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{{WikiProject European Microstates|class=B|nested=yes}}
{{WikiProject Micronations|class=B|nested=yes}}
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{{FAOL|Hebrew|he:נסיכות סילנד|lang2=Chinese|link2=zh:西兰公国}}


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|action7=GAN
==Featured Article==
|action7date=01:53, 17 July 2008
|action7link=Talk:Principality of Sealand/GA1
|action7result=not listed
|action7oldid=224498848


|action8=GAN
Is it possible to bring the ] article back to Featured Article status? This article was a featured article and was "Today's Featured Article" for 28 December 2005. Also, this article is a featured article in 2 other languages, so this task should not be too difficult. ] 21:57, 5 November 2007 (UTC)
|action8date=19:14, 18 July 2008
:It should be possible, with the right amount of work, to achieve that outcome. I'm not quite sure why it was un-FA'd; there's always been a small clique of editors who have a problem with micronation content generally, so it might have had something to do with that. --] 02:16, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
|action8link=Talk:Principality of Sealand/GA2
::Preposterous. If you'd take the time to look, you'd see that at the time the article was defeatued, it had a mere eight citations and was riddled with {{Tl|Fact}} tags. '''<font color="8855DD">]</font><font color="#6666AA">]</font>''' 05:18, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
|action8result=not listed
:::Well there are 32 citations in there now, and the anti-micronation POV-pusher ] has been permanently banned by Jimbo, so presumably once the few remaining fact/cite tags are dealt with, a new FA nomination should be a breeze. --] 06:15, 6 November 2007 (UTC)
|action8oldid=226496425
::::Which remaining fact/cite tags need to be dealt with? I suggest placing a list here including all fact/cite tags that need to be dealt with, and after a fact/cite tag has been dealt with, it can be removed from the list using the <nowiki><s></s></nowiki> wiki markup. Once all fact/cite tags have been dealt with on this article, it can be nominated for Featured Article status. ] 18:56, 6 November 2007 (UTC)


|action9=GAN
Here is a list that I created including all information in the article that require citations. If no citation can be found the information can be deleted from the article. Use <nowiki><s></s></nowiki> wiki markup to show that a citation has been added to the article. Once completed this article should be able to be nominated for Featured Article status.
|action9date=02:11, 4 December 2011
|action9link=Talk:Principality of Sealand/GA3
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|maindate=December 28, 2005
*<s>Paddy Roy Bates, a British subject and pirate radio broadcaster, who ejected a competing group of pirate broadcasters</s>
|currentstatus=FFA
*<s>Defended this claim on at least one occasion: in an incident in 1990, the Royal Maritime Auxiliary vessel Golden Eye was fired upon from Sealand.</s>
|topic=Geography and places
*There will be a trial in the Ciudad Real (Spain) provincial court against a man selling Sealand passports.
*Roy and Joan Bates have been referred to internally since the foundation of Sealand as "Their Royal Highnesses Prince Roy and Princess Joan of Sealand"
*Roy Bates is styled "Sovereign", and Joan Bates is sometimes described as being "in joint rule" with him.
*<s>Michael Bates's son James, who was referred to as "Prince Royal James".</s>
*<s>As Sealand is not a recognised country, the Bates family officially travel internationally as British citizens.</s>
*He stated that his only legal recourse was to sue Roy Bates in a British court of law
*<s>Accepted without surcharge and passed by Belgian postal authorities into the international postal system at that time.</s>
*<s>Although recent examples exist of mail bearing Sealand stamps and cancellations, to the exclusion of all others, being transmitted through the international postal system.</s>
*<s>Sealand has many non-Sealanders acting as official national athletes, including mini-golf and football</s>.
*A Canadian University student is in negotiations to represent Sealand in International Amateur golf events.


|otd1date=2012-09-02
] 22:11, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
|otd1oldid=510390923


|otd2date=2018-09-02
:Instead of making a list here, you may find it easier and more productive to act {{TL|Fact}} to the statements in the article. '''<font color="8855DD">]</font><font color="#6666AA">]</font>''' 22:18, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
|otd2oldid=857755773
::All the statements above already have {{TL|Fact}} attached to them in the article, I created the list after they were attached by other users. ] 22:29, 8 November 2007 (UTC)
|otd3date=2023-09-02|otd3oldid=1173385519

|otd4date=2024-09-02|otd4oldid=1243600540

}}
The list below shows all information removed from the article because no source could be found:
{{British English|date=September 2010}}

{{WikiProject banner shell|class=C|
*There will be a trial in the Ciudad Real (Spain) provincial court against a man selling Sealand passports.
{{WikiProject East Anglia |importance=Mid}}
*Roy and Joan Bates have been referred to internally since the foundation of Sealand as "Their Royal Highnesses Prince Roy and Princess Joan of Sealand"
{{WikiProject Micronations |importance=High}}
*Roy Bates is styled "Sovereign", and Joan Bates is sometimes described as being "in joint rule" with him.
}}
*A Canadian University student is in negotiations to represent Sealand in International Amateur golf events.
{{User:MiszaBot/config

|archiveheader = {{talkarchivenav}}
If sources are found, then they can be added to the article, but as long as there is no source, I don't see why this information should be in the article. Most of the information in the earlier list did have sources, so I added citations.
|maxarchivesize = 150K

|counter = 8
Now that all fact/cite tags have been dealt with, I am nominating this article for featured article status. It now has 39 references, 31 more than when the article was demoted, and citations that were required have now been added. ] 17:37, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
|minthreadsleft = 4

|algo = old(90d)
This article needs more references, supporting all the claims that are made. This will significantly improve the article's chances of being promoted. ] 21:03, 13 November 2007 (UTC)
|archive = Talk:Principality of Sealand/Archive %(counter)d

}}
==The first sentence==

Before this article's status as a featured article candidate ended, there was some confusion as to whether the article's first sentence ("The Principality of Sealand is a micronation") is correct. Here is what was stated:

:Thanks for your changes, but I'm still not happy, even looking at the very first sentence: "Sealand is a micronation". The sources (except the Sealand News) do not support that. It's within British territorial waters. Their argument may have held when Britain's limit was 3 miles, but now it's 12 miles, the court rulings would probably be quite different and if they try broadcasting a pirate radio station again... ] 14:47, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
::The Principality of Sealand does not see itself as a micronation, nowhere does it officially state that it is a micronation. When the Principality was founded, its territory was in international waters. It was founded before a law was passed by the UN stating that nations cannot be founded on platforms, and it was founded before the UK extended its territorial waters limit from 3nm to 12nm. The British and Sealandic territories therefore border eachother near the British coast in the North Sea. Sealandic territory must be considered because the Principality has many laws supporting its claim to sovereignty and has been recognised many times over throughout its history. Therefore, even if the UK does not recognise this, the Principality is not in British territorial waters and the court rulings during the time that the Principality was not in British claimed waters support this. I agree that the first sentence is misleading, micronation seems to be what the Principality was labelled as just because it has never been "officially" recognised by the UN or the UK. Some people consider it a micronation, and others a microstate. The problem with using microstate is that there are people who will argue that the Principality is not a country, and would sooner base this on their own opinions rather than legal facts. I suggest replacing micronation with microstate as legally (using facts which Misplaced Pages requires) it is a nation, but whether that edit would stay I can't guarantee. ] 22:06, 14 November 2007 (UTC)
:::I have found a reference that shows that the Principality of Sealand does see itself as a microstate, and not a micronation. The reference can be found . Therefore it is incorrect to state at the top of the article that Sealand is a micronation - the first sentence has to be changed. ] 22:52, 15 November 2007 (UTC)
::::What it sees itself as is a matter of note - but is also largely irrelevant from the perspective of taxonomy. What it ''actually'' is, is an ephemeral statelike entity - ie, by definition, a micronation. That is how virtually all reliable external sources refer to it. --] 14:24, 16 November 2007 (UTC)
:::::But there are those who do not consider it a statelike entity, but a nation. Many of these external sources do not base their view of Sealand as a micronation on legal facts - it is just an opinion. This opinion has only been used because there are people who cannot accept that the Principality of Sealand can be a nation, even if there are legal facts to prove that it is a nation. To say "The Principality of Sealand is a micronation" would be against ] because that sentence is just the opinion. What about those that do see Sealand as a nation? Their opinon isn't just an opinion, it is a statement supported by laws and facts. Why isn't this statement included into the article? There must be a way of rewriting the sentence so that it is a more accurate definition of the Principality. -- ] (]) 17:13, 16 November 2007 (UTC)

The first sentence still is incorrect. It needs to be changed so that it agrees with ], and not with the opinion that the Principality of Sealand is not a nation. ] (]) 20:09, 18 November 2007 (UTC)

:The first sentence is as correct and as thoroughly NPOV as anyone can reasonably expect given the odd nature of the subject of the article. Suggestions that Sealand is a nation (ie a group of people with a distinct historic shared cultural heritage) border on the ridiculous. A few dozen English citizens on a gun platform in the North Sea are not a nation by any accepted definition of that term, and as far as I'm aware no legal ruling has ever included such a pronouncement. At most Sealand is an historic anomaly dressed up with a bit of theatre by a savvy businessman with a flair for self-promotion. There's nothing wrong with that. But there's nothing really unique about it either. ] and ] do the exact same thing. It's one of the common characteristics of micronations linked to actual real estate. In any case, the one thing most available sources agree on is that Sealand is a micronation, so that's the opinion that WP's article must properly reflect. --] (]) 21:32, 18 November 2007 (UTC)
::However the Hutt River Province (and the Principality of Seborga in its current state) was founded on land claimed by a UN recognised nation. What makes the Principality of Sealand unique is that it was founded in, at the time, international waters. Also there have been many events in its history, which include UN recognised nations, that have supported its sovereignty. Several legal opinions have shown that Sealand is a nation. Neither the Principality of Seborga nor the Hutt River Province have achieved all of the above. What I have mentioned is just a fraction as to why Sealand is unique.

::There are those who consider Sealand a micronation, and others who consider Sealand a microstate. The first sentence in the article states that Sealand is a micronation - this is just one of the views on Sealand's sovereignty. Why isn't the other view considered? Not all sources see Sealand as a micronation. This article is in Wikiproject European Microstates as well as Wikiproject Micronations. I think all Sealandic articles need to consider both views - that is the most NPOV it can be. ] (]) 22:35, 18 November 2007 (UTC)

:::Sorry, but that argument doesn't hold water. WP's NPOV and verifiability policies are not a license to give equal weight to fringe theories, and all sources are not created equal. If the BBC, Lonely Planet and other equally authoritative sources call it a micronation, and some guy in Canada who once ran in a marathon wearing a Sealand T-shirt says on his personal website that it's a sovereign principality, we definitely can't use the latter to "balance" the statements in the former. 3 poor sources do not trump 2 authoritative ones.

:::Some people may well believe passionately that Sealand is or should be a sovereign state because there are apparently unresolved questions concerning its legal status - but the practical realities of its physical situation - lacking in all natural resources necesary for human survival, entirely dependant on the supply of goods and, as the recent fire highlighted -UK public services, not even a single resident who is not also a British citizen + plain old realpolitik make the likelihood of that ever happening extremely remote.

:::As it stands Sealand has no formal bilateral relationship with any state. Until it does so we can't give undue weight to the idea that its actually something more than a plain old garden variety micronation, which is what the weight of reputable sources agree that it is. --] (]) 23:42, 18 November 2007 (UTC)

::::Actually, here is an example of a region attempting to gain complete independence. Abhkazia is not officially recognised by any nation or international organisation. However it has a president and a prime minister and uses the Russian Ruble, not the Lari, as currency. Russia grants citizenship to Abkhazians. However we don't consider Abkhazia a micronation, even when there are micronations much larger than Abkhazia.

::::Sealand's sovereignty is not just a "fringe theory", to say that would be comparing its sovereignty to conspiracy theories. The arguments that support Sealand's sovereignty actually exist as recent official documents and recorded historical events, unlike many conspiracy theories. A letter from the Department of Health and Social Security calling the fort "Sealand", the several stamps from UN recognised nations in a Sealandic passport, the visit of a German diplomat to the Principality. Here is a list of the sources for this information:

::::*Department of Health and Social Security
::::*Government of the Republic of Togo
::::*Government of the Republic of Hungary
::::*Government of the Syrian Arab Republic
::::*Government of Mongolia
::::*Government of the Republic of Bulgaria
::::*Government of the Federal Republic of Germany
::::*Government of the Republic of Senegal
::::*Government of the Gabonese Republic
::::*Government of the Republic of Guinea
::::*Government of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan

::::Clearly 10 UN recognised governments and an official department are much more reliable sources than the BBC or Lonely Planet. A Sealander, using a Sealandic passport, managed to gain access into all of the above UN recognised nations. This means the principality's sovereignty is not just a "fringe theory", similar in status to a conspiracy theory. Abkhazians currently would need a UN recognised nation's citizenship - it would be difficult to travel without it. Surely with this evidence for the principality's sovereignty the first sentence needs to be rewritten.

::::There are people who consider Sealand a micronation. If there are a suitable amount of sources and people that think that, then it should be included in the article. However there are also a suitable amount of sources and people who consider the Principality of Sealand a nation, so this should also be included in the article. The Wikiprojects seem to follow this - so should the rest of Misplaced Pages, it is correct NPOV. ] (]) 21:20, 19 November 2007 (UTC)

I have rewritten the first paragraph, so that it is NPOV. It now shows both views rather than supporting one opinion. ] (]) 21:30, 19 November 2007 (UTC)

:I've reverted your change. As far as I'm aware no authoritative third party source has ever classified Sealand a microstate. The inclusion of Sealand in the European microstates list on WP should be removed.

:There is absolutely no comparison between Abkhazia and Sealand. The former has a distinct historic cultural identity and has the potential to be a viable state. Sealand has not, and does not.

:Having a well-made micronation passport stamped by the customs authority of a recognised sovereign state is easy as pie, and is essentially a meaningless act. A stamped micronation passport doesn't mean the government of the country in question has somehow legitimised the claims of the micronation.

:Again, this is not something unique to Sealand. Passports from the ], ] and ] have all been stamped by customs officers of real countries on dozens of occasions. In less sophisticated countries it's easy to get away with just handing over a nice-looking micronation passport to a non-English-speaking border guard, and it's unlikely they'll question it. In more sophisticated countries the practise is to hand over a real passoprt together with a micronation one get both stamped. The Hutt River people have been doing the latter when entering Australia for years.

:Procedural oversights and documentary sleighs-of-hand of this nature are all very entertaining, but it means absolutely zip as far as legitimising the claims of the micronations in question go. Unless there is evidence of a formal bilateral relationship between Sealand and a sovereign state it remains a micronation. --] (]) 02:41, 20 November 2007 (UTC)

::Using "microstate" may be too specific, so I changed that to "sovereign nation". Undoubtedly there are people and sources that consider the Principality a sovereign nation - this should be included into the article. True, Abkhazia and the Principality are different in many ways, but to say that there is no comparison between the two is incorrect - they still have some similarities, and also to say that the principality does not have the potential to be a viable state is pure speculation which Misplaced Pages does not allow (]).

::The article being on Wikiproject Micronations and Wikiproject European Microstates is correct NPOV. This shows that both views of the Principality are considered - by not saying that it is undoubtedly a microstate, but also not undoubtedly a micronation.

::Though the government of a nation may not recognise the Principality even after its custom officers stamped Sealandic passports several times, this still is recognition of its sovereignty. A customs officer of any nation should make sure that an unrecognised passport is not used at borders. Passports are official documents, if unrecognised passports are recognised, then the Principality's sovereignty is recognised by the government of that nation - whether intentional or not. Even if it is simple to travel to various UN recognised nations using an unrecognised passport - it does not mean that the government of these nations have not accepted these passports as official documents.

::To agree with NPOV, the article's first sentence must be written so that it states both views of the Principality. The sources that show that the Principality is a sovereign nation can't be simply ignored. ] (]) 19:48, 20 November 2007 (UTC)

:There are ''no'' reliable third party sources that support the contention that Sealand is a sovereign state. If you believe that there are, then please cite them.

:Stamped passports do ''not'' legitimise the Bates family's claim that Sealand is a sovereign state. The status of sovereign state cannot be attained via documentary sleight-of-hand.

:Sealand ''does not have'' a bilateral relationship with any sovereign state.

:Ergo, Sealand is not a sovereign state, and WP cannot give undue weight to unsubstantiated, fringe notions which pretend or assert otherwise. --] (]) 00:50, 21 November 2007 (UTC)

::When I rewrite the first paragraph, I am making sure that it is NPOV. There are several reliable sources that support the sovereignty of the Principality of Sealand - this isn't just an unsourced POV. Saying that the Principality is a micronation is a POV, if this POV can stay in the article why can't the other POV stay? That is correct NPOV. Stamped passports show de facto recognition, and the legal opinions do show that it isn't the Bates family that are the only people who claim that the Principality is a sovereign state.

::Here are plenty of sources (a fraction of all the sources) supporting the Principality's sovereignty. I am not placing them here so that the word "micronation" can be deleted from the article - if there are sources that say that the Principality is a micronation, then that POV can be included in the article. I am placing these sources here so that Misplaced Pages users can see that there is another POV with sources and this POV must be included in the article - and not simply ignored. This is correct NPOV.

''According to , de facto recognition includes "diplomatic activities by representatives of the states involved in connection with tasks between states, relationships etc.;", for example when Germany sent a diplomat from its London embassy to Sealand. Roy Bates relented after several weeks of negotiations and subsequently claimed that the diplomat's visit constituted de facto recognition of Sealand by Germany.''

''De facto recognition also includes: "recognition and official endorsement with a visa of passports issued by the other state as travelling documents." This can be seen in the photographs of a stamped Sealandic passport:''

*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*

''There are also many legal opinions by various people stating that the ] under various laws is a nation. This can be seen in the copies of these legal opinions:''

* (Professor in Public International Law, University of Nijmegen)
* (University professor of law, full professor for constitutional law, administrative law and jus gentium in the faculty of jurisprudence of the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, chairman of the Institut für Staats- und Verwaltungsrecht [Institute for constitutional and administrative law in Erlangen, department of constitutional law and international law)
*
*


== Wrong Latin in motto... (For those who care) ==
::Here are sources supporting the sovereignty of the Principality. This is not a fringe theory, these sources can't be compared to conspiracy theories. I don't see why a NPOV article on the Principality of Sealand would ignore this and support the POV that the Principality is a micronation. I think the article should consider both POVs. ] (]) 18:04, 21 November 2007 (UTC)


Hi there, just wanted to point out that, given that "e(x)" goes with the ablative case and the ablative singular of "mare" is "mari", the Latin in the motto should be "E mari Libertas", not "E mare Libertas". As we are all aware that His Royal Highness' family is century-old, meaning that there might be some sort of medieval history behind this "e mare" which I am not aware of and from which the current motto is derived, let it be on my head! But if His Royal Highness cares about the proper Latin in his nation's most renowned motto, I suggest he changed it for the sake of his people.
:::We seem to be engaged in a rather circular discussion. Legal opinions (which for all we know may have been paid for by the Bates family) do not prove that Sealand is a sovereign state, and we cannot present them as though they do. They do not represent a weight of mainstream legal opinion - they represent a few anomalous fringe opinions. There are similar opinions concerning the Hutt River Province and other supposedly anomalous situations, and they mean precisely nothing, because none of them have ever been tested in a court of law whose jurisdiction is clear and unambiguous.


Explanation:
:::The opening paragraph already explicitly states that Sealand's situation is viewed as an interesting legal case study by some people. That's really all the mention of the sovereignty position that the article requires in order for it to comply with NPOV. We really need to leave it at that, rather than trying to promote the POV that because someone with a law degree said its a state, then that somehow cancels out the weight of opinion (both legal and otherwise) thatit isn't one and can never be one.
Mare is a neutral word of the third declension. In Latin third declension words, generally speaking, have the ablative ending "-e". But since mare (stem: mar-) ends with an -e in the nominative case and on top of that is a neutral word, meaning that the accusative case is also spelled "mare" (as opposed to (the hypothetical masculine/feminine) "marem"), the regular "mare" exceptionally becomes "mari" in order to distinguish the form of the ablative case from the nominative and accusative cases. This is as far classical Latin goes, anyways.


== Inclusion of symbols ==
:::Frankly, it's totally ludicrous to assert that a decrepit WW2 gun platform in the English Channel which has no resources of any kind, entirely reliant on the UK, and with a population of a handful (at most) of British Citizens beholden entirely to one eccentric family in whose name the structure is occupied is anything other than what it appears to be - an unrecognised statelike entity - ie a ].


The removal of all symbols from this page is unwarranted. The arguments made in the RfC were specifically regarding whether the inclusion of symbols in the infobox would be giving them ] weight. This has no bearing on the body of the article. The flag and coat of arms of Sealand are widely used emblems of the micronation and there's no reason why they shouldn't be included. ] (]) 18:30, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
:::It is my personal observation that your contributions to this discussion are very much lacking in perspective, and I cannot help but wonder if you are somehow directly associated with or have an interest in Sealand. If this is the case continuing to strongly push the sovereignty POV is, to say the least, inappropriate. --] (]) 22:18, 21 November 2007 (UTC)


:Please provide the '''necessary secondary reliable sources''' to demonstrate that the flags and coat of arms have been discussed in sufficient depth to merit inclusion. ] (]) 18:33, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Firstly, I am not a Sealander, and have no association with the Principality.
::Sources that specifically highlight the flag:
::Sources that mention the flag:
::And this is after a minute of looking.
::] (]) 19:00, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I can't say I'm overly impressed with commentary that mostly merely notes that Sealand has a flag. Hardly in-depth discussion, in my opinion. Still, perhaps we should see what else other contributors think. The article has been edit protected for a week, so there's no hurry. ] (]) 19:20, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
:::None of those links include in-depth discussion of the flag, they merely note it exists and sometimes show a picture of it. The unbylined Business Insider India piece is not RS. ] (]) 18:25, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
::::AndyTheGrump is in the wrong here. The RfC consensus was that flags of micronations shouldn't be ''in the infobox'' as this puts undue emphasis on the symbols and legitimizes non-countries by making their infoboxes look just like the infoboxes of real countries. The RfC consensus was ''not'' that symbols are prohibited from appearing ''anywhere'' in the article. And RE: JoelleJay, there does not need to be "in-depth discussion of the flag" to put it somewhere in the article. We are not discussing writing a standalone article about the flag and its symbolism or history. The fact that numerous sources confirm the flag's existence is more than enough to display a small image of it in some paragraph. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 16:53, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::There is nothing in Misplaced Pages policy that states that sourced 'existence' is necessarily sufficient grounds to include something. And I'd note that secondary sources discussing the coat of arms haven't been provided at all. ] (])
::::::We're simply discussing the concept of due weight. If one were to try to write a whole standalone article about the Flag of Sealand, they'd better have enough sources discussing it in depth to produce a few paragraphs. But to simply have a small captioned image labeled "Flag of Sealand"? Something small, insignificant, and uncontroversial? The existence of plentiful secondary sources establishes sufficient notability for something so trivial. It can be debated whether or not there is due weight to put the flag ''in the infobox'', as many editors feel that would be inappropriate. But there's no good arguments against having it ''anywhere''. You were edit warring based on a clear misreading of the RfC. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:34, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Disagreeing with you does not constitute 'edit warring'. And if the flag is 'insignificant', why do we need to include it? ] (]) 17:39, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Come on, I know you know what I mean. I'm not talking about you edit warring ''with me,'' I haven't edited the page in over two months. I'm talking about , when your edit warring got the page fully protected. I doubt you've already forgotten about that.
::::::::As for the second half of that reply, again, I don't doubt that you know what I was saying. Adding the flag to the article is a small and insignificant change, and therefore one where the due weight burden is much lighter than if we were discussing creating a whole article or section about it. The reason why it should be included is, obviously, because it appears in numerous secondary sources.
::::::::I'm curious, how far does your view that the flag is unsuitable for inclusion go? Would you also oppose ? There's a good number of them on Wikimedia Commons, and some of them are better quality than some of the pictures we have in the article right now. Do you believe that would also go against the RfC result?
::::::::<b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:54, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I'm not the slightest bit interested in responding to bad-faith accusations of edit-warring, or in responding to straw man arguments. ] (]) 17:59, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::I don't see what makes it a "bad faith accusation of edit warring" to note that the current revision of the page has a summary reading {{tq|"Changed protection settings for "Principality of Sealand": Edit warring / content dispute"}} following you reverting other editors to remove the flag at least four times, but alright. I also don't know where the strawman was, I just asked you a question to try to figure out what your position is. But if you're not interested in discussing it, that's fine. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 18:06, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::What the numerous secondary sources support is ''mentioning the existence of the flag'', which we do. Just because something is mentioned, or even appears in pictures, in IRS sources does not mean it is encyclopedic to include it as an image. ] (]) 20:41, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::If you agree that the sources warrant mentioning its existence, and the flag is currently mentioned in 3 different contexts throughout the article, I'd say that's good enough reason to allow the reader to see it. A flag is a purely visual thing, it wouldn't make a lot of sense to repeatedly mention it but intentionally avoid showing it. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 13:56, 27 June 2024 (UTC)


== Should we add the flag to the infobox? ==
::::Secondly, the Principality is in the North Sea, not the English Channel.


] instead of ] would be very informational. Additionally, we could move the ] to another location on the page. ] (]) 16:12, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Thirdly :''"Frankly, it's totally ludicrous to assert that a decrepit WW2 gun platform in the English Channel which has no resources of any kind, entirely reliant on the UK, and with a population of a handful (at most) of British Citizens beholden entirely to one eccentric family in whose name the structure is occupied is anything other than what it appears to be - an unrecognised statelike entity - ie a ]."'' This is just an opinion. It is not a decrepit WW2 gun platform, it is a former Maunsell sea fort that is being restored. Define eccentric (another opinion) when referring to states such as the Principality of Sealand or micronations such as the Hutt River Province.
:No. See ], where it was decided by clear consensus that micronation infoboxes should not contain flags. ] (]) 16:30, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
::Actually Andy, the finding was that consensus was ''generally'' against it. You'll note that it included the caveat of (albeit rare) case-by-case use of flags. Certainly, that's no measure of if its appropriate here, but the door has certainly been left open for the community to decide that it ''is'' appropriate. ] 04:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::And note the stipulation that "symbols which are recognized or reported by reliable sources may be appropriate to add, as important information." ] 04:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:No. --] (]) 19:15, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
::Very informal thank you. ] (]) 20:00, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
:::I'm guessing you meant "informative". I agree with Andy and didn't see any reason to expound. We've already discussed this at the RfC. Having ''another'' discussion isolated to a single article isn't helpful. The answer is, simply, no. --] (]) 21:35, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
::::Sorry for being late, but I meant informal, not informative. ] (]) 02:58, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
::::As I told Andy: the closure specifically (and intentionally) left the door open ("Certain symbols which are recognized or reported by reliable sources may be appropriate to add..."). The community can certainly decide that the flag is appropriate to add under that decision (and that it comports with the guidelines). ] 04:34, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::Then that is an incorrect interpretation of the consensus and should be amended. There was very strong consensus that micronation infoboxes '''should not have symbols''', regardless of sourcing, as demonstrated by the overwhelming majority of editors voting for option B (which left no room for discussion). ] (]) 22:47, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::Challenge at ] if you feel the need. ] 06:26, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
:No. This has already been decided on a community-wide level. ] (]) 19:40, 26 June 2024 (UTC)


== RfC on the inclusion of symbols ==
::::Finally, I am not attempting to push a POV. I am just following this official English Misplaced Pages policy:


<!-- ] 17:01, 31 July 2024 (UTC) -->{{User:ClueBot III/DoNotArchiveUntil|1722445268}}
::::''Misplaced Pages works best when people with opposing opinions work together to find common ground. Neutral point of view advises that all significant views can and should be documented proportionally. An edit war is the opposite of this, with two sides each fighting to make their version the only one.''
{{closed rfc top|result='''Withdrawn''' — I should not be asking editors to weigh in on what they think the Village Pump RfC consensus was. If anyone disagrees with its result, there is a venue for that, and this isn't it. Inviting debate on something that isn't debatable was a fatal mistake for this RfC. My apologies. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 00:51, 28 June 2024 (UTC) }}
Is it appropriate for symbols (e.g. the Flag of Sealand) to appear somewhere in the article? <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 16:59, 26 June 2024 (UTC)


=== Background ===
::::This isn't an edit war. The above paragraph states: "people with opposing opinions should work together to find common ground." Nowhere did I say that the POV stating the the Principality is a micronation should not be included in the article, but all of the above sources can't be ignored - they exist and challenge the label micronation - whether Misplaced Pages users like it or not. If this is the case, then the article should show the POV in support of Sealandic sovereignty. To rewrite the first sentence is to find common ground between two POVs. ''"Legal opinions (which for all we know may have been paid for by the Bates family)"'' - this is just speculation, no sources show this - no sources, no inclusion into the article. ''"They do not represent a weight of mainstream legal opinion - they represent a few anomalous fringe opinions."'' - once again - just a POV, no sources, no inclusion into the article.
A few months ago, a Village Pump RfC was held . It closed with a consensus that it is generally not appropriate to display micronation flags in the infobox, though it may be allowed on a case-by-case basis.


For a few months after that, the flag was moved down to a paragraph, but it was not removed entirely from the article as the RfC pertained only to infoboxes. This became a point of contention this month as one editor felt that the RfC meant it should not appear anywhere in the article.
::::''"The opening paragraph already explicitly states that Sealand's situation is viewed as an interesting legal case study by some people. That's really all the mention of the sovereignty position that the article requires in order for it to comply with NPOV."'' If the POV that the Principality is a micronation can be in the article - then the other POV should be included into the article. It has sources, legal opinions based on fact - more then enough for a POV to be included into the article. ] (]) 23:14, 21 November 2007 (UTC)


Since this is still an unresolved issue and there are multiple threads about this, I feel the best way forward is to settle it through an RfC.
:::::The sum total of your constant reversion of the opening paragraph's content by attempting to include unsubstantiated assertions promoting a fringe POV is very rapidly entering edit-warring territory.


I suggest the following options, but you are always welcomed to !vote for a solution not listed if you prefer.
:::::The article already clearly and explicitly states that some people consider Sealand a sovereign state. Your repeated attempt to give undue weight to that eccentric fringe POV is completely inappropriate.
* '''Option A''' - Symbols (e.g. the flag) may appear in the article body, just not in the infobox.
* '''Option B''' - Symbols may appear in the infobox.
* '''Option C''' - Symbols have no place in this article.


<b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:19, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
:::::I strongly suggest that you moderate your attempts to promote the sovereignty POV and return your focus to improving the article such that it more fully complies with WP content policies generally.


=== Survey ===
:::::Doing otherwise may leave you open to accusations of being a single-purpose account whose presence on WP is intended to actively promote Sealand. --] (]) 00:32, 22 November 2007 (UTC)
* '''Prefer Option A''' as nominator. I feel this is the most consistent with the result of the RfC. That said, the RfC did leave open the possibility of flags appearing in the infobox on a case-by-case basis provided that there are enough sources. As the RfC close note mentioned, one of the main problems with micronation flags is that they are far too often unverifiable and unrecognizable. This is not the case with the flag of Sealand, as it is without a doubt the most well-known of the micronations. However, there are still other concerns with flags in micronation infoboxes, such as the potential to mislead a reader into viewing the micronation as more legitimate or country-like than it really is. For those reasons, I'll also '''weak endorse Option B''', but I find A to be the least problematic. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:19, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*'''None of the above''', since this RfC appears to be asking whether abstract 'symbols' can be included in the article. Instead, any RfC should be discussing ''specific'' symbols only, and whether coverage in secondary sources is sufficient to justify inclusion of that specific symbol. ] (]) 17:49, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*'''Oppose option B'''. Local relitigation of something already decided at a higher/broader level. ] (]) 19:40, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*:As the previous RfC closer: I specifically left the door open for case-by-case decisions on symbols which may (though it is likely rare) be appropriate to add and comport with guidelines. However, my previous closure only covered infoboxes, not article bodies, and thus is merely informative. ] 22:42, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option B or A'''. Per Vanilla Wizard, the RfC allowed flexibility. I'd be fine with it not being in the infobox, and it placed somewhere else in the article. ] (]) 20:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*'''Invalid RfC'''. Would an "A" or "B" outcome mean both the flag and coat of arms (and any other "symbols") are permitted somewhere in the article, including in the infobox? The RfC question does not make this clear, and does not mention that discussion of source analyses would still be required to justify DUEness of any given symbol (so !votes that do not address sourcing are not policy-compliant). ] (]) 23:00, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
:* That is a valid concern and I will try to address it, though I don't think it invalidates the RfC. I think the reason for the confusion is that there are two overlapping points of contention to sort out: 1) how editors interpret the Village Pump RfC (in short, what is ''allowable''), and 2) if sourcing justifies inclusion (in short, what is ''due''). I can see how this would make the "outcomes" confusing and I apologize for that.
:: The language in the suggested "options" only asked about the former because I assumed discussion about the latter would follow naturally, as it had already been happening in the earlier discussions where you and I went back-and-forth about due weight. For example, if someone states their preference is for option B, that necessarily implies they believe there is due weight to go that route. I did not think it needed to be explicitly stated, but I was mistaken and I'll add a note below the question to clear that up.
:: I figured the question about what is ''allowable'' was the origin of this issue, as everyone seems to have their own opinion about what the Village Pump RfC meant. My reading of it is that it affects only the infobox and we should go by what the closer said unless and until their close is reviewed by an uninvolved third party. Others, yourself included, have argued that under no circumstances can the infobox display symbols, regardless of sources. One other went even farther and cited the Village Pump RfC as an edit summary justification for removing the flag and arms from the whole article. My assumption of your position is (and correct me if I'm wrong) that you oppose inclusion in the infobox because of the Village Pump RfC, but oppose inclusion in the article for a different reason, which is that you don't believe there is due weight for it. I expect a lot of editors will have a very nuanced opinion like yours and hope that this will be an opportunity for editors to express those opinions so this subject can be put to rest.
:: <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 00:08, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
::* Actually, I take that back. ], I thought about it some more, and I agree with you. This ''is'' an invalid RfC and it needs to be withdrawn and restarted with a more focused question. I just don't agree ''why'' it's an invalid RfC. This RfC question is invalid because ''this'' RfC is not the place to ask people what they think of ''that'' RfC. The Village Pump RfC is closed, what's done is done. Many editors may disagree with the closer's interpretation of the discussion, but the result is still the result unless it's changed at the right venue.
::: Per ], {{tq|"In general, deletions are discussed at WP:Deletion review, moves are discussed at WP:Move review, and other closures (including requests for comment) are discussed at WP:AN."}}
::: To put it bluntly, my mistake was acting as though it mattered how anyone interprets that discussion. I should have been asking ''only'' about due weight instead of trying to lump the two issues together. Yes, many editors disagree, but they'll have to take those disagreements to ]. Right here, at this time, on this talk page, it doesn't matter what anyone thinks of the Village Pump RfC and whether the door should have been fully closed on the infobox question.
::: <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 00:38, 28 June 2024 (UTC)


=== Discussion ===
::::::#To say that the POV supporting Sealandic sovereignty is an "eccentric fringe theory" is just an opinion.
* Notifying users who participated in the above discussions about this topic and/or made related edits in the article's revision history as they may want to weigh in: {{ping|Bennett1203|Hammersoft|JoelleJay|Loytra|Swiãtopôłk}}. That should be everyone (excluding those who've already participated here), but if I missed any please let me know. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 12:37, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
::::::#This POV has many sources based on facts and documents - it must be included into the article. What is written in the first sentence is "The Principality of Sealand is a micronation". This is the first sentence that is read - the first sentences of an article define what the article is about. This definition of the Principality is just one POV, and does not consider the other POV. If it did, it would be correct NPOV.
::::::#Misplaced Pages relies on reliable sources. All of the sources I added above are more than enough for the statement that "The Principality of Sealand is considered by some to be a micronation, but by others a sovereign nation." Notice that I am not deleting the POV stating that the Principality is a micronation - if I did, it would not be NPOV - but I think that both POVs should be considered, especially in the first paragraph - the paragraph that defines what the Principality of Sealand is. ] (]) 20:47, 22 November 2007 (UTC)


==== Discussion about the RfC wording ====
===Third opinion===
*'''Comment''' What does 'e.g.' mean? If this is a question about including the flag, then don't confuse the issue by discussing abstract 'symbols'. ] (]) 17:08, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't think that the first sentence of the lead paragraph is the place for the debate. The terms "mirco nation" and "micro state" are both subject to a certain degree of ambiguity and thus may tend to add more confusion than clarity to the lead. The discussion of both definitions seems appropriate further into the article. I would avoid the use of either in the first sentence and only minimally discuss either or alternatives in the lead paragraphs. The salient issues here are the disputes on multiple levels that this is anything more than a chunk of concrete in Britixh waters. Regardless the story is facinating. --] (]) 21:07, 22 November 2007 (UTC)
** I thought it should be fairly obvious what e.g. means in this context. Flags, coat of arms, and other symbols. The previous talk page thread was titled as such, the closing comment of the RfC specified more symbols than just the flag, etc. There is nothing to be confused about. If you feel one way about the flag and another way about other symbols, you're always welcome to state that. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:23, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
***The discussion above noted the minimum requirement that symbols need discussion in external sources. Accordingly, it should be asking about specific symbols that are directly sourced. Not abstractions. ] (]) 17:35, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
****The RfC is phrased the way it is because there seems to be some disagreement over the implications of the Village Pump RfC. In particular, your view that it affects the entire article, not just the infobox. The Village Pump RfC's closing comment contains no language stating that it affects anything but the infobox question, but you citing a link to that RfC as your reason for deleting the flag from the article suggests this is a point of disagreement that should be settled through an RfC here.
***:It should go without saying that how an editor !votes will depend on their assessment of available sources. You may be unimpressed by the available sources and believe inclusion is not justified, in which case your perspective would align with Option C. How one feels about the available sources would also be the difference between Options A and B, as the RfC left open the door to putting symbols in the infobox on a case-by-case basis.
***:To reject the question entirely because it didn't specifically differentiate between the flag and the coat of arms just feels needlessly obstructive. Nothing about the language of the question precludes discussing the symbols individually. An RfC is the best way to put this issue to rest, and there's no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater just because it could have been phrased slightly differently to ask that editors assess the symbols one at a time. A quick comment asking editors to do that would have sufficed, no need to prematurely declare the RfC dead on arrival and ask for a new one before it's even begun.
***:<b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 19:05, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*****You would do well to read <s>]</s> ]. If you had taken the time to discuss this properly, rather than rushing headlong into starting an RfC 6 minutes after your first post on the topic, I'm sure we could have avoided all this. As it stands, the RfC doesn't include even include the most obvious response - which is that we need to look at the merits of specific 'symbols' individually. Something which any reasonable interpretation of Misplaced Pages would be a ''requirement'' for inclusion. Not an option that can be overridden by an RfC. And no, you don't get to tell me (or anyone else) what my perspective is, or how you think I should have !voted. ] (]) 19:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
******Goodness, where do I begin. I'm going to ignore the part where you baselessly accuse me of not taking the time to read the talk sections on the subject before starting the RfC. The bulk of this response is already addressed directly in the comment you are replying to: {{tq|Nothing about the language of the question precludes discussing the symbols individually. A quick comment asking editors to do that would have sufficed.}} Re: {{tq|"I'm sure we could have avoided all this."}}, again, "all this" also could have been avoided if you just left a comment respectfully saying "I ask that editors comment on both the flag and the arms separately" instead of prematurely throwing a wrench into the process and berating me for failing to predict how you'd react the RfC. The last part is just silly. I am not casting your !vote for you, I simply stated that the reason why I decided to include C in the list of options was my reading of your comments. I do not understand how you found a way to take offense to that. I think ] in any case; even though we've never crossed paths until a couple hours ago, I noticed there's something about the way you type that just comes across as too unpleasant for there to be any chance of us ever having a productive conversation with each other. I'll leave you with this: if you or any other editor feel one way about the flag and another way about the arms, there's absolutely nothing stopping anyone from leaving a !vote along the lines of "(A) for the flag and (C) for the arms" if that is their choice. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 20:05, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
*******I've just realised I linked WP:BEFORE above instead of WP:RFCBEFORE, which was what I intended. Apologies for that. As for the remainder of your comments, I stand by what I said. Starting an RfC six minutes after first commenting is poor practice. The RfC is poorly thought out, and poorly worded. And, given that it fails to stipulate that 'symbols' must be properly sourced, liable to result in invalid results. Local RfCs cannot overrule global policy. ] (]) 20:47, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
* Option B isn't an option. We've already discussed this multiple times and it is getting aggravating to have to keep on saying NO to this. Option B isn't happening, barring some new community wide consensus that overrides the recently concluded RfC on the matter. As to being in the article? Sure...IF...IF...there are ], ] that support discussion regarding the symbol. Just adding it because the micronation has their flag? No. It gets tiring having to deal with leaders of these micronations doing everything they can to make it seem like the Misplaced Pages article about their fantasy is representing a somehow legitimate country. Enough already. Either come up with reliable, secondary sources to support discussion or drop it. --] (]) 16:34, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
*: The closer of the Village Pump RfC already replied to you about this. But as for {{tq|"It gets tiring having to deal with leaders of these micronations doing everything they can to make it seem like the Misplaced Pages article about their fantasy is representing a somehow legitimate country. Enough already."}} — I can assure you none of us are Bates. <b style="font-family:Trebuchet MS">]]</b> ] 17:17, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
*::Which is a wildly inaccurate reading of the overwhelming consensus that '''micronation symbols should never be in infoboxes'''. Option B ''did not leave any room for the possibility of symbols'', and it had a supermajority of the !votes. ] (]) 23:38, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
{{closed rfc bottom}}

Latest revision as of 00:44, 8 November 2024

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Wrong Latin in motto... (For those who care)

Hi there, just wanted to point out that, given that "e(x)" goes with the ablative case and the ablative singular of "mare" is "mari", the Latin in the motto should be "E mari Libertas", not "E mare Libertas". As we are all aware that His Royal Highness' family is century-old, meaning that there might be some sort of medieval history behind this "e mare" which I am not aware of and from which the current motto is derived, let it be on my head! But if His Royal Highness cares about the proper Latin in his nation's most renowned motto, I suggest he changed it for the sake of his people.

Explanation: Mare is a neutral word of the third declension. In Latin third declension words, generally speaking, have the ablative ending "-e". But since mare (stem: mar-) ends with an -e in the nominative case and on top of that is a neutral word, meaning that the accusative case is also spelled "mare" (as opposed to (the hypothetical masculine/feminine) "marem"), the regular "mare" exceptionally becomes "mari" in order to distinguish the form of the ablative case from the nominative and accusative cases. This is as far classical Latin goes, anyways.

Inclusion of symbols

The removal of all symbols from this page is unwarranted. The arguments made in the RfC were specifically regarding whether the inclusion of symbols in the infobox would be giving them WP:UNDUE weight. This has no bearing on the body of the article. The flag and coat of arms of Sealand are widely used emblems of the micronation and there's no reason why they shouldn't be included. Loytra (talk) 18:30, 10 June 2024 (UTC)

Please provide the necessary secondary reliable sources to demonstrate that the flags and coat of arms have been discussed in sufficient depth to merit inclusion. AndyTheGrump (talk) 18:33, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
Sources that specifically highlight the flag:
Sources that mention the flag:
And this is after a minute of looking.
Loytra (talk) 19:00, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
I can't say I'm overly impressed with commentary that mostly merely notes that Sealand has a flag. Hardly in-depth discussion, in my opinion. Still, perhaps we should see what else other contributors think. The article has been edit protected for a week, so there's no hurry. AndyTheGrump (talk) 19:20, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
None of those links include in-depth discussion of the flag, they merely note it exists and sometimes show a picture of it. The unbylined Business Insider India piece is not RS. JoelleJay (talk) 18:25, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
AndyTheGrump is in the wrong here. The RfC consensus was that flags of micronations shouldn't be in the infobox as this puts undue emphasis on the symbols and legitimizes non-countries by making their infoboxes look just like the infoboxes of real countries. The RfC consensus was not that symbols are prohibited from appearing anywhere in the article. And RE: JoelleJay, there does not need to be "in-depth discussion of the flag" to put it somewhere in the article. We are not discussing writing a standalone article about the flag and its symbolism or history. The fact that numerous sources confirm the flag's existence is more than enough to display a small image of it in some paragraph.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 16:53, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
There is nothing in Misplaced Pages policy that states that sourced 'existence' is necessarily sufficient grounds to include something. And I'd note that secondary sources discussing the coat of arms haven't been provided at all. AndyTheGrump (talk)
We're simply discussing the concept of due weight. If one were to try to write a whole standalone article about the Flag of Sealand, they'd better have enough sources discussing it in depth to produce a few paragraphs. But to simply have a small captioned image labeled "Flag of Sealand"? Something small, insignificant, and uncontroversial? The existence of plentiful secondary sources establishes sufficient notability for something so trivial. It can be debated whether or not there is due weight to put the flag in the infobox, as many editors feel that would be inappropriate. But there's no good arguments against having it anywhere. You were edit warring based on a clear misreading of the RfC.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:34, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Disagreeing with you does not constitute 'edit warring'. And if the flag is 'insignificant', why do we need to include it? AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:39, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Come on, I know you know what I mean. I'm not talking about you edit warring with me, I haven't edited the page in over two months. I'm talking about the most recent revisions to the article, when your edit warring got the page fully protected. I doubt you've already forgotten about that.
As for the second half of that reply, again, I don't doubt that you know what I was saying. Adding the flag to the article is a small and insignificant change, and therefore one where the due weight burden is much lighter than if we were discussing creating a whole article or section about it. The reason why it should be included is, obviously, because it appears in numerous secondary sources.
I'm curious, how far does your view that the flag is unsuitable for inclusion go? Would you also oppose photographs of Sealand where the flag is on a flagpole? There's a good number of them on Wikimedia Commons, and some of them are better quality than some of the pictures we have in the article right now. Do you believe that would also go against the RfC result?
 Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:54, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not the slightest bit interested in responding to bad-faith accusations of edit-warring, or in responding to straw man arguments. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:59, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't see what makes it a "bad faith accusation of edit warring" to note that the current revision of the page has a summary reading "Changed protection settings for "Principality of Sealand": Edit warring / content dispute" following you reverting other editors to remove the flag at least four times, but alright. I also don't know where the strawman was, I just asked you a question to try to figure out what your position is. But if you're not interested in discussing it, that's fine.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 18:06, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
What the numerous secondary sources support is mentioning the existence of the flag, which we do. Just because something is mentioned, or even appears in pictures, in IRS sources does not mean it is encyclopedic to include it as an image. JoelleJay (talk) 20:41, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
If you agree that the sources warrant mentioning its existence, and the flag is currently mentioned in 3 different contexts throughout the article, I'd say that's good enough reason to allow the reader to see it. A flag is a purely visual thing, it wouldn't make a lot of sense to repeatedly mention it but intentionally avoid showing it.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 13:56, 27 June 2024 (UTC)

Should we add the flag to the infobox?

The flag instead of the base would be very informational. Additionally, we could move the previous image to another location on the page. Bennett1203 (talk) 16:12, 14 June 2024 (UTC)

No. See Misplaced Pages:Village_pump_(policy)/Archive_191#RfC:_micronation_infoboxes, where it was decided by clear consensus that micronation infoboxes should not contain flags. AndyTheGrump (talk) 16:30, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Actually Andy, the finding was that consensus was generally against it. You'll note that it included the caveat of (albeit rare) case-by-case use of flags. Certainly, that's no measure of if its appropriate here, but the door has certainly been left open for the community to decide that it is appropriate. TW 04:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
And note the stipulation that "symbols which are recognized or reported by reliable sources may be appropriate to add, as important information." TW 04:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
No. --Hammersoft (talk) 19:15, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Very informal thank you. Bennett1203 (talk) 20:00, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm guessing you meant "informative". I agree with Andy and didn't see any reason to expound. We've already discussed this at the RfC. Having another discussion isolated to a single article isn't helpful. The answer is, simply, no. --Hammersoft (talk) 21:35, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Sorry for being late, but I meant informal, not informative. Bennett1203 (talk) 02:58, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
As I told Andy: the closure specifically (and intentionally) left the door open ("Certain symbols which are recognized or reported by reliable sources may be appropriate to add..."). The community can certainly decide that the flag is appropriate to add under that decision (and that it comports with the guidelines). TW 04:34, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Then that is an incorrect interpretation of the consensus and should be amended. There was very strong consensus that micronation infoboxes should not have symbols, regardless of sourcing, as demonstrated by the overwhelming majority of editors voting for option B (which left no room for discussion). JoelleJay (talk) 22:47, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
Challenge at WP:AN if you feel the need. TW 06:26, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
No. This has already been decided on a community-wide level. DrKay (talk) 19:40, 26 June 2024 (UTC)

RfC on the inclusion of symbols

The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
Withdrawn — I should not be asking editors to weigh in on what they think the Village Pump RfC consensus was. If anyone disagrees with its result, there is a venue for that, and this isn't it. Inviting debate on something that isn't debatable was a fatal mistake for this RfC. My apologies.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 00:51, 28 June 2024 (UTC)

Is it appropriate for symbols (e.g. the Flag of Sealand) to appear somewhere in the article?  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 16:59, 26 June 2024 (UTC)

Background

A few months ago, a Village Pump RfC was held regarding the use of flags in infoboxes on micronation articles. It closed with a consensus that it is generally not appropriate to display micronation flags in the infobox, though it may be allowed on a case-by-case basis.

For a few months after that, the flag was moved down to a paragraph, but it was not removed entirely from the article as the RfC pertained only to infoboxes. This became a point of contention this month as one editor felt that the RfC meant it should not appear anywhere in the article.

Since this is still an unresolved issue and there are multiple threads about this, I feel the best way forward is to settle it through an RfC.

I suggest the following options, but you are always welcomed to !vote for a solution not listed if you prefer.

  • Option A - Symbols (e.g. the flag) may appear in the article body, just not in the infobox.
  • Option B - Symbols may appear in the infobox.
  • Option C - Symbols have no place in this article.

 Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:19, 26 June 2024 (UTC)

Survey

  • Prefer Option A as nominator. I feel this is the most consistent with the result of the RfC. That said, the RfC did leave open the possibility of flags appearing in the infobox on a case-by-case basis provided that there are enough sources. As the RfC close note mentioned, one of the main problems with micronation flags is that they are far too often unverifiable and unrecognizable. This is not the case with the flag of Sealand, as it is without a doubt the most well-known of the micronations. However, there are still other concerns with flags in micronation infoboxes, such as the potential to mislead a reader into viewing the micronation as more legitimate or country-like than it really is. For those reasons, I'll also weak endorse Option B, but I find A to be the least problematic.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:19, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
  • None of the above, since this RfC appears to be asking whether abstract 'symbols' can be included in the article. Instead, any RfC should be discussing specific symbols only, and whether coverage in secondary sources is sufficient to justify inclusion of that specific symbol. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:49, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose option B. Local relitigation of something already decided at a higher/broader level. DrKay (talk) 19:40, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
    As the previous RfC closer: I specifically left the door open for case-by-case decisions on symbols which may (though it is likely rare) be appropriate to add and comport with guidelines. However, my previous closure only covered infoboxes, not article bodies, and thus is merely informative. TW 22:42, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Option B or A. Per Vanilla Wizard, the RfC allowed flexibility. I'd be fine with it not being in the infobox, and it placed somewhere else in the article. SWinxy (talk) 20:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Invalid RfC. Would an "A" or "B" outcome mean both the flag and coat of arms (and any other "symbols") are permitted somewhere in the article, including in the infobox? The RfC question does not make this clear, and does not mention that discussion of source analyses would still be required to justify DUEness of any given symbol (so !votes that do not address sourcing are not policy-compliant). JoelleJay (talk) 23:00, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
  • That is a valid concern and I will try to address it, though I don't think it invalidates the RfC. I think the reason for the confusion is that there are two overlapping points of contention to sort out: 1) how editors interpret the Village Pump RfC (in short, what is allowable), and 2) if sourcing justifies inclusion (in short, what is due). I can see how this would make the "outcomes" confusing and I apologize for that.
The language in the suggested "options" only asked about the former because I assumed discussion about the latter would follow naturally, as it had already been happening in the earlier discussions where you and I went back-and-forth about due weight. For example, if someone states their preference is for option B, that necessarily implies they believe there is due weight to go that route. I did not think it needed to be explicitly stated, but I was mistaken and I'll add a note below the question to clear that up.
I figured the question about what is allowable was the origin of this issue, as everyone seems to have their own opinion about what the Village Pump RfC meant. My reading of it is that it affects only the infobox and we should go by what the closer said unless and until their close is reviewed by an uninvolved third party. Others, yourself included, have argued that under no circumstances can the infobox display symbols, regardless of sources. One other went even farther and cited the Village Pump RfC as an edit summary justification for removing the flag and arms from the whole article. My assumption of your position is (and correct me if I'm wrong) that you oppose inclusion in the infobox because of the Village Pump RfC, but oppose inclusion in the article for a different reason, which is that you don't believe there is due weight for it. I expect a lot of editors will have a very nuanced opinion like yours and hope that this will be an opportunity for editors to express those opinions so this subject can be put to rest.
 Vanilla  Wizard 💙 00:08, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Actually, I take that back. JoelleJay, I thought about it some more, and I agree with you. This is an invalid RfC and it needs to be withdrawn and restarted with a more focused question. I just don't agree why it's an invalid RfC. This RfC question is invalid because this RfC is not the place to ask people what they think of that RfC. The Village Pump RfC is closed, what's done is done. Many editors may disagree with the closer's interpretation of the discussion, but the result is still the result unless it's changed at the right venue.
Per WP:CLOSECHALLENGE, "In general, deletions are discussed at WP:Deletion review, moves are discussed at WP:Move review, and other closures (including requests for comment) are discussed at WP:AN."
To put it bluntly, my mistake was acting as though it mattered how anyone interprets that discussion. I should have been asking only about due weight instead of trying to lump the two issues together. Yes, many editors disagree, but they'll have to take those disagreements to WP:AN. Right here, at this time, on this talk page, it doesn't matter what anyone thinks of the Village Pump RfC and whether the door should have been fully closed on the infobox question.
 Vanilla  Wizard 💙 00:38, 28 June 2024 (UTC)

Discussion

Discussion about the RfC wording

  • Comment What does 'e.g.' mean? If this is a question about including the flag, then don't confuse the issue by discussing abstract 'symbols'. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:08, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
    • I thought it should be fairly obvious what e.g. means in this context. Flags, coat of arms, and other symbols. The previous talk page thread was titled as such, the closing comment of the RfC specified more symbols than just the flag, etc. There is nothing to be confused about. If you feel one way about the flag and another way about other symbols, you're always welcome to state that.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:23, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
      • The discussion above noted the minimum requirement that symbols need discussion in external sources. Accordingly, it should be asking about specific symbols that are directly sourced. Not abstractions. AndyTheGrump (talk) 17:35, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
        • The RfC is phrased the way it is because there seems to be some disagreement over the implications of the Village Pump RfC. In particular, your view that it affects the entire article, not just the infobox. The Village Pump RfC's closing comment contains no language stating that it affects anything but the infobox question, but you citing a link to that RfC as your reason for deleting the flag from the article suggests this is a point of disagreement that should be settled through an RfC here.
        It should go without saying that how an editor !votes will depend on their assessment of available sources. You may be unimpressed by the available sources and believe inclusion is not justified, in which case your perspective would align with Option C. How one feels about the available sources would also be the difference between Options A and B, as the RfC left open the door to putting symbols in the infobox on a case-by-case basis.
        To reject the question entirely because it didn't specifically differentiate between the flag and the coat of arms just feels needlessly obstructive. Nothing about the language of the question precludes discussing the symbols individually. An RfC is the best way to put this issue to rest, and there's no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater just because it could have been phrased slightly differently to ask that editors assess the symbols one at a time. A quick comment asking editors to do that would have sufficed, no need to prematurely declare the RfC dead on arrival and ask for a new one before it's even begun.
         Vanilla  Wizard 💙 19:05, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
          • You would do well to read WP:BEFORE WP:RFCBEFORE. If you had taken the time to discuss this properly, rather than rushing headlong into starting an RfC 6 minutes after your first post on the topic, I'm sure we could have avoided all this. As it stands, the RfC doesn't include even include the most obvious response - which is that we need to look at the merits of specific 'symbols' individually. Something which any reasonable interpretation of Misplaced Pages would be a requirement for inclusion. Not an option that can be overridden by an RfC. And no, you don't get to tell me (or anyone else) what my perspective is, or how you think I should have !voted. AndyTheGrump (talk) 19:28, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
            • Goodness, where do I begin. I'm going to ignore the part where you baselessly accuse me of not taking the time to read the talk sections on the subject before starting the RfC. The bulk of this response is already addressed directly in the comment you are replying to: Nothing about the language of the question precludes discussing the symbols individually. A quick comment asking editors to do that would have sufficed. Re: "I'm sure we could have avoided all this.", again, "all this" also could have been avoided if you just left a comment respectfully saying "I ask that editors comment on both the flag and the arms separately" instead of prematurely throwing a wrench into the process and berating me for failing to predict how you'd react the RfC. The last part is just silly. I am not casting your !vote for you, I simply stated that the reason why I decided to include C in the list of options was my reading of your comments. I do not understand how you found a way to take offense to that. I think we're done here in any case; even though we've never crossed paths until a couple hours ago, I noticed there's something about the way you type that just comes across as too unpleasant for there to be any chance of us ever having a productive conversation with each other. I'll leave you with this: if you or any other editor feel one way about the flag and another way about the arms, there's absolutely nothing stopping anyone from leaving a !vote along the lines of "(A) for the flag and (C) for the arms" if that is their choice.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 20:05, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
              • I've just realised I linked WP:BEFORE above instead of WP:RFCBEFORE, which was what I intended. Apologies for that. As for the remainder of your comments, I stand by what I said. Starting an RfC six minutes after first commenting is poor practice. The RfC is poorly thought out, and poorly worded. And, given that it fails to stipulate that 'symbols' must be properly sourced, liable to result in invalid results. Local RfCs cannot overrule global policy. AndyTheGrump (talk) 20:47, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
  • Option B isn't an option. We've already discussed this multiple times and it is getting aggravating to have to keep on saying NO to this. Option B isn't happening, barring some new community wide consensus that overrides the recently concluded RfC on the matter. As to being in the article? Sure...IF...IF...there are reliable, secondary sources that support discussion regarding the symbol. Just adding it because the micronation has their flag? No. It gets tiring having to deal with leaders of these micronations doing everything they can to make it seem like the Misplaced Pages article about their fantasy is representing a somehow legitimate country. Enough already. Either come up with reliable, secondary sources to support discussion or drop it. --Hammersoft (talk) 16:34, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
    The closer of the Village Pump RfC already replied to you about this. But as for "It gets tiring having to deal with leaders of these micronations doing everything they can to make it seem like the Misplaced Pages article about their fantasy is representing a somehow legitimate country. Enough already." — I can assure you none of us are Bates.  Vanilla  Wizard 💙 17:17, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
    Which is a wildly inaccurate reading of the overwhelming consensus that micronation symbols should never be in infoboxes. Option B did not leave any room for the possibility of symbols, and it had a supermajority of the !votes. JoelleJay (talk) 23:38, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion. Categories: