Wikipedia Bias - The Example Naomi Seibt

  • 4 years ago

Wikipedia is biased. Water is wet. Nothing new under the sun. Still, I want to present a particularly egregious example.

Naomi Seibt is a talented Youtuber who graduate from College (actually the German equivalent 'Gymnasium') at only sixteen years of age. Whilst still in school she competed successfully in widely respected math and physics competitions, winning second and first place respectively.

#Wikipedia, though, paints her differently, very differently, you know...Nazi.

But, of course, this is not the used word. The innuendo game is well-known already. Random voices are quoted that accuse her of 'white nationalism' and 'antisemitism.' Outright lies are included. Her poem 'Sometimes I Keep Silent' were about 'nationalism' when the title already says what it is actually about: the silence.
(The #poem can be found here:
https://juergenfritz.com/2019/06/08/gedicht-naomi-seibt/
Use an automated translation tool of your choice if you wish.)
She was even inspired by Stefan Molyneux.
- You mean the Canadian Youtuber?
Thank you for asking. I'm not sure because on Naomi Seibt's Wikipedia entries, both the English and the German one, he is also a Nazi. Seibt also "dismisses" the allegations that she were a "puppet" of the right wing. How dare you! The #Heartland Institute, where she worked, is described as pseudo-scientific. And the culprit behind our lack of scientific knowledge is also found: the old white man.

You find Naomi's channel here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeYSlCaX1PheCaqxN7u2klw

My video on Correct!v, the obsessive media outlet trying to dig up dirt on her, is here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPFFFjBkHGw