Committed identity: 9053e0c5dc2bd1c3403a53772edd3ec0e19e02593d637baf56f050ec5eb48a78ef44daba3ea1a6d6344afc42ea939d2cf809b55c4ad565aa3d4e0bfb3c248017 is a SHA-512commitment to this user's real-life identity.
If you have come here because I have reverted an edit of yours:
No, I'm not part of a conspiracy to hide "the truth."
No, I'm not biased against you, and I could be wrong.
If you (hopefully respectfully) disagree with me, come and leave a message on my talk page, described below (click SHOW)
Sometimes, I can make mistakes. That happens, and given one civil message, I can redact the warning, restore your content, and everything should be okay. However, to do so, please comply with some ground rules:
Discuss, in a calm manner, why you disagree with my revert.
If you, in hindsight, actually think I was right, then all is well, and things should be okay.
Lastly, I'm willing to apologise for my actions, but in turn, you should be too. Like me, you're not always right, and please don't insist you are, especially even if I've provided substational evidence to the contrary.
The lead section is an essential
summary of an article, located above the first heading.
In the source text (the text in the edit window), a heading looks like this:
== This is a heading ==
The lead section is a very important part of every article. The length should correspond to the overall length of the article: an article of 50,000 characters might well have a three paragraph lead, while one of 15,000 or less should limit itself to one or two paragraphs. The text should give a good overview of the article, but it should also get the reader hooked and interested in learning more. Take a look at some featured articles for inspiration.
It is often a good idea to align a representative image with the lead by placing [[File:Filename.jpg|thumb|caption]] just before the first heading. (Filename is the name of the desired file and caption is a description of the image).