Recently I've found that some vandals have been putting silly sentences into
empty subjects that could potentially make good articles. For instance, last
week we had someone write some crap under Jim Jones and the Jonestown mass
suicide (don't remember the name of the article). While it was being blanked
(repeatedly, I might add), I googled and added a few sentences with content,
and we had a short article, while the vandal left. Today the same thing
happened with Israeli tree frog. Admittedly the article is just a sentence,
but it is a start. Maybe this can be a good way to deal with some of the
vandals: fill in some information, instead of just deleting.
In a similar vein, someone wrote an article called "Separate but equal."
Agreed, it wasn't written very well, but a few quick edits turned it into a
stub that can be built up into an important article. My sense is that the
article was written by a kid (no offense, LittleDan), but it still had some
valuable material and this important topic was not covered at all. Now, at
least, we have a stub on which we can build.
I know it won't work in all cases, but I suggest this in some cases as a way
of countering vandalism and actually benefitting from it.
Danny
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I've seen several articles that said things sounding remarkably similar to the
tainted, incomplete, or just inaccurate stuff they tell me in school. For example, I saw
an article called "War Hawks" where the only text was, "John C Calhoun was
a member of the War Hawks." Recently, in history class, I was told that John Calhoun
was a war hawk, but it was phrased as a statement of fact. They didn't even mention
that 'war hawk' was a derogatory term. I can easily see how a kid who doesn't
question school could have written an article like that.
daniwo59(a)aol.com wrote:In a similar vein, someone wrote an article called "Separate
but equal." Agreed, it wasn't written very well, but a few quick edits turned it
into a stub that can be built up into an important article. My sense is that the article
was written by a kid (no offense, LittleDan), but it still had some valuable material and
this important topic was not covered at all. Now, at least, we have a stub on which we can
build.
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