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Is WMF fundraising abusive?

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By Smallbones and Andreas Kolbe
This column, the Forum, is intended for the frank discussion and sharing of opinions between Wikipedians, so please read the discussion below in that light.
Andreas Kolbe is a former co-editor-in-chief of The Signpost. He recently published an article in The Daily Dot, titled "Wikipedia is swimming in money—why is it begging people to donate?". Smallbones is the current editor-in-chief of The Signpost. The opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of other Signpost contributors or those of the Wikimedia Foundation.

Smallbones: Andreas, you recently wrote a piece in the Daily Dot, criticizing the Wikimedia Foundation's fundraising. Your piece was reported on and followed up by several other news sources, among them The Next Web, The Telegraph and Clarín, Argentina's biggest newspaper. The overall criticism seems to be that:

Does this represent your view of the problem?

Andreas Kolbe: Hi Smallbones, thanks for inviting me! I don't think the WMF's budget increases are necessarily a bad thing. For example, I asked many questions on Meta in the run-up to this piece. I received answers because there were WMF staff members there watching the pages. As anyone who's been around a while knows, that's not how it would have been a few years ago. There are many things the roughly 500 Foundation staff and contractors are doing that are worthwhile, and if the money is there to pay them, then good.

What I do feel strongly about is that the revenue should be gathered honestly. That brings me to your second point. The WMF banners shown annually around the world always evoke a sense that Wikipedia is facing an imminent threat – that its independence or even continued presence online is imperiled by a lack of funds. Which at this point is frankly ludicrous. Just look at the graph!

As for wasting money on projects the community neither wants or needs, I'd have to ask you what you mean by community – the volunteer community, or the public in general?

Smallbones: Defining community might mean all the potential readers, or potential donors – that is the entire population of the world, or it might mean a few thousand people who make more than 100 edits per month on the English Wikipedia. Let’s talk about the overall group of English-language editors on Wikipedia since the major complaints I’ve seen are in the English-language press.

People in the U.S. may have a different experience with fundraising campaigns than people in other places. Being asked to donate to charities is an everyday occurrence here. For example, today my National Public Radio station announced that an unnamed donor will give the station $100,000 if 3,500 people call the station and make a pledge of any size. But you need to do it in the next three days or else the $100,000 will disappear!

Later this summer, I expect to see volunteer firefighters, wearing some of their firefighting gear, standing in the middle of the road near the traffic light in front of their station. They slow down traffic and extend their tall firefighting boots to collect money from drivers. Yes, I’d consider this pushy if I thought about it, but like many Americans, I’ve gotten used to it.

The Canadian and British experiences with charity fundraising are fairly close to the American experience, though their public broadcasting and firefighting are likely paid for directly by the government. I’ve been told that charity solicitors on London streets are called “chuggers”, short for “charity muggers”. Canadians and Brits likely have seen television adverts with disturbing pictures of animals or children in pain, soliciting money for the animal welfare or children's welfare societies.

I don’t object to the goals of these organizations, but I really don’t like these adverts. Other countries would fund these needs through the government. Still other countries might fund them through religious organizations, large donations from philanthropists, or, perhaps in poorer countries, not at all. Perhaps a narrowly tailored campaign should be designed by the WMF for each country.

The first example of a WMF fundraising pitch in your Daily Dot article reads: "This Thursday Wikipedia really needs you. This is the 10th appeal we’ve shown you. 98% of our readers don’t give; they look the other way … We ask you, humbly, don’t scroll away."

While I’m surprised that the "this is the 10th appeal" sentence would help raise funds, I don’t see anything objectionable in it. The WMF does need donors every year, not just every 2-3 years when they’d be starting to run out of money. The "98%" sentence just gives readers the assurance that they wouldn’t be alone in not donating. The last sentence just asks readers to think one more time about donating.

Where is the objectionable part? Where are the disappearing funds? The firefighter’s boot in the driver’s face? The chuggers? The pictures of children and animals in pain? I guess I just don’t get it. Could you give another example of an objectionable on-Wiki pitch and explain why you think so?

Andreas: Other phrases used this fiscal year have included "Help us keep Wikipedia online and growing," "We need you to make a donation to protect Wikipedia's independence," "We humbly ask you to defend Wikipedia's independence," "This Thursday we need you to make a donation so that we can continue to protect Wikipedia's independence." Here are some examples:

"This Wednesday we humbly ask you to defend Wikipedia's independence"


The way they sound almost tearful sometimes, which is so at odds with the financial realities, causes me and countless others much the same distaste you describe feeling above.

Smallbones: Let’s focus on your last example – they’re all very similar to each other and to the example I discussed above. Three additional points.

Andreas: Surely it's designed to enhance the sense of urgency, that Wikipedia "really needs" money, today. But let me come back to your four bullet points above.

You asked whether I thought the WMF "is wasting donors' money on projects that the community neither wants or needs". My concern is rather that the global community of readers and donors doesn't have a good grasp of what the WMF is doing, which appears to be at least in part by design. Maybe they'd love what the WMF is doing, but if they don't know about it, how can they have an opinion?

Smallbones: You’re dead-wrong on this one. The WMF is radically transparent compared to other nonprofits. Just go to the bottom of the main page. There’s a dozen Wikimedia projects listed and linked. Dozens of different language versions. Wikipedia:About, Contact Wikipedia. You can also go to the Wikimedia Foundation website or read the articles on Wikipedia and Wikimedia Foundation. The biggest problem is likely that there is too much information, or that it’s not organized as well as it could be.

But you are likely thinking of the WMF’s future plans. Any big changes will likely be discussed with a dozen communities and listed on Meta for general discussion. The general reader who clicks on a fundraising banner probably doesn’t want to read all of that, but they can. They also likely have a very firm grasp of what Wikipedia is – it’s an online encyclopedia.

Can you think of any nonprofit – or any organization that is more transparent?

Andreas: The fundraising banners always just ask for money for Wikipedia, which is not even the WMF's main expenditure item – it reportedly accounts for about 30% of spending.

The financial statements show that over the past decade,

Yet throughout this period of growth, the fundraising banners have made people believe that the WMF "often struggles to have enough money to keep Wikipedia up and running," as Trevor Noah put it in his recent interview of Katherine Maher. Viewers were left with that notion – the phrase remained uncorrected.

Smallbones: You are confusing exponential growth with other issues. There’s no question that the WMF’s fundraising has been successful. That doesn’t mean that they are lying to potential donors. That doesn’t mean that they are wasting money.

As far as Maher’s interview with Trevor Noah, I can’t answer for either of them but will note that you’re now focusing on what wasn’t said in a TV interview, rather than what was said in a fundraising appeal. Noah asked a long question (almost a full minute of an 8 minute interview) about the importance of WMF being a nonprofit (starting at 3:50), Maher’s answer covered the main question in detail, but not the part that you focused on.

Andreas: Andrew Lih said five years ago in the Washington Post, "People will come up to me during fundraising season and ask if Wikipedia's in trouble. I have to reassure them that not only is Wikipedia not in trouble, but that it's making more money than ever before and is at no risk of going away."

The WMF is $200 million richer today. When people learn just how wealthy the WMF is, you see complaints like this one at Hacker News:

Smallbones: Surely you could find a better source than Hacker News. When the pseudonymous poster says the WMF told him that they couldn’t survive “without my 10 bucks”, you didn’t take that literally did you?

What Andrew Lih said over 5 years ago is likely more interesting. I’ll ping him to see what he thinks now.

Andreas: I could have quoted many more statements like that from social media. Here is a Twitter thread by Hector Martin, the Asahi Linux founder, that got nearly 1,000 retweets. He refers to the banners as "downright deceptive". The Next Web spoke of Wikipedia's "impassioned pitch for cash" that "gives the impression that the site is struggling to stay afloat". People out there agreed with me.

Moreover, many readers assume the WMF plays an active role in directing, moderating or fact-checking Wikipedia content. This is partly because the WMF has a media presence and takes credit for the project, whereas the volunteer community has no public voice, no organisation speaking for it, no PR agent. The WMF should fill this role, but the volunteers don't feel represented by it.

Smallbones: The WMF does a pretty good job mentioning Wikipedia volunteers at almost every chance. Perhaps they could do more. I also think that many reporters don’t know how to deal with the multi-headed hydra that is Wikipedia, and just credit the WMF for convenience. So how should the WMF represent the diverse views of the community? – that’s a hard one to answer.

Andreas: Half the board should be elected by volunteers who do not represent organisations financially dependent on the WMF – who have no financial conflict of interest. This brings me to your last bullet point about the WMF and the community. I was struck by the magnitude of the opposition when the WMF tried to rebrand itself as the Wikipedia Foundation last year – voices against the renaming were running at well over 90 per cent on Meta (540 opposed vs. 46 in favour). Volunteers spoke of attempted "identity theft". An open letter telling the WMF to stop bears the signatures of 73 Wikimedia affiliates and 998 volunteers.

I believe what drives this unease is in part the way the WMF has been absorbed by the US political and financial establishment.

A Counterpunch article I read the other day mentions that traditionally an estimated 80% of top foreign policy positions in the US government are held by members of the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). It's a US think tank with around 5,000 members. They include ex-WMF CEO Katherine Maher and the WMF's most influential consultants, mentioned in its annual Form 990 disclosures as having received six-figure sums for their services. These consultants all have close ties to the Clintons:

Moreover, the various foundations that have traditionally given the WMF large sums of money – such as the Ford Foundation, Stanton Foundation, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Knight Foundation – are all headed by CFR members as well (or a member's spouse, in the case of the Stanton Foundation).

Wikipedians don't belong to this small elite. Wikipedia itself is an anti-elitist project. In most countries (with exceptions like Kazakhstan) volunteers celebrate their project's independence from government, even to the point of contrariness (recall the Pierre-sur-Haute incident). Think tanks aren't welcomed as sources – "Avoid all think tanks like the plague … The influence of think-tanks is pernicious …" was one veteran admin's verdict at WP:RSN.

Smallbones: The politics of Wikipedians and of the folks who run the WMF is always a good topic for speculation and even for conspiracy theories. About all I can say is that, after a period of strong libertarian influence, the general community seems to have become more liberal than the “average American”. Since this is an international project that shouldn’t be unexpected. But I hadn’t heard the one about the Clintons taking over the WMF before.

The Council on Foreign Relations is a highly respected organization. Nobody should be playing a game of "guilt by association" using their name.

Andreas: I think media organisations – including Wikimedia – should be at arm's length from government. As for the Clintons, these approaches were made quite openly as long as a decade ago. Hillary Clinton sent Richard Boly to Wikimania 2012. Boly was then in charge of "an ambitious State Department initiative that uses social media and online platforms to change the way employees communicate and reach outside their boundaries to advance U.S. foreign policy interests. He told Wikipedians we are "kindred spirits" and read out a letter of greeting from Clinton.

There is a growing culture gap. You now hear complaints even from ex-staffers that WMF leadership culture has become indistinguishable from general US corporate culture.

Now, your firemen example. So you come to a traffic light. Firefighters are preventing you from moving off, impressing on you that they are struggling to have enough money to keep the fire engines up and running, need your money today to continue to save lives. Alarmed, you give them $20 of your hard-earned cash. But then you find out that the fire service's purely administrative headcount has increased 10-fold, most of the money is spent on other things than fire engines, its net assets have grown by $100 million over the past five years, and it's also acquired a $100-million endowment in record time, partly funded by your donations. Moreover, its CEO now earns twice as much as ten years ago, and ten times as much as you.

I think anyone who's not a complete doormat would at this point feel slightly had.

And then you learn that the firemen even go to some of the city's poorest quarters, begging for money, making people fear they may have to do without a fire service if they don't give money today – even though the service has already surpassed its own revenue year goals by nearly $50 million.

Smallbones: Can I say that your firefighter example is a bit alarmist? You are asking me to assume all your conclusions into a hypothetical example. Or are you just trying to hose me?

Andreas: In April/May, the WMF was already around $50 million ahead of its revenue year goals. Yet it started fundraising in South American countries badly hit by the pandemic, using banners that implied its independence was under threat. I didn't think that was right.

Smallbones: There’s a very good argument for fundraising around the world. If fundraising is limited to just North America and Western Europe, the WMF will be perceived as just being an organization for the developed world. When hard financial choices have to be made, the developed world would be very influential. The WMF wants to be a world wide organization.

Andreas: Yes, indeed it does! All I have to say in conclusion is that I'd ask Wikipedians to read the Daily Dot article, and share it online if they agree.

If the banners continue to imply there's a financial emergency, or that money should be given to the WMF to "show the volunteers that their work matters", I'd suggest volunteers organise a social media campaign with the tagline "Not in our name" in time for the next fundraiser.

And volunteers should press – in the media, not just on Wikipedia – for non-Wikimedia-affiliated volunteers to be given 50% of the seats on the WMF board. That would be a partnership of equals, and it's the only way things will change.

Smallbones: To conclude, Andreas, you haven’t shown any examples of abusive fundraising adverts, certainly nothing comparable to what I see every day from other nonprofits. I’ll only ask our readers to check out the specific banners that the critics so vociferously complain about.

Sure, the WMF might better tailor their adverts to individual countries, or remove the word “Wednesday” from the banners. But that’s not what you are complaining about, is it? You’ve vacillated on whether WMF spending is a problem. I'm sure you understand that international fundraising makes sense for an international organization.

I still can't understand why you want to delay fundraising until the WMF is close to being broke. Most people will try to ensure that they have enough money before they need it.

That leaves the fact that the relationship between the WMF and editors in some project communities is often contentious. You’re promoting your own views on Wiki-politics above. Fine, but don’t confuse your politics with the proper way to raise funds. Your politics may be more controversial than you think.

The difficulties between the WMF and the editor communities can only be solved by all parties recognizing that they need each other. These difficulties won’t be solved by cutting fundraising.

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I really doubt that @Jayen466: (Andreas) has any of these concerns, but if he does he should feel free to respond here or by email. Strange as it might seem, we had a very good relationship during the writing of this, exchanging 5-7 emails over the last 2 weeks, keeping some track of word count. I'd originally proposed 2 parallel essays (with each of us getting to see the other's essay as they were written) and a couple of variants. He wouldn't bite until I essentially gave away the store - we'd exchange questions and answers and each of us could say whatever they wanted to. I do think there is some comradery berween us as Signpost EiCs. In some ways I think it was a failed experiment - we both got a bit carried away at times. I mean it sounded almost like an ArbCom page a few times. But we both got what we bargained for, the right to say whatever we wanted to - on a very broad topic. Smallbones(smalltalk) 01:20, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know if Kolbe has concerns, I am expressing my concerns. I am especially concerned with To conclude, Andreas, you haven’t shown any examples of abusive fundraising adverts, which is an obvious lie given that there are pictures of examples on the same page. It would have been less repugnant to have said this if it wasn't the conclusion of the article, and if Kolbe was able to respond.
I take it that Kolbe did not agree with you publishing your final comment at the end of the article, and that they only agreed to the idea of you concluding the article without seeing what that conclusion would be. Please clarify if this is not the case or if there is something missing. Onetwothreeip (talk) 07:30, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, Onetwothreeip. Smallbones is right though. We agreed that as editor-in-chief of the Signpost, he should have the last word. I'd seen his conclusion before publication – we edited the page together (see edit history). Smallbones has strong opinions and jumps in with both feet. That's fine. I assure you he was a perfect gentleman behind the scenes, and I do indeed feel a sense of camaraderie because he's kept the Signpost going all this time. I know it's a heck of a lot of work.
We agreed that we should try to keep the piece to about 3,000 words. If I were to say anything further in response, it's that I never meant to imply that the WMF should only fundraise once the money runs out – only that it shouldn't claim the money is running out when by any measure it is richer than ever. To go to Latin America, the global epicentre of the pandemic right now, with fundraising banners claiming "We need you to make a donation today so that we can continue to protect Wikipedia's independence", when the Foundation had already taken about $50 million more this financial year than even its own annual plan originally asked for, seemed altogether perverse.
I didn't write the Daily Dot headline by the way – my working title was "Monetising Wikipedia".
The German language area had better fundraising banners for a while – nothing about "humbly", "awkward", "really need", just a matter-of-fact "We fundraise once a year, now is the time, we're aiming for x million, right now we are y million short, if you can help, please do." And they actually stopped when the target was reached. If the WMF did that, that would already be an improvement. Putting a little more info on the banners about what the WMF is actually doing, rather than pretending it's all just to keep Wikipedia going, would be better still. That's what we should shoot for. Best, --Andreas JN466 12:34, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I do not think they are wrong in their comments to me and I'm not concerned with their attitude towards you. What is wrong is that they made the final comments in the article, which contained at least one significant lie. As I'm now aware that both of you agreed to their final comment, I have to place responsibility with both of you. Onetwothreeip (talk) 02:19, 1 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I agreed that Smallbones as the host should conclude the piece. I didn't say that I agreed with what he said! But it's not for me to tell him what he can and can't say. He is entitled to his opinion. People can agree or disagree. Regards, --Andreas JN466 12:22, 1 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]
I should emphasize that I was never truly offended by the "boot in the driver's face." It's just something that a useful and successful local institution has to do. I also always feel free not to donate. Smallbones(smalltalk) 15:14, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
For those who haven't seen it, it's worth mentioning User:Guy Macon's related essay "Wikipedia has Cancer", though its focus is more on the rate of growth of WMF expenditures/revenue rather than the tone of fundraising appeals. Colin M (talk) 18:24, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
The "Show the volunteers who bring you reliable, neutral information that their work matters" is offensive to many editors. The WMF knows that. There were complaints about it on the mailing list last December. Following similar complaints by the Brazilians in April, it was taken out of the banners on the Portuguese Wikipedia ... only to be used again a couple of weeks later in Spanish-speaking Latin America. (It's included in the Spanish version above.) --Andreas JN466 18:44, 28 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, this is a really terrible phrase. 95% of the feedback I get is negative, most of it deliberately hostile and often politically charged, because there's a selection bias of only people who disagree caring enough to say/do anything. So maybe you could thank me by... thanking me, not by paying some money to a company whose assets I couldn't tell you in dollars to the nearest power of 10. It is concretely a practical thing that a layperson can do: when you read an article and learn something important, find the most primary recent contributor (if one exists) and write something nice on their talk page. I try to do it from time to time. — Bilorv (talk) 06:43, 29 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
The most important thing we should not be doing is seeking--or even accepting--donations from large benefactors. We don't need them--I've been told small donors contribute about 80% of the funding. WP is at base a populist egalitarian project, and should stay that way. If we become dependent on a few foundations or individuals, we lose our freedom of action, and we lose the perceived independence of our content. (I do not thing the CFR or any such group has any actual influence on enWP content now, and that's the way we want to leave it. But the mere fact this could be seriously questioned in this Forum illustrates the problem.) We're open resource written by the general public, and addressed to them, and we need to retain that perspective. The closer we approach to an ordinary foundation or business model, the less the influence of the volunteers, and the less likely we are to retain and attract them. As the largest information technology firms get more and more dominant, there needs to be one place at least where their influence does not extend. The board should not be just 50% from the volunteers--it should be entirely or almost entirely from the volunteers, and elected directly. At the very least, nobody who has ever held an executive role in the information industry should be on it--their experience will contaminate us. We shouldn't be part of their world.--I would even say, we exist in opposition to it. (Though I recognize the paradox that we and all independent sites exist only because the large firms pay for and operate the basic structure of the internet for their commercial purposes, and the further paradox that Google et al get much of their value from our voluntarily provided content. WP is enmeshed in the commercial and official world , just as we individually are in our life generally. ) DGG ( talk ) 21:45, 30 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
Accepting money from those who realize the value of Wikipedia has nothing to do with how they and their articles will be treated, or will they be allowed to dictate in the slightest how the money is used. If Bill Gates wants to give $500 million to the upkeep of Wikipedia, no strings attached, because he knows its unique place in society, he should be welcomed with the understanding that because of that his page will be even more scrutinized by long-time valued editors. I agree with you about the board, the more real editors selected the better. Randy Kryn (talk) 23:02, 30 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
David, I'm absolutely fine with the idea of a board 100% elected directly by the volunteers. That would be democracy. How do we get there from here? And I agree that any influence organisations like the CFR have on Wikipedia content is likely to be minor to non-existent. That's not what I was implying: there is no need. Wikipedia has firm rules about which sources are allowed to be cited. I remember your comments from a few weeks ago where you expressed the view that Wikipedia could be a little more liberal in this respect, a view I share. These rules by and large already make sure that Wikipedia's content is broadly consistent with America's – or more broadly the West's – interests. There is no need to micromanage every Wikipedia article if the broad thrust is right, and Western establishment values and viewpoints enter minds and cultures across the globe, in hundreds of languages, through projects like Wikidata and Wikifunctions, amplified by Google infoboxes, Amazon and Apple voice assistants etc. Information is soft power, especially when done on a global scale (which is of course why China e.g. doesn't want Wikimedia, and Russia has an uneasy relationship with it).
Making Wikimedia "the essential infrastructure of the ecosystem of free knowledge", the strategy that came out of this process overseen by a CFR member (and which many volunteers actually think of as weird, or overreach, and more or less imposed on them), aims precisely in this direction. It is surely an idea the CFR could only approve of. The idea of exporting Western culture and making it globally dominant is not even intrinsically bad: Western culture has good and bad elements like any other culture. Western culture offers valuable freedoms many other countries lack. Most people in the West consider it altogether superior (although if 8 billion people on earth lived Western lives, it would probably be fatal for the environment). So Wikipedians by and large may be entirely happy and proud to play a part in this endeavour of cultural ambassadorship, spreading free (Western) knowledge and values in the service of freedom, democracy, economic growth and wealth generation, fighting against poverty, oppression and lack of access to Western-style technology, knowledge and education. But I submit it's worth thinking about these things, and trying to see them from different perspectives, and noting the political and business motivations involved.
So if Wikimedia strategy processes can conceivably be influenced by CFR consultants, what other types of influence are possible? Think back to August 2011, when Wales surprisingly endorsed the Kazakh Wikipedia, run by a government operative in a country with a deplorable human rights record (but huge mineral wealth and a useful stance on nuclear disarmament). Wales told Wikimania of his intention to go to Kazakhstan and give that award in the presence of the President or Prime Minister of Kazakhstan. Now in October 2011, two months after the award, the WMF announced that it had received its biggest ever donation from the Stanton Foundation: $3.6 million.
You may recall that the Stanton Foundation is run by the wife of Graham Allison, who was then director of the Belfer Center, and who is the possessor of a friendship medal from Kazakhstan's president Nazarbayev. He is also a CFR member and former assistant defense secretary in the Clinton administration. Clinton, like his mate Tony Blair, had had well-publicised and controversial dealings with Kazakhstan, delivering "a propaganda coup" to its President, as the New York Times put it. So I submit here is one possible explanation for why a free-speech advocate like Wales might suddenly sing the praises of a dictator who brutally suppresses free speech in his country, in the process delivering to him – just like Clinton before him – another propaganda coup that was promptly touted by Kazakh officials on multiple embassy websites: "Kazakhstan wins Wikipedian of the Year award!" But even if all of that was mere coincidence, what we do know is that a few years later there was a very public scandal involving a Wikipedia editor working for the Belfer Center who was paid by the same Stanton Foundation. One of the last things Sue Gardner did before she left was to analyse what had gone wrong and should never be repeated. So influence can be of many kinds, and arguably yield results that a volunteer-run board would not have supported. --Andreas JN466 23:54, 30 June 2021 (UTC)[reply]
There are reasons why things have not been structured to encourage a democratic approach. Part of this bias is due to early libertarian influences on Wikipedia -- which I won't go into, but considering that Jimmy Wales considers himself a small-l libertarian (a well-known fact), that statement should not need a citation. Part of this bias is due to fear that any elected board could be subverted by an outside group who could overwhelm the core of dedicated volunteers, the vanguard party. It was a realistic fear in the earliest years: I remember when the EN-Wikipedia list was abuzz with news that Neo-Nazis planned on taking over Wikipedia by mobbing us with their followers. When you consider that at the time we had only a few hundred volunteers making edits on a regular basis, that was a credible threat. However, when the attack came, instead of hoards of Neo-Nazis, it turned out to be barely a corporal's guard -- who were swiftly dealt with.
I'm sure there are other reasons -- besides inertia -- for this prejudice against a democratic process. -- llywrch (talk) 19:00, 1 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]



       

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