User talk:Jasper good
Welcome!
[edit]Hi Jasper good! I noticed your contributions and wanted to welcome you to the Wikipedia community. I hope you like it here and decide to stay.
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Happy editing! Ian.thomson (talk) 23:05, 3 May 2020 (UTC)
Discretionary sanctions alert
[edit]This is a standard message to notify contributors about an administrative ruling in effect. It does not imply that there are any issues with your contributions to date.
You have shown interest in complementary and alternative medicine. Due to past disruption in this topic area, a more stringent set of rules called discretionary sanctions is in effect. Any administrator may impose sanctions on editors who do not strictly follow Wikipedia's policies, or the page-specific restrictions, when making edits related to the topic.
For additional information, please see the guidance on discretionary sanctions and the Arbitration Committee's decision here. If you have any questions, or any doubts regarding what edits are appropriate, you are welcome to discuss them with me or any other editor.
Ian.thomson (talk) 23:05, 3 May 2020 (UTC)
A summary of some important site policies and guidelines
[edit]- "Truth" is not the only criteria for inclusion, verifiability is also required.
- Reliable sources typically include: articles from mainstream magazines or newspapers (particularly scholarly journals), or books by recognized authors (basically, books by respected publishers). Online versions of these are usually accepted, provided they're held to the same standards. User generated sources (like Wikipedia) are to be avoided. Self-published sources should be avoided except for information by and about the subject that is not self-serving (for example, citing a company's website to establish something like year of establishment).
- Any claim about medicine or health must use the strongest sourcing possible. Only use specialist up-to-date comprehensive medical sources and do not use isolated studies, journal articles, or older works. Do not use general news sources even if those sources would otherwise be reliable.
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Also, science-based medicine isn't the same as "western medicine." Traditional western medicine includes practices like Homeopathy and there's plenty of non-western science-based medicine practitioners. I mean, the dude on the 1000 yen bill figured out what syphilis really was, and we've got dozens of articles about famous Chinese pharmacologists, Indian cardiologists, Ugandan public health doctors, Japanese dermatologists; and several on Egyptian and Pakistani surgeons, Malaysian GPs, and Nigerian gynecologists -- so it's rather colonialist to act like only the west has science-based medicine (and that's what you're doing when you call science-based medicine "western"). The entire paradigm of "western vs traditional medicine" was ultimately Maoist propaganda that some western quacks found useful (causing them to obscure western traditional medicine by claiming it originated elsewhere and corrupting other regions' traditional medicines in the process). A lot of science-based medicine does examine traditional medicine for its chemical basis, and when it finds something useful it isolates the active ingredient. That's why we take Asperin instead of white willow tea (same active ingredient). Ian.thomson (talk) 23:05, 3 May 2020 (UTC)
Your thread has been archived
[edit]Hi Jasper good! The thread you created at the Wikipedia:Teahouse,
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