Emet says he was delighted that "Fluri" had taken the time to read all the references in their entirety and was even more delighted with assurances that the work was now "unlikely to need protection".
Enter "Eleland", the Wiki Administrative Editor who was soon disparaging the references critical of O'Loughlin calling them "Chinese whispers" by the "Israel lobby" provided through "Jewish Groups".
Emet was more than somewhat perturbed by this terminology and redoubled his efforts to substantiate the references. Eleland persisted and called in another Administrator (one Manning) and both then took part in a deletion/restoration war with him. Emet stuck to his guns and, among other things, pointed out that O’Loughlin’s critics were indeed not all Jewish, or pro-Israel for that matter (another example came from The United Australian Lebanese Movement who had taken umbrage at O'Loughlin's characterisation of their patriot Michel Aoun as a "coup leader" in his attempts to fight the Syrians.). He insisted that the words "Jewish groups" be replaced with "media monitoring groups".
Ultimately, Eleland became, the prosecutor, the judge, the jury and the executioner. He put out warnings on the article on the basis that it was unbalanced. Eleland was asked to produce some references favourable to O'Loughlin but he could not do so. Then he put the O'Loughlin article up for deletion altogether but the reasons he gave were unconvincing. Eleland had a bias against Israel but what was not apparent was the strength of Eleland's apparent sympathies towards Hizbullah whose aims include the destruction of Israel and whose leadership has threatened genocide against Jews – a fact which by any normal standards of decency would have disqualified Eleland from playing any role in moderating this matter.
Eleland neither declared his position, nor did he withdraw. Instead he overruled Emet's objections on grounds that were dubious at best. It seems that on Eleland’s interpretation of Wiki rules, it was virtually impossible to cite as an authority anything other than a doctoral thesis specifically on O’Loughlin. Absent that, and any viewpoint or study of his work did not meet the standards of the online encyclopedia whose editor David Shankbone said recently in Haaretz,
"Go out and find different things. One source for knowledge is terrible."
However, in Eleland’s case, one source for knowledge was one too many.
Emet decided that enough was enough and he began to look a little more into Eleland and found that he was quite a player in many, many articles about the Arab/Israel conflict. The more he looked into Eleland, it became clear that he was dealing with Wikipedia's roving anti-Israel fixit person. Out of 50 sequential edits Eleland had been anti-Israel in all of them, each time criticising the references as being not adequate. It appeared that this was his modus operandi. Undermine the Israel case by shredding the references.
Pointing this out to Wikipedia did not result in a friendly response at all. Emet was accused of making unacceptable charges of veiled anti-Semitism (he had actually complained of about it being anti-Israel). He was "blocked" and insulted and there was zero inclination to even examine Eleland's handiwork.
Then, a new comment appeared at the end of the "discussion page" for the O'Loughlin article. An anonymous person reported that there was a precedent to allegation of bias against a journalist Isabel Kershner in that her “articles about Jerusalem were biased toward Israel because of her religious beliefs". Emet went straight to the Kershner article in Wikipedia, but was amazed to find that the comment was not there. Looking through its history he found that this comment had only been introduced by an anonymous person on 24 December 2007 and then deleted two days later (i.e. the same day as its presence had been noted in the O'Loughlin discussion). No prize for guessing who was responsible for the deletion.
Then the article on Ed O'Loughlin was deleted. Within days of the deletion Emet discovered the reference on Eleland’s user page to his support for Hizbullah but by now Eleland had triumphed and all debate on the issue was strangled. The criticisms of O'Loughlin - indeed the entire article had been deleted leaving Emet to reflect on the deviousness of the anti-Israel lobby and on these words from Kafka's, The Trial –
5 comments:
If the Wikipedia organization had any integrity it would re-open the entire investigation in the O'Loughlin entry. Personally however, the work of the journalist in question is so unremarkable that he really doesn't warrant any space in any encyclopaedia of note.
It is about time that Mr O'Loughlin and his employer were held responsible for their violations of journalistic integrity. Further now that the innate bias of a trusted Wikipedia editor, who admits his support of a terrorist group and yet has edited many Israel-related articles, has been uncovered, that organisation should be held to closer scrutiny also.
No real need to respond to this screed, but I should point out that I am not an admin: see http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3AListusers&username=Eleland&group=&limit=1
Whatever the above was, it's like most of what Wikipedia seems to post on O'Loughlin - gone with the wind.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Ed_O%27Loughlin/Anonymous_user_comments
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