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Due to Graeber's leftist supporters, bringing any encyclopediac balance to the article is currently impossible. The following passage is being consistently removed: "Graeber was also a signatory to an open letter denouncing Cambridge social scientist Noah Carl on the grounds his work was “ethically suspect” and “methodologically flawed", which led to the young academic losing his position. Graeber contended Carl had "a racist motive", yet offered up no research paper by Carl to support his claim." Citations are Graeber's own tweet about the matter, the signed letter, and a Quillette article: https://twitter.com/davidgraeber/status/1070766617305452544 / https://medium.com/@racescienceopenletter/open-letter-no-to-racist-pseudoscience-at-cambridge-472e1a7c6dca / https://quillette.com/2018/12/07/academics-mobbing-of-a-young-scholar-must-be-denounced/ Intellectually insulting, specious, and infantile excuses that any of these sources are 'unreliable', or that including the passage is 'encyclopediac', are merely tiresome. Graeber sought to destroy the careers of fellow academics whose opinion he disagreed with. In this, he very much exemplified the very worst of Leninist/Stalinist Woke activists. This appalling aspect of his personality and career should be noted in the article if it is to be balanced because, as his tweet shows, his hubris made him publicly proud of being ruthlessly cruel for the purpose of enabling his goals. MisterWizzy (talk) 04:35, 5 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
It is a 'literally who' with sources that are literally twitter (lmfao) and some right wing psuedo-blog news website that clearly has an agenda. Even if this was notable, which it is not, you have not provided a single good source. Please go take your idiotic stuck-in-2016 anti-SJW nonsense rhetoric elsewhere, nobody here is interested.. SP00KYtalk09:34, 5 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Perfect proof of all I wrote. Even Graeber's own tweeted statement is dismissed as not a "good source": i.e. they can't even be bothered to come up with a half-decent lie. MisterWizzy (talk) 13:18, 5 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Nobody's saying he didn't sign the letter. The tweet is an okay source, but not alone. We need a reliable, secondary source to establish that it was a significant event in his biography and so we can give some context from a neutral point of view (i.e. not repeating the smears of Graeber's political enemies as if they were fact). If we included a paragraph on everything Graeber tweeted about, this article would be a bit on the long side. – Joe (talk) 06:16, 6 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
The tweet cannot be used as it contains a statement about a third party. Twitter : Self-published and questionable sources such as twitter can only be used if (among other things) "it does not involve claims about third parties". Burrobert (talk) 12:14, 6 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
As one of the editors who removed the drivel (which was added without edit summary) that prompted an ES with content, namely "Hagiography pushing to erase critical fact" I'd like to point out that this article is far from a hagiography, and the alleged incident is not critical to Graeber, and no comment on whether it is even a fact. MisterWizzy should assume good faith, and take a less combative approach on this talk page. JesseRafe (talk) 15:00, 6 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Hi all! I am new to Wikipedia and have drafted my first article on the Museum of Care, created by David Graeber and Nika Dubrovsky. English is not my first language, and I would appreciate it if someone could contribute and copy-edit the article a bit. Also, I am trying to improve my source base. So if you know of any useful links, please feel free to add them. I will only have limited access to my computer for the next two weeks, so please excuse me if I don't respond quickly. Kuzinakka (talk) 20:25, 16 August 2022 (UTC)[reply]
The sentence "He later worked as a plate stripper on offset printers" is incorrect.
Either "He later worked as a plate stripper for offset printers" (meaning for those who print offset), or "He later worked as a plate stripper on offset presses" or "He later worked as an offset plate stripper" would be more correct. The distinction is that the "printer" runs the press; the press is not a "printer."
There are computer printers, but not offset printers.
Minor point, but glaring. Sorry, not confident enough to edit the article directly on my one.