sanger/Nine_Theses#....
[1] https://christianeducatorsacademy.com/is-yahweh-the-christia...
by frm88
6/23/2026 at 6:26:21 PM
Huh, ironically, the opposite happened with Tesla, when numerous editors warred to include a model on the list of "Fastest Production Vehicles", even though the model hadn't been released, based on a press release from Tesla (and even that said it was a simulated, expected number).It got to the point where there was a column for "verified" numbers, others, and then "Manufacturer projected" numbers.
by FireBeyond
6/23/2026 at 9:42:37 PM
In that specific case, you could add those data to Wikidata https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q19867977#P2541by YoshiRulz
6/23/2026 at 5:45:38 PM
> There was an interesting table on the starlink page I used to check every so often showing which countries had access to starlink as it was rolled out. Was interesting to see the expansion. [...] Of course, some editor decided it was 'marketing' for starlink so it got deleted despite loads of people protesting....I mean, yeah, that doesn't sound particularly encyclopedic. "Marketing" might be a bit strong but that doesn't mean it belongs in a general encyclopedia.
by Wowfunhappy
6/24/2026 at 12:08:49 AM
Why not? It's the first time many developing countries have had access to high quality internet at an often relatively affordable price?by martinald
6/23/2026 at 2:27:28 PM
It’s a shame :( There’s a lot of blatantly incorrect information on wikipedia, and i’ve had multiple wikipedia edits reverted due to ’bad sources’by ieie3366
6/24/2026 at 7:03:26 AM
I’ll keep the status quo of rejecting MAGA lies over allowing Fox News as a reliable source any dayGo use conservapedia or grokpedia if you want the lies, no one is forcing you to use Wikipedia, and no one is asking for it to be turned into shit like everything the alt right touches
by thiht
6/25/2026 at 4:37:26 AM
Seek help.by naturalmovement
6/25/2026 at 1:42:01 PM
Not sure why?by thiht
6/23/2026 at 8:05:41 PM
And despite all this, it's still probably the best website around. Just because everything else is even worse.by pwdisswordfishq
6/24/2026 at 3:33:50 AM
I pay for the EB. Wish I'd bought the last print edition back in 2010.by NordStreamYacht
6/23/2026 at 6:28:43 PM
Yeah, try to make any substantive change on many pages and you'll get met with a barrage of "WP:OR! WP:POV! WP:NPS! WP:WTF!" and don't fall into the amateur trap (that certain editors hope you will) of reverting their reversion. They'll look to get you blocked for a revert war. "What should I do then?" "You should respond to my comments on the Talk page for why I reverted you." "But you haven't made any comments on the Talk page about that." "That's beside the point."by FireBeyond
6/24/2026 at 5:45:33 PM
For a few years now Wikipedia has had a mentorship feature where every new user can ask an experienced user for help through the homepage. They usually come through and help you go through the alphabet soup.> "But you haven't made any comments on the Talk page about that."
Well then, make that comment yourself and you can go ahead and revert it later if the other person does not respond.
by Aatube
6/25/2026 at 3:56:31 PM
Or, eventually, as a user who had nearly 2,000 contributions over 10+ years, you finally say "Why even bother?" and just leave the project, like I did.by FireBeyond
6/23/2026 at 1:24:26 PM
Well there is a lot more, e.g.:After that, Larry Sanger remarked: "What people don't realize, actually, is the number of people who are actually at work on Wikipedia on any given day is not really that enormous. It's more in the hundreds or low thousands, not in the millions. Well, there's a lot of people in India. There's a lot of educated people in India, right? There's a lot more educated people in India than there are in, say, England. Just due to sheer numbers, you can field a lot of good writers on Wikipedia, and if you quite simply learn how to play the game..." (33:54).
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Adminis...
by Sweepi
6/23/2026 at 3:10:22 PM
You cut out the context, making it look like he was trying to bias the website.The part you left out was that he was asked by the interviewer how Indians who felt the site was biased against them could fight the bias:
> When asked about how "Indians and Hindus who feel there is this bias" could "fight it actively", Larry Sanger responded:
So he’s saying that a group can combat bias on the site by participating in the site. India has a lot of educated people and therefore it wouldn’t be hard to find people to contribute. Why is this so controversial?
by Aurornis
6/23/2026 at 1:32:06 PM
Ok, saying things like "The left marched through this institution. There’s no reason we can’t march right back" is pretty bad.To be clear: it would be equally bad if you swapped left and right in that sentence. I don't know if his assessment of the issues with Wikipedia is correct, but his solutions aren't what you propose if you want to make Wikipedia more neutral
by wongarsu
6/23/2026 at 3:18:53 PM
> Ok, saying things like "The left marched through this institution. There’s no reason we can’t march right back" is pretty bad.He’s not saying they need to “march through this institution”. He’s saying they need to learn how to navigate the increasingly Byzantine rules set up by the small number of editors so they can contribute to the site.
Why would it be bad to counter bias by bringing in people from the under-represented group? What would be permissible to you, if not bringing in people from that group to participate?
by Aurornis
6/23/2026 at 3:01:51 PM
>Ok, saying things like "The left marched through this institution. There’s no reason we can’t march right back" is pretty bad.Why is that bad?
>To be clear: it would be equally bad if you swapped left and right in that sentence.
Not at all, if it was swapped, the left would be calling for diversity, equity, and inclusion. They'd call those opposing said diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives every -ist they could throw, all while playing the victim.
Then O'Sullivan's First Law inevitably comes true and the terminally online leftist entryists shut anyone right of them out. This is where Wikipedia is now.
by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 3:57:36 PM
> Why is that bad?Because it's a far-right conspiracy theory implying Wikipedia editors are Red Guards purging universities, and calls for a counter-purge.
In other words, it is a thinly veiled call for violence based on a conspiracy theory.
The same conspiracy theory Anders Breivik explicitly cited after murdering 77 people.
by vrganj
6/23/2026 at 4:33:35 PM
>Because it's a far-right conspiracy theoryIt's not a conspiracy theory, it's a documented leftist political strategy [0].
>implying Wikipedia editors are Red Guards purging universities, and calls for a counter-purge.
No one is making the claim that Wikipedia editors are purging universities.
>In other words, it is a dog-whistled call of violence based on a conspiracy theory.
No one is calling for violence. Attempting to paint the inclusion of non-far-left voices as "violence" is a propaganda tactic.
by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 6:35:08 PM
>The same conspiracy theory Anders Breivik explicitly cited after murdering 77 people.Anders Breivik explicitly cited Wikipedia editors are Red Guards purging universities?
by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 7:03:41 PM
It's a rephrasing of the "Cultural Marxism" conspiracy theory, which was at the core of Breivik's Manifesto. A conspiracy theory that originated as "Cultural Bolshevism", the justification the actual Nazis used to justify their mass murder.by vrganj
6/23/2026 at 8:42:54 PM
Cultural Bolshevism wasn't the justification to the mass murder the Nazis committed. The genocide was motivated due to Nazis' own racial theories. The rest were killed due to strict authoritarianism of the ideology. At best, it was an excuse.by bit-anarchist
6/23/2026 at 9:23:50 PM
> Cultural Bolshevism wasn't the justification to the mass murder the Nazis committed. The genocide was motivated due to Nazis' own racial theories.Those two are one and the same. Cultural Bolshevism was a Jewish plot in the Nazi world view.
by vrganj
6/23/2026 at 9:42:33 PM
No they aren't the same. Jews, as a race, were seen as subhuman and antisocial, sufficient justifications in Nazi world view to exterminate.Cultural Bolshevism was, at best, an attempt to link anything seen as degenerate to jews to further strengthen persecution of such. Even if Jews weren't a thing, Nazis would still mass murder, hence it was an excuse.
by bit-anarchist
6/23/2026 at 10:10:43 PM
Jews were the evil geniuses behind Bolshevism in the deranged Nazi world view: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_BolshevismCultural Bolshevism was seen as the Jewish plot to destroy the West.
It is all the same. To spread "Cultural Marxism" theories is to spread antisemitism.
by vrganj
6/23/2026 at 11:20:12 PM
You might be confusing a couple of things. Nazis couldn't care less about the "west". In fact, in the Nazi world view, Jews already controlled most of western contries. They were, first and foremost, "aryan" supremacists (not white supremacists, as commonly understand today), and saw the world under a dialectic lens of Aryans vs. everyone else. There is no "west" there.The people who most talk about "Cultural Marxism" (conservatives) tend to be Israel shills, even on when it commit atrocities. In the same line, most discussions of cultural marxism don't invoke race, maybe religion (but not often Judaism).
by bit-anarchist
6/24/2026 at 6:02:37 AM
Please read the article I linked. It addresses both of your points.by vrganj
6/24/2026 at 5:46:00 PM
I read it. In my second reading, I found nothing that contradict the first point, and that address the second point. If you found otherwise, could you cite the relevant sections?by bit-anarchist
6/24/2026 at 9:19:03 PM
Sure, I feel like both of your points are addressed by the first paragraph already:> Jewish Bolshevism, also Judeo–Bolshevism, is an antisemitic, anti-communist conspiracy theory, and myth[2] that claims that a Jewish conspiracy was behind the Russian Revolution of 1917, controlled the Soviet Union and international communist movements, and had a secret plan to control or destroy Western civilization; or, more generally, it is the antisemitic myth that Bolshevism was fundamentally Jewish.[3] It was one of the main Nazi beliefs that served as an ideological justification for the German invasion of the Soviet Union and the Holocaust.[4]
I had a history education in Austria, a big part of it was trying to teach how we ever got to the atrocities that were committed, and as part of that we were thought how the Nazi ideological apparatus worked.
The conflating of Jewishness and Communism was a key pillar of their ideology.
by vrganj
6/24/2026 at 11:18:47 PM
As the citation says, it was one of the main beliefs that justified the invasion and the Holocaust. Even if Jewish Bolshevism wasn't a thing (which could happen, if Jews didn't get better representation in the USSR in comparison to the Empire), Nazis would still commit the holocaust, invade the USSR, and, most importantly, still exist, thus, it can't be called a key pillar of Nazism. It's more accurately described as a key pillar of Nazi propaganda, supported here:> Michael Kellogg in his Ph.D. thesis argued that the racist ideology of Nazis was to a significant extent influenced by White émigrés in Germany, [...]
p.s. Kellogg is mentioned below to argue that this was the origin of Hitler's antisemitism, but that is contested, and there's plenty of evidence of Hitler antisemitism from early on. Still, Jewish Bolshevism is well accepted as a key propaganda element.
Moving to the second point, I don't see how your citation address it. "Cultural Marxism" is primarily spoken without referring to religion. Unlike Cultural Bolshevism, there's no modern equivalent to Jewish Bolshevism, and, as I stated previously, the ones who primarily talk about Cultural Marxism don't even mention religion, and if they do, they often treat Judaism and Christianity as if they are in the same boat. If anything, the closest religious scapegoats would be Muslims, but they aren't treated as "masterminds". Don't even get started on race (which is what Nazis actually cared about).
by bit-anarchist
6/25/2026 at 11:03:58 AM
Rereading this comment, I realized I made a jump withe white émigrés bit. The idea is that they would form a significant support base of Nazi Germany, but weren't as central to the philosophy of Hitler's ideology as suggested.I also recognize that I did claim that Jewish Bolshevism wasn't the justification for the mass murders. I still maintain that, for I meant the main primary ideological reason why the Nazis did it. Without the racial supremacy (specially without the theories about Hebrew degeneracy) and ultra-traditionalism of Nazism, Jewish Bolshevism wouldn't even be conceived.
by bit-anarchist
6/24/2026 at 7:30:22 PM
>It's a rephrasing of the "Cultural Marxism" conspiracy theory, which was at the core of Breivik's ManifestoFalse and a non sequitur.
It's not a conspiracy theory, it's a documented leftist political strategy [0].
by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 1:46:51 PM
I'm trying to find the charitable read on this and I'm unable to. He's saying that it would be great to allow Hindu ethnonationalist sources, because that would open up a talent pool of Hindo ethnonationalist editors? What kind of an argument is that?by rozab
6/24/2026 at 3:32:24 AM
He said that in response to a leading question by the interviewer: he's saying if you think X viewpoint is being suppressed, then people with that viewpoint need to participate to counter the suppression.by NordStreamYacht
6/23/2026 at 1:52:26 PM
An interesting procedural detail is how an admin decided to just close the discussion and ban the user before the mandatory discussion period was over, and got a lot of pushback for the sloppy decision making process. This was overturned, only for another admin to reach the same conclusion seven hours later, after the discussion was online for the mandatory 72 hours (with no consideration for the two hours between the wrongful decision and the reversal)https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Adminis...
by wongarsu
6/23/2026 at 2:37:17 PM
Having a labyrinth of rules to follow and then applying them asymmetrically is a classic way to build power for the ingroup and exile outsiders.The ingroup knows the rules well enough that they can wait until an enemy crosses one of the rules, then they have an excuse to punish them. The more rules on the books, the more opportunities to use them against your enemies.
When someone inside breaks the rules, it’s treated as a misstep, handled internally, and then forgiven after a short ceremony to make it look like order and procedure are still being maintained.
by Aurornis
6/23/2026 at 6:56:17 PM
>Having a labyrinth of rules to follow and then applying them asymmetrically is a classic way to build power for the ingroup and exile outsiders.This is why Codes of Conducts became so popular.
by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 6:26:04 PM
Wikipedians refer to such ingroup members as The Unblockables. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Unblockablesby greyface-
6/23/2026 at 6:00:40 PM
This.At clubs. At school. At work.
This is one of the first things I taught my kids to recognize and yet I see plenty of people in their 40s or more that still haven't figured it out. Some of them even become "useful fools" and make matters worse.
by moralestapia
6/23/2026 at 6:53:47 PM
You can build your own wikipedia.by sixothree
6/23/2026 at 8:05:46 PM
Sanger did, indeed, create his own Wikipedia alternative.[0] It failed to catch on, and is currently maintaned and almost exclusively edited by just one person.by lambdaone
6/23/2026 at 2:46:29 PM
"Intellectual Diversity" seems to be another of these "Intelligent Design" rebrandings where rather than admit they were wrong the same crap just gets re-branded and goes straight back on the shelf.by tialaramex
6/23/2026 at 6:23:36 PM
> This is unpopular because people oppose this on various grounds (mostly that it might be vote brigading and tiling decisions in their favor just by showing up in an organised way around wikipedia). Also the same project was apparently suggested before and rejected in early stagesIt's gone now, but this is hilariously on-brand - Wikipedia Review had its own axes to grind but did hugely in-depth work exposing Wikipedia Admins for "caballing", having secret mailing lists that Wikipedia denied the existence of, private IRC channels where admins had their pet topics that they owned and would "get suppressing fire" from other admins when they were going to make edits that reflected their POV (i.e. "watch while I edit and block/ban people who try to revert or interfere"). They'd do the same for admin elections etc.
by FireBeyond
6/23/2026 at 1:29:45 PM
> But then he made a tweet that basically just says "I suggested this, some people like it, some hate it". That's super against the rules, because it attracts people to the proposal who otherwise wouldn't have seen it.How would this in any way be against the rules? Wouldn'tan open and democratic process like wikipedia want as many eyes as possible on a vote or rule change?
That sounds completely backwards from the open and free spirit of wikipedia. If even wikipedia has gone full mob rule then hwo do any projects stay open and free to everyone?
by chollida1
6/23/2026 at 1:36:15 PM
Consensus-based decision making doesn't work if people can bring in their existing audience from elsewhere to overwhelm the discussion. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Canvassing.by ameliaquining
6/23/2026 at 1:40:10 PM
>How would this in any way be against the rules? Wouldn'tan open and democratic process like wikipedia want as many eyes as possible on a vote or rule change?if you bring in a bunch of non-wikipedia people (i.e. people who haven't previously cared about or participated in wikipedia discussions at all), all from 1 person's twitter following, you aren't getting "open and free spirit"-ed discussion. you are getting a bunch of larry followers who want larry to "win"
by john_strinlai
6/23/2026 at 1:40:20 PM
(Note: This is what I got from the Talk page about the ban)The core idea is, Wikipedia has internal mechanisms to make these kinds of notifications, and making these decisions needs some knowledge and experience about how Wikipedia works.
Recruiting inexperienced people to bias decisions which requires knowledge is effectively converting that proposal to a blunt instrument and trying to force your way in (aka bludgeon).
When the mechanisms in place and requirement of experience (i.e. competence), whistling the town square and calling people to force a gate is textbook brigading, and brigading is forbidden everywhere (maybe except 4chan/8chan).
by bayindirh
6/23/2026 at 3:12:52 PM
> Recruiting inexperienced people to bias decisions which requires knowledge is effectively converting that proposal to a blunt instrument and trying to force your way in (aka bludgeon).I agree with your premise and with your conclusion. That said, campaigning in a democracy is exactly recruiting inexperienced people to bias decisions which requires knowledge. Any support of that viewpoint would effectively ban political campaigning.
by dotancohen
6/23/2026 at 4:06:32 PM
That's not my premise, and not my conclusion. This is a summary of what the admins talk on that discussion page. So I'm just a messenger summarizing things.Moreover, Wikipedia is not a democracy [0]. It's a consensus based system. So, as they say, votes coming from outside doesn't count, and that's fine by me.
Last but not the least, this is a kind of decision on the level of law-making for the Wikipedia. People elect politicians, but don't write the laws themselves. Criticizing Wikipedia for not allowing "ordinary citizens" to write the laws is a bit stretch while giving democracy as an example to aspire to doesn't make sense, because even a democracy doesn't work the way you want to portray here.
Anyway, Wikipedia is not a democracy to begin with, so that's moot in a sense.
[0]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:What_Wikipedia_is_no...
by bayindirh
6/24/2026 at 12:35:26 AM
It clearly cannot be consensus based?As several users mentioned, “The Unblockables” are notorious, as only one admin willing to unblock them is sufficienf. Even against the wishes of another admin and many users.
by MichaelZuo
6/23/2026 at 1:36:49 PM
I would describe Wikipedia's process as democratic but not necessarily open. And it's pretty hypocritical to describe how they operate as 'mob rule' while complaining that rabble-rousing on other platforms should be allowed. Which is it? Should Sanger be allowed to raise a mob to win a policy vote, or should Wikipedia forbid external vote-whipping?I stopped engaging with Wikipedia because my experience of their administration is that it's deeply toxic. This specific instance doesn't seem too out-of-hand to me, since the rules are clear in this instance. It's where there are grey areas that their behavior starts to get unhinged.
by stonogo
6/23/2026 at 1:36:17 PM
While I agree, the internet has also long suffered from brigading (for better or worse) because the barrier-to-action is virtually zero.by WarmWash
6/23/2026 at 1:54:44 PM
Remember that the editors of wikipedia do not owe us anything. Time is a gift, and they give theirs to us in great abundance.It's perfectly acceptable for them to charter their own rules and keep these kinds of matters internal until they agree it's best, for their goals, to involve the public.
Frankly, they strive to be some of the greatest practitioners on neutrality. This is not the kind of organization that needs the kind of public correction you are wondering about.
And if it was, I think we can all understand why modern day Twitter is the wrong place to exclusively inspire that discussion.
by lanyard-textile
6/23/2026 at 1:40:21 PM
The Wikipedia community proudly states that they're not a democracy [1]. I don't even know how that works. People simply think their opinion is the best one while hiding behind statements like, "This is THE consensus, you can't do anything about it. Oh, Wikipedia IS NOT A DEMOCRACY, so your pathetic voting attempt has literally no power here."[1] : https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Wikipedia:IS_NOT_A_DEMOCRACY...
by altilunium
6/23/2026 at 1:50:14 PM
Why not quote the rule, if it is so offending?: Wikipedia is not an experiment in democracy or any other political system. Its primary (though not exclusive) means of decision making and conflict resolution is editing and discussion leading to consensus—not voting. (Voting is used for certain matters such as electing the Arbitration Committee.) Straw polls are sometimes used to test for consensus, but polls or surveys can impede, rather than foster, discussion and should be used with caution.
Off-site petitions and votes have no weight in the formation of consensus on Wikipedia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:What_Wikipedia_is_no...
by Sweepi
6/23/2026 at 2:45:56 PM
Fun fact:Sanger wrote the original version of that rule, and its change over the years has reflected a shift from people coming to Wikipedia in the very early years thinking that they could just do whatever the Hell they wanted, to in later years people coming to Wikipedia thinking that it is run like a legislature.
by JdeBP
6/23/2026 at 7:51:23 PM
My personal read is this:A democracy can vote that pi=4.
This is not a very useful property for an encyclopedia, so you're going to need a different system for determining outcomes.
Preferably you need a method that is somehow still somewhat fair. And that's how we get to the concept of rough consensus. It's absolutely not perfect, and it's not meant to be, because nothing is. Improvements welcome.
by Kim_Bruning
6/23/2026 at 8:12:22 PM
> Intellectual DiversityUntil I see a situation where this is used to add leftists or far left to a right wing organization, I will just assume it means quota for minimal number of underqualified right wing hacks.
by watwut
6/23/2026 at 1:23:38 PM
[dead]by draw_down
6/23/2026 at 1:56:55 PM
[flagged]by pjc50
6/23/2026 at 4:58:37 PM
Much like “free speech.”Do people really not understand how propaganda works? Or do they just pretend not to in order to help enact these otherwise unpalatable policies?
by archagon
6/23/2026 at 5:44:58 PM
[flagged]by throwawaypath
6/23/2026 at 3:15:25 PM
> that hit a nerveSpeaking the unvarnished truth often does.
by classified
6/23/2026 at 4:09:39 PM
While this can be the case, in my experience nerves are always attached to self-image. This means one can hit a nerve not only by saying the emperor has no clothes, but also with actual defamation.by ben_w
6/23/2026 at 2:16:38 PM
And once they get powerful enough, both diversity and intellect suffer.by tpm
6/23/2026 at 2:39:05 PM
[flagged]by throwawaypath