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[edit] Self serving revisionismThis article demonstrates the worst of efforts to use Wikimedia to revise history according to libertarian-utopian designs. It is mostly original research, in which the writers say "Islam is sort of like consensus democracy" and "Switzerland is sort of a consensus democracy." The article offers no sources suggesting the term "consensus democracy" is used self-referentially by any established legal jurisdiction anywhere. The links -- not sources (there are none) -- the "external links" point to an original on-line book that doesn't rise the the level of credible sourcing Wikimedia promised readers, and to an activists handbook. The introductory premise, that "Consensus democracy is the application of consensus decision making to the process of legislation" is not based in any legitimate source. If I didn't know better I would suggest this is an effort to create definition in support of wikipedia's bizarre claim that it is not an experiment in democracy, but rather a working demonstration of consensus democracy. But I know who created the article. Knowing that, I suggest it's continued placement on Wikipedia and three year history with no significant effort to provide sources or delete as original reasearch suggests Wikimedia drives away editors who disrupt the libertarian-utopian dreams of core members, but preserves their work when it lends substance to novel social concepts Wikimedia attempts to advance. Xientist 23:17, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
--- There seems to be some text missing from the final sentence, or fragments of two sentences have perhaps collided? Moved from article:
because it's full of doubtful generalizations which are largely irrelevant to the subject. Are there any references to back up the content that says "consensus democracy" is associated with the left and "semi-direct democracy" is associated with the right? -- Stevietheman 21:21, 15 May 2004 (UTC) I reversed recent changes that subdivided the general concept of consensus democracy into how it's dealt with regionally. I found the text regarding the U.S. to make little sense. At any rate, if changes like this are to be introduced again, I would hope the author would take a lot more care with easing in the new content. These recent changes came too far too fast... be more incremental, please. -- Stevietheman 03:22, 22 Aug 2004 (UTC) I made the changes that were removed. It's rather frustrating too see some much work just removed. The article is currently very US-centered, that doesn't matter, in the US the debate seems to centre around deliberative and semi-direct democracy, but the European view, were consensus-democracy is accepted used term within political science, should be reviewed too. It can't just be removed because it makes too little sense: So I'll put it back in (perhaps a bit clearer). please, before mercilessly editing my changes out again, explain what you don't understand about european consensus democracy, working together might improve the article. - 31 aug 2004 All the references to Islam in the last paragraph seem a little out of place. Would it be better to move those to a different article? --- I've moved the piece I originally wrote about the European consensus-democracy to consociational state, where it fits better. - c_mon 12u17, february 1 2006. [edit] Examples?Not sure if anyone still has this article on his/her watchlist, but are there any examples of consensus democracy? All of the examples mentioned in the text turn out to be just a consensus between a very limited number of voters or organizations. The poldermodel for example is a "consensus" between 3 huge organizations and basically the same as negotiation processes in "non-consensus" systems. How does that ensure that minority positions aren't just ignored ? As of now, none of the examples mentioned is even close to a consensus of all people involved. Malc82 22:08, 1 May 2007 (UTC) [edit] Original ResearchThis article is scheduled for massive OR deletions unless supported. Citations #1 and #3 are challenged as unreliable sources. Raggz 08:23, 26 May 2007 (UTC) "Be careful not to go too far on the side of not upsetting editors by leaving unsourced information in articles for too long, or at all in the case of information about living people. Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia, has said of this: "I can NOT emphasize this enough. There seems to be a terrible bias among some editors that some sort of random speculative 'I heard it somewhere' pseudo information is to be tagged with a 'needs a cite' tag. Wrong. It should be removed, aggressively, unless it can be sourced."
[edit] FYIIf people who watch this page are also interested in how Wikipedia is governed, be sure to check out this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Advisory_Council_on_Project_Development . Slrubenstein | Talk 13:22, 18 July 2009 (UTC) Categories: Stub-Class Politics articles | Mid-importance Politics articles | Stub-Class Philosophy articles | Unknown-importance Philosophy articles | Stub-Class social and political philosophy articles | Unknown-importance social and political philosophy articles | Social and political philosophy task force articles | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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