No, it does not, hence the name. It is a reaction to the way Wikipedia has been taken over, not an honest effort to create a true encyclopedia.
A better solution would be to create a Wikiproxy which adds the missing viewpoints to Wikipedia articles without throwing out the baby with the bathwater. This will be impossible for some articles which are too heavily slanted but even there such articles can be included as an addendum to real NPOV articles. Such a proxy should do away with the 'Perennial Sources' scam which is used by Wikipedia to keep out dissenting voices, relying on editors to weed out nonsense.
Now that I think of it there might be a way to get something off the ground fairly quickly by creating a 'meta-encyclopedia engine' which pulls in articles from several user-definable sources, e.g. Wikipedia, Britannica, Everything2 and whatever other sources [1] and allows editors to comment on subjects by referring to content from upstream articles as well as by adding their own content.
A better solution would be to create a Wikiproxy which adds the missing viewpoints to Wikipedia articles without throwing out the baby with the bathwater. This will be impossible for some articles which are too heavily slanted but even there such articles can be included as an addendum to real NPOV articles. Such a proxy should do away with the 'Perennial Sources' scam which is used by Wikipedia to keep out dissenting voices, relying on editors to weed out nonsense.
Now that I think of it there might be a way to get something off the ground fairly quickly by creating a 'meta-encyclopedia engine' which pulls in articles from several user-definable sources, e.g. Wikipedia, Britannica, Everything2 and whatever other sources [1] and allows editors to comment on subjects by referring to content from upstream articles as well as by adding their own content.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_online_encyclopedias