User:JesseRafe
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JesseRafe
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[edit] Jesse
In a perfect world Jesse would edit Wikipedia more often. He feels it is his duty to do so as before Wikipedia existed most people use Jesse as a Wikipedia of sorts. Jesse has less red links than Wikipedia.
In a perfecter worlder Jesse would have people call him Jesse Rafe, since that is what his name is after all. Jesse therefore uses that name on the internet where he likes seeing his name in bold.
Et aussi, j'essaie d'écrire en français içi: fr:utilisateur:JesseRafe. Mais, j'en ai marre de français.
Jesse doesn't know how, or care to know how, to make this page look nicer. If you're a nice person who knows about nice things, tell Jesse here.
Jesse first had the impression that the majority of the English users on Wikipedia were Australian. This was on account of the fact that a large number of those whom he discusses things with herein are Australian. This is probably because Jesse edits wikipedia almost exclusively between 3 and 5 am New York time
Jesse is aware of Wikipedia's No Original Research policy. Jesse, however, loves original research.
[edit] Editorialness
[edit] Pages Created
The Plague (magazine), ProStars, Bo Knows, Mount Airy, Stanton Street (Manhattan), Steal (basketball), Danny Hoch, Robbie Robinson (referee)
[edit] Significant Edits
[edit] Sports
Wilt Chamberlain, Allen Iverson, Kyle Korver, Brian Dawkins, Philadelphia Phillies, Philadelphia Phillies roster, Knicks-Nuggets brawl
[edit] Philadelphia
Pat Croce, Julia R. Masterman School, Cheesesteak, Philadelphia (disambiguation)
[edit] Other, lesser things
Jørgen Leth, New York University, Kaplan (disambiguation), Patrick Swayze, Nas, House of Pain, Al Leong
[edit] Jesse's Trivia
[edit] Trivium 1
It is accepted that all the world's languages have words for white and black. If that language only has two words, those are them. If they have a third one it is almost always red, if they have a fourth green, and so on. In English there are only three verbs for becoming a color: To whiten, to blacken and to redden. (Golden of course, is an adjective) This means that these words must have been in such an old form of Anglo-Saxon that dates back to when "English" only had this many color words, unlike now, when it has this many.
[edit] Trivium 2
The next one has to do with vanilla sex but I haven't gotten around to it for a while...