this post was submitted on 02 Nov 2025
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I don't think it's the place of Wikipedia to put together the UN's opinion and the UK's opinion (to take two examples) and conclude that the UN's can be stated as fact while the UK's can't.
I agree that the UN's is correct, but it makes Wikipedia worse, not better, to ignore disagreement on important subjects.
Do you take the same broad-minded approach to Holocaust denial? Vaccine misinformation? Intelligent design?
I take the same approach, yes: where there is well-established consensus, Wikipedia should state that as fact. Where there is disagreement with the consensus, it should be noted proportionately.
But there is no lack of consensus on the things you mention.
The genocide of Gazans is in the same place: a few ideologically-motivated crazies arguing for the side that is obviously both factually and morally bankrupt.
I agree it's ideologically motivated, but that doesn't affect the fact that there's a lack of consensus. There are serious governments and academics and commentators who disagree.
Probably in time they will see the truth but that's not for Wikipedia to predict.