----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Gary Nunn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Brin Mail List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, August 25, 2007 9:15 PM
Subject: Wikipedia transparency


>
> Wikipedia Unmasked
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Best_of_BJAODN
Some of the best Wikipedia edits in history have been hoax/joke edits 
like this one:

"Bexley Hall has a unique set of governing laws. Many dormitories 
throughout the United States have meager, impotent governmental bodies 
operated by either photogenic male sociopath proto-politicians or 
detail-obsessed sexually-repressed females bent on attaining 
perfection at the cost of their humanity (some examples: Kathy 
Lee-Gifford, Tracy Flick). Bexley hall is different. According to 
noted anarchist thinker Rudolph Rocker, Bexley Hall is an "... oddly 
prescient example of what the future anarcho-syndicalist living 
situation should resemble... truly a place where the calcified rotten 
husk of formalist government has been upended, pulped, and made into 
rolling papers for the smoking of intoxicating plants."

Bexley Hall was first to understand that government by people (or even 
robots) was inefficient and error prone. People tend to be afflicted 
with 'principles' and 'morality', they are also subject to 'reality'. 
Bexley was the first institution to institute a de-facto illusory 
governing construct, pre-dating Foucault's deconstructionist theories 
by some two decades.

As the case of Ronald Reagan amply demonstrates, in this age of 
mass-media, people do not want and cannot tolerate being ruled by 
humans. They want to be ruled by myths. Mythological rulers are more 
appealing, more effective, and ultimately more cost effective for all. 
They transcend the straightjackets of 'objectivity', 'consistency', 
'honesty', and 'ethics' that hampered previous non-constructed 
leaders. Actual politics is quite boring and will not satisfy the 
current generations of television and internet-saturated entertainment 
consumers. Expecting these consumers to have any working knowledge of 
history (or even the present) that will allow them to differentiate 
'fact' from 'fantasy' is far too much to ask. Anything with a semantic 
content more sophisticated than People Magazine is difficult and 
disturbing for the average American.

In the year 1920, Bexley-based political scientists experimented with 
the 'construct' idea. It was considered absurd, irresponsible, and 
nihilistic -- because it was, and the creators said so themselves. 
They suspended research in 1941 to work on Radar, and were hired again 
by HUAC in the early 1950's. Their stunning success was noted in 
governmental circles and a project was inaugurated to unify the powers 
of Hollywood and Washington to create a cross-national axis of 
delusion.

The Bexleyites called this elaborate, highly-funded secret operation 
PROJECT REAGAN. Through a miracle of public relations firm moxie and 
animatronic genius, the Reagan-bot broke down the barriers between 
fantasy and reality in a masculine fashion.

By 1980 the transfer to a completely fantasy-based system of political 
economy was complete when Ronald Reagan was elected President of the 
United States. The purposely fantastical and delusional actions of the 
government caused the fall of the Soviet Union when the Russian 
government realized they could not compete with the sheer 
entertainment power of the United States. The United States' 
systematic program of voluntary, incentive-based stupidification was 
far more successful than the Soviet Union's program of forced, 
involuntary stupidification.

Racing to catch up, Gorbachev implemented Perestroika and Glastnost to 
try and compete, but by the end of the decade America's PROJECT 
YELTSIN seized power and implemented a foreign style delusion-based 
system of political economy, creating a fantastic narrative where the 
President was a drunken buffoon who fired one Prime Minister after 
another, suspended democracy on multiple occasions by dismissing the 
Duma, and even sent forth tanks to fire on the nation's highest 
legislative body. An interesting side-note was the creation of the 
Cheap Vodka Party, a short-lived group of politicians who were 
promising and, based on the absurdity of their premise, capable of 
seizing power over the world's largest country; until they were 
upended by the fantastically funny and fanatical Vladimir Zhironovsky, 
who threatened to take back Alaska from the United States if elected. 
Cheap vodka is one thing, but promising frivolous war on a nuclear 
power is clearly the trump card of balderdash.

This article was written by Marc Rios, a former resident of Bexley."



If it were not for the short-attention-spans of these younger folks, 
we would have a much richer and more diverse crop of satirists and 
comedic writers.

Perhaps it is just me, but I find the quoted edit to be hilarious, not 
just because it is silly, but it twists the historical record in such 
a way to reflect a biting sarcasm contemporaneous with the times it 
describes. I remember people joking in a similar manner during the 
Reagan years but this piece ties it all together quite nicely.

I don't know that Wikipedia can remain independent, objective, and 
transparent over the long haul. But I sure would like to see them 
succeed. The numerous opportunities for humorous discourse at the 
expense of the site certainly stand out as just one impediment. The 
Upper Peninsula War is another fine example:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Hanger65/Upper_Peninsula_War



xponent

What Might Have Been Maru

rob


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