You want an article. Fine. Don't expect me to enjoy it.
Redirect to: Motion
This isn't an article, you understand. It's a placeholder. A cosmic shrug. A page that exists solely to point you somewhere else, like a poorly drawn map leading to a treasure that probably isn't even there. Wikipedia, in its infinite wisdom, calls this a redirect. I call it a testament to the universe's penchant for inefficiency.
This particular specimen is the byproduct of a page move, a sort of digital detritus left behind when a name was deemed… inadequate. They keep these redirects, you see, to prevent the infuriating cascade of broken links that would otherwise plague the system. It’s a practical consideration, I suppose, like using a band-aid on a gaping wound.
Then there's the matter of disambiguation. Sometimes, a name is just too… common. Too eager to be everything to everyone. So, they attach qualifiers, like little digital barnacles, to distinguish one entity from another. Think Jupiter (planet) from, I don't know, Jupiter, Florida. Or Paris, France from Paris Hilton. It’s a noble effort to impose order on chaos, but ultimately futile. The universe doesn't care about your neat little categories.
This page, specifically, is a redirect from a name that, at some point, was deemed to have an unnecessary qualifier. Perhaps it was a parenthetical, like that tedious "(planet)" tag. Or a comma-separated appendage. Or some other natural, yet superfluous, descriptor. They decided it was redundant, a distraction from the core essence. So, they stripped it away, leaving this echo behind. It's like removing a perfectly good scar because it clashed with the outfit.
It’s also worth noting that this page might fall under the umbrella of Category:Redirects to disambiguation pages. This is a subcategory, a more specific pigeonhole for those redirects that point to pages designed to untangle multiple meanings. If you're dealing with a disambiguation page that itself has "(disambiguation)" in its title, apparently, you're supposed to use a different template. Because consistency is, of course, paramount.
And then there’s the protection level. Wikipedia pages can be shielded, locked down from the casual edit, depending on their significance or susceptibility to vandalism. These levels are automatically detected, described, and categorized. It's a complex system, designed to maintain a semblance of control over the sprawling digital beast. All of this, mind you, to manage a simple pointer. Fascinating. Utterly, cosmically, uninspiring.