Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,154,217 members, 7,822,105 topics. Date: Thursday, 09 May 2024 at 06:35 AM

Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent - Religion - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Religion / Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent (521 Views)

Sex: A Trusted Tool In The Hands Of The Devil / "God Is Not A Magician" : A Dubious Cop-out. / The Two Powerful Tool God Give You To Create The Life You Want (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by DoctorAlien(m): 4:26am On Aug 05, 2018
by Paul Price

Since its inception in 2001, Wikipedia has been a controversial website, plagued with problems, the greatest of which is the serious concern of biased and inaccurate content. This is no small problem for the internet at large, since Wikipedia has become a go-to source on nearly everything, appearing in a very high percentage of Google searches as one of the top results.

More recently, Google was embarrassed by a gaffe in which their search results pulled data automatically from Wikipedia which labeled the California GOP (Republican party) as Nazis—attributed by Google and Wikipedia to ‘vandalism’. This only goes to show the deep extent to which Google, the world’s most-used search engine by far, is utilizing the information contained on Wikipedia pages, and the dangers this presents.

Wikipedia is rife with overt falsehoods and bias against biblical creationists. It is serving to reinforce this bias across the world as Wikipedia continues to see broader and broader application.

Neutral Point of View?

Wikipedia is governed by various guidelines which are supposed to regulate how articles are administered on the site. According to their guideline called ‘Neutral point of view’,

All encyclopedic content on Wikipedia must be written from a neutral point of view (NPOV), which means representing fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all of the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic.

Already you can see a potential here for bias since we have subjective terms such as “significant” and “reliable” being used. Who gets to determine what constitutes significant or reliable? Well, the editors themselves, as it turns out—that means you, me, and literally anyone with a computer who knows how to edit Wikipedia. But here’s the catch: anyone can also revert any changes made by another editor. This means ultimately that articles represent a ‘consensus’. This would be bad enough in itself, since we know that truth is not decided by majority vote, and ‘consensus science’ is anti-science. But it is worse than it seems on the surface, since most Wikipedia articles are not being watched or edited by a very large number of people. Here, the ‘consensus’ is really only the agreement of a relative few people who, by chance, happen to be the only ones monitoring a given page at a given time. This means that the less popular a page is, the more likely it is to contain errors and bias, or, in the words of wiki expert Alexander Halavais, “The high-traffic areas are going to be the cleanest.”

Even high-traffic areas, though, are not going to be free of bias if the topic is of a controversial or contentious nature. Since Wikipedia is essentially mob-rule applied to encyclopedia content, the prevailing view of the mob is going to determine the bias of the articles. It is naïve to expect people to police themselves when dealing with topics they are averse to, like biblical creation.

Who are ‘Wikipedians’?

When you consider who “the mob” is on Wikipedia, it is that subset of people who have access to the internet, know about Wikipedia and care enough about it to make changes on it—and additionally have the technical expertise to do so (since modifying Wikipedia is a bit like using programming language). Wow! Come to think of it, that is a pretty specialized group, isn’t it? And would we expect that particular group to fit into any categories? Probably largely younger people, for starters, and largely Westerners, since the internet is originally a product of the West and is still dominated largely by the West.

It turns out my predictions were right on the money. A 2010 study on Wikipedia editors shows that the greatest number of editors are in the USA (20%), followed by Germany (12%) and Russia (7%). The only non-Western country in the top 10 was India (3%), which of course also has a strong Western influence due to the history of British colonialism there. 59% were ages 17 to 40.

So if Wikipedia editors tend to be younger Westerners, what biases would we expect to find there? We know that younger people in the USA are tending more and more towards the abandonment of religion. This trend is even more severe in Europe, which is now being described as post-Christian. The trend among younger people in the USA is also towards the acceptance of Darwinism and rejection of biblical creation according to a Pew Research Center report (according to one reporter, “ … if you ask a younger American how humans arose, you’re likely to get an answer that has nothing to do with God”).

Bias, bias, bias!

This all adds up to a stark and sad reality: Wikipedia is very likely to be hopelessly, terribly unbalanced in articles dealing with God, religion and creation science. In digging through some relevant pages, I found some really cringe-worthy, egregious examples of this. In the Wikipedia guidelines section on ‘Fringe theories’, it says this:

“Pseudoscience usually relies on attacking mainstream scientific theories and methodology while lacking a critical discourse itself (as is common among Biblical creationists)” [emphasis mine]
They didn’t even attempt to hold back, claiming that creationism is pseudoscience. Creationists certainly do not lack a critical discourse; all the articles on this site, for example, undergo a peer review process. In addition, creationists publish in peer-reviewed journals such as the Journal of Creation, and go to collective meetings such as the International Conference on Creationism, where ideas are debated and discussed, among many other avenues. Creationists even also publish in secular peer-reviewed journals as well!

Wikipedia openly and blatantly classifies biblical creationism as ‘pseudoscience’:

“Creation science is a pseudoscientific attempt to map the Bible into scientific facts. It is viewed by professional biologists as unscholarly, and even as a dishonest and misguided sham, with extremely harmful educational consequences.”
The level of bias and misrepresentation here is almost beyond words. It is sad that this is coming from what may be the internet’s most-used source of information, but this is the reality we must face in the 21st century. The wording here implies there is a total lack of any professional scientists who support and engage in creation science—a claim which is flat out wrong.

Ideology is a big motivator

According to Wikipedia’s policy on neutrality, “Articles must not take sides, but should explain the sides, fairly and without editorial bias. This applies to both what you say and how you say it.” However, according to a study from 2007, “ideology” was among the most commonly indicated motives for editing Wikipedia articles. There is obviously a major conflict of interest present if people are commonly making edits to Wikipedia for ideological reasons, which is exactly the opposite of Wikipedia’s stated policy of neutrality. Predictably, the result is that bias is rife within the articles on the site.

The proper response to this is twofold: first, Christians and biblical creationists should lobby whenever possible against the rampant bias at Wikipedia and make others aware of it. How else can we ever hope to see a positive change? Christians should engage themselves in the debate online by taking part in the editing of Wikipedia articles to remove clear instances of bias (but not to attempt to introduce pro-Christian biases of our own in the text).

For my part, I raised a fuss at Wikipedia over Jonathan Sarfati’s biographical page including a defamatory quote from Eugenie Scott calling Refuting Evolution 2 a “crude piece of propaganda”. To make a long story short, I wound up getting banned indefinitely on that account, and one of the Wikipedia editors had this to say (a clear admission of purposeful defamation and discrimination):

“There is zero chance that Wikipedia will ever treat pseudoscientists who believe that everything was created in 7 literal days 10,000 years ago the same way we treat the actual scientists -- astronomers, physicists, geologists, paleontologists, etc. -- who have solid evidence that the earth is much, much older.”
Of course, this comment betrays ignorance of the biblical account itself, since God created in 6, not 7 days. In addition, it commits the No True Scotsman fallacy in asserting that creation scientists are not ‘actual’ scientists.


Second, it should be clearly understood in general that Wikipedia is not a good source of information, especially on lesser-known topics and on any potentially controversial topics. That does not make it useless, however. For example, I have found Wikipedia to be a great source of other sources. Sometimes this can be a great shortcut to finding relevant pages, papers, books, etc. on a topic of interest.

It has been documented time and again that there is a battle going on in academia and in the media to attempt to silence all dissent against Darwinism. Because Wikipedia is so driven by consensus (rule of the majority a.k.a. mob rule), it suffers from all the problems that such systems of governance typically do, such as the ‘tyranny of the majority’, where the majority acts against the interests of minority groups.

The problems at Wikipedia are only symptomatic of a larger struggle that has been going on much longer than Wikipedia has been around. With God’s help, let us do our part to represent and defend the truth of the Bible and of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the world, in every medium possible.


Source: https://creation.com/wikipedia

3 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by dalaman: 5:03am On Aug 05, 2018
Creationist are now attacking Wikipedia? Make wuna continue.

1 Like

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by johnydon22(m): 6:27am On Aug 05, 2018
I am going to reply this but i am too sleepy at the moment. Let me sleep for a couple of hours more then come back and reply
Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by felixomor: 10:18am On Aug 05, 2018
DoctorAlien:
by Paul Price

Since its inception in 2001, Wikipedia has been a controversial website, plagued with problems, the greatest of which is the serious concern of biased and inaccurate content. This is no small problem for the internet at large, since Wikipedia has become a go-to source on nearly everything, appearing in a very high percentage of Google searches as one of the top results.

More recently, Google was embarrassed by a gaffe in which their search results pulled data automatically from Wikipedia which labeled the California GOP (Republican party) as Nazis—attributed by Google and Wikipedia to ‘vandalism’. This only goes to show the deep extent to which Google, the world’s most-used search engine by far, is utilizing the information contained on Wikipedia pages, and the dangers this presents.

Wikipedia is rife with overt falsehoods and bias against biblical creationists. It is serving to reinforce this bias across the world as Wikipedia continues to see broader and broader application.

Neutral Point of View?

Wikipedia is governed by various guidelines which are supposed to regulate how articles are administered on the site. According to their guideline called ‘Neutral point of view’,

All encyclopedic content on Wikipedia must be written from a neutral point of view (NPOV), which means representing fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all of the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic.

Already you can see a potential here for bias since we have subjective terms such as “significant” and “reliable” being used. Who gets to determine what constitutes significant or reliable? Well, the editors themselves, as it turns out—that means you, me, and literally anyone with a computer who knows how to edit Wikipedia. But here’s the catch: anyone can also revert any changes made by another editor. This means ultimately that articles represent a ‘consensus’. This would be bad enough in itself, since we know that truth is not decided by majority vote, and ‘consensus science’ is anti-science. But it is worse than it seems on the surface, since most Wikipedia articles are not being watched or edited by a very large number of people. Here, the ‘consensus’ is really only the agreement of a relative few people who, by chance, happen to be the only ones monitoring a given page at a given time. This means that the less popular a page is, the more likely it is to contain errors and bias, or, in the words of wiki expert Alexander Halavais, “The high-traffic areas are going to be the cleanest.”

Even high-traffic areas, though, are not going to be free of bias if the topic is of a controversial or contentious nature. Since Wikipedia is essentially mob-rule applied to encyclopedia content, the prevailing view of the mob is going to determine the bias of the articles. It is naïve to expect people to police themselves when dealing with topics they are averse to, like biblical creation.

Who are ‘Wikipedians’?

When you consider who “the mob” is on Wikipedia, it is that subset of people who have access to the internet, know about Wikipedia and care enough about it to make changes on it—and additionally have the technical expertise to do so (since modifying Wikipedia is a bit like using programming language). Wow! Come to think of it, that is a pretty specialized group, isn’t it? And would we expect that particular group to fit into any categories? Probably largely younger people, for starters, and largely Westerners, since the internet is originally a product of the West and is still dominated largely by the West.

It turns out my predictions were right on the money. A 2010 study on Wikipedia editors shows that the greatest number of editors are in the USA (20%), followed by Germany (12%) and Russia (7%). The only non-Western country in the top 10 was India (3%), which of course also has a strong Western influence due to the history of British colonialism there. 59% were ages 17 to 40.

So if Wikipedia editors tend to be younger Westerners, what biases would we expect to find there? We know that younger people in the USA are tending more and more towards the abandonment of religion. This trend is even more severe in Europe, which is now being described as post-Christian. The trend among younger people in the USA is also towards the acceptance of Darwinism and rejection of biblical creation according to a Pew Research Center report (according to one reporter, “ … if you ask a younger American how humans arose, you’re likely to get an answer that has nothing to do with God”).

Bias, bias, bias!

This all adds up to a stark and sad reality: Wikipedia is very likely to be hopelessly, terribly unbalanced in articles dealing with God, religion and creation science. In digging through some relevant pages, I found some really cringe-worthy, egregious examples of this. In the Wikipedia guidelines section on ‘Fringe theories’, it says this:

“Pseudoscience usually relies on attacking mainstream scientific theories and methodology while lacking a critical discourse itself (as is common among Biblical creationists)” [emphasis mine]
They didn’t even attempt to hold back, claiming that creationism is pseudoscience. Creationists certainly do not lack a critical discourse; all the articles on this site, for example, undergo a peer review process. In addition, creationists publish in peer-reviewed journals such as the Journal of Creation, and go to collective meetings such as the International Conference on Creationism, where ideas are debated and discussed, among many other avenues. Creationists even also publish in secular peer-reviewed journals as well!

Wikipedia openly and blatantly classifies biblical creationism as ‘pseudoscience’:

“Creation science is a pseudoscientific attempt to map the Bible into scientific facts. It is viewed by professional biologists as unscholarly, and even as a dishonest and misguided sham, with extremely harmful educational consequences.”
The level of bias and misrepresentation here is almost beyond words. It is sad that this is coming from what may be the internet’s most-used source of information, but this is the reality we must face in the 21st century. The wording here implies there is a total lack of any professional scientists who support and engage in creation science—a claim which is flat out wrong.

Ideology is a big motivator

According to Wikipedia’s policy on neutrality, “Articles must not take sides, but should explain the sides, fairly and without editorial bias. This applies to both what you say and how you say it.” However, according to a study from 2007, “ideology” was among the most commonly indicated motives for editing Wikipedia articles. There is obviously a major conflict of interest present if people are commonly making edits to Wikipedia for ideological reasons, which is exactly the opposite of Wikipedia’s stated policy of neutrality. Predictably, the result is that bias is rife within the articles on the site.

The proper response to this is twofold: first, Christians and biblical creationists should lobby whenever possible against the rampant bias at Wikipedia and make others aware of it. How else can we ever hope to see a positive change? Christians should engage themselves in the debate online by taking part in the editing of Wikipedia articles to remove clear instances of bias (but not to attempt to introduce pro-Christian biases of our own in the text).

For my part, I raised a fuss at Wikipedia over Jonathan Sarfati’s biographical page including a defamatory quote from Eugenie Scott calling Refuting Evolution 2 a “crude piece of propaganda”. To make a long story short, I wound up getting banned indefinitely on that account, and one of the Wikipedia editors had this to say (a clear admission of purposeful defamation and discrimination):

“There is zero chance that Wikipedia will ever treat pseudoscientists who believe that everything was created in 7 literal days 10,000 years ago the same way we treat the actual scientists -- astronomers, physicists, geologists, paleontologists, etc. -- who have solid evidence that the earth is much, much older.”
Of course, this comment betrays ignorance of the biblical account itself, since God created in 6, not 7 days. In addition, it commits the No True Scotsman fallacy in asserting that creation scientists are not ‘actual’ scientists.


Second, it should be clearly understood in general that Wikipedia is not a good source of information, especially on lesser-known topics and on any potentially controversial topics. That does not make it useless, however. For example, I have found Wikipedia to be a great source of other sources. Sometimes this can be a great shortcut to finding relevant pages, papers, books, etc. on a topic of interest.

It has been documented time and again that there is a battle going on in academia and in the media to attempt to silence all dissent against Darwinism. Because Wikipedia is so driven by consensus (rule of the majority a.k.a. mob rule), it suffers from all the problems that such systems of governance typically do, such as the ‘tyranny of the majority’, where the majority acts against the interests of minority groups.

The problems at Wikipedia are only symptomatic of a larger struggle that has been going on much longer than Wikipedia has been around. With God’s help, let us do our part to represent and defend the truth of the Bible and of the Gospel of Jesus Christ to the world, in every medium possible.


Source: https://creation.com/wikipedia

Excellent writings.

2 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by CoolUsername: 12:32pm On Aug 05, 2018
Although creationism is not the hill you want to die on, this post is right to point out Wikipedia's left wing bias.

Take any politically divisive topic and Wikipedia will overwhelmingly favour the leftist position by omitting damning information and posting dubious points about the right. They also push politically correct, feminist rhetoric as much as possible.

Take for a example, the Wikipedia entry for Sarah Jeong, an Asian American journalist who was recently employed by the New York Times. This woman has tweets calling white people 'goblins' and stuff like 'cancel the white race'. When people found out about this the NYT didn't fire her but rather defended her. Anyway, when people tried to edit her wikipedia entry to make mention of the tweets, wikipedia locked the article from editing. Why? To protect a leftist journalist.

Furthermore, I've been on top nerd culture for a while now so I'm quite familiar with the term 'GamerGate', I want everyone who is skeptical of what I'm saying to check out the Wikipedia entry on GamerGate and compare it to that of KnowYourMeme and Encyclopedia Dramatica just to get a view of how they subtly twist the narrative.

That said, when it comes to scientific topics Wikipedia is relatively unbiased, this doesn't mean it is a very factual source, though. It may be okay for getting general information but it's better to seek other sources for deeper study.

2 Likes

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by DoctorAlien(m): 3:40pm On Aug 05, 2018
CoolUsername:
Although creationism is not the hill you want to die on, this post is right to point out Wikipedia's left wing bias.

Take any politically divisive topic and Wikipedia will overwhelmingly favour the leftist position by omitting damning information and posting dubious points about the right. They also push politically correct, feminist rhetoric as much as possible.

Take for a example, the Wikipedia entry for Sarah Jeong, an Asian American journalist who was recently employed by the New York Times. This woman has tweets calling white people 'goblins' and stuff like 'cancel the white race'. When people found out about this the NYT didn't fire her but rather defended her. Anyway, when people tried to edit her wikipedia entry to make mention of the tweets, wikipedia locked the article from editing. Why? To protect a leftist journalist.

Furthermore, I've been on top nerd culture for a while now so I'm quite familiar with the term 'GamerGate', I want everyone who is skeptical of what I'm saying to check out the Wikipedia entry on GamerGate and compare it to that of KnowYourMeme and Encyclopedia Dramatica just to get a view of how they subtly twist the narrative.

That said, when it comes to scientific topics Wikipedia is relatively unbiased, this doesn't mean it is a very factual source, though. It may be okay for getting general information but it's better to seek other sources for deeper study.

When it comes to some controversial topics like evolution vs creationism, I don't agree that Wikipedia is unbiased. The opposite is in fact the case: they are totally biased against creationism. How can anyone called them unbiased when they constantly misrepresent, shun, suppress, omit and dismiss without any convincing reasons the arguments of creationists against those of evolution? On the other hand, they promote and force down the throats of everyone the largely unverified stories of evolution. This may make more meaning to you if you realise that the whole thing is a battle of worldviews: Naturalism (the unfounded and unverifiable idea that everything arose out of natural processes without divine intervention) versus Creationism.

The No True Scotsman fallacy which a Wikipedia editor committed, as pointed out by the OP, speaks volumes on the issue of whether Wikipedia is biased or not.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by CoolUsername: 4:02pm On Aug 05, 2018
DoctorAlien:


When it comes to some controversial topics like evolution vs creationism, I don't agree that Wikipedia is unbiased. The opposite is in fact the case: they are totally biased against creationism. How can anyone called them unbiased when they constantly misrepresent, shun, suppress, omit and dismiss without any convincing reasons the arguments of creationists against those of evolution? On the other hand, they promote and force down the throats of everyone the largely unverified stories of evolution. This may make more meaning to you if you realise that the whole thing is a battle of worldviews: Naturalism (the unfounded and unverifiable idea that everything arose out of natural processes without divine intervention) versus Creationism.

The No True Scotsman fallacy which a Wikipedia editor committed, as pointed out by the OP, speaks volumes on the issue of whether Wikipedia is biased or not.

I can agree with you that Wikipedia is biased against creationism in terms of misrepresenting creationist arguments, given their track record which I'm all too familiar with. What I disagree with is you treating evolution vs creationism like it is a controversial issue in the science community.

Evolution by natural selection is a very strong theory with a great deal of biological, geological, and even mathematical evidence (through mathematical modelling). Creationism - at least the type that tries to discredit evolution - would probably get you laughed out of the room and with good reason.

There is no evidence and no good argument out there that discredits evolution theory. Creationism can be paired up with evolution just fine, not all scientists are atheists. You can believe in God without trying to deny evolution.

1 Like

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by DoctorAlien(m): 4:26pm On Aug 05, 2018
CoolUsername:


I can agree with you that Wikipedia is biased against creationism in terms of misrepresenting creationist arguments, given their track record which I'm all too familiar with. What I disagree with is you treating evolution vs creationism like it is a controversial issue in the science community.

Evolution by natural selection is a very strong theory with a great deal of biological, geological, and even mathematical evidence (through mathematical modelling). Creationism - at least the type that tries to discredit evolution - would probably get you laughed out of the room and with good reason.

There is no evidence and no good argument out there that discredits evolution theory. Creationism can be paired up with evolution just fine, not all scientists are atheists. You can believe in God without trying to deny evolution.

If your argument is that the majority of scientists subscribe to the theory of evolution, and that they mock those who don't believe in evolution with them, then perhaps no one may dispute that. But evolution is no more supported by "evidence" than is creationism. In fact, scientists on both sides of the issue observe the same data, but interpret the data differently to support their preconceived worldviews. Put concisely, both evolutionists and creationists constantly see "evidence" for their theories in the same things.

You can argue that no evidence can discredit evolution: that may be because evolutionists are ready to adjust and readjust their theories so that their model will accommodate any observed phenomenon.

1 Like 1 Share

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by CoolUsername: 4:51pm On Aug 05, 2018
DoctorAlien:


If your argument is that the majority of scientists subscribe to the theory of evolution, and that they mock those who don't believe in evolution with them, then perhaps no one may dispute that. But evolution is no more supported by "evidence" than is creationism. In fact, scientists on both sides of the issue observe the same data, but interpret the data differently to support their preconceived worldviews. Put concisely, both evolutionists and creationists constantly see "evidence" for their theories in the same things.

You can argue that no evidence can discredit evolution: that may be because evolutionists are ready to adjust and readjust their theories so that their model will accommodate any observed phenomenon.

I really think your problem here is with the entire scientific method because modification of your hypothesis is a routine step in all fields of scientific research. The fact is that no form of the theory of creationism that tries to exclude evolution stands up to scrutiny. It's as simple as that.

1 Like

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by budaatum: 4:52pm On Aug 05, 2018
Creation science is indeed a pseudoscientific attempt to map the Bible into scientific facts. It is an unscholarly, dishonest and misguided sham with extremely harmful educational consequences. Anyone with an ounce of sense knows the invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe after drinking heavily.

Down with the bi-assed wikipedia!

1 Like

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by DoctorAlien(m): 5:18pm On Aug 05, 2018
CoolUsername:


I really think your problem here is with the entire scientific method because modification of your hypothesis is a routine step in all fields of scientific research. The fact is that no form of the theory of creationism that tries to exclude evolution stands up to scrutiny. It's as simple as that.

If the scrutiny you're talking about is the criticism of evolutionist scientists, then creationists are not bothered, because same can be said of the theory of evolution: no form of the theory of evolution that tries to exclude creationism stands up to scrutiny, with creation scientists. And we know that there are thoroughly trained and qualified scientists on the side of creationism. Some of them are at creation.com

1 Like

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by vaxx: 5:18pm On Aug 05, 2018
Wikipedia is honest. It acknowledge that it is systematically biased in some view that are tend to be complicated in the society go here to confirm ..http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:BIAS

But in science field and historical fact. Wikipedia maybe one of the good source out there when searching for sciencetific related field as it contain many authentic area of references...

Creationist webpage on the other hand happens to be an apologetic site which aim is to puch scientific theory to favour Christianity ideology. I must confess they are interesting area that they touched which is very objective and authentic but largely most of the field they try to align with science are biased based concept. I love reading from the both site to get a wider coverage of the ideas.. And no where do creationist site claim it is biased which make it a dishonest site according to me.


I am using rationalwiki now. And i found it impressive and better than Wikipedia.

2 Likes 1 Share

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by hopefulLandlord: 5:26pm On Aug 05, 2018
budaatum:
Anyone with an ounce of sense knows the invisible and undetectable Flying Spaghetti Monster created the universe after drinking heavily

I can confirm this to be true. FSM showed me everything

Thank you FSM, may your lovely sauce continue to enrich and sustain our lives
R'Amen

3 Likes 1 Share

Re: Wikipedia: A Dubious Source, But A Powerful Tool For Suppressing Dissent by festwiz(m): 5:54pm On Aug 05, 2018
hopefulLandlord:


I can confirm this to be true. FSM showed me everything

Thank you FSM, may your lovely sauce continue to enrich and sustain our lives
R'Amen
Praise the FSM, R'amen. grin

(1) (Reply)

Still Not Over Leke Adeboye Insulting People Who Ask The Church For Assistance / 2019: What God Showed Me Concerning Nigeria, Another Civil War – Olumba Olumba / Walk In The Spirit, What Does It Really Mean?

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 81
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.