User talk:Filll/AGF Challenge Question Development

Mediation questions

 * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Lectures/lecture2-questions
 * User: Vassyana
 * User: PhilKnight (Addhoc?)
 * User: WJBScribe
 * User: Daniel (??)
 * Editor Assistence WP:EA --Filll (talk) 17:48, 13 April 2008 (UTC)

More ideas

 * who gives a bleep
 * NY Times is not RS--Filll (talk) 18:09, 13 April 2008 (UTC)
 * what did Arbcomm really mean here? what did they say?
 * proportion to their prominence
 * dirty ganges
 * Dick tation
 * AIDS denialism
 * gravy diarrhea
 * civil baiting, disruption but politely, pushing inappropriate content but civilly
 * I have had long arguments with a Muslim scholar who claimed that Jesus was not one, but two separate people and therefore Christianity is an extreme blasphemy practiced by stupid people, as compared to Islam of course. How mainstream is this view? Should it be the dominant view on Wikipedia in the associated articles? I have also had several heated arguments with fundamentalists who claim that Jesus never said "love thy neighbor as thyself" and that such a statement appears no place in the bible, and that Jesus even ordered his followers to hunt down and slaughter those who denied the literal truth of every word of the Old Testament. Should Wikipedia write its articles about Jesus and the bible accordingly?
 * Golden rule does not appear in the bible and jesus never said it
 * Jesus ordered followers to slaughter those who deny literal truth of Old Testament
 * Anglican minister in Rwanda hacking with machete in NPR interview

What is the AGF Challenge?
The AGF Challenge is a series of short exercises representing the sorts of difficult decisions editors and administrators have to make sometimes when editing Wikipedia. They are meant to stimulate thought and discussion, and possibly be used for training, as RfA questions and to establish Best Practices for editing Wikipedia. You can test your Wikipedia decision-making and editing skills in a safe environment without getting involved in contentious disputes yourself, or reading through hundreds of kilobytes of tedious talk page arguments or getting into reversion-wars.

Note: Although the AGF Challenge exercises are based for the most part on real situations, the details have been altered slightly to obscure the identities of those involved.

The AGF Challenge exercises are divided into sets. If you have completed one set of AGF Challenge exercises, you are welcome to try your hand at another set.