User blog comment:Sannse/Five Things Every Admin Should Know - Revisited/@comment-4999100-20171107032438/@comment-24258073-20171107034812

Founders are no different from other users, unless you count that they are automatically given Administrator and Bureaucrat rights when founding the wiki. Founders of wikis are not the owners of the wikis they found. They are just the ones that created them.

And Bureaucrats that are also Administrators are no different from Administrators that aren't Bureaucrats, except that Bureaucrats can grant and revoke rollback, content mod, and admin rights, grant bureaucrat rights, and revoke bot rights.

A Bureaucrat wouldn't even be able to edit a MediaWiki page unless they had Administrator rights. So it doesn't make sense if they could be allowed to revise JavaScript if Administrators couldn't.

On top of that, submitting approval each time is not difficult. And most JavaScript revisions are approved hands down anyway, unless they have something that obviously makes them unfit for approval.

Lastly, if Bureaucrats were allowed to revise editing of JavaScript, then they could make edits to JavaScript that would otherwise be rejected for approval. And the tone of your message creates the impression that Bureaucrats cannot muck up when editing JavaScript which isn't true. Anyone can make a mistake when editing anything.