Villain definition: Difference between revisions
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*Anyone from mythology | *Anyone from mythology | ||
*Anyone from theology | *Anyone from theology | ||
*Random Internet users. | |||
*People who are only allegedly guilty. | |||
[[Category:Policy]] | [[Category:Policy]] | ||
[[Category:Site maintenance]] | [[Category:Site maintenance]] | ||
[[Category:About Villains]] | [[Category:About Villains]] |
Revision as of 11:35, 11 May 2020
A Villain is a person who has committed a crime meeting the Specifications for Warranting a Page.
Criteria
- They must be provably guilty.
- They must have committed a serious crime, and not just be disliked or hold controversial opinions.
- They cannot be a random Internet user.
- Rational people cannot be able to dispute whether or not they are a villain.
- All facts must be verifiable and come from reliable sources.
- All those across the political spectrum must be able to agree that they are a villain.
Types of people who cannot have pages
- Politicians (except dictators or those who have committed definite crimes, for example Dennis Hastert).
- Judges
- Lawyers
- Corporations
- Corrupt officials (only ones underneath dictatorships)
- Anyone from mythology
- Anyone from theology
- Random Internet users.
- People who are only allegedly guilty.