Talk:Gene Robinson/Archive 2
This is an archive of past discussions about Gene Robinson, for the period 2009. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Explanation of removal of sent
I removed this from Gene Robinson#Allegations of impropriety:
- [quotation removed by Tb; see below]
The assertion is plausible, but unverified; worse yet, verification of it is an implausible prospect, since it would involve proving a negative about an enormous and poorly defined group of people.
And even if it were to be verified, it would appear to be excluded under SYN.
--Jerzy•t 20:15, 19 January 2009 (UTC)
- I agree completely. Moreover, because WP:BLP applies to talk pages also, I've removed the sentence from the talk here. It is still available of course in the edit history. Tb (talk) 20:33, 19 January 2009 (UTC)
- It's important that i start by noting Tb's scrupulous approach to documenting removal of material from a signed contrib, and by also saying that all my concerns abt the removal are on behalf of the process issues and the possibility of an appearance of coverup, rather than on behalf of the value of the removed material for use in the accompanying article.
That said, the relevant policy at Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons#Non-article space includes, under "Talk pages", this sentence:
- New material should generally be discussed in order to arrive at a consensus concerning relevance, availability of sources, and reliability of sources.
- which implies to me that the applicability of BLP to talk pages is not a matter of identical application to all namespaces, but contemplates what common sense would demand, which is to maintain proportionality between means and ends, and thus to tolerate questionable material far longer on the talk page than we would on the article:
- _ _ It is far less hazardous here (on the talk page) where the surrounding material challenges its validity than (in the article) where it is permitted to continue to rub elbows with the surrounding material
we are presentingis presented as established fact.
_ _ It is far more useful here where it presents editors with focused occasion to evaluate it, than where its major effect is to cast aspersions on the credibility of elements of the article that are verified or offer most readers a sense of the ring of truth and relevance, while sitting there itself, unverified and requiring acceptance of some sort of conspiracy theory for its relevance to be possible.
- _ _ It is far less hazardous here (on the talk page) where the surrounding material challenges its validity than (in the article) where it is permitted to continue to rub elbows with the surrounding material
- I am prepared only to say "[on the article] far longer", bcz i have turned lazy after determining that the removed sentence spent six months or more in the article, in contrast to this precision: the same material survived on this talk page for 18 minutes.
As to the appearance of a coverup, the hiding of the sentence conceals something that some readers (and some editors) don't know how to uncover for themselves, and that others won't bother to exhume for themselves from the edit history. And a problem with that is that it also conceals the fact that the sentence does not actually criticize Robinson, nor does it actually criticize anyone of failing to criticize him, nor does it actuallycriticize anyone of failing tocriticize anyone who might have failed to criticize those who might have failed to criticize him. It just- says that someone did fail to follow one proposed avenue for evidence supporting criticism those who might have failed to criticize him,
- offers no description of why that statement should be taken seriously,
- offers no defense against the obvious claim that no one making that statement could have a reasonable basis for believing it to be true, and
- does all this in a context
thatwhere evenif provenproof would make it of interest only as a clue to a tacit conspiracy among those three parties to avoid the various criticisms (and thus a SYN violation).
- By continuing to suppress the statement from the talk page
', WP offers itself as a logical candidate as a fourth-level party in the hierarchy of such a conspiracy (and thus a SYN violation).
Do i need to say that the rapid suppression on this talk page is about the worst response i can imagine? Unless, i mean, someone would like to add a graphic of their Illuminatist Conspiracy membership card to the talk page.
--Jerzy•t 08:51 & 09:54, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
- It's important that i start by noting Tb's scrupulous approach to documenting removal of material from a signed contrib, and by also saying that all my concerns abt the removal are on behalf of the process issues and the possibility of an appearance of coverup, rather than on behalf of the value of the removed material for use in the accompanying article.
- I agree completely. Moreover, because WP:BLP applies to talk pages also, I've removed the sentence from the talk here. It is still available of course in the edit history. Tb (talk) 20:33, 19 January 2009 (UTC)
Coming out
Under the Gene Robinson#Coming out subsection, I'm having a hard time understanding why the following content is in this subsection:
Robinson became Canon to the Ordinary in 1988, the executive assistant to the then bishop of New Hampshire, Douglas Theuner. Robinson remained in this job for the next seventeen years until he was elected bishop.[1] Robinson and his daughters are very close. Ella actively helped her father with public relations at the General Convention in 2003. Just a week before the General Convention, Robinson had been with his daughter Jamee and held his four-hour-old first granddaughter.[1] He now has two granddaughters.[2][3]
In February 2006, Robinson was treated at an inpatient rehabilitation facility to deal with his "increasing dependence on alcohol".[1] Diocesan officials were surprised by the news and asserted that they did not notice his alcoholism affect his ministry in any way. The Episcopal Church, through its General Convention, has long recognized alcoholism as a treatable human disease, not a failure of character or will. The members of the Standing Committee issued a statement fully supporting Robinson.[4] He returned to work in March 2006.[5]
What does any of that content, especially the alcohol abuse content, have to do with his "coming out"?? - ℅ ✰ALLST☆R✰ echo 03:44, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
Agree, the rehab comes long after coming out, after consecration, and after the he began living under 24 hour protection because of death threats - which have not been included (has anybody tried to source that yet?). Mish (talk) 22:42, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
Death threats, bulletproof vests and protection: [1][2][3] Mish (talk) 16:48, 25 April 2009 (UTC)
- I've tweaked it a bit, it was tied to the chronology more than anything else. -- Banjeboi 15:41, 26 April 2009 (UTC)
V. Gene Robinson's birth name
Would it be against Wikipedia standards to state that his birth name was Victoria Imogene Robinson? If properly sourced. --Frissell (talk) 20:02, 14 April 2009 (UTC)—Preceding unsigned comment added by Frissell (talk • contribs) 19:31, 3 April 2009 (UTC)
- I doubt you can find such a source, since his name was and is Vicki Gene Robinson. The Wednesday Island (talk) 22:44, 14 April 2009 (UTC)
- Normal Wikipedia style is to give the bio subject's full name in bold at the start of the atticle, even if it's not the common name. That includes cases where the bio subject uses his or her middle name. For example, the article about the 28th President is at Woodrow Wilson but it begins, "Thomas Woodrow Wilson...." Is there a reason not to do the same thing here? JamesMLane t c 23:58, 20 April 2009 (UTC)
- None I can see. The Wednesday Island (talk) 00:20, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
- I would advise caution in this regard since the article is about a living person. I would say no to changing the lead if the real purpose or intent were just to tease or ridicule him or to direct unnecessary attention to a name he rarely uses. clariosophic (talk) 03:49, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
- The information is already in the article. It's just buried. My purpose in changing it would be to provide the information in the standard format we use for all bios, whether the subject is living or dead. The BLP policy doesn't apply here. (If you want an example of a living person, see the Lil' Kim article, which begins with her full legal name.) In any event, a proposed edit stands or falls on its own merit, regardless of the motivation of the editor. JamesMLane t c 09:54, 21 April 2009 (UTC)
- There's no need to put it in the lede but you can certainly add it to the infobox. This just isn't that notable of an item. -- Banjeboi 04:47, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- Notability doesn't enter into it. It's simply a matter of what's set forth in the MoS: "While the article title should generally be the name by which the subject is most commonly known, the subject's full name should be given in the lead paragraph, if known." (from Wikipedia:Manual of Style (biographies)#Names) It's not notable that Woodrow Wilson, like Gene Robinson, is always referred to by his middle name, with the first name being known only to a few people. Nevertheless, his article begins with "Thomas Woodrow Wilson" in boldface. In fact, every Wikipedia bio article I know of begins with the subject's full name in boldface, unless we don't (yet) know the full name. JamesMLane t c 05:54, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- As has been pointed out the only reason there seems to be to emphasize it in the lede would be to disparage the subject so I would lean on WP:IAR concerning that MOS point much as we do on articles for people who transition gender and birthnames don't match their gender identity. This is a bit of a judgement call and the consensus seems to be leaning toward leaving it off the lede for now. -- Banjeboi 09:45, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- Notability doesn't enter into it. It's simply a matter of what's set forth in the MoS: "While the article title should generally be the name by which the subject is most commonly known, the subject's full name should be given in the lead paragraph, if known." (from Wikipedia:Manual of Style (biographies)#Names) It's not notable that Woodrow Wilson, like Gene Robinson, is always referred to by his middle name, with the first name being known only to a few people. Nevertheless, his article begins with "Thomas Woodrow Wilson" in boldface. In fact, every Wikipedia bio article I know of begins with the subject's full name in boldface, unless we don't (yet) know the full name. JamesMLane t c 05:54, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- I don't understand your reference to people who transition gender. Some people change their names during their lives, for that reason or for any number of other reasons. The MoS (in Wikipedia:Manual of Style (biographies)#Names) addresses that situation:
- In some cases, subjects have legally changed their names at some point after birth. In these cases the birth name should be given as well:
- (from Bill Clinton): William Jefferson Clinton (born William Jefferson Blythe III on August 19, 1946) …
- In some cases, subjects have legally changed their names at some point after birth. In these cases the birth name should be given as well:
- This rule is fully applicable to transgendered people. See, for example, Patrick Califia, which begins: "Patrick Califia (formerly known as Pat Califia)...."
- I assure you that there's no intent on my part to disparage the subject. I raised the point because I saw that the initial was used at the beginning of the article, which made me think that we didn't know the full name, and I then discovered that we did have the information but had buried it. It's certainly not correct to say that the only reason is emphasis (for whatever purpose); I made clear that my reason is MoS compliance. There's quite an array of people whose bios follow the standard format -- Woodrow Wilson, Lil' Kim, Bill Clinton, and Patrick Califia. There's no reason to make an exception for Gene Robinson just because some nutjob homophobes hate him.
- As for the alleged consensus, two editors (The Wednesday Island and myself) favor following the MoS, one (you, Banjeboi) is opposed, and one (clariosophic) is opposed if the purpose is ridicule. If, having considered the MoS, you and clariosophic remain opposed, then we should probably prepare an RfC to get additional opinions. JamesMLane t c 14:44, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- I should perhaps point out that Robinson is someone I respect and admire; I still believe we should follow the MoS. The Wednesday Island (talk) 15:11, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- My source would be the exact Concord Monitor article footnoted to establish his birth name. See: http://www.deimel.org/church_resources/monitor_profile.htm "Charles and Imogene Robinson had counted on a girl, so Robinson's father named the baby Vicky Imogene Robinson".Frissell (talk) 14:58, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
- I don't think anyone doubts the information is true. The question is does adding into the lede help our readers understand the subject better or does it cause more problems. Perhaps a footnote on the current name that delves into this so next time someone wonders the information is readily available would work? And the correlation to transgender BLPs is that if we have evidence someone wants this information minimised we do so. We don't have to have it in the lede, the infobox and prominently discussed. Sometimes we downplay the information to focus less on their gender transition and more on all the other aspects about them that are notable. -- Banjeboi 00:12, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
- We begin a bio with the bio subject's name. That's how we begin all our bios. I don't see how following an invariant policy focuses attention on a fact (one that is, as you note, undisputed).
- Considerations of how to handle a name change don't shed much light on the case of a person like Robinson whose name has not changed. I'll note, however, that there's no problem with giving undisputed information about different names that the person has used. The MoS example is Bill Clinton. Nobody seems to have argued that the beginning of his article gives undue weight to the death of his biological father and his subsequent use of his stepfather's surname. It just reports the facts about his name, with the explanation coming later in the article.
- If you're concerned about giving it too much attention, I think that relegating the subject's full name to a footnote -- a procedure that I don't recall ever seeing in any comparable case -- would make it stand out more, not less. As for a person's desire that particular information be minimized, I don't accord that any weight, but even if we apply it in this instance, we would honor it by giving the person's preferred nickname in quotation marks. Just as the Jerrold Nadler article begins "Jerrold Lewis "Jerry" Nadler....", this one would begin "Vicky Imogene "Gene" Robinson...." (I'd go with "Vicky", not "Vicki", on the basis of the source found by Frissell.) JamesMLane t c 16:31, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
- Sorry, I am opposed to this after doing a quick Google search turning up 10 ghits all derivatives of this page suggesting that we are not following how anyone presents this information but our own convention. That is no one is using this unique way and we seemingly are going out of our way to disparage a BLP subject which is a really bad idea. We do not lead, we follow. Until we get some FA writers to guide the most logical way to present this I think what we have is fine. Do you have any reliable sources the subject prefers their name spelled out that way? To suggest Right Reverend Vicki "Gene" Robinson will in any way help our readers understand the subject better seems disingenuous at best. -- Banjeboi 16:51, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
- I confess the truth of your charge against me: My proposal is indeed that we follow our own convention, even though other sites follow their own conventions instead. Yup, I'm busted good on that one.
- I object, however, to your repeated but unsupported assertion that the purpose of following our convention is to disparage. This article on Robinson was created on August 5, 2003. As of that date, the MoS page on biographies was already several months old, and already called for beginning the article with the subject's name, even if that name wasn't the one most commonly used (see the "Slim Pickens" example here). Was that MoS page deliberately set up that way so as to facilitate the subsequent disparagement of Gene Robinson? and the policy is applied to U.S. presidents and rap stars and scores of thousands of other people just to provide cover for our mockery of Gene Robinssn? It's like saying that it's disparaging for us to refer to him as "Robinson" when many other sources say "Rev. Robinson" or "Mr. Robinson".
- You ask, "Do you have any reliable sources the subject prefers their name spelled out that way?" No. I haven't even looked. I'll look when the MoS says "Present the name of a living person in the form preferred by the bio subject." When you get the MoS changed to say that, we'll go fix the Mitt Romney article, too, because he sure as heck doesn't like to be called "Willard". (By the way, I'm not urging such a change. BLP-mania has already gone way too far on Wikipedia, and I regret to say that there might be some support for changing the policy so as to eliminate or bury the "Willard" and "Vicki" information.) Unless and until that change is approved, though, we should apply the MoS as it currently stands. JamesMLane t c 21:43, 23 April 2009 (UTC)
- I'll follow up to recruit some FA writers who know this area well to see if they can provide relevant insight on which way might be best. -- Banjeboi 03:10, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
- Looking through the above, how about this? Is it clear from sources that the Bp does not use either baptismal name and has effectively replaced them with 'V Gene'? So he is Bp V Gene Robinson, that is his title and name, regardless of his baptismal name. To refer to somebody using a name they do not themselves choose (or like) or use is disrespectful. However, as you say, there was a baptismal name that differs and this is suggested in the source given below. I am not personally convinced that it was not Victoria, but you are going by the available evidence which stands unless shown to be Victoria from different sources - that would need to come next, as per other biographies, as (born Vicky Imogene Robinson, etc...), not what is inline in the text further on (Vicki Gene Robinson) which cannot be supported from the cited source. I'm not sure this makes him an object of ridicule, although I understand that some would use it that way. Mish (talk) 09:05, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with you that we shouldn't use "Victoria" unless someone finds a reliable source that gives that as his name. Where I disagree with you is that you're taking the fact that he's commonly known by a variant of his baptismal name and you're trying to analogize that to a formal name change. That's not accurate. He's not like Bill Clinton, whose name did change (as a result of his mother's remarriage) and whose bio begins with both names. He's not like Slim Pickens, who adopted a stage name and whose bio also begins with both names. He's more like Barney Frank, in that he's universally known by a nickname derived from his "official" name. In Robinson's case, the nickname is from his middle name, but even when someone is known by his middle name, we begin the article with the full name -- see Woodrow Wilson and Mitt Romney. And, speaking of Woodrow Wilson, let's not forget Woodrow Wilson Guthrie. How many people could tell you his official name? Virtually none. He effectively replaced it, to use your phrase. Nevertheless, his article begins "Woodrow Wilson "Woody" Guthrie...." That article, Barney Frank, and Jerrold Nadler are examples of how we begin bios of people known by a nickname. They're the model for what we should do here. JamesMLane t c 14:12, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
I take your point, but think you are in error, he is consecrated "The Right Reverend V. Gene Robinson" [4], and that is his formal episcopal title, so that is his name, not a nickname - I very much doubt the presidents you referred to were inaugurated 'Bill' or 'Woody', but using their real names. The same is true for other Bishops - I'm not aware of any consecrated using nicknames, although may be referred to by nickname by people known to them. Whether one agrees with his consecration or not, it still stands and this is the title by which he should be referred. It is common practice in the church for people to undergo re-naming on taking up formal offices or taking religious vows - I doubt very much you will find other religious figures not listed using the name associated with their formal title, for example Pope_Benedict_XVI. To make this case an exception because 'V Gene' is similar to 'Vicky Imogene' is perjorative. Somebody mentioned trangender. Well, intersex is a closer parallel, and when children are found have been 'wrongly' assigned a sex and name at birth they may have their sex and names changed while they are still very young, and from that point the new sex and name stands, they stop using the 'wrong' name, rather the one that makes sense for the gender that was reassigned, for example, Cheryl_Chase_(activist) (on the point about transgender adults, they are also referred to by their current name, not their birth-name Del_LaGrace_Volcano, and the details listed when available in the public domain. If somebody has changed their name (which in this case happened either early on in his life when it was understood he was a boy, or formally during consecration - we do not seem to know) then this is the usage that should stand. You may see this as a nickname, but that is a POV, because it has clearly been formalised at some point as his real name. Mish (talk) 16:48, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
- I don't accept your assumption that the way he's listed on a church website establishes the equivalent of a formal name change. You misunderstand about Wilson -- "Woody" was never a nickname of his -- but if you want to look at presidential inaugurations, then the use of a nickname is not unheard of. The 1977 inauguration went: " I, Jimmy Carter do solemnly swear... " [5] I think he signed bills into law that way, too. That doesn't mean it was formalized as a name change. Our article about him properly begins: "James Earl "Jimmy" Carter, Jr....." I can also tell you, from personal knowledge, that Congressman Theodore S. Weiss always used "Ted" -- that's how he was listed in Congressional directories, and when, as a lawyer, I prepared an affidavit for him to sign in connection with a lawsuit, he wanted it to state his name as "Ted Weiss". That doesn't mean we should say "Ted Weiss (born Theodore S. Weiss)". It's correct in its current form: "Theodore S. "Ted" Weiss". Your inference from the church website is, IMO, too thin a reed on which to rest an implicit assertion of a name change.
- Still, if your assumption were accurate, then the current state of this article would still be wrong. The correct way to begin it would be: "V. Gene Robinson (born Vicky Imogene Robinson on May 29, 1947)...." That would satisfy my criterion of including the available information in the first line, in compliance with the MoS, rather than burying it four paragraphs later. There's no such burial in any of the examples you cite. (Incidentally, in Cheryl Chase (activist) her birth name should be in the parenthetical with her birth date, the way Clinton's is, but I'm quite sick of this issue and I don't intend to try to fix it there.)
- My preferred approach here would be: Begin the article with "Vicky Imogene "Gene" Robinson"; in the later text, retain the current explanation of why he was given a typically female name; and add, probably at that point, that he now uses "V. Gene Robinson" as his formal name for church purposes. I'd guess that he was always known as "Gene" even as boy, and if we find a reliable source that supports that, we could add it in, too. Alternatively, if most editors think that this should be treated as the equivalent of a formal name change, then I could live with "V. Gene Robinson (born Vicky Imogene Robinson on May 29, 1947)...." JamesMLane t c 19:55, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
I agree that it and could read, "V. Gene Robinson (born Vicky Imogene Robinson on May 29, 1947)...." and would be personally be OK with that, because at some point, between Baptism and consecration, the name has changed. I have written to the diocese to see whether they can confirm the Episcopal website's wording (which would be a valid source) correctly reflects the consecration described, if somebody has access to the year book for the Church it will list the correct name there, but not being in the USA I do not. I realised after I wrote the above that whether a president does use his nickname or not is actually irrelevant - inauguration does not make it his real name, but being consecrated does have this effect (the Pope, comes by his name at the point he is elected and installed as Pope), at the moment the evidence suggests that his real name is the one currently used, unless evidence to the contrary can be provided, the only evidence should stand.
However, for example, Cardinal Basil Hume has a different baptismal name, "George Haliburton Hume", but this is not reflected in the lede which simply lists him as "(George) Basil Hume"; only the body of text refers to the baptismal name. So it does appear in similar contexts the baptismal names are not used in the lede if they are not particularly relevant.
Others will have to say what they think. Mish (talk) 21:49, 24 April 2009 (UTC)
- A private email from the diocese to you would fail WP:V, so we couldn't use it as a valid source in the article. Tell them to post the information on their website so we can quote it! Of course, you can report it here as part of our discussion.
- I don't think Robinson can be analogized to the Pope. A papal name is a different sort of thing. According to our article, a Cardinal comes out and tells the crowd that the new Pope "has conferred upon himself the name ____". Unless there's a source establishing that a consecration is similar, with the newly consecrated bishop authorized to confer a name upon himself, it seems more analogous to Jimmy Carter's inauguration than to the installation of a new Pope.
- As for the Basil Hume article, it's not correct in its current form. There's no mention in the applicable MoS provision of whether a baptismal name is "particularly relevant". The name is simply included, as a matter of course. That's the point of having a Manual of Style -- to create a certain minimum level of uniformity in all the articles of a particular type. JamesMLane t c 02:39, 25 April 2009 (UTC)
- By valid source I meant their website, I was asking them to confirm what the website said was his name. I've now dug up the order of service [[6]]:
- THE CELEBRATION OF HOLY EUCHARIST AND THE ORDINATION AND CONSECRATION OF V. GENE ROBINSON AS BISHOP COADJUTOR OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
- In the Name of the Father, and of the Son and of he Holy Spirit, I, Gene Robinson, chosen Bishop of the Church in New Hampshire, solemnly declare that I do believe the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be the Word of God, and to contain all things, necessary to salvation; and I do solemnly engage to conform to the doctrine, discipline, and worship of The Episcopal Church.
- Neither "Vicky" nor "Imogene" are used, only "Gene" and "V. Gene". I don't have time to look at what you do with other bishops in the USA, and I don't have time to take this further. I'm beginning to think you might be a bit more slack in these things over that side of the pond.
- I also turned up this from the BBC [7]:
- Charles and Imogene Robinson had been preparing for a girl and - reckoning it did not matter much - gave their gravely ill baby the names they had picked out for a daughter - Vicky Imogene. The birth certificate was never changed.
- Most sites (including the media) use "V. Gene Robinson" in the context of his formal title, or simply "Gene Robinson"; the only sites that use "Vicky" (I can find) are sites that don't like his being consecrated. So, it could be argued that calling him Vicky is a term associated with a POV about him and what he 'should' be called, rather than what his name is now.
- I will let you inform the editors of Basil Hume's biography that they need to attend to this at some point, and I realise it is not as pressing as this one. I take your point about the Pope, but Basil changed his name in some way between when he was born and became a cardinal. Whether the style is right or wrong, they should be treated the same way I agree.
- I'd be happy with the suggested solution (although going by the BBC report he appears to have been registered as a girl at birth, but no clear indication of gender/sex then, or formal change of sex/gender or name in childhood). Also, the registration name would be the one that would be relevant at birth, not the baptismal name, he was raised nonconformist so was not baptised until he was 13 - I got them mixed up. Mish (talk) 08:03, 25 April 2009 (UTC)
- Comment. Per MOS we have In general, the relative emphasis given to material in the lead should reflect its relative importance to the subject according to reliable sources. which isn't terribly helpful but the do suggest that reliable sourcng should lead the way and I think they have. It seems all sources avoid using it, the BLP subject avoids it and no one else really uses it either. I'm still digging through to see if it has any set policy but still posit that it's really not needed or helpful in the lede and may be causing harm to do so. They also have for all MOS guidelines - though it is best treated with common sense and the occasional exception. As we are arguably the main source for information on this living person I feel we should adhere to minimizing it and only mentioning it as an aside in the birth section, they never bothered to change it. -- Banjeboi 16:56, 26 April 2009 (UTC)
- The foregoing comment by Banjeboi establishes that we do not have and probably will not reach consensus. We can begin preparing the Request for Comment now, or we can wait a bit if Mish thinks that a communication from the diocese in the near future might shed some light on the matter. Mish, what do you think? JamesMLane t c 21:51, 26 April 2009 (UTC)
- I'm in no rush, but I'm not holding my breath either. I asked the diocese for clarification on a different aspect of this situation back in Nov 2006, and never received a reply then (respect for privacy may have meant they felt unable to answer). I think that both approaches hold merit (either a bracketed reference following the lede, or leave as is in the body text). Given that most of the 'hate sites' already have some variation of the registered name already, it won't be news to his detractors. I don't see it as a stigma to be given a girl's name at birth, even for a man, in the way those of sites seem to. On Wikipedia, however, it lacks a certain sensitivity to the circumstances of his birth not to deal with this sensitively - and locates this entry in a certain position that reflects the usage of hate sites than the mainstream media. This would be a precedent if it were accepted. I cannnot see that just because somebody did not have their male name formally ratified along with their male gender after birth, that it makes sense to insist that they be referred to by a name given mistakenly on what proved to be a false assumption. Being male seems to overrule the birth certificate, as clearly it was invalid. He proved not to be a girl, so why insist now he be identified with a girl's name?
- Wikipedia itself seems fairly inconsistent in how this policy is applied: John Wayne has 'John Wayne' in the lede, and not 'Marion Robert Morrison', which only appears in the body text; Dean Martin, on the other hand has the birth-name in brackets after 'Dean Martin'. They are dead, so not as pressing or problematic as a BLP - but as I understand it BLPs need to be handled sensitively, so I am unclear why the leniency (or laxity) that is accommodated elsewhere is being resisted here.
- What I would appeal to is respect for the subject, that policies are guidelines not rules, so variations can be made; however, if such respect is lacking, then by all means RfC. The better way would be to come to consensus, and to that end I would agree with Benji if it resolved the matter. You could agree too, the sky would not fall on our heads, and there need be no more discussion. Mish (talk) 00:29, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Leave the man's name as he wishes to be known in the lead paragraph. The MoS is, as mentioned, a guideline, and not a rule. The unfortunate choice of name for his son (that he thought would never live to answer to it), shouldn't be made an opportunity for disparaging that son. "Jimmy" Carter's full name wasn't the source of humour for his opponents, nor for that matter where those of any of the others brought forward in the argument for following the MoS. I don't think the lead paragraph is the proper place to make mention of the 'full name'. Leave it down in the 'early childhood' section. Just my thoughts. Bo (talk) 01:20, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- What I would appeal to is respect for the subject, that policies are guidelines not rules, so variations can be made; however, if such respect is lacking, then by all means RfC. The better way would be to come to consensus, and to that end I would agree with Benji if it resolved the matter. You could agree too, the sky would not fall on our heads, and there need be no more discussion. Mish (talk) 00:29, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- Mish, thanks for the information about what we can expect from the diocese. I agree with you that there's no stigma attached to Robinson's name. My purpose isn't to disparage Gene Robinson; my purpose is to set up the article so that it best serves our readers, who can reasonably expect to find such information in the introductory section. To depart from the MoS by burying the information, in the name of sensitivity to a living person, would be buying into the "stigma" point of view. The BLP policy says that negative or contentious information must be properly sourced, but I don't see this information as falling in that category. Even if the information were negative, it's properly sourced. No one contends that "V. Gene Robinson" was his birth name.
- I don't agree that Wikipedia is "fairly inconsistent" on this point. I'd say that Wikipedia has a Manual of Style, that it's largely followed, but that in a project that maintains millions of articles and relies on volunteers, some mistakes are made. (As another example, the MoS is absolutely clear that section headings are to be in sentence case. Nevertheless, many aren't. To find an example for you, I just did a "Random article" cruise, and hit 1993 Little League World Series on approximately the tenth try. That mistakes are made doesn't mean the MoS is just a helpful suggestion.) As for John Wayne, that article followed the correct format for much of its existence -- see this version. It was changed in this edit by an editor with less than one week's experience, whose ES asked, "is this relevant to the opening?" -- evincing the new editor's ignorance of the MoS. That no one editing John Wayne has bothered to correct the error is unfortunate, but that omission on their part doesn't constitute an amendment of the MoS.
- You're right that the sky wouldn't fall on our heads if this article were left in the incorrect format. We will also survive if the article is corrected. The discussion has sought consensus, but neither side has been persuaded, nor has either side decided to view the matter as minor and acquiesce. Therefore, the appropriate next step is to go to RfC, to get wider input. JamesMLane t c 04:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- You miss my point, the triviality is in seeking to apply a policy when it makes no sense to apply it, simply in order to ensure conformity to the letter rather than to serve the purpose of the policy. What is not trivial is using the policy in a way that it operates detrimentally to the subject, and puts Wikipedia in a position where it treats an individual in the same way as a hate group. I see no stigma, you say you don't either, and who knows how the subject see this. Sites that would be inadmissible in a biography here give this information prominence by using it as his name, rather than simply referring to it, do so they see it as derogatory. Does it make sense to follow their usage, rather than the name the subject now uses? Mish (talk) 06:45, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- "[P]urpose is to set up the article so that it best serves our readers" - exactly. Our readers expect the lede to effectively summarize the rest of the article. This does that. Adding Vicky or any surprising information that seems quite trivial doesn't help. It creates more questions which then have to be answered - in this case we'd need to explain as a newborn he was very sick so the doctor asked the young couple for a name for both the birth and death certificates, blah blah blah - too trivial and too much for the lede. Luckily it is discussed immediately in the early life section. So if anyone was somehow alarmed that we didn't immediately to them what that "V." was for they get the answer in the very next paragraph. -- Banjeboi 07:51, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
Setting up the RfC
First, I've reverted the collapsing of the thread. Collapsing would generally be a bad idea when it would make it less convenient for RfC respondents to see the whole discussion. If it were to be collapsed, there would be no justification for hiding all my comments about the MoS -- including direct quotations -- while leaving visible Banjeboi's personal interpretation. Anyone concerned about the length can save even more space by collapsing the whole thing, though I personally would prefer that it remain visible.
The better course is to present succinct summaries in the RfC, leaving the entire previous thread visible for those who want more detail. I've seen way too many RfC's that just throw a question at the participants and expect them to wade through a lot of talk-page arguing even to figure out exactly what the issue is, let alone understand the arguments. It's worthwhile to devote some attention to preparing it before posting it.
As I see it there are two issues: (1) Should Robinson's birth name be included at the top of the article, or omitted there and addressed later? (2) If it's included, should it be presented as his name, with "Gene" in quotation marks as a nickname (as in Jimmy Carter), or should it be presented as a birth name that was subsequently changed (as in Bill Clinton)? The advantage of setting it up as two separate questions is that people who favor the current setup, of not mentioning the birth name until later, would also be able to opine on how to mention it if their view doesn't prevail.
The obvious alternative would be to give the three options and let people choose Version 1 (V. Gene Robinson), Version 2 (Vicky Imogene "Gene" Robinson) or Version 3 (V. Gene Robinson (born Vicky Imogene Robinson on [etc.]). The problem with doing it that way is that people favoring the current version would be excluded from the discussion of how to change it if it's changed.
I've prepared a framework for the RfC at User:JamesMLane/Robinson sandbox. Everyone else is welcome to edit it and/or comment on it, especially to present the summaries of arguments. I'll be working on the argument for including the name. At some point we'll copy it onto this page as a new thread, and then post the RfC. JamesMLane t c 10:33, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
- This is belabouring a rather pointy arguement so allow me to help you since you insist on pushing this. Feel free to add your statement before mine if you wish. -- Banjeboi 03:11, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
- OK, so instead of working with me to prepare a neutral RfC, you just bashed ahead and did it your way. You created a nonneutral statement, one that includes a fact you consider important (it's a BLP) and omits what I consider important (the MoS). You posted the RfC with only your statement of position, not waiting for mine. Evidently, you and I have divergent ideas of what constitutes collaborative editing. By the way, the formatting is messed up so that this entry doesn't display properly as a wikilink at Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Biographies, and I recommend that you fix that while deleting the BLP reference. Nevertheless, as an involved editor, I won't engage in edit warring by modifying your improper RfC. JamesMLane t c 05:19, 28 April 2009 (UTC)
RfC: Is adding Robinson's legal name of Vicky Gene instead of V. Gene appropriate for the lede of this BLP?
Per updated information from the subject of this BLP we've added a footnote in the lede sentence to explain the name but the rest will remain as it has been. Duely weighted content detailling of the name is to remain in the birth section. -- Banjeboi 23:02, 13 May 2009 (UTC) | |||||||||
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(outdent) There is such a policy, of a sort, which is I think generally conducted through OTRS, regarding information which could be a violation of [{WP:BLP]]. I emailed the diocese giving them the information on how to contact OTRS if they had any clear preferences one way or another. Like I said, if, in a reasonable length of time, there is no contact with OTRS, we can reasonably conclude that the subject has no serious objections to our doing as the sources indicate. I expect if OTRS does receive any communication, someone from OTRS will leave a message of some sort here, so that we can know the message was received. John Carter (talk) 16:50, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
Use of birth name vs professional nameWhile there is certainly precedent for listing 'professional name' (birth name) in the lede, it can also be sensible to use the name by which the subject was known when they became 'notable' enough to rate an article in the first place. For example, the lede for singer Beverly Sills uses only that name, with her birth name first mentioned in the 'early career' section. It's the same for John Wayne.So using this pattern in the Robinson article would put the birth name discussion in the 'Early Life' section (where the more extended discussion of the name would fit best anyway) JoanR (talk) 04:34, 30 April 2009 (UTC)
Style vs accuracyFrom what I gather from the above discussion, it is still not sufficiently clear exactly what his birth name was. It would be abysmal style to delve into all the options in the lede, especially as it would have to be in the first sentence. ("Won't somebody think of the readers?") Relegate this discussion to a footnote and/or the background section. Apart from anything else, a full discussion would violate WP:NPOV and Wikipedia:Lead section. Rd232 talk 16:51, 3 May 2009 (UTC)
UpdateI was able to get some clarity on a few issues from Bishop Robinson's office; (i) his legal name is Vicky Gene Robinson, (ii) he solely uses V. Gene Robinson and (iii) the people who use Vicky mainly/solely/primarilly etc. are doing so to disparage him. Based on this, and as I've expressed from the beginning, we should leave things much as they are with the footnote explaining the V. as we now have. -- Banjeboi 18:45, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
Leave it as is. --Secisek (talk) 06:32, 7 May 2009 (UTC) |
- ^ a b c Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "New Hampshire's Bishop Gene Robinson". NPR (Fresh Air from WHYY). 9 December 2004.
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(help) - ^ Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Bibber, Paula (14 February 2006). "Letters from the Bishop and the Standing Committee". Diocese of New Hampshire news release.
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(help) - ^ Robinson, V. Gene (8 March 2006). "Bishop's Return". Diocese of New Hampshire news release.
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