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The 'generally known and trusted...' doesn't reflect how RFAs actually
happen. It usually comes down to 'absence of fault' rather than any sort
of positive support of a person. Unless someone has done something
controversial (previously be desysopped, stated unpopular views on
deletion policy or whatever) then, provided they have significant
participation in various namespaces their RFA will probably be unanimous
(if they have any of the aforementioned faults, however minor, it will
probably degenerate into a no-consensus flamewar)
Cynical
geni wrote:
On 3/31/06, Steve Bennett <stevage(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
On 3/31/06, geni <geniice(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
* if
the nominee is "generally a known and trusted member of the community".
And this is where the attempt to rule lawer from outdated policy
breaks down. You can count the number of people generally know to the
current wikipedia community one hand. Thus we have to accept that
either there should be almost no new admins or that policy is failing
to describe wikipedia practice and needs to be rewriten.
Tyrenius's
interpretation of this rule seems to be that amongst those
who have had contact with him, he is respected and trusted. Is that
fair enough?
Since we are aparently following the hard wording of the rules no.
I would actually argue that the number of people
generally known to
the community can be counted on one thumb, and some comments in the
userbox controversy cast doubt on that.
We do have [[Category:Notable_Wikipedians]].
The regular RFAr votes probably know each other (myself I try to avoid
voteing there for a number of reasons includeing spaming of my talk
page)
I think my biggest complaint with all this is
that, as happens so
often, when people are asked to make quick fire judgments about
something big and complicated, they resort very quickly to judging
form or statistics. My own nomination was unanimously opposed because
I hadn't included an introductory nomination statement. You see a lot
of comments that "edit summaries too low", for people with 90% or more
edit summary in major edits, or "not enough edits", for people with
more than 2000.
Heh last time I was there I a fair number of the oppose votes came
from people who said I should have held a policy debate first.
There is no way to prevent people from makeing snap judgements so at
best we can hope to make sure those judements are as good as posible
And the worst is "come back later, might
support you then". Not
because the candidate is in any way actually deficient as an admin,
but they simply haven't served an unwritten waiting period.
</rant>
Steve
It does take time to learn how wikipedia works (I'm not still totaly
certian on range blocks although I have used them on other wikis) so
it is reasonable to have some level of waiting peroid.
--
geni
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