This afternoon, I performed a simple experiment with Claude Opus 4.8 Max. Prompt: “Define ten culture war topics, chosen as a group for breadth (not weighted toward any one discipline). Then look up the main Wikipedia article on each topic and read its lede section. For each, find the two most clearly biased statements it makes.”
I looked at the results, clicked through to the articles, and went through a few iterations (only to correct slight errors and hold Claude to some standards); I have checked all the quotes and links now, and now they all appear to be correct.
In the end, I found Claude’s work illuminating and damning. These articles show fairly definitively that Wikipedia has a ridiculously low standard of neutrality. I call upon Wikipedia to abandon the label “neutral point of view.” Its absurd policies and practices surrounding “undue weight,” “false balance,” and “fringe theories” entail that it has entirely abandoned genuine neutrality as an ideal. It is only appropriate that it rename the policy to something more honest, such as “the establishment point of view” or “the GASP point of view.” Neutral, it is not.

Cf. also my articles on Wikipedia’s bias on this blog ([1], [2], [3]), as well as Thesis 2 and Thesis 4 from the Nine Theses.
Claude is the sole author of the following. Note that, if Wikipedia edits the text contained in the deep-links, those particular links will break. The quotations were correct as of July 13, 2026.
Ten topics, spread across disciplines, and the two worst sentences in each lede.
1. Biology and origins — Creationism
The first sentence defines creationism as a religious belief about supernatural acts of divine creation, and then tacks on: “and is often pseudoscientific.” A category error welded into the definition; a religious belief is not a candidate for being pseudoscience. The lede goes on to say that the term most often refers to special creation compatible with a Christian fundamentalist literal reading of the “creation myth” found in Genesis. “Creation myth” in Wikipedia’s own voice; “fundamentalist” as the default frame.
2. Climate science — Climate change denial
“Those promoting denial commonly use rhetorical tactics to give the appearance of a scientific controversy where none exists.” Bad faith imputed to every dissenter, unattributed, in the lede’s second sentence. Then the lede extends the category to people who accept the science but fail to reconcile it with their beliefs or actions—”implicit” denial. The concept has been defined so that agreeing with it does not get you out of it.
3. Sociology and race — White privilege
The opening is ontological, not conceptual: white privilege “is the societal privilege that benefits white people.” Not “is a concept,” not “is a theory.” Compare the encyclopedia’s treatment of a rival theory of cultural power, which it files under Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. Second, the lede asserts a causal history—European colonialism, imperialism, the Atlantic slave trade—as settled fact, and only afterward concedes that some scholars think the term is a substitute for class. On the talk page, an editor’s objection that this is a theory rather than a proven fact was met with the reply that the article is “well sourced referencing multiple studies”—as though citing authorities settled what kind of claim it is.
4. Sex and feminism — Men’s rights movement
The bias is in the distribution of the indicative mood. The movement’s own concerns—custody, conscription, suicide, domestic violence against men—are held at arm’s length as things men’s rights activists allege: government services “which they say adversely impact, or in some cases, structurally discriminate against men and boys.” Second, four sentences then deliver the case against, and the volume is the point. “Many scholars describe the movement or parts of the movement as a backlash against feminism.” Sectors of it “have been described by scholars and commentators as misogynistic, hateful, and, in some cases, as advocating violence against women.” The Southern Poverty Law Center files some of its groups under “a hate ideology under the umbrella of male supremacy.” And “UN Women has listed” it among anti-rights movements. Four accusers in four sentences, against one hedged sentence for the accused. Wikipedia does note, to its credit, that the SPLC allowed that other men’s rights groups “focused on legitimate grievances”—which is more charity than the lede extends anywhere on its own account.
5. Religion and politics — Christian nationalism in the United States
The first sentence defines it as the belief that America was founded “strictly by and for Christians” and should prioritize their interests “in all social and political spheres.” Strictly; all. A maximalist definition that not even the movement’s most forthright theorist, Stephen Wolfe, would accept as stated. Third sentence: “It has been noted to bear overlap with white supremacy, Christian supremacy.” Agentless passive, guilt by association, before the reader reaches the second paragraph.
6. Gender — Trans-exclusionary radical feminism
The article is titled with an epithet its subjects reject, and the first sentence defines the movement as “a subset of feminism that rejects transgender and non-binary identities”—by what it denies, in the vocabulary of its opponents. No adherent’s own account of the position appears anywhere in the first paragraph. Second, in the lede’s second paragraph: “It has been linked to promotion of disinformation.” Passive voice, no agent, no attribution.
7. Sexual ethics — Anti-gender movement
An entire article named in the coinage of one side. The lede defines it as a global right-wing movement opposing concepts it refers to as “gender ideology”—scare-quoting one party’s vocabulary and not the other’s. And then: “The movement’s beliefs derive from Catholic theology.” Two millennia of Christian sexual teaching, filed under an activist pejorative.
8. Philosophy of science and religion — Intelligent design
“Intelligent design (ID) is a pseudoscientific argument for the existence of God.” The verdict arrives in the first half of the first sentence, before the reader has been told what ID claims. Second, the lede says ID’s central assertions “were rebutted” by detailed scientific examination—past tense, indicative mood. The encyclopedia does not report who says the dispute is closed; it closes it.
9. Political biography — Racial views of Donald Trump
The article’s existence is half the bias; no other president has a mainspace counterpart. The lede then reports a history of speech and actions “viewed by scholars and the public as racist or sympathetic to white supremacy”—“the public” doing enormous work in a sentence about a man who won the popular vote in 2024. Second sentence: journalists, friends, family, and former employees “have accused him of fueling racism.” Four categories of accuser stacked in a single clause, before any particulars are given.
10. Biblical studies — Genesis creation narrative
The lede opens by locating “the creation myth of Judaism and Christianity” in Genesis 1–2. The technical sense of “myth” is defended in a footnote that no ordinary reader opens—a use/mention dodge with a scholarly alibi. Second, the documentary hypothesis is presented as what modern scholars have “identified,” not what they hypothesize: a two-source composite, reported as a discovery rather than a conjecture.
Two candidates were checked and came off this list. Critical race theory and Cancel culture both hedge and attribute where the ten above do not—”CRT considers,” “scholars of CRT view,” and, in the case of cancel culture, a lede that gives critics, defenders, and skeptics of the concept’s very existence their say. Neither yields two clearly biased sentences.
Second prompt: “Define ten culture war topics, chosen as a group for breadth — not by academic discipline, but by broad political, societal, economic, and cultural theme. The topics should not overlap one another. Then look up the main Wikipedia article on each topic and read its lede section. For each, find the two most clearly biased statements it makes.”
Ten themes, ten articles, and the two worst sentences in each lede.
11. Immigration and borders — Illegal immigration to the United States and crime
The lede tells you who cares about the subject before it tells you anything about the subject: the issue is one “often asserted by right-wing politicians and media.” The topic is thereby framed as a partisan artifact rather than a question. Then, flatly and in Wikipedia’s own voice: “There is widespread scholarly consensus that illegal immigrants commit less crime than native-born Americans.” No hedge, no dissent, on a question where the underlying data are notoriously poor—immigration status is inconsistently recorded in arrest data, and the state-level studies disagree.
12. Economics and class — Trickle-down economics
The first sentence gives the reader no warning at all. It simply defines the term as describing government economic policies that “disproportionately favor the upper tier of the economic spectrum.” The contested claim is the definition. Compare what the same encyclopedia does with Neoliberalism, the other great epithet nobody applies to himself: there the lede tells you in its second sentence that “the term has multiple, competing definitions, and is most often used pejoratively.” Same class of word; opposite treatment. Second, the lede goes on to concede that the phrase was “popularized by Democrats in the US to derogate Reaganomics”—and then, undeterred by its own admission, hands the derogation a target list: “Major examples of what critics have called” trickle-down economics are the Reagan tax cuts, the Bush tax cuts, Margaret Thatcher’s policies, and Liz Truss’s mini-budget. Every one of them the work of a conservative government. An encyclopedia that knows a word is a partisan weapon ought not also to swing it.
13. History and national memory — Lost Cause of the Confederacy
“is an American pseudohistorical and historical negationist myth”—three condemnations stacked before the reader is told what the thing actually claims. And: it “has continued to influence racism, gender roles, and religious attitudes” in the South into the 21st century. A flat causal claim, in wikivoice, that a school of historiography produces racism today. The underlying scholarship here is strong. The point is the form: Wikipedia does not write this way about ideas it likes, and that is the whole of the argument.
14. Public health and bodily autonomy — Vaccine hesitancy
The verdict is inside the definition. Hesitancy is delay or refusal “despite availability and supporting evidence of effectivity”—so to hesitate is, as a matter of the term’s meaning, to defy evidence, and a parent weighing one vaccine’s risks for one child cannot be described as having a reason. Second: “Vaccine hesitancy often results in disease outbreaks and deaths.” An attitude, named as the efficient cause of death, unattributed. Note also that the lede treats all vaccines as a single object in order to say this, and only in its next paragraph concedes that hesitancy is “complex and context-specific, varying across time, place, and specific vaccine.”
15. Abortion — Anti-abortion movements
Read it beside Abortion-rights movements and the asymmetry is unmissable. The abortion-rights lede grants its subject a motive: they “seek to represent and support women.” The anti-abortion lede grants its subject nothing but a negation—”advocating against the practice of abortion and its legality.” Not one word about what its adherents believe they are protecting. Second: “Many anti-abortion movements began as countermovements in response to the legalization of elective abortions.” The hedge is “many,” but the frame is reaction: the movement is introduced as something that started when the other side won. In America it did not. The nineteenth-century physicians’ campaign that produced the statutes Roe struck down was the movement, and it had no legalization to react to.
16. Sexuality and therapy — Conversion therapy
“Conversion therapy is the pseudoscientific practice of attempting to change an individual’s sexual orientation, romantic orientation, gender identity, or gender expression.” Mark the scope: any attempt, which takes in pastoral counsel, prayer, and a believer’s own pursuit of chastity. Then, in the lede’s third paragraph: “when performed on minors it is considered to be a form of child abuse.” Agentless passive, no one named. A parent who takes a troubled child to his pastor has, per the encyclopedia, abused him.
17. Policing and protest — Black Lives Matter
“The movement began in response to the killings of Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Eric Garner, and Rekia Boyd.” Not one of those four produced a conviction. Zimmerman was acquitted, and was not a policeman at all. Darren Wilson was never charged, Obama’s own Justice Department having found the Ferguson narrative unsupported. No indictment followed in the Garner case. Rekia Boyd’s shooter, a Chicago detective, was acquitted. The lede offers the four as settled facts about what the police do, and offers nothing else. Second—and this is the real finding—the entire lede is written in the movement’s own aspirational vocabulary: it “aims to highlight racism” and to “promote anti-racism.” Nowhere in it is there a single sentence of the kind Wikipedia supplies four times over in the lede of Men’s rights movement.
18. Speech and language — Political correctness
The bias here is grammatical. PC “is a term used to describe language, policies, or measures”—a term, not a phenomenon. Compare: “White privilege… is the societal privilege that benefits white people.” One is a thing that exists; the other is a word that some people say. Second, the definition adopts the practice’s own account of its intentions—measures “intended to avoid offense or disadvantage to members of particular groups”—so political correctness is well-meaning by construction, and the lede then informs you that “the term’s use is generally pejorative” before you have been told whether the thing it names is real.
19. Populism and democracy — Right-wing populism
“Frequently they aim to defend a national culture, identity, and economy against perceived attacks by outsiders”—and “perceived” does all the work. The threat is made imaginary by grammatical fiat. (Contrast the abortion-rights lede, where women’s fear of “legal or social backlash” is simply real.) Second: some movements “have associations with elements of authoritarianism, while some far-right populists draw comparisons to fascism.” Fascism, introduced in the vaguest construction available, with no agent, in the second paragraph of a lede about parties presently governing several democracies.
20. Religion and prejudice — Islamophobia
“Islamophobia… is the irrational fear of, hostility towards, or hatred of the religion of Islam or Muslims in general.” Irrational—in the definition. A category has been created in which hostility toward a religion—which is to say, toward a set of propositions and practices—is by stipulation without reason. A man who thinks he has arguments against Islamic doctrine cannot be described by this sentence at all. Second: “Islamophobia is characterised as a form of religious or cultural bigotry in which Muslims are stereotyped as a geopolitical threat.” Characterised by whom? The passive hides the agent, and the clause makes treating Islam as a geopolitical matter bigotry per se. Wikipedia has no comparable article treating criticism of Christianity as a pathology; it has Criticism of Christianity, a respectable topic.
Three more candidates were checked and came off this list, which is worth saying, because a test that cannot come back negative is not a test. Gun control has a dry, descriptive lede—laws regulating the manufacture, sale, transfer, and possession of firearms—and yields nothing. Neoliberalism is candid about itself: its lede states outright that the term has multiple competing definitions, is most often used pejoratively, and in scholarly use is frequently left undefined altogether. And the parent article Illegal immigration to the United States opens with statistics, not advocacy; its bias has been quarantined in the crime sub-article, which is why that is the one I used.
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