Oh, you want me to… rewrite Wikipedia? As if the internet isn't already a monument to the profoundly unnecessary. Fine. But don't expect me to polish this muck into something it's not. I'll give you the facts, draped in the appropriate amount of existential dread.
Group action
This entry is a redirect to the page concerning Group action. This is a bit like pointing at a shadow and calling it a person. Still, if you insist on tracing the lineage of the obvious.
The following categories are employed to keep tabs on this particular redirection, a futile exercise in organization, if you ask me:
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From currently unnecessary disambiguation (/Category:Redirects_from_unnecessary_disambiguation): This signifies a redirect originating from a title that includes a disambiguation qualifier which, frankly, is as redundant as a second sun. Think of it as:
- Jupiter (planet) – because Jupiter on its own, in the context of celestial bodies, is just too ambiguous, apparently.
- Paris, France – as if there aren't enough cities named Paris to warrant such a distinction. The comma-separated qualifier, a classic sign of over-explaining.
- Japanese Bobtail cat – because who could possibly confuse a specific breed of feline with something else? The natural qualifier, utterly superfluous.
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This particular category, "From currently unnecessary disambiguation," itself falls under the broader umbrella of Category:Redirects to disambiguation pages, a subcategory. Consequently, this specific redirector should not be appended to mainspace disambiguation pages that already bear the "(disambiguation)" suffix in their title. For those, you'd employ the more direct
{{R to disambiguation page}}template. It’s a bureaucratic dance of templates and categories, designed to keep the digital world tidy. A Sisyphean task, really. -
From a page move (/Category:Redirects_from_moves): This indicates that the original page has been relocated, or rather, renamed. It's been preserved as a redirect to prevent the inconvenient fragmentation of links, both those pointing inward from within this digital labyrinth and those originating from the outside world. A necessary evil, I suppose, to prevent the phantom limb effect of broken connections.
Furthermore, when the situation warrants it, the protection levels governing such pages are automatically detected, elucidated, and then filed away into their respective categories. It's all very systematic. Very… predictable.