Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Elections January 2006/Candidate statements/Kitch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anybody who has questions relating to my campaign to be an arbitrator may ask them here. Thank you. --Kitch (talk · contribs), 17:27, 6 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] from Jokermage

  • How would not having the powers of an administrator or bureaucrat affect your ability to arbitrate? Jokermage "Timor Mentum Occidit" 01:28, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
    • They would not affect my ability to arbitrate in the least. It merely means that other administrators would have to implement any decisions that any arbitration panel I was a member of would make. --Kitch (talk · contribs), 15:01, 7 January 2006 (UTC) (PS: I changed your question to a bullet point instead of a number point. Trying to use number points for my response looked silly. I hope you don't mind.)

[edit] Question

What are your views of the proposed Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee Code of Conduct and User Bill of Rights?

--HK 16:04, 7 January 2006 (UTC)

  • The proposed user prerogatives (which you noted as the User Bill of Rights) are a good idea. Any codification of rules and/or rights should be codified in writing, so as to minimize any chance of abuse by the powers that be. Also, I see nothing in error with the proposed ArbCom code of conduct for the same reason. --Kitch (talk · contribs), 18:54, 8 January 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Concerns over personal attack templates

User:Improv, who is also a candidate for the arbitration committee, has placed the following statement on Wikipedia:Village pump (policy):

I am concerned about templates surviving AfD that appear to contrast with established policy. In particular, I feel that these templates are Poisoning the well when it comes for how we treat our fellow wikipedians. There are circumstances where knowing too much about one's neighbours politicises how one deals with them. This is, to an extent, unavoidable in society, but wearing signs of hate as badges on our shoulders takes what is a small problem that we can usually deal with into the realm of being damaging to the community. Already, there have been signs of people refusing to help each other because they are on different ends of a political spectrum -- this seems likely to get worse if this trend continues. Some people cry that this is an attack on their first amendment rights (if they're American, anyhow), but that doesn't apply here because Wikipedia is not the U.S. government -- it is a community that has always self-regulated, and more importantly it is an encyclopedia with a goal of producing encyclopedic content. We have a tradition of respecting a certain amount of autonomy on userpages, but never absolute autonomy. We might imagine, for example, templates with little swastikas saying "this user hates jews". I am not saying that such a thing would be morally equivalent to this template against scientology, but rather that we should aim to minimise that aspect of ourselves, at least on Wikipedia, so we can make a better encyclopedia. The spirit of NPOV does not mean that we cannot have strong views and still be wikipedians, but rather that we should not wear signs of our views like badges, strive not to have our views be immediately obvious in what we edit and how we argue, and fully express ourselves in other places (Myspace? Personal webpage?) where it is more appropriate and less divisive. [1]

I am inviting all candidates, including Improv, to expand on this theme on their questions pages. Do you agree that this is a cause for concern as we move into 2006? How do you see the role of the arbitration committee in interpreting the interpretation of Wikipedia policy in the light of this concern? --Tony Sidaway|Talk 20:47, 12 January 2006 (UTC)