You mentioned the "Student Bill of Rights" in your comment, so I presume you know who David Horowitz is and Students for Academic Freedom, and likely also Horowitz's Frontpagemag. In case you missed it, I just left a comment pointing to the SAF site's Bradford coverage page[http://www.studentsforacademicfreedom.org/reports/IUPUILawBradfordPage.htm], listing seven articles that SAF/Frontpagemag did on the Bradford controversy. Horowitz was one of the leading figures pushing the nationalization of this case. My AfD comment has a little bit more. --Groggy Dice 07:55, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
:Well, maybe we should keep the article now, and delete it in two years. Probably very few people will remember him in two years, I agree, but I have two problems with your argument. First, he became part of the larger Ward Churchill controversy. Picture someone exploring the "little Eichmanns" affair coming across one of the conservative commentaries hailing Bradford as the anti-Churchill. The person reads about how leftist academics are persecuting a Silver Star-winning Green Beret and real-deal Indian, while rallying around an unpatriotic fake Indian like Churchill. The explorer decides to go on Wikipedia to find out more, finds no entry for Bradford, and the misinformation stands.
:Second, people like Horowitz can no longer champion Bradford openly and heavily in the mainstream since his disgrace, insuring that he will probably never achieve your threshold of notability. But ignoring Bradford helps them to continue to use this case "under the radar." I noted that he still mentioned the Bradford case in the introduction to The Professors, which came out in February, two months after Bradford's case collapsed. (Without the book at hand, it's impossible to know if he's discussed elsewhere in the book.) Horowitz apparently continued to cite the Bradford case on the radio during his book tour, months after the truth came out. Now that Bradford is "damaged goods," his current level of semi-notability is actually best for them. They can still present a heavily slanted version of his case to arouse the "base," without him being so generally notable that they would face refutation. Leaving him off Wikipedia helps them in playing this "under the radar" game. --Groggy Dice 00:01, 24 July 2006 (UTC)
== Thanks, Ted ==
Hey Ted, I am an unregistered user here just got a message from you saying I changed something and I have no clue what you're talking about! I would appreciate not receving messages that do not pertain to me.
I think I got it now! Amity150 03:24, 25 July 2006 (UTC)
Hey, Ted - Let me know if you get this because I am not sure yet how to message someone, so this is a learning experience. On the huntingtin: I think if the gene is referred to it is not capitalized, right? The article does not seem to be entirely consistent on this either. Anyway, if I am wrong, please accept my apologies! Thanks, amity. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 23:05, 24 July 2006 (talk • contribs) Amity150
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I made a legitemate change to 2006 Serie A scandal. I added in the match's that ac milan ect will play behind closed doors not just Juventus' as the page says. I then recieved thins message
IN the page The most annoying thing in the world i just changed it from a redirrect to the crazy frog to an annoying page as the title would suggest. ( it looks like it worked)
The edit to TedE page was just out of pure annoyance with you —Preceding unsigned comment added by 88.110.249.79 (talk • contribs)
I also dont know how to contackt you directly
--88.110.249.79 23:03, 25 July 2006 (UTC)