Possible Duplicate:
Require Second Opinion for Flagged Answers
Please see this question, from Literature StackExchange: Why is the Scarlet Letter so popular in school? This was the first version of the answer I flagged:
The University of Wisconsin explains this as:
"The Scarlet Letter attained an immediate and lasting success because it addressed spiritual and moral issues from a uniquely American standpoint. In 1850, adultery was an extremely risque subject, but because Hawthorne had the support of the New England literary establishment, it passed easily into the realm of appropriate reading..."
Basically, It contains a timeless, yet distinctly american view of the 1850's.
This answer was entirely sourced from a quote from the University of Wisconsin. It contains ONE sentence of original content which is factually incorrect, grossly so, by a difference of 200 years! The Scarlet Letter was set in 1640, but written in 1850. This is not subjective! It is a fact* and a rather important and relevant one for this question.
I flagged this. The flag was declined, because it would have been a more appropriate thing to make a comment about the answer, not flag it. I didn't want to do that initially, because I didn't want to seem super rude e.g.
"This answer is so totally inadequate. It is such a casual copy
and paste that it is wrong by 200 years! SNARK!"
But I did as suggested, and in polite terms. The log is heavily edited, so I cannot access my original response, nor the moderator's replies to me. Sorry! I just found it: Me, in the content of the flag:
This answer is wrong! The Scarlet Letter is not about America in the 1850's! It was written in that time period by Nathaniel Hawthorne, but the book takes place in the days of Puritan New England. This needs to be changed, particularly since the question includes comments like "everyone has to read this book in school"! – Sep 22 '11 at 21:20
Response:
declined - Hey, this would have done more use as a comment ON the answer...
Unfortunately, I can't see who provided that response, unlike on other SE sites. There was a name accompanying the moderator's denial of my flag, and reply, but it was the same name as the person who had answered the question (but moderators don't respond to flags about their own questions).
Following this, the answer was changed:
The University of Wisconsin explains this as:
The Scarlet Letter attained an immediate and lasting success because it addressed spiritual and moral issues from a uniquely American standpoint. In 1650, adultery was an extremely risque subject, but because Hawthorne had the support of the New England literary establishment, it passed easily into the realm of appropriate reading.
Basically, It contains a timeless, yet distinctly american view of the 1850's.
Note that the respondent altered the quote itself, from 1850 to 1650! The source, which is a decent one, did, and still reads as 1850. The source is correct! It is the respondent on Literature Stack Exchange who is misinterpreting the meaning of the quotation though. The original content, the single sentence, is STILL incorrect, as it should be 1650's, not 1850's (and the fact that any nationality, American or otherwise, should have a capital letter).
I decided to just answer the question myself. However, the other answer remained the selected "best choice" answer. It still is. This was the final version which further edits the quoted source material:
The University of Wisconsin explains this as:
The Scarlet Letter attained an immediate and lasting success because it addressed spiritual and moral issues from a uniquely American view of the 1650's. As it was written around 1850, adultery was an extremely risque subject, but because Hawthorne had the support of the New England literary establishment, it passed easily into the realm of appropriate reading.
Basically, It contains a timeless, yet distinctly american view of the 1650's as seem through the lens of the 1850's.
The single sentence of original content STILL has errors (although, finally, the correct date for the novel's setting was given!), "American", and "seen" (not "seem"). These aren't picky little details, as the venue is Literature StackExchange. Meanwhile, my answer is the one that was marked with "Community edit". (Why wasn't the other answer corrected by "Community"?)
What is the appropriate course of action here?
(The source document is available for comparison.)
* Puritan New England was a time period in the 1600's, not the 1800's! The Scarlet Letter was written in the 1850's, but took place between 1640 and 1645. This is not a matter of debate. Hawthorne says that is when it was set. The historical context is consistent with that time period. There are no disputes, in academic or popular opinion about this.