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There is a place where the State of Israel is incessantly vilified, its leaders maligned, and its policies continuously criticized by Arabs and their third world and Western cohorts. Any attempt to defend Israel is immediately quashed by hordes of Jihadists and like-minded anti-Semites. Israel's defenders are subjected to censorship while its most virulent detractors are afforded the podium to blather about this or that "atrocity" committed by Israel in defense of its citizenry. It's a place where truth gives way to vitriolic, blood curdling Israel bashing.
If you think I'm talking about the United Nations Human Rights Counsel or the General Assembly, you're wrong. If you think I'm talking about Human Rights Watch or any one of the hundreds of anti-Israel NGOs, wrong again. If you think I'm talking about the back office editorial rooms of the New York Times, CNN or Al Jazeera, try again. The place I'm talking about is Wikipedia, an online, supposedly impartial encyclopedia open to editing from anyone who bothers.
Wikipedia describes itself as a "multilingual, Web-based, free-content encyclopedia project based mostly on anonymous contributions." It is "written collaboratively by an international (and mostly anonymous) group of volunteers." Anyone with internet access can write and make changes to Wikipedia articles.