"John Lee" wrote
But recall, in this case, how would you salvage the article's content? What useful article could be made out of the content contributed?
I don't accept the framing. As far as I'm concerned, a deletion is an assertion that the topic is unwelcome. In other words that no useful stub can be made. Not that _no useful stub can be made out of the words on the page_. I'm sure we used to be better at this.
As I said, in this case we aren't working to establish whether we deserve an article on this particular topic, but whether this particular article as it stands would be a useful article at all (or could be made into one), assuming this topic should be covered. In this case, reading the original revision, I don't see how we could salvage it.
You are working with the narrow version of "salvage", basically copy-editing only. That is why I think the approach shown is blinkered. That is why I think systemic bias is the background. As I say, we used to be better at welcoming new articles as prompts to create something.
Charles
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