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by the_af 1173 days ago
This is a problem with any community, right? Regardless of how open it purports to be, if you don't belong to the trusted circle you are at a disadvantage. And you can only belong to that circle if you were there from the beginning or you spend a lot -- and I mean, a lot -- of time making yourself known so that they accept you. Most people don't have that kind of time.

I don't know if this can be avoided.

2 comments

That is fair, but the problem is that most people do not know that Wikipedia is run by various cliques. Article content does not converge to the "truth". Instead it converges to whatever those who has the most time to waste on Wikipedia believes the truth to be. Take Wikipedia's article on male circumcision. It very much underplays the ethical, moral, and physical issues associated with it because the clique that controls that article see no problem with cutting off unconsenting boys' body parts. People don't know that so when they read that article they think it is "fair" and "objective" which it is not.
> Article content does not converge to the "truth". Instead it converges to whatever those who has the most time to waste on Wikipedia believes the truth to be.

I'm in agreement with you. The worst problem is that people who have not had to deal with edit wars are not aware of how clique-run Wikipedia is. And yes, cliques depend on a bunch of people with way too much free time on their hands.

I'm just saying that I don't know if there is a solution to cliques within communities. Isn't this a widespread problem beyond Wikipedia?

People trust Wikipedia and that is the problem. Those who write articles and engage in battles of attrition over article content are not idealists doing it for the sake of humanity. Instead they are marketeers getting paid to polish celebrities biographical articles, authors peddling books about the joy of circumcision, people paid by governments to carry out psy-ops, etc. The only reason I took the circumcision article as an example is because - for anyone not born in a country where male circumcision is not common practice - it is obvious that it is not written from a "neutral point of view". Other articles have the same issues too. Except for them I don't know anything about the subject so I'll be fooled by Wikipedia's serious tone and many citations into believing that those articles are neutral and factual.
> Those who write articles and engage in battles of attrition over article content are not idealists doing it for the sake of humanity. Instead they are marketeers getting paid to polish celebrities biographical articles, authors peddling books about the joy of circumcision, people paid by governments to carry out psy-ops, etc.

Or obsessive low-level ideologues, who have little else going on in their lives, pushing some agenda. My impression that's the largest group.

Well that’s a wonderful opinion you have there, but sadly, many don’t share it with you.
And those people are child abusers. It's not a bad thing to disagree with child abuse.
Circumcision has a long history because we lacked the medical equipment to resolve phimosis, so everyone had to have it removed earlier. Even today resolving that is much more involved. Of course people don't know this, they're just following their parents religion.
It's a tip of a tongue, but I recall reading somewhere that anarchisistic-run models are prone to corruption in the respect that where the faction with the biggest power can rule it as a de-facto dictator. They suggest that acknowledging the existence of the cliques while turning it into a constitutional-republican model may help alleviate the problem by providing greater oversight or check and balances to their power.