This isn't the coronation he wanted, clearly. Sure, most are content to suck his dick, but some can see he doesn't wash nearly enough to be considered cleanest of the clean.
Not really a surprise that in the space of a day, the Administrator who admits he can be impulsive, has switched from claiming his action was not an emotional decision, to a fairly clear admission now that it was. Which answer to believe? Maybe the psycho doesn't know himself. Long time ago now, so unless he keeps a mood journal, which I'm presuming his high school counselor way back when probably said was a good idea, we may never know.They angered me, I didn't anger them. They lost my trust; I didn't lose theirs.
Not really a surprise that the person who overturned an attempt by the Foundation to shore up en.wiki's minimal expected standards of behaviour, thinks civility is a secondary policy.when balancing competing interests, [civility] is not the most important [policy]
Not really a surprise that now one of the excuses offered up for his action is he thought Fram was the victim of a conspiracy. As above, it is also pretty clear the entire point of the ban was that the normal systems were failing. He may disagree that they were, but this was the stated reason.What I would say to them: we already have a mechanism for dealing with complaints about harassment, including (if necessary) submitting private information. I would not be terribly surprised if Fram has done stuff that cumulatively is too much to tolerate. The place to make that decision is ArbCom. The way not to do it is a non-transparent decision by a bunch of groupthinking coworkers in an office somewhere with no possibility of appeal, or even contest and answer the accusations in the first place. What I'm curious about how many of those "complaints" are an organized attempt to get Fram kicked out? Seems surprising that hardly anyone actually knows about the new option of complaining to WMF about people harassing them, and yet multiple people chose it to complain about this one particular editor? But there's no way to tell if the process is not transparent. --Floquenbeam (talk) 11:58, 24 July 2019 (UTC)
No surprise the Administrator who is blind to his own emotional instability and general temperament issues (the real psychos always say something like 'I am just grumpy'), who acted impulsively out of an arrogant belief he was correct, is now getting snippy with the community who now question his judgementI think I explained this pretty thoroughly above
I cannot help what you, or anyone, choose to perceive as my motivations if you don't believe that
We're finally getting to something like the truth though. He reversed an office action because he thought the legal owners of Wikipedia had conspired to eject Fram. That they were corrupt, basically. The irony of an accusation like that coming from a long time Wikipedia Administrator, is hilarious. How many people have they conspired to ban after get togethers on IRC, and the first thing the victim hears of it, is the log entry?
It is now beyond obvious that Floquenbeam not only disagreed with what the Foundation did, HE HAD NO REAL FUCKING CLUE WHY THEY DID IT, despite repeated explanations in statements and policy. He did what he did because he was angry and he is impulsive, and above all, he thinks he is better than everyone else. He fancies himself as some kind of revolutionary leader, not a mere janitor that pushes the buttons the community asks him to.
Which of his conflicting descriptions of Trust and Safety is the one we're meant to believe? The far away conspirators who are totally incompetent, or the department that actually includes a lot of volunteers who he trusts implicitly.
Which version of ArbCom are we meant to believe he supports? The one with jurisdictional authority over Fram, or the one that has already stated that the mob's ravings and rantings about what the Foundation has supposedly done, the mob Floquenbeam appointed himself Chief Lightning Rod to, was apparently horseshit. Multiple legitimate complaints, investigated thoroughly, by people with deep understanding of the nuances of the toxic en.wiki culture.
For the epic had faith alone, he is patently unfit to be an Administrator. The toxic English Wikipedia community is so broken, they're desperate for him to be one.
It is high time RfA is reformed. It is totally unacceptable that people can get away with saying 'why not' and other similarly vacuous variants, when serious (arguably the most serious) objections have been raised.
There needs to be a positive declaration from the Wikipedia community that they understand what he did and why he did it (if he can ever get it straight it in his own head), that they understand what everyone else's reasons for thinking he is unfit are, and deciding to promote him anyway. That is what would happen in a supposed self-governing community that was mature enough to take responsibility for its actions.
It should be mandatory for every single supporter to categorically say they are fine with having an Administrator who overturned an office action because the WMF had made them angry with their far away groupthink and their corrupt conspiracy to ban a Wikipedia Administrator who was entitled to due process and a fair trial (unless the Foundation wished to imply he had touched kids, then Floquenbeam would be fine with trusting their confidential investigation).