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“ | I've neither supported nor opposed this candidate, but I must say, I've never seen such blatant assumptions of bad faith, as are currently being made in the oppose section. Opposing because the candidate showed support for a retired editor? Opposing because the candidate edited the same article as you? Because 35% [of] the candidate's edits are in mainspace (what the hell is that)? | ” |
— auburnpilot |
“ | Thank you for the fairness of your comment AuburnPilot. ... and we still wonder why so very many editors won't go anywhere near RfA? | ” |
— VS |
I first decided to start contributing seriously to Wikipedia during January 2006, at much the same time as the release of Walt Disney's travesty, High School Musical, which left populations the world over with deep mental scarring.
Perhaps in an attempt to show the world that Wikipedia would be a force of reason in these troubled times, adminship hopefuls passing through RfA were generally supported by the community, provided they fit the following criteria:
...and that was pretty much it. Participants in RfAs generally assumed good faith on the part of the candidate. Unless there was a good reason why that candidate should not be trusted with the tools, they were generally granted adminship by the community. In any case, if they screwed up, then they could easily be blocked, the damage reverted, and the mop revoked via ArbCom ruling.
I took a necessitated leave of absence from the end of 2006, as real life was rapidly catching up with me. When I returned in 2008, RfA was definitely not as I remembered it. I fully recognise the place of opposition to RfAs as a vital aspect of the process, preventing untrustworthy or inexperienced users from misusing the tools or making impressive blunders. However, editors who would have been wholeheartedly supported two years ago are now often shunned by their peers at RfA, and often for little or no reason. Some of the oppose comments I've seen made me double-take, with reasons such as:
In other words, many participants in RfAs were no longer looking for reasons to support the candidate, but reasons to oppose them – they were assuming bad faith on the part of the candidates whom they were commenting upon. Granting adminship used to be no big deal; it now seems to be anything but.
The reasons for this could be numerous (lack of a watertight recall process, the increased volume of RfA applications due to Wikipedia's swelling userbase, etc.) but I believe that until this issue is addressed, the RfA process will become more and more hostile towards candidates, which benefits nobody.
None of the perennial RfA reform proposals have so far attained consensus, so it's time that we either came up with a better one, or simply asked people to respectfully unscrew themselves.