User talk:JohnShockedPanama LewisThe long and opinionated comment you inserted into the Panama Lewis article completely in violation of Wikipedia conventions. As a courtesy to you I'm moving it to the discussion page rather than deleting it. Please make sure that in the future your edits are encyclopedic in nature, well-documented, and not POV. Brain Rodeo (talk) 19:20, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Panama Lewis, Aaron Pryor, etcI'm sorry, what you wrote doesn't conform to Wikipedia conventions. It reads more like an angry letter to the editor of a newspaper. I removed the unacceptable content, but it's still saved in the system, so if you'd like to take a shot at refining it, go ahead. As I said above, I didn't write the article and since I haven't seen the Pryor-Arguello fight I don't know how accurate it is (or isn't). My edit had nothing to do with the accuracy of the article anyway. I merely removed some flawed text from a very flawed article. Be part of the solution, JohnShocked. Write some encyclopedic content for these articles - not just a long argument in favor of your point of view, but a neutral explanation of the facts. That's something that hasn't happened yet. Brain Rodeo (talk) 16:39, 5 April 2008 (UTC) Rather than delete the whole thing, why not delete the parts of it that do not conform. I document practically everything I say in that piece, or state things that are widely known. For instance, if I state that the build up to this Pryor-Arguello fight was anti-Pryor in the press, then I quote the commentator of this fight referring to that build-up, that is ok, right ? Ultimately, what is stated in the piece is based on watching the fight. I have a copy of the fight and I have watched it several times this past week, since reading the Wiki original, and I have been editing into that section what is clearly visible to anyone watching the fight. How could that be wrong ? -comment posted by user JohnShocked
Re: Geek page edit deletionYour additions were removed because they were original research. The only things that the two external links you provided showed was that the television cartoon existed and that it included a computer named "G.E.E.C." The theory that this show then became the inspiration for the modern usage of the work "geek" is unsupported by reliable sources and thus unverifiable. --Allen3 talk 11:25, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
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