I don't think he's lost broad community support at all, if you look at
his
talk page and the talk pages on the ArbCom case, I think you'll see just the opposite.
And why, pray tell, would anyone who supports the decision dare go to his userpage and tell him, especially given his record of threatening blocks? Furthermore, why would any otherwise sane individual go and rub salt in the wound if he's that disturbed by the result of the RfAr by gloating about it? I'd like to think that most of the people who feel this is the proper outcome aren't interested in dancing around about it.
They may not show up on his userpage, but would certainly weigh in at the ArbCom case, as happened in many other cases...in this instance there's just not much talk in support of this outcome.
And when re-applying for RFA, you don't need to have lost broad support, just a small group (15% or so) of committed opposers will be enough to block it. Other high profile admins have gotten much longer leashes than this...
I think the evidence of lost support may, in fact, come from the results of the aborted arbcom election vote. Whether he acted correctly or ended up with the correct result (both of those are separate things) 99%, 75%, whatever of the time, I'm not sure that the trust of the general community exists anymore because of that percentage of being wrong.
Well, the standard there is much higher, there are editors with significant numbers of opposers that are otherwise highly regarded in the ArbCom Elections. If in fact there is a silent majority that agrees with this decision there's no sign of it (though it may be there), I think they could do us a favor by making them selves known. As it stands now I see this action as contrary to the good of Wikipedia both as it effects a single editor and what it says about the support you'll get under sustained pressure from what are generally recognised as commited trouble makers.
Brian
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This hitherto silent minority of one supports the ArbCom decision including the acknowledgement of the excellence of much of Mondo's contribution.
Theo
On Tue, 12 Dec 2006 09:38:11 -0600, "Brian Haws" brian@bhaws.com said:
If in fact there is a silent majority that agrees with this decision there's no sign of it (though it may be there), I think they could do us a favor by making them selves known.