For example, I would delete "So-and-so is an actress", but would think twice about "So-and-so is an actress. She has appeared in (bluelinked) movies X, Y, and Z." One asserts notability. The other doesn't. I don't see what the problem is here.
The problem is that users who have not read the huge and ever-growing list of wiki policies and procedures are unaware of the notability guidelines and simply don't post anything about notability. No one would; did you put a section in the last history report you wrote called "why I think this topic is worthy of my report"? It certainly not something that commonly exists outside the wiki world. I've never seen another encyclopedia that has a section on every article called "why we put this article in here".
So a knowledgable editors spends time writing what I thought was a useful article. Then someone who is unfamiliar with the topic tags it. And then along comes an admin who's following a cat or robot-built list looking for articles that have been tagged, and presto-deleto.
It took me about 15 seconds to confirm that the company in question is widely known and reported on. A perfectly valid article was deleted due to a combination of a new editor being punished for not following policy that he could not possibly be aware of, combined with lazyness on the part of the tagging user and the deleting admin. Neither one could be bothered to do a google search, or if they did, couldn't be bother to report their reasons.
I see this _all_the_time_. The wikipedia is about the articles, not the policies, but it seems an ever-growing number of users and admins are forgetting this.
Maury
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