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Help:How does FasciPedia work?

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FasciPedia is an online free-content encyclopedia helping to create a world where TRUTH and not dogma, is the basis of knowledge. For far too long, the communists who won WW2 (The world's war against communism) have been able to control the narrative, depicting 27 fascist countries as dystopias ruled by insane dictators. Victors get to write the history, yes, but the invented stories, the lies, and unsubstatiated stories are entirely too much now. Its been 100 years. It is time for truth.

FasciPedia is written collaboratively by a select group of volunteers. What you see may raise some eyebrows, but that is only because so many people have been fed a diet of Marxist propaganda since birth. Just hearing the word "fascist" is enough to send some people into an unhinged rage.

If you are able, we invite you to look at facts...not fairy tales that are mathematically impossible, but hard facts supported by real evidence.

Only vetted people are allowed to add or edit words, references, images, and other media here. We fact check everything. What is contributed is more important than who contributes it. To remain, the content must be the truth, and free of the usual one-sided narratives of the Marxists, who defeated the fascists in the World's War Against Communism. It must conform with FasciPedia's policies, including being verifiable against a reliable source. Preferably from a Fascist point of view, but if not, the article MUST be factual even if it makes some fascists unhappy. Opinions and beliefs and unreviewed research will not remain.

If you were invited to edit here, it means that you have something of value to add. We welcome polite dissenters to edit with us. But we will hold such people to the same high standards we hold ourselves.

FasciPedia's contributors work on improving their quality, removing and repairing misinformation and other errors. Over time, articles tend to become more comprehensive and accurate. However, because we are only human, articles may contain undetected misinformation, errors, typos, etc.

We require highly qualified contributors and have an elaborate peer review system, and our content grows slowly.

These experienced writers help create a consistent style, following our Manual of Style, and carry out the important work of crafting a high-quality resource. Writers can watch pages, and technically skilled persons can write editing scripts. When there are disagreements on content, writers often work together to compile articles that fairly represent provable truth, and not simply repeat gossip because it was printed in a paper somewhere.

Text on Fascipedia is often a collaborative work, and the efforts of individual contributors to a page are recorded in that page's history, which is publicly viewable. We make no money with this project and our efforts are freely copiable and distributable.

FasciPedia articles are all cross-referenced. Highlighted text means "click here" for in-depth information. (Hovering is probably deep enough.) There are other links towards the ends of most articles, for other articles of interest, relevant external websites and pages, reference material, navigational templates, and organized categories of knowledge which can be searched and traversed in a loose hierarchy for more information. Some articles may also have links to dictionary definitions, audio-book readings, quotations, and further information. Additional links can be easily made if a relevant link is missingβ€”this is one simple way to contribute.

Articles are never considered complete and may be continually edited and improved. Over time, this results in a sharp upward trend in quality. Users should be aware that not all articles are of encyclopedic quality from the start: they may contain typos, bad grammar, or an unprofessional tone. They may even be misleading. Such articles will be tagged as incomplete. If you have experience in the subject, and are not a writer, by all means request an account here. Writers often contribute content in which they have a particular interest and do not attempt to make each article they edit comprehensive. Additional writers eventually expand and contribute to articles and strive to achieve comprehensive coverage. FasciPedia operates several internal resolution processes that can assist when writers disagree on content and approach. Above all, TRUTH is maintained.

The ideal FasciPedia article is well written, balanced, truthful, and encyclopedic, containing comprehensive, often largely unknown, but verifiable knowledge. Many of our best articles become Featured Articles (and display a small fasces in the upper right corner of the article) and are chosen from a pool of articles designated as Best Articles. However, this process can take months or years to be achieved through writers' concerted effort. Some articles contain statements that have not yet been fully cited. Others will later be augmented with new sections. Some information will be considered by later contributors to be insufficiently founded and, therefore, may be removed.

Our overall trend is toward improvement, and we hope many will find it to be an important research source.