On 22/12/06, Ray Saintonge saintonge@telus.net wrote:
Steve Bennett wrote:
On 12/19/06, Guy Chapman aka JzG guy.chapman@spamcop.net wrote:
It's like "don't be a dick". The idea is to do it, not to quote it.
I personally agree with Jimbo's elevation of "assume good faith" to be the single mantra which binds us together and makes Wikipedia work. Everyone *does* need to know about. You don't enforce it, you don't beat people over the head with it, but you do make sure people are aware of its existence, and hope they follow it.
That's better. More than either a rule or a guideline, "assume good faith" is a principle. It is integral to the five pillars.
It's what I think of as the absolute hard policy - the constitution.
Content: Neutral Point Of View, Verifiability, No Original Research Community: No Personal Attacks, Assume Good Faith.
I suggest to people that they treat Don't Bite The Newbies as being in the Community list. Since occasional contributors seem to write a tremendous amount of our text.
These would be the "constitution" as new rules and procedures should be considered in terms of them, and ideally as following directly from them, as directly as possible.
(This is the thrust of the [[Wikipedia:Practical process]] essay, which as it states at the top is intended to provoke thought and thoughtfulness rather than be a tick-the-boxes guideline.)
- d.