flame,
To be fair, the original poster’s comments were general and a link was provided so that the whole of the article could be read. To be a bit
realistic about Wikipedia, maybe, I’ve found that while the nature of the project seems noble sometimes what one finds is so subjective that it’s not really a good source at all for objective views and accurate facts: I wouldn’t accept it as a primary source in a high school paper, really, but if you keep in mind that some bias is going to creep in - sometimes a great deal of bias - it’s fast and useful as a quick and dirty reference but whatever you find needs a more object source. Just as an example, notice the definition correctly attributed to Finney and Wikipedia has a convenient link to Finney should you be interested in him and a quick scroll brings up a warning that portion of the article discussing Finney’s Theology which says “The neutrality of this section is disputed. Please view the article’s talk page.”
Reading the article on Joseph Smith, for instance, one sees a seeming polyglot of pro- and anti-Mormon information that has been fused to produce an article that is somewhat accurate yet - for someone more acquainted with Smith - seems a little too cleaned up with some nifty hagiography and apologetics while some information is just factually incorrect (much of which is in Smith’s favor).
So although I don’t think you judged the original poster’s comments harshly at all, and you did do some research to point out the times and places of origin of the various groups mentioned, I’d just like to point out that while Wikipedia can provide some interesting and varied information (and having every other word linked to another article can become a bit like channel surfing for hours on end) I don’t think anyone should use the site as anything but a place with some fun facts but facts that need other sources to verify the accuracy of what is written.
I notice that you’ve linked to Wikipedia for about 1/2 of your sources and I’d say that is a good percentage as it’s likely that about 1/2 of the data from that source is accurate!
Sorry if I’ve rambled a bit - I just wanted to make a point about referring to a single source for information: in this instance, a very specific single source. My take on the phenomena is similar to Deb’s - “I keep thinking, was there something in the water in upstate New York?”