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sunsettommy
04-19-2008, 08:41 AM
An editing war is described in the link

National Post

Wikipedia's zealots

The thought police at the supposedly independent site are fervently enforcing the climate orthodoxy

Lawrence Solomon, Financial Post Published: Saturday, April 12, 2008

EXCERPT:

As I'm writing this column for the Financial Post, I am simultaneously editing a page on Wikipedia. I am confident that just about everything I write for my column will be available for you to read. I am equally confident that you will be able to read just about nothing that I write for the page on Wikipedia.

The Wikipedia page is entitled Naomi Oreskes, after a professor of history and science studies at the University of California San Diego, but the page offers only sketchy details about Oreskes. The page is mostly devoted to a notorious 2004 paper that she wrote, and that Science journal published, called "Beyond the Ivory Tower: The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change." This paper analyzed articles in peer-reviewed journals to see if any disagreed with the alarming positions on global warming taken by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. "Remarkably, none of the papers disagreed with the consensus position," Oreskes concluded.

Oreskes's paper -- which claimed to comprehensively examine all articles in a scientific database with the keywords "climate change" -- is nonsense. As FP readers know, for the last 18 months I have been profiling scientists who disagree with the UN panel's position. My Deniers series, which now runs to some 40 columns, describes many of the world's most prominent scientists. They include authors or reviewers for the UN panel (before they quit in disgust). They even include the scientist known as the father of scientific climatology, who is recognized as being the most cited climatologist in the world. Yet somehow Oreskes missed every last one of these exceptions to the presumed consensus, and somehow so did the peer reviewers that Science chose to evaluate Oreskes's work.

When Oreskes's paper came out, it was immediately challenged by science writers and scientists alike, one of them being Benny Peiser, a prominent U.K. scientist and publisher of CCNet, an electronic newsletter to which I and thousands of others subscribe. CCNet daily circulates articles disputing the conventional wisdom on climate change. No publication better informs readers about climate-change controversies, and no person is better placed to judge informed dissent on climate change than Benny Peiser.

http://www.nationalpost.com/todays_paper/story.html?id=440268

RogerFGay
04-19-2008, 08:59 AM
Kim Dabelstein Petersen, the (Danish woman) Wikipedia zealot mentioned in the article; also spends a lot of time posting in the discussion forum at IMDB under the movie: "An Inconvinient Truth" (sic), under pseudo-name Kim-324. She's been absent the past few days. I wonder if she was shaken by being exposed by the legitimate press. Someone else seems to have stepped in to take her place. Posters on IMDB have been wondering who she works for. Don't see how it's practical for someone to work on a propaganda campaign full-time without financial support.

DesertFox
04-19-2008, 09:17 AM
I had the same experience when correcting the Wiki entry on WWII German General Erhard Raus. What they had on him pretty grossly ran against the literature on both WWII and Raus. I corrected their entry, with reference, but when I checked a couple weeks later somebody had incorporated my comments into the previous comments in a way that distorted what I said. It was still an improvement, but not AS improved.

I quit messing with Wiki after that. Not that I ever really believed in such a thing. Liberals are just liars. They have to win the argument, truth be damned, facts be damned, to hell with reality; and will take over anything they can with lies, distortions, misattributions, elisions, phony quotes, and so on.