Wikipedia’s Neutrality Is Dead — And Blocking Its Own Founder Proves It
by Kym Farnik [Commentary]
If you ever needed proof that Wikipedia has drifted from “the free encyclopaedia anyone can edit” to “the ideological encyclopaedia a select priesthood controls,” look no further than this headline: “Wikipedia blocked its own co‑founder, Larry Sanger, for trying to make the site more balanced”.
Yes — the man who wrote the neutrality policy was locked out by the very editors who now claim to uphold it.
This isn’t just irony. It’s a flashing red warning sign about what Wikipedia has become, especially in terms of political, social, and religious items.
According to the New York Post, Larry Sanger attempted to re-engage with Wikipedia to push for reforms aimed at restoring neutrality. Instead of welcoming the guy who helped build the platform, Wikipedia’s entrenched editors slammed the door in his face.
Why?
Because Sanger’s proposals threatened the ideological comfort zone of a community that has grown overwhelmingly left‑leaning.
This is exactly what Sanger told Straight Arrow News: Wikipedia has a “liberal bias” baked into its editorial culture, its sourcing rules, and its governance. His plan to fix it — including ending consensus gatekeeping, allowing competing articles, and abolishing source blacklists — was never going to fly with editors who benefit from the current ideological monopoly.
Blocking him wasn’t a procedural decision. It was a political one.
Let’s be blunt: Wikipedia’s political articles don’t just lean left. They tilt, list, and fall over left.
Multiple sentiment‑analysis studies have shown a consistent pattern:
- Right‑of‑centre public figures are described with more negative sentiment, including language tied to anger, disgust, extremism, and controversy.
- Left‑of‑centre public figures receive more positive sentiment, with language tied to joy, progress, admiration, and social good.
This isn’t accidental. It’s what happens when one ideological faction dominates the editorial class.
Wikipedia editors decide which sources are “reliable”. And surprise: left‑leaning outlets are labelled reliable, while right‑leaning outlets are labelled unreliable.
If the only “approved” sources lean left, then the emotional tone of the articles will lean left too.
This is how you get biographies of conservative figures dripping with negativity, while progressive figures are bathed in soft‑focus praise.
It is so bad that there is a sub-reddit that specifically calls out anti-Semitic bias on Wikipedia.
High-profile Christian religious articles are frequently locked or heavily guarded by established “guardian classes” of editors. Users trying to introduce traditional or alternative theological viewpoints often find their edits quickly reverted for lacking mainstream secular citation.
Sanger’s warnings — and now his exclusion — raise the question:
Can Wikipedia be reformed, or is it time for alternatives that actually respect ideological diversity?
Because if the co‑founder, who came up with the name “Wikipedia” can’t get a fair hearing, what chance does anyone else have?
It’s time for a new name for the site, “WikiBiased”.
Read more: https://dailydeclaration.org.au/2026/06/25/wikipedia-neutral-block-founder/
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