- Joined
- Aug 7, 2021
Content issues aside, it is a somewhat interesting debate. A serious encyclopedia (which Wikipedia pretends it's trying to be) might not want to downgrade a serious scientific term, however obscure, as no longer a primary topic in favor of some short-lived Internet nerd drama, even though the latter is what nearly everyone going to the article is looking for. Avoiding recentism and all that. The current solution, a disambiguation page, was a way to split the baby.I especially love "Gamergate (harassment campaign)" because of the disambiguation page, almost certainly entirely created just to justify putting that there (the only other entry being an extremely obscure word that is not remotely ambiguously different). Agenda much?
I have a similar take on Anne Hathaway. 100 years from now, I suspect few will care about some early 21st-century Hollywood ditz, but new generations of Shakespeare fans will be eager to read about his enigmatic wife. But today most readers are looking for the actress. Perhaps the younger Farmers will live long enough to see them switched.
The label can certainly be slapped on almost anyone or anything they don't like. On the other hand, bigger names such as Tucker Carlson, Ann Coulter, and Donald Trump himself are not yet categorized as far-right. Articles with too many eyes on them must fend the label off, while lesser figures are helicoptered only by the likes of GorillaWarfare.I don't understand the definition of 'far right' anymore.
There is a similar trend with QAnon. Politicians are tied to it based on what seem very flimsy connections. Is Mastriano a full-on QAnon adherent? I'm guessing not, and he probably just agreed with a few things Q posters said. For instance, the intro mentions supposedly damningly that he "has spoken at events that promoted QAnon"; so..., he was in the same room as someone who promoted Q? And this "promotion" might be next to nothing itself.
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