I wonder why that is? While you may find inaccurate information on Wikipedia, 
the vastly overwhelming information there is absolutely accurate. But isn't 
that true of EVERY source? In my life experience I have found that settled 
science is very unsettled indeed. Salt causes high blood pressure. Sugar causes 
diabetes. Red meat causes cancer. Milk is bad. Eggs are bad. Coffee is bad. 
Mercury is a molten ball. Life needs sunlight to live. A nuclear blast will 
render an area unlivable for 10,000 years. I could go on and on. 

Mankind is constantly revising "settled" science, and well we should, but what 
I object to is being told that what academia is now telling us is the new 
absolute, and I am expected to just accept that. 

Bob S


> On Jun 17, 2022, at 01:57 , Richmond Mathewson via use-livecode 
> <use-livecode@lists.runrev.com> wrote:
> 
> From what I know (my wife is a senior academic at a university) references
> to Wikipedia pages are academic suicide, fail, go straight to jail, do not
> pass GO, do not collect 200 smackers, and you get the picture.


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