the doog
Sprue-ce Goose
Regarding "Wiki" articles. I would advise being very, very cautious of the content of Wiki articles.
The warning against believing everything posted on the internet also applies to Wiki articles.
Per Wiki policy:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_policies_and_guidelines
Wikipedia is free content that anyone can use, edit, and distribute.
Actually, Wikipedia is considered by many to be one of the most accurate sites on the internet. It is constantly revised to contain the most current information and the information is peer-reviewed and corrected. You can't just anonymously edit the text to alter facts; you must cite your sources, and attribute your email/identity to your additions and your information can be challenged and removed if found to be errant or propaganda.
Doog:
Thanks for the vote of confidence in Wikipedia.
In that case, Wikipedia standards must have changed considerably since I first viewed a Wikipedia webpage perhaps ten years ago.
The historical accuracy of the page I viewed at the time was so obviously wrong that I shunned the website.
As for Wikipedia today:
I do note that comments are now being added to web pages such as the text at the top of this webpage:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gordon_Tootoosis
However, it would be helpful if whoever posted the notation:" This article needs additional citations for verification" had also noted those sections or statements which have not been verified. I do not see any obvious mention of what requires verification within such an article- or did I miss something in the references section?
Perhaps clicking on each hyperlink and sifting through every related web page is necessary in order to discover the reason why additional citations are needed?
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In view of this thread's title, I hope my post is suitably PC ...............