--- theProject <wp.theproject(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Basically, my issue is with pages that contain
statements that may be
*directly* false in the future. (Omission of facts that may be true in the
future is, of course, completely expected.) So instead of "Person X is the
CEO of ABC Company, Inc.", or even "as of 2006, Person X is the CEO of ABC
Company, Inc.", we'd write instead, "as of 2006, Person X was the CEO of
ABC
Company, Inc." Even if X is no longer the CEO of ABC sometime down the road,
that statement -- as of 2006, he WAS the CEO -- is still true.
I don't think there's any one solution to this (sometimes using "is" is
quite
reasonable), but another option is to simply bypass the issue of the present,
and go with something like "person X was appointed CEO in May 2006".
-- Matt
Wikipedia:
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Blog:
http://cipher-text.blogspot.com
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