Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard/Archive 20
This is an archive of past discussions about Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard. 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 main page. |
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Thanksgiving
This looks to have been resolved below, and discussion has died out over the last few days, so I am closing this. If anyone is still not satisfied with the compromise wording that Steven Zhang suggested below, then I suggest talking it out some more on Talk:Thanksgiving, and if necessary bringing it to the Mediation Cabal or an RfC. Best regards, Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 05:39, 16 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion | |||
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Dispute overview
There is a months long dispute in this article about the lede. The very short lede, in the opinion of several editors over the months, is deficient in not summarizing the content of the article. Apparently, there are some editors (Glider87 and Fnagaton) who are adamant that nothing remotely religious be in the lede. The problem with that is the article mostly discusses the origins of this holiday, including religious origins. See, Talk:Thanksgiving#Proposed lede and MOS:LEAD dispute resolution for the most recent discussion. Anupam is accused of pushing POV in the opposite direction. Generally, odd policy rationales, threats of dire wiki consequences, obsessive focus on the history of the dispute instead of moving forward, etc. seem to be employed in the service of preventing progress. In addition, recently, Smallbones has suggested that Glider87 and Fnagaton are single issue editors. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Lots of talk on the talk page. There was an RfC by Anupam, where no conclusion was reached. I most recently requested mediation to no avail.
Provide guidance on relevant policy, and help restore reasoned discussion, in the service of making progress on the article. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:27, 28 January 2012 (UTC) Thanksgiving discussion
If that proposed wording of the lede works for all here, then I'm fine with that. Note: Could another user active at DRN tie this one off? Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 19:43, 7 February 2012 (UTC)
Section break 2How about another suggestion: "Thanksgiving has significance for both religious and secular aspects, as it is recognized in that way across the World." And then after, a one-sentence explanation on the religious aspects and a one-sentence explanation on the secular aspects. How does that do? Whenaxis talk · contribs 01:51, 8 February 2012 (UTC)
I would suggest that all realize that there are many ways to phrase an article that complies with policy, not just one way. Also, rigidness in maintaining that there is only one way to apply policy to an article is not going to achieve anything worthwhile because it is not an accurate statement. Alanscottwalker (talk) 18:11, 9 February 2012 (UTC)
My take on the lede I proposed is that it details that it is primarialy identified as a secular holiday, though other aspects remain. Alternatively, you could use something like "The origins of Thanksgiving had various underlying elements and purposes, providing thanks to religious deities, a prosperous harvest or to commemorate their countries independence. In modern times, it is primarily identified as a secular holiday, though to an extent other observances remain" or something similar. How's that? Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 04:14, 10 February 2012 (UTC)
This is starting to become rather long. The Thanksgiving article at this point states, in the history section "Native Americans also celebrated the end of a harvest season. When Europeans first arrived to the Americas, they brought their own harvest festival traditions, and gave thanks for their safe voyages." The Labor Thanksgiving article says in the second sentence of the lede The law establishing the holiday cites it as an occasion for commemorating labor and production and giving one another thanks. I think this details that there is more than one reason for thanksgiving apart from religious concerns. I also note my concern about points of view here. When this issue first came to DRN, there was very little religious detail in the article, and now it's changing to the other end of the spectrum. I think my lede section is a fine balance based on the reliable sources presented in the article. I don't think continuing to discuss the same points over is going to be productive, either. If we cannot come to a resolution then I would recommend mediation be pursued so the issues can be analysed in detail. Regards, Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 00:56, 11 February 2012 (UTC)
"Thanksgiving has roots in religious and other traditions of thanksgiving. Today, it has been adopted as a secular holiday, so celebrants have added to or discarded these traditions, which now include a diverse array of observances." [adding "and other" before "traditions" in the first sentence.] That works, I think. Alanscottwalker (talk) 19:54, 11 February 2012 (UTC)
OK, let's see what everyone else thinks. Steven Zhang Join the DR army! 23:04, 11 February 2012 (UTC)
Perhaps it should start at the beginning
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Purpose redirected
Zulu Papa 5 has agreed to create a draft broad concept article in his userspace at User:ZuluPapa5/Purpose. Let's bring discussion of this draft back to Talk:Purpose. I will put the page on my watchlist and give suggestions on how to improve new drafts as they appear. Best regards, Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 14:51, 18 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Requesting attention to Viriditas' (V) redirect contribution [2] leading to a dispute at Talk:Purpose#Redirect_roll_back. Despite previously offering to host the article in user space, V has made no real effort to improve the article content. V closed a previous RFC and then implemented a redirect, after the long standing article was re-written with new sources. V's redirect does not meet redirect guidelines, nor does it appear to benefit the Wikipedia reader with useful educational information (see [3] ) which is why we are here at Wikipedia. In this recent dispute, V contented without sources, that the re-written article was POV bias because of a source's 1916 date [4]. Even thought the re-written article has 12 sources from 1290 to 1997 included, and over 6 additional sources have been proposed during the talk discussions. V then demanded tertiary sources, and one was presented in V's scientific area of concern. To justify the redirect, V then contented the article is a wp:coatrack. Despite that What Is not a coatrack guidance says: "An article with a title that can have several meanings, or a term that is used differently in different fields of study, is not a coatrack if it only covers one definition". The article title is a widely applied term, and content can clearly say so. With fair editorial judgment an NPOV article can be made. It is a term which has taken on slightly different meanings in different fields of study, particularly in scientific history. When presented in a NPOV, the sources verify that the term has a notable and significant role in science, philosophy, psychology, linguistics, religion, psychology, machine intelligence and possibly nihilism. Wikipedia is not a directory (or re-directory), it publishes balanced reliably sourced and notable information. The word is found in the dictionary and the thesaurus, which are considered tertiary sources. It has had notable scholars research and apply it within their specific fields of study, each taking a slightly different view to the term, which is why a NPOV article on the term is justified. Despite the term's wide application and important meanings, V contents it's not possible to frame an NPOV article on this term, without embarking into OR grounds. V contents that only by finding a encyclopedia entry or some tertiary source, which V can accept in strict interpretation, can V allow a Wikipedia entry. V is ignoring Wikipedia:WINAC and a reasonable editorial approach, that primary and secondary sources can be fairly attributed to present the term in a properly framed NPOV article. V also rejected a proposal to WP:hatnote the article with sensible editorial judgment, which would assist the Wikipedia reader. Hatnotes are supported by WP:R#PLA, when as in this case, redirecting doesn't make sense. The fact is that Wikipedia has many articles based on terms which have taken on meanings in different field of study, for example: existence, truth, logic, infinity, goal. Each having none to little tertiary support. The common sense editorial approach has been to present the etymology and the historical evolution into fields of study, relevant applications and links to other main articles which deal with the specific applications in detail. This is similar to a disambiguation guide, but with sectioned paragraph content, where careful attention to the sources treatment of the term, and relevant perspectives are presented in NPOV. Wikipedia is not a dictionary nor, is it a publisher of original thought. As a community of diverse contributors, NPOV articles are made which balance the verified sources without presenting new analysis. V also incorrectly proposed an alternative redirect, based on their synthesis of Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry, and the absence of an entry on the specific term. Reference sources treat the term as a word that is distinctly different then V's proposed redirects. Wikipedia is a digital encyclopedia project, and unlike paper encyclopedias, it has presented terms which are then expanded with verified educational content. Without citing adequate sources indicating that a redirect would be appropriate, V has been unable to support the redirect. Likewise, V has been unable to articulate precisely why the specifically written article content presents POV original research, except for attacking me personally as an OR contributor and demanding more sources. Looking closely at WP:Redirect, V's proposed redirects have not served the redirect purposes stated in that guideline. Simply put, the article term has been the specific subject of reliable sources and scholarly research, and an article is justified, as long as it does not present new analysis. NPOV means that when the sources are fairly presented, the reader can decide. If an NPOV article can not be created, then I propose the article should probably be deleted; because, the proposed redirect targets are off base to what sources present for the term. If the common sense of the Wikipedia community will prevail, the article can be made in NPOV state with educational content, and expanded with the proposed sources and as new sources arrive. In this example, it is possible to write a NPOV article, without original research. Users involved
I am concerned that V is biased against religious interpretations of the term being presented in the article.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
There was an RFC, a 3PO and a Wikiquette clarification.
Help interpreting Wikipedia guidelines and polices to support removing the redirect and making a NPOV article to benefit Wikipedia readers. Zulu Papa 5 * (talk) 18:02, 6 February 2012 (UTC) Purpose redirected discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Zulu Papa, I don't think creating a concept dab page needs to be difficult at all, and I can help you with structuring it if you like. Neither does it need to be perfect; it just needs to be reasonably well-sourced and reasonably good at outlining the different encyclopaedic topics relating to the concept of "purpose". I think the basic problem is that so far we have been working from the outside in ("I have some material that discusses purpose in some form, let's put it in the purpose article"), rather than from the inside out ("What are the main aspects of the concept of "purpose" that should be outlined/disambiguated in an encyclopaedia article?"). Viriditas is right when he says that there are no sources to support a Wikipedia article - there simply aren't any modern sources that deal with "purpose" as an overarching concept, because it is so vague. There are only sources that talk about "purpose" in a specific context such as teleology in philosophy, goals in goal-setting theory, etc. The only reason that we can have an article about it at all is because of the WP:CONCEPTDAB guideline - these different encyclopaedic topics are linked together purely by the general meaning of the word "purpose" as defined in the dictionary. As such, I think a very good starting point would be to think of what Wikipedia articles we would include if we were making a traditional disambiguation page. Once we have a list of articles, we can then work out the best way to link them together in prose. The obvious ones to start with are Intention, Goal, and Teleology - can you think of any others? — Mr. Stradivarius ♫ 12:12, 12 February 2012 (UTC)
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University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
88guy88 willing to compromise by sourcing and removing problematic areas. It also appears that Mesconsing is not active within the last little while. Whenaxis talk · contribs | DR goes to Wikimania! 21:57, 19 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
The user Mesconsing added the academic boosterism tag to the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire article. He also made or suggested several helpful edits. However, I felt that the article was disinterested and encyclopedic, not worthy of the academic boosterism tag. A small dispute followed, and eventually Mesconsing accused me of "wikilawerying." I then moved our conversations (which took place on both our user talk pages) to the university's talk page. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I attempted to engage in a constructive and respectful conversation. Mesconsing replied by accusing me of wikilawering. At that point, I decided that an admin should get involved. However, after checking out the dispute resolution guidelines, I felt I should post here first.
I would like to have a third party look at the article (specifically, the introduction and reputation sections) and advise both myself and Mesconsing on the proper way to resolve our dispute. I would also like to make sure the dispute doesn't "blow up" with the parties involved assuming bad faith -- accusations of "wikilawyering," etc. 88guy88 (talk) 00:35, 12 February 2012 (UTC) University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
As your residential Eau Claire mediator (not a UWEC alumni), please do not accuse one another of wikilawyering. It fosters the totally wrong kind of attitude between editors. Consider: 4) You write, "Although many of the peacockisms have citations, they're citations to UWEC promo literature. That's hardly an objective source. Please read the Wikipedia:College and university article guidelines." First, please specify what other "peacockisms" you are refering to. Second, the article is sourced with a combination of both UW-Eau Claire articles and articles from specific rankings institutions. I did not see a section of the guidelines article you pointed me to that disallowed citing articles published by a university. The facts that these articles cover are backed up by other articles from the rankings institutions themselves. [88guy88]
5) You write, "Overall, the tone and the cherrypicking of "facts" cause problems with this article. Example: The placement rate of chemistry graduates is not a widely accepted standard for evaluating colleges, and seems like a silly item to include in a WP article about any college." Please cite a specific wiki guideline that disallows the inclusion of chemistry to PhD rates. It might seem "silly" to you, but that isn't quite enough. Further, clarify the facts you believe are cherrypicked. [88guy88]
Thank you for helping edit this article. 88guy88 (talk) 22:24, 11 February 2012 (UTC) This is clear as day to most editors. Content wise, Mesconsing is completely right. Conduct wise, 88guy88 gets it. Self-published sources, especially when they're promoting a positive image, are almost always wrong to use. Accusing another editor of wikilawyering (twice in one reply to one post, so how could it happen "again"? Seriously, that's a little unfair) is also almost always wrong to do. It seems like an out-of-hand dismissal, and doesn't promote reasoned argument. So: Content, advantage Mesconsing. Conduct, advantage 88guy88. Nobody wins. Just my 2c. Xavexgoem (talk) 02:22, 12 February 2012 (UTC) Thanks for the input. My underlying concern with all of this is not so much related to the sources used as it is to the "academic boosterism" tag. I still feel the aricle is disinterested. The "reputation" section of the article currently reads: In 2012, U.S. News and World Report ranked UW-Eau Claire as the 32nd best Midwestern university out of 146 public and private colleges and as the 5th best university when only public colleges are considered.[1] Eau Claire is categorized as a "tier 1" institution, and is classified as "more selective," one step away from the magazine's highest category, "most selective."[2] The magazine also named UW-Eau Claire the fourth best school in the Midwest in terms of undergraduate teaching.[3] The Princeton Review has named Eau Claire a "Best Value College" (one of 50 such public campuses in the country) and a "Best Midwestern College."[4] The magazine described the school as a "challenging, midsize state university that offers an exceptional and very affordable education" and said that "in terms of its array of majors and minors, Eau Claire compares favorably with much larger schools. As one example, more than 700 students are involved directly in faculty research — an honor reserved for graduate students at most universities."[5] The publication added that "one of the more impressive aspects of the university is its inexpensiveness in relation to the quality of education being offered."[6] The Princeton Review also included Eau Claire in its list of the 311 most environmentally friendly campuses in the United States.[7] In their list of the "100 Best Values in Public Colleges," Kiplinger's Personal Finance has ranked Eau Claire as the 67th best value for in-state students and as the 64th best value for out-of-state students. According to the publication, the "rankings are based on academic quality, overall costs and financial aid availability."[8][9] The university is one of four undergraduate institutions in the United States to have four or more Dreyfus teacher scholars on the faculty[2] and was among the 141 public and private colleges, universities and professional schools named in the President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll with Distinction for General Community Service.[10] The Templeton Foundation included the university in its list of colleges that "encourage character development."[11] UW-Eau Claire sends more students abroad than any other master's level institution in Wisconsin, and it ranks 10th nationally among all master's schools in the number of students who study abroad.[12]
Thanks for the help. 88guy88 (talk) 21:08, 12 February 2012 (UTC) It has been awhile since I have heard from anyone, so I am going to move forward with editing. Based on this discussion and Mesconsing's suggestions, the article is flawed on two levels. First, the introductory section of the article contains a sentence that reads "UW-Eau Claire has received high marks from several publications including U.S. News and World Report, the Princeton Review, Money Magazine and Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine." Remedy: I will simply remove this sentence. Second, the "reputation" section of the article uses sources published by the university. Remedy: I will add sources that aren't affiliated with the university to verify all claims made. Once I have done these two things I will remove the "academic boosterism" tag. Please feel free to contact me at any time. Thanks for helping out. 88guy88 (talk) 19:13, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
References
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The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
WP:SNOW — TransporterMan (TALK) 16:58, 16 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
In the section labelled Criticism and Controversy on this page I am trying to include reference to a recent documentary film 8: The Mormon Proposition which the LA Times called "An outstanding and urgent example of the investigative documentary". This documentary is a scorching indictment of the Mormon Church's historic involvement in the promotion & passage of California's Proposition 8 and the Mormon religion's secretive, decades-long campaign against LGBT human rights. How could it possibly be deemed inappropriate to include it under a section labelled Criticism and controversy? Users involved
This section appears to be very heavily censored by Mormons.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I'm being ignored on the talk page.
I'm not sure? I'm new to this. How can you help? I add it - they delete it. Who decides if it is appropriate or not? Light Defender (talk) 07:06, 14 February 2012 (UTC) The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
"This documentary is a scorching indictment of the Mormon Church's historic involvement in the promotion & passage of California's Proposition 8 and the Mormon religion's secretive, decades-long campaign against LGBT human rights". Um, no. Wikipedia doesn't deal in 'indictments', scorching or otherwise - this isn't a court of law. I suggest you start again, with a clear statement of what the documentary is being cited for, and with diffs indicating any objections to such citation. We aren't going to decide here whether Mormonism is right, wrong, or just plain irrelevant, and neither are we going to make a similar decision regarding critics of Mormonism. Instead, we trying to write an encyclopaedia - and if there is a dispute regarding content, it helps to know what this is about. AndyTheGrump (talk) 07:39, 14 February 2012 (UTC)
My description of the film is a direct quote from IMDB. I used it only to show that the film is highly critical of the Mormon church. Is it right that a section on this page labelled Controversy and criticism reads more like a well constructed piece of Pro-Mormon propaganda? All the controversy and criticism has been whitewashed out by the team of extremely heavy handed Mormon censors. They are now saying that a consensus is being reached to keep the film reference out. This is not a consensus. This is one individual (Myself) against the opinion of a team of Mormon Censors. Please could we have a completely independent unbiased decision on whether reference to this highly critical film is relevant to the Controversy and Criticism section of this page. Light Defender (talk) 13:01, 14 February 2012 (UTC)
In your being new to the Wikipedia it is easy to come with some preconceived agendas that you would like to achieve. This may or may not be one of the them; to bring the "real" truth about Mormonism to Wikipedia. That would not be a good position to start from. There are a plethora of pages on the topic of Mormonism. It is impossible to include everything in every article and it would be error to assume we should. Upper level articles should have only a summary of the topic as a whole and then refer to a number of additional articles for readers to read if they are interested. Prop 8 may be a burning issue for you personally, but in the skeme of church with over a 180 years of history, this documentary is insignificant. However, it is probably worth a mention on the Criticism article. Additionally, you might want to pull back from the allegations such as, "This is one individual (Myself) against the opinion of a team of Mormon Censors." I have been around for a few years and I do not censor anyone. One of our policies you might want to read is to assume good faith of our fellow editors. Based upon the tone of your writing here, I can only assume that you have an axe to grind. This is not the place for it, but a personal blog might be an ideal alternative. -StormRider 16:22, 14 February 2012 (UTC) OK! Thank you. (As you probably guessed I'm an amateur at all this) - I would like to point out that the only reason there is a reference to this documentary in the article Criticism of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is because I put it there yesterday - not long before putting it on this article. I'm still half expecting it to be deleted from that page too? I am still wondering... Under the subtitle 'Controversy and criticism' why would the following sentence: "The church expressed support for a Salt Lake City ordinance protecting members of the LGBT community against discrimination in employment and housing while allowing religious institutions to consider lifestyles in actions such as hiring or providing university accommodations." (Printed in a Mormon owned and published paper) - be given more weight than reference to a documentary which provides overwhelming evidence of it's "decades-long campaign against LGBT human rights." There is simply nothing Encyclopaedic about this! It is pro-Mormon propaganda by a religion infamous for it's "Strick taboo on Homosexuality"[1] Cheers anyway. Light Defender (talk) 16:56, 14 February 2012 (UTC)
Axe to grind? No... I just saw this documentary the other day and was shocked and disturbed (It appears civil rights in the UK are somewhat ahead of the US). I now think it's vitally important that anyone investigating this religion should know exactly how instrumental it's been in obstructing or removing the civil rights of millions of people over the last few decades using seriously devious and underhanded methods (Something this documentary shows very clearly). A religion that in recent history was prepared to go to war to defend it's right to polygamy which even more recently banned interracial marriage and now is all of a sudden the champion of 'traditional marriage' between 'One Man and One Woman' - 180 years of history riddled with hypocrisy. This "insignificant" documentary's message will stain this religion in the civilised world for another 180. And yet the Wiki page for this religion still reads like a well constructed Pro-Mormon advertising campaign? You're right, this is no place for the fight. (Why would an encyclopaedia represent an unbiased/balanced view of a subject?) I'll get on to the BBC and see if we can't get it broadcast globally - perhaps just before the US presidential election (especially if Romney gets through). LOL I've not been in a dispute before, so I'm not sure how to end it? Is there a particular method? I thought I'd conceded yesterday. Cheers Light Defender (talk) 08:10, 15 February 2012 (UTC) References
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Occupy Wall Street
Closing this, as the dispute seems to have died down for now. If there are still problems, try the Mediation Cabal or an RfC. Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 06:55, 16 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
This topic was discussed and compromised but based on a recent dispute there appears to be still issues with it. The recent discussions are here: Users involved
I included and extended invites to recent editors, as well as the editor that created the article
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
This has been discussed, and I thought it was resolved.
I'm hoping for a consenus among the editors of the article as well as any other editor to finally solve this issue. Racingstripes (talk) 04:42, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Occupy Wall Street discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
First I want to apologize for bringing this here again. I was under the impression that this was resolved, but I was mistaken. This seems like the most logical place to discuss this again. I brought up here in DRN that as a compromise the section titled "Crime" should be re-named "security concerns" and this was also brought up by another editor that has no connection with the OWS as well during the NPOV noticeboard. According to the discussions, this was accepted as a compromise, along with a reduction of the content that was less notable. Now it seems to me that that's not good enough. I attempted to bring back the title as "Crime" since the issue has started over again, I figured the content of the article should be reflective of how the article was before this discussion began.Racingstripes (talk) 05:01, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
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Dog
Closed as listed at ORN. Can be reopened here if no resolution there. — TransporterMan (TALK) 02:37, 19 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Disputing that the domestic dog which I understand as Canis lupus familiaris is a union of familiaris and Canis lupus dingo. I want to revise as follows: Canis lupus familiaris or more commonly the domestic dog is a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus), a member of the Canidae family of the mammilian order "Carnivora".[1][2] He wants: The domestic dog (a union of Canis lupus familiaris[3] and Canis lupus dingo[4][5] ) is a subspecies of the gray wolf (Canis lupus), a member of the Canidae family of the mammilian order "Carnivora". See talk for our discussion: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Dog under domestic dog section.
Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
long discussion on talk page
I feel the information is incorrect. If you think so then I'd like to remove it and replace it. Jobberone (talk) 06:57, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Dog discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Other party notifiedJobberone (talk) 08:25, 15 February 2012 (UTC) I can only repeat what I've said there. Chrisrus (talk) 08:30, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
References
References
This dispute does not seem to be resolved after all. Chrisus is either ignoring your decision or has misunderstood you.Jobberone (talk) 12:15, 18 February 2012 (UTC)
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Charles R. Pellegrino
Consensus is clear that we cannot claim that Pellegrino has a PhD with the sources we currently have. If Redslider continues to edit against this consensus then a request for comment on user conduct may become necessary. Best regards, Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 07:22, 17 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
I made revisions to the subject's (Pellegrino's) biographical page to correct what I feel are malicious and untrue statements about the subject, and constitute ad hominem attacks to malign and discredit him. I confined this set of revisions to matters concerning the false accusation that the subject does not possess the credentials he says he has (a Phd. from Victoria University), and other textual statements that imply the same. The discussion supporting my revisions is in item 6 on the Talk page for that entry. While I was making my final revisions regarding Dr. Pellegrino's degree, I received a 'Wiki Message' from 'Sparthorse' asserting that my remarks were "vandalism" and that he/she was reverting them. I rechecked the page and indeed, my revisions had been removed and the page reverted. The discussion supporting my reasons for making the revisions I did (first part of Talk, item 6) was made prior to the notice from 'Sparthorse' and provide supportive argument for the changes I made. The second part of Item 6 (and all of item 7) deal directly with 'Sparthorse's interjection into the matter. I refer you to those items for understanding fully what is at issue. I regard the matter as a grave breach of protocol and trust in attempting to maintain Wikipedia's standards for accurate and informative material. At least to avoid unwarranted harm to a living person. What I will observe here, is that the issue here is not simply about content, but cuts across several serious matters concerning Sparthorse's use of authority as an administrator. In that, his charge of "vandalism" and his reversion of my edits, appear to me to unwarranted and abusive. I believe it appropriate to not only ask that the reversions be removed and my revisions let stand, but that Sparthorse be blocked from any further actions or edits on the subject page. I feel that Sparthorse simply does not understand the gravity of character assassination and impugning the integrity of a living subject to be permitted futher participation in the process of preparing an accurate and informative biography of Dr. Pellegrino. note: there are other serious issues regarding this particular biography and the management of its text. However, I am confining my complaint here only to matters that arose out of my attempt to correct the record regarding Dr. Pellegrino's degree. Users involved
(for all other discussion I refer the reader to Items 6 & 7 the talk section of the subject page.
Yes
Resolving the dispute
Yes. I discussed Sparthorse's actions on the talk page and invited him/her to reply (#6). They did, and I found the reply evasive and wholly inadequate. I stated the reasons I found their reply deficient in the same item. I also added an item (#7) informing them of my intent to bring this matter to the community of administrators.
I am not certain of the proper forum or authority to address this matter. I feel, as an external editor, I am not equal to the task of further argument with an administrator, and in any case, have no authority to do anything about preventing their inappropriate behavior with respect to a breach of policy on vandalism and reversion of text intended to prevent serious harm and defamation to a living person. Following instructions I found on Wikipedia I came here to be referred to the proper place for resolution, and to receive any thoughts you might care to offer on the matter. Redslider (talk) 20:13, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Charles R. Pellegrino discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
I would like to see this returned to the article's talk page if possible. However, since this seems to be more of a personal dispute than a content dispute, I would recommend that you take this to the Cabal and seek mediation. Other DRN editors, please weigh in here if you feel differently. Sleddog116 (talk) 22:48, 15 February 2012 (UTC)
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List of tallest buildings in the world
See closing comments and recommendation, below. — TransporterMan (TALK) 18:29, 16 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Content dispute on whether to put "Hong Kong" (original version) or "Hong Kong, China" (disputed new version) on the "country" column for buildings in Hong Kong. Users involved
114.229.251.187 is probably the same person as 114.229.252.36 since they're from the same IP range and made the same edit. At any rate, 114.229.251.187 has already exceeded WP:3RR.
Not yet.
Resolving the dispute
Raised on User talk:114.229.251.187 and there was a fairly long edit summary discussion.
Possible page protection, 3RR warning / block, and further mediation Deryck C. 21:52, 15 February 2012 (UTC) List of tallest buildings in the world discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
The reason the user Deryck Chan is bringing this to issue is that Hong Kong by itself is not a country. If you look at the list of buildings the category specifically states "Country" and each other building is listed under it's parent country and not for example "Houston, Texas" which would be equivalent to "Hong Kong" by itself which is just a Special Administrative Region of China. The category listing specifically states "Country" and following the convention of the other countries listed, Hong Kong should be listed under it's parent country of China. Although listing it as Hong Kong, China would also be acceptable. 114.229.251.187 (talk) 21:58, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Wikipedia should be an encyclopedia with accurate information, the above user Deryck C. unfortunately has resolved to push his POV despite my numerous attempts to explain to him that Hong Kong is not a country and only just a Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China. He is persistent in trying label Hong Kong as a "country" when that would be inaccurate, the readers of Wikipedia deserve and demand accuracy of the information presented in all articles. Thank you very much! 114.229.251.187 (talk) 22:08, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Clerk note: 114.229.251.187 (talk) has been blocked 48 hours for edit warring. — Mr. Stradivarius ♫ 23:47, 15 February 2012 (UTC) Comment by AstronautI am broadly sympathetic to the view that Hong Kong is part of China, but not enough to go on an editing spree across Wikipedia to impose my POV on everyone else. It is clear to me that 114.229.251.187 holds a very pro-China POV (see for example this unrelated edit - which I have reverted for being rather pointy). They do seem prepared to aggressively edit-war over this issue. Unsurprisingly, 114.229.251.187's combative editing style has got them blocked for a while. This subject has been discussed before (at some length) on the article talk page, see Talk:List of tallest buildings in the world#The nationality of Hong Kong and Talk:List of tallest buildings in the world#Hong Kong subsumed into China, or not?. The latter discussion raised some important points where consensus varied from article to article. It seems to me that consensus has not been reached on the article currently under discussion except to maintain the status-quo for the time being. Astronaut (talk) 10:09, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Comment by 218.250.159.25With all due respect, may I know whether there is any existing policy or convention on Wikipedia regarding dependencies, particularly on their inclusion on lists or in categories? If no, should there be any? 218.250.159.25 (talk) 11:26, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
Closing comment by Mediator/Clerk TransporterManThis is a long-term dispute ranging over a number of different articles and involving many different editors, including a number who have not been included in the parties list, above, even though they have been involved in the current dispute. There is not, currently, a clear-cut policy solution so far as I can tell, and possible compromises such as "Hong Kong, China" or "Hong Kong (People's Republic of China)" have themselves been a matter of controversy. In light of the independence and nationalist questions involved, I just do not believe that a decision at this noticeboard (or at MedCab or MedCom) will, in the long run, settle the issue once and for all for either this particular article or for the encyclopedia as a whole. A policy-based solution is needed. What I would, therefore, suggest is that someone create Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Hong Kong-related articles in the same manner as those listed at Category:Wikipedia Manual of Style (regional), but with the sole initial item being the resolution of this issue and then propose it via a policy RFC in accordance with WP:PROPOSAL. — TransporterMan (TALK) 18:27, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
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Genocide denial in Palestinian related articles
Now that sources have been provided, I'm going to kick this one back to the various talk pages for additional talk page discussion (of which there was very little, if any, prior to it being listed here, in contravention of the guidelines of this noticeboard). If after substantial discussion on the talk page no resolution has been achieved, feel free to relist it here, but please limit it to specific edits at specific articles. Remember also that this noticeboard is for content, not conduct, matters. — TransporterMan (TALK) 18:51, 16 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
Two users are cleansing articles regarding the Palestinian people and Palestine of massacres/genocides committed. Under the German people article. It says: "Germany had a substantial Jewish population. Only a few thousand people of Jewish origin remained in Germany after the Holocaust" Thus it should also be said that upon the Islamic conquest of modern day Israel/Palestine the area had a Jewish majority. After the conquest and massacres such as the Safed Plunder. 1660 Destruction of Tiberias, etc. etc. Israel/Palestine's indigenous Jewish population (Old Yishuv) was down to only a few thousand people by the advent of Zionism. If this cannot be included in the Palestinian people section, then why is an identical historical fact included in the German people section? Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
I tried talking to both of them. Malik Shabazz did not respond and Tiamut questioned whether or not these massacres even took place.
The following articles Palestine, Palestinian people, History of Palestine, and History of the Palestinian people should all contain references to these massacres. I find it hard to believe they are being cleansed once again. I can't imagine someone deleting the Holocaust mention in the German people article. DionysosElysees (talk) 00:08, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Genocide denial in Palestinian related articles discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Comment by ZeroA quick look at Special:Contributions/DionysosElysees shows that this editor should stop editing and instead spend some time reading Wikipedia policies like WP:NPOV and WP:V. Almost all edits so far are either unsourced or poorly sourced, are expressed in intemperate language, and betray a political purpose not appropriate here. This has been accompanied by repeated accusations against other editors. Zerotalk 01:23, 16 February 2012 (UTC) So you're suggesting that these genocides did not happen and that genocides carried out within other communities are included across wikipedia but the Palestinians are immune. Can you please explain your logic for claiming these genocides didn't happen and why the Palestinian pages are the ones that are kept white washed of genocides committed within their community while every other nationality's history contains them. Please explain talk 09:26, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
I simply do not understand why you and the aforementioned editors work with a zeal to make sure no massacre of the indigenous Jewish people is mentioned on any Palestinian related page meanwhile all other pages of other nationalities mention them with no issue. I think you have an agenda in covering up these genocides for some political view on modern events instead of looking history with out a bias. Clearly these genocides happened, something you have refused to admit as well yet there seems to be a campaign to keep them hidden. talk 02:43, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Clerks' warning: Here at Wikipedia we judge edits, not editors. Stop making judgments, statements, or other comments about one another or what one another should or should not do and limit all discussion and comments strictly to the content of the edits without commenting about other editor's biases or motivations. If you want to seek comments on or sanctions of other editor's conduct, please use WP:WQA, WP:RFC/U, WP:AN. WP:ANI, or WP:ARB. This noticeboard is for content disputes, only, not conduct disputes. — TransporterMan (TALK) 02:55, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
Comment by Malik ShabazzDionysosElysees added some material to the article Palestinian people that constituted original research. After it was removed by Tiamut, DionysosElysees restored it. I removed it and explained why on the article's Talk page.[9] Instead of replying there, DionysosElysees accused me on my Talk page of having "an agenda of white washing [this and similar] pages of any reference to the genocides carried out by the Muslim Arabs upon the indigenous pre-Zionist Jewish population...."[10] It seems to me that DionysosElysees should read WP:Civility. Reading WP:Requests for arbitration/Palestine-Israel articles would probably be a good idea too. — Malik Shabazz Talk/Stalk 04:42, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Comment from uninvolved(Comment from uninvolved editor) @DionysosElysees, why don't you just provide reliable secondary sources for the historic issue you want to introduce? Content such as the one you introduced may be correct or incorrect but it certainly needs to be sourced. JCAla (talk) 08:52, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Done: Citations provided. User_talk:DionysosElysees —Preceding undated comment added 18:08, 16 February 2012 (UTC).
(The following comment was added post-closure, probably as an edit conflict, but the listing is closed. — TransporterMan (TALK) 18:59, 16 February 2012 (UTC)) The mention of the Safed Plunder in the Palestinian people article is no different then the mention of the Holocaust in the German people article so why aren't you deleting the Holocaust from the German people article? talk —Preceding undated comment added 18:52, 16 February 2012 (UTC).
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Acupuncture
I suggest taking this to a request for comments on user conduct, and possibly to the administrators' noticeboard for incidents in the event of any more blatant personal attacks. There does not seem a lot that this noticeboard can achieve here besides pointing out Wikipedia policy. Mr. Stradivarius (talk) 00:22, 18 February 2012 (UTC) |
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Dispute overview
Dispute over content has resulted in several personal attacks on User:WLU by user Dickmojo, for which he was immediately warned on the talk page and in his userspace. Dickmojo has also accused other editors (who are simply trying to enforce WP policy regarding medical articles) of being "zealots", "extremists" and "fanatics" (and again, and again in the article this time, which I believe is wp:vandalism), of "xenophobia" and "racism" (for which he was again admonished by myself). His accusations of racism ring especially hollow when you consider his own obvious bias against members of his own profession in the West. Users involved
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Dickmojo has been politely warned several times about name-calling. To be fair, he did (grudgingly - see edit comment) delete at least one of his offensive comments. He has been reminded coutless times by the other users of the policies of WP:WEIGHT, WP:MEDRS, WP:AGF, WP:FORUM, WP:RS, WP:V, WP:OR, WP:PROVEIT and probably others...!
An official notice regarding WP:NPA, WP:FORUM and WP:VANDALISM would probably do it. Dickmojo does not have a leg to stand on policy-wise and simply won't listen to other editors, who have now adopted a policy of silence. Famousdog (talk) 11:52, 16 February 2012 (UTC) Acupuncture discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Ok, this is outrageous. Here I am, trying to vigoursly defend my passion and my profession, which is a part of me, which I have devoted 10 years intimate study to, and know more about than famousdog, Jess and WLU put together, from the vicious, snide, cruel, callous and misinformed attacks it is being subjected to on this website by sceptic fanatics, and I'm the one being attacked now. I didn't revert a single thing, you check the logs, I didn't revert a single thing on the main page, yet I was persecuted for "Edit Warring". What a joke! It said that Edit Warring was when a contributor did 3 reverts in a single day, yet I didn't even do ONE, and I'm "warned" for "Edit Warring". Then, WLU comes along and says "the elaborate ceremony of interview, "diagnosis" and selection of points is worthless and education should instead be a brief study of how to maintain sterile procedures and avoid hitting nerves, blood vessels and organs? Of course, for a lot of practitioners that would be like a priest or someone with a PhD in theology becoming an atheist, it would be incredibly hard to admit they wasted so much of their lives on what is really the equivalent of memorizing the chants used by witchdoctors. It would take a lot of courage to abandon the pretense of "ancient Chinese wisdom" and stick with simple safety precautions instead." to which I replied "the only really valuable research out there are the Chinese studies (because of the expert skill of Chinese practitioners in general in this regard vis-a-vie Western practitioners), and you'll note that they are all universally positive on the efficacy of acupuncture. But for a zealous rational-skeptic extremist fanatic like you to accept that WLU would be like a Spanish Inquistor suddenly deciding to stop persecuting witches for their "heresy". which is just tit for tat, and I didn't start it, and I didn't continue it, so I'm not the bad guy here. On a broader level, its not NPOV for an encyclopedia to sound like one of those amateurish, zealous "quackwatch" websites on a topic of such massive historical and cultural significance and gravitas as acupuncture: a practice thousands of years old that has affected the lives of Billions of people. Sure, you may have your scientific criticisms of it, but those criticism originate from a paradigm completely foreign to the native context in which TCM and acupuncture is understood, and should NOT be given the major weighting in the article that it is currently given.Dickmojo (talk) 12:09, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
Comment: I don't see how dispute resolution is necessary here. We have two users requesting that the article be changed without providing new sources - their argument primarily being that wikipedia is biased towards scientific consensus and peer reviewed publications - and then we have a few experienced editors saying that can't be done, per policy. I don't know how that makes me a zealous fanatic, and I would urge anyone with evidence to the contrary to take the issue to RFCU with diffs showing that I've attempted to "stop opposing consensus from forming", posted "vicious, snide, cruel, callous and misinformed attacks", or "bullied new editors" to get my way. This is not the place for such inquiries, and in no way serve to change the weight of policy against the idea that an editor's opinion, experience, or sensitivities should be considered over scientific consensus supported by peer reviewed publications. — Jess· Δ♥ 18:00, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
(Comment from uninvolved editor) After looking at the article's talk page, one thing I've noticed is that there is an awful lot of discussion about the topic from many editors. Talk pages are not for discussing the topic, but rather they are for discussing how to improve the article. I understand that these can sometimes overlap, but I have found that if editors remind themselves of this and try to focus on artice improvement, the unwelcome rhetoric is less likely to flow. -- Scjessey (talk) 13:23, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
This board seems to be being used as a stick to beat Dickmojo, who seems to be guilty of little more than trying to correct the highly POV nature of acupuncture and not understanding WP's extremely obscure set of rules and guidelines. On many of these Fringe/Protoscience articles, there is a resident set of skeptics who will use every trick in the book to deter anyone from even correcting POV, never mind general improvement of the article's dismal state. They instarevert any such changes, misuse WP guidelines and bully new editors in talk pages & on user pages to stop any opposing consensus forming. There is rarely explanation of reverts, never any partial reversion, never any friendly help for new users. Ultimately, WP is highly flawed for such articles. If you had enough time and motivation you could probably do something about it. But to new editors, these articles make WP look like a nasty, unfair and broken place. Mindjuicer (talk) 16:21, 16 February 2012 (UTC)
Hello all, I consider myself a neutral party to this dispute (never edited the article) but I see a bunch of personalization of the dispute and attacking the individuals. Let's drop the sticks to beat other editors with and look at the content that is being disputed. Can we all agree to that before moving forward? Hasteur (talk) 17:29, 16 February 2012 (UTC) (Comment from uninvolved editor) Hello everyone, I'm a regular contributor to this noticeboard, and I have never had any dealings with acupuncture articles before. On this page and on the article talk page I see a lot of frayed tempers and accusations, but at its heart this dispute seems to be over the content of the article. Articles on alternative medicine are a perennial source of controversy on Wikipedia, and because of this we have developed quite detailed guidelines for how to deal with them. The two most relevant pages, which I see have already been linked to multiple times, are Wikipedia's guidelines for how to cover fringe theories, including alternative medicine, and the guidelines on reliable sources for medical articles.The crux of the dispute, as I see it, is that these guidelines contrast with Mindjuicer's and Dickmojo's reading of the situation. Let me illustrate this. Above, Dickmojo says "Sure, you may have your scientific criticisms of [acupuncture], but those criticism originate from a paradigm completely foreign to the native context in which TCM and acupuncture is understood, and should NOT be given the major weighting in the article that it is currently given." This interpretation runs counter to what the guidelines listed above state, which is that on scientific matters, Wikipedia must weight its coverage according to the perspective from mainstream science. We can cover the historical importance of concepts like meridians and qi, and this kind of coverage can and should take up a significant part of the article. However, when it comes to scientific claims like whether qi and meridians actually exist, then we must go with the modern, mainstream scientific consensus. Our guidelines on reliable sources in medical articles are very clear about how this consensus is measured, and they point squarely at giving the 2008 literature review more weight than the 2003 review, which it subsumes. Dickmojo's claim that "research into the electro-conductivity properties of acupuncture points and meridians is suggestive" does not seem to be backed up by the 2008 source, so I'm afraid that we can't include it. It is possible that we could alter the article if more reliable secondary sources on the subject are forthcoming, but until this happens there is really nothing that we can do. I can understand Dickmojo's and Mindjuicer's frustration with this situation, but I'm afraid that however much they try and argue the point on the talk page, their efforts will likely be in vain. I recommend that they back off from this dispute, as continuing to edit against the guidelines may be enough to convince an administrator to block for tendentious editing, especially if the personal accusations and attacks continue. As a general plan of what to do next, I agree with Noformation's suggestion of holding an request for comment on user conduct on Dickmojo and/or Mindjuicer if their conduct doesn't improve. This means both learning to edit per Wikipedia's policies and guidelines, and learning to collaborate with other editors. I also agree with Noformation's other suggestion that if there are any more blatant personal attacks, then a trip to the administrators' noticeboard for incidents may become necessary. I hope, however, that Dickmojo and Mindjuicer can improve their behaviour and adherence to policy well enough and quickly enough that this will not be necessary. I will leave this thread open for a little while longer in case anyone has questions, but otherwise there doesn't seem to be a lot that dispute resolution can achieve here. If anything in my post is unclear, please let me know and I will clarify it. All the best — Mr. Stradivarius ♫ 07:10, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
COIAbove in Dickmojo's first statement he writes "Here I am, trying to vigoursly defend my passion and my profession, which is a part of me, which I have devoted 10 years intimate study to." DM, are you aware of our conflict of interest guidelines that strongly discourage you from being involved with acupuncture articles? Your statement indicates to me that your goal at WP is not overall improvement of the pedia, but rather to push a POV that is dear to you. It also indicates that you cannot edit the article dispassionately. Wikipedia is not a place to defend your profession nor a venue in which to WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS. I think that the crux of the issue here is that you see things from a POV that is not mainstream, and so to you the mainstream sounds extreme. Noformation Talk 21:20, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
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Boom! Studios
No discussion on talk pages as required by this project's guidelines, though requesting editor has made a valiant try. Consider a RFC. — TransporterMan (TALK) 01:22, 17 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
There have been a number of recent attempts to remove information regarding Andrew Cosby, his status as Boom! Studios co-founder and contributions he has made to the company since its inception, despite numerous reputable sources citing the validity of this information, including Boom's own publications, where Mr. Cosby was listed as co-founder for years prior to his leaving the company in 2010, Andrew Cosby's wikipedia page [4] (which was originally established by Ross Richie (Boom's other co-founder and current CEO), various interviews with both co-founders, [5][6], and press from reliable sources both online and in print. [7][8][9] Even Bloomberg's Executive Report lists Andrew Cosby as Boom! Studios' co-founder. [10]. Have tried talk page with both the editor involved and on the site itself. No response. 2 independent editors took a look and make corrections, only to have those correction undone by the part responsible for the continued vandalism. Suspect malicious intent. Users involved
I have kindly asked the user to refrain from making these unnecessary changes, but have received no response. Other editors tried to step in to resolve, and their edits were undone.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Yes. Through talk pages on both Njkaters page and the Boom page. Have provided numerous sources. Nothing works.
I tried to get the page protected, but was told to try dispute resolution. I took the first step by asking other editors to examine the dispute. They apparently did but had their edits erased as well. Truthsayer2012 (talk) 00:50, 17 February 2012 (UTC) Boom! Studios discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
(Comment from uninvolved editor)This looks like a case of edit warring. Can you please provide the version/diff you want, and the diff/version that the disputing party (Njkaters (talk · contribs)) wants?Curb Chain (talk) 01:11, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
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India
Closing as WP:SNOW, as well-sourced clear consensus is against the requesting editor. — TransporterMan (TALK) 14:37, 17 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
I do not believe Buddhism and Jainism are reform movements of Vedic religion, as Fowler suggests with his Catholic-Protestant analogy. Here is my reference: Y. Masih (2000) In : A Comparative Study of Religions, Motilal Banarsidass Publ : Delhi, ISBN 81-208-0815-0 Page 18. "There is no evidence to show that Jainism and Buddhism ever subscribed to vedic sacrifices, vedic deities or caste. They are parallel or native religions of India and have contributed to much to the growth of even classical Hinduism of the present times." Users involved
Fowler&fowler believes he owns the page.
Yes.
Resolving the dispute
Yes, India talk page
Enforce Wikipedia:Neutral point of view. SaibAbaVenkatesh (talk) 04:31, 17 February 2012 (UTC) India discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Ask the Buddhist and Jain editors on Wikipedia what they think of the Hindu fundamentalist language Fowler is shoving down our throats with ownership behavior.. SaibAbaVenkatesh (talk) 04:37, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
The references presented by User:Fowler&fowler in discussion in India talk page are far more superior and mainstream than the weak references by user SAV. Also, as an editor brought up and schooled in India, I am aware of the general view (as taught in texts supported by different major schools of Indian history) that Buddhism and Jainism were born as reforms against the orthodoxies and strictness of late Vedic era. So, completely agree with the present version, and completely agree with AshLin that "Don't fed the trolls." Regards.--Dwaipayan (talk) 06:03, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
Lal Mani Joshi said "To say that Gautama the Buddha was born a Hindu (as some contemporary Hindus have claimed) is entirely nonsensical. There is no evidence to think that the Vedic religion was prevalent among the Sakyas, Mallas and Licchavis. On the contrary, there is evidence of the progress and influence of several varieties of Sramanic religion and philosophy which had nothing in common with Brahmanic theism, sacrificialism, and world-affirmation. The ideologies of the sramanas cannot be traced to Indo-Aryans...." page 10. The Buddhist Visnu by Holt. 2004. SaibAbaVenkatesh (talk) 06:12, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
Fowler has provided impeccable sources (please see the discussion on the India talk page) and wikipedia relies on sources rather than on what particular editors believe or think may the truth. Both fowler and I have made changes to the text based on the assumption that SaidAbaVenkatesh's objections are made in good faith (though, reading that editor's comments above, that is a questionable assumption), but, clearly, we can't make changes that are inconsistent with what reliable sources say. --regentspark (comment) 13:52, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
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DeSmogBlog Deserves Deniergate Recognition
No attempt has been made at resolving this at the relevant talk pages, as is required before bringing it here. Try that first.--Atlan (talk) 12:58, 17 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
DeSmogBlog has recently achieved worldwide recognition for exposing the "Deniergate" controversy. I have made several attempts to begin acknowledging this, including the use of 4 references to relevant reputable media articles. Another user, "Squiddy" has twice (so far) deleted my additions, and this seems unfair? I have written on their talk page, politely, and look forward to their response, with little optimism of a reasonable reply. Another user, "166.249.98.29" has attempted to vandalise the page by including reference to "fakegate". Given the topicality of this page, ongoing dispute is lamentably likely to ensue, and the attention of editors may be regrettably required? Please help before things get ugly :-()! Users involved
Not yet.
Resolving the dispute
Yes, have initiated discussion on Squiddy 's talk page, and live in hope, but not confidence...
apply your wisdom and reason... Shambala2011 (talk) 12:42, 17 February 2012 (UTC) DeSmogBlog Deserves Deniergate Recognition discussionDiscussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
Comment from univolved editor Squiddy has started a discussion on the article talkpage, and agrees that the information should be included in the article. His issue is with the non-neutral wording of the current version. Shambala2011, please consider his comment there, and try to draft a more appropriate version of the section on the talkpage before changing the article. In addition, you are on the verge of breaching WP:3RR; please do not revert the article again without first establishing consensus on the talkpage. Yunshui 雲水 12:56, 17 February 2012 (UTC)
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No dispute, edit request; this noticeboard is only for requesting help with disputes. — TransporterMan (TALK) 19:13, 17 February 2012 (UTC) |
Closed discussion |
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Dispute overview
The list includes "Palestinians" yet leaves out the Old Yishuv being that there was an indigenous Jewish population in the same area prior to and through out the development of the Palestinian people then listing Palestinians as indigenous while NOT mentioning the Old Yishuv implies that the latter must not exist so the former can have its "indigenous" status. Users involved
Not yet.
Resolving the dispute
Palestinians should be removed from the indigenous list and replaced with the Old Yishuv or the Old Yishuv should at least be added as well. DionysosElysees (talk) 18:24, 17 February 2012 (UTC) Discussion about the issues listed above take place here. Remember to keep discussions calm, brief, and focused on the issues at hand.
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