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Revision as of 18:02, 3 October 2007 by Durova (talk | contribs) (added userpage template)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) Misplaced Pages editorThis is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Deeceevoice. |
Justice for the Jena Six!
I am deeceevoice.
FYI -- I'm not here much, so if you write me, don't be surprised if it takes a while for me to get back atcha. These days, you'll find me here and there -- or not at all. It's a combination of being bored/fed up with the place and the fact that I have a life. When I'm not working like a fieldhand, I'm in my activist mode on a variety of issues. (Yes, there is a world beyond this virtual one.) Increasingly, however, I'm on the Sudan/Darfur issue, working to combat the disinformation campaign being waged in the African-American community by the Nation of Islam, the leaders of which are shills for the Bashir regime, and forging alliances among stakeholders (Oromo, Dinka, Darfuris, Nubians, etc.) in reclaiming their nation, halting the Arabization/recolonization of Africa and building a new and democratic Sudan.
A Caveat
Misplaced Pages is a technology-driven enterprise. As a result, it is skewed toward a white, male, under-50 demographic -- and any hack with a computer and Internet access can edit virtually anything. This has resulted in both misinformation and disinformation; appalling subject matter deficits; and various biases vis-à-vis subject matter treating people of color, the Third World and, most notably, African peoples. The nature of such biases runs the gamut from simply naivete and a kind of youth-driven myopia/provincialism, to a pervasive Eurocentrism/cultural bias, to racism (both mindless and calculated, subtle and blatant/virulent). I have found the project's self-policing mechanisms likewise riddled with some of the same problems, resulting in governance structures the members of which often function without integrity or accountability, who are often hostile, antagonistic, hypocritical and unjustly and unfairly punitive. And when the admins abuse their authority in the most blatant and egregious fashion, they are not held accountable -- while those guilty of lesser offenses often are dealt with excessively harshly.
I recently was blocked after making legitimate changes to a document -- this after another, edit-warring editor openly and blatantly invited others to engage in tag-team edit warring, a favorite tactic on Misplaced Pages to censor the writings of other editors who don't toe the party line of a numerically superior editorial faction. Because I focus on subects dealing primarily with black people, it has been my experience that this dynamic is an exceedingly common one on Misplaced Pages when the subject in question treats people of color. The matter at issue in this case? A cabal of editors who repeatedly have tag-team edit-warred about the insertion of adequately sourced and perfectly appropriate material on the "Negroid" nature of face of the Great Sphinx of Giza. They refuse to allow any inclusion of well-documented, widely known observations of various learned writers throughout history, or that of a former Harvard professor. At first, they relegated the information to a subsection dealing with crackpot theories. Then they deleted it altogether, claiming the source, which recapitulated information (also alluded to in other articles) printed in The New York Times, was unreliable. The most persistent edit warrior in this case, in an another article related to black people repeatedly, however, inserted preposterous information contained at the Stormfront website. On Misplaced Pages, an editor can decide some hack whose material appears on a neo-Nazi website is a reliable source, while a published Harvard professor writing in The New York Times is not.
Am I calling this editor a racist? Nope. I'll let the reader draw his or her own conclusion.
An article treating the "racial controversy over ancient Egypt," after more than two years of effort by informed editors, has been gutted and trashed -- essentially by an appallingly ill-informed/misinformed, single editor -- with a decidedly eurocentrist viewpoint. The article, once provocative, interesting and enlightening, is now nothing more than an inadequate outline with a decidedly eurocentrist slant. The article is now essentially worthless.
The same dynamic was at work on an article about Black people, where essentially a team of white (certainly non-black) contributors has determined that only they are allowed to define who black people are. Contributions by black editors have been reverted (deleted) summarily and repeatedly -- wholesale -- including corrections of grammar, fact and capitalization. And one of these very same offending editors had the gall to visit my user page to tell me to stop editing, because my edits were "not helping."
I recently revisited Jazz, once a featured article. It's now an utter mess and has been de-featured (is that a word?). It's been so whitewashed, so gutted, the subject is barely recognizable. I've reinserted some language here and there. I simply don't have the patience to read the entire thing, let alone attempt a thorough rewrite. Betcha this article is virtually the only one in cyberspace that seeks to portray jazz as a "color-blind" phenomenon, de-Africanizing its roots, and with more illustrations and examples featuring white people (including a list of all-white and Jewish bandleaders from the 1920s)!!! A classic case of white wannabeism/cultural appropriation.
But that doesn't stop it from being at the top of the list of sources on the subject when you Google it. Frightening.
Misplaced Pages is a f***ing runaway freight train headed straight to hell. It's downright and despicably dangerous.
In short, Misplaced Pages is all too often an unreliable source riddled with systemic bias.
Personally, I do not believe Misplaced Pages is an effective venue for treating fairly or accurately subjects related to African peoples. Misplaced Pages is a noble idea, but inherently and fatally flawed. It has its pluses, but plenty of minuses as well. Don't believe the hype and proceed with caution.
So, in short, dear reader, I give you fair warning:
DON'T BELIEVE EVERYTHING YOU SEE IN PRINT.
If You Don't Mind The Interjection
The Original Barnstar | ||
For grinding it out and making your voice heard Docjay8406 16:09, 28 November 2006 (UTC) |
The Tireless Contributor Barnstar | ||
Two and a half years and 15,000 edits? Yeah.
Someone should have given this to you by now. Docjay8406 16:09, 28 November 2006 (UTC) |
The Purple Star | ||
I award you this purple star for dealing with numerous personal attacks from others diplomatically
while continuing to contribute to Misplaced Pages. Wiki Raja 18:08, 10 August 2007 (UTC) |