Revision as of 23:36, 4 March 2007 view sourceBabyDweezil (talk | contribs)1,482 edits →[] {{blpwatch-links|Cults and new religious movements in literature and popular culture}}← Previous edit | Revision as of 23:37, 4 March 2007 view source Athaenara (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users54,866 editsm →[] {{blpwatch-links|Mark Rathbun}}: One-line post moved here from other Rathbun section. Added missing {{article|Mark Rathbun}}.Next edit → | ||
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{{article|Mark Rathbun}} Non ] that violate ] are being reverted back into the artcile. See recent history and Talk page.] 23:03, 16 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
:This is not really an article but a missing person notice. ] 12:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC) | |||
:This article really should be deleted. He is only noted as the object of conspiracy theories, which may very well be true but still are not WP material. ] 04:42, 17 February 2007 (UTC) | :This article really should be deleted. He is only noted as the object of conspiracy theories, which may very well be true but still are not WP material. ] 04:42, 17 February 2007 (UTC) | ||
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Michael Ratner Template:Blpwatch-links
Michael Ratner (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) A new editor has a remarkable interest in the real estate dealings of the subject of this article's brother, and wants to source claims of some kind of questionable financial dealings to their research into government records. Jkelly 20:35, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
Steve Walsh (rugby) – Resolved. – 22:49, 4 March 2007 (UTC) |
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The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it. |
Steve Walsh (rugby) Template:Blpwatch-linksSteve Walsh (rugby) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) The entire article is being used to paint Steve Walsh in a poor light. This article should be removed and/or locked. Bardcom (talk · contribs) 10:05, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
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The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it. |
Naeim Giladi Template:Blpwatch-links
In the article about Naeim Giladi (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views), some editors are inserting direct links to white supremacists, neo-nazis web-sites, such as Kevin Alfred Strom of National Vanguard and the Adelaide Institute. I beleive this violates both WP:RS and it is Poisoning the well. Comments? Regards, Huldra 13:31, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
Pauline Hanson Template:Blpwatch-links
- Template:Pauline Hanson - the subject is a controversial Australian politician who has recently announced her candidacy in the upcoming federal election. A media organisation conducted a DNA test of dubious validity (a Torres Strait Islander was supposedly of European and Asian but not Melanesian ancestry) and presented the results to the subject, as reported in a newspaper story. In this story she is quoted as saying "All I can think of is that probably down the track it eventuated from some war.", but we are not given the precise context of these remarks. Some editors have inserted this material into the biographical article, along with various attempts to ascribe racist views to the subject - see here for discussion. My main problem with this material is that it is of transitory notability - it belongs in a news article but not a biographical article, unless it develops "legs", which a search for follow-up articles shows none. But for BLP purposes, the quote is not well sourced in that we are not given any dialogue or record of conversation, so we cannot tell what, precisely, the subject was responding to. We must depend on the media organisation's own interpretation, and this has been reinterpreted in the attempts to summarise it for the biographical article. --Pete 14:25, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- I can't see how it has been reinterpreted as you claim. A simple mention of the story is there. Current version of quote: "All I can think of is that probably down the track it eventuated from some war" "rape and pillage" - "But I'm not going to knock it. It has made me who I am." - on discovering the results of a media-sponsored DNA test which claim Ms. Hanson's genetic makeup has 9 per cent originating in the Middle East, 32 per cent from Italy, Greece or Turkey and 59 per cent from northern Europe"Merbabu 15:17, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- For a start, your quote above is confected. Even taking the article at face value she didn't use those words in that order. All the paper tells us is that her words eventually followed "When told of the results, the former fish and chip shop owner appeared flustered...". We are not told of any intervening conversation, and therefore we cannot say to what statement or question, precisely, she was responding. The paper gives one interpretation, and when summarising it for the article you neccessarily reinterpret it. But I am not satisfied that the newspaper, in setting up what is clearly a stunt, has told us the full story. You appear to take the whole thing at face value, but it might be that Ms Hanson was responding to something quite different, perhaps the results of another person, or possibly the methodology of the test. You note that we are not told explicitly that it was her results to which she gave the response. We should be skeptical of media outlets which set up stunts of this nature, because they can misdirect the reader to make for a better story in order to sell more papers. Using such sources without corroboration in a biographical article is unwise or gullible, particularly when the subject is controversial. --Pete 16:05, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- It is not "my" quote. It is (was) how the article sat when you posted here. And if the order bothers you, then change it - it won't change the meaning of the article. I'm sure if it was something you wanted to hear you woudln't be playing games about "interpretations" and "context". I thought our role was NOT to intepret. Furthermore, are you accusing "me" of "reinterpreting" or "taking it at face value". Which one? Furthermore, if sources cannot be summarised for inclusion in WP, then we are in big trouble - any sourced info on WP is likely to be summarised (or paraphrasing?) - do you mean you've never done it? hmm. If the interpretation is the issue then i suggest you offer an alternative.Merbabu 16:14, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- The single source for the quote is too vague as to context for us to use it without making our own interpretation. --Pete 16:31, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- It is not "my" quote. It is (was) how the article sat when you posted here. And if the order bothers you, then change it - it won't change the meaning of the article. I'm sure if it was something you wanted to hear you woudln't be playing games about "interpretations" and "context". I thought our role was NOT to intepret. Furthermore, are you accusing "me" of "reinterpreting" or "taking it at face value". Which one? Furthermore, if sources cannot be summarised for inclusion in WP, then we are in big trouble - any sourced info on WP is likely to be summarised (or paraphrasing?) - do you mean you've never done it? hmm. If the interpretation is the issue then i suggest you offer an alternative.Merbabu 16:14, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- For a start, your quote above is confected. Even taking the article at face value she didn't use those words in that order. All the paper tells us is that her words eventually followed "When told of the results, the former fish and chip shop owner appeared flustered...". We are not told of any intervening conversation, and therefore we cannot say to what statement or question, precisely, she was responding. The paper gives one interpretation, and when summarising it for the article you neccessarily reinterpret it. But I am not satisfied that the newspaper, in setting up what is clearly a stunt, has told us the full story. You appear to take the whole thing at face value, but it might be that Ms Hanson was responding to something quite different, perhaps the results of another person, or possibly the methodology of the test. You note that we are not told explicitly that it was her results to which she gave the response. We should be skeptical of media outlets which set up stunts of this nature, because they can misdirect the reader to make for a better story in order to sell more papers. Using such sources without corroboration in a biographical article is unwise or gullible, particularly when the subject is controversial. --Pete 16:05, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- I can't see how it has been reinterpreted as you claim. A simple mention of the story is there. Current version of quote: "All I can think of is that probably down the track it eventuated from some war" "rape and pillage" - "But I'm not going to knock it. It has made me who I am." - on discovering the results of a media-sponsored DNA test which claim Ms. Hanson's genetic makeup has 9 per cent originating in the Middle East, 32 per cent from Italy, Greece or Turkey and 59 per cent from northern Europe"Merbabu 15:17, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- It's probably worth noting that Pauline Hanson built her political career on views that have often been described as racist, so her own race, and her response to apparently being only mostly white, is notable. Regards, Ben Aveling 04:59, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- We're not talking notability here, but quality of source. Do you have any input on this? --Pete 09:19, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Quality of source? It happened - no one is pretending it didn't. Yes, it was a media stunt, no is suggesting otherwise, but it got a reaction that is notable - ie, hanson's apparent discomfort with it. The WP article doesn't add any interpretation to it. Merbabu 10:01, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- This is the source . I invite 3rd parties to check it for themselves. Regards, Ben Aveling 10:29, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Quality of source? It happened - no one is pretending it didn't. Yes, it was a media stunt, no is suggesting otherwise, but it got a reaction that is notable - ie, hanson's apparent discomfort with it. The WP article doesn't add any interpretation to it. Merbabu 10:01, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- We're not talking notability here, but quality of source. Do you have any input on this? --Pete 09:19, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Peter Lamborn Wilson Template:Blpwatch-links
Peter Lamborn Wilson is not a widely known author---his areas of interest run from pirates to Islamic heresy to anarchism---but he is a source of controversy. Much of the controversy in the Misplaced Pages article, though, relates to a pseudonym (Hakim Bey) he has used over the years for some of the books and essays he has written. In the article, in the opening paragraph, we find the following sentence: "He sometimes writes under the name Hakim Bey. The pseudonym may or may not have been a name-of-convenience or collective pseudonym used by other radical writers since the 1970s." I submit that this pseudonym has been used by other writers, and that it is impossible to prove that everything written and published under that pseudonym was in fact the product of Peter Lamborn Wilson. Given this, and given the controversial nature of a small percentage of those writings (dealing with pederasty/pedophilia), I submit that the criticisms within the article (i.e., that Peter Lamborn Wilson advocates pedophilia) are unjustified, unsubstantiated, and may qualify as libel. I have stated a number of times in the article talk page that verifiable evidence, per Misplaced Pages policy, must be submitted that proves all of the articles were written by the same person, and that person is, in fact, Peter Lamborn Wilson. All of these statements on my part have been rebuffed. So, I bring this issue here, I ask for an examination of the article, and a discussion of its content. Thank you. ---Charles 22:08, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- It would be helpful if you can point to particular instances of the name "Hakim Bey" having been used by other people. —Ashley Y 06:31, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- Here is the most egregious example of which I am acutely aware: Why I wrote a fake Hakim Bey book and how I cheated the conformists of Italian "counterculture" (http://www.evolutionzone.com/kulturezone/bey/luther.blissett.fake.hakim.bey). Now, in this case, the person calling himself "Luther Blissett" (which is itself a pseudonym used by multiple authors) wrote and published the "fake" as a critique of Hakim Bey's writing, and so he revealed the charade in order to mock all of those who had been taken in. The fact that he wrote and published it and was able to convince people it was Bey's indicates the difficulty of definitively saying that everything published under the name Hakim Bey was in fact written by Peter Lamborn Wilson. I do not think such a statement can be justified and supported by the facts currently in evidence. ---Charles 19:34, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Mark Rathbun Template:Blpwatch-links
Mark Rathbun (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) Non WP:RS that violate WP:BLP are being reverted back into the artcile. See recent history and Talk page.BabyDweezil 23:03, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- This is not really an article but a missing person notice. Steve Dufour 12:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
- This article really should be deleted. He is only noted as the object of conspiracy theories, which may very well be true but still are not WP material. Steve Dufour 04:42, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- you are looking only at that section. His work for Scientology is N in its own right. But is this notice about fairness to him, or to B.Schwartz?DGG
- I happen to be an (online) friend of Barbara. I feel sorry for her because of the attacks against her; which mainly take place on Usenet but also here where she is the subject of an attack article, Barbara Schwarz. Having said that, I would like to see the section about her views removed from Mark's article. I will not nominate his article for deletion; however he is really not notable. Just holding a job, however important that job may be in the little world of Scientology, is not enough to be the subject of a WP bio. Steve Dufour 01:59, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- I tried to nominate Barbara Schwarz for deletion but was not able to figure out the process since it has been nominated 3 times before. Steve Dufour 07:48, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
I just added a notability tag to Mark's article. Steve Dufour 18:31, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- More sources have been added and in general the article has been improved. If anyone knows about Mark's whereabouts please let the FBI know. Steve Dufour 20:09, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Regnery Publishing
A big part of the article is about an employee who was fired for plagiarism done in his college days. The Wonkette is cited as a source for certain rumors about him. Steve Dufour 04:42, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- I read this section and examined the sources used. I don't have a problem with the sources. Wonkette in this case is probably acceptable as this regards an event that occurred in the Blogosphere and the Wonkette writer has knowledge due to previous employment. That being said, the section almost certainly does not belong in the Regnery article at all, since it is too tangential, and adds nothing to our understanding of Regnery. It looks more like part of a vendetta against either Ben Domenech or more likely, Regnery. Quatloo 14:11, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for trying to help. The section has been put back in with the reason given being basically that Regnery is an evil, right-wing publisher and anything that can be found that might be negative about it should be included in the article. I don't feel like getting into a fight over it, however. Steve Dufour 02:02, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- It reads like just trivial gossip to me. I bet that most publishers have fired editors and other employees for more serious offensives. It would make more sense to just say that Regnery is hated for derailing John Kerry's career. Roger 05:29, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- What it really does is make the anti-Regnery people look a bit out of touch. Steve Dufour 06:47, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
Inayat Bunglawala Template:Blpwatch-links
- Inayat Bunglawala (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - What takes precedence; WP:RS or WP:BLP? A blog accused Mr. Bunbglawala of sending them threatening e-mail, but ultimately found it could not prove it. Several users wish to add this accusation in since it was mentioned in an Israeli tabloid. I have taken the "Presumption in favor of privacy" guideline in BLP, others disagree. Whether YNet is even an RS at all is also another issue. // Tarc 21:35, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- Given that the site is a blog, it makes my decision easier to say that WP:BLP takes precedence. The source doesn't really seem that reliable. But even then, I think that BLP should take precedence because if there's something that a person doesn't want others to know, or that others don't deem pertinent to the encyclopedia at all, it should be able to be disregarded. There's always that factor of "is this important/relevant enough to be included?" So in short, I say remove the information if it is deemed inappropriate in context. └┘talk 00:36, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Forgot to drop a line when I read this yesterday. Just wanted to say thanks for the input. :) Tarc 13:41, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
TARC mis the issue. ynetnews is a source that fits WP:RS. This site is used extensivly in wkipedia. this is the web site of Israel's leading news paper. This is not an issue of blog Vs Misplaced Pages policy but an issue of[REDACTED] llowed to publish what was already published by WP:RS source. Zeq 18:30, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- Zeq, you are now completely misrepresenting and distorting the dispute. The primary issue was exactly as I noted above, regarding what takes precedence. I mentioned Ynet as an RS as aside to the primary issue. I did not and have not edited the article due to a question of Ynet being a reliable source; I edited it due to the policy on WP:BLP. Tarc 23:01, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
I don't mind assuming the reliability of ynetnews, but the paragraph in question accuses the subject of criminal behaviour. When you actually look at the source, all it says is that some person claims "strong circumstantial evidence". It doesn't even assert that there is any evidence, only that some person claims it. This is rather less than what is in Inayat Bunglawala. This is poorly sourced in the sense that the source does not support what is said in the article.
Accusations of criminal behaviour of living people, even "merely" saying that "there is evidence to suggest", ought to be considered very carefully before inclusion. This strikes me as a rather blatant violation of WP:BLP. —Ashley Y 06:41, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Kate Mulgrew Template:Blpwatch-links
- Kate Mulgrew (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - Acting on a ANI report, I've indefblocked a user, Taylor364 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log), who did almost nothing but blank Talk:Kate Mulgrew repeatedly. That user has now issued a legal threat. On further investigation, it appears that Timfhagan (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) – who may be Mulgrew's (ex-?)husband, U.S. politician Tim Hagan – had tried, earlier, to have information removed from the article and/or talk page, apparently pertaining to Mulgrew's stance on abortion or about an adoption of hers. Given this, we can speculate that Taylor364 is a sockpuppet of Timfhagan, and that if this is so, the legal threat would come from Tim Hagan. I'm unsure on how to proceed in such a situation – does this need Office attention of any sort? – and if yes, whom to contact. Guidance by those versed in WP:BLP matters would be appreciated. See also this explanation of the issue by an involved user on my talk page. // Sandstein 22:52, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
- Well, I don't think we should jump to conclusions. For all we know, she could be telling the truth. I would suggest that you possibly run checkuser on both of the people, to get a better sense of whether they're sock puppets. Given those are sockpuppets, you can rule out any possibility of it being either one of those who they say they are. If not, though, then I think the person has a right to take off whatever they don't want on the page about them. It's only right. But I doubt that that is actually Kate Mulgrew. But again, don't just assume. └┘talk 00:32, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- I don't quite understand what you are saying. I've no reason to assume that Kate Mulgrew herself is involved in editing her article. My question was whether the legal threat by someone who may be her husband warrants any further action. Sandstein 06:42, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Well, again, checkuser all of the usernames in question and if they're all coming from the same place, it's probably just some vandal trying to find a hole in the system is all. Then, just revert the comment as vandalism. └┘talk 13:36, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Erwin Raphael McManus Template:Blpwatch-links
- Erwin Raphael McManus (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) -- Appears to be a church figure who has supporters and enemies. The enemies (either one person or with sock-puppets) are persistently reverting to an unwikified critical version that mainly links to a bunch of anti-this-guy blogs. One or two of his supporters occasionally revert to a hagiographic version, which isn't a good article either but at least isn't potentially libelous. Both sides seem to like to keep removing my cleanup tags. --Delirium 07:04, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Garth Turner Template:Blpwatch-links
- Garth Turner (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - A new editor, using the username Dorothy turner (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) and the IP 65.95.112.18 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · filter log · WHOIS · RDNS · RBLs · http · block user · block log) has been altering information on Canadian politician Garth Turner. (The article lists Dorothy Turner as the spouse of Garth Turner.) Moogle10000 (talk · contribs) interpreted this as a violation of NPOV and COI, and warned the Dorothy Turner account heavily. I'm concerned that the Dorothy Turner edits were an attempt to establish better balance in the article, and that the NPOV warnings were a bit close to WP:BITE. I don't know enough about the situation to judge which side is closer to NPOV, but I'm worried that the editors on that article don't have a solid enough grasp of WP:BLP. Editors who understand BLP and Canadian politics are invited to examine the situation. — Josiah Rowe (talk • contribs) 07:32, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Robbie Keane
I cleared up some of the mess which has been left, but someone is obsessed with "Snuff FC" and I don't know all the correct detaila about his playing statistics to be able to fix them all. (Jim901 20:36, 18 February 2007 (UTC))
- I have been in and supplied a whole load of sources, contained in References section; also cut out some false redlink cats at the bottom. Perhaps other editors would like to go in and help further? By the way, this isn't really the correct place to put this report is it? It seems to be merely a 'talk page' subject. I can see no biographical controversy in the Robbie Keane article. Refsworldlee(eds) 22:42, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
Pete Townshend Template:Blpwatch-links
Pete Townshend (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
The article on Pete Townshend is being hi-jacked by two people (or possibly one person with a sock-puppet account). There was an edit war of considerable intensity that was waged on the article about one year ago. It was then settled with a consensus. But only after the text had grown wildy disproportionate in length and with inflammatory language. The calm prevailed for approx. a year. It has flared up badly again.
The story in a nutshell is that in 2003 Townshend was briefly under suspicion of having downloaded child pornography. The UK police investigated thoroughly, Took away 14 computers from Townshend. Spent 4 months on forensic investigation. Then elected NOT to charge Townshend with any crime. It issued a statement declaring that they had found no images. Townshend had vountarily acknowledged that he had ACCESSED a site on a single occasion - which was certainly a technical breach of the law. The police elected to caution him and Townshend accepted the caution. End of story. Receiving a caution in England is not the same as if you have done nothing wrong. But neither is it a legal conviction or judgement of guilt as that is construed by other countries or by lay persons.
There has been a concerted effort to insert inflammatory (and possibly defamatory) language into the article that will brand Townshend as though he had been charged and found guilty in a court of law. And the sheer quantity of data about an incident that covered 5 months duration in a 43 year career is wildly disproportionate. You can see the excessive exchanges on the Talk page - and the endless edit war of the past 2-3 days prior to an administrator locking the page (which I think was a prudent decision)
Anyway - I believe that this is a serious situation - with a possible sock-puppet account being used as part of a systematic and relentless attempt to demean the subect of the article. It seems to be a vendetta. Assistance and wise counsel much appreciated. Davidpatrick 23:10, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- It will help here if you provide {{userlinks}} for these. — Athænara ✉ 10:44, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Burt Reynolds
burt reynolds page vandalised again by unregistered user 172.189.14.186 he removed the entire reference section of which he had nothing to do with thus taking away all the citation of reference for most of the articles please stop these vandals, i have asked a few times if you could do the same thing other pages have and block edits by unregistered users, please help~~ Rogue_Gremlin 10:25pm (EST) Feb 18, 2007
- Please use edit summaries and use the preview button rather than making repeated edits in succession. Most of the last 100 edits are from you, so it's kinda hard to follow what is going on. One IP user removed a hoard of external links ... probably excessively many unless there's some important reason to have them there. But that's likely a content dispute - we don't protect pages simply because there is a disagreement - we only protect them because of persistent vandalism. --BigDT 03:32, 19 February 2007 (UTC)
There has been persistent vandalism, the externals links removed was the (entire Reference section), that helped to validate the entire page, including the proper citations for almost everything on the page. This is not disagreement stuff, it is straight out vandalism when others work is completely removed. Rogue_Gremlin 11:05pm (est) feb 2007
Colin Angus
A contributor is repeatedly adding the same libelous and unsubstantiated information to the biography of expeditioner Colin Angus. A warning has been issued, and changes made, however, the offender continues posting the same negative messages from different IP addresses. There is no information on or off the internet that supports these allegations."Kingfisher2"
Shawn Hornbeck Template:Blpwatch-links
The article has once again been protected. The current dispute is over whether or not we should call him a "kidnapping victim" or "an alleged kidnapping victim." Outside opinions are needed and necessary. AniMate 03:11, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- If the case has still not been decided in court I think you have to say "alleged". In general, as I said a couple times above, I don't think the victim of a crime, especially a child, should be the subject of a WP article at all. Steve Dufour 03:16, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
You're preaching to the choir on that one, but there are some people very invested in keeping the article. It's been protected several times, and I'm more than likely going to nominate it for deletion once the media attention dies down. Hopefully we can get it merged into the Michael Devlin article in the future. AniMate 03:23, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- I don't see what the problem is. I would think that 99% of everyone would think that there is something wrong with an article that details the sexual abuse of a child. Why doesn't WP have a policy to remove it right away? Steve Dufour 03:29, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with you 110%. However, these AFDs show that people really think these are valid articles. They've been arguing for the inclusion of their birth dates and want as much info as possible. I absolutely think we need policy that states explicitly what should and shouldn't be included in these articles... and whether or not any of these articles should exist. As it stands, I'm appalled that these kids privacy is being abused after everything they've (allegedly) been through. AniMate 03:49, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- I find it hard to recomend WP to other people, as much as I generally like it myself, if the WP community seems to have such a blind spot about this issue. Steve Dufour 08:01, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
Adam Keller
The article claims he is a supporter of Hezbollah. Two links are given. One in Dutch and one in Hebrew. I managed to get a babelfish translation of the Dutch article and the article says no such thing. // Liftarn
Yevgenia_Albats
Repeated violations by User:Vlad fedorov who is trying to defame all critics of Putin's administration. See my arguments here Talk:Yevgenia_Albats#Violation_of_BLP_rules. This issue has been resolved by User:Alex Bakharev who wrote a compromise NPOV version (me and everyone else except Vlad Fedorov agree with this version), but User:Vlad fedorov continue inserting POV, and poorly supported "exceptional claims" in the article. Biophys 16:15, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- So, Vlad repeatedly inserts defamatory and not supported by any independent sources claims about Yevgenia Albats made by Arutunyan who is a side of a controversy (see Talk:Yevgenia_Albats#Violation_of_BLP_rules). Then, he uses defamatory statements made by Arutunyan to discredit another journalist Anna Politkovskaya (see his edits of her article and also Putin's Russia. Actually, Yevgenia Albats struggled to protect reputation of murdered Anna Politkovskaya from defamation by Arutunyan allegedly ordered by Putin's administration (see Yevgenia Albats article).Biophys 16:17, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Please note that Alex Bakharev edited the article from which talk show scandal was deleted by User:Ilgiz. Moreover, Alex Bakharev has reintroduced the information according to which father of Albats was a GRU spy, which was repeatedly deleted by users Biophys and Colchicum. Alex Bakharev version doesn't endorses personal opinion of Biophys and Alex Bakharev doesn't endorsed you empty accusations.Vlad fedorov 17:07, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
There are no any evidence that anyone except users Biophys, Colchicum and Ilgiz agree with the version of Biophys. Two other users are collegues of Biophys.
I would like to respond the following to the accusation of Biophys:
- First, users Biophys and Colchicum never contacted me on a Talk page and tried to resolve the dispute. In fact they just demanded me to stop the editing of the articles. They also never tried to resolve the dispute. They also haven't presented evidence of trying to resolve the dispute with me. Complains to the Administrators noticeboards and false, unsupported accusations of my violations of Misplaced Pages policies are not a method of resolving the dispute.
- Second, they violate 'good faith' obligatory assumption in cliaming that I stalk them. I am a newcomer to the Misplaced Pages. I was brought to the Misplaced Pages, because the article on Boris Stomakhin created by Biophys was completely outrageous since it turned everything uspide down. Convicted criminal Stomakhin was presented as a hero, besides his calls to exterminate all Russians, to destroy Russian with atomic explosion, to commit terrorist attacks on Russian civilians.
- Third, accusations presented here were already taken up at vurtually every Administrators, incident, 3RR, BLP noticeboards and administrators talk pages. So they just mainly repeat their accusations. I have never received any warnings from administrators, because otherwise they would have gladly published these warnings already here. I was just arbitrarily blocked by non-Russian, English speaking admin William Connolley. This admin, however, later helped me to clarify the points of dispute which I had with Biophys over Boris Stomakhin article, but unfortunately he left the discussion on the talk page of Boris Stomakhin article, when the critical decision on the validity of Biophys accusations was needed.
- Fourth, these accusations pursue the goal to harass me and to stop me from contributing another POV into the articles dedicated to Russia.
- Fifth, I also would like to bring all these issues to the arbitration, because the allegations of Biophys and Colchicum that I violate Misplaced Pages policy by citing reliable sources defame me and are directed not on the sources, but on my person. I would like to have finally a decision of an arbitrator/mediator/administrator that my sources are valid and reliable, the are not contradictory and do not violate anything. The problem is that Biophys claims that every my contribution violates Misplaced Pages policies. This is a strategy taken by him in order to discredit every introduced material presenting other point of view.
The underlying problem, in my opinion, is the personal dislike of me and revenge of user Biophys against me for the following:
Vlad fedorov 17:07, 20 February 2007 (UTC)
- Near the top of the page, in large bold type in the instructions for how to use the noticeboard, is the line: "Please make your comments as concise as possible. Fellow editors and administrators are less likely to pay attention to long diatribes." Did you not see that? — Athænara ✉ 14:27, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Burt Reynolds
This is at least the 5th time I have reported this, PLEASE block unregistered users from editing this page, ip address 172.201.90.27 who keeps hoping ip address' in Reston, Virginia, this is not a dispute issue, he erases pertinent links that provide the citations for almost the whole page and since you can block his ip since he uses an anonimyzer or dial-up can you atleast block unregistered users, which would help stop the vandalism. TY ~~ Rogue_Gremlin Feb 20, 2007 9:07pm est
- Some of the references you are adding to the article aren't helpful. I'm looking at this edit . Just linking to http://www.britannica.com or http://encarta.msn.com/Default.aspx doesn't help. If you used the Burt Reynolds article as a reference, link to that article. The best practice is to link everything inline using {{cite web}}. So you would write something like this:
- This is the line I want to cite. <ref>{{cite web|url=http://whatever|date=whatever|etc...}}</ref>
- That will appear in the article like this:
- This is the line I want to cite.
- And then if you add a <references /> tag to the bottom of the article, everywhere that you have a <ref> link in the article will show up at the bottom. As it is, the IP user is right. Several of the links you have in there just say the same thing. Does that help at all? As it is, the references section just isn't that useful. If you would like an example of an article where inline citations are properly being used, see Misplaced Pages. If I can help you further, please feel free to ask on my talk page. Thanks. --BigDT 02:59, 21 February 2007 (UTC)
The 2 you mentioned are very helpful you just can't view them for free. Rogue_Gremlin Feb 2007
Mike Huckabee (pt. 2) Template:Blpwatch-links
Two editors repeatedly adding an undersourced, biased text of dubious notability, with extensive incivility.
Maybe more editors coming in can add some sanity. A.J.A. 22:06, 21 February 2007 (UTC)
Derek Bell (baseball player) Template:Blpwatch-links
- Derek Bell (baseball player) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) Derek Bell is a former baseball player who lost his job with his team after threatening to go into what he termed "Operation Shutdown" before the 2002 season. He hasn't played professionally since, and has gone downhill rapidly and been arrested for drug use. Various anonymous IPs in the 192.88.124 range have been attempting to insert a mocking reference to Mr. Bell's unfortunate circumstances into the article ("Operation Shutdown is currently in its Xth month."). I think this is unencyclopedic and needlessly cruel, and have been reverting. Most recently, a "new" user has showed up to add the identical piece of information. Anyway, if y'all could help keep an eye on things, I'd appreciate it. -Hit bull, win steak 05:08, 22 February 2007 (UTC)
As one of the several users to edit the Derek Bell article, I feel that it is worth noting that the status of Operation Shutdown has been a part of Mr. Bell's entry for almost two years, and was the reason for starting an article on this particular baseball player. As a fan of not only Mr. Bell, but of the Pittsburgh Pirates, I do not find this information to be a mockery, but rather a way to follow a campaign on which he embarked. Furthermore, myself and the other IPs involved have not been adding useless information, but rather replacing information that I've known many people to enjoy seeing, and that has been there for, as previously stated, almost two years now. We have not been vandalizing the article, but restoring it.— Preceding unsigned comment added by Mtcupps (talk • contribs)
Jim Nobles
Editors at this article are asserting, based on some occult organisation's websites, that a politician in Seattle Washington is an occultist. The websites fail our reliable sources guidelines, and it seems likely that there are two different individuals, both interested in politics, actually involved here. Jkelly 23:51, 23 February 2007 (UTC)
- I have removed the offending material, and have left a note at the talk page of the article and of the user who was inserting the claim. Musical Linguist 00:35, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Tom Cruise on Talk:L. Ron Hubbard Am I not getting it?
- Talk:L. Ron Hubbard - Hi. There was a posting to the talk page here that I considered gross misuse of the talk page so I deleted it here. Now I know that my deletion there may not be supported in policy and that is not what I am asking about. One editor let my deletion slide but another reverted it. I then removed only the part that I thought was an ultra-clear BLP vio, here and again, here. Figured that would be the end of it but one came back with lawyerly stuff and the other that I am just wacked to think that (my words, not his). Am I wacked? On just this point, I mean! Please (laff). I thought that sort of unsupported and wildly derogatory material could not stand, no matter where it appeared. I thought that is what BLP says. Thanks Justanother 04:48, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Answer - Technically, BLP applies to article space, not the talk page. The comments you cite were not in line with Misplaced Pages norms in that the talk pages are specifically for the purpose of discussing ways to improve the article, not a blog or forum to voice opinions on celebrities. Feldspar's warning to that effect was an appropriate response to the comments. The comments could be seen as vandalism and removed as not constructive or trolling. But in that case, IMHO, it's better just to ingore them and not encourage the trolls.--William Thweatt | 05:08, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Hi. Thanks for your input. How do you then reconcile this prominent line in BLP
--Justanother 05:18, 24 February 2007 (UTC)Unsourced or poorly sourced controversial (negative, positive, or just highly questionable) material about living persons should be removed immediately from Misplaced Pages articles, talk pages, and user pages. (emphasis added)
- Hi. Thanks for your input. How do you then reconcile this prominent line in BLP
- Answer - I think the difference is that it is obvious that the comments in question are not presented as biographical information officially sanctioned by Misplaced Pages and no reasonable person would construe them as such. (That's not a shot at you, I just mean that there's no possibility of litigation as the comments are clearly presented as one editor's opinion and not given as "fact". Nevertheless, I have left a warning on the user's talk page.--William Thweatt | 05:28, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks again. That is an interesting take. I can see the logic of it but, I guess that my problem is that it introduces "gray area" into something that should probably have as little gray area as possible. We agree that the comment is inappropriate and it is certainly about a living person but now we have to apply some subjective test as to whether litigation is a factor (IAMNOTALAWYER). This one may have been clear but why add the gray area? WP:BLP does not seem to. And is it only about litigation? Wasn't there something in BLP about feelings? Why would we allow that comment to stand anywhere here? The other problem with leaving such trollish remarks in is that it leads to subtle (or not-so-subtle) enabling of the abusers. Please notice Feldspar's use of the word "our" rather than "your" when describing the trolls claims and opinions. That is a little subtle (and if I misinterpreted from that that Feldspar agrees with the troll then I apologize) but I have seen it much more obvious. My feeling is that such trolls should just be removed and that the BLP aspect just seals the deal. What do you think? --Justanother 15:59, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Answer - All good points...and I don't disagree. However, we're now getting into other issues that are better dealt with on more germane pages. I don't feel that this is a WP:BLP issue for reasons outlined above. You're right, however, about the "grey area" and that should be discussed on the WP:BLP policy talk page to get more consise language in the policy regarding article talk pages. This is a clear case of trolling and could legitimately be removed as such. However, that's not always the most productive was to handle trolls. As for how to best deal with trolls, see WP:NOFEEDING under the subsections "Not feeding the Trolls" and "the value of slow reverts". I am going to remove the comments as trolling and see what happens.--William Thweatt | 17:56, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
- Thank you once again and very much this time. It is quite a pleasure and a distinct change to have my ideas and concerns addressed with respect and not as "fantastical, bizarre". I am not even saying that my idea of the application of BLP was correct, simply that, IMO, it is not really that much of a stretch from the words and intent of BLP, though perhaps going a bit into "uncharted territory". I will look forward to any discussion of this on the policy talk page and may well start one myself at a later time. Thank you again for your help. --Justanother 20:00, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Backmasking Template:Blpwatch-links
Poorly sourced claims are being made in this article about backmasking artists. The statement reads:
- Other artists accused of backmasking include The Eagles, Queen, Black Oak Arkansas, Britney Spears, and Rush.
I asked for citations to this article and they were provided. However, the analysis of them is not reliable sources (please see the talkpage discussion). Could someone please clear this up? Ronbo76 05:34, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Victoria Toensing
This looks to have an NPOV problem. I'll revert, but could someone keep an eye on this?
Thanks.
Eddieuny 20:37, 24 February 2007 (UTC)
Tilman Hausherr Template:Blpwatch-links
- Tilman Hausherr (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - A number of editors are working together to continually reinsert some poorly sourced information which it seems would inevitably cause a very POV guilt-by-association effect. An entire paragraph is devoted to explaining what a persecutory person a "Lutheran Sect Commissioner" is, not because the article subject is a "Lutheran Sect Commissioner", but because he allegedly "worked for years" with one, and "wrote for" that "Lutheran Sect Commissioner"'s magazine. Only problem is, the single citation that claims to show that they "worked for years" together only shows that they were at a single picket together, and the pieces that were supposedly "written for" the Lutheran Sect Commissioner's magazine are nothing but weekly digests giving capsule summaries of news stories that are of interest in a particular field. Just because someone reprints such a list of capsule descriptions does not in any way show that the list was written for them.
Moreover, the people who are working together to repeatedly reinsert this poorly sourced and POV information appear to be taking a far different approach to this article than they do to any of the articles whose subjects they prefer. As I write this, the report exactly three above mine on this noticeboard is Justanother (talk · contribs) arguing repeatedly that not editing out of another editor's words a personal opinion that Tom Cruise may be "crazy and bad" is a violation of WP:BLP. (And incidentally, also taking the opportunity to smear me with innuendoes such as "Please notice Feldspar's use of the word "our" rather than "your" when describing the trolls claims and opinions" when what I told the new editor, the one Justanother refers to as "the troll", was that "Our own personal value judgements ... our personal opinions ... don't really belong here unless they lead to improvements in the article". I am not happy that Justanother is now trying to insinuate that I am somehow expressing support for the troll's views by not phrasing it as "Your opinions are not welcome here".) But who took it upon himself to restore the paragraph-long description of Lutheran Sect Commissioners() and specifically add material about how Lutheran Sect Commissioners allegedly "contributed to persistent negative public attitudes toward members of minority religions", calling it "The net effect of Tilman's (and friend's) work"?() Who else but Justanother?
Fossa (talk · contribs) seems to be trying to take this opportunity to completely decimate the article of even its best-sourced information() as the second-best thing, perhaps, to deleting it entirely (, edit summary "This version contains all WP:RS-sorced information and it odes neither embellish nor put down User:tilman. Keep it that way or simply delete." -- in fact, all sourced information, including that sourced to Marburg Journal of Religion and the journal Nova Religio has been removed.) And Misou (talk · contribs), who has added unsourced personal information about the article's subject() and information sourced to Renate Hartwig() who has apparently lost a number of libel suits (including to the article's subject) actually left me an inappropriate vandalism warning() for removing the unsourced, poorly sourced, or irrelevant material from the article and explaining in each case why I was doing so. // Antaeus Feldspar 03:09, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Comment - I am not working with anyone at all (don't worry though, I put "cabal" on my Christmas list). The funny thing is I came to it because Misou posted a warning on Antaeus' talk page about vantalizing Tilman (warning since by removed Antaeus here, not that I care). I thought it meant User:Tilman and I could not figure out why Antaeus would vandalize Tilman as Antaeus and Tilman are "cult-fighting" buddies. So I clicked and saw it was Tilman's (non-notable - editorial comment, laff) article, not his user space that was being referred to. So I took a look to see why Tilman was "notable" today and saw these refs to the "Lutheran Sect Commissioner". "What is that", methought, so I looked it up. (I was not aware of Misou's similar reference to what I then found as Misou's had been deleted by then.) Found some (cough) poorly-sourced material in a US State Department Report and posted it. After all, if Tilman wrote for the organization and such writing speaks to his notabilty (god knows, little else does) then does it not make sense to add some extremely well-sourced info about what that organization is and how it fits in to the overall subject of "cult-fighting" which is, again, Tilman's "claim" to notabillity. I mean, we are not running out of paper, are we? PS, Antaeus. I see that you posted this an hour ago and have moved on to other work. Don't you think it might have been worth a mention in the talk page or a notice to mine and Misou's user talk? --Justanother 04:13, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Justanother, let me see if I can sum up the first part of what you are claiming. You claim that you only came to Tilman Hausherr because you saw Misou's false vandalism allegation on my talk page, but you did not investigate Misou's claim: you did not examine my edits to see what information I had added or removed, or whether I had presented sound reasons for those additions/removals (such as WP:BLP violations, which you clearly care deeply about -- sometimes). But somehow, without taking any sort of time to look at the very thing that brought you to the page, the allegedly-vandalistic removal of text from the article, you somehow managed by pure coincidence to reintroduce into the article almost exactly the very same text that had been removed.() That is your story so far and it already strains credulity. But all right, let us suppose that you restored -- coincidentally -- almost exactly the same quote about what a "Lutheran Sect Commissioner" because you didn't bother to take a look at the recent history of the article. What is your excuse for restoring the same material after you were made aware that the stated relevance does not exist? When I removed the poorly-sourced claim that Tilman "has been writing in" Berliner Dialog, I did so with the edit summary "As before -- Tilman writes a piece that summarizes news stories of interest; to say he is "working with" anyone who prints that piece is your OR."() Removing once again the irrelevant digression about the "Lutheran Sect Commissioners", I used the edit summary "remove again irrelevant digression about the pursuits of a man who has no shown connection to Tilman besides reprinting a piece that ANYONE CAN REPRINT".() You ignored both of those and restored that poorly sourced claim that he "writes for" Berliner Dialog with the edit summary "Antaeus, what are you talking about? All I do is clarify the group that the article aleady said he writes for - not the first bit of OR. Show me the OR on talk please".() But this is clearly false. The article did not 'already say he writes for' Berliner Dialog because that original research had been removed. You attempted to justify the very edit in which you restored that original research by falsely claiming it was already there. Now you attempt to again in this very space promote the same claim which has already been debunked -- that because "Berliner Dialog" reprints a freely available digest of news stories of which Tilman Hausherr was the compiler, it means that Tilman "wrote for the organization" (oh, it's graduated from a publication into an entire organization now) and that anything which pertains to "the organization" is therefore relevant to Tilman Hausherr. Under a similar theory I suppose that if the Ku Klux Klan were to carry the "Dear Abby" column in their newsletters then anything about the Ku Klux Klan would suddenly be extremely relevant to "Dear Abby"? The material you repeatedly reinserted was poorly-sourced material that violated WP:BLP; your claim that even now you have still not realized this absolutely astonishes me. -- Antaeus Feldspar 05:43, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry to hear that that you are strained and astonished. That does not sound comfortable. Hey, I have no reason to lie about how I got there. I watch your page, I don't watch Tilman's article. I won't bother but I imagine the edit history will prove my lack of interest there. When I arrived there the article looked like this. See the ref to the Lutheran Sect Commissioner? And the "Beliner Dialog". Well that is what I saw. So I clicks on 'em and I sees "net.update - 1. 12. 1999 - 29. 6. 2000 - von Tilman Hausherr" and "net.update von Tilman Hausherr 5.9.2002 - 29.5.2004". Now my German is bad but it looks like Tilman is the author there. So I figure those articles must be there to establish Tilman's notability since, IMO, little else does. Here we have Tilman writing for a Lutheran Church publication. OK, there is some notability, right? So I do a bit of searching and, guess what, I find the State report (it was not very hard). I am already familiar with those and I think I quoted one some time ago in the main Scientology article, if I am not mistaken. So it only makes sense to me to add that well-sourced material about the organization that published the paper that Tilman seemed to be writing for. And you know, Antaeus, I looked in the article talk page and I completely missed where you discussed this and where you justified edit-warring with Misou over it. Would you mind pointing me at it? Please. But wait, what does Tilman say over there:
Antaeus, it is amazing what you find if you ever actually look at a talk page while you are edit-warring. --Justanother 06:13, 25 February 2007 (UTC)For example, that I wrote for Berliner Dialog could be properly sourced . . . Tilman 22:11, 22 February 2007 (UTC)
- Suppose that we take it as stipulated that Tilman wrote for Berliner Dialog. Oh hell! I'll even bend over backwards for you and pretend for the sake of argument that we have some reason to believe Tilman "wrote for" Berliner Dialog something more substantive than "Net Update", the previously-referenced digest of stories of interest from the news. Berliner Dialog is still a publication, not an organization (contrary to your earlier muddy references to them as if they were the same thing). Your argument is still "Tilman writes for the publication, therefore he supports the organization that publishes the publication, therefore anything which can be said about the organization can be brought up in reference to him" and as a result your argument is still shoddy and still no justification for your blatant attempt at guilt-by-association. If I were to insert into Kirstie Alley a paragraph of well-sourced material entirely about and unflattering to Narconon, I guarantee you would be screaming about how it was a clear attempt by "the POV-editors" to bias the article -- despite Alley being the International Spokesperson for Narconon for ten years or more, far more of a connection between the person and the organization than you have to justify your repeated insertions of anti-Lutheran Church material into Tilman Hausherr. -- Antaeus Feldspar 08:04, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Ah, a coherent argument (not the part where you try to back away from your error as in "that poorly sourced claim that he "writes for" Berliner Dialog" but that is OK, we all make errors - I mean the other part about Kirstie). Couched in the usual invective, of course, but a coherent argument none-the-less. Now, had I found such an argument on the talk page from your edit-war with Misou or had you presented any such argument on self-same talk page when I posted to it about my edits under the "ambiguous" heading of "Lutheran Sect Commissioner"; had you responded there instead of using up all your 3RR and having none left for Fossa and then running over here to attack me instead of simply asking a question (an abuse of this board that I will likely report on AN/I so there is your heads-up though I could likely be forestalled with a simple apology); had you done any of that you may have found that I agreed with your argument. I think we have seen time and again, Antaeus, that we two can edit together in the Scientology articles and really have no big problem about it but when you attack me and I defend myself it gets ugly and while it may be "fun" for both of us it is boring for others, and when you bring it somewhere like this, it is disruptive (and please let's not get into the bit with "our" and "your" - trust me, you don't want to bring that up either; please use my talk page if you really must). So, in response to your coherent argument. Fair enough. I think it would be most appropriate for me to make an article on the "Sect Commissioner" and put the US State data there (I also think there is UN data, and did see a bit). Then Tilman et al can help us with balancing the view. Finally, if we then want to put the Berliner Dialog in Tilman (and if we are to have anything at all there then it belongs), we can do the "publication of the sometimes controversial Lutheran ]" as we would if this were Kirstie's article. Does that sound fair? And again, as I have said before, but maybe you missed, "I do not have any double-standard" which also happens also to be a concise statement of who I am here. Cheers. --Justanother 14:34, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, please, by all means, Justanother, do bring your complaints about me to AN/I. I will be tickled pink if you do that. I am sure that AN/I will have an extremely delightful time evaluating your statement that I came here to "attack you" in the context of "the bit with 'our' and 'your'" which yesterday you thought was completely all right to share with everyone here and now you think should be discussed in some more private venue. -- Antaeus Feldspar 02:39, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- I am at your command. --Justanother 02:42, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, please, by all means, Justanother, do bring your complaints about me to AN/I. I will be tickled pink if you do that. I am sure that AN/I will have an extremely delightful time evaluating your statement that I came here to "attack you" in the context of "the bit with 'our' and 'your'" which yesterday you thought was completely all right to share with everyone here and now you think should be discussed in some more private venue. -- Antaeus Feldspar 02:39, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- Ah, a coherent argument (not the part where you try to back away from your error as in "that poorly sourced claim that he "writes for" Berliner Dialog" but that is OK, we all make errors - I mean the other part about Kirstie). Couched in the usual invective, of course, but a coherent argument none-the-less. Now, had I found such an argument on the talk page from your edit-war with Misou or had you presented any such argument on self-same talk page when I posted to it about my edits under the "ambiguous" heading of "Lutheran Sect Commissioner"; had you responded there instead of using up all your 3RR and having none left for Fossa and then running over here to attack me instead of simply asking a question (an abuse of this board that I will likely report on AN/I so there is your heads-up though I could likely be forestalled with a simple apology); had you done any of that you may have found that I agreed with your argument. I think we have seen time and again, Antaeus, that we two can edit together in the Scientology articles and really have no big problem about it but when you attack me and I defend myself it gets ugly and while it may be "fun" for both of us it is boring for others, and when you bring it somewhere like this, it is disruptive (and please let's not get into the bit with "our" and "your" - trust me, you don't want to bring that up either; please use my talk page if you really must). So, in response to your coherent argument. Fair enough. I think it would be most appropriate for me to make an article on the "Sect Commissioner" and put the US State data there (I also think there is UN data, and did see a bit). Then Tilman et al can help us with balancing the view. Finally, if we then want to put the Berliner Dialog in Tilman (and if we are to have anything at all there then it belongs), we can do the "publication of the sometimes controversial Lutheran ]" as we would if this were Kirstie's article. Does that sound fair? And again, as I have said before, but maybe you missed, "I do not have any double-standard" which also happens also to be a concise statement of who I am here. Cheers. --Justanother 14:34, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Suppose that we take it as stipulated that Tilman wrote for Berliner Dialog. Oh hell! I'll even bend over backwards for you and pretend for the sake of argument that we have some reason to believe Tilman "wrote for" Berliner Dialog something more substantive than "Net Update", the previously-referenced digest of stories of interest from the news. Berliner Dialog is still a publication, not an organization (contrary to your earlier muddy references to them as if they were the same thing). Your argument is still "Tilman writes for the publication, therefore he supports the organization that publishes the publication, therefore anything which can be said about the organization can be brought up in reference to him" and as a result your argument is still shoddy and still no justification for your blatant attempt at guilt-by-association. If I were to insert into Kirstie Alley a paragraph of well-sourced material entirely about and unflattering to Narconon, I guarantee you would be screaming about how it was a clear attempt by "the POV-editors" to bias the article -- despite Alley being the International Spokesperson for Narconon for ten years or more, far more of a connection between the person and the organization than you have to justify your repeated insertions of anti-Lutheran Church material into Tilman Hausherr. -- Antaeus Feldspar 08:04, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry to hear that that you are strained and astonished. That does not sound comfortable. Hey, I have no reason to lie about how I got there. I watch your page, I don't watch Tilman's article. I won't bother but I imagine the edit history will prove my lack of interest there. When I arrived there the article looked like this. See the ref to the Lutheran Sect Commissioner? And the "Beliner Dialog". Well that is what I saw. So I clicks on 'em and I sees "net.update - 1. 12. 1999 - 29. 6. 2000 - von Tilman Hausherr" and "net.update von Tilman Hausherr 5.9.2002 - 29.5.2004". Now my German is bad but it looks like Tilman is the author there. So I figure those articles must be there to establish Tilman's notability since, IMO, little else does. Here we have Tilman writing for a Lutheran Church publication. OK, there is some notability, right? So I do a bit of searching and, guess what, I find the State report (it was not very hard). I am already familiar with those and I think I quoted one some time ago in the main Scientology article, if I am not mistaken. So it only makes sense to me to add that well-sourced material about the organization that published the paper that Tilman seemed to be writing for. And you know, Antaeus, I looked in the article talk page and I completely missed where you discussed this and where you justified edit-warring with Misou over it. Would you mind pointing me at it? Please. But wait, what does Tilman say over there:
- Justanother, let me see if I can sum up the first part of what you are claiming. You claim that you only came to Tilman Hausherr because you saw Misou's false vandalism allegation on my talk page, but you did not investigate Misou's claim: you did not examine my edits to see what information I had added or removed, or whether I had presented sound reasons for those additions/removals (such as WP:BLP violations, which you clearly care deeply about -- sometimes). But somehow, without taking any sort of time to look at the very thing that brought you to the page, the allegedly-vandalistic removal of text from the article, you somehow managed by pure coincidence to reintroduce into the article almost exactly the very same text that had been removed.() That is your story so far and it already strains credulity. But all right, let us suppose that you restored -- coincidentally -- almost exactly the same quote about what a "Lutheran Sect Commissioner" because you didn't bother to take a look at the recent history of the article. What is your excuse for restoring the same material after you were made aware that the stated relevance does not exist? When I removed the poorly-sourced claim that Tilman "has been writing in" Berliner Dialog, I did so with the edit summary "As before -- Tilman writes a piece that summarizes news stories of interest; to say he is "working with" anyone who prints that piece is your OR."() Removing once again the irrelevant digression about the "Lutheran Sect Commissioners", I used the edit summary "remove again irrelevant digression about the pursuits of a man who has no shown connection to Tilman besides reprinting a piece that ANYONE CAN REPRINT".() You ignored both of those and restored that poorly sourced claim that he "writes for" Berliner Dialog with the edit summary "Antaeus, what are you talking about? All I do is clarify the group that the article aleady said he writes for - not the first bit of OR. Show me the OR on talk please".() But this is clearly false. The article did not 'already say he writes for' Berliner Dialog because that original research had been removed. You attempted to justify the very edit in which you restored that original research by falsely claiming it was already there. Now you attempt to again in this very space promote the same claim which has already been debunked -- that because "Berliner Dialog" reprints a freely available digest of news stories of which Tilman Hausherr was the compiler, it means that Tilman "wrote for the organization" (oh, it's graduated from a publication into an entire organization now) and that anything which pertains to "the organization" is therefore relevant to Tilman Hausherr. Under a similar theory I suppose that if the Ku Klux Klan were to carry the "Dear Abby" column in their newsletters then anything about the Ku Klux Klan would suddenly be extremely relevant to "Dear Abby"? The material you repeatedly reinserted was poorly-sourced material that violated WP:BLP; your claim that even now you have still not realized this absolutely astonishes me. -- Antaeus Feldspar 05:43, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
Gentlemen (and/or ladies), I have taken a look at the article and its talk page as well as the extremely long explanations here (in the future please note the text in bold at the top of this page about being consise). It seems this dispute is rather complex, involving AfD, deleting sourced matertial, BLP, arguments over which version is better, and some obvious POV issues. After reading the comments and histories, I believe this issue is not going to be settled here. I suggest that somebody take the issue here RFC or here Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Biographies. A fresh set of outside eyes not involved in the issue is needed to help establish consensus and sort out WP policies. I would also suggest that everybody take a look at this essay before continuing, it contains some good advice.--William Thweatt | 16:17, 25 February 2007 (UTC)
A thinly veiled effort to promote the ideas of Hausherr via Misplaced Pages, Tilman and his supporters insert link to a a black list of actors ("faq-you/celeb.txt"!) compiled by Hausherr directly into the article. If this was a page of a politician or a businessperson, such shameless link spamming as well as the violations of WP:RS would be removed w/i minutes, if not seconds. Instead, here the crowd of anti-cult activists is given free reign, simply thanks to their sheer size. Fossa?! 14:42, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- On the other hand, the only people who will ever look at Tilman's article are he and his friends and people who don't like him. In all cases they are people who have made up their minds on the issue of Scientology, so no effective "promotion" will take place because of this article. Steve Dufour 21:23, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- Kinda like the only people that will look at this noticboard item (smile). BTW, Steve, I had some words about your motives on Tilman's talk page. --Justanother 21:28, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- My feelings towards Tilman are friendly. I voted against the deletion of his article when it was nominated last year and I would do so again. the real Steve Dufour 21:33, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
Peter Gelb
Another user has reinserted a number of times what seem to me to be libelous allegations that Mr. Gelb used unfair influence to gain coverage for his clients in the New York Times. Also unecessarily inflammatory statements (my opinion) ascribed to the subject, Mr Gelb have been reinserted into the article. Editors, please evaluate appropriateness of these items. Thanks for your help. Markhh 23:25 25 February 2007
- I'm the user who readded the sentences in dispute. The allegations at issue have all been previously published in print by a reliable source, and are clearly and accurately referenced and ascribed to the appropriate source per WP:V and WP:NPOV. I don't see the problem. Grover cleveland 07:10, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
- I also didn't see a problem. BTW there is freedom of the press in this country and the New York Times has the right to cover whatever they like for whatever reason. Other people have the right to comment and complain about this as much as they like too. Steve Dufour 21:20, 26 February 2007 (UTC)
Umer Sharif Template:Blpwatch-links
An anon vandal whose IP address's initials are always 210.56. is adding same paragraph again and again to Umer Sharif without any refernce. This paragraph is serious violation of WP:OR, WP:NPOV and WP:LIVING. I am not sure what ypu can do but I think you can easily figure out the solution. This anon vandal appears to repeat the addition of this paragraph every two three days. ( Szhaider 06:23, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
Zodiac Killer Template:Blpwatch-links
There is a major movie opening this week about this case, and I expect there will be a lot of material added to this article. I have just deleted a lot of info about suspects, since most was unsourced and about living people. I expect the editors (who seem to own the article) will object and try to reinsert it. Thanks. Jeffpw 08:28, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
Category:Anti-Islam sentiment – Now on CFD: if category survives that will continue to monitor for BLP violations, which will doubtless occur. Nothing more can be done here. – 14:50, 28 February 2007 (UTC) |
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The following is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above Please do not modify it. |
Category:Anti-Islam sentiment Template:Blpwatch-links
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The above is an archived Biographies of living persons incident concerning the article above. Please do not modify it. |
Lewis Libby Template:Blpwatch-links
Two editors insist on including the information that Libby was "born to a Jewish family." Libby himself has not publicly identified himself as Jewish, nor have there been any credible articles showing that his ethnicity or religion (or his parent's for that matter) has in any way impacted his professional work. This seems to me to be a violation of 's privacy provision. Certain editors seem rather adament that this information be included. Some outside intervention would be greately appreciated. Notmyrealname 17:09, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
- Far more than "two editors" have attempted to restore information to this article that others like nmrn continually revert. See the editing history of the article and Talk:Lewis Libby; there is a category called "Jewish American lawyers" in Misplaced Pages that has been listed in this article long before "two editors" came upon it. Both "credible" and "reliable" articles have been cited establishing the pertinence of this matter of his personal history to the rest of the article (see my comment below the bulk of comments here). The sources have been cited in good faith in this article and continually deleted by nmrn and others for some period of time. --NYScholar 09:12, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Libby is Jewish . This took me 30 seconds to find. Quatloo 18:16, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
- Also troubling is your use of the term "has not publicly identified himself as Jewish." An individual at the highest levels of government (and Libby was one of a handful of the most powerful men in Washington) does not have to publicly acknowledge something in order for it to be reported. You can make that argument with minor celebrities, but not with Libby. Quatloo 18:26, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
- Please keep up what you are doing here Quatloo. I am a Republican I would welcome more Jewish people in our party. :-) Steve Dufour 03:04, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Why is his religion relevant? Also, the page currently reads "was born into a Jewish family." Perhaps he converted? My point was that there is no evidence that he has made his religion/ethnicity part of his work, as opposed to a politician that is courting a religious constituency, for instance (in that case, it would be appropriate, of course). His being Jewish or not is not part of his public persona or notoriety. The fact that the source you cited is the Tulsa Jewish News (is this generally considered a reliable source?) adds to the argument that this is not noteworthy to the general public.Notmyrealname 04:32, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- The Tulsa Jewish News is a perfectly reliable and acceptable source. It has a long history of print publication -- more than 75 years -- and isn't some sham publication created for partisan purposes. There is no requirement that a reliable source be a national publication. Quatloo 13:19, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Conversion is extremely unlikely, and actually his being Jewish has come up as somewhat relevant. See for example. . Whether he was born in or not is an interesting point and it mgiht be good to find a source that explicitly says that he was born Jewish. But given how rare converts to Judaism are, if he were a convert, we can be pretty sure it would have come up. (technically this is WP:OR but hopefully sourcing can be found) At minimum, this isn't a BLP concern because being born Jewish is not potentially negative info (especially if he is Jewish no matter what)). I would suggest however, given that the above sources mention it explicitly and that they show that his Jewishness matters, that it should be mentioned in some form in the article. JoshuaZ 04:43, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Why is his religion relevant? Also, the page currently reads "was born into a Jewish family." Perhaps he converted? My point was that there is no evidence that he has made his religion/ethnicity part of his work, as opposed to a politician that is courting a religious constituency, for instance (in that case, it would be appropriate, of course). His being Jewish or not is not part of his public persona or notoriety. The fact that the source you cited is the Tulsa Jewish News (is this generally considered a reliable source?) adds to the argument that this is not noteworthy to the general public.Notmyrealname 04:32, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- The policy is clear: The subject must publicly self-identify with the belief in question, AND the belief must be relevant to the subject's notability or public life. If both criteria are not met, then privacy concerns override, and it cannot be included. Clear enough? - Crockspot 05:08, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- No, not clear enough. BLP says that category tags should not be used unless those condtions are met. I don't see anywhere where it says we can't include such information when well sourced to reliable sources and it is relevant (which is the case here). JoshuaZ 08:31, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- I believe both criteria are met. For the first criterion, attending public religious services would certainly count as public self-identification. The second criterion, as to whether it is relevant -- the individual in question is involved in making policy towards Israel. I don't think anyone can make a serious contention that criterion #2 does not apply. Quatloo 13:19, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- As I have shown on the Libby talk page, source 1 is not reliable. The bio for Libby cites its source as "Misplaced Pages." For all the people it identifies, it cites "News Sources" and another website that does not indicate Libby's ethnicity. This is a bogus list. Source number 2 claims that some White Supremacist groups affiliated with KKK member David Duke thought Libby's ethnicity was relevant, however everything in the actual article says that it was not. I think it is kind of twisting logic to say that a responsible news story saying that his being Jewish is not relevant somehow makes it relevant. Read the full story. I very much disagree with Quatloo that his being involved with policy towards Israel automatically makes his being Jewish relevant. Jews have diverse opinions about Israel. There is no evidence that Libby's input (whatever it was) was influenced by his being Jewish or not. His family membership in a synagogue does not constitute PUBLIC self identification. If that were the standard, then every person of any faith who attends church/synagogue/mosque, etc. would automatically lose their right to privacy on Misplaced Pages. If he had written an op-ed saying "as a Jew, I believe..." than it would be a different story. Notmyrealname 16:17, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- I am not an expert on Jewish matters but isn't it possible for a person to be "born into a Jewish family" (as the article says -- is this WP jargon BTW? I have seen it elsewhere).... as I was asking, can't a person be "born into a Jewish family" without being, strictly speaking, a Jew? Steve Dufour 17:04, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Notmy, I think you are confusing the BLP category policy with the general policy, and the second one is still a reliable source. Relevancy by a notable source saying something is not relevant is still relevant for our purposes because it was relevant enough to talk about. JoshuaZ 19:04, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Well, the source itself is somewhat obscure. But, I wonder, relevant to what? I could see it if we want to include a section saying that some hate groups have mentioned him in their blogs, but then what are we doing beyond giving them more exposure? I just don't think that a single mention by a rather obscure publication (who has heard of the JTA?) is enough to justify relevancy, especially when the article is about it not being relevant. If the end result is that we just note that he is Jewish based on all of this, we have, in effect, just supported the efforts of fringe hate groups. If we are to take the role of editors seriously, we have to have some sounder rationale for relevance. According to WP:BLP we should "ask yourself if the information is presented as being true, if the source is reliable, and if the information, even if true, is relevant to an encyclopedic article on that subject." Just because it is published and true, does not make it relevant. Notmyrealname 20:19, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
Libby's attendance at a public synagogue is so well known among the Jewish community that it is noted by Jewish publications outside of his region. That's certainly sufficient. It isn't necessary for someone to shout "I'M A JEW" to meet this requirement. This is also no privacy violation, it's published in an established newspaper. Also the language "born into a Jewish family" is not necessary and should probably be changed to be less weasel-worded. Libby himself attends synagogue. Quatloo 18:27, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- Quatloo, I think that there are several questions here. Has Libby publicly self-identified his religious affiliation? Is it relevant? I don't think he has taken any action to indicate that this is part of his public persona. Does joining a religious institution automatically mean that your religion should be included on a Misplaced Pages biography? The fact that the Tulsa Jewish News included this (hardly a representative sample of "the Jewish community" (sic)), without sourcing in a minor news item isn't a sufficient case of relevance. If you look at the Google results and read the links, you will see that anti-semitic groups, including those run by KKK leader David Duke wrote some pieces under the headings "Lewis Libby: One more Jewish Traitor Neocon Exposed." One writer for JTA, Ron Kampeas, wrote a story about it that a bunch of blogs reprinted. The story was about the hate groups writing about Libby being Jewish. In his interviews, he found that most people who worked with him in the White House had no idea he was Jewish, and in fact were adamant that he was not. I have never heard of the JTA before, and I doubt anyone would consider it mainstream. There has been no discussion of it in the broader media. The article itself goes to great lengths to explain that his being Jewish is NOT relevant. The only point of including this in his bio would be to echo the blog rants of hate groups. Notmyrealname 19:09, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- I agree. His religious affiliation (whatever it is) seems to be irrelevant. He is not seen as a religious activist or specifically Jewish activist. ←Humus sapiens 23:42, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- The JTA is certainly a reliable source, but I'm not seeing the relevance either. Far from being a prominent facet of the man's identity, it seems to be contentious information that was unknown by close acquaintances. Let's not yellow badge the man. Jayjg 00:05, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I agree. His religious affiliation (whatever it is) seems to be irrelevant. He is not seen as a religious activist or specifically Jewish activist. ←Humus sapiens 23:42, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- He is not a religious activist, that is true. But the religious affiliations at the highest levels of US Government are extremely important, particularly when the play a role in formulation of policy with respect to Israel. If Israel were not a major component of policy, your argument would have merit. But such is not the case. Quatloo 04:01, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Um, he isn't involved in foreign policy and we have no reliable source claiming that his Jewishness ever effected policy. I'm in favor of including that he's Jewish but the above sounds... well, I'll AGF that it just sounds worse than it was meant to. At minimum this sounds very conspiratorial. JoshuaZ 16:21, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- The assistant to the Vice President for national security affairs isn't involved with foreign policy? That's pretty funny. One must wonder what exactly that job description involves. Quatloo 17:06, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- What you need to do is find a published source that says his Jewish identity has influenced American-Israeli policy. Otherwise it is original research. Steve Dufour 12:50, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- No. The article is on the man, Lewis Libby, and not about American-Israeli policy. A basic fact about him such as religion can be included if no other claim is made regarding it. By your logic, not even his age or marital status could be included in the article, nor can that same information be included even in articles about US Presidents. That's simply absurd. You are misapplying WP:OR, which requires that the thesis be stated ("introduces a theory, method of solution, or any other original idea"). Making a mere statement of religion implies nothing. Just as with birthdays of politicians, it is germane to include religious affiliation if it is public, but not to make any conclusion about it without supporting secondary sources. Never has it been WP policy or guideline that basic facts about an individual -- age, religion, birthdate, location of birth, names of parents and siblings -- be explicitly relevant to that person's body of work. If that is the case, let's get busy working, we have to remove all of that information from hundreds of thousands of articles. Quatloo 16:12, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
(indent to left side) Just chimming in since I reinserted Libby's ethnicity into article. I agree that Libby's ethnicity isn't all that notable but it seems that the[REDACTED] "standard" if any really exists, is to mention ethnicity if it can be properly sourced. Also, my opinion is that ethnicity should only be mentioned under "early life" or "family backround" ect unless there is some major reason to list it higher up in the article. The mention should also "flow" and not just slammed into the article for its own sake which I see quite a bit of. Anyways --Tom 17:14, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I think there is some confusion regarding Quatloo's comments. You seem to be arguing two different points. One is that Libby's religion is a basic fact (like age, marital status, etc.) that should be included if it is public knowledge and properly sourced. There is a reasonable disput about this given that Misplaced Pages has a policy against using a category such as Jewish American Lawyers. Although the policy does not seem to explicitly rule out including his religion in the general text of the bio for privacy reasons, it is certainly implied (otherwise, why have it in categories?). Your other point seems to be that because Libby dealt with government policies involving Israel, his being Jewish is notable. This second point, if it is what you mean, is troubling and would appear to be POV. It might be helpful if you could clarify your arguments. Thanks. Notmyrealname 18:54, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- My argument is more nuanced than that. There are two prongs to the argument -- first, it is basic factual information, inherently not POV to include it if it is public information, properly sourced, and not used in a POV fashion. My second argument is that it is always appropriate to note the religion of a high public official (though not necessarily other individuals), because of the possibility that it might impact policy. Otherwise we must omit the fact that Mitt Romney is LDS, the ages of candidates, their birthplaces, etc. and that also is absurdity. Of course, no conclusion should be drawn from the basic facts unless there are secondary sources. Quatloo 21:29, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks for the clarification. I think the main source shows that it is being used in a POV fashion. I also think you are missing the element of privacy that should be accorded in biography cases. To the second argument, I think that there is a difference for public officials and politicians. In this case, it should be proven first that it has had an impact on policy. The assumption that it always does is POV. Notmyrealname 22:15, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Given that his affiliation is published in an established newspaper, I am not sure what "privacy" you are referring to. But your requirement that his religion must first be shown to have an impact on policy, that is a requirement that you have invented yourself. Quatloo 23:55, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I don't think so. I am following the logic of the rule on categories-- "Category tags regarding religious beliefs and sexual preference should not be used unless two criteria are met: * The subject publicly self-identifies with the belief or preference in question * The subject's beliefs or sexual preferences are relevant to the subject's notable activities or public life." If this applies to categories in WP:BLP, why not to the content of the article itself? Also, YOU'RE the one who brought up the policy thing. I think a different standard should apply to non-elected officials than to elected politicians. Does it matter if the head of trade policy is Episcopalian? Should this always be included in a biography? There is a bias towards privacy on WP:BLP. Beliefs and sexual preferences are singled out in particular. Notmyrealname 00:37, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- But as I said before, both criteria are met. 1. He self-identifies, by attending a public synagogue, a fact well known enough in the Jewish community to be reported outside his region, and 2., the religious identification of all high officials and policy makers (not just those that are elected) are certainly "relevant to the subject's notable activities." They are extremely relevant if the individual is making foreign policy. It doesn't have to be proven that the religious affiliation has affected policy (the requirement which you have invented), it is simply inherently relevant because it helps frame where the policy is coming from. As to your second point, having different standards for elected or non-elected officials -- no. They are both public servants. The only difference is in how they are chosen. Lewis Libby was far more powerful than the majority of elected officials in the US. He was on the public payroll in an extremely critical and influential position, one more powerful than most US Senators and certainly most US Congressmen. Arguing to exclude such people from scrutiny is baffling. Quatloo 01:17, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- How does someone's religion frame where the policy is coming from? This is a POV contention not supported by any facts. Also, by your standard, anyone who actually practices their faith by attending a religious institution should automatically have their religion included in a Misplaced Pages bio? This basically includes everyone of faith. The difference between an elected official and a non elected official is that the elected one appeals to different constituencies to garner votes. According to the article cited in all this hullabaloo, most people had no idea about Libby's faith and it was NOT relevant. Notmyrealname 01:40, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- No, I did not say that. What I am saying is that any official in high office (I have repeatedly stated that this does not apply to all individuals, apparently you chose to ignore that), if their religion is publicly self-identified (a criterion met in this case), it ought to be stated. The same goes for birth location, birth date/age, education, work experience, marital status. They are acting on our behalf, and we should know where they are coming from. All of these things together frame the individual and the policies they make. It is not necessary to prove each of these specifically have had an effect on policy to include them in a biography on the individual. It is extremely reasonable to state the background facts about an individual when such clearly has no privacy implications (as is true in this instance). Your logic is so absurd that it's not possible to state George W. Bush's birthdate, and here, bafflingly, it is not possible to state someone is Jewish when they make policy towards Israel. Simply astonishing. The fact is relevant even if it has not affected policy. It should be shown. As to your other point, the difference between elected and unelected officials, while interesting and noteworthy in some other venue, is irrelevant to this discussion. If someone holds high office in the US, they are answersable to the American people, and we ought to know exactly who they are. Elected or unelected. Until he resigned Libby was one of a handful of the most powerful individuals in the Executive Branch of government. There are only two elected officials in the Executive Branch. Now all the others are off limits? This seems to be what you are saying. Absurdity upon absurdity. Quatloo 02:28, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Quatloo seems to be saying that it is always relevant to identify whether any person involved in US/Israeli policy is Jewish or not. I will WP:AGF, but it is clearly a POV. I think some degree of relevance should be noted. That is what editing is all about. We don't list whether Libby has any pets or is a vegetarian. Not everthing should be included. However, if relevancy can be demonstrated, it should be included. Therefore, George W. Bush's birthdate is important because there is a constitutional requirement about a president's age. William Boykin's faith is relevant because he made public speeches about religion that were in violation of Pentagon policy and resulted in a scandal. Mitt Romney faith is important because he has raised a lot of money from LDS members (among other reasons). Why does someone being Jewish or not have anything to do with their policy decisions regarding Israel? Notmyrealname 02:52, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
You are twisting my words into a Israeli/Jewish issue to make it appear that I hold an agenda. That is false. I am not approaching this from that standpoint except using it as an example here because in this instance, it demonstrates your utter absurdity. I am saying that it is perfectly acceptable to list the religious affiliation of any high official without stating a reason, if he self-identifies (I would even go further than that, it would be acceptable to list it even if he did not self-identify publicly, but I am not arguing that point here.) This must be done in a non-POV way, that is, it must merely be stated without any conclusions drawn to it. I am saying that we don't need to demonstrate a reason, because for a high official, the very nature of high office is reason enough. Quatloo 03:18, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Okay, you are saying that every high public official (whatever that is) who attends a religious service should have their religion on their Misplaced Pages bio. The WP:BLP policy that "Biographies of living people must be written conservatively and with due regard to the subject's privacy" doesn't include religion, even though there are restrictions on this regarding categories. This is because there should be a presumption that there is a possibility that the person's religion might in some way affect their policies (for instance a Jew who is involved in Israel policy). I just don't agree with this (and especially the final parenthetical, which you have put forth several times). Public officials in the United States are not required to list their religion. It would be illegal to ask them to do so when they applied for a job. I think the bias should be in favor of privacy in regards to things like religion and sexual orientation, rather than presuming relevancy. I think we need a somewhat higher standard for self identification than attending a service or belonging to a church/synagogue, etc. I am pleased that the page no longer lists Libby as a "Jewish American lawyer," "born into a Jewish family," or lumped in with the category of "Jewish American lawyers." The current rendering of the page is rather clunky and probably falls under original research, but I think we are making progress. Notmyrealname 05:46, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- We have already established that this is not a privacy issue (it's public information), so any privacy argument you make here is moot. The fact that public officials are not required to divulge their religion, also is not relevant to our discussion. If a high official attends public services and that becomes a published fact in a reliable source, it is perfectly fair game for Misplaced Pages. If you seriously are posing questions such as Why does someone being Jewish or not have anything to do with their policy decisions regarding Israel ?, you really should stop and decide whether or not you are living in a different world than everyone else. Quatloo 06:40, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Hmmm, good point. On my planet there are Jewish people with all sorts of views about Israel, just like people who aren't Jewish. Usually, people who think that all Jews think alike and that any Jew who is a high government official should be publicly identified, think that Mel Gibson got a bum rap. What's your planet like? Notmyrealname 13:34, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- On this planet, people think it's reasonable to know an accurate background of their high government officials. I am not and have never been singling out any one particular religious group here. In such positions, a person's religion (or lack thereof) is always a potential conflict of interest, just as his work history is. It should be out in the open. To state that Dick Cheney worked for Halliburton in his article, it is not necessary to demonstrate first that his employment at the company has affected his decisions as Vice President. Quatloo 17:06, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Having read the tortuous arguments above, I can see absolutely no reason why Libby's obvious and self-identified Jewishness should not be listed on wikipedia. He's a senior government official connected, however tangentially, with foreign policy. You bet it's relevant! The white-anting, undermining and subtle censorship of ordinary information like this is harming Misplaced Pages, of this I am certain. Skopp (Talk) 22:59, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- This implies that someone's Jewish ethnicity or affiliation with Judaism mysteriously makes him a part of some world-wide conspiracy. Care to WP:ATTRIBUTE this? ←Humus sapiens 00:39, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- Not at all. But it a potentially interesting data point. Being Jewish may affect some of his decisions and views, or not, as the case may be, but it is nice to know in any event. One wonders why this sort of interesting personal detail is the focus of a censorship campaign here. That's even more interesting! Skopp (Talk) 17:42, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- If it's true that the Bush administration is following a secret Jewish agenda then why did 90 percent (or so) of Jewish Americans vote against him? Steve Dufour
- To camouflage it, of course. ←Humus sapiens 22:21, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- If it's true that the Bush administration is following a secret Jewish agenda then why did 90 percent (or so) of Jewish Americans vote against him? Steve Dufour
- The relevance of debate in the media about whether or not Lewis Libby is Jewish is clearly established in the reliable source published by Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA) and several reliable news media cited directly in the article on Lewis Libby at the following link: Lewis Libby#Personal history and fully explained in the talk page section long before Notmyrealname came upon the article and started deleting the sources (reverting continually pertinent sourced information): see Talk:Lewis Libby (scroll up before nmrn's comments and read my recent replies). Kampeas' article makes very clear what relevance this aspect of Libby's personal history has to current political debate in the United States regarding both the Iraq war policies of the Bush administration (in which he was a senior member) and the Libby trial about the CIA leak grand jury investigation, which is a central section in the article about Libby and his involvement in the Plame affair. --NYScholar 09:08, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Actually, the Kampeas article makes painfully clear that Libby's being Jewish is not relevant at all, except possibly as a rejoinder to KKK leader David Duke and others who believe in conspiracies. Please check out the talk page and you will also see that NYScholar has made several comments that pretty much cross the line of WP:NPA. On the article itself, at Lewis Libby#Personal history you will see NYScholar's latest clunky edit, including poor use of sourcing, that is original research. Sigh. Notmyrealname 13:25, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- A mischaracterization -- the Kampeas article does nothing of the sort. The most it does is make a claim that Libby's being Jewish has not affected his decisionmaking, and that he kept his profile low. Stipulating those conclusions are true (they likely are) is not at all equal to a finding that his "being Jewish is not relevant at all." One must be careful not to draw the conclusions one wants to find, when they are not actually present. I find the article troubling for other reasons, but it is one of the few sources discussing the issue. Quatloo 17:20, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Category:Hamas members Template:Blpwatch-links
Some debate over at Category:Hamas members if the category should be a subcat of Category:Anti-Semitic people. // Liftarn
- The debate is at Category talk:Hamas members. Plenty of RS were provided. ←Humus sapiens 11:21, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
- If RS were provided we wouldn't have this debate. // Liftarn
Eric S. Raymond Template:Blpwatch-links
A user insists on putting in an accusation that Eric Raymond inserted pro-Iraq-war terms into the Jargon File. The "source" is an Internet newsletter. Raymond has stated on Misplaced Pages that the accusation is false and that the person who made it has apologized. Talk:Eric_S._Raymond/Archive_1#More On the subject of Criticism.
I can't keep reverting this without violating 3RR (well, I can, since it's a BLP issue, but doing so puts me at risk if the user can get an admin to disagree with me).
Using Eric's denial is also a problem because of inconsistencies in WP:RS which state that Misplaced Pages is not a source, period, even though it would count as a self-published source in an article about the author. Ken Arromdee 14:47, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
Gary Radnich Template:Blpwatch-links
Gary Radnich (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
Several users (including multiple IPs as well as CharlotteWebb) have repeatedly re-added multiple unsourced or poorly-sourced negative assertions about this Bay Area television/radio personality. Most pernicious is the accusation of racism, for which the only listed source is an article noting that Radnich has been the target of some racist remarks due to his interracial marriage.
There are two other poorly-sourced assertions; one a negative description of his show using weasel words ("By some accounts"), and the other an assertion of "constant criticism of baseball superstar Barry Bonds" sourced only by a single video clip. JavaTenor 19:53, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
Brian Kenny (sportscaster) Template:Blpwatch-links
I noticed this article while on RC Patrol. It is totally unsourced. What concerns me is that it contains alleged information about his children which probably should not be in his article. It too is unsourced. Morenooso 00:11, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Sensitive info about minors removed. Some sources supplied, citations requested where not. Hope this helps. Refsworldlee(eds) 01:26, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- How is the information "sensitive" when it is on his professional ESPN biography? Generally such biographies are creating with information provided by the subject himself, so he likely wants that information out there. Quatloo 16:15, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- Do you have children? Would you like potential kidnappers to know exactly where to get at them? I have no other questions than that. Child information is always sensitive, and Misplaced Pages is no place to display it. Refsworldlee(eds) 01:09, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- And the only ESPN biography I have found (here) makes no mention of where his kids are schooled - thank goodness. Refsworldlee(eds) 01:26, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- How is the information "sensitive" when it is on his professional ESPN biography? Generally such biographies are creating with information provided by the subject himself, so he likely wants that information out there. Quatloo 16:15, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Quackwatch Template:Blpwatch-links
Involving the website of Stephen Barrett.
The following IP has been misused (other IPs are also involved....)
- 4.233.98.20 (talk · contribs) -- Used on March 1, 2007 to make gross violations of BLP at Quackwatch. Signed as Tim Bolen.
Tim Bolen is in legal dispute with Stephen Barrett, the webmaster of Quackwatch. Everything written by this user is exactly in Tim Bolen's style. His team (including lawyer) is awaiting trial for libel and malicious prosecution.
Upon discovering this misuse of Misplaced Pages to make a long list of accusations, misrepresentations, and even some totally false statements made against better knowledge (he has been informed, is being sued, and yet repeats them), I immediately deleted the entry per BLP. Misplaced Pages should not be used for an extension of his off-wiki war against Barrett.
Was it proper of me to delete it?
I also began tracking down other possibilities and found other IPs (same IP range) from the same location (he does live there), making violations showing the same level of personal involvement:
- 4.232.90.102 (talk · contribs) -- Used on August 22, 2006 to vandalize a revert at the now deleted Quackpot Watch article (about Bolen himself) and to vandalize the Stephen Barrett article.
- 4.233.98.128 (talk · contribs) -- Used on August 24, 2006 to vandalize the Quackwatch article three times.
There may be other IPs that can be identified later.
Another matter of directly related interest:
- Ilena Rosenthal (User:Ilena) has just been indef banned because of actions here related to her bringing the same battle to Misplaced Pages. She has also been sued for republishing Bolen's original statements, but got off because she was not the originator of the statements. See: Barrett v. Rosenthal
It is worth noting that he makes legal threats against potentially all Wikipedians:
- "One more thing - In my opinion, what happened to Ilena Rosenthal does not apply to you at Wickipedia because you are an EDITED publication which makes each of you separately and together legally liable for the content of your presentation. So step carefully."
This is also typical of his style, to make intimidating threats in best SLAPP-motivated style.
If anyone needs more information, just use my email link or use my talk page. Please notify me of any comments here by posting to my talk page. -- Fyslee (collaborate) 15:10, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Stephen Barrett Template:Blpwatch-links
Identical situation as above, but involving the biographical article itself.
The following IP has been misused (other IPs are also involved....)
- 4.233.98.20 (talk · contribs) -- Used on March 1, 2007 to make gross violations of BLP at Quackwatch. Signed as Tim Bolen.
Tim Bolen is in legal dispute with Stephen Barrett, the webmaster of Quackwatch. Everything written by this user is exactly in Tim Bolen's style. His team (including lawyer) is awaiting trial for libel and malicious prosecution.
Upon discovering this misuse of Misplaced Pages to make a long list of accusations, misrepresentations, and even some totally false statements made against better knowledge (he has been informed, is being sued, and yet repeats them), I immediately deleted the entry per BLP. Misplaced Pages should not be used for an extension of his off-wiki war against Barrett.
Was it proper of me to delete it?
I also began tracking down other possibilities and found other IPs (same IP range) from the same location (he does live there), making violations showing the same level of personal involvement:
- 4.232.90.102 (talk · contribs) -- Used on August 22, 2006 to vandalize a revert at the now deleted Quackpot Watch article (about Bolen himself) and to vandalize the Stephen Barrett article.
- 4.233.98.128 (talk · contribs) -- Used on August 24, 2006 to vandalize the Quackwatch article three times.
There may be other IPs that can be identified later.
Another matter of directly related interest:
- Ilena Rosenthal (User:Ilena) has just been indef banned because of actions here related to her bringing the same battle to Misplaced Pages. She has also been sued for republishing Bolen's original statements, but got off because she was not the originator of the statements. See: Barrett v. Rosenthal
It is worth noting that he makes legal threats against potentially all Wikipedians:
- "One more thing - In my opinion, what happened to Ilena Rosenthal does not apply to you at Wickipedia because you are an EDITED publication which makes each of you separately and together legally liable for the content of your presentation. So step carefully."
This is also typical of his style, to make intimidating threats in best SLAPP-motivated style.
If anyone needs more information, just use my email link or use my talk page. Please notify me of any comments here by posting to my talk page. -- Fyslee (collaborate) 15:12, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
Matt Drudge Template:Blpwatch-links
- Skoppensboer (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) - The user has engaged in edit-warring at the Matt Drudge article, and has moved content believed to be in violation of WP:BLP to his userspace. He was warned and the content was removed. After the warning he restored the content.RWR8189 22:10, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- The content I replicated on my user page was found to be WP:BLP by only one other editor. If you read it, it is clearly encyclopaedic and no lawyer on earth could consider it problematic. I contend that there is a cabal of conservative editors sanitizing all information from certain pages that they deem critical to their cultural heroes. This is a practice that should be stopped before WP becomes the plaything of political activists. Skopp (Talk) 22:36, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- The content in question uses an article that is a source of dubious reliability, offers a non-specific link to radio archives, and uses original research to make conclusions. Those are the problems, not some cabal.--RWR8189 22:59, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
- I'll make the radio link specific, ok? Hope that satisfies you. There is absolutely no OR at all. Skopp (Talk) 23:49, 1 March 2007 (UTC)
As a BLP patrol volunteer, I have a strong opinion in this matter. But as I am already directly involved in a complaint against this user on this article, I will refrain from expressing it. - Crockspot 16:44, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
James Dobson Template:Blpwatch-links
James Dobson (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - Yet another article under the guise of biography that is little more than a slagfest of controversies and critcisms, with the subject's own views described from primarily his critics' POVs. I have made some NPOV changes in the "Social views" section of article and, given the POV perspective of most of that section, deleted the entire very long and article-overwhelming "controversies" section per WP:Undue weight. I have described my concerns further at Talk:James Dobson#Slagfest or Biography? // CyberAnth 06:42, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- I reviewed the situation and it does not seem to require outside intervention related to the policy of Biographies of living people, which is a basis for posting on this noticeboard. -- Jreferee 16:37, 2 February 2007 (UTC)
- This issue is still active—it was raised again a few weeks later. — Athænara ✉ 12:37, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
James Dobson - tendentious editing or vandalism nightly for about 6 days. "Divine right" keeps reappearing even though it is an ancient political term having nothing to do with Dobson's views on marriage. This, or something similar (in the James Dobson#Views on marriage section) is the proper text to maintain NPOV or something reasonably close:
- "He believes that men, while not created by God as superior to women, have a role which includes servant leadership within the family. Their wives, and children at home, are to submit to their authority in matters of conflict." Witnessforpeace (talk · contribs) 02:06, 2 March 2007 (UTC).
I added references and which explain "not superior to women" and add some details concerning "submit" Also, existing reference contains and extended ans sincere quealification that clearly indicates that my text "recommend" belongs in there, as well as my explanation as to what mothers ought to do instead of working outside the home. This has also been reverted about 6 times with no explanation given in the discussion, and no exlanation as to why the reference is being misued. Witnessforpeace 02:20, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
The article seems not to be currently under attack as described. — Æ. ✉ 14:04, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Correction. I happened to look at it between reversions. A closer look at the history gives a different picture. Two accounts (very likely the same editor) have been making identical edits:
- 67.168.239.61 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
- Jerry1964 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) 1a + 1b 3 4
- Jerry1964 has been WP:3RR warned once. I just wanted to reverse my error of judgement quickly first. — Athænara ✉ 14:35, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- Diffs added above—Misplaced Pages:Disruptive editing, Misplaced Pages:Tendentious editing, Misplaced Pages:Edit warring, violation of Misplaced Pages:Neutral point of view. — Æ. ✉ 15:18, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Subhash Kak Template:Blpwatch-links
- Subhash Kak (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - Some editors (User:Dbachmann, User:Gobalan Achayan and User:Lumidek) are adding libelous, defaming, poorly sourced and/or false material on the talkpage and in the article. This has also happened in some other articles where Subhash Kak is mentioned. --12:47, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
John Parr Template:Blpwatch-links
- John Parr (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - The article (http://en.wikipedia.org/John_Parr) contains an opinion on his youngest son, James, that uses en expletive. Whether the opinion is true or not doesn't matter, I don't think it is an appropriate use of language in this context and should be reworded.212.57.228.39 13:20, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- That obscenity was added 11:10, 25 February 2007 (UTC) by 172.203.67.96 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log). I've reverted it. — Athænara ✉ 13:37, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Barbara Schwarz (again!)
- I was not able to work out the process to nominate it for deletion since it has already been nominated 3 times. She is clearly non-notable, except to a small group of her "anti-fans" Steve Dufour 17:00, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- A more experienced editor is now considering deletion and this is being discussed on the article's talk page. Steve Dufour 20:55, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Jabron Hashmi
First British Muslim soldier to die in the War on Terror, widely reported but a few users repeatedly editing the article to suit their POV, including what I believe to be many sockpuppets. Not especially frequent, but constant. RHB 17:54, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
- I took a few of the negative comments off. The fact that a soldier is not popular with the people he is fighting against (while the war is going on anyway) is not notable. Steve Dufour 18:13, 2 March 2007 (UTC)
Kim Peek is not the influence for Rain Man
Kim Peek is not the influence for the movie Rain Man (which is written on her[REDACTED] page), George Finn was.
Eldred G. Smith Template:Blpwatch-links
Eldred G. Smith (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - An editor has repeatedly inserted information that s/he claims has "long been suspected" regarding an usourced "report." The claim made in the article has recently been denied by the subject's son, who is also the author of a book on the subject. Although the editor claims this information is common knowledge, I could find no evidence on the internet that the rumor in question even exists outside of this article. In any case, suspicions, rumors (even if they exist) and unsourced "reports" are not appropriate for BLP's. LeftField 13:54, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- The situation now appears to be resolved.LeftField 23:25, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Nigel McGuinness Template:Blpwatch-links
Nigel McGuinness (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - I originally posted the following at WP:COI/N but was told it was a BLP issue so have decided to take the case here. The case has been argued here before however at the time there was not a large amount of input and the debate was still raging. I feel enough time has passed now for another look at the case to occur to get a clear answer on the topic.
- The conflict of interest and debate occurred back in September of 2006 and was never completely resolved and thus I believe a re-look at the case should occur.
- Prior to the debate the real name of the professional wrestler in question was listed, sourced to the USPTO of the registered ring name. A new user, TrishBunkey (talk · contribs), appeared and removed the information citing privacy which lead to a debate about censorship, how the USPTO a public source is a private source and whether precedents suck as Buckethead and Criss Angel applied.
- It was discovered that TrishBuckney was the webmistress of the official website of Nigel McGuinness and sent a note to the wikifoundation to have the information removed. The information was removed due to this by admin FCYTravis (talk · contribs) (06:05, 23 September 2006 FCYTravis (Talk | contribs) (rm real name per OTRS ticket #2006092210008209)), who subsequently unlocked the fully protected article even though the dispute was still going on. Some other admins, namely Alphachimp (talk · contribs), disagreed with this conclusion and other users also disagreed leading to many versions of the article being deleted from the history to remove any reference to the real name. The dispute eventually died down as FCYTravis was adamant and no area came to a conclusion.
- For the previous arguments on this case see;
- I would like a clear look at the dispute as the legal issue of ones publicly available name being banned from their own article in question seems bizarre, the conflict of interest involved with the people in the dispute, the lack of policy on a case such as this, censorship and how the result of the discussion was clearly against precedent set by other articles.
In addition to the above it is of note that one of the arguments against inclusion of his real name was that[REDACTED] was the only source, however his real name is also available on his imdb page as seen here. –– Lid 15:10, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
Cults and new religious movements in literature and popular culture Template:Blpwatch-links
This article contains the following text:
A "Growing Up Gotti" episode in 2005 featured a Social Therapist (follower of Fred Newman and Lenora Fulani) intervening in the family problems of Victoria Gotti and her teenage sons.
The actual episode contains no reference to either Newman or Fulani, and no reference at all to any claims that they, or the therapy practice they are associated with, has anything to do with "cults" or "new religious movements." An editor keeps reinserting this sentence, despite the fact that its inclusion is purely POV, and defamatory to the people mentioned. The editor refuses to provide any reliable sourcing for the claim insisting that it stands alone as is, and with the dubious explanation (which the editor seems to have invented) that "popular culture" articles somehow do not need to be as strict with respect to claims as other articles. I do not see any guideline indicating that individuals can be smeared with a "cult" charge without any sourcing whatsoever purely on the whim of an editor. BabyDweezil 19:39, 3 March 2007 (UTC)
- This is in no way defamatory, POV, or a violation of WP:BLP. Inclusion in the article does not imply anything other than that it is a reference that has something related to the concept of cults and new religious movements, as portrayed in literature and popular culture. This would fall under a category of satire/parody, and therefore be acceptable. Smee 20:54, 4 March 2007 (UTC).
- The show had nothing related to the concept of cults and new religious movements. Zero. Zip. BabyDweezil 23:36, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Clay Buchholz Template:Blpwatch-links
Clay Buchholz (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - This article makes a claim that Clay Buchholz stole 29 laptop computers. It provides a dead or nonexistant link as the source of information and the information can not be located elsewhere besides this[REDACTED] article and other sites that reference it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.67.153.238 (talk • contribs) 05:44, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
- That has been removed. However, it seems like he is still a minor league player at this time so he probably isn't notable enough for a WP article. Steve Dufour 17:06, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Daniel Pipes Template:Blpwatch-links
Source: Talk:Daniel Pipes The recent archiving of the talk page of this article has made the editing content dispute unclear. There are still problems with lack of balance and lack of full citations in this controversial article on a living person; earlier tags placed by editors alerting other users of this encyclopedia to problems of this kind were continually being reverted by some users and even administrators, making it difficult for Misplaced Pages users to be referred to the talk page for discussion. Then an administrator placed current discussion in an archive page (1) that was very difficult to follow. My comment in Talk:Daniel Pipes of March 1, 2007, explains what I find are the problems of that manner of archiving and refers to still easily-accessible full citations for the content of the current version of the article on Daniel Pipes, which can be used in improving the article's citations. The article is currently tagged with an "unreferenced" template (by another editor). I agree that the article needs the "unreferenced" tag, along with the tags that were removed by others alerting to the problems of lack of balance and lack of neutrality; these three problems are interrelated in my view. --NYScholar 00:54, 4 March 2007 (UTC) Also, I just want to add that I believe that the citations problems that I perceive in this article are fairly easily resolvable; but I myself will not being doing any more work on it (due to the non-productive conflicts that I've already experienced there and future lack of time). I've provided the necessary citations information for other editors to do that work. Explanations are already in the talk page archive (2) of the article and in my own talk page archive (2).] --NYScholar 09:03, 4 March 2007 (UTC)]
- This article seems like there is way too much of people's opinions about the subject. Although there is some balance since both positive and negative opinions are expressed. Steve Dufour 17:08, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
Sid Haig Template:Blpwatch-links
- Sid Haig (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) - Rcarey1979 keeps on adding irrelevant POV stuff to Sid's article; "Despite Haig's status as a cult figure in modern horror films, he revealed that he was no expert on the genre.", using an off-hand comment from Sid about zombies eating brains in the original Night of the Living Dead, which was false. Its not relevant enough for the encyclopedia article. Other users have attempted to remove it, and user has given no reason to justify his edits.// CyberGhostface 23:04, 4 March 2007 (UTC)
- . whatever http://whatever.
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