User:Prototime

Semi-retired: After taking an extended semi-wikibreak, it appears unlikely that I will return to my prior level of editing any time soon (perhaps I will one day). For now, I hope to channel my research energy into more academic and professional pursuits. But I'm certainly not leaving Wikipedia entirely, and you can always reach me by leaving a talk page message or by pinging me.

I'm just a simple Wikipedian trying to make my way in the universe.

Projects
Before I semi-retired, the following were projects I started or planned to start. I may still work on these projects at my leisure.
 * Bring National Voter Registration Act of 1993 up to Good Article status and then to Featured Article status
 * Bring Shelby County v. Holder up to Good Article status and then to Featured Article status
 * Add information on procedural due process to Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
 * Create Expand an article on Procedural due process (before I created it, it was only a redirect to a small section of Due Process Clause)

Wikipedia history
I started editing Wikipedia not long after I stumbled across it several years ago. During my early days of editing, I focused mostly on articles related to Avatar: The Last Airbender and Florida politics. After getting burned out, I substantially decreased my editing for a while and became a bit of a WikiGnome. During that time, I did not have a main topical focus on Wikipedia, but I involved myself in WikiProjects and kept tabs on several articles that interested me. I returned to active Wikipedia editing in 2013, and among several other pursuits, I brought Voting Rights Act of 1965 to Featured Article status. I am now semi-retired. To the extent I am active these days, I am particularly interested in improving articles related to voting rights in the United States, but I continue to have eclectic editing interests.

Previous projects
My previous projects have included, but certainly have not been limited to, the following:
 * Brought Voting Rights Act of 1965 up to Good Article status and then Featured Article status
 * Created a navigation template for "Voting rights in the United States"
 * Created an article on Gerrymandering in the United States

Major contributions

 * Voting Rights Act of 1965
 * Freedom of speech in the United States
 * Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
 * Shelby County v. Holder
 * Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution
 * Psychology
 * An Inconvenient Truth
 * Business
 * Triangular theory of love
 * Shadow the Hedgehog (video game)
 * Freethought
 * University of Central Florida
 * Deliberative assembly
 * Deliberative democracy
 * Democracy
 * Template:Democracy
 * Template:Forms of government
 * Template:United States constitutional law
 * Greenhouse and icehouse Earth
 * The Legend of Korra
 * Numerous Avatar: The Last Airbender articles
 * Various Florida government and Florida education articles
 * National Voter Registration Act of 1993
 * University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law
 * Inductive reasoning

Noteworthy pages created

 * Amendments to the Voting Rights Act of 1965
 * Gerrymandering in the United States
 * Template:Voting rights in the United States
 * List of jurisdictions subject to the special provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965
 * Procedural due process
 * Dickinson Law Review
 * Advisory Council of Faculty Senates
 * Wii Browser
 * Wikipedia:WikiProject Avatar: The Last Airbender
 * The Library (Avatar: The Last Airbender episode)
 * The Desert
 * Secret of the Fire Nation, Part 1
 * Secret of the Fire Nation, Part 2
 * Florida Department of Community Affairs

Awards
  Precious

rights, protection and care

Thank you, professional lawyer trying to do the right thing including gender neutrality, for quality articles on legislation such as Voting Rights Act of 1965 and Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, for,  and , interested in , - you are an awesome Wikipedian!

--Gerda Arendt (talk) 08:44, 6 August 2014 (UTC)

Views about Wikipedia
''I may get around to turning these into essays sometime. Until then, if you want to discuss them, post on my talk page.''
 * In the News criteria: The way in which items make it into Wikipedia's In the News section on the Main Page is severely inconsistent, even absurdly inconsistent. Wikipedia will post news about a United States Supreme Court decision invalidating a federal law that prohibited same-sex couples from receiving federal marriage benefits, but it will not post news about the United Kingdom's Parliament and Queen fully legalizing same-sex marriage a few weeks later, and yet it will post news about the United Kingdom's Duchess of Cambridge birthing a son. How such a facially absurd inconsistency can exist is, I suspect, because there are only two basic ITN criteria: "the quality of the updated content and the significance of the developments described in the updated content". This vague and limited criteria basically allows the small, dominant group of editors who pay attention to the In the news/Candidates page to pick stories based almost entirely on how they subjectively feel about each particular story as it comes up. This degree of subjectivity easily produces inconsistency because decisions are based almost entirely on a small group of editors' interests, experiences, knowledge, and prejudices. (Sometimes, this group of editors' feelings applied over the long term to a select type of news story will be used to create their own unwritten customs—but the customs still originate from the editors' subjective feelings, not necessarily anything rational, and certainly nothing apparently obvious to outsiders.) To prevent this subjectivity from invading the In the News, editors should develop objective criteria upon which to guide decisions about what is worthy of inclusion ITN—and something more substantive than the unexplained notions behind the automatic-inclusions-list at WP:ITNR. Ideally, different categories of news topics should have their own criteria; for example, criteria about when a celebrity story is sufficiently noteworthy, criteria about when a court case is sufficiently noteworthy, criteria about when a sporting event is sufficiently noteworthy, etc. Likewise, criteria should be established for when something is not sufficiently newsworthy. Obviously, the categorization of news topics would take some effort and require community consensus, and then developing the criteria would be quite a task as well, but the relevant WikiProjects could (and should) be consulted lated to their Project. Such criteria needn't be so demanding or precise that their application becomes simply a mechanical exercise, but by replacing the current system in which ITN inclusion is determined by the personal whims and fanee the community toward consensus for ITN inclusion in a fair manner.
 * Social aspects: Wikipedia needs more social aspects, both related to the content of Wikipedia articles (substantive) and off-topic. More on this view coming soon...
 * Inclusivity: Wikipedia needs to take more proactive action to close the gender gap among its editors and be an inclusive community. More on this view coming soon...

Things to know
Basically, Wikipedia requires three things:
 * Quality sources that are cited to support content
 * Notability of a subject that has its own Wikipedia article
 * Due weight given to the different viewpoints on, and aspects of, a subject

Sources: Typically, the highest quality of source is:
 * Reliable
 * Secondary
 * Third party
 * Independent
 * For information on the differences between "secondary", "third party", and "independent", see Party and person.
 * Neutral, if cited to support a statement of fact. There is no rule prohibiting a biased source from being used to support a statement of fact, but it's preferable to use neutral sources when available. Biased sources may support statements of opinion so long as in-text attribution is given. For more info on neutrality and bias, see:
 * Bias in sources (NPOV policy)
 * Biased or opinionated sources (IRS guideline)
 * Statements of opinion (IRS guideline)
 * Attributing and specifying biased statements (NPOV policy)
 * If you need help finding a source, check out WP:WikiProject Resource Exchange.

Notability:
 * Notability is a threshold issue for a subject to be worthy of its own an article on Wikipedia. The notability guideline requires that the subject receive "significant coverage" among independent, reliable, secondary sources.
 * Note: "The concept of notability does not govern to the content of an article; it governs only whether the article should exist. Content coverage within a given article or list (i.e., whether something is noteworthy enough to be mentioned in the article or list) is governed by the principle of due weight and other content policies."

Weight:

Due and undue weight concern how much attention an article gives to a viewpoint on, or an aspect of, the article's subject.
 * Undue weight to particular viewpoints on the subject (see WP:UNDUE). In particular:
 * A fringe minority viewpoint should receive virtually no attention at all (see WP:FRINGE)
 * A significant minority viewpoint should receive attention, but less than the majority viewpoint (the article should not present a false balance between a minority viewpoint and majority viewpoint) (see WP:VALID)
 * Viewpoints that are equally prominent in reliable sources should receive equal attention in an article (see WP:Balance)
 * Undue weight to certain aspects of the subject (see WP:BALASPS). This commonly includes too much attention being given to:
 * Recent events (see WP:RECENTISM)
 * Isolated events
 * How the topic pertains to, or is viewed by, a certain culture, geographical area, sex, age, or other particular group (see WP:Systemic bias)
 * Other aspects of a topic that receive comparatively less attention among reliable sources.

Citing: See generally WP:ILC
 * As WP:MINREF describes, Wikipedia requires inline citations for the following types of article content:
 * Direct quotations
 * Any statement that has been challenged (e.g., by being removed, questioned on the talk page, or tagged with, or any similar tag)
 * Any statement that you believe is likely to be challenged.
 * Contentious material, whether negative, positive, or neutral, about living persons
 * Per WP:INTEXT, you must provide an in-text attribution (in addition to the usual inline citation) to a nonfree source if you:
 * Quote someone - see MOS:QUOTE
 * Closely paraphrase something - see WP:CLOSEPARAPHRASE
 * Add statements of opinion - see WP:ATTRIBUTEPOV. Material from a biased reliable source, such as an opinion piece in a newspaper, is by definition more likely to constitute a statement of opinion, and thus it is more likely to require an in-text attribution - see WP:NPOV, WP:RSOPINION, and WP:BIASED.


 * Exception: Free sources, such as public domain sources, do not require in-text attribution when they are quoted or closely paraphrased. But they do still require an inline citation and an acknowledgment that the source is a free source, such as by using an attribution template. See Plagiarism.

Original synthesis: WP:SYNTH

Manual of Style: WP:MOS

Article review processes:
 * Articles for creation
 * Copy edit request
 * Peer review
 * Good Article review
 * A-Class assessment
 * Featured Article review
 * Articles for deletion

Content dispute resolution:
 * WP:DR - A description of how to resolve content disputes on Wikipedia.
 * WP:DRR - A list of the processes Wikipedia has established to help facilitate content dispute resolution.

Problems: Noticeboards

Information on reviews within the FAC process

https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Ian_Rose&oldid=615105497#FACs_question

Law-related:
 * Manual of Style/Law: MOS:LAW
 * Law sources as reliable sources (essay): WP:LAWSOURCES
 * WikiProject Law

Tools of debate

 * Fallacies and cognitive biases: Learn them, avoid them, and point them out viciously in other people's arguments.
 * Cherry picking: Always put forth and refute opposing views.
 * Occam's razor: When various possible solutions have equal likelihood of being true, choose the simpler one to remove what is superfluous.  This really helps to combat pseudoscience, the New Age, etc.
 * Scientific method: The best way we know to discover the truths of reality, and the best standard against which to hold claims of new knowledge.