QUOTE(Jimbo @ Earler today)
>"The notion that a false claim to knowledge is wrong is not part of
> Wikipedia's culture."
This is preposterous.
Looking at this realistically, I think we could probably be
somewhat charitable WRT Jimbo's claim of "preposterousness." The core of Wikipedia's user community does accept that a false claim to knowledge is wrong. What they absolutely
don't accept, much to Jimbo's own recent chagrin, is the notion that they should have to prove that their claims to knowledge are
true.QUOTE
> "It combines the free-market dogmatism of the libertarian Right with
> the anti-intellectualism of the populist Left. "
Nonsense.
Maybe Jimbo didn't understand the quote? (Clearly,
Dave Gerard didn't even try...)
By "free-market dogmatism of the libertarian Right," Kamm is presumably referring to the notion that "market forces" are the most effective way of ensuring that people get what they want. Many people believe this is simply wrong, and that government regulation is necessary to limit corruption, fraud, and so on. Wikipedia, which is almost totally unregulated and ruled by market forces, plays into this mode of thinking quite directly, I should think.
By "anti-intellectualism of the populist Left," Kamm is probably stretching things a bit - this sort of talk usually comes from right-wing types who are overly eager to equate communism with fascism, and who refer to "left-wing dictatorships" such as Stalin's and Mao Zedong's (both anti-intellectuals) as examples of the "populist left." While this really doesn't apply much to the politics of Western democracies, in terms of Wikipedia I'd say he has a valid point. Putting aside the issue of Wikipedia's power structure and its similarity to various totalitarian regimes (an idea I've never personally bought into), there are all sorts of examples on Wikipedia of popular movements being promoted at the expense of corporations, governments, and of course, intelligence agencies. (Not to mention other websites...) That's not necessarily bad, but then again, truth is relative even if facts are not. POV pushing is a huge problem on Wikipedia regardless of which political direction or ideology it occurs in the name of.
Kamm shouldn't be blamed for, in effect, trying to state his objections as plainly as he can. WP is more complex than that, but he's writing a news-site column, not a book.
Meanwhile, the foregoing is probably more appropriate for the blog, isn't it?