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<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote style="background: white; border: solid 2px darkblue; padding: 1em;"><big>Thanks for | Ѕ<blockquote><blockquote><blockquote><blockquote style="background: white; border: solid 2px darkblue; padding: 1em;"><big>Thanks for | ||
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==pro-american?!== | |||
How can you justify this pro-american behaviour?! you call yourself a European!! deleting an article about anti-americanism is one thing, but opposing another similar articles elevation to GA status is despicable! I can see you are anti-communist, you accuse Castro's government of corruption, yet the country you betray your continent to support is more corrupt than any other! it's digusting! --] 12:38, 18 September 2006 (UTC) | |||
==sorry I am confused== | ==sorry I am confused== |
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pro-american?!How can you justify this pro-american behaviour?! you call yourself a European!! deleting an article about anti-americanism is one thing, but opposing another similar articles elevation to GA status is despicable! I can see you are anti-communist, you accuse Castro's government of corruption, yet the country you betray your continent to support is more corrupt than any other! it's digusting! --Frogsprog 12:38, 18 September 2006 (UTC) sorry I am confusedI left a message at the bottom of Archive 2, wasn't sure if you meant leave new messages there, or on this, what seems to be the actual talk page? I hope you get this...... --Antelope In Search Of Truth 20:17, 15 July 2006 (UTC) Your last 2 messages made today showing up on my Watchlist
Sorry I have been tuning out - will help you out again. KarenAnn 13:38, 16 July 2006 (UTC) Teemu's RFCHello Zleitzen. Thanks for your message... I'm off on holiday tonight, so it may be worth asking someone else (I know Mongo left a message for Teemu at one point) to keep on eye on things. Please could you also ensure ASAP that you leave a message on Teemu's talk page informing him of the RFC? Cheers, Proto::type 06:33, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Re: SandboxYes, I would be interested. On the (barely) hopeful side, Ian¹³/t 08:43, 17 July 2006 (UTC) has left a final warning on Teemu's Talk page, threatening to block him if he continues. Certainly your assemblage of all that data in the rfc demonstrates that Teemu is not a run-of-the-mill disruptive person. He is disturbed. KarenAnn 13:39, 17 July 2006 (UTC)
Happy to help, so count me in. mensch • t 20:58, 17 July 2006 (UTC) I agree with BruceHallman that all sides of POV battle must be involved. Otherwise, conspiracy theories will flourish. Good faith will not reign. KarenAnn 00:42, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
Deletion page?Tag the articles with deletion templates, put the details on the deletion page and they should be deleted per norm. I have tagged the pages with the proposed deletion tag...... didn't see anything about "deletion page" at http://en.wikipedia.org/WP:PROD. I listed details on the deletion tag and article talk page that are clear enough..... In any case, thanks for the help! :) --Antelope In Search Of Truth 00:01, 18 July 2006 (UTC) Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/MONGOEver since you asked MONGO for help on the Teemu matter, I have been enormously respectful of him. He has helped me out on serveral occasions. I don't know how much you follow certain aspects of the goings-on on Misplaced Pages but a rfc Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/MONGO has been lodged against MONGO by totally unreasonable people. (I have been following their behavior.) If you are so inclined, you have an opportunity to make a statement in MONGO's defense. It appears these people target him because he attempts to maintain Misplaced Pages standards and policies. KarenAnn 22:41, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
ThanksThanks for the outside view. What a change from the days when you congratulated all for working well together, and when we all worked towards consensus. I hope that environment, which was upset at the time of the revert, will return someday. Sandy 15:02, 22 July 2006 (UTC)
Hey, there, sorry for disappearing in the middle of the Criticism deconstruct: a death in the extended family, as well as a bad (unrelated) car accident (no injuries, other than totaled cars) left my entire household very shaken for several days. I haven't had a chance to check on the status of the Criticism deconstruct, since that environment is too toxic for me to wade into right now, and I regret this "gotcha" style of editing that has taken over that series of articles. Having to reconstruct references and text is so time consuming. Anyway, knowing that they would be productive, I did take the opportunity to have a look at your edits. I appreciate the cleanout of some of what had accumulated there, as I just never got to it when I merged the reference content to there and reorganized the article. I didn't want to ruffle any (more) feathers with massive deletions. I only found one edit from you that we might want to revisit: deletion of History. The Criticism article has been argued from both sides by the same editors. The gist of one of the arguments is that it has to be a fully contained article, balanced in its own right, so as not to be a POV fork. So, I added the background, thinking it would be needed as context for building upon the article, particularly considering major sections that have yet to be written. Some of the criticism and counters to the criticism won't flow if the reader isn't given some background for context. You've more experience at this than I, so what are your thoughts about adding back in some version of History, from which to begin to reconstruct the article? Best regards, Sandy 18:35, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
Politics of CubaThanks for clarifying the Human Rights Counsil sentence. I didn't know wheater the original was meant' as a critique or a neutral membership. Teemu Ruskeepää 16:27, 14 August 2006 (UTC) Independent mediaIn Talk:Castro you recently pointed to a lack of 'independent media' to make an argument. Where in the world to you see an independent media? I am curious, because I see such no where. Everywhere, the question is: independent of what and by what degree? And, why is the question of independence more important than the question of ownership of media? Why do you focus on one and not the other? BruceHallman 16:07, 23 July 2006 (UTC)
Condoleezza Rice
Autentico PartyFirst it seems obvious that although I have given up on Misplaced Pages, you have not. Thank you for the Autentico Page re-my first revolutionary association was M-26-7, not the autenticos, I was only associated with them after Castro seized power. For a balanced presentation one has to keep in mind that much of the blame for the student gangsterism can laid on Emilio Tro (Castro's leader and who was the first of one of the first to teach him how to kill by stealth) and Rolando Masferrer. Masferrer was a brilliant intellectual who was professor in the Havana Institute, Cuban senator and newspaper editor a former communist and executioner for the Republic in the Spanish Civil War, was tied to Batista by his later ruthless killings. In my view none of these were the heroes many make them out to be. The Organizacion Autentica still exists and a web page is found at ] El Jigue 07-26-06
Castro is charismatic - Listed with footnotesEven though you may not care anymore, I listed Castro in List of charismatic leaders against their will, but because I had the references, they had to let it happen. Don't know if this is still an issue on the Castro talk page. But if so for BruceHallmaan et al, there it is. Article up for adf -- but there it is, if you are interested. Mattisse 02:22, 27 July 2006 (UTC)
CastroThanks for your work on the Castro transfer page. Could you please watch the Cuba page, users are insisting in the info box that Raul is now President of the Council of state (President of Cuba). This is not the case, Raul is assuming duties as per Cuban constitution. Thanks. --Zleitzen 15:14, 1 August 2006 (UTC)
2006 Cuban transfer of dutiesWhy have you reverted my edit regarding allegations of Castros death? It had a reference from a legitamate source not just some random blogger. --¡Viva la Revolución! PiMaster3 21:55, 2 August 2006 (UTC) Request for Content ReviewalHi, I've just created a couple of pages about Cuban topics. Here are the corresponding sandboxes. Please take a look and feel free to comment and/or criticize. Thanks.--EmirCalabuch 00:28, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
I'm adding a few Cuban painters on the category (just stubs for the moment, will dwelve into them later). Not many painters found. Just found a stub about Amelia Peláez, but the page name is misspelled (Amelia Pelaes, which is wrong). Shall we keep the old page or create a new one with the correct spelling?).--EmirCalabuch 15:04, 3 August 2006 (UTC) HeadlineCool, though I think you wrote "Alarcon" by mistake instead of writing Roque.--Jersey Devil 03:30, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
CastroCheers for the advice! TVGH (formerly TV Genius) 01:54, 4 August 2006 (UTC) List of charismatic leaders made it through!I see the list made it through the afd by the skin of it's teeth. Looks good now with it's new name and Castro has great citation notes. Strangely, when Castro recently was hospitalized, the American media universally used the word "charismatic" in discribing him. Mattisse 21:20, 4 August 2006 (UTC) I'm still interested in Frank Pais and the revolutionary undergroundIt seems the Cuban stuff is in an uproar right now. I noticed you deserted Fidel Castro as it is hopeless for the time being. The Max Wever stuff is great. I never paid much attention to him until now. Applause for your ability to soldier on. Thanks for the support from you. It made a difference and I am getting the hang of this place now. Maybe one of these days I'm be back into my Cuba interest. My doctor is Cuban -- left Cuba in 1997. He told me not to believe anything the US govermaent says, nor the Cuban exhile community. Mattisse 01:24, 5 August 2006 (UTC) Good stuff. I don't believe what the Cuban government says either. But then I don't believe what any government has to say! The problem in editing in this area is that too many people believe propaganda at face value of all kinds, without considering balance. I was looking at an old interview with Fidel recently where he was trotting out the most awful lies. But one needs to remember US, European or other Latin American Government propaganda and lies - many of which have had an equal or greater damaging effect. For instance, the CIA's campaign of convincing Cuban families that their children would be "sent away to Russia" leading to a tragic emigration scenario that divided children from their families, some permanently. Then we hear the repeated claims by the Cuban government that all dissidents are in the pay of the US and must be punished etc, which is clearly bogus. All governments are to blame in some fashion! Such lies and propaganda are part of an endless game of power and control between nations, and between governments and their people.--Zleitzen 01:45, 5 August 2006 (UTC) Fidel Castro talk page user has come alive againTeemu is back. So far he seems just to be fiddling around on his own talk page. But beware. Mattisse 10:15, 6 August 2006 (UTC) Black BritishIf you cannot see the relevance of the passage you have just deleted then I am...surprised. Your edit summary implies that there is some "scientific" definition of "black", a view disputed by almost every commentator on such racial labels. The reference is very clearly in the context of the discussion of the inclusion of Asians within the term due to a perception of shared experience of denigration because of white attitudes to people with dark skin. Hence it is directly relevant to the issue being discussed here - the fact that common experience derives from labels applied in the mainstream/white culture. Further historical evidence of this usage has already been given below. You only have to see a film like "Rita, Sue and Bob Too" to identify that this usage has been common (in which an Indian youth is called a "black bastard" by a drunk). Paul B 14:39, 8 August 2006 (UTC)
CDRI modified the photograph and added it back into the article. Is it ok now? - FrancisTyers · 10:51, 10 August 2006 (UTC)
Reality TVCould you weigh in here with an opinion - I'd like to get a consensus: http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia_talk:Deletion_policy#Reality_Telvision_Contestants --DavidShankBone 22:15, 14 August 2006 (UTC) HiI've redone List of dictators currently in power to add explanations beside each dictator. Please reconsider your vote. Thanks! AdamBiswanger1 04:35, 16 August 2006 (UTC) I Wrote the Article About Andres Rivero AgueroZleitzen: Yesterday I contributed an article about Andres Rivero Aguero, the last person elected President of Cuba in a multiparty election (1958). I noticed in the "Discussion" section that you wrote that you didn't know "who the Hell" contributed the article. Now you do. I have since been in email contact with Mr Rivero's grandson of the same name, and based on information he supplied have made three minor corrections: 1) Rivero didn't accompany Batista into exile in the U.S. from 1944-52, but instead remained in Cuba, practising law and contributing political commentary to several publications; 2) Rivero was the candidate of four (not six) pro-government parties in 1958 (including Batista's Progressive Action Party); and 3) Rivero did not practise law in Miami after settling in the U.S., but instead lived in very modest circumstances supported by his wife and children. I felt that Rivero deserved more than a stub, considering his important role in the transitional period 1958-59. --Doug Rees 23:22, 16 August 2006 (UTC)
Thank YouZleitzen: Thank you for your kind words. I am working on a submission about Osvaldo Dorticos Torrado, who played a key role in the Cuban revolution but is practically unknown in the U.S. Dorticos is usually described as a "colourless yes man" to Castro, but I feel that anyone who went from being President of the Cienfuegos Yacht Club to being President of Communist Cuba is interesting enough to get a reasonably long biography. --Doug Rees 11:44, 17 August 2006 (UTC) Courtesy notificationI mentioned your name here. Sandy 18:25, 26 August 2006 (UTC)
In terms of sub-articles, the following are intact and thorough, and anything in these areas can be trimmed:
These are also thorough, although they've had a lot of prose deterioration and suffer from a lack of inline citations:
This one is weak: IMO, it needs to be reorganized, not geographically, but by area of foreign policy focus: This article is *awful*: I could actually rewrite if I didn't spend all my time dealing with 4-against-1 and cleaning up sloppy editing. The new article, the brainchild of a brand new editor who was bitten and chased off, is: Anyway, the real work is in reducing the Presidency Section of the main article Hugo Chavez (the content is all in the daughter article), and weaving relevant content from the Criticism of Hugo Chávez article into the appropriate places, cutting both articles in half (the main article and the criticism article). Objection to reducing the size comes principally from 172, who pops in occassionally only to object. The others insist that "criticism" should be separate, not recognizing that "criticism" is just the other side of the story, the balance they refuse to allow into the article. They don't seem able to acknowledge that what they call "criticism" is every bit as relevant as their POV. The criticism article suffers from overkill right now, because anything I introduce as one sentence, they object to (no paraphrasing or summarizing is allowed), so the content grows to address their objections. If they would agree to simpler summarization of basic concepts, the article could be half the size. I dunno: I feel badly asking you to help. I still have no indication there is any flexibility or desire to work consensually, and it gets worse by the day. It's a huge chore, and with so much intransigence, I'm not sure how it will ever get done. Every time a new editor comes on the scene, I get my hopes up, but bias and/or simple lack of knowledge of the issues become quickly apparent. I trust you to be able to edit outside of any ideological bias. Sandy 02:30, 27 August 2006 (UTC) Another courtesy notification here. Anagnorisis is a very long-standing editor of the Chavez articles, so he should be included in any consensus, particularly since he had a long interaction with JRSP about that article: including everyone will help smooth out problems in the long run. I searched all of the sources I have access to in order to expand the Chavismo article, but I was unable to find anything positive about it from any reliable source. The pro-Chávez editors complain of imbalance, but I can't invent text from thin air. Sandy 17:30, 28 August 2006 (UTC)
Thanks for helping with any refs. My references are usually terribly laid out, not being a computer person I just don't think I have the technical mindset to format them correctly. I always try but inevitably make errors!--Zleitzen 18:23, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
A reference that may interest youHello Zleitzen -- Your boldness in restoring the integrity of the CG article is greatly appreciated. I have been searching for the references we discussed re Cuba-USSR relations and have just found an interesting paragraph on page 361 of "Ernesto Guevara también conocido como el Che" (2003 edition) by Paco Ignacio Taibo II that I am wondering if you have seen? I believe that there is too much text for me to reproduce it here without violating WP's copyright rules, but I am thinking that perhaps you either own or have access to that book. Meanwhile, I will be searching for the other references that I promised to forward to you. Am hoping you will continue to keep a watchful eye on the CG article! Many thanks -- Polaris999 05:17, 30 August 2006 (UTC) Update: I found one of the quotes I wanted to pass on to you. It is from Castañeda, Jorge G. Che Guevara: Compañero. New York: Random House, 1998. ISBN 0679759409, page 170 where he quotes Che explaining his idea that Cuba should withdraw from the IMF to one of his subordinates shortly after assuming the presidency of the National Bank of Cuba in Fall 1959:
This sentence is a succinct expression of his deluded view of the USSR at the time (before he visited the "Bloc".) -- Polaris999 07:39, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
Thanks again Polaris. What I meant by referring to mid 1961 is that across the board on those[REDACTED] articles which give a brief mention to the revolution - Cuba becoming a "communist state" - "Cuba aligning itself with the Russians" and so on - I try to clarify that it was only formally the case after mid 1961. I think that Castro's Marxist-Leninist declaration after the Bay of Pigs is the easiest signpost for this. However I agree completely with your above analysis.
p 157 "… Ernesto saw him almost every day."
p 415 "By contrast, Che wanted nothing to do with the United Sates and had already begun to prepare for the showdown with Washington he saw as inevitable. In this he was seconded by Raúl. Both favored a sharp radicalization in revolutionary policy, a final consolidation of power and a break with the West."
p 488 "Che never said so publicly, but those who knew him say he returned from his first trip to Russia privately dismayed by the elite lifestyles and evident predilection for bourgeois luxuries he saw among Kremlin officials, in contrast with the austere living conditions of the average Soviet citizen. Four and a half decades of socialism had obviously not created a new Socialist Man, at least not among the party elite, and this was not what he had expected to find in the madre patria of global socialism."
p 544 "Over the coming days, Fidel recriminated bitterly with Khrushchev, and the hapless Mikoyan was dispatched to Havana to patch things up. Mikoyan did what he could, but Fidel and Che were convinced Khrushchev had sold them out for his own strategic interest. Their talks went on for several weeks and at times were exceedingly tense."
P 565 - complete paragraph, beginning "To Alberto Granado, Che's malaise …"
p 581 - five paragraphs beginning with, "Feder Burlatsky, a former Khrushchev advisor, … "
p 585 – four paragraphs beginning with, "Snapping back from his romantic reverie, Metutsov said that as Che spoke …"
p 766 - "Some of the remarks he scribbled on the margin of the Soviet manual, however, were no less irreverent than his observation of Lenin. Signaling a passage that boldly declared: 'Socialism need not come about through violence, as proven by the socialist states of Eastern Europe, where change came through peaceful means', Che quipped in humorous disbelief: 'What was the Soviet army doing, (obscene comment omitted here, but it appears in the JLA text)?' " Hope this helps! -- Polaris999 09:36, 9 September 2006 (UTC) Perhaps you will want to check this outHello Zleitzen -- This concerns the Fidel Castro article which I just took a look at in order to see how it deals with the matter of Cuba - USSR relations. I have no interest whatsoever in becoming an editor of that article but, as I notice that you have done some work on it, I thought that I would mention the following problem to you in case you wish to pursue it. The issue is this: within the "References and footnotes" section, there is the following note:
The text to which this note is linked is:
This bizarre sentence is not only wrong, it is absurd. Che Guevara was not making policy in Cuba in 1965, nor did he ever set up anything called "UMAP". Furthermore, page 62 of Castañeda's book is definitely not a source for any statement to the effect that he did, or that he made comments about the same; in fact, that page deals exclusively with the period in Fall 1953 when Guevara was travelling from Ecuador to Costa Rica, en route to Guatemala. Polaris999 01:33, 31 August 2006 (UTC) I'd advise any good editor to stay away from that Castro article. I poked around in it for a while but it was a hideous experience. The article is terrible and the talk pages are the most unpleasant I have encountered. Good editors are subjected to repeated abuse from idealogues - vandalism is rife - and almost nobody seemed to know anything about the subject matter in hand. I'll don a tin hat and go in to make changes. --Zleitzen 02:06, 31 August 2006 (UTC)
Osvaldo Dorticós TorradoHi Zleitzen, I have just submitted an article on Osvaldo Dorticós Torrado, which can be viewed online. I realise that the Cuban Revolution is a highly emotional and contentious topic; but my own personal belief is that an encyclopaedia article should be factual and unbiassed, with opinion clearly identified and strictly bracketed. I have tried to apply this standard to both articles I have written--on Dorticós and on Andres Rivero Agüero. I hope that I have followed the correct procedure in listing references. -- DougRees 20:55, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
José Miró Cardona"Castro designated Miró ambassador to the U.S. in May 1960. But by July, Miró had rejected the policies of Castro, resigned his post and had sought refuge in the Argentine Embassy. He entered the United States as an exile in the winter of 1960-1." This does not make sense at all. If Miró was in the US since May of 1960, why would he "enter" the US the next winter? I'm a 100% sure that he was an embassador to Spain and I've seen a couple of sources on the subject. Here's one: http://www.biografiasyvidas.com/biografia/m/miro_cardona.htm There is going to be an act in his honor in Puerto Rico in about 4 weeks, so I should be able to get a better source from there.
Carlos PiedraHowdy, Zleitzen: I'm a brand-new contributor and corrected Carlos Piedra's middle name in your article earlier today. I probably violated a dozen protocols, standards and accepted practices for Misplaced Pages while doing so, and I hope you'll accept my apologies. But his middle name was Modesto. I have an interview with his daughter recorded, and could put you in touch with her directly if you'd like. She and the other members of the family have been annoyed for some time at this error, and as I came across your piece (doing research for seperate project on Piedra) I thought I'd try to set the record straight. Please advise as to how I should proceed. Best- Mike Hassinger
A few Cuban mattersI have added to the Central Bank of Cuba article. I am thinking of doing more of the Cuban banking sector - do think it warrants its own page, or shall I include under BCC ? I would like to add more to Cuban cinema - but am not sure that I really know enough. Perhaps I should translate some stuff from the ICAIC website. We need a page for "Fresa y chocolate" - should that be under the Spanish name ? How commonly is it translated into English rather than left in Spanish ? I have had the honour to be involved in the financing on the new Cuban movie "El Benny". I would like to start a page on that movie, but wonder whether I am too closely connected. I have put a NPOV tag on the tourism apartheid page - hope that you don't mind. I really think it is just too one-sided. -- Beardo 03:04, 4 September 2006 (UTC)
Chavez/Morales photographsZleitzen, I understand you position, and I respect it. But your position on Chavez or Morales, and my position, are irrelevant to the work we do here. When I tell people I went to Cuba I invariably hear, usually via a joke to soften the statement, "Oh, didn't mind supporting Castro a little, huh--haha." Trust me, I was poor when I went there and Castro made little off me. I went there to see a country that I grew up thinking housed the devil himself. And I wanted to see it before it became Starbucksa-fied and before history is written, and re-written, on Castro. With that mentality, I posted those photographs. I liked them, first off. I thought they were interesting and good. But I also thought it served my job--our job--here to do so. Which is is to tell a full story, not a partisan one. I am working on Floyd Abrams and that's my photograph. I also worked extensively with Evan Wolfson. Still, if I came across a criticism, I had to put it up. To let people know not everyone feels and thinks the same thing. At least to give a hint of it. That is why those photos need to stay on those pages. I have a lot of respect for the work you put into this, by the way. --DavidShankBone 18:23, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
I wasn't saying you are partisan, I was just talking in general. It wasn't meant as a criticism, and I apologize if it read that way. They aren't inflatable - they are hand painted puppets. If they are not appropriate for Evo Morales (who has killed nobody) and Hugo Chavez, then they shouldn't be appropriate for Michelle Bachelet, Lula's page and Kirchner's page (of course, the least controversial didn't upload, frustratingly). I have dial-up, and it takes a long time for these to upload from home. My point is that it doesn't matter if they murder or not, they are being represented in an award-winning, National Endowment for the Arts-funded public theater piece. That's noteworthy, and significant, and adds dimension to each person. Don't you agree the NEA funding and the depiction are relevant and noteworthy? --DavidShankBone 19:50, 5 September 2006 (UTC)
"Unencyclopedic": Can you define for me how you are using this term so that I can understand where you are coming from, or point me to a definition? --DavidShankBone 14:40, 6 September 2006 (UTC) Cuban CinemaThanks a lot for your help in the battle with deletionists concerning the notability of Cuban Films. Thaman81 01:26, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
Chávez economicsThanks for helping organize discussion on Talk:Hugo Chávez. I was a little discouraged when my original edit was reverted, but I'm happy to see discussion over the section. Hopefully the section will end up with some good references -- the original article I dereferenced seemed to make their figure up, and I'd like a more reliable source (regardless of the direction of revision). CRGreathouse (t | c) 23:28, 12 September 2006 (UTC) Category linkAfter you visited my page i thought I'd return the favour. :) I noticed that you haven't made Category:Opposition to Fidel Castro a link. Just in case you don't know how to do that (I only learned that after a year editing Misplaced Pages) - just add a colon, like I have done here. DirkvdM 18:22, 13 September 2006 (UTC) Cuban NPOV etc.Under Allegations of tourist apartheid on my talk page, you wrote "I don't know who rattled the anon's cage on that talk page! But there is an element of practicality about the comments in the sense of this: Having added the POV template, which is perfectly acceptable, you really would need to offer suggestions on how to make the page NPOV. I understand entirely why you believe the page to be POV, but how do you propose to change this?--Zleitzen 09:05, 8 September 2006 (UTC)"
Havana Shipyards - I added the NPOV and Original research tags last night, which user Gabrielfoto removed without comment, ignoring my comment about OR on the talk page. I have restored the tags. I note that you included such tags a short while ago, which he removed. He has also taken out a section on El Aresenal so that the article is just about the Palmer shipyard (I assume his family's). I am almost tempted to AfD on non-notability. I think instead I'll try to make some progress on creating pages for Cuban actors, films etc. -- Beardo 00:20, 16 September 2006 (UTC) Hi Beardo, Your rationale for my having removed El Arsenal is misguided - although understandable. My reasoning was that I couldn't find any information linking the actual site of El Arsenal to the site where the Palmer Shipyards are today. I looked for several hours online but couldn't make heads or tails of it. If you can verify, put that reference back in, by all means - I just couldn't verify it in any way,shape or form - it's a tough one, on account of the fact that we're talking about a centuries-old location. I just wanted to make sure that it was 100 percent true. Actually, Zeitlen might have some insite on this - he assisted me a great deal in how to provide sources sources, etc. Take care, GabrielFoto |