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Well, let's get it off our chests everyone, shall we? :-) ]] 00:26, 27 December 2006 (UTC)
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== German Austria was renamed by allies to simply "Austria" ==
{{Archive box |search=yes |bot=MiszaBot I |age=3 |units=months |index=/Archive index |

* ] <small>(Dec 2006–Jan 2008)</small>
The claim that a country always has a right to name itself whatever it wants are false. For instance in 1919, ] was officially known as the Republic of German Austria (Republik Deutschösterreich). Many territories it claimed under its control included regions that were later assigned to neighboring nations. Not only did the Entente powers forbid German Austria to unite with Germany, they also forbade the name; it was therefore changed to the Republic of Austria.
* ] <small>(January–June 2008)</small>

* ] <small>(July–Sept 2008)</small>
==Irridentist.. that's a new one==
* ] <small>(Oct 2008–Nov 2009)</small>

* ] <small>(July 2009 – July 2011)</small>
Man, I thought an "irridentist" was a doctor that gave your teeth ]. I guess you learn something new every day! --] (]) 20:30, 16 July 2008 (UTC)
* ] <small>(Aug 2009 – 2013)</small>

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:Spelled "irredentist" (with an "E' not an 'I')
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== Problem with much of this article ==
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__TOC__
The POV problem with much of this article, in particular with edits such as the most recent ones by ], is that it mixes up two different things: reporting what somebody's (e.g. the Greek side's) argument is, and our own authorial discussion (as enyclopedia authors) of what the actual historical facts are. The article should really only deal with the first. The second should be left to our articles dedicated to the history of Macedonia or whatever. For the first, what you need as reliable sources is notable representatives of the partisan points of view, e.g. Greek government spokespeople. For the second, you need independent academic sources. What this article is now doing is mixing the two together in a ] way: ostensibly reporting the partisan argument, but then, at every corner, mixing in quotes from independent scholars that purport to prove ''that the partisan argument is correct''. That way, people are mis-using this article as essentially a POV fork of "History of Macedonia": you get to write a history of Macedonia, but purely from the one POV rather than the other. Please don't do that. ] ] 08:11, 20 July 2008 (UTC)
{{Clear}}
:The subsection I was editing is the "" of the ", so it's the Greek POV ''by definition''. are coming from very well known reliable scholars (] and ]) who are experts on the subject, especially Danforth. I chose to add quotes from the sources provided to the references and not to the section, simply to help readers follow the references, which anyway meet ] standards. Of course there will always be people such as ] who , but since the subsection I was editing is the "Historical concerns" of the "Greek position", so the Greek POV ''by definition'', my edits was NOT in a ] way and they have to get back.
:To BalkanFever: We are used to (..."''learn the name of the country or gtfo''") by you, stop reminding us your background. FYROM is the abbreviation for UN's "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia", like it or not. ] (]) 02:41, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
::And ] is the ''name'' of the country, like it or not. If you can't tell the difference, you can't be helped, and you definitely should gtfo. ''']]''' 09:19, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::Cat-Owl, you didn't address my argument. As long as you don't show any signs of even understanding what the argument is, revert-warring is not going to help you. ] ] 09:20, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

:::FPS, independent scholars experts on the issue referenced, reliable sources, the section is Greek POV by definition, what more to address??? BF, you have been reported at . ] (]) 15:11, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

:::: I explained to you why the independent scholars are irrelevant here. The section has the function to explain what the Greek position is. Not more and not less. For that purpose, you just need sources exemplifying the Greek position (like a government spokesperson), or even better, an independent scholar discussing the Greek position, ''as such'' (like Danforth does in part of his book). What the section must not attempt to do is pass judgment on whether or not the Greek position is correct. Therefore, there is no legitimate function in listing opinions of outside authors just because they agree with this or that corollary of the Greek position. You have been collecting quotes not to explain the Greek position but to endorse it. If you can't see why that is wrong, I can't help you. ] ] 15:18, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
:::::I got your point. However my edits has nothing to do with "whether or not the Greek position is correct"! Anyway, shall I then at least add Danforth? ] (]) 15:23, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
:::::: Which quote of Danforth? If you mean the one I reduced here , the answer is no, and the reason is in my edit summary. That passage, firstly, doesn't say what you claimed it said, and second, it is not about how and why this fact is used as an argument by the Greek side. ] ] 15:24, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

:Both, hence:"The history of the construction of a Macedonian national identity does not begin with Alexander the Great in the fourth century B.C. or with Saints Cyril and Methodius in the ninth century A.D. as Macedonian nationalist historians often claim." and "Whether a Macedonian nation existed at the time or not, it is perfectly clear that the communist party of Yugoslavia had important political reasons for declaring that ''one did exist'' and for fostering its development through a concerted process of nation building, employing all the means at the disposal of the Yugoslav state". (''The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World'', Princeton Univ. Press, December 1995) ] (]) 15:32, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
:: Fine, not . So? ] (]) 15:36, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::: Not the other either. The one about the "construction of a Macedonian national identity" is, first, again not from a passage where Danforth discusses why and how the Greeks use this as an argument or what role it plays in the Greek position, so again, you are not explaining the Greek position, you are just heaping on what will appear as additional support for it. Second, you are quoting it incompletely, and therefore in a distorting fashion. Read the next sentence, it goes something like: "... but it doesn't begin with Tito in 1944 either, as the Greek side would want us to believe" (just reporting the sense of it, from memory, can't be bothered to look up the exact wording right now.) So Danforth is in effect saying that both sides are distorting history. You are ripping things out of context. ] ] 15:38, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::::Ok, here is the full quote: "The history of the construction of a Macedonian national identity does not begin with Alexander the great in the fourth century b.c. or with saints Cyril and Methodius in the ninth century a.d., as Macedonian nationalist historians often claim. nor does it begin with tito and the establishment of the People’s Republic of Macedonia in 1944 as Greek nationalist historians would have us believe. It begins in the nineteenth century with the first expressions of Macedonian ethnic nationalism on the part of a small number of intellectuals in places like Thessaloniki, Belgrade, Sophia, and St.Petersburg. This period marks the beginning of the process of “imagining” a Macedonian national community, the beginning of the construction of a Macedonian national identity and culture." ] (]) 15:45, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::::: Yes, that's it. So, this could possibly serve as a reference to support a sentence in the article that might go something like: ''"Greek nationalist historians tend to emphasise the late emergence of a Macedonian national identity, often quoting Titoist political initiatives around 1944 as its point of origin and denying or discounting earlier roots in the 19th century."'' That's what this quote has to offer for a paragraph about the "Greek position". ] ] 15:51, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::::::Hmm... The way you put will fit better in the "Ethnic Macedonian position", not the "Greek position"! Anyway, shall I edit it like you suggest, adding the full quote in the ref.? ] (]) 16:02, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

::::::: You see, that's the whole problem. You misunderstand what "Greek position" means. It doesn't mean that the paragraph should be written ''from'' the Greek POV. It means the paragraph should describe the Greek POV, from a neutral distance. ] ] 16:04, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

:No, really, I got your point. That's why I asked you to edit it the way you suggest. ] (]) 16:07, 21 July 2008 (UTC)
::I've given it a try myself. ] ] 16:20, 21 July 2008 (UTC)

:::I edit the sentence in the "Historical concerns" to follow the rest of Danforths's passage to follow your above advice and avoid "quoting it incompletely, and therefore in a distorting fashion". ] (]) 07:53, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
:::: Sorry, but I find that particular addition very poor writing. Clumsy, redundant, and again tendentious. "Despite the fact that.... claim the opposite" is just silly. And, it's again outside the scope of the paragraph. It's about the Greek position, remember? The stance of the Macedonian nationalists doesn't belong here. ] ] 08:11, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
: Feel free to edit it accordingly then! I'm self-taught in English... ] (]) 08:20, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
::But remember, not "incompletely, and therefore in a distorting fashion"... :) ] (]) 08:23, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
::: Good and "complete" quoting does not mean one has to report everything that an author happens to say on a given page. It means one has to report things respecting their context and the author's intentions. We've dealt with the Greek (over-)emphasis on the late emergence of a Mac. nation; the ethnic Mac. (over-)emphasis on earlier traditions and continuities is already dealt with elsewhere. No need to repeat that. ] ] 08:38, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
::::Sure. ] (]) 08:45, 22 July 2008 (UTC)

:FPS, by removing that sentence (''Despite the fact that the history of the construction of a Macedonian national identity does not begin with Alexander the Great in the 4th century BC or with saints Cyril and Methodius in the 9th century AD, ethnic Macedonian nationalist historians claim the opposite...'') from the section, you quote Danforth's passage incompletely, therefore in a distorting fashion, giving a false impression to the readers. Why don't you add it back with your good English? ] (]) 18:39, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

::Because there's nothing distorting about the sentence as it stands now. The topic of our section is the Greek position; what Danforth means to say about the Greek position at that point is just what it says now, not more and not less. ] ] 19:21, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

Cat and Owl, though I disagree with much in the approach to the Macedonian issue with FPS, I think you have not understood the nature of the quote here and therefore your editorialising is out of place. By wiki standards (whatever they are re file and I understand your aganaktisi) your editing reads like POV. ] (]) 19:30, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

::::Ok then, so I added that sentence in the "Historical perspective" of the "Ethnic Macedonian position". Perhaps you can edit it a bit, unfortunately my English are not good to do it myself. ] (]) 19:45, 23 July 2008 (UTC)

Oh man.

Here I was thinking that this little issue had been resolved peacefully. Then come three agenda-driven POV accounts and do this.

It's hopeless. This whole article is a festering rotten mess of a POV nightmare. And it will remain so as long as it's in the hand of agenda editors who will not cease and will not leave it alone until every but every little detail has been given a spin. The result is abominably poor writing.

So you guys want every bit that might be understood as negative about the Greek position to be hedged with "it has been argued", while as long as it's critical of the Macedonian position it's presented as fact, right.

Also, just for the record: The one bit in this composite edit (the one inserted in the Macedonian section) is obviously redundant, this issue is already treated just in the sentences around it. And the other bit is falsifying. That wasn't a direct quote. And there's no use for that hedging there. ] ] 06:32, 24 July 2008 (UTC)

== Malta recognises Macedonia under its constitutional Name ==

http://www.orderofmalta.org/site/attdiplomatica.asp?idlingua=5

Please sort Malta in the List of Countries that bilaterally use the name "Macedonia" <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 17:27, 1 August 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

Wait until it is recorded here :


== Semiological confusion, and the first use of a past name ==
http://www.mfa.gov.mt/


If the country has to be referred in a modern context by informing the readers about its past disputes with Greece, then the term North Macedonia suffices without further clarification in the first sentence of the article's lead paragraph. But if the editors want to change that sentence to refer to the country in a historical context, the first time this historical name is used, should be in its official form, Republic of Macedonia, instead of the short Macedonia. This is still per WP:NCMAC's historical context criteria while at same time eliminating any possible initial semiological confusion. The rest of the article does not require changes as the clarification is given already from the start. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 20:41, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
What is this other link?


: No. Our current guideline for historic contexts still continues the same principle as the old ], which stated that "'Republic of Macedonia' will be used in all contexts where other countries would also be called by their full official names", but that "'Macedonia', by itself, will be used to refer to the country in all other articles in contexts where this is practically unambiguous". It's quite simple really:
] (]) 22:07, 1 August 2008 (UTC)
:* We use the old name of the country in pre-2019 contexts. This is one such context, without any doubt.
:* The old name of the country was "Macedonia", pure and simple. That was its name in exactly the same way as the names of its surrounding countries are "Greece", "Bulgaria", "Serbia" and so on.
:* Each of these other countries also has a formal long name involving some form of "Republic" ("Hellenic Republic", "Republic of Bulgaria", and so on). But we use those only in special, rare situations. Since we're not saying "Hellenic Republic" in this sentence, why would we want to use the long form for the second of the two countries we're mentioning?
:* The only other reason we habitually used to employ the "R. of" prefix somewhat more often was disambiguation. But disambiguation is already provided by the context of the sentence. Nothing could be more unambiguous than "the Southeast European countries of Greece and Macedonia" and "until 2019". No other of the many "Macedonias" was a country in Southeast Europe in 2019. How could any reader ''possibly'' be confused about which "Macedonia" this sentence is referring to? ] ] 20:54, 3 June 2020 (UTC)


:::You got some very valid points, but my points are as very valid too and I am sure you understand that. However, do you realize you are making changes without seeking ]? The name North Macedonia stayed like that for years and became Consensus. But if you want the old name for historical purposes, then we have to stick to the historic Consensus made for it, which, prior to 2019 it read: "The use of the name "Macedonia" is disputed between the southeastern European countries of Greece and the Republic of Macedonia". That's a compromise that will keep everyone satisfied and any concerns on disambiguation, soothed. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:03, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
== No mention in the article about the recent accusations about minorities ==
:::Changing the article into a historical tone, brings us more questions: What about the infobox? The map? As you probably noticed, prior to 2019, it was "Republic of Macedonia" not only on the lead sentence, but also on the Infobox and the Map as well. Now with your changes, the infobox and map refer to the country using a present tone, but the lead no longer uses present tone but past tone... --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:05, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
:::: That old wording is of course no longer an option because it's out of date. And there are no concerns of disambiguation, because there simply isn't any ambiguity. Full stop. And no, you don't have any valid point at all, as usual. We'll simply apply the rules of ] (both the old and the new), which for some reason this article has so far failed to do. ] ] 21:08, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
:::::I firmly disagree with your changes, you ought to seek consensus if you want your edits to stay. Go ], not edit warring. This isnt helpful! NCMAC states that Republic of Macedonia can be used in a historical context. This was the term used there as well before we changed it to North Macedonia. Mind you, Republic of Macedonia was used for a very long time and none had objected to it, not even you. What changed now and you are disputing it? --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:16, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
:::::: Stamping your feet on the ground and crying "but I don't agree" won't help your case. You have no case. Read the guideline, then read it again to try and actually understand it. You haven't. ] ] 21:28, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::: First of all, I was a participant to the creation of the updated NCMAC. Something which you forgot. Second, I am not stamping my feet there, I am merely explaining that your uncompromising attitude is leading no where. I have already tried to explain to you that there are 3 options: North Macedonia, Republic of Macedonia and plain Macedonia, and I am fine with the 2 first ones, which had already been used in that sentence for a very long time and are stable for obvious reasons explained above and for which you failed to acknowledge. The third option, the plain Macedonia, was never used in the first sentence and I do not understand why this sudden insistence of yours to ram it there despite my concerns. I am fine with the first 2 options like everyone here was, I would say, before you come and make disputed changes to it. The topic of Macedonia is very sensitive and its articles have long been controversial, for which you, as an Admin, are fully aware of. The safest course here is to be cautious and find consensus before making changes to such a sensitive article like that. Is it much to ask from you to try and be more grateful towards me (and any editors who may not agree with your views), for offering you a compromise, which is Republic of Macedonia? You know that the plain Macedonia will never be accepted into the top of the article without much-needed clarifications such as North (which was stable for 1+ year), or Republic of (which was stable for many more years before it was replaced by North). If you don't want a compromise, then we return the sentence to its present tone, that is "North Macedonia" and be done with it. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:56, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::::As usual, Future Perfect is right about MOSMAC and Silent Resident is misinterpreting other Misplaced Pages guidelines to suit a particular narrative. --] (]) 04:14, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:::::::::As usual, this comes by Taivo, the disruptive edit warrior who started not one, not two, but FOUR edit wars across Misplaced Pages over the use of the plain "Macedonia" on various articles. Coincidence???--- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 08:15, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::::::Sorry for being too busy in real life and not reporting sooner: The attention of an uninvolved admin has been requested at: . Also the article has been reverted back to the last stable version before all this disruption started. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 18:07, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::::::: And, for the record, here's what that uninvolved admin answered: "] should answer most of the questions." Yes, indeed, it does. SilentResident might take this as a hint to finally start dealing with the question how her preferred wording matches that guideline (which it quite obviously doesn't). A question she so far hasn't addressed with even a single word in all those hundreds of words of rambling aboe. If that explanation isn't given in her very next posting on this page, I'll revert it back to the guideline-conforming wording soon. In the absence of such an argument, there really isn't anything to discuss further here. ] ] 19:12, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:::::::::::: The Administrator said you should seek ] first: "{{tq|] should answer most of the questions. If no agreement can be reached, you should consider using an ]}}" I suggest you heel to his advice and try to come into agreement with those who disagree with your viewpoints, or else open a RFC and have a third opinion on this. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 19:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::::::::: But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count. You don't count as long as you don't ''finally'' start doing what you ought to have done a dozen or so postings further up: address the issue how to properly apply the guideline. There will be an actionable disagreement if and when there is actually some ''argument'' on the table. Not just ranting on and on about how we must stick with some prior version, but an argument about ''the only thing that counts'': how to apply ]. I don't know if you really don't realize this, but ''you haven't said a single word about that yet''. Right now, there is nothing to agree or disagree about, other than the obvious fact that my version conforms with ] while yours doesn't. ] ] 19:37, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
{{tq|But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count.}} First, you must really feel comfortable to speak like that against fellow editors, as admin that you are, heh? It will be useful in future reports against you. Second. lets see what we have here:


{{tq|"''the only thing that counts'': how to apply ]"}} So, in your perception, the article's first sentence isn't in line with ]? I disagree. It meets NCMAC ctireria, just not the "historical context" criteria. Otherwise you wouldn't try change the wording in the first place and give it a historical context. But I do not mind any changes to it that can bring the sentence both under ] and under historical context criterias. However I do mind -in fact I am vehemently opposed- to the use of the ambiguous Macedonia as the first word in the lead paragraph for the country. The "Republic of" is necessary especially from the moment the lead is mentioning more than one Macedonias (Greek region of Macedonia, Ancient Kingdom of Macedon, Socialist Republic of Macedonia, etc).
I read the whole article and nowhere is mentioned the recent row of letters sent by FYR Macedonia to the EU. It is technically off-topic but very actually on-topic. It is clearly perceived by Greece as very related to the naming dispute and common sense dictates that has a very strong merit. --] (]) 21:04, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
:You said it yourself: it's off-topic. This article is exclusively about the name of the state, nothing else. The continuous tendency of growing into a general treatment of all Macedonian history of politics must be stopped. ] ] 22:31, 3 August 2008 (UTC)
::It is '''not''' off topic since it is the official stance of the government of Greece that it is on topic. Namely it is perceived - and IMO rightly so - that no such accusations would exist without the naming dispute. It is seen as a decoy related to the naming dispute and a non-real issue. In any case, it is not about my opinion or your opinion, it is related to the official stance of the Government of one of the Countries ''on the naming dispute'' specifically. --] (]) 08:01, 4 August 2008 (UTC)


You haven't explain why, while ] permits both "Republic of Macedonia" and "Macedonia", you are insisting on using only the ambiguous "Macedonia" for the opening sentence of the article which is finding me vehemently opposed for the reasons underlined above and in previous discussions to which you were participant. Why not use "Republic of Macedonia" which is less ambiguous and still in line with WP:NCMAC? After all, this was the one we used in the very opening sentence for 10+ years already. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 20:50, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
== The article fails to mention the international organizations dealing with the name FYROM ==


: How did any of the recent changes "give it" an historical context? It was an historical statement all along. Do you know the meaning of the little word "was"? It means ''in the past''. The naming dispute ''no longer exists''. It existed before 2019 and ceased to exist the moment the renaming happened. So, ''every'' statement describing the dispute is by necessity, always, a "pre-2019" historical statement in the sense of the guideline. It wasn't post-2019 "North Macedonia" that was engaged in the dispute, it was pre-2019 "Macedonia".
The article claims to be about the dispute while there is only mention of UN and that only in FYR Macedonia POV fashion (since it is immediately followed by "but most of its members don't care" etc.). Other organizations include (as found in ]): European Union, NATO, IMF, WTO, IOC, World Bank, EBRD, OSCE, FIFA, and FIBA. --] (]) 21:31, 2 August 2008 (UTC)
: About ambiguity, what matters is not how many "Macedonia"s are mentioned somewhere in the lead or elsewhere in the article, but whether there is a danger of ambiguity in the particular sentence we're talking about. That's the only legitimate function of disambiguation: making sure readers won't misunderstand the particular passage in question. That sentence is perfectly disambiguated by the term "countries". There is no other "Macedonia" that is a country (or was one in 2019) or could possibly be engaged in a dispute with Greece, so no reader could possibly be confused about what this sentence means.
: And I "haven't explained" why it should be the shorter term? Yes, I have, in my very first posting above. ] doesn't just blindly permit both the longer and the shorter form to be chosen at will; it mandates that the shorter form should be used where there is no danger of ambiguity. That was very explicitly spelled out in the old NCMAC, and the new NCMAC has inherited this principle for the historical contexts, even though it no longer spells it out in as much detail – it does explain the same principle for the modern "N.M." vs. "R. of N.M."; the historical "M." vs. "R. of M." go by the same criteria.
: And stop going on and on about how much you are "vehemently opposed" to this or that or how this or that version was stable for so and so long – you should know that neither of these are of any relevance whatsoever. ] ] 21:09, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::I disagree. This article is about the Naming Dispute and the lead paragraph shouldn't welcome the readers with anything less than the official name of the country whose the name was disputed in the first place. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:19, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:::] has still failed to address the question of ] in any manner whatsoever, let alone a convincing manner. She is alone in her insistence that "North" should always precede "Macedonia" in each and every instance in which it occurs, a POV that she consistently pushes in every content dispute that she initiates and exacerbates (and then blames others for edit warring). The neutral admin was crystal clear--NCMAC answers all the questions. But SilentResident plays the game of ] consistently and unconvincingly. "North Macedonia" was the '''''result''''' of Prespa, not a party to the dispute. That was "Macedonia". --] (]) 21:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::"Republic of Macedonia". The official name everybody (including you) consented to, for 10+ years to be used at the opening sentence of the article. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:34, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
*'''Initial comment''' I've been pinged to this by Ed as an uninvolved admin with a background in Balkans disputes. ] says that "all contentious edits touching upon North Macedonia naming practices also continue to be subject to a 1RR restriction.", unless you are reinstating the version conforming to NCMAC. Three editors have breached 1RR, although no doubt they will all claim they are reinstating the version conforming to NCMAC. In addition to the 1RR restriction under NCMAC, this is also an article subject to discretionary sanctions under ]. Nevertheless, Silent Resident has breached 3RR in any case, and is lucky they have not been blocked on that basis. Given the interpretation of NCMAC in this case is disputed, I have restored the pre-dispute version (despite the fact that it may be the "wrong version"), to allow the resolution of the issue here on the talk page without further edit-warring. I will talk more about the interpretation of NCMAC in my next comment. Bear with me while I drill down into the consensus positions determined by the 2019 RFC. Thanks, ] (]) 02:44, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
::Have now had a good look at the 2019 RFC, and it is very clear about issues such as this. What it says (in the collapsed detailed consensus box at the top) is:
{{quote|5. Historical names: What should be used in place of Macedonia and Republic of Macedonia in other articles about the periods and events between 1991 and 2019?
Option B: Macedonia and Republic of Macedonia should still be used in historical articles, with an optional note similar to "now North Macedonia".
The closing panel agrees that there is a clear consensus for Option B. The terms "Macedonia" and "Republic of Macedonia" retain their meanings within the context of articles about the periods and events between 1991 and 2019 and thus, should not be changed, although an optional note such as "now North Macedonia" may be added where appropriate.}}
::What this means is that when referring to the country between 1991 and 2019, Macedonia/Republic of Macedonia should be used to refer to the country, with the option of adding "now North Macedonia" where appropriate. Now, given this naming dispute is historical (as it says in the current first sentence, it "was" disputed, and therefore this is in the past) and occurred between Greece and the Republic of Macedonia between 1991 and 2019, not between Greece and North Macedonia after 2019 (as the dispute was resolved by the Prespa agreement and the subsequent change of country name to North Macedonia), we are clearly dealing with the quoted consensus on historical names here, so part 5 of the RFC applies to this article. In the circumstances, the optional use of "now North Macedonia" is appropriate, as that is now the name of the country, and is should be mentioned in the first sentence as it forms the resolution of the dispute that the article is about. There is the issue of consistent use of common names here, which Tomica quite rightly raised in an edit summary. If we use "Greece" as the common name for the Hellenic Republic, then it is only reasonable to use "Macedonia" as the common name for the Republic of Macedonia in the same sentence, especially as it is linked to the North Macedonia article. If it is followed by "now North Macedonia" it is indisputably clear what we are talking about. It is therefore clear that the first sentence should be worded "The use of the country name "]" was disputed between the Southeast European countries of ] and ] (now North Macedonia) between 1991 and 2019." and the first sentence of the second para should read "The dispute arose from the ambiguity in ] between the Republic of Macedonia, the adjacent ] and the ancient ]." Therefore, is not IAW the 2019 RFC. I have implemented the above. ] (]) 05:11, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
:::], that's a very good compromise IMO. The (Now North Macedonia) placed ''next'' to Macedonia, suffices for me, as it eliminates the risks for semiological confusions and it is much better than the version Taivo and FPAS had put, which was only an ambiguous Macedonia without any qualifiers next to it. Thank you! And again, sorry for the 1RR rule, wish I had realized this sooner rather than have FPAS bring it to my attention. Speaking of FPAS, I urge him and Taivo to leave the opening sentence untouched from now and on and refrain from such kinds of edits in the future. Peacemaker67, I would appreciate if can you leave the article locked for a while? I am worried someone may try revert your changes and this is the last thing the article needs. Thank you. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 09:03, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
::: I'm fine with Peacemaker's version, of course. I still think my previous version was slightly more elegant, with the "North Macedonia" bit a few words further away but integrated in such a way that it actually added something substantial to the explanation of the issue. The interesting fact is not just that it happens to have this new name now, but that its name change was the very thing that resolved this dispute, so why not let the reader know this while we're at it? But that's a minor quibble and not worth fighting over. That SR now acts as if this tiny difference ("N. M." one word away versus nine words away from "M.") makes all the difference to them, as if readers could overcome the alleged "semiological confusion" she's been fantasizing about across a textual distance of no more than two words, only goes to demonstrate how utterly irrational her whole approach has been the whole time. ] ] 15:17, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
::::If it is several words apart, then it is not a qualifier. If it is next to it, then it is. Something they haven't taught to you at the school's grammar lessons, I assume?
::::There might be cases where qualifiers can be words or sentences apart but this is not enough given this is a name dispute over an ambiguous name shared by multiple regions/entities in its background.
::::You are just trying just to make others's concerns appear ''illogical'' while yours as ''logical''. To me, this is a classic characteristic of a defensive profile that has serious difficulties in communicating with other people of different views. These profiles usually are the ones that have difficult time trying to find a common ground in disputes. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 16:34, 5 June 2020 (UTC)


== Time for protection? ==


I'll fully protect the article if three of the recent editors request it. But we know how tedious that can be. Surely there is some other way.. ] (]) 20:27, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
== Opinions versus facts on the naming disputer ==
: Well, I don't suppose any of us would want you to protect it unless it happens to be on the ], right? – But seriously, the only way ahead I see is that the editor who has so far stubbornly dodged any invitation to engage with the content and guideline issue and has instead engaged in purely procedural stonewalling should be clearly told to either start bringing forward pertinent arguments or go away. That's what we have admins for. ] ] 20:47, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:: Apparently you haven't wondered why I was not responding to you for a while. You got to my nerves with your insults.
::*"{{tq| I'll revert it back to the guideline-conforming wording soon. In the absence of such an argument, there really isn't anything to discuss further here.}}"
::*"{{tq|But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count.}}"
:: I say, EdJohnston, yes lets lock the article, because I do not trust the editor is suitable enough for editing it! After all, I have no changes to make to it, it is him who caused all this disruption.
:: Edit: So it seems one more editor is disagreeing with Future Perfect and Taivo's version: Future Perfect you said you are not counting me, but looks like you will have to make a re-count. Sorry to say, but that makes it not "zero" but TWO editors against your plain "Macedonia"... I believe it is better if the article is locked to the last stable version and open a RFC on the matter. There isn't anything else to say in this discussion, I have become too stressed and anxious after this climate encountered and the insults against me. If a RFC is opened, I will participate. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 20:54, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::: SilentResident, you are now beyond 3RR . Please self-revert. ] ] 21:13, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:::: As you are. Difference is I wasnt the one who instigated all this disruption, it was you. I was simply defending it from what seems to be: 1) Going without consensus, 2) dismissing your opponent's concerns, 3) insulting them in talk pages... need to say more? For this reason I asked for Admin attention. This is too much for me to handle by myself, I have OVERDONE myself and yet to no avail: all I see is more and more drawn to the edit war you started: Are you feeling proud for it? I will repeat myself one more time to Ed: the article needs to be locked! As for you, FPAS, I am disappointed. Next time learn to make consensuses instead of wars. @Alexikoua & Tomica, it is not worth going into edit wars just because of FPAS's contested edits. Please lets open a RfC like how Ed has suggested and let a new consensus to be formed. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::: I'm not beyond 3RR. I (admittedly) made two reverts yesterday, and a third one more than 24 hours later today; this last one having been unfortunately unavoidable because your (and Alexikoua's) careless editing in the meantime had led to a version that was not just contrary to the guidelines but plain nonsensical ("North Macedonia changing its name to North Macedonia"). ] ] 21:35, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::And Alexikoua does '''''not''''' agree with SilentResident, his edit was to "clean up" the stable version that I had reverted to. He did nothing to change the wording of Macedonia, his edit concerned a different topic. SilentResident is stretching the facts to agree with her own unique agenda. --] (]) 21:43, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::: @FPAS and Taivo: You still have the chance to do things right this time: either call a RfC like Ed said and make a new ], or return the article to the old consensus. Anything else, be it edit wars, arguments, accusations or insults against your opponents, isn't helpful. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:50, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
::::::::@SilentResident. What "isn't helpful" is your POV pushing that ignores NCMAC and Ed's actual advice: "NCMAC says it all". You don't seem to be able to read or remember any comments that don't support your unique POV. Ed said to refer to NCMAC. You don't seem to have heeded his comment at all and seem to be completely ignoring NCMAC. --] (]) 23:35, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
:::::::::I am speechless. You just claimed that the 2 options of the 3, which are "North Macedonia" and "Republic of Macedonia" (which was used for years, and YOU CONSENTED to it), are "{{tq|completely ignoring NCMAC}}". Wow! What can I say?


:::::::::You know something? I am curious, if these 2 options indeed ignore NCMAC, why did you let them stay in the opening sentence for YEARS (10+ years)?
Futper, you just removed a large section from this talk page and part of your justification was ''"This page is not for you guys to discuss your "opinions"'' about Macedonia". Actually I think that discussion is exactly what a '''talk page''' is for (it's not the article right?), We are trying to determine if something is a verifiable fact or an opinion before entering the actual article.


:::::::::Why in all of sudden you instigated all this disruption and edit wars to have it removed in an unsuspecting time like this?
:''(long-winded material redacted again)''


:::::::::Why didn't you support my repeated calls for the respect of ]?
:No, this talk page is not for exchanging opinions about Macedonia. It is also not for working out what is "true" or "false". It is purely for discussing what needs changed in the article, based not on our opinions but on what the academic literature on the topic says. The article is about the naming dispute. About the dispute as a topic of present-day politics, not about the historical facts regarding the issues the dispute touches on. This article is most definitely not about whether Alexander the Great was Greek, or whatever. Now, what aspect of the naming dispute do you think is currently not represented according to the way reputable sources describe it? -- ] ] 20:28, 6 August 2008 (UTC)


:::::::::If the old CONSENSUS was problematic, then why didn't you even seek a new WP:CONSENSUS building?
I don't recall where I gave "my opinions" in the last post. Didn't I just ask you for yours?


:::::::::Why did you not even ask for a third opinion or RfC on the matter?
I also clearly stated I was not interested in getting into a discussion on ancient Macedon history (so I'm not sure why you make this point) If you carefully reread the Macedonian naming dispute article you'll see that a huge section of it deals with concerns over historical patrimony so it's clearly not completely irrelevant as you suggest. (which is also part of why the US condemned FYROM for anti-Greek propaganda) The essence of the Greek complaint is FYROM propagandists deny Macedonian (Greek) heritage in order to later claim it as their own history. I fail to see why on a talk page questions are being removed especially considering you were free to answer as you wished.


:::::::::Why have you and FPAS been quiet to Ed's calls for a RfC???
However, since you object I will happily ask these questions where ever you like. Would you prefer I asked on your talk page? ] (]) 22:02, 6 August 2008 (UTC)


:::::::::Trying to put the blame on others for your wrong doings isn't going to help. Seems you love accusing other for having hidden "agendas" and such, but none of us started the mess, it was you. Your edit log shows you have participated in 4 disputes related to Macedonia already. And now this time you who broke ARBMAC, broke long-established 10-year CONSENSUS and broke 1-year SILENT CONSENSUS, broke WP:CYCLE, and your disruption got 4+ different editors and +3 Admins drawn to them, and more. You want to criticize me? Do it. I am not pretending to be a perfect person, and unlike you, I fully acknowledge with shame my fault for breaching 1RR while trying to defend the article from you. Wish I realized I was breaking the 1RR sooner so that I prevent myself from falling for it and having FPAS bring it to my attention when it was too late. The admins and the community have my apology. I accept my responsibility and that's why I called Tomica and Alexikoua to constraint themselves so that there aren't any further 1RR breaches. But if you want to criticize me, first you will have to be honest with yourself and acknowledge your wrongdoings which caused these disruptions in the first place, both here and on the other articles. If it wasn't for your edit wars and breaks of CONSENSUS, then the locking of the article and the Admin intervention wouldn't have happened now. Criticize me as much as you like, but first I expect you to acknowledge your wrongdoings, support our call for CONSENSUS and RfC and stop your edit wars across Macedonia-related topics once and for all. I do not EVEN want to see the name "Taivo" in future edit wars about Macedonia again! It is getting tiring already.
== Which were the Greek's Byzantine days? ==


:::::::::Edit: nevermind about RfCs and such, Peacemaker67 intervened and offered an excellent compromise that can satisfy both parties: "Macedonia" stays, but a much needed qualifier "North Macedonia" is added next to it and IMO this soothes all of my concerns for possible semiological confusions. I am positive that the dispute is resolved. However I do insist that the article stays locked for a while at least. The article's protection is necessary, IMO, if we really want to prevent similar incidents in the future. Also a reminder to everyone and to myself as I failed: ''the article is subject to 1RR''. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 08:44, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
I will ask for an explanation. The introduction sounds a bit like nationalist manifesto.
::::::::::There is no need for the article to remain locked because it is now in compliance with NCMAC (it was not in compliance previously). --] (]) 09:45, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
It says: "Greece, whose Macedonian province{{fact}} was the first region to be named as such, at official level, since its Byzantine days{{fact}}."
::::::::::: There is. The article will have to remain locked unless the editors who 1) stirred the edit wars, 2) ignored the consensus, and 3) went with changes without taking in account the other party's concerns, acknowledge their attidude was inappropriate and promise to not repeat this in the future. There is also my fear that because the new sentence is still fresh, someone who didn't participate in the Talk Page might not like Peacemaker's resolution and try restoring back any disputed edits. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 12:58, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
<br>Please supply the facts or revert to my correction. Greek was not even official language during the whole Byzantine (I would write Roman, most precise historical term is Eastern Roman) period so please precise which were the Greek's Byzantine days. Macedonia is ] from 1913 and from 168BC it was ] and later part of the Ottoman territory called ] up to 1913. (] (]) 20:39, 7 August 2008 (UTC))
::::::::::::How funny. You are the one who started the edit warring, no one else. You are the one who rejected Future Perfect's perfectly acceptable wording that was in compliance (as he explained) with NCMAC. You are the one that the article needs to be protected from, just like every other article where you take your flaming "North" sword into useless battle. What did you achieve with your edit warring and whining? Nothing. The word "North" moved forward a couple of words, but changed nothing to native speakers of English who are perfectly capable of understanding context. You're not a native speaker and although your English is very good, it's not at the level of being able to lecture native speakers as to what they can and can not understand based on normal context. Future's edit was in line with NCMAC, which, as you have been told, is the final authority on this matter. --] (]) 16:41, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
: Please don't try to re-write history. Not only Greek was spoken in the Byzantine empire but it is documented that in the Roman empire itself Greek was prevalent. Check the sources. --] (]) 22:22, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Speak only for yourself. What may be perfect for you isn't necessarily for everyone else. You should have asked us if we find it perfect, something you DIDNT. Instead, you and FPAS came here with the "''We will have it worded THIS way, because we say so and think so! We don't care about consensus, We don't care about SilentResident's concerns, she has agendas, and she doesn't count anyways''" attitude. You are welcome to consider FPAS's wording as being better for you, but for me it is Peacemaker's. Period.
::In addition, I find it extremely ridiculous that such a sorry state of an article gets even '''more''' nationalist extremist edits. It doesn't even include the organizations that call the country FYROM (as it has been stated ]) and some editors pump it with even more pro-FYROM POV. This article is at a laughable state at the moment. The only article in the entire wikipedia that may be shedding some light on the issue is ] --] (]) 22:33, 7 August 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::IMO, there is nothing more to say here. This discussion has come to a natural end, and there are better things to do than arguing indefinitely with you. Good day. :-) --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 17:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
==Macedonian ethnic group==
:::::::::::::::Just to be clear I have no objections to PeaceMaker's wording whatsoever, it is perfectly acceptable to me and to Misplaced Pages's actual, enforceable ] embodied as policy in ]. You keep weeping over the "lack of consensus", but you seem ignorant of the simple fact that ] itself '''is, indeed, a consensus''' of the broadest kind. It is you, dear SilentResident, who wanted to ignore consensus, not Future and I who were seeking to enforce the broadest of consensuses in this matter. Your crocodile tears are noted. --] (]) 20:29, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
''Macedonian'' is attested in English from 1897, according to the OED. IMRO is older than that, if not much. Surely we should be discussing the last half of the nineteenth century? ] <small>]</small> 02:03, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::No one has ever stated that ] isn't a WP:CONSENSUS in the broader form. Has anyone ever stated that? No.


::::::::::::::::The real question here is why did 2 experienced editors, you and FPAS, attempted to force your wording of preference into the article, when it has become clear it was opposed? Why force it instead of building a consensus and figuring out better alternatives such as Peacemaker67's "Macedonia (now North Macedonia)" when it has become clear that your plain "Macedonia" wasn't accepted into the opening sentence?
Well in a sense you're right, it was used in the late 19th century by specific persons or small groups of people. The IMRO didn't use the name in connection to an ethnic group when it was founded in 1893. Can you please quote the OED reference ?--] (]) 04:08, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
:The quotation from ] now in ]: ''Why not Macedonia for the Macedonians as well as Bulgaria for the Bulgarians and Servia for the Servians?'' Note that the relevant definition is:
::A member of a people of Macedonia distinguished by their Slavonic language and culture. Also: a person identified with this ethnic group, whether or not a native or inhabitant of Macedonia.
:Use for Ancient Macedonia is of course much older. ] <small>]</small> 12:50, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
How old is this definition ? That's what i'm asking, Gladstone referred to the people living in Macedonia as the IMRO did in the first years, not to a specific ethnic group. I can understand that "in the first half of the 20th century" might point out to late events and as i said in a broader sense you are right but you are using wrong sources.--] (]) 15:29, 8 August 2008 (UTC)


::::::::::::::::Why wouldn't we work on finding a compromise together? I made a step: offered you a compromise, didn't I? It is the "Republic of Macedonia" (but apparently there were ''better'' ones, like Peacemaker has shown to us). Only if you had made one step forward, just like I did, then, IMO, we would have had good changes to reach Peacemaker67's solution by ourselves, but ''without'' Peacemaker67's help! (not that I am dismissing Peacemaker67's help, I am saying that as editors we can do better than this).
== US Senate ==


::::::::::::::::You don't need me to tell you the obvious, that you are a smart and intelligent person, with alot of experience on Macedonia-related topics. Just I wish you handled things in an way that I wouldn't feel I was left without options but resort to desperate means such as to call for admin intervention. I can't shake from my mind the question "Why did we reach a point where Peacemaker67's intervention was necessary for something that Taivo, an experienced editor, would manage by simply reaching out to me?"
Pmanderson is right: the resolution in the US Senate wasn't "passed". It was an initiative of a handful of Senators which was merely referred to the relevant committee (), where it's apparently sat without being finally voted on for a year. (Of course it's got very little chance of being passed anyway, because it blatantly contradicts government policy, at least in its choice of wording. )


Given this state of affairs, I'd very much question whether the whole thing is notable anyway. These resolution proposals in some parliaments are a dime a dozen. Senators associated with some lobby group can bring in as many such proposals as they wish. Together with that FYROM resolution, there was also a resolution ''"Recognizing the 50th anniversary of the desegregation of Little Rock Central High School"'' and one ''"Commending the City of Fayetteville, North Carolina, for holding a 3-day celebration of the 250th anniversary of the birth of the Marquis de Lafayette"'' . That's about the level of seriousness these kinds of resolutions have. Unlike the FYROM one, those two were actually agreed on. ] ] 07:20, 8 August 2008 (UTC)


::::::::::::::::IMO, we can't just keep calling the admins and RfCs ''every'' time we are in disagreement! Its getting ridiculous. A good start is to learn to trust each other. You will need understand that I have no personal agendas just because I disagree with you. It happens that I see everything from a different viewpoint than you do. Quite obvious, isn't it??? You may agree or disagre with me for many things but this isn't a reason to accuse me for having... agendas. I may have editorial POV, yes, but agendas? Or crocodile tears? Really? OK, you have made your choices.
:This is the problem: the Greek media take everything out of proportion to support the Greek position, and then it ends up here Examples:
::::::::::::::::Excuse me but I will not reply any further, Im done here and this is not ]. You want to continue this discussion? Sure, use User Talk Pages. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 21:33, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
:*Gruevski at Goce Delčev's grave
:::::::::@everyone, Peacemaker67's resolution can be read here in case the above discussions get archived. --- <span style="text-shadow:#CCC 0.1em 0.3em 0.3em; font-family: Trebuchet MS">] <sup>(] &#124; ])</sup></span> 09:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
:*This resolution thing
::::::::::At last, sanity prevails. ] (]) 21:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
:*Panama switching to "FYROM"


== The language "As a significant contingent of ethnic Greeks identify themselves as Macedonians and view themselves as unrelated to Macedonians" does not follow logical semantics.. ==
:About the last one, Macedonian press reports that in a call to Antonio Milošoski, ] refuted Greek media claims that Panama switched, and the country still uses "Republic of Macedonia". ''']]''' 07:42, 8 August 2008 (UTC)


The identifier "North" should be used in this context to differentiate Between the ethnic Greek subgroup of Macedonians and North Macedonians. As it wouldn't make sense for Greeks who consider themselves ethnically Macedonian to believe they are unrelated to ethnic Madeconians. Ed 18:12, 6 October 2023 (UTC) <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::That being said, the Macedonian media have blown up a few incidents as well, but evidently we should also be wary of Greek news. ''']]''' 07:53, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
:Nope. See: ]. ] (]) 18:18, 6 October 2023 (UTC)


::Yeah, you're probably right. That way, it's not even the Greek contributors' fault. They just go by the narrow perspective of their national media. ] ] 07:45, 8 August 2008 (UTC) : You left out and misplaced the one crucial word in the quoted phrase that makes all the difference: "unrelated to ''ethnic'' Macedonians". That word ''ethnic'' is the disambiguator here. Macedonian Greeks do not consider themselves "ethnically Macedonian"; they are ethnic Greeks. The Slavic Macedonians in North Macedonia are ethnic Macedonians. "North" can't be used as a disambiguator here because it's not part of the ethnic name; it's only part of the name of the country. There is no such thing as "North Macedonians". ] ] 18:24, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
::They do in fact consider themselves "ethnic Macedonians" the way Cretans consider themselves "ethnic Cretans", and Maniotes consider themselves "ethnic Maniotes". These are known as ethnic subgroups. Referring to one side that perceives themselves as Macedonian but not ethnically Macedonian makes absolutely no sense and does not follow logic since for a Greek, being Macedonian is being part of an ethnic subgroup. Ed 18:32, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
:It shouldn't have taken you more than three reverts to start this discussion. But anyway, there's no issue here. The name of the ethnic group was not subject to the Prespa agreement. Countries don't dictate what people refer to themselves as. "Ethnic" is already a satisfactory distinction, since it refers to an ethnic group, not a regional group. "North Macedonians" is sometimes used by reliable sources to refer to citizens of North Macedonia. Most reliable sources still continue to refer to ethnic Macedonians as "Macedonians". Please sign your post too. ] (]) 18:26, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
::Regardless of the Prespa agreement, following simple logic and not defying the law of identity or noncontradiction should dictate the use of "North" as an identifier to follow good semantical reasoning. Ed 18:36, 6 October 2023 (UTC) <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
::I was trying to correct the Tag, and for some odd reason lag lept leaving out the double brackets I was adding. Ed 18:33, 6 October 2023 (UTC) <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:::Sorry, but we follow reliable sources, not editorial opinions. Reliable sources do not use the term "ethnic Macedonians" to refer to ethnic Greeks. Use four tildes to sign your comments. ] (]) 18:47, 6 October 2023 (UTC)


== Why is Misplaced Pages allowing such obviously biased language in this article? ==
== Panama ==


Using the word "ethnic" before designators like "Macedonian Politician" etc, is verging on ridiculous use of language. Ed 18:43, 6 October 2023 (UTC) <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) </small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
The alleged "change" of Panama towards "FYROM" is also misquoted. The ambassador merely said that Panama ''will apply "for all purposes, the result that arises from the negotiations taking place under the UN"'', and that it ''commits itself to abiding by the relevant decisions of the UN regarding that country's name for international and bilateral use,'' according to . Now, in the context of "result that arises...", the reference to "decisions of the UN" can obviously only refer to any '''future''' decision about a final settlement. He's saying his country will switch to whatever is agreed if something is agreed in future. For now, there is no "relevant decision of the UN" that would oblige any individual country to use ''FYROM'' bilaterally. The UN only ever decided that they will use ''FYROM'' internally. So by committing himself to UN decisions he is basically not making any commitment whatsoever. ] ] 07:56, 8 August 2008 (UTC)
:I didn't see this section yet, but I changed Panama and used A1 as the source. The most important part is quoted in the ref. ''']]''' 08:05, 8 August 2008 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 18:25, 1 May 2024

Former good article nomineeMacedonia naming dispute was a good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
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Semiological confusion, and the first use of a past name

If the country has to be referred in a modern context by informing the readers about its past disputes with Greece, then the term North Macedonia suffices without further clarification in the first sentence of the article's lead paragraph. But if the editors want to change that sentence to refer to the country in a historical context, the first time this historical name is used, should be in its official form, Republic of Macedonia, instead of the short Macedonia. This is still per WP:NCMAC's historical context criteria while at same time eliminating any possible initial semiological confusion. The rest of the article does not require changes as the clarification is given already from the start. --- SilentResident 20:41, 3 June 2020 (UTC)

No. Our current guideline for historic contexts still continues the same principle as the old WP:Naming conventions (Macedonia)/2009, which stated that "'Republic of Macedonia' will be used in all contexts where other countries would also be called by their full official names", but that "'Macedonia', by itself, will be used to refer to the country in all other articles in contexts where this is practically unambiguous". It's quite simple really:
  • We use the old name of the country in pre-2019 contexts. This is one such context, without any doubt.
  • The old name of the country was "Macedonia", pure and simple. That was its name in exactly the same way as the names of its surrounding countries are "Greece", "Bulgaria", "Serbia" and so on.
  • Each of these other countries also has a formal long name involving some form of "Republic" ("Hellenic Republic", "Republic of Bulgaria", and so on). But we use those only in special, rare situations. Since we're not saying "Hellenic Republic" in this sentence, why would we want to use the long form for the second of the two countries we're mentioning?
  • The only other reason we habitually used to employ the "R. of" prefix somewhat more often was disambiguation. But disambiguation is already provided by the context of the sentence. Nothing could be more unambiguous than "the Southeast European countries of Greece and Macedonia" and "until 2019". No other of the many "Macedonias" was a country in Southeast Europe in 2019. How could any reader possibly be confused about which "Macedonia" this sentence is referring to? Fut.Perf. 20:54, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
You got some very valid points, but my points are as very valid too and I am sure you understand that. However, do you realize you are making changes without seeking WP:CONSENSUS? The name North Macedonia stayed like that for years and became Consensus. But if you want the old name for historical purposes, then we have to stick to the historic Consensus made for it, which, prior to 2019 it read: "The use of the name "Macedonia" is disputed between the southeastern European countries of Greece and the Republic of Macedonia". That's a compromise that will keep everyone satisfied and any concerns on disambiguation, soothed. --- SilentResident 21:03, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
Changing the article into a historical tone, brings us more questions: What about the infobox? The map? As you probably noticed, prior to 2019, it was "Republic of Macedonia" not only on the lead sentence, but also on the Infobox and the Map as well. Now with your changes, the infobox and map refer to the country using a present tone, but the lead no longer uses present tone but past tone... --- SilentResident 21:05, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
That old wording is of course no longer an option because it's out of date. And there are no concerns of disambiguation, because there simply isn't any ambiguity. Full stop. And no, you don't have any valid point at all, as usual. We'll simply apply the rules of WP:NCMAC (both the old and the new), which for some reason this article has so far failed to do. Fut.Perf. 21:08, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
I firmly disagree with your changes, you ought to seek consensus if you want your edits to stay. Go WP:BOLD, not edit warring. This isnt helpful! NCMAC states that Republic of Macedonia can be used in a historical context. This was the term used there as well before we changed it to North Macedonia. Mind you, Republic of Macedonia was used for a very long time and none had objected to it, not even you. What changed now and you are disputing it? --- SilentResident 21:16, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
Stamping your feet on the ground and crying "but I don't agree" won't help your case. You have no case. Read the guideline, then read it again to try and actually understand it. You haven't. Fut.Perf. 21:28, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
First of all, I was a participant to the creation of the updated NCMAC. Something which you forgot. Second, I am not stamping my feet there, I am merely explaining that your uncompromising attitude is leading no where. I have already tried to explain to you that there are 3 options: North Macedonia, Republic of Macedonia and plain Macedonia, and I am fine with the 2 first ones, which had already been used in that sentence for a very long time and are stable for obvious reasons explained above and for which you failed to acknowledge. The third option, the plain Macedonia, was never used in the first sentence and I do not understand why this sudden insistence of yours to ram it there despite my concerns. I am fine with the first 2 options like everyone here was, I would say, before you come and make disputed changes to it. The topic of Macedonia is very sensitive and its articles have long been controversial, for which you, as an Admin, are fully aware of. The safest course here is to be cautious and find consensus before making changes to such a sensitive article like that. Is it much to ask from you to try and be more grateful towards me (and any editors who may not agree with your views), for offering you a compromise, which is Republic of Macedonia? You know that the plain Macedonia will never be accepted into the top of the article without much-needed clarifications such as North (which was stable for 1+ year), or Republic of (which was stable for many more years before it was replaced by North). If you don't want a compromise, then we return the sentence to its present tone, that is "North Macedonia" and be done with it. --- SilentResident 21:56, 3 June 2020 (UTC)
As usual, Future Perfect is right about MOSMAC and Silent Resident is misinterpreting other Misplaced Pages guidelines to suit a particular narrative. --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 04:14, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
As usual, this comes by Taivo, the disruptive edit warrior who started not one, not two, but FOUR edit wars across Misplaced Pages over the use of the plain "Macedonia" on various articles. Coincidence???--- SilentResident 08:15, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
Sorry for being too busy in real life and not reporting sooner: The attention of an uninvolved admin has been requested at: . Also the article has been reverted back to the last stable version before all this disruption started. --- SilentResident 18:07, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
And, for the record, here's what that uninvolved admin answered: "] should answer most of the questions." Yes, indeed, it does. SilentResident might take this as a hint to finally start dealing with the question how her preferred wording matches that guideline (which it quite obviously doesn't). A question she so far hasn't addressed with even a single word in all those hundreds of words of rambling aboe. If that explanation isn't given in her very next posting on this page, I'll revert it back to the guideline-conforming wording soon. In the absence of such an argument, there really isn't anything to discuss further here. Fut.Perf. 19:12, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
The Administrator said you should seek WP:CONSENSUS first: "WP:NCMAC should answer most of the questions. If no agreement can be reached, you should consider using an WP:RFC" I suggest you heel to his advice and try to come into agreement with those who disagree with your viewpoints, or else open a RFC and have a third opinion on this. --- SilentResident 19:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count. You don't count as long as you don't finally start doing what you ought to have done a dozen or so postings further up: address the issue how to properly apply the guideline. There will be an actionable disagreement if and when there is actually some argument on the table. Not just ranting on and on about how we must stick with some prior version, but an argument about the only thing that counts: how to apply WP:NCMAC. I don't know if you really don't realize this, but you haven't said a single word about that yet. Right now, there is nothing to agree or disagree about, other than the obvious fact that my version conforms with WP:NCMAC while yours doesn't. Fut.Perf. 19:37, 4 June 2020 (UTC)

But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count. First, you must really feel comfortable to speak like that against fellow editors, as admin that you are, heh? It will be useful in future reports against you. Second. lets see what we have here:

"the only thing that counts: how to apply WP:NCMAC" So, in your perception, the article's first sentence isn't in line with WP:NCMAC? I disagree. It meets NCMAC ctireria, just not the "historical context" criteria. Otherwise you wouldn't try change the wording in the first place and give it a historical context. But I do not mind any changes to it that can bring the sentence both under WP:NCMAC and under historical context criterias. However I do mind -in fact I am vehemently opposed- to the use of the ambiguous Macedonia as the first word in the lead paragraph for the country. The "Republic of" is necessary especially from the moment the lead is mentioning more than one Macedonias (Greek region of Macedonia, Ancient Kingdom of Macedon, Socialist Republic of Macedonia, etc).

You haven't explain why, while WP:NCMAC permits both "Republic of Macedonia" and "Macedonia", you are insisting on using only the ambiguous "Macedonia" for the opening sentence of the article which is finding me vehemently opposed for the reasons underlined above and in previous discussions to which you were participant. Why not use "Republic of Macedonia" which is less ambiguous and still in line with WP:NCMAC? After all, this was the one we used in the very opening sentence for 10+ years already. --- SilentResident 20:50, 4 June 2020 (UTC)

How did any of the recent changes "give it" an historical context? It was an historical statement all along. Do you know the meaning of the little word "was"? It means in the past. The naming dispute no longer exists. It existed before 2019 and ceased to exist the moment the renaming happened. So, every statement describing the dispute is by necessity, always, a "pre-2019" historical statement in the sense of the guideline. It wasn't post-2019 "North Macedonia" that was engaged in the dispute, it was pre-2019 "Macedonia".
About ambiguity, what matters is not how many "Macedonia"s are mentioned somewhere in the lead or elsewhere in the article, but whether there is a danger of ambiguity in the particular sentence we're talking about. That's the only legitimate function of disambiguation: making sure readers won't misunderstand the particular passage in question. That sentence is perfectly disambiguated by the term "countries". There is no other "Macedonia" that is a country (or was one in 2019) or could possibly be engaged in a dispute with Greece, so no reader could possibly be confused about what this sentence means.
And I "haven't explained" why it should be the shorter term? Yes, I have, in my very first posting above. WP:NCMAC doesn't just blindly permit both the longer and the shorter form to be chosen at will; it mandates that the shorter form should be used where there is no danger of ambiguity. That was very explicitly spelled out in the old NCMAC, and the new NCMAC has inherited this principle for the historical contexts, even though it no longer spells it out in as much detail – it does explain the same principle for the modern "N.M." vs. "R. of N.M."; the historical "M." vs. "R. of M." go by the same criteria.
And stop going on and on about how much you are "vehemently opposed" to this or that or how this or that version was stable for so and so long – you should know that neither of these are of any relevance whatsoever. Fut.Perf. 21:09, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
I disagree. This article is about the Naming Dispute and the lead paragraph shouldn't welcome the readers with anything less than the official name of the country whose the name was disputed in the first place. --- SilentResident 21:19, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
User:SilentResident has still failed to address the question of WP:NCMAC in any manner whatsoever, let alone a convincing manner. She is alone in her insistence that "North" should always precede "Macedonia" in each and every instance in which it occurs, a POV that she consistently pushes in every content dispute that she initiates and exacerbates (and then blames others for edit warring). The neutral admin was crystal clear--NCMAC answers all the questions. But SilentResident plays the game of I don't like it consistently and unconvincingly. "North Macedonia" was the result of Prespa, not a party to the dispute. That was "Macedonia". --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 21:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
"Republic of Macedonia". The official name everybody (including you) consented to, for 10+ years to be used at the opening sentence of the article. --- SilentResident 21:34, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
  • Initial comment I've been pinged to this by Ed as an uninvolved admin with a background in Balkans disputes. WP:NCMAC says that "all contentious edits touching upon North Macedonia naming practices also continue to be subject to a 1RR restriction.", unless you are reinstating the version conforming to NCMAC. Three editors have breached 1RR, although no doubt they will all claim they are reinstating the version conforming to NCMAC. In addition to the 1RR restriction under NCMAC, this is also an article subject to discretionary sanctions under WP:ARBEE. Nevertheless, Silent Resident has breached 3RR in any case, and is lucky they have not been blocked on that basis. Given the interpretation of NCMAC in this case is disputed, I have restored the pre-dispute version (despite the fact that it may be the "wrong version"), to allow the resolution of the issue here on the talk page without further edit-warring. I will talk more about the interpretation of NCMAC in my next comment. Bear with me while I drill down into the consensus positions determined by the 2019 RFC. Thanks, Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 02:44, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
Have now had a good look at the 2019 RFC, and it is very clear about issues such as this. What it says (in the collapsed detailed consensus box at the top) is:

5. Historical names: What should be used in place of Macedonia and Republic of Macedonia in other articles about the periods and events between 1991 and 2019?

Option B: Macedonia and Republic of Macedonia should still be used in historical articles, with an optional note similar to "now North Macedonia".

The closing panel agrees that there is a clear consensus for Option B. The terms "Macedonia" and "Republic of Macedonia" retain their meanings within the context of articles about the periods and events between 1991 and 2019 and thus, should not be changed, although an optional note such as "now North Macedonia" may be added where appropriate.

What this means is that when referring to the country between 1991 and 2019, Macedonia/Republic of Macedonia should be used to refer to the country, with the option of adding "now North Macedonia" where appropriate. Now, given this naming dispute is historical (as it says in the current first sentence, it "was" disputed, and therefore this is in the past) and occurred between Greece and the Republic of Macedonia between 1991 and 2019, not between Greece and North Macedonia after 2019 (as the dispute was resolved by the Prespa agreement and the subsequent change of country name to North Macedonia), we are clearly dealing with the quoted consensus on historical names here, so part 5 of the RFC applies to this article. In the circumstances, the optional use of "now North Macedonia" is appropriate, as that is now the name of the country, and is should be mentioned in the first sentence as it forms the resolution of the dispute that the article is about. There is the issue of consistent use of common names here, which Tomica quite rightly raised in an edit summary. If we use "Greece" as the common name for the Hellenic Republic, then it is only reasonable to use "Macedonia" as the common name for the Republic of Macedonia in the same sentence, especially as it is linked to the North Macedonia article. If it is followed by "now North Macedonia" it is indisputably clear what we are talking about. It is therefore clear that the first sentence should be worded "The use of the country name "Macedonia" was disputed between the Southeast European countries of Greece and Macedonia (now North Macedonia) between 1991 and 2019." and the first sentence of the second para should read "The dispute arose from the ambiguity in nomenclature between the Republic of Macedonia, the adjacent Greek region of Macedonia and the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon." Therefore, this edit is not IAW the 2019 RFC. I have implemented the above. Peacemaker67 (click to talk to me) 05:11, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
Peacemaker67, that's a very good compromise IMO. The (Now North Macedonia) placed next to Macedonia, suffices for me, as it eliminates the risks for semiological confusions and it is much better than the version Taivo and FPAS had put, which was only an ambiguous Macedonia without any qualifiers next to it. Thank you! And again, sorry for the 1RR rule, wish I had realized this sooner rather than have FPAS bring it to my attention. Speaking of FPAS, I urge him and Taivo to leave the opening sentence untouched from now and on and refrain from such kinds of edits in the future. Peacemaker67, I would appreciate if can you leave the article locked for a while? I am worried someone may try revert your changes and this is the last thing the article needs. Thank you. --- SilentResident 09:03, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm fine with Peacemaker's version, of course. I still think my previous version was slightly more elegant, with the "North Macedonia" bit a few words further away but integrated in such a way that it actually added something substantial to the explanation of the issue. The interesting fact is not just that it happens to have this new name now, but that its name change was the very thing that resolved this dispute, so why not let the reader know this while we're at it? But that's a minor quibble and not worth fighting over. That SR now acts as if this tiny difference ("N. M." one word away versus nine words away from "M.") makes all the difference to them, as if readers could overcome the alleged "semiological confusion" she's been fantasizing about across a textual distance of no more than two words, only goes to demonstrate how utterly irrational her whole approach has been the whole time. Fut.Perf. 15:17, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
If it is several words apart, then it is not a qualifier. If it is next to it, then it is. Something they haven't taught to you at the school's grammar lessons, I assume?
There might be cases where qualifiers can be words or sentences apart but this is not enough given this is a name dispute over an ambiguous name shared by multiple regions/entities in its background.
You are just trying just to make others's concerns appear illogical while yours as logical. To me, this is a classic characteristic of a defensive profile that has serious difficulties in communicating with other people of different views. These profiles usually are the ones that have difficult time trying to find a common ground in disputes. --- SilentResident 16:34, 5 June 2020 (UTC)

Time for protection?

I'll fully protect the article if three of the recent editors request it. But we know how tedious that can be. Surely there is some other way.. EdJohnston (talk) 20:27, 4 June 2020 (UTC)

Well, I don't suppose any of us would want you to protect it unless it happens to be on the correct version, right? – But seriously, the only way ahead I see is that the editor who has so far stubbornly dodged any invitation to engage with the content and guideline issue and has instead engaged in purely procedural stonewalling should be clearly told to either start bringing forward pertinent arguments or go away. That's what we have admins for. Fut.Perf. 20:47, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
Apparently you haven't wondered why I was not responding to you for a while. You got to my nerves with your insults.
  • " I'll revert it back to the guideline-conforming wording soon. In the absence of such an argument, there really isn't anything to discuss further here."
  • "But there isn't anybody who disagrees with me here. You don't count."
I say, EdJohnston, yes lets lock the article, because I do not trust the editor is suitable enough for editing it! After all, I have no changes to make to it, it is him who caused all this disruption.
Edit: So it seems one more editor is disagreeing with Future Perfect and Taivo's version: Future Perfect you said you are not counting me, but looks like you will have to make a re-count. Sorry to say, but that makes it not "zero" but TWO editors against your plain "Macedonia"... I believe it is better if the article is locked to the last stable version and open a RFC on the matter. There isn't anything else to say in this discussion, I have become too stressed and anxious after this climate encountered and the insults against me. If a RFC is opened, I will participate. --- SilentResident 20:54, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
SilentResident, you are now beyond 3RR . Please self-revert. Fut.Perf. 21:13, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
As you are. Difference is I wasnt the one who instigated all this disruption, it was you. I was simply defending it from what seems to be: 1) Going without consensus, 2) dismissing your opponent's concerns, 3) insulting them in talk pages... need to say more? For this reason I asked for Admin attention. This is too much for me to handle by myself, I have OVERDONE myself and yet to no avail: all I see is more and more drawn to the edit war you started: Are you feeling proud for it? I will repeat myself one more time to Ed: the article needs to be locked! As for you, FPAS, I am disappointed. Next time learn to make consensuses instead of wars. @Alexikoua & Tomica, it is not worth going into edit wars just because of FPAS's contested edits. Please lets open a RfC like how Ed has suggested and let a new consensus to be formed. --- SilentResident 21:29, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
I'm not beyond 3RR. I (admittedly) made two reverts yesterday, and a third one more than 24 hours later today; this last one having been unfortunately unavoidable because your (and Alexikoua's) careless editing in the meantime had led to a version that was not just contrary to the guidelines but plain nonsensical ("North Macedonia changing its name to North Macedonia"). Fut.Perf. 21:35, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
And Alexikoua does not agree with SilentResident, his edit was to "clean up" the stable version that I had reverted to. He did nothing to change the wording of Macedonia, his edit concerned a different topic. SilentResident is stretching the facts to agree with her own unique agenda. --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 21:43, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
@FPAS and Taivo: You still have the chance to do things right this time: either call a RfC like Ed said and make a new WP:CONSENSUS, or return the article to the old consensus. Anything else, be it edit wars, arguments, accusations or insults against your opponents, isn't helpful. --- SilentResident 21:50, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
@SilentResident. What "isn't helpful" is your POV pushing that ignores NCMAC and Ed's actual advice: "NCMAC says it all". You don't seem to be able to read or remember any comments that don't support your unique POV. Ed said to refer to NCMAC. You don't seem to have heeded his comment at all and seem to be completely ignoring NCMAC. --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 23:35, 4 June 2020 (UTC)
I am speechless. You just claimed that the 2 options of the 3, which are "North Macedonia" and "Republic of Macedonia" (which was used for years, and YOU CONSENTED to it), are "completely ignoring NCMAC". Wow! What can I say?
You know something? I am curious, if these 2 options indeed ignore NCMAC, why did you let them stay in the opening sentence for YEARS (10+ years)?
Why in all of sudden you instigated all this disruption and edit wars to have it removed in an unsuspecting time like this?
Why didn't you support my repeated calls for the respect of WP:CONSENSUS?
If the old CONSENSUS was problematic, then why didn't you even seek a new WP:CONSENSUS building?
Why did you not even ask for a third opinion or RfC on the matter?
Why have you and FPAS been quiet to Ed's calls for a RfC???
Trying to put the blame on others for your wrong doings isn't going to help. Seems you love accusing other for having hidden "agendas" and such, but none of us started the mess, it was you. Your edit log shows you have participated in 4 disputes related to Macedonia already. And now this time you who broke ARBMAC, broke long-established 10-year CONSENSUS and broke 1-year SILENT CONSENSUS, broke WP:CYCLE, and your disruption got 4+ different editors and +3 Admins drawn to them, and more. You want to criticize me? Do it. I am not pretending to be a perfect person, and unlike you, I fully acknowledge with shame my fault for breaching 1RR while trying to defend the article from you. Wish I realized I was breaking the 1RR sooner so that I prevent myself from falling for it and having FPAS bring it to my attention when it was too late. The admins and the community have my apology. I accept my responsibility and that's why I called Tomica and Alexikoua to constraint themselves so that there aren't any further 1RR breaches. But if you want to criticize me, first you will have to be honest with yourself and acknowledge your wrongdoings which caused these disruptions in the first place, both here and on the other articles. If it wasn't for your edit wars and breaks of CONSENSUS, then the locking of the article and the Admin intervention wouldn't have happened now. Criticize me as much as you like, but first I expect you to acknowledge your wrongdoings, support our call for CONSENSUS and RfC and stop your edit wars across Macedonia-related topics once and for all. I do not EVEN want to see the name "Taivo" in future edit wars about Macedonia again! It is getting tiring already.
Edit: nevermind about RfCs and such, Peacemaker67 intervened and offered an excellent compromise that can satisfy both parties: "Macedonia" stays, but a much needed qualifier "North Macedonia" is added next to it and IMO this soothes all of my concerns for possible semiological confusions. I am positive that the dispute is resolved. However I do insist that the article stays locked for a while at least. The article's protection is necessary, IMO, if we really want to prevent similar incidents in the future. Also a reminder to everyone and to myself as I failed: the article is subject to 1RR. --- SilentResident 08:44, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
There is no need for the article to remain locked because it is now in compliance with NCMAC (it was not in compliance previously). --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 09:45, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
There is. The article will have to remain locked unless the editors who 1) stirred the edit wars, 2) ignored the consensus, and 3) went with changes without taking in account the other party's concerns, acknowledge their attidude was inappropriate and promise to not repeat this in the future. There is also my fear that because the new sentence is still fresh, someone who didn't participate in the Talk Page might not like Peacemaker's resolution and try restoring back any disputed edits. --- SilentResident 12:58, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
How funny. You are the one who started the edit warring, no one else. You are the one who rejected Future Perfect's perfectly acceptable wording that was in compliance (as he explained) with NCMAC. You are the one that the article needs to be protected from, just like every other article where you take your flaming "North" sword into useless battle. What did you achieve with your edit warring and whining? Nothing. The word "North" moved forward a couple of words, but changed nothing to native speakers of English who are perfectly capable of understanding context. You're not a native speaker and although your English is very good, it's not at the level of being able to lecture native speakers as to what they can and can not understand based on normal context. Future's edit was in line with NCMAC, which, as you have been told, is the final authority on this matter. --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 16:41, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
Speak only for yourself. What may be perfect for you isn't necessarily for everyone else. You should have asked us if we find it perfect, something you DIDNT. Instead, you and FPAS came here with the "We will have it worded THIS way, because we say so and think so! We don't care about consensus, We don't care about SilentResident's concerns, she has agendas, and she doesn't count anyways" attitude. You are welcome to consider FPAS's wording as being better for you, but for me it is Peacemaker's. Period.
IMO, there is nothing more to say here. This discussion has come to a natural end, and there are better things to do than arguing indefinitely with you. Good day. :-) --- SilentResident 17:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
Just to be clear I have no objections to PeaceMaker's wording whatsoever, it is perfectly acceptable to me and to Misplaced Pages's actual, enforceable WP:CONSENSUS embodied as policy in WP:NCMAC. You keep weeping over the "lack of consensus", but you seem ignorant of the simple fact that WP:NCMAC itself is, indeed, a consensus of the broadest kind. It is you, dear SilentResident, who wanted to ignore consensus, not Future and I who were seeking to enforce the broadest of consensuses in this matter. Your crocodile tears are noted. --TaivoLinguist (Taivo) (talk) 20:29, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
No one has ever stated that WP:NCMAC isn't a WP:CONSENSUS in the broader form. Has anyone ever stated that? No.
The real question here is why did 2 experienced editors, you and FPAS, attempted to force your wording of preference into the article, when it has become clear it was opposed? Why force it instead of building a consensus and figuring out better alternatives such as Peacemaker67's "Macedonia (now North Macedonia)" when it has become clear that your plain "Macedonia" wasn't accepted into the opening sentence?
Why wouldn't we work on finding a compromise together? I made a step: offered you a compromise, didn't I? It is the "Republic of Macedonia" (but apparently there were better ones, like Peacemaker has shown to us). Only if you had made one step forward, just like I did, then, IMO, we would have had good changes to reach Peacemaker67's solution by ourselves, but without Peacemaker67's help! (not that I am dismissing Peacemaker67's help, I am saying that as editors we can do better than this).
You don't need me to tell you the obvious, that you are a smart and intelligent person, with alot of experience on Macedonia-related topics. Just I wish you handled things in an way that I wouldn't feel I was left without options but resort to desperate means such as to call for admin intervention. I can't shake from my mind the question "Why did we reach a point where Peacemaker67's intervention was necessary for something that Taivo, an experienced editor, would manage by simply reaching out to me?"


IMO, we can't just keep calling the admins and RfCs every time we are in disagreement! Its getting ridiculous. A good start is to learn to trust each other. You will need understand that I have no personal agendas just because I disagree with you. It happens that I see everything from a different viewpoint than you do. Quite obvious, isn't it??? You may agree or disagre with me for many things but this isn't a reason to accuse me for having... agendas. I may have editorial POV, yes, but agendas? Or crocodile tears? Really? OK, you have made your choices.
Excuse me but I will not reply any further, Im done here and this is not WP:FORUM. You want to continue this discussion? Sure, use User Talk Pages. --- SilentResident 21:33, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
@everyone, Peacemaker67's resolution can be read here in case the above discussions get archived. --- SilentResident 09:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)
At last, sanity prevails. Khirurg (talk) 21:47, 5 June 2020 (UTC)

The language "As a significant contingent of ethnic Greeks identify themselves as Macedonians and view themselves as unrelated to Macedonians" does not follow logical semantics..

The identifier "North" should be used in this context to differentiate Between the ethnic Greek subgroup of Macedonians and North Macedonians. As it wouldn't make sense for Greeks who consider themselves ethnically Macedonian to believe they are unrelated to ethnic Madeconians. Ed 18:12, 6 October 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chronograph 1985 (talkcontribs)

Nope. See: Misplaced Pages:Naming conventions (Macedonia). Jingiby (talk) 18:18, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
You left out and misplaced the one crucial word in the quoted phrase that makes all the difference: "unrelated to ethnic Macedonians". That word ethnic is the disambiguator here. Macedonian Greeks do not consider themselves "ethnically Macedonian"; they are ethnic Greeks. The Slavic Macedonians in North Macedonia are ethnic Macedonians. "North" can't be used as a disambiguator here because it's not part of the ethnic name; it's only part of the name of the country. There is no such thing as "North Macedonians". Fut.Perf. 18:24, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
They do in fact consider themselves "ethnic Macedonians" the way Cretans consider themselves "ethnic Cretans", and Maniotes consider themselves "ethnic Maniotes". These are known as ethnic subgroups. Referring to one side that perceives themselves as Macedonian but not ethnically Macedonian makes absolutely no sense and does not follow logic since for a Greek, being Macedonian is being part of an ethnic subgroup. Ed 18:32, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
It shouldn't have taken you more than three reverts to start this discussion. But anyway, there's no issue here. The name of the ethnic group was not subject to the Prespa agreement. Countries don't dictate what people refer to themselves as. "Ethnic" is already a satisfactory distinction, since it refers to an ethnic group, not a regional group. "North Macedonians" is sometimes used by reliable sources to refer to citizens of North Macedonia. Most reliable sources still continue to refer to ethnic Macedonians as "Macedonians". Please sign your post too. StephenMacky1 (talk) 18:26, 6 October 2023 (UTC)
Regardless of the Prespa agreement, following simple logic and not defying the law of identity or noncontradiction should dictate the use of "North" as an identifier to follow good semantical reasoning. Ed 18:36, 6 October 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chronograph 1985 (talkcontribs)
I was trying to correct the Tag, and for some odd reason lag lept leaving out the double brackets I was adding. Ed 18:33, 6 October 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chronograph 1985 (talkcontribs)
Sorry, but we follow reliable sources, not editorial opinions. Reliable sources do not use the term "ethnic Macedonians" to refer to ethnic Greeks. Use four tildes to sign your comments. StephenMacky1 (talk) 18:47, 6 October 2023 (UTC)

Why is Misplaced Pages allowing such obviously biased language in this article?

Using the word "ethnic" before designators like "Macedonian Politician" etc, is verging on ridiculous use of language. Ed 18:43, 6 October 2023 (UTC) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Chronograph 1985 (talkcontribs)

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