Last week, a person with the Twitter handle @arizonasunblock from Tampa, Florida, noticed that Bradley, who has been on the high court since 2015, appeared to make major changes to her Wikipedia biography earlier this year.
It’s a shitty thing to do. But not illegal. I’m sure there’s something worse to accuse her of doing, than breaking the terms of services of Wikipedia.
It’s uncanny how much “conservative” and “can’t take responsibility of their documented actions” overlap.
I’ll have to go post this to the Wikipedia admin noticeboards to be dealt with, though it’s likely someone else has already beat me to the punch if this is hitting the news itself.
As I thought, someone already did and the page has been fixed and temporarily protected to prevent another IP address doing this again. A lot more editor eyes will be on the article too from now on.
The REAL way to fix this is:
- Host a personal blog arguing about details
- Use a pseudonym like “SpaghettiSaiyan69” and add start sprinkling those links as reference.
- Wait a few more weeks as those links become source of truth
That’s silly - judges are supposed to have clerks to do that for them.
I’m more concerned that a judge didn’t have a clerk do this. Judges should be half-decent at delegating tasks.
In 2009-ish my local US House rep had his bio edited from an office in the Capitol building. Repeatedly, in fact. I’ve always wondered it was done by him or an intern.
Based on the blisteringly dumb things he’d say in public, and the fact that he was one of the vanishingly small minority of Republicans to get redistricted out of his very safe seat in Ohio by his own party - I’m betting that he did it on his own time. Not that I think his “retirement” had anything to do with the Wikipedia bio. It’s just something that would fit with his ideas of “having a cunning plan.”