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(3) Although the section cites to some blogs which are maintained by ostensibly reliable sources (e.g., the Atlantic), the purpose is merely to give a one-sided account of left-of-center criticism. If this were a proper criteria, nearly every article on Wikipedia could have a similar "criticism" section, collecting the opinions (say) of right-wing blogs criticizing the subject of the article.[[User:NeutralityPersonified|NeutralityPersonified]] ([[User talk:NeutralityPersonified|talk]]) 14:03, 1 April 2011 (UTC)
(3) Although the section cites to some blogs which are maintained by ostensibly reliable sources (e.g., the Atlantic), the purpose is merely to give a one-sided account of left-of-center criticism. If this were a proper criteria, nearly every article on Wikipedia could have a similar "criticism" section, collecting the opinions (say) of right-wing blogs criticizing the subject of the article.[[User:NeutralityPersonified|NeutralityPersonified]] ([[User talk:NeutralityPersonified|talk]]) 14:03, 1 April 2011 (UTC)

==Removed the following==

"A largely ineffective and self-indulgent platform for Phillips, he sends numerous pseudo-conservative emails to those unfortunate enough to have intentionally or accidentally joined the Tea Party Nation group. Refuting comments to Phillips' typically misinformed email tirades, or even comments that simply disagree with Phillips' political viewpoints, are usually censored, and those 'members' banned from the web site. The Tea Party Nation should not be confused with the original Tea Party started by Ron Paul."

This doesn't even need comment but here goes anyway... The above was A) not cited, B) personal opinion and C) libelous.

Revision as of 12:00, 8 November 2011

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Right to vote

I changed the statement to make it clear that he supports the idea of requiring property ownership to vote. Dylan Flaherty 10:23, 6 December 2010 (UTC)[reply]

The quote said he thought it made sense in the past. This wasn't a clear endorsement of enacting it today. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.75.76.182 (talk) 13:15, 2 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"But one of those was you had to be a property owner. And that makes a lot of sense," Looks like present tense to me. Not "and that used to make some sense, but it's like totally idiotic for the United States to withdrawal whimpering to the past instead of standing up and winning the future" or something else that's clearly past tense. Hcobb (talk) 01:53, 3 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

I revised wording to:

Phillips has said the founders’ principle of restricting voting rights to property owners “makes a lot of sense.”


Clearly this is a neutral representation of the sources. We can not assume advocacy because one can believe an idea has merit (i.e. makes a lot of sense) while ultimately opposing it.

I strongly question whether this statement of his--not backed (according to sources) by any political action or advocacy for policy change--belongs in the summary area of the article. It looks relatively minor, among the plethora of clearly expressed advocacy coming out of Tea Party Nation. I would remove it all together, if up to me.

Anti-Protestantism?

Why is Anti-Protestantism a category on this page? Gtbob12 (talk) 14:03, 24 January 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Removal of "Criticism" Section

I have removed the purported "criticism" section for mulitiple violations of Wikipedia policy:

(1) The section relies primarily on non-reliable sources, such as an apparent blog called "Homebrewedtheology." Also cited is Thinkprogess, a highly partisan left-wing site.

(2) The section violates the policy by giving undue emphasis to the alleged "critcism", which is essentially the author's POV.

(3) Although the section cites to some blogs which are maintained by ostensibly reliable sources (e.g., the Atlantic), the purpose is merely to give a one-sided account of left-of-center criticism. If this were a proper criteria, nearly every article on Wikipedia could have a similar "criticism" section, collecting the opinions (say) of right-wing blogs criticizing the subject of the article.NeutralityPersonified (talk) 14:03, 1 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Removed the following

"A largely ineffective and self-indulgent platform for Phillips, he sends numerous pseudo-conservative emails to those unfortunate enough to have intentionally or accidentally joined the Tea Party Nation group. Refuting comments to Phillips' typically misinformed email tirades, or even comments that simply disagree with Phillips' political viewpoints, are usually censored, and those 'members' banned from the web site. The Tea Party Nation should not be confused with the original Tea Party started by Ron Paul."

This doesn't even need comment but here goes anyway... The above was A) not cited, B) personal opinion and C) libelous.