User:Geeman

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About Gee
en This user is a native speaker of English.
This user is a bibliophile.
This user enjoys writing.
CUV This user is dedicated to
cleaning up vandalism.
Image:Face-angel.svg This user reports vandals to administrators so they can be blocked.
This user tries to do the right thing. If they make a mistake, please let them know.
This user strives to maintain a policy of neutrality on controversial issues.

Wikipedia is not censored.

WPC This user will get around to being a member of the Wikipedian Procrastination Club
1,000+
1RR This user prefers discussing changes on the talkpage rather than engaging in an edit war.

Geeman (talkcontribscounttotallogspage movesblock logemail)

I am not very interesting. There are much more interesting things to read about on this site than a biography of me. Go read something else.... For example, you could take a look at a few of the pages I've authored or made significant contributions to, such as:

  • William "Bill" A. Shomo was a U.S.A.A.F. fighter pilot during WWII who was awarded the Medal of Honor for shooting down seven planes in a single engagement, the most confirmed kills in one mission of any American fighter pilot of the war.
  • Denis Diderot was the scholar whose encyclopedic work makes him the "patron saint of wikipedia."
  • It was Toyotomi Hideyoshi who unified Japan, turning it into one nation after centuries of chaos and war. His legacy is still controversial, however, particularly as to how he might be characterized and who among those he fought are important to his biography.
  • I somehow have found myself contributing frequently (and vociferously) to the article on Albert Einstein. My interest is more literal and historical than academic and physical, but the talk page for that article has much of my ramblings on the nature of his character, legacy and how he is interpreted. In many ways those ramblings describe what could be viewed as my philosophy towards wikipedia, knowledge in general and historical goals.
  • La Amistad was the ship that was taken over by slaves whose legal status sparked a court case that became a rallying point for the abolition movement. The Tecora is the ship that transported those same captives across the Atlantic.