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@KidAd: Re Special:Diff/1067272573 and Special:Diff/1067275777, how does saying he is Black in the lead violate MOS:ETHNICITY, which says Ethnicity, religion, or sexuality should generally not be in the lead unless it is relevant to the subject's notability. You can't seriously be saying that his being Black is not relevant to his notability? It's noted by every source--literally every single one in the article. Multiple sources note that he'd be the first Black person elected to statewide office in 150 years. I don't understand your thought process here. Levivich17:16, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah and we're gonna have a discussion about that. The global consensus is "unless it is relevant to the subject's notability", so either folks can go and try to change that global consensus at MOS:ETHNICITY, or they can make an argument that being Black isn't relevant to the subject's notability. I'm seeing neither one happening here. Levivich17:41, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Just from a cursory Google search, I see that CBS News calls him a "progressive activist," NPR calls him a "longtime community activist," Black Enterprise calls him a "Democrat and social justice activist," Yahoo News calls him a "passionate activist," etc. etc. I cannot find one source that calls him a "black activist." KidAd • SPEAK18:03, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
OK, not every single one. CBS News: Chambers, who is Black, .... NPR doesn't mention he's Black. Black Enterprise is obviously not going to mention that the Black people they profile are Black, since that goes without saying. "Yahoo! News" is actually an article by MadameNoire. Neither Black Enterprise or MadameNoir are included in our Wikipedia article. NPR, Black Enterprise, and MadameNoir all include a photograph of him (our Wikipedia article does not).
But let's look at other in-depth sources for the article, like: Rolling Stone: Chambers grew up in North Baton Rouge — on the Black side of town ... If he succeeds, he’ll be the first Black man elected to statewide office in Louisiana since P.B.S Pinchback in 1873, who won a Senate seat but was never seated due to a contested election claim by white opponents.Adweek: If Chambers is elected, he will be the first Black man to hold statewide office in Louisiana in nearly 150 years, since Reconstruction.The Advocate (LA's largest paper): The other Democrat in the race is a Black progressive who grew up in Baton Rouge and has attracted a horde of online followers with a compelling message against White privilege and for all working people.Nola.com: Chambers is seeking to become the first Black person elected to statewide office in Louisiana since Reconstruction 150 years ago. It's important that he's a Black person running for statewide office in Louisiana. Levivich18:13, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
BTW, "black" was put back into MLK's lead (not in the first sentence, but elsewhere). So no, I don't think the answer is taking it out of Malcom X's lead. For articles without photographs, and for readers who are visually impaired and may not be able to see a photograph, the text should inform the reader that black civil rights leaders are black. It matters that it's not just anyone fighting for the rights of a disadvantaged group, but that it's a member of that group. It matters that MLK was black; it matters that Chambers is black; and if we don't say it, the reader might not know it. Levivich19:35, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah I'm somewhat inclined to try to change Malcolm X's an African-American Muslim minister phrasing, but also disinclined to step into a big hornet's nest. As for Chambers and stating that he is black in the lead, I'm undecided. – Muboshgu (talk) 20:28, 22 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]