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:::::Incorrect. I have repeatedly and explicitly stated that "new religious movement" is a subset of a "religion". Based on that, the rest of your argument above is invalidated.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::Incorrect. I have repeatedly and explicitly stated that "new religious movement" is a subset of a "religion". Based on that, the rest of your argument above is invalidated.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::Because "new religious movement" is a subset of "religion" means no more than it would be just as acceptable to write "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" compared with "Jehovah's Witnesses is a new religious movement." But this does not mean it would be acceptable to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" compared with saying Jehovah's Witnesses is a "Christian sect" or a "Christian new religious movement". The reason we can legitimately declare "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" is because the body of world knowledge demonstrates a consensus for this presentation. But to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" is contrary to the same body of knowledge.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::::Because "new religious movement" is a subset of "religion" means no more than it would be just as acceptable to write "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" compared with "Jehovah's Witnesses is a new religious movement." But this does not mean it would be acceptable to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" compared with saying Jehovah's Witnesses is a "Christian sect" or a "Christian new religious movement". The reason we can legitimately declare "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" is because the body of world knowledge demonstrates a consensus for this presentation. But to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" is contrary to the same body of knowledge.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::Your objection is similar to saying "the apple is ''red'', and the apple is ''fruit'', but under no circumstances shall the apple be called ''red fruit''". Bias is evident in the objection.--] (]) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''3)''' Apparently you do not understand the value of sharing research methodology. The method I employed (and disclosed for purposes of verification/testing) made it impossible for me to select sources. | ::::'''3)''' Apparently you do not understand the value of sharing research methodology. The method I employed (and disclosed for purposes of verification/testing) made it impossible for me to select sources. | ||
:::::It is your attitude, approach, and motive I have a problem with, not the method of your actual research.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::It is your attitude, approach, and motive I have a problem with, not the method of your actual research.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::'''Jeffro77''', you need to get beyond your own personal dislikes and focus on good research and presentation. It matters no one iota what my personal disposition is. Nobody cares, accept '''you''' apparently. Readers only care about having reliable information that is verified and consistent with the body of knowledge on whatever the subject. Your personal disgust with my "attitude, approach, and motive" has led you to accuse me wrongly by suggesting I selected source material. For an academic this is probably one of the worst accusations to have hurled against them. In this case, your slur of me is not only completely absurd as demonstrated by the record, it also demonstrates how you have let your judgement become clouded by your personal dislike of me, or what you call my "attitude, approach, and motive." Just how you know my motivation is a mystery. Presumably you have supernatural powers to read minds.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::::'''Jeffro77''', you need to get beyond your own personal dislikes and focus on good research and presentation. It matters no one iota what my personal disposition is. Nobody cares, accept '''you''' apparently. Readers only care about having reliable information that is verified and consistent with the body of knowledge on whatever the subject. Your personal disgust with my "attitude, approach, and motive" has led you to accuse me wrongly by suggesting I selected source material. For an academic this is probably one of the worst accusations to have hurled against them. In this case, your slur of me is not only completely absurd as demonstrated by the record, it also demonstrates how you have let your judgement become clouded by your personal dislike of me, or what you call my "attitude, approach, and motive." Just how you know my motivation is a mystery. Presumably you have supernatural powers to read minds.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
:::::::On the contrary, other editors have also expressed concern regarding your motives and style of debating. I have no personal opinion of you at all, as I do not know you. However, I have tried to point out to you several times that your ''approach'' does not work in your favour. You have ignored that advice apparently because of pride.--] (]) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''4)''' I have not anywhere suggested the literature presents a view that the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses is non-Christian., or that it is not a religion. These assertions on your part are either inventions of your mind, or else poor comprehension. A consensus presentation that does not declare a religion as Christian is not a consensus presentation that the religion is non-Christian. | ::::'''4)''' I have not anywhere suggested the literature presents a view that the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses is non-Christian., or that it is not a religion. These assertions on your part are either inventions of your mind, or else poor comprehension. A consensus presentation that does not declare a religion as Christian is not a consensus presentation that the religion is non-Christian. | ||
:::::And yet you call reference to them as "a Christian religion" vandalism.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::And yet you call reference to them as "a Christian religion" vandalism.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::Yes. That edit is vandalism under '''the conditions''' I have already iterated.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::::Yes. That edit is vandalism under '''the conditions''' I have already iterated.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
:::::::No, it is an edit dispute.--] (]) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''5)''' Other religions find their own presentations in the literature. Some of them have a consensus presentation which declare them as Christian and others do not. If this is a field of study you want to bite off, then please do so and report your method and finding. Be assured it will be tested. | ::::'''5)''' Other religions find their own presentations in the literature. Some of them have a consensus presentation which declare them as Christian and others do not. If this is a field of study you want to bite off, then please do so and report your method and finding. Be assured it will be tested. | ||
:::::The suggested tangent is superfluous. It is apparent though that many sources are biased against JWs (as are apparently even some who claim to be members thereof).--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::The suggested tangent is superfluous. It is apparent though that many sources are biased against JWs (as are apparently even some who claim to be members thereof).--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::It is a sweeping generalization to suggest that the body of evidence brought to the table is biased against Jehovah's Witnesses. Because there is bias against Jehovah's Witnesses by "some" or even "many" (weasal words, by the way) does not mean the evidence brought forth on this occasion is bad information. Frankly, during the process I took great pains to '''point out''' presentations authored by individuals with known bias one way or another, and recommended discounting the views accordingly. Again, your disdain has grasped the better part of your judgement.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::::It is a sweeping generalization to suggest that the body of evidence brought to the table is biased against Jehovah's Witnesses. Because there is bias against Jehovah's Witnesses by "some" or even "many" (weasal words, by the way) does not mean the evidence brought forth on this occasion is bad information. Frankly, during the process I took great pains to '''point out''' presentations authored by individuals with known bias one way or another, and recommended discounting the views accordingly. Again, your disdain has grasped the better part of your judgement.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
:::::::As I have already stated, I expressed no concern with your ''research'', however your ''conclusions'' are not supported by your research.--] (]) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''6)''' Editors had earlier agreed on the expression “Christian sect”. Even '''Wonderpet''' applied this usage! I have no problem with “Christian sect” or “Christian new religious movement”. Both of these have weight of vetted source presentations. But the simple declaration of “Christian” or “Christian religion” is contrary to the presentation found in the body of world knowledge when used as declarations. | ::::'''6)''' Editors had earlier agreed on the expression “Christian sect”. Even '''Wonderpet''' applied this usage! I have no problem with “Christian sect” or “Christian new religious movement”. Both of these have weight of vetted source presentations. But the simple declaration of “Christian” or “Christian religion” is contrary to the presentation found in the body of world knowledge when used as declarations. | ||
:::::I ''conceded'' that the term 'Christian sect' could be used. Whether other editors agree is up to them. However, the term "new religious movement" is indeed more accurate than "sect". However, calling them a "Christian religion" hardly constitutes vandalism, as it is still an accurate (though less specific) statement.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::I ''conceded'' that the term 'Christian sect' could be used. Whether other editors agree is up to them. However, the term "new religious movement" is indeed more accurate than "sect". However, calling them a "Christian religion" hardly constitutes vandalism, as it is still an accurate (though less specific) statement.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
::::::It does constitute vandalism under '''the conditions''' the edit was made. I have alread explained this, and you have skirted it. No surprise there.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::::It does constitute vandalism under '''the conditions''' the edit was made. I have alread explained this, and you have skirted it. No surprise there.--] (]) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
:::::::Ignored.--] (]) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC) | |||
::::'''7)''' '''Wonderpet''' is the one that has stirred this pot; not me. The matter was settled until she began pushing her POV without discussion or substantiation, despite requests for both. -- ] (]) 04:41, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ::::'''7)''' '''Wonderpet''' is the one that has stirred this pot; not me. The matter was settled until she began pushing her POV without discussion or substantiation, despite requests for both. -- ] (]) 04:41, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | ||
:::::Regardless, someone inserting something correct but not in agreement with your point of view is not vandalism.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) | :::::Regardless, someone inserting something correct but not in agreement with your point of view is not vandalism.--] (]) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC) |
Revision as of 01:01, 27 December 2007
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Jehovah's Witnesses and blood
Though your lead-in is interesting, it doesn't confirm remotely to WP:LEAD. Take a look at that guideline, and I suspect you'll want to do some shuffling around with the article. Be bold. :) joshbuddy, talk 00:08, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
I'm not sure I agree with your statement. But we should explore it. Can you be more specific?Marvin Shilmer 03:17, 9 January 2007 (UTC)
Marvin, I know i made some offensive comments, sorry. George 02:05, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
- Thanks, George. Is it big of you to apologize. But we should all be big enough to overlook one another's passions, understanding that our passion sometimes manifests itself with rough edges. Apology accepted. I have an extensive library of vetted journals and other academic publications, not to mention access to one of the world's deepest databases of research material. If I can ever help you retrieve something useful let me know. If I have time I am glad to help.-- Marvin Shilmer 17:00, 9 May 2007 (UTC)
My comments
Marvin, I wanted to drop you a personal note to assure you that I'm not trying to marginalize or ignore your statements on objectivity and academic rigor. I just have gotten to the point where I'd like to work through the core issues with as little rhetoric as possible. After a couple of years on Misplaced Pages I know that these discussions can (and frequently do) expand out of control if every tangent is entertained, and I think we can be a lot more productive if we avoid lengthy debates (I've been involved in some that have raged on for months without getting anywhere). We obviously have some differences of opinion on how information should be presented, but I'd rather identify these and move on as best we can rather than spend a lot of effort trying to explain why the other's opinion is flawed. Best regards. -- mattb 02:44, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
warning
Please refrain from repeatedly undoing other people's edits, as you are doing in Jehovah's Witnesses. If you continue, you may be blocked from editing Misplaced Pages. The three-revert rule (3RR) prohibits making more than three reversions in a content dispute within a 24-hour period. Additionally, users who perform a large number of reversions in content disputes may be blocked for edit warring, even if they do not technically violate the three-revert rule. Rather than reverting, please discuss disputed changes on the talk page. The revision you want is not going to be implemented by edit warring. Thank you.DGG 19:47, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
- Administrators with power have the option of banning whomever they wish. But I have not deleted/removed anything whatsoever outside Wiki policy. I have deleted/removed unverified attributions. Wiki expressly permits every editor this freedom, including this lowly non-administrator editor. Additionally, I have not added any material that I failed to discuss on the talk page first. Furthermore everything I have added was verified by vetted secondary sources, yet this was deleted by another editor (Fcsuper). Since your warning to me is wholly erroneous in terms of acts attributed to me, my question is who are you acting at the behest of? Clearly someone shared this error and asked you to act. Please explain. -- Marvin Shilmer 19:57, 13 May 2007 (UTC)
- I'm sorry I didn't see your note till now. Nope. I came here just as I said, from Recent Changes. Like many people, I do a little random checking there as well as what I mainly do, which is monitor speedies. What I noticed was a pattern of back and forth changes, and now that I've noticed it, I intended and do intend to follow it up with others also who seem to be doing it there--I never meant to say it was primarily you. I do not want to get involved in the merits of the changes--nor do I intend to edit on this subject, nor have I ever worked with any of the people here who are interested. But I know from my own experience on subjects I edit that repeated back and forth does not turn out well--however annoying it may be at first, it gets worse. I've once or twice been tempted, but what I do at that point is turn off the computer. No matter how right I think I am. If it's worth coming back the next day, I come back.
- I personally have never blocked anyone, except once by mistake. If I wanted to, I'd have to check the instructions for the exact steps, for I've never read them in detail & hope I never will need to. If I thought it was needed, I'd ask someone else to double-check and do it, but I've never done that either. However, there's a noticeboard where people can put requests for blocking, and the admins who check that do it if it meets the technical requirements, in the hope of decreasing the intensity of conflict. By my counting, you may have gone over the limit or come close, & I was trying to alert you to that before someone else with perhaps a little less patience did. The more you are in the right, the more you should try not to get blocked, for then you will appear in the wrong.
- I will check out things now, and if someone needs a warning, I'll warn them. That's all I'll do. That's the most I ever do. For almost any situation, it's enough. DGG 04:09, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
- DGG: I appreciate you taking the time to respond. Your genuineness shines through in living color. By the way, I think I inadvertently edited your user page in an effort to communicate with you. Though I am an experienced writer and researcher I’m afraid my Wiki skills are more limited. I did not change my edit on your user page for fear I would exacerbate my mistake. I also left a message today on your talk page. Best regards. -- Marvin Shilmer 04:17, 15 May 2007 (UTC) (I appreciate your reminding me today, because I had meant to do it yesterday, but got too sleepy. It's easy to post on a user page by mistake.--as I said above, I make that sort of mistake too--and if you hadn't told me, it might have been a while till I noticed,)DGG 05:58, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
Marvin, I agree with DGG. Edit warring is a bad thing and leads to unpleasant things like page protection and blocking of edit wariors. Consider using the WP:1RR rule. Limit yourself to one revert and then take it to the Talk Page. Since the text that is the subject of the edit war is also being discussed on the Talk Page, don't feel that you have to revert unacceptable wording. Focus on developing a consensus text and then put that text in the article after a consensus has been developed. (Yes, I know that I have been bold and made some edits to the article text but you will note that I have not edit warred when other people have changed my proposed text.) --Richard 17:44, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
- Richard: I disagree with neither your nor DGG. What I dislike is the manifest refusal of editors to respond on academic terms to academic questions. I also dislike it when an editor misrepresents published author’s presentations, and then has the audacity to move their erroneous transposition into the main text. This is so rampant it makes me wonder where are other competent editors. Why are editors not insisting on acceptable standards of academic presentation, such as secondary source verification for starters, and beyond this taking precautions to present from among these sources as they represent an existing consensus in the literature, which is very important to a reference work. At the moment vying editors on the Jehovah’s Witness talk page are more interested in researching my personal background (and then implying motivation from that) than they are in academic excellence. If they expended this time on the subject at hand rather than attempting to torpedo my participation with innuendo of character then perhaps they could realize how tenuous their presentation is. -- Marvin Shilmer 18:09, 15 May 2007 (UTC)
info request
Hi Marvin, would you be so kind, I understand you have awesome research tools, I am looking for a good solid estimate of the number of ordained ministers in the United states only. I cannot find this information anywhere. Thank you.--Ice9Tea 00:36, 17 May 2007 (UTC)
- Ice9Tea: I'm happy to take a quick look at this question for you. I have a request that will help reduce my time to research. Are you looking for an estimate of ordained ministers with a congregational ministry, or are you looking for an estimate of ordained ministers with a personal ministry? Jehovah's Witnesses, for instance, consider each baptized Witness as an ordained minister whether they have congregational ministerial responsibilities or not, whereas among these only a few (elders and ministerial servants) have congregational ministerial duty. I'll wait to hear from you, and then I'll take a look see.-- Marvin Shilmer 12:28, 17 May 2007 (UTC)
- Marvin thanks, I think that the question can be stated like this "How many individuals are there that are counted as ordained ministers by the laws governing such matters in the United States including only those using the Bible in there ministry"? thanks again.--Ice9Tea 23:36, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
Hi Marvin, I'm looking for your e-mail address to discuss further. Long time no talk. Use the "E-mail this user" function to send me your address. Hope to hear from you. --Risot7 (talk) 16:39, 21 December 2007 (UTC)
Thank you
It is true that there are subjects that I will completely avoid, but for the most part I rather enjoy having my assumptions challenged. Duffer 12:49, 14 September 2007 (UTC)
- Duffer, For me it is impossible to hold personal conviction in anything I am unwilling to openly discuss and examine, including cherished personal beliefs and/or preferences. Further, my values compel me to unabashedly examine and test my beliefs for veracity in the face of counterclaim. If I’m wrong I want to know. What sort of conviction leads a person to selectively avoid subjects? The biblical account of Moses and Aaron at Meribah conveys a sobering message when it comes to avoiding or addressing an issue/subject. Because Aaron failed to address the misconduct of Moses, and in fact stood in tacit support of Moses’ misdeed, Aaron was forthrightly removed from his high office and suffered premature death. The same thing happened to Moses, of course. Each man made a choice in this instance. Moses chose to act inappropriately in his capacity of the anointed of Jehovah. Aaron chose to avoid addressing the issue/subject, and to give tacit support to the anointed of Jehovah when he should not have. This was a costly mistake for Aaron, and one we should learn from. -- Marvin Shilmer 17:45, 18 September 2007 (UTC)
Jehovah's witness's articles
Please yourself refrain from ill-informed and arrogant criticism of others. The article was rated as a "B" because it requires a formal review from the GA group to get GA recognition. The same holds for FA. I am not myself in the position to grant either. A-class, which perhaps it might technically qualify for, also generally requires, according to current standards elsewhere, more than one editor to agree to that level. I would know this as a member of the Biography project, where I do most of the A-Class reviews. In short, the B class was pretty much the highest level of assessment that could be given out. Frankly, your apparent outrage at the rating surprises me. I can only assume that your outrage is due to it not having received A-Class rating, as it clearly was more than a Start or Stub. Again, if you note the standards set elsewhere, there are now specific groups which tend to put them out only after a rather more detailed review. I'm virtually certain the Jehovah's Witnesses project doesn't have the people to do so themselves, and I'm in the process of tagging and assessing the articles for all the religion projects, so that ultimately all the projects will know which articles are more or less closest to GA or FA status, making (hopefully) some sort of collaboration possible somewhere down the line. Clearly, if you believe that your work demands an A-Class rating, you can change it on your own. Frankly, you could have done so at any time. Also, if you think that it qualifies for GA, which I personally think it probably does, please feel free to propose it. However, if anyone is going to fling words like "worthless" around, I would think that the best place to apply it would be toward the criticisms made by individuals of others who neither have nor seek any understanding of the motivations behind those actions, in short, your own comments. Good day. John Carter 13:11, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: If you find arrogance in my request that you provide a summary for ratings you apply, then you read the arrogance into the text. My request is only that you follow Wiki recommended practice. I took the time to specify precisely the recommended practice in need of your attention, which is to offer a summarization to explain your rating and/or any related strengths and weakness. The task of providing such a summary does not rest with GA group. The task rests with the editor taking it upon him or herself to apply a rating in the first place, which in this case is you. You applied a B-class rating; hence you have an obligation to explain your rating, including any related strengths or weaknesses. Presumably you are in a position to explain your own actions. As for me, I do not presume to rate my own work. That would be arrogance. However, a request for editors to follow recommended practices is in no way arrogance, except perhaps to an untrained eye. Again I request that you provide a summary to explain why your assigned rating, including any perceived weaknesses or strengths. --Marvin Shilmer 14:55, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- You did notice that every article relevant to the project was rated, not just your own, right? For the purpose of letting the project know where the articles stand in terms of quality? That also is something which is presumably "worthwhile" to the project itself, even if it doesn't make you feel good. And the rating is primarily intended in almost all cases for the benefit of editors to determine which articles they should work on, not for the benefit of the editor/s who already have. Or were you only concerned with this one article? And I did explain the reason for the rating above. Basically, the article might qualify as A class, but right now there is a lot of question going on out there regarding whether A-Class might join GA and FA as becoming a "objectively reviewed" level, and it would probably be problematic to rate any article at that level before it is known whether there will be a specific rating group dealing with that classification in the near future. Personally, when I finish the religion projects' assessments, and include all the GAs, FAs, etc., on their list, it'll be a lot easier for everybody to know which articles are most important and in (comparatively) worst shape. I'll probably try to set up a formal A-Class review for WP:RELIGION somewhere down the road as well. These assessments were only to indicate which articles would benefit most or least from concentrated attention of the project as a whole. However, as you seem to want only a specific literal answer to a question which I think I have basically answered several times already, the article's weaknesses as I see them right now are simply lack of an external peer review, which is what is generally indicated for a detailed review of the article and which can be requested at WP:PR, or any formal reception of GA or FA status. I am also curious as to where the practice you indicated is "recommended" is found, but doubt I'll get a real answer. As per the project's own assessment page, "Unfortunately, due to the volume of articles that need to be assessed, we are unable to leave detailed comments in most cases. If you have particular questions, you might ask the person who assessed the article; they will usually be happy to provide you with their reasoning." Please note the word "usually". Calling someone's work "useless" generally will alienate anybody, even the most fair-minded individual. To repeat, I think the only real impediments, based on the less-than-completely-thorough review which is all that's indicated for assessment, is that the article is in probably, basically, good enough shape for GA consideration. Unfortunately, as GA review isn't itself completely uniform, I can't be sure that any comments I might make regarding what I see might help improve the article's quality might be something which someone else sees as weakening it. If you want the article to be considered for GA status or better, the best thing to do is file a formal request for peer review, and then address any deficiencies indicated there. That way, it will be less likely for a GA or FA reviewer to say "I don't like this" late in the game if it hadn't been mentioned before in the peer review. I hope that answers your question. John Carter 15:19, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: Cutting through your use of a great many words, the request is made right on the tags you inserted with the rating. Have you failed to read your own tags? As for the purpose of a summary explanation of your rating and/or any related strengths and weaknesses, this is for you to do and others to review for veracity and/or future editing needs. Please include a summary with any rating applied. Please add summary for your existing rating tag lacking them. It is, after all, difficult to read another editor’s mind. And, yes, I saw quite a few of your other rating tags, none of which I saw any summaries for. Need I point to every one of them for you to understand the need to include a summary with all rating tag? My presumption was that you would get the message with a single instance cited. Perhaps this is a bad presumption.--Marvin Shilmer 17:52, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- You also cut through the specific terms which are clearly and explicitly included in the assessment page of the project itself. I explicitly quoted that statement above. It says, and I once again quote the Misplaced Pages:WikiProject Jehovah's Witnesses/Assessment page, "Unfortunately, due to the volume of articles that need to be assessed, we are unable to leave detailed comments in most cases. If you have particular questions, you might ask the person who assessed the article; they will usually be happy to provide you with their reasoning." I also indicated that your statement up front calling such actions as I did "worthless" is hardly a way to encourage getting a favorable response. Your assumption stated above is explicitly contradicted by the terms of the assessment page itself. The terms on the project banner were seemingly copied from several others, and was created long before I joined. Your statement above about how the summary is for the purpose of the reviewer betrays a total lack of any acquaintance with the system. Please read the page linked to by me above. The purpose is not to tell any given editor who has already worked on a page how the article stands, but rather to indicate to other editors how the article stands, so that they might improve those that need improvement. Also, generally, importance parameters are included. On this banner, they aren't. They help the project focus the greatest attention on the most important articles. In any event, the purpose is not do tell an individual editor how good his article is, but rather to tell everyone else. Rather than attempting to cut through the words I took the effort to post here, I suggest instead that you actually read them, and show some regard for others yourself. And, by the way, I am no longer watching this page. And please show at least the regard for others to pay attention to what they tell you. Had you done so, your own last comment would I think have been completely unnecessary. Bye. John Carter 18:04, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: Cutting through your use of a great many words, the request is made right on the tags you inserted with the rating. Have you failed to read your own tags? As for the purpose of a summary explanation of your rating and/or any related strengths and weaknesses, this is for you to do and others to review for veracity and/or future editing needs. Please include a summary with any rating applied. Please add summary for your existing rating tag lacking them. It is, after all, difficult to read another editor’s mind. And, yes, I saw quite a few of your other rating tags, none of which I saw any summaries for. Need I point to every one of them for you to understand the need to include a summary with all rating tag? My presumption was that you would get the message with a single instance cited. Perhaps this is a bad presumption.--Marvin Shilmer 17:52, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: Please read what I actually stated and refrain from reading your conclusions into my words. I never said I failed to read your use of a great many words. I said I was cutting through your use of a great many words to digress (you) back to the original request, which you have still failed to even remotely comply with. So be it. Your answer is, apparently, “I have no need to explain my ratings for the benefit of other editors who want to improve content based on my perspective of strengths and weaknesses.” Let me know when you have something substantive to go along with your rating. As it stands we have several B-ratings issued by you with no shared perspective by you on ways editors can make improvements, or if you even see a need for improvements (not to mention specific improvements). This reduces your rating tags to the status of random (read: worthless) rating. But, feel free to ignore whatever you want. My aim is to progressively improve whatever article or issue I touch. What is your aim?--Marvin Shilmer 18:28, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- And I answered your request above. I said already my purpose in tagging was to let the project know which articles were relevant to it, and what state they were in. B-Class is pretty much the best grade any individual can give out. If you want specific requests for how to improve articles, like I already said to bring them to GA status or higher, the best way to go is to seek peer review and directly respond to what would likely be the multiple comments there from multiple users. Also, doing so reduces the likelihood that an individual will choose to raise an objection late in the approval process. The fact that you did not see that would seem to belie your own comment above. It is by the way standard form for most projects to have few if any articles with comments. If you were a member of any, you might know that. Personally, I can see no purpose in any further conversation with you. I have removed your comments from my own userpage, and will request that you cease and desist making unfounded judgements of others or engaging in making further irrational comments on my user page. Your comments constitute trolling. I am also formally resigning from the JW WikiProject, indicating your activity is why. Good day and goodbye. My purpose was to let the project know which articles were Start, Stub, and otherwise need impovement, which most articles are at. Generally, it takes no effort to realize how such articles need improvement. In fact, if you had bothered to read the page I had linked to and explicitly asked you to read, you might even know that. That's why the project's assessment page is there, after all. However, you don't seem interested in doing anything on your own, but insult others and ignore what they tell you. John Carter 18:35, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: Notwithstanding the use of a great many words, apparently we are not communicating, for I see no answers whatsoever to my very specific and reiterated request. Here it is as plainly as I know to say it: 1) You tagged an article with a rating. 2) Presumably an editor who rates an article has at least some perspective on weaknesses and strengths, and you are doing the work of an editor. 3) I am interested in improving Wiki articles; hence I am interested in perspectives of editors who see weaknesses and strengths in Wiki articles. 4) Either you see weaknesses and strengths in an article you rate, or you do not. 5) I was asking that you provide a summary for an article you rated to seek your perspectives of weaknesses and strengths. I know the Wiki peer review process. I also know the more typical peer review processes. I was interested in your perspectives in relation to your ratings because you took the time to make a rating (actually, ratings). Apparently you do not wish to share your perspectives of weaknesses and strengths, which is fine. As an editor you have a prerogative to respond to requests of other editors or not. Regarding all your personal remarks of my person and presentation, please refrain from character assault, and refrain from assuming bad things of rigorous academic questions. If you don’t like other editors asking you questions about your editing my recommendation is that you just express this up front, and concisely.-- Marvin Shilmer 19:37, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
Answers:
- (1) Yes, I have tagged and placed the banner of the Jehovah's Witnesses articles on several articles.
- (2) There are serious doubts about whether anyone can know objectively the full content of any article. Pope Soter, for instance, is still called a stub, despite the fact that everything known about the subject is already included. I have myself created several pages on saints, where, according to the source, nothing is known about the individual beyond his or her name and the fact that some prior book historically called them a saint. In cases like that, even if the article is complete, it is often the case that an article is tagged as a lower class, even if it is complete. Pikachu was once officially recognized as a GA, and is once again, but given the comparative lack of length of the article, had been earlier merged into a larter article. This too is standard.
- (3) If you were really interested in seeing what others thought about the strengths and weaknesses of articles, you would have read my comments, which indicated that I thought peer review would work best. As stated, as soon as I ensure all the religion projects out there know what articles are relevant to them, and creating their "articles" pages to permit maintenance, it is my intention to create a WikiProject Religion peer review/A-Class review department. That will still be some way off, however, given the huge size of several of the other projects, and various other pressures on my time.
- (4) I clearly indicated above that I thought my own judgements were not necessarily binding, and that the appropriate way to seek detailed discussion is through peer review. I provided clear and direct links to extant pages which supported my own actions. Each and every statement and link I made you ignored, in favor of repeating original questions. Considering your repeated use of the word "useless", which is probably the single biggest statment of unsupported attack which has been made, and it has been made repeatedly by you. And, as I indicated, my own views are not necessarily the only ones relevant, and I have found in the past that sometimes the formal reviewer who comes in later disagrees with me about lengths of sentences and other matters, sometimes causing work done on that basis to be undone. Remember, assessment is not a formal review. That is indicated on the assessment page which was linked to. Regarding your particular article, as has been said three or four times now, I don't personally see any weaknesses which would necessarily inhibit it from receiving GA or FA status. However, the formal review for such articles is not done by me, and it is best to seek formal review, rather than informal review, as such review presents a way to determine if any improvements have been made since the formal review. Given my own unofficial status at both GA and FA, any comments I might make would very possibly be disagreed with later, which would be counterproductive. I have repeatedly referred you to peer review. You have consistently ignored that recommendation, and yet you complain about me being noncooperative?
- (5) As stated above, I do not consider my own opinions, which are so clearly informal, worth indicating at great length, which you seem to be demanding as par for the course, but instead have said repeatedly that the way to seek such opinions is through formal peer review. You have ignored that, and have continued to badger me for opinions which I do not generally give out outside of a formal setting. You have also repeatedly impugned both the nature of my actions and my own character in the process, particularly with the word "useless" which you seem so fond of. I could also point out that such assessments are among the most valuable things to the group which is responsible for print versions of wikipedia, but I imagine you might decide that that isn't "useful" to you individually either. In short, it seems to me that the only thing which matters to you is that everything related to the article be done in such a way as you benefit from it. I sincerely urge you to read WP:OWN, which explicitly says such thinking is to be avoided.
- In conclusion, my actions for the JW project could even be said to be not specifically for that project itself, but rather for the Religion projects and other projects. By knowing which articles apply to individual "daughter" projects, it is possible to know whether the broader scope projects would also think them within their scope.
- Factually, I have answered repeatedly everything you asked. You have uniformly continued to ignore that, and instead make at best insulting, "useless", and certainly counterproductive comments yourself. If your own behavior were better than it has been in this situation, I might have spent the time to completely review the article, as I have in the past. Instead, you were insulting from the word "Go", and indicated at about the same time a total lack of familiarity with many aspects of wikipedia. I have really only spent as much time as I have here to indicate to an editor who seems to have done at least one article fairly well that there is a great deal more cooperation and collaboration involved in[REDACTED] than you have even remotely displayed to date. If you were honestly interested in such collaboration, you would probably have joined the JW project and actually created a userpage. You have not done either. Those actions in and of themselves betrays a rather weak grasp of many aspects of wikipedia. I strongly suggest that you familiarize yourself with many of these aspects. Good day. John Carter 20:45, 30 October 2007 (UTC)
- Warlordjohncarter: It is an amazing thing to observe such an avalanche of response to a request for you to share whatever strengths and weaknesses compelled you to assign any rating at all to the article(s) in question. All you had to do is say, "I want to rate and I want to tag articles with a rating, but I do not want to share my perspectives of weaknesses and strengths." Did it really take the whole dictionary to say that? As for your petty personal attacks of my participation here, they are amusing. Particularly humorous is your outlandish claim "that everything related to the article be done in such a way as you benefit from it." Where and how you concoct such a conclusion based on these exchanges between us it, to say the least, a mystery. I am glad you have an opinion, and I am glad you felt free to voice it to me. Now if only you could digress from your negative personal assaults and focus on offering the actual opinion asked for (i.e. your perspectives of strengths and weaknesses in the subject article) the discussion would be complete. But, alas, I doubt that is going to happen. If you had anything substantive and/or studied to offer on the subject by now you surely would have offered it.-- Marvin Shilmer 01:32, 31 October 2007 (UTC)
Your Approach
Marvin, it is obvious that you have some interest in academia, and that you are probably well intentioned in your disputes. However, your use of many words for little net gain, along with repetetive tired sound bites such as "I am glad you have an opinion, and I am glad you felt free to voice it to me" come across as egotistical and condescending. Because of your approach, people are then forced to question your motives, which you then label as personal attacks. Your methods get people offside, and will not help in getting people to reach agreement with you. If you feel that this is also a personal attack, there may be no help for you.--Jeffro77 (talk) 00:33, 8 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77: Thanks for sharing your view. Questioning motivation is a waste of time in the face of evidence. A weak mind and poor education are usually the culprits behind the behavior. When individuals persist in this it is called ad hominem. -- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 22:41, 8 December 2007 (UTC)
- Your response, with your condescending explanation of ad hominem, is disappointing. Oh well.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:10, 9 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro: Apparently it is important to you to expend time talking about people, in this case me. Though this is your prerogative, it is of no consequence whatsoever to readers and researchers here. If it makes you feel better to persist in this behavior, feel free. Your additional presumptive conclusions and assertions of my person are noted. Do not expect me to continue responding to something so irrelevant.-- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 16:02, 9 December 2007 (UTC)
- Your response, with your condescending explanation of ad hominem, is disappointing. Oh well.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:10, 9 December 2007 (UTC)
Marvin, your point would be valid if cfrito had modified something of your edits that affected the context of what you had written. In fact, including a user's IP address in addition to their username is entirely superfluous to any edit whatsoever, except for possibly a talk page of an article dealing with the ISP associated with that IP address. Your continued insistence in posting that user's IP address (as you did in your response to me in the article's talk page) has the single purpose of trying to irritate that user. That is harassment. I raise this issue because I have attempted to help you in the past regarding your approach in dealing with other editors, which you also treated in an arrogant manner. I really do hope that you will take something positive from this instead of maintaining your superior dismissive attitude.--Jeffro77 (talk) 02:00, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77: Tinkering is tinkering. I appreciate you sharing your perspective. Please. Always feel free. -- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 02:13, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
Reference to Wonderpet's reference to JWs as a "religion" in the JW article is not "vandalism", and stating such in an edit comment is inappropriate. If he said JWs are a "pink cat", that would be 'vandalism'. Just because you disagree with them being called a 'religion', such an edit is merely a disputed point, not vandalism. Your comment about Wonderpet is therefore libelous.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:10, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- "Vandalism is any addition, removal, or change of content made in a deliberate attempt to compromise the integrity of Misplaced Pages. The most common types of vandalism include the addition of obscenities or crude humor, page blanking, or the insertion of nonsense into articles.
- "Any good-faith effort to improve the encyclopedia, even if misguided or ill-considered, is not vandalism. Even harmful edits that are not explicitly made in bad faith are not considered vandalism. For example, adding a personal opinion to an article ONCE is not vandalism — it's just not helpful, and should be removed or restated. Not all vandalism is OBVIOUS, nor are all massive or controversial changes vandalism; careful attention needs to be given to whether changes made are beneficial, detrimental but well intended, or outright vandalism." (Misplaced Pages:Vandalism, emphasis added)
- Jeffro77: I appreciate your eagerness to constantly address my person with your opinions. It really is an education. Wonderpet has vandalized by asserting her POV over and over again without any substantiation whatsoever. Though this is pointed out, she persists. This is intentional behavior. Such editing compromises the integrity of Misplaced Pages, which in this case is the article on Jehovah’s Witnesses. It is not credible for Wonderpet to claim “good faith” when he or she edits without substantiation in the face of overwhelming evidence contrary to her edit, and this is done repeatedly despite frequent and open requests to take the issue to talk. You have some nerve to suggest my remarks of and to Wonderpet on this issue are libelous. You should not use words you do not know the meaning of. --Marvin Shilmer (talk) 01:30, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- At worst, Wonderpet's edit was "detrimental but well intended" rather than "vandalism". Wonderpet's intention was clearly not to reduce the integrity of the article. "New religious movements" are inherently "religions", and the petty dispute regarding semantics hardly justifies calling Wonderpet's edit "vandalism".--Jeffro77 (talk) 03:13, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77: Thanks for once again sharing your opinion.
- Apparently you discount “intent” from intentional act. Wonderpet knew what s/he was doing; hence it was a deliberate act. S/He did it anyway. S/He did the same thing repeatedly. S/He did it despite repeated requests for discussion and substantiation beyond POV. Wonderpet vandalized.-- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 04:07, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- "1" The situation is an 'edit dispute', not 'vandalism'. "2" A "new religious movement" is a "religion", and the 'dispute' is largely just you disagreeing. "3" See "2". "4" The alleged 'large volume of evidence' is merely a selection of sources that you think agree with your view, though those sources do not actually indicate that the group is non-Christian or that it is not a religion, and other religions that are indisputably Christian religions are also discussed in the same manner in other works that you allege to support your view. "5" Wonderpet and other users have tried to discuss the issue on the talk page, and you are the only one disputing what actually represents your POV.--Jeffro77 (talk) 04:17, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Apparently you discount “intent” from intentional act. Wonderpet knew what s/he was doing; hence it was a deliberate act. S/He did it anyway. S/He did the same thing repeatedly. S/He did it despite repeated requests for discussion and substantiation beyond POV. Wonderpet vandalized.-- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 04:07, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77:
- 1) No. Wonderpet lowered the bar far beyond a simple edit dispute. She did this by insisting on a POV edit despite mountain loads of research and methodology shared, despite lack of verification on her part, and despite repeated requests to take the matter to talk.
- You have previously indicated that the group is Christian. You have also previously indicated that the group is a religion.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- And I have also previously shown (and indicated expressly) it is contrary to the consensus in peer reviewed literature for an encyclopedic work to present the Jehovah's Witnesses with with declaratory language simply stating the religion is "Christian" or a "Christian religion". I have also provided verification in the way of methodology and resulting research.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- You have previously indicated that the group is Christian. You have also previously indicated that the group is a religion.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 2) You have persistently presented “new religious movement” and “religion” as though the two are equivalents, when they are not. New religious movement is a phrase with meaning in the literature. Furthermore, the presentation is not as simple as you depict. The actual declaratory language of comparison is “Christian new religious movement” compared with “Christian religion”. As declaratory terms one of these has weight of vetted resources and one is contrary to vetted resources. This is not simple disagreement. This is what the literature shows in spades.
- Incorrect. I have repeatedly and explicitly stated that "new religious movement" is a subset of a "religion". Based on that, the rest of your argument above is invalidated.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Because "new religious movement" is a subset of "religion" means no more than it would be just as acceptable to write "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" compared with "Jehovah's Witnesses is a new religious movement." But this does not mean it would be acceptable to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" compared with saying Jehovah's Witnesses is a "Christian sect" or a "Christian new religious movement". The reason we can legitimately declare "Jehovah's Witnesses is a religion" is because the body of world knowledge demonstrates a consensus for this presentation. But to declare Jehovah's Witnesses as a "Christian religion" is contrary to the same body of knowledge.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Your objection is similar to saying "the apple is red, and the apple is fruit, but under no circumstances shall the apple be called red fruit". Bias is evident in the objection.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- Incorrect. I have repeatedly and explicitly stated that "new religious movement" is a subset of a "religion". Based on that, the rest of your argument above is invalidated.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 3) Apparently you do not understand the value of sharing research methodology. The method I employed (and disclosed for purposes of verification/testing) made it impossible for me to select sources.
- It is your attitude, approach, and motive I have a problem with, not the method of your actual research.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77, you need to get beyond your own personal dislikes and focus on good research and presentation. It matters no one iota what my personal disposition is. Nobody cares, accept you apparently. Readers only care about having reliable information that is verified and consistent with the body of knowledge on whatever the subject. Your personal disgust with my "attitude, approach, and motive" has led you to accuse me wrongly by suggesting I selected source material. For an academic this is probably one of the worst accusations to have hurled against them. In this case, your slur of me is not only completely absurd as demonstrated by the record, it also demonstrates how you have let your judgement become clouded by your personal dislike of me, or what you call my "attitude, approach, and motive." Just how you know my motivation is a mystery. Presumably you have supernatural powers to read minds.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- On the contrary, other editors have also expressed concern regarding your motives and style of debating. I have no personal opinion of you at all, as I do not know you. However, I have tried to point out to you several times that your approach does not work in your favour. You have ignored that advice apparently because of pride.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- Jeffro77, you need to get beyond your own personal dislikes and focus on good research and presentation. It matters no one iota what my personal disposition is. Nobody cares, accept you apparently. Readers only care about having reliable information that is verified and consistent with the body of knowledge on whatever the subject. Your personal disgust with my "attitude, approach, and motive" has led you to accuse me wrongly by suggesting I selected source material. For an academic this is probably one of the worst accusations to have hurled against them. In this case, your slur of me is not only completely absurd as demonstrated by the record, it also demonstrates how you have let your judgement become clouded by your personal dislike of me, or what you call my "attitude, approach, and motive." Just how you know my motivation is a mystery. Presumably you have supernatural powers to read minds.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- It is your attitude, approach, and motive I have a problem with, not the method of your actual research.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 4) I have not anywhere suggested the literature presents a view that the religion of Jehovah’s Witnesses is non-Christian., or that it is not a religion. These assertions on your part are either inventions of your mind, or else poor comprehension. A consensus presentation that does not declare a religion as Christian is not a consensus presentation that the religion is non-Christian.
- And yet you call reference to them as "a Christian religion" vandalism.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Yes. That edit is vandalism under the conditions I have already iterated.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- No, it is an edit dispute.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- Yes. That edit is vandalism under the conditions I have already iterated.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- And yet you call reference to them as "a Christian religion" vandalism.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 5) Other religions find their own presentations in the literature. Some of them have a consensus presentation which declare them as Christian and others do not. If this is a field of study you want to bite off, then please do so and report your method and finding. Be assured it will be tested.
- The suggested tangent is superfluous. It is apparent though that many sources are biased against JWs (as are apparently even some who claim to be members thereof).--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- It is a sweeping generalization to suggest that the body of evidence brought to the table is biased against Jehovah's Witnesses. Because there is bias against Jehovah's Witnesses by "some" or even "many" (weasal words, by the way) does not mean the evidence brought forth on this occasion is bad information. Frankly, during the process I took great pains to point out presentations authored by individuals with known bias one way or another, and recommended discounting the views accordingly. Again, your disdain has grasped the better part of your judgement.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- As I have already stated, I expressed no concern with your research, however your conclusions are not supported by your research.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- It is a sweeping generalization to suggest that the body of evidence brought to the table is biased against Jehovah's Witnesses. Because there is bias against Jehovah's Witnesses by "some" or even "many" (weasal words, by the way) does not mean the evidence brought forth on this occasion is bad information. Frankly, during the process I took great pains to point out presentations authored by individuals with known bias one way or another, and recommended discounting the views accordingly. Again, your disdain has grasped the better part of your judgement.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- The suggested tangent is superfluous. It is apparent though that many sources are biased against JWs (as are apparently even some who claim to be members thereof).--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 6) Editors had earlier agreed on the expression “Christian sect”. Even Wonderpet applied this usage! I have no problem with “Christian sect” or “Christian new religious movement”. Both of these have weight of vetted source presentations. But the simple declaration of “Christian” or “Christian religion” is contrary to the presentation found in the body of world knowledge when used as declarations.
- I conceded that the term 'Christian sect' could be used. Whether other editors agree is up to them. However, the term "new religious movement" is indeed more accurate than "sect". However, calling them a "Christian religion" hardly constitutes vandalism, as it is still an accurate (though less specific) statement.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- It does constitute vandalism under the conditions the edit was made. I have alread explained this, and you have skirted it. No surprise there.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Ignored.--Jeffro77 (talk) 01:01, 27 December 2007 (UTC)
- It does constitute vandalism under the conditions the edit was made. I have alread explained this, and you have skirted it. No surprise there.--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- I conceded that the term 'Christian sect' could be used. Whether other editors agree is up to them. However, the term "new religious movement" is indeed more accurate than "sect". However, calling them a "Christian religion" hardly constitutes vandalism, as it is still an accurate (though less specific) statement.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 7) Wonderpet is the one that has stirred this pot; not me. The matter was settled until she began pushing her POV without discussion or substantiation, despite requests for both. -- Marvin Shilmer (talk) 04:41, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Regardless, someone inserting something correct but not in agreement with your point of view is not vandalism.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Wonderpet's edit was contrary to the consensus presentation in the literature; hence it is absurd to say s/he inserted something correct. And, on this final point, my advice to you is that you chew on your own use of the term vandalism--Marvin Shilmer (talk) 15:31, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Regardless, someone inserting something correct but not in agreement with your point of view is not vandalism.--Jeffro77 (talk) 06:43, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- 1) No. Wonderpet lowered the bar far beyond a simple edit dispute. She did this by insisting on a POV edit despite mountain loads of research and methodology shared, despite lack of verification on her part, and despite repeated requests to take the matter to talk.