User:TheMadBaron
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Hello. I'm TheMadBaron. I've been away. I'm back. With a vengeance.
Boxy Boxy
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Slash and burn....
I'm an unashamed deletionist. I'd be an inclusionist if there weren't already far too many of the feckers going completely overboard. You'll often find me on AfD advocating the deletion of absolutely everything. Having said that, I'm not above attempting the occasional Cleanup.
Rock and WHAT????!!!!
I'm engaged in an ongoing project to replace inappropriate links to rock and roll with links to Rock (music). The way I see it, people who think that all music written after 1959 is "rock 'n' roll" probably shouldn't be writing about music at all....
Recommended reading
- Acoustic Kitty
- As Slow As Possible
- Boston molasses disaster
- Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmnckssqlbb11116
- Cadaver Synod
- Cargo cult
- Chewbacca Defense
- Defenestration
- Flying Spaghetti Monster
- Fucking, Austria
- Holy Umbilical Cord
- Inherently funny words
- Irresistible force paradox
- Jedi census phenomenon
- Joshua A. Norton
- Kenneth Pinyan
- Massachusetts School for Idiotic Children
- Microphone gaffe
- Mill Ends Park
- Rhinoceros Party of Canada (1963–1993)
- Roundhay Garden Scene
- Ryugyong Hotel
- Sealand
- Sniglet
- Soggy biscuit
- Tanganyika groundnut scheme
- The great Wikipedia hyperlink hoax
- United States ex rel. Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff
- War elephant
- Wikipedia:Practical process
- Xenu
- You have two cows
- Zeno of Elea
- Zeroth
The magpie goose (Anseranas semipalmata) is a species of waterfowl found in northern Australia and southern New Guinea. The only living species of the family Anseranatidae, it inhabits open wetlands and is not truly migratory, although it sometimes travels long distances to find food and water. The magpie goose has black-and-white plumage in both sexes, with a long neck and legs and a long hooked bill, and is typically 75 to 90 centimetres (30 to 35 in) long. It feeds on vegetation, both in water and on land, and breeds colonially, often forming large flocks and laying five to fourteen eggs. Populations remain plentiful overall, although reduced from their historical range. The species was formerly widespread in southern Australia but declined there after wetlands used for breeding were drained. The magpie goose is important to Aboriginal Australians as a seasonal food source and for recreational hunting and tourism. This pair of magpie geese was photographed at East Point, a suburb of Darwin in the Northern Territory, Australia.Photograph credit: JJ Harrison
/Articles I started /Things to do /Tool up!


(Smurrayinchester)