https://www.wikiprove.org/index.php?title=Barack_Obama&feed=atom&action=historyBarack Obama - Revision history2024-03-29T15:59:26ZRevision history for this page on the wikiMediaWiki 1.37.2https://www.wikiprove.org/index.php?title=Barack_Obama&diff=7&oldid=prevAdmin: Created page with "[Coming Soon] =What is the “Kleinfeld Score”?= The Kleinfeld Score is a numerical score that measures a political figure’s honesty. You calculate it by dividing a political speaker's number of '''truthful''' Wikiproved claims and statements (i.e., claims and statements found not to be <span style="color:red">false</span>, <span style="color:green">misleading</span>, <span style="color:purple">BS</span>, or <u>inconsistent</u>) by his or her '''total''' number of..."2022-04-13T20:26:02Z<p>Created page with "[Coming Soon] =What is the “Kleinfeld Score”?= The Kleinfeld Score is a numerical score that measures a political figure’s honesty. You calculate it by dividing a political speaker's number of '''truthful''' Wikiproved claims and statements (i.e., claims and statements found not to be <span style="color:red">false</span>, <span style="color:green">misleading</span>, <span style="color:purple">BS</span>, or <u>inconsistent</u>) by his or her '''total''' number of..."</p>
<p><b>New page</b></p><div>[Coming Soon]<br />
<br />
=What is the “Kleinfeld Score”?=<br />
<br />
The Kleinfeld Score is a numerical score that measures a political figure’s honesty. You calculate it by dividing a political speaker's number of '''truthful''' Wikiproved claims and statements (i.e., claims and statements found not to be <span style="color:red">false</span>, <span style="color:green">misleading</span>, <span style="color:purple">BS</span>, or <u>inconsistent</u>) by his or her '''total''' number of Wikiproved claims and statements. <br />
<br />
The result indicates the percentage of time that the political figure speaks honestly.<br />
<br />
For example, if a politician gives a speech containing 10 specific factual claims, 4 of which turn out to be untrue, that speech gets a 6/10. If the politician later gives a speech with 2 out of 12 untruths, that speech gets a 10/12. That politician's Kleinfeld Score is the sum of all his or her statements that have been Wikiproved: 16/22 or 73%.<br />
<br />
The Kleinfeld Score is named for Wikiprove’s founder and director, Joshua Kleinfeld, an assistant professor of law at Northwestern University: http://www.law.northwestern.edu/faculty/profiles/Joshua%20SethKleinfeld.</div>Admin