Marc Riddell wrote:
on 2/9/07 3:44 PM, geni at geniice@gmail.com wrote:
Šyou end up with resentment against the lucky ones.
After reading all of the posts on the provocatively-named subject "Admin Burnout", I am hard pressed to see anything "lucky" about being "chosen" as one. How on earth would you go about persuading someone to take this on? The whole day's posts have spoken about nothing but the negative side of the job; are there any advantages - or are you simply hoping there are enough masochists out there to fill the positions?
Marc Riddell
While it's true that some people's approach to being admins puts them in the way of much undeserved abuse, that is not the only way to be an admin.
Lest I be misunderstood, I appreciate the work that those admins do. It is necessary work, and Wikipedia benefits from it. These admins deserve our thanks and our support.
However, Wikipedia can also benefit from the less active admins. These admins have a lower profile, and spend much less time on the project. Because of how RfA works now, these admins tend to be those who have burned out, or who became admins quite some time ago (as I did).
-Rich