Fred complained that:
We don't present all main views or even the predominant view. We censor views we feel are incorrect and substitute euphamisms; so East Germany becomes a "socialist country", not a totalitarian Marxist-Leninist government imposed by fiat on the Soviet Zone of occupied Germany.
To the degree that our articles fit this description, then they are at best incomplete.
One of the main views about East Germany is that:
A) its government was not elected, but imposed by fiat B) its government was totalitarian, not democratic C) calling it "socialist" is an attempt at deception
This is a widely held view, and therefore /by definition/ is required to be in the article about this controversial subject.
Now, don't get me wrong. I'm not saying the Wikipedia should endorse the bullet points listed above as "true" or "objective" but that those points /must not/ be censored out of the article, merely because of pressure from someone who thinks differently.
You can ask Jimbo or Larry, or anyone who believes in the NPOV Policy of Wikipedia. It's basic. It's key. It's fundamental.
And I wish we didn't have to keep bringing this up every few months!
Ed Poor, aka Uncle Ed