Dear fellow Wikipedia devotees,

While I'm new to this list, I've been an avid fan and proponent of Wikipedia 
and all the great service it gives people since it launched.  People can learn 
not just all the basics of nearly any topic imaginable, but for a large number, 
readers can with diligence become expert on more than a few and save themselves 
the cost of tuition/training.  All this, in addition to satisfying their 
curiosity about millions of subjects.

That said, it doesn't matter who writes the content on Wikipedia so long as 
it's relevant and factual.  Unlike the published, single-authority edited 
encyclopediae of the past, Wikipedia allows anyone with relevant information to 
contribute to it.  Their additions or other edits are checked by volunteers to 
make sure the edit isn't a defacement, irrelevant, patently unfactual, or 
unverifiable.  They are typically left as written or maybe edited only for 
grammar/spelling.  Wikipedia is a rare success story in democracy of knowledge. 
 If one feels moved to contribute, they do.  If not, they don't.  It's like 
voting in a sense, though it's true people in democracies should perhaps take 
the opportunity to do so more often.  But it's up to them.

Like voting or anything else, to single out a particular group of people based 
on their indelible characteristics as being desirable as contributors to any 
field implicitly devalues the contributions not just of those currently 
contributing who don't fall into that category, but also says to any other 
group of a particular identity that you care more about the group you're trying 
to get more involvement from than them.  "Identity politics" is unfortunately a 
fact of our current political climate and I hope one day we can, as MLK Jr. 
hoped, judge one another not by skin color (and I'd add gender, sexuality, and 
a few others), but by content of character.  In the context of Wikipedia, this 
would translate to the veracity and applicability of contributions made to the 
vast Wikipedia knowledge-base -- not who in particular is doing the 
contributing, nor their indelible characteristics of person.

Because identity politics is today part of general electoral politics doesn't 
mean it need be for anything else, and especially given how such things as a 
person's ethnicity, gender, sexuality, etc., say nothing about what they know 
about or can do, I don't see how it's relevant to the veracity and 
applicability of Wikipedia's knowledge base.  I don't care that, for example, a 
black person (Charles Drew, MD) came up with the process of creating blood 
plasma, an innovation that has saved millions of lives.  He was tragically and 
mortally injured in a car accident, however, and so his potential future 
achievements were lost to humanity.  (He was not refused treatment for his 
injuries at the hospital he was taken to because of his ethnicity, as is widely 
but falsely believed; he was just so badly injured that he died.  See 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_R._Drew#Death ).  I also don't care that 
Adm Grace Hopper (USN) wad female, only that she wrote the first computer 
language compiler so programmers of lesser brain power than her (such as 
myself) could go on to program computers without struggling with binary 
switches and punch cards.  Her contributions were what was important, not her 
gender, skin color, or anything else as far as her professional achievements go.

If you ask any RN the names of the greatest contributors to the nursing 
profession, you'll get a stream of women's names.  To suggest that nursing 
"needs" more men or else it won't be able to achieve its greatest potential 
would be a crass and inaccurate insult to the many thousands of women who have 
made modern nursing what it is.  Of course there have been and will be male 
nurses who stand out as contributors, but only a very small percentage, 
probably in keeping with the ratio of men to women in nursing.  And yet, 
despite the high salaries RNs command, are there any gov't-sponsored 
initiatives to get men into nursing?  If so, it'd be news to me and many 
others.  But I ask, if men by and large, for whatever reasons, aren't 
interested in becoming nurses, why make a big deal about it?  Are there 
gov't-sponsored campaigns to get more women into the relatively lucrative job 
of refuse collection?  Or, the likewise lucrative jobs of plumber, ordnance 
disposal engineer, nuclear materials technician, etc.?  No.  But other fields 
that are a lot less dirty and/or dangerous, yes.  (Think professional STEM 
fields.)  This isn't by accident, nor is the fact that the nursing profession 
with its high salaries (for RNs, anyway) is in no hurry to recruit men simply 
because they're men.  But why should they?  That one receives care from a 
female vs. male nurse isn't relevant.  To trumpet a "need" for men in nursing 
minimizes the huge contributions of women nurses and is a patently false 
proposition.  Nursing needs competent, dedicated people in its ranks.  The 
gender of them is irrelevant.

This returns me to my primary point, which I hope you can see.  WMF may think 
this idea to single out a particular group based on an innate characteristic to 
encourage them to be Wikipedia contributors is good for some reason, but it 
rests on false assumptions around a connection between one's gender and their 
competence at any given task.  Unless the task is inherently tied to a person's 
sexual biology, it doesn't play a part in whether or not they are good or not 
at something, nor whether or not they want to do it. (I am for example a good 
improv-style comedian; many have suggested I go to open-mic nights and share my 
schtick with the crowd.  Thing is, I don't want to, so I don't.  It's enough 
for me to know I can keep my friends in stitches when I am so moved.)

As for devaluing current contributors should they happen *not* to be female: 
WMF, like a political party, needs to be careful, I suggest, not to drop a 
dozen eggs while going to pick up three.  Also, in the process of telling other 
identity groups you're focusing on just one, you marginalize them.  "Playing 
favorites" is a trap the gov't has fallen into and the results have been bad 
for it.

Like others on this list, I also got an email today from someone who subbed me 
to a supposed Google Group for lesbian Wikipedia contributors.  While I knew 
immediately it was a fake [1. I'm not female and thus 2. Cannot by definition 
be a lesbian], its very existence shows the disaffection with the decision.  It 
also underscores the hazards of going the identity politics route.  For 
example, to be extra-inclusive within the target audience (women), would this 
initiative now need to be tweaked to include a special sub-effort of outreach 
to gay women?  And what about bisexual women?  They are, arguably, like gay 
women, a group in need perhaps of specific outreach and encouragement.  But 
maybe the same can be said of black people (or African-American, if you 
prefer), Lationos (or Hispanics, again, if you prefer), or maybe people of 
western Asian descent (i.e., people whose ancestors lived in pre-modern era 
Asia in countries now named China, Mongolia, Korea, and Japan).  And then there 
are people of Indo-Asian ethnicity (India, Pakistan, etc.).  Polynesians.  
Mexicas.  Native Americans (or Indians, depending on who you ask).  Gay men.  
Bi men.  Gay Latinos.  Transsexual Polynesian-Indo-Asian women, men, or both.  
There's no end of it once the precedent is established, and there'll be no 
peace for the WMF.

The gov't can get away with using identiy politics and pursuing policies of 
favortism based on whatever aspects they choose to use.  Age, sex, ethnicity, 
non-natural personhood (i.e., corporate welfare/punishment), etc., are all open 
to them because they are the gov't.  Unless people are ready to rebel against 
them, they have the say about where the taxpayers' bounty goes and who is 
favored over another.  It may annoy some in the pop'n (esp. those not getting 
the largesse), but too bad.  Unless you're ready to go rebel, you have to 
accept it.

Non-profit shoestring volunteer-dependent endeavors cannot afford to be choosy 
or worse, be or appear to be high-handed. One key to success in the marketplace 
is recognizing that everyone's money is as green as anyone else's.  In the case 
of WMF, the currency is contributors of knowledge.  WMF can't afford to 
alienate them in favor of *maybe* picking up a few more 
volunteers/contributors.  Again, don't drop a dozen eggs trying to pick up 
three more.  The risk isn't worth the reward.  The only thing WMF has going for 
itself is popularity and justifiable faith in what it provides.  Lose either of 
these things and it's done for.  If you start counting such irrelevancies as 
the physical or similar aspects of contributors (like their ethnicity, gender, 
sexual orientation, etc.) as being ipso facto relevant to the value of their 
contributions, you've lost the second thing (justifiable faith).  If you 
openly, in fact or in appearance, start playing favorites from among your 
readers/contributors/volunteers for any reason, you are sure to lose the first 
(popularity).

WMF would be better-served focusing not on the sex, etc. of its contributors, 
but on its long-term survival strategy.  At the moment, WMF is living 
hand-to-mouth and relying on end-of-year micro-donations to keep itself afloat. 
 This isn't a sustainable model.

Wikipedia is a free web-based teaching and reference service.  It is only a 
question of when someone with a better mousetrap who has a way to make money 
from their site comes along.  (Remember the #1 search engine in 1996?  It was 
called "Alta Vista".  Then came Google.   The rest is history, and the big 
reason for that is simply Google's AdSense.  If Alta Vista had come up with 
that idea, maybe they'd still be around.)

I won't suggest Wikipedia stop being Wikipedia.  Did Google stop being a free 
search engine after they learned how to make money from it, allowing them to 
continue being Google (and more)?  No.  Neither should Wikipedia.  But WMF has 
to figure out how to become able to sustain itself without the kindness of 
strangers.  Projects like closing the (so-called) gender gap will actually work 
against the aim of making Wikipedia more atteactive than it is now as a web 
site for gaining knowledge but without the heaps of embedded editorializing 
found today in newspapers on- and off-line, in textbooks covering almost 
anything but the hard sciences, etc.  Still, it can create for itself 
opportunities to pay its own way and attract donations that people feel good to 
make.

About a week and a half ago, I asked for input re a project suggestion.  ( 
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/WikiTribute ) To date, I haven't gotten 
feedback because perhaps the list has been filled with discussion about the 
exclusivity of the 3-month gender gap project funding.  Already, the topic has 
distracted people from possibilities that may otherwise have been entertained 
that could generate income for WMF.  Aside from the idea's merits as such, it 
is also a way to encourage donations/get fees, and in an ongoing basis rather 
than principally at one time of the year (December).  But even if WMF thinks it 
isn't worth pursuing, it needs something else -- something it can charge for 
that will have broad, on-going appeal to many people and/or business entities.  
(AdSense, for example, is used by ordinary people with blogs and large 
high-traffic commercial web sites alike.)  It has to leave people feeling good 
about Wikipedia and WMF and be popular broadly and "agnostically".  Does your 
local gas station care if you're male or female?  Gay or straight or bi or 
asexual?   Or does the Red Cross decide when there's a blood drive that only 
certain donors will get the cookies and coffee or be encouraged to get them 
while telling other donors to wait until that particular group has gotten some 
first?  If they did, donations'd fall off fast, or blood donors would go 
directly to hospitals to donate -- assuming they still felt like it.

Maybe my note and/or opinion will be ignored, or denounced, or something else.  
Perhaps it'll have no effect at all.  But as a devoted Wikipedia enthusiast, 
donor to WMF, and pro-knowledge-democracy advocate, I can tell you that raising 
a fence if even temporarily to full participation in WMF activities for 
Wikipedians interested in seeing it grow is bad on multiple levels: 
politically, philosophically, practically, and financially, and most 
especially, relative to its foundational purpose of allowing others to 
contribute/participate to this great effort of recording the world's collective 
knowledge on an on-going basis and without hindrance, except insofar as the 
contributions are accurate, relevant, and sincere.

It's a dream worth keeping alive.  I for one would hate one day to look back on 
1Q 2015 and say to the others with me in the nursing home "Yeah, Wikipedia -- 
it was a sad day back in '15.  The beginning of the end.  I was there.  I tried 
talking them out of it, but... it just didn't work.  Now we're all stuck with 
www.selected-contributors-only-o-pedia-not-wikipedia.com and that's nothing 
close to what we used to have in Wikipedia."

Of course by then, we may all have computers implanted in our brains that tell 
us anything we want to know just by thinking the question.  Doubt it, but who 
knows.

Thank you for reading.

Matt
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