The destruction of Native American peoples, cultures, and languages has been characterized as genocide. Debates are ongoing as to whether the entire process and which specific periods or events meet the definitions of genocide or not.
I know we have a tendency to notice specifically the aspects of Wikipedia that consolidate the worldview of the State Department, but it seems there's also some very active Catholic editing to discredit any critique of any popes. I fell into a wild Wikipedia rabbit hole last year on this topic, and the more "Talk" pages I read and edits I followed I now think there's some Vatican deep state that has a small but dedicated Wikipedia army lol.
Anyways my favourite of the thing you're looking for is that the most closely guarded claim I've seen on Wikipedia is on the Working Time page: "Standard working hours of countries worldwide are around 40 to 44 hours per week (but not everywhere: from 35 hours per week in France[4] to up to 105 hours per week in North Korean labor camps)]. Source? A defector who left Korea 30 years ago who said "Those accommodated are mobilized for forced labor from 5:00am to 7:00pm in winter, and till 8:00pm in summer."
Saints, too. The Padre Pio page is hilariously written in two voices, one that believes all supernatural phenomena, and one that keeps repeating that he bought carbolic acid one town over so as to fake his stigmata.
Accusations that the NKVD killed a bunch of Ukrainians and Poles for absolutely no reason other than "Stalin was evilly twirling his moustache"
Sources cited:
Nazi Germany
An "independent international commission" made up entirely of "experts" from Nazi-occupied Europe which were handpicked by the Nazi government, and agreed fully with initial Nazi "findings"
A bunch of other random sources citing the "independent commission"
Note how the Katyn Commission article goes out of its way to avoid the word "Nazi," only saying "Germany" and "Reich"
Found myself here a while back.
Was having fun reading up ancient aliens and stuff and then saw they listed Historical Materialism.
Their reason? Some conservative philosopher said "nu uh"
Wikipedia has Reddit brain. Any article about any subject is viewed equal. Except when the article is a primary or secondary source (those are too biased) or if they're on the No-no list, or if they're not on the Good list. I've seen "sources" that were 20 years behind the current science/level of discussion be used. Absolute joke of a "resource".
My brother in christ this "pseudoscience" has predicted more things historically than any of your neoliberal financial nonsence you try to pass off as irrefutable facts and nature itself.
In fact nature itself IS materialism, it is literally a continuation of darwinistic thinking about evolution which has perfectly explained how we and everything around us came to be.
The execution van, also called a mobile execution unit, was developed by the government of the People's Republic of China (PRC)[citation needed] and was first used in 1997.[citation needed] The prisoner is strapped to a stretcher and executed inside the van.[citation needed] The van allows death sentences to be carried out without moving the prisoner to an execution ground.
The vans also require less staffing, requiring four people to assist with the injection and are mobile.[citation needed] The PRC states [citation needed] that the vans are more humane than previous forms of execution.
That may be the highest [citation needed] density I've ever seen.
Ashkenazi Jews have genetic contributions from all over the place. There's a political push to say they're originally native to the Levant because of..... well actually I don't know why they're pushing that line it's a total mystery.
Wikipedia says "While the consensus in genetic research is that the world's Jewish populations (including the Ashkenazim) share substantial genetic ancestry derived from a common Ancient Middle Eastern founder population, and that Ashkenazi Jews have no genetic ancestry attributable to Khazars" and cites Behar et al. (2013). "No Evidence from Genome-Wide Data of a Khazar Origin for the Ashkenazi Jews" to support that claim. But you can't cite one 2013 study and call that citation evidence of "consensus". And the papers citing Behar et al. take a variety of positions on it. It's a lie to call it a consensus.
I'd be curious to read a more unbiased take on this, but I have no idea where to look.
Edit: the consensus thing is common lie that Wikipedia editors like to push. Even official policy guides require the consensus to be cited, meaning that a reliable source should say it's consensus, but right wing editors love to flout this and just show that 4 authors means consensus.
the Khazar hypothesis being bunk is not a zionist plot, all of these studies find european ancestry in addition to middle eastern if they don't get caucausian. some genetic marker a person has being 'from' one region or another does not justify setting up an apartheid genocide regime there.
people do have a habit of declaring a 'consensus' due to a subjective valuation of the quality of the disputing voices, not how loud they are, though. and in this case, we have geneticists citing Koestler into the 2010s
While apparently unbiased and posting both sides of a discussion, this one sucks too. For a detailed breakdown of the sources, see https://youtu.be/3kaaYvauNho
This was my favorite line in the Cycling in North Korea article, although it's now finally been removed because it seems to have been too much even for NATOpedia.
As with other reports from North Korea, whether the bicycle-sharing program is intended as a service for actual use by citizens (and not simply propaganda) cannot be confirmed.
We can't possibly know whether nefarious North Korea intends bicycle sharing to be mere propaganda.
This isn't propaganda, exactly, but it has the vibes of anti-Marxist misinformation (is that a thing?): Character mask. It's absolutely incomprehensible and reads like an essay by someone obsessed with the history and theory of Marxism in a weird, unproductive way (you know those types). Naturally, it has remained essentially unchanged for a decade. Bonus points if anyone can figure out what micro-ideology its author is pushing, because I really can't tell.
Huh i thought that was genuinely very interesting, and adds a little bit of nuance to a few points of Marx in capital where "charactermaske" was translated into something else.
Hard to say which specific branch the author belongs to, most of this looks to be a pretty good analysis and explanation of the concept and its usage and evolution, doea a good job at providing different interpretations, responses and critiques while still defending the original concept in some ways.
Where it gets dodgy is towards the end, the inclusion of modern or post "Marxists" that apply it to the USSR in (what looks to to me like) unproductive ways, and fucking zizek at the end, but that might have been a more recent edit
The South African all-white settler town of Orania has a Wikipedia page that is way too in-depth for a town of its size, and the page seems much too kind to this extraordinarily racist settlement.
Tbh I do kinda laugh at some of them. You just have to remember that they're all about this fantasy land that exists only in the collective imagination of Americans and bears no relation to reality.
I just googled "Vietnam". The first website result I got was Wikipedia, and instead of any of the information that came before it in the page, the information it decided to show me on the search page was "Vietnam is a developing country with a lower-middle-income economy. It has high levels of corruption, censorship, ..."