But it does have authoritative perspective.  That is exactly my point and the 
point at which you railed at, from a position that was extreme.  Your 
contention is that we should not report *any* thing in our work on a drug 
except what the manufacturer puts on the label.  And that you don't think that 
position is ridiculously extreme is exactly why you can't see apparently what 
we're actually doing.  Instead you want to put up a straw man to try to thrust 
your argument acrost by showing how naked he is.  But no one has ever taken the 
extreme position that you're advocating against in the first place.

So that's why your argument has no clothes.




> See I took Atorvastatin and you wouldn't let the project report that the

> Stanford Medical Journal reported that it causes more damage to the heart than

> is acceptable.





Such claims are best kept within the confines of official medical 

journals, the news media, and personal blogs. Not put into a forum "that 

everyone can edit" where it masquerades as having some authoritative or 

encyclopaedic perspective. The danger is that "everyone can edit it" so 

any particular page fetch may have just been edited by someone with a COI.



 

 


 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: wiki-l...@phizz.demon.co.uk
To: Wikimedia Foundation Mailing List <foundation-l@lists.wikimedia.org>
Sent: Sat, Oct 23, 2010 12:43 pm
Subject: Re: [Foundation-l] Paid editing, was Re: Ban and moderate


On 23/10/2010 15:15, wjhon...@aol.com wrote:

> In a message dated 10/23/2010 3:40:30 AM Pacific Daylight Time,

> wiki-l...@phizz.demon.co.uk writes:

>

>

>> OK this is going to be controversial but have you ever considered taht

>> maybe you shouldn't have anything on Atorvastatin other than what comes

>> as the medical advice in the packaging? One cannot provide any useful

>> advice on whether someone should use the drug or not that should be

>> between the patient and their doctor. I mean its not as if wikipedia is

>> an expert pharmacopeia as wikipedia doesn't have experts weighing the

>> evidence one way or the other, all you can do is mimic the day to day

>> controversy which of its very nature is going to be conflict ridden.

>>

>> If there are still any pretensions of being encyclopaedic here then any

>> such articles should only be written once the conflict has been resolved.

>>

>> Example here is the MMR article from one period in 2004:

>>

>> http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MMR_vaccine&oldid=6127791

>>

>> any parent reading that article at that time is highly unlikely to have

>> opted for the vaccine. Or take the final paragraph here:

>>

>> http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=MMR_vaccine&;

>> oldid=6127791#The_MMR_controversy

>>

>> adding every rumour, statement, or innuendo that someone somewhere in

>> the world might have once said, however wrong, is unencyclopeadic. It is

>> certainly not without consequences. How many children were made ill by

>> those paragraphs?

>> http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/vaxpictures/measles3.htm

>> http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/vaxpictures/measles1.htm

>> http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/vaxpictures/mumps1.htm

>> http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/vaxpictures/mumps2.htm

>> http://www.ratbags.com/rsoles/comment/vaxpictures.htm>>

>>

>

> Why would you make such outrageous statements and expect any result here?

> On what space have you been slumming where people add "every rumour,

> statement or innuendo that someone somewhere in the world might have once 

said"?

> Please tell me, I'm dying to know.  I mean I'm really dying.

>

> See I took Atorvastatin and you wouldn't let the project report that the

> Stanford Medical Journal reported that it causes more damage to the heart than

> is acceptable.





Such claims are best kept within the confines of official medical 

journals, the news media, and personal blogs. Not put into a forum "that 

everyone can edit" where it masquerades as having some authoritative or 

encyclopaedic perspective. The danger is that "everyone can edit it" so 

any particular page fetch may have just been edited by someone with a COI.







> You want us only to report things once the controversy is

> over, in other words once 25,000 people have gotten sick from salmonella

> eggs... not just a thousand.  No wait, actually after all the lawsuits are 

over

> and the people involved are all dead as well.





Sound good to me. At least while that is happening the news channels are 

reporting the current state of play, and the wikipedia page isn't being 

edit warred by those telling everyone that nothing is wrong.



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