My name is Jason Clevenger. My primary interest is in articles on food and restaurants. I also make contributions to philosophy articles and to the
Washington University in St. Louis article.
For a while after I started contributing, I was pretty much unaware of the Wikiwars going on just under the surface. This changed when an article I had gone to several times had an deletion
AfD notice on it. Why would anyone want to delete an article that other people go to? I still have not found a good answer to this question. But I did learn about the alphabet soup of policeies and guidelines:
WP:N,
WP:V,
WP:Not and all the rest. I began to get involved in the
WP:AfD process, usually in support of keeping an article. I have strong
inclusionist tendencies, but it is also clear that there are plenty of articles that come into Wikipedia everyday that should be deleted. Anyone doubting this should dip a bucket into the river of
Wikipedia:New Pages. But of course the question is how to draw a line between what stays and what goes. That is what the inclusionism/
deletionism tension is about. And since I have chosen to get involved I should provide a sketch of my principles.
There is no room for malice. I have never had much patience with the , "it was just a joke" defense of prima facia cruelty.
Wikipedia is a project to produce a free content encyclopedia that can be edited by anyone. (see
History of Wikipedia) This openness is an essential feature and for me it implies a fundamental populism in deciding what shape it should take. The
AfD battles that I weigh in on usually revolve around the 'worthiness' of a topic for inclusion in an encyclopedia. If there are people who want to create and edit an article and then come to see it, the presumption should be that it belongs here. Reality TV shows are an example of this kind of debate. I happen to think that most Real/TV is dreck. But that doesn't matter. Lots of people enjoy it and some of them want to create articles about these shows and the people on them. But many of these get swept up into the AfD process on the grounds of a lack notability (
WP:N).
There are five particular
policies that help flesh out the essential nature of Wikipedia and as such should should be the grounds (in the usual cases) for deciding that an article should be removed: Verifiability
WP:V, Neutral Point of View
WP:NPOV, No Original Research
WP:NOR, Copyright Violations
WP:CV, and What Wikipedia is Not
WP:NOT.
There are also a number of guidelines (not official policy) that are used in evaluating these policies: examples are
WP:NN,
WP:BIO, and
WP:CB. They are in effect tools that can be used in deciding whether or not polices are violated.
Too often AfD debates are not about policy; instead they are about the status of a particular tool. A common example is 'notability'
WP:NN. The rationale for notability as a guideline for deletion is that Verifiability, Neutral Point of View, and No Original Research are less likely to be violated when the subject has a minimum level of notability. Not unreasonable. But too often AfD debates involving notability are really debates about whether a given topic is 'encyclopedic' enough.
The worst kind of debates, in my mind, are the
cruftwars. Two essays (not policy, not guidelines), Fancruft
WP:CRUFT and Listcruft
WP:LC, are invoked as reasons for deletion. The rational for this is taken from
WP:NOT: 'Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of items of information' and 'Wikipedia is not a directory'. But in practice, the charge of 'cruft' is quite often a POV statement about whether or not the material is worthy of being in an encyclopedia.
Est omnino difficile iudicare inclusionis meritum cuiusdam rei in encyclopædia cum ratio sciendi quid populi referat incerta sit, sed nihilominus aliquid encyclopædiam dedecet
It is generally difficult to judge the worthiness of a particular topic for inclusion in an encyclopedia considering that there is no certain way to know what interests people, but some topics nevertheless are not fit for an encyclopedia.
This motto reflects the desire of these Wikipedians to be reluctant, but not entirely unwilling, to remove articles from Wikipedia.
Ten things you may not know about Wikipedia is a list of insights about Wikipedia specifically targeted at people who have limited or no prior experience with the project (such as journalists, new editors, and new readers).
These explanations should not surprise experienced editors but will hopefully help the rest of the world to shape an informed opinion of our work.