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{{consensus|The objective of this page is to reach ''']''' on '']''-related naming issues in Misplaced Pages articles}} | {{consensus|The objective of this page is to reach ''']''' on '']''-related naming issues in Misplaced Pages articles}} | ||
{{ambox | text = '''For discussion on this page from the first phase of the discussion, see ]. <br />For the particular thread that resulted in the decision of which proposals were put forward, see ] and <span class="plainlinks"></span>.}} | |||
{{Misplaced Pages:Centralized discussion/Macedonia/navbox}} | |||
==Structure== | |||
== Request for comment == | |||
So, let's collect ideas on how to proceed further, in terms of process and infrastructure. | |||
I have opened a ] on this dispute. Please see the ] and subpages for more information. ]]] 21:26, 25 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
My own suggestion: | |||
# Create subpages for the five principal areas of discussion: | |||
## Page title of the main country article | |||
## Naming conventions for page titles of sub-articles of the country | |||
## References in other articles | |||
## Greece-related articles | |||
## International organisations articles | |||
# In each subpage, collect a small number of competing proposal guidelines | |||
# Hold initial content discussion on the talk pages of each proposal subpage | |||
# Collect consensus material on another subpage, "/guidelines", which will grow into the final result (hopefully) | |||
# Possibly create another subpage "/evidence" to host things like usage statistics, a repository of source links and so on. | |||
] ] 08:15, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Looks good. I don't suppose you need us regulars to register our own endorsements again at this stage, right? BTW, as you may have seen, I've sent a number of notifications to editors and article talk pages. ] ] 08:22, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Each of the five pages should be about all four meanings of Macedonia as the 29.1.1 page says. | |||
::Anyone other than the referees may endorse proposals. ]]] 13:32, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
## Page title of each of the four macedonias | |||
## Naming conventions for page titles of sub-articles of each of the four macedonias | |||
## References in non-contemporary context | |||
## Specific country-related articles (Greece/Bulgaria/Republic of Macedonia) | |||
## Other contexts (e.g.International organisations articles) | |||
:::Since I am not familiar with how the "RfC" process normally works, may I ask please if we can endorse multiple proposals? (as in first choice, second choice, etc.). I have first choices but would like to endorse one or two proposals as second and third choices on the pages. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:19, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::That would be better than having 4 meanings * 5 = 20 total pages. The rest seems ok. | |||
::::Different RfCs work in different ways, but in this particular one the message at the top of the page asks that we only endorse one proposal. -- ] (]) 20:25, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: I see your point, but the other Macedonias are hardly as contentious. We've always handled those just fine, with just ad-hoc disambiguation as a matter of common sense. In #4, only the one pairing has ever been an object of discussion. The whole discussion exists only because Greek editors wanted to make that one situation (ref to the country from Greece-related articles) a special exception case. If you want to merge that case with the other mutual pairings, you are basically already conceding there should be no special rules – which is fine with me, because then we don't need to discuss anything. #5 is moot for the other Macedonias, because they are, by their very nature, not participants in international organisations. ] ] 08:39, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: I |
:::::Thank you, I missed that text (always rapidly scrolling down :-) ).] <sup>]</sup> 21:04, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | ||
::::: Of course, concomitant issues regarding the "other" Macedonias can be treated as they come up. But it's still unnecessary to complicate the initial summary of the questions with things that won't be contentious. ] ] 08:59, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::: I have an idea, I found this ]. Can we use it to give out the definitely non contested issues like: FYROM (the acronym not the long form) cannot be used in most circumstances (unless e.g. to avoid repetition of the long form of the term in certain articles). Or Macedonia (region) is the accepted title of that article... not sure that there won't be any drama about which to include. If anyone objects we can take it down. ] <sup>]</sup> 09:21, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::: Sure, good idea. ] ] 09:32, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::: BTW, not sure if you've seen it, but I've started drafting sub-pages. Do you think the format is okay like that? ] ] 09:34, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: Can't keep up with the pace right now. I'll see them in a while. So where does that template thingy goes best? A separate section in the page covering resolved issues?] <sup>]</sup> 10:29, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: Okay, let's take a break. ] ] 10:36, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I do however disagree since many users might be looking for a compromise rather than sticking to a single proposal as is apparent by swaying endorsements and many endorsements that indicate a second choice in their comments. | |||
== Citations == | |||
:::::May I suggest to change that into '''a maximum of two endorsements.''' | |||
The page should make some use of the {{tl|Reflist}} tag. I added it. However citations should be used moderately.] <sup>]</sup> 10:28, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Please realize that we have to have an indication of a second preference of endorsements so that consensus can be reached. ] <sup>]</sup> 21:27, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Advertising this discussion == | |||
== Proposal == | |||
I saw Future placed a notice at ] and ] | |||
I remember something the referees said about advertising to Village Pump (looked it up:]), the ] and elsewhere. We need to gather outside opinions here as suggested by ARBCOM. I remember some other places mentioned in ARBMAC2. | |||
I would suggest to advertise at more places where more outside users that might be interested and third parties can see (talk:Greece and talk:Macedonia is more for the immediately interested).] <sup>]</sup> 08:42, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: You're right. I've done <s>WP:WPP</s>] and the centralised discussion box now. ] ] 08:49, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
BTW, when the discussion does start, I would strongly prefer that we structure it similarly to the arbitration's evidence section. That will minimise indent replies, making the discussion more easily readable and less prone to hostility. Let me know about your views on this. I am taking a break too... --] (]) 10:47, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Could you clarify what you mean? I think it's a lot easier for readability if a reply to a comment is indented right below rather than in a section much further down called "Reply to X". ''']]''' 11:11, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Not sure what place you meant, but that link is WikiProject Philosophy :) ''']]''' 08:56, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::The Workshop page was a bit chaotic, many overlaps and no taxonomy.The Proposed Decision page was nice but the community is not a fixed number of arbs that vote on versions and voting like in a <s>poll</s> you-know-what, is unworkable. | |||
:::I notified ], ], ] (regions with parts in the Macedonia region) using Future's notification note. Also ] (locus). | |||
::I would say something like the PD page but with no "opposers" and no "abstains". Revisions (offsets) of proposals were handy. Each proposal (for each specific issue that needs to be addressed) can have multiple rationales signed by multiple users. The competing proposals can be like A) B) C) and the revisions will be A.1) A.2) etc. The evaluating admins can tag issues about each proposal (tag A.x) with "no basis" etc. or "current rationale wording violates that and that" | |||
:::I also notified the ] (second place in page hits from the main Macedonia articles). ] <sup>]</sup> 09:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Odin5000 Blocked and topic banned== | |||
::By taking a look at MOSMAC I can hypothesize that it failed because it was an effort to collaboratively write an article ("essay") with no structure (other than typical policy texts). This one in contrast should be an effort to address specific issues with specific proposals. Opposing views do not have to mix. That way the ones in agreement with one proposal do not have to repeat the same arguments over and over again. | |||
(copied from my post to Odin5000's talk page, if there's enough evidence for a CU, please let me know) | |||
Blocked 72 hours, see which was posted after the final warning by Sarek. You are also banned from anything related to the Macedonia dispute, including talk pages, central discussions, ANI threads, anything at all, indefinitely. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 18:23, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Swaying endorsements == | |||
::Rationales should be bullet points. Every new bullet under rationale should be about a new and unique way to justify the proposal. The number of the ways is not important but in that way all opinions can be expressed and evaluated without repetition and overlaps. | |||
::I |
Is this form of commenting about individual votes acceptable during the process?. I want a definite answer about this and where the referees stand on that part. If the answer is that minor campaigning is appropriate and not gaming this consensus-finding process, then I might want to know to adjust my course of action accordingly. ] <sup>]</sup> 19:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | ||
:We've been asked by the ArbCom and referees to justify our recommendations with reference to policies and guidelines. If the basis for their recommendation is unclear from what they've posted, or there's an issue with an assertion that's been made in a recommendation, there's no harm in asking for a clarification or mentioning a point that may have been overlooked. It's to everyone's advantage if there's absolute clarity about what is being recommended and why the particular recommendation is being made. It ''would'' be improper to ask people on their talk pages to change their !votes and I'd strongly advise against anyone thinking of doing that. -- ] (]) 19:18, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::If the individual has already participated in the discussion, and has made their view known, then this violates neither the spirit nor the substance of the canvassing guidelines. Contacting editors who have ''not'' participated would be more problematic. ] (]) 19:28, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Let's clarify this. NPOV is a key (arguably ''the'' key) issue in this matter. If you check the main articles discussion page, you'll see that (for instance) John Carter has just posted a description of why he thinks NPOV's criteria aren't sufficient in this case. He's addressed the issue of NPOV directly. In a handful of cases in the present main articles discussion, where contributors have not addressed the NPOV issue in recommending proposals, I've asked them to consider clarifying their recommendations. It's certainly not indiscriminate and I've not asked anyone to change their !vote. I've likewise not contacted anyone who hasn't participated, addressing the concern Fritzpoll raises. -- ] (]) 19:33, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Based on the diffs, I'm happy with what ChrisO has done. I was clarifying the situation in general to address Shadowmorph's comment that he might ''adjust (his) course of action accordingly'', and not impugning the specific instance raised here. ] (]) 19:46, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Thank you. -- ] (]) 19:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I also want to clarify to Shadowmorph that these are ''not'' "votes". This is a Request for Comment action with commenters organizing their comments in sections labelled "endorsements". This is ''not'', ''not'', ''not'' a poll and there are no "votes" here. The referees have made it abundantly clear that even if a "majority" of endorsers favor one or another proposal, they will be guided primarily by policy adherence and not by counting noses. (] (]) 19:58, 26 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::::::Thank you, for the clarification. Don't worry I won't be campaigning to users unless one "has already participated in the discussion". In that case I will feel free to comment on the talk page of that one about his endorsement. However I couldn't find any other place where Hiberniantears has participated in this discussion (or stating a preference on the Macedonia naming) before he signed his endorsement for proposal B. | |||
:::::::Taivo I know these are not votes but I also know that consensus should be assessed with reviewing each endorsement on the basis of the arguments provided. Exactly because this is not a vote is because a user who is so marginally close between two proposals that he easily sways his "vote" should be regarded as a less strong indication he being a part of this consensus. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:15, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: |
::::::::Also SheffieldSteel said in Caspian blue's talk page that ChrisO has contacted many of the editors who signed ] asking them to change or justify their position. So this has not been a single case. I guess I can proceed in the same fashion then. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:26, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | ||
:::::::::No, he's wrong. I have already resolved this with him on his talk page and he has clarified his recommendation. -- ] (]) 20:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: I'm not convinced we should invite "vote"-style comments at all, at least in a first phase. Remember the whole purpose of the exercise is to finally make this NOT a vote. Perhaps we should have an initial phase that really is just hammering out the proposals and documenting the arguments. ] ] 12:55, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Ok, but it is true that at least 3 users other than Hiberniantears were notified in the same way. Diffs: '''1st''' :, '''2nd:''' , '''3rd:''' . ] <sup>]</sup> 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::It was a "vote" at ] that initiated the latest round of arbitration, so I agree with Future Perfect, no votes, no vote-like comment behavior. (] (]) 13:18, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::::::::::Also noticeable is that man with one red show shifted his endorsement from this, into this after your helpful comments. No problem. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:50, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::(ec) But the fact that this isn't a vote is reason not to worry about "swaying" of one or two persons. Nothing's being counted here, so 5-4 or 4-5 doesn't matter. The referees are looking more for any concerns or points that haven't already been made by the half dozen of us participants. They're getting input, so an endoresement is simply a data point, not a determining factor. (] (]) 20:28, 26 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::::::::I don't see how signing an endorsement does not constitute participation on these pages. The votes don't matter, the numbers are not important - all we principally care about is the argument ] (]) 20:36, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: I understand. It is now clear that informing users that signed endorsements about the arguments of the other proposals is appropriate. Thank you. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::: It isn't ''automatically'' appropriate - it depends on how you do it. Please don't be tempted to spam people with appeals to change their votes. -- ] (]) 20:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::: Thank you, let me say that I am not an ] and I have reason. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:52, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::::I am rather concerned about ''who'' is contacting ''whom'' about ''what''. My understanding is that ChrisO's article move from ] to ] led (directly or indirectly) to a large amount of drama, an Arbcom case, ChrisO's desysopping, and ultimately to this discussion. Now ChrisO seems to be contacting ''only'' those editors who've endorsed ] over ], i.e. those who effectively disagree with his original article move. Are there no other editors whose position might need to be clarified? Is there no other editor who could tell them? ]<sup><small><b>]</b></small></sup> 21:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::I can't see why he isn't entitled to discuss an editor's position with them on their talkpage, provided they have already expressed an opinion here (i.e. he is not trying to bring fresh eyes to support proposal A) - can't the editors in question tell him to sod off if they don't like it? Is Fritzpoll being unusually dense? :) ] (]) 21:12, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::::(ec) I'm naturally rather interested in the NPOV issue, since I wrote the naming conflict guidelines and the relevant section of NPOV. Hence my concern that it's addressed adequately in the arguments. My sole concern here has been, where editors have not addressed NPOV, to ask whether they could clarify their recommendations to address this point. If they have addressed it, as John Carter for instance has, I have not asked them for clarifications (and I have in fact complimented John on being so clear about his recommendation ). I might add that I think it is rather inappropriate for you to post followups like which are obvious assumptions of bad faith, particularly as Fritzpoll has stated that he is happy with my actions. I have already asked you to remove those followups in good faith, and I would appreciate it if you could do so. Finally, please do not assume (as you appear to be doing) that I am somehow ''persona non grata'' on the Macedonia issue. My involvement in this discussion was fully endorsed (and indeed encouraged) by the ArbCom. -- ] (]) 21:16, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
(outdent) Re Shadowmorph's continuing worries about "swaying votes": This is not a poll! If Proposal X gets 25 endorsements but barely follows policy and Proposal Y gets 1 endorsement but follows policy precisely, then Proposal Y is the one the referees will accept. They're looking for input and new perspectives, not a majority of users siding with X or Y. Who cares if one or two people "change" their endorsements. Maybe it's because ChrisO's interpretation of policy is more solid and not based on Greek politics. But don't get your hackles up about it. It's not a vote! (] (]) 21:25, 26 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:I think the case is that the referees are looking to assess what the consensus of the community is in conjunction to the policy. Not just "looking for input". Otherwise there would be no point in all this, right? ] <sup>]</sup> 21:29, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::No assumptions of bad faith here, ChrisO. There is no doubt in my mind that you are convinced you are doing the right thing. ]<sup><small><b>]</b></small></sup> 21:31, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Thank you for clarifying that. Could you please address my request about your user talk page followups? -- ] (]) 21:41, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Yes, that's right, but consensus isn't about the number of people stating a particular opinion - it is about the quality of those opinions. ] (]) 21:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Changing proposals == | |||
===Decision mechanism=== | |||
I've been thinking further about how we can actually bring about a decision here. On the one hand, we have a very clear mandate that this should not again become a "vote", with all the block voting effects and the type of dynamics we saw in the Greece poll and elsewhere. That's the íntention behind Bainer's proposal. So, theoretically, one way out would be if we just left it to the referee-admins to act as content-arbitrators, i.e. assess the soundness of our arguments, purely on the basis of their own personal judgment. However, the remedies also say that the referees ought to be assessing not just arguments, but "consensus". So, they will probably not feel confident simply "judging" things, but will want to see a consensus formed among others. But how can they assess consensus if we don't previously have a stage where we collect people saying "yes, I agree with X", i.e. giving vote-like statements? But once we allow that, how do we prevent yet new floods of people coming in with stereotyped "agree with X"/"as per Y" statements based not on an independent assessment of the arguments but on pre-existing political motivations? | |||
Just to make this clear. I thought it was before, but apparently not. | |||
I believe the only workable solution is to clearly separate the roles of participants with pre-existing involvement in the debate on the one hand, and outside uninvolved observers on the other. This means: we (people with previous involvement in related disputes, active participants in the Arbcom case, and editors with known affiliations with the nationalities in question) should only act in the presentation and documentation of the proposals and arguments. Then, in a separate step, we should have a stage where ''other'' people should be invited to say: "yes, I'm more convinced by X than by Y". But that role should be restricted to previously uninvolved editors. I'd say, we could set a condition like that they should be established editors (with minimum X edits before the beginning of this process), uninvolved in the dispute, and not from one of the ethnic groups involved. Their "!votes" would then serve as a neutral measurement of how convincing our arguments are. | |||
'''Do not change any part of any of the proposals' wordings. At all.''' (obvious typographical errors are of course exempt) | |||
Would that be acceptable? ] ] 13:55, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I'm thinking, we have each interested person post in their own section on some subpage, and say "This is what I think, and this is why I think it." Enforce a limit on length, say, 2000 or 2500 words per person or something, and move all discussion to the talk page of that page, kind of like the /evidence page is on an Arbitration case, but allowing for more personal opinion/analysis. By disallowing ''direct'' replies on the page itself, it would be much easier for the referees to determine consensus and the strength of the arguments. ]]] 14:11, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: But the practical consideration is, if we really want to recruit more outside uninvolved people to chime in, we can't really expect each of them to write 2000-words essays on each of the questions. Also, there are only so many ways of re-stating the same arguments; we don't really want twenty people to say the same things in different words, just in order to prove that each of them has independently formed their opinion. There is, at some point, a legitimate place for a person to just say: "I'm for X, as per Y's arguments" (roughly in an RfC-"endorsement" style). Such endorsements provide the visible demonstration that somebody's arguments have convinced somebody else. Only, we don't want people with preconceived, external political motives doing that; "endorsements" can only fulfill their legitimate role of validating an argument if they come from outside. ] ] 17:26, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
If you simply must make a change, post to the appropriate talk page first, but please note that it is extremely unlikely that any significant changes will be made, under any circumstances. You had two weeks to make changes, so if you didn't do it then, don't do it now. People who endorse a proposal want what they are endorsing to remain consistent. Thanks, ]]] 05:09, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::(ec) I'm still uncomfortable with the voting aspect of Future's proposal. There's just no way to keep the "drive by" and "bloc voting" aspects out of it. I like J.delanoy's limited length discussion without direct commenting. More like legal briefs. It may also keep anything heated from developing. "Consensus" is not a majority vote, but a coming together. So perhaps the next step after writing the briefs could be for someone less involved to read all the statements and write out a "this is what everyone agrees on" statement based on the briefs. Then the contentious matters will be clearly focused for either further discussion or clarification. More consensus might develop out of that process. In the end, there will be things that are still not agreed upon. Those are the matters that the arbitrators will simply have to adjudicate. (But we knew that from the beginning.) (] (]) 17:34, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::: I'm happy with them adjudicating – if they will be willing to do that. I'm not so optimistic about consensus developing, ''among those of us who are already parties to the dispute''. In core questions, we already know it just won't happen. As for keeping the block voting out, it can be done to a large degree if we can exclude Greek and Macedonian voters. To forestall an objection: that doesn't exclude them from the process; I'm just saying they (and we) shouldn't be the ones who endorse, but the ones who put their arguments up for the test of endorsement by others. ] ] 17:40, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Now I've got to sound a bit like Tasos. Who is Greek? Who is Macedonian? And is it really possible (or realistic or "right") to exclude them? I think that we need a very strong neutral clerk involved. The ArbCom process seemed pretty clearly focused--stick to policy and don't drag anything else into the arena. If we have a strong neutral clerk, then he/she can be the gatekeeper for all comments. When a comment is not focused on policy and strays into politics, they can delete the comment or move it into a separate corral for "irrelevant" matters that are ignored. I don't think that any of the involved editors should perform that task. (] (]) 17:51, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::::::Ah, I misread your comment, Future. You weren't talking about excluding them from "filing a brief", but from the endorsement process. I still think that's problematic for technical reasons since there is a very large Greek diaspora (and virtually no Macedonian one). (] (]) 17:53, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:Thank you for clarifying this for us. I understand now that the only parts to be edited are the endorsements, with everything else remaining the same. In light of the fact that we've recently invited many people to comment on these proposals, I would like to ask how they are supposed to voice their disagreement with the policy rationale of specific proposals. I apologise if my edits were seen by some as disruptive. I look forward to a fruitful cooperation with everyone in this case. --] (]) 08:33, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
So, here's a more complete proposal on how to proceed to keep the process focussed, trying to bring together the best aspects of what each of us has proposed so far: | |||
* We stick with the subpage structure I started creating this morning. | |||
* On each subpage, active participants are welcome to file a concrete proposal, roughly like the ones I added already in some cases. | |||
* For each proposal, the proposer adds a summary rationale explaining how it is based on policy, linking to evidence data and so on. These should be restricted in size. That would correspond to what I think you were describing with your "like a legal brief", and what Radjenef meant with "like the evidence page". | |||
* Other editors are free to "co-sponsor" such a proposal, by adding their own supporting argument to it, but those secondary statements should be even more narrowly restricted in size, and it should only be done if the co-sponsoring statement actually contains something new. (No mere "me too" statements at that stage.) | |||
* (Possibly:) Opposing participants are allowed to add a ''very brief'' summary statement against each proposal. The number and size of such counter-statements should be strictly limited. | |||
* From that point onwards, threaded discussion will be handed off elsewhere, to a dedicated section of a discussion page which will be linked to from the proposal for convenience. | |||
* Finally, there will be an endorsement section for each proposal, roughly like on a user RfC, with a list of outside editors signing that they find the argument convincing. This section may only be used by established and previously uninvolved editors (and ideally, excluding editors from the nationalities involved). | |||
* The referees will have the task of judging the soundness of the arguments presented in the initial statements, aided in their assessment by the poll-like effect of the outside endorsements (but not reduced to counting votes). | |||
Thoughts? ] ] 18:12, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== IP editors == | |||
:Two other issues: we need to reduce as much as possible the scope for disruption (e.g. of the sort that might result from off-wiki canvassing) and we need to be as transparent as possible. To those ends, I suggest: | |||
:Also, I haven't talked to the other referees, but I think that we should disallow IPs from endorsing proposals. This is contentious enough without IPs making it even worse. If you are really serious about helping to solve this, I think you can create an account. ]]] 05:13, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:* IP editors and editors with accounts created before the end of the ARBMAC2 case should be (politely) excluded from participation. I am somewhat uneasy about allowing existing SPAs to participate, but excluding them probably isn't practical. | |||
::To me, this is an absolute no-brainer. If we're going to forbid SPAs, how can we possibly allow IPs, which have even less status than SPAs? Such IPs are furthermore just as single-purpose as SPAs. ] ] 05:17, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:* Participants in this process should publicly state at the outset, for the record, their nationality and whether they have any affiliations to the disputing countries or nationalities, e.g. ''] {{flag|UK}} (no Macedonian or Greek connections)''. By being open about our affiliations, we can better address the issue of editorial blocs identified by the Arbcom . -- ] (]) 19:12, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::but that's catch 22. If you care enough to create an account, you can't contribute because you're an SPA. I didn't set up an account because I saw how you treated a guy you called an SPA - deleted his words and blocked him. So what is the casual reader, who sees something they know is wrong to do? <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 05:31, June 27, 2009 </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> | |||
:::: why is Misplaced Pages suddenly only the domain of old boys anyway? What happened to "anyone can edit"? Heimstern, until such time as IPs are banned from discussing, please reinstate my opinions on the page you protected. I'd also like an apology from the guy who deleted my words without referee consensus.<small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 05:33, June 27, 2009 </span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> | |||
:::::People who are brand new to Misplaced Pages don't know what an SPA is or that things operate by consensus. If you'd like to participate in the discussion, you are welcome to use your account. If you've already had your say under that name, please remember that we are not counting votes here - saying the same thing twice will not make your support count any more. ] <sup>]</sup> 05:42, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Hi Shell, I appreciate your sentiment. Unfortunately that is NOT the case. I posted one opinion supporting proposal C for what Skopje should be referred to in articles about Greece, and inexplicably had my comments deleted. Another user Orion500? had their support of proposal C also deleted. He's now been blocked and topic banned. There is no statement on the page that new users and IPs cannot contribute to the discussion, so what are we supposed to do? It is quite obvious those that support proposal A are prepared to delete arguments to make sure their POV is pushed through. I also had my comments deleted by J.delanoy of another users talk page. The level of hostility and threat to new users who may be very concerned about what the encyclopedia says is quite extreme and bizzarre. So again, I appreciate you sentiments but invite you to see the history pages of the proposal to discover the reality. | |||
:To the anonymous IP. It doesn't matter which side of the issue you are on. It was decided early on in this process that anonymous IPs, single-purpose accounts, and new accounts would be excluded from the process. This isn't a vote, so numbers of endorsements will not decide the issue. (](]) 14:19, 27 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::Taivo if that is the case then why was the page not semi protected for just established users? Why were there no instructions saying this? How is a new user to know they are not welcome to edit, if the edit button works and they CAN post a comment. How are we to know?? It seems to me that you create your own mess by saying one thing and doing the other. Did you not read Shells comment above? He/she welcomed new user comments but you are saying no. Furthermore J.deloney raised the issue suggesting that IP users be not allowed to contribute INDICATING that at this moment THEY ARE. You do not suggest a change that is already policy. | |||
Therefore, the deletion of my comments on the page should be reverted if there is to be any consistency, consensus and no hypocrisy. | |||
::::Look, you obviously are familiar with Misplaced Pages, so lets drop the disruption. If you'd like to participate, you know how to do so. If you don't want to use your existing account, there's nothing any of us can do for you. If you are Orion500, I would suggest that this is a poor direction to take and will only lead to trouble. ] <sup>]</sup> 15:16, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:All right then. Until the other two referees get on to say what their opinions are, you may consider all IPs banned from endorsing proposals. ]]] 15:14, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I agree, IPs and most likely any brand new accounts will be unable to participate. Otherwise its just too open to gaming. ] <sup>]</sup> 15:22, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I agree with your call to ban IP editors. May I suggest, however, a way of appeasing the IP editors themselves? If one of them has an '''exceptionally''' brilliant policy-based idea in support of one of the proposals, they can contact one of the regular editors (probably one who endorses the same proposal) and ask them to add it to their rationale. Alternatively, we could create a sandbox area for IP editors, from which we could draw ideas, even though they wouldn't be participating in any of the regular discussion. --] (]) 10:41, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I agree with the ban of IP editors on the endorsement side - why don't we let IPs comment on the talkpage if they have a good idea? ] (]) 11:02, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::That seems a reasonable compromise. Though judging from the performance of the IP editors so far, I suspect we're not likely to see anything particularly constructive. -- ] (]) 11:04, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Did we forget something? == | |||
My understanding of the process is that it goes like this: | |||
# we present the info in that page that all people can agree to (consensus) and leave out the decision on which clearly we cannot agree. | |||
# present alternatives | |||
# some uninvolved users/admins (but not SPA or new accounts) will make the decision.<br> | |||
Notice that in all this process there's no need to present which side you are on or your nationality... ] 07:04, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: But this leaves only two categories of consensus levels: either full consensus across ''all'' participants (something that rarely happens anywhere in the wiki world, and is unlikely to happen for more than a few minor aspects here), or apparent complete standstill and relegation to "stalemate resolution". But I expect the referees won't be willing to do that. They are supposed to resort to their own judgment as "stalemate resolution" only as a last resort. First of all they are supposed to read "consensus", and that certainly includes wiki-style "rough consensus", so we need to find ways to clearly document the existence of such, including the opinions of neutral outside observers who won't have the time and energy to engage in a sustained discussion effort and tinkering with proposals, but will nevertheless be crucial to provide us with the sort of outside sanity check we need to break the deadlocks. ] ] 07:38, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: (moved comment) I don't think this (outside endorsements) is a wise addition to the process. It is just a "vote" with a different name and will be subject to the same problems encountered at ] with the infamous poll. There is no way to ensure that "endorsers" are truly "uninvolved" or not motivated by nationality or politics. I also don't see how it might help well-informed arbitrators who will be adjudicating the final decision anyway. I'm just distrustful of our (or a clerk's) ability to screen every passing endorser for prior neutrality or uninvolvement. Watching the stream of new accounts and single-purpose accounts line up to make their voice heard at ARBMAC2, I'm leery of opening the doors to anyone who wanders by. (] (]) 07:09, 13 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::But there ''are'' things which everyone will agree on that we can mark as "already has consensus" (the names of ], for example). Consensus can actually be determined without voting. For example, one editor can write a list of things which he or she thinks everyone will agree on and post it in a section called "Consensus". If anyone doesn't agree, they simply say so. If no one says anything, or if only one person objects to this or that, then we have a wiki consensus. Consensus isn't about a majority, but an overwhelming majority, so there's no need to "vote". I think that even right now, someone who's been involved in this discussion for a while could already write a list of things that everyone agrees on already. (This is a key early step in all books on negotiating and in business negotiating.) Then we focus on discussing just the non-consensus issues. (] (]) 13:14, 13 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::: sure, that can be done. ] ] 13:31, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::: I've started doing something with the {{tl|Resolved issues}} template that Shadomorph dug up somewhere. ] ] 17:49, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I agree with what Taivo says, I think that voting and commenting leads to division, let's try to buld a consensus about the basic facts first without voting by keeping the article like a normal article (without comments and sign ups inside it) ] 17:26, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
So, I take it the consensus for the moment is we will have no "vote-like" elements at all, at least for the time being? I guess that's okay for the initial phase at least. We can still introduce a more poll-like phase at a later stage, if it turns out to be necessary, and concentrate on more pure discussion style work first. ] ] 17:47, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Kwamikagami, with his endorsement post at the Greece-related page , draws our attention to one topic domain that we seem to have forgotten in this RfC setup: the naming of languages and ethnicities. While in most domains this is relatively straightforward, and I trust we can decide many things involving article naming issues in analogy with whatever gets decided for the geographical terms, there are a few notorious problems in certain corners – the one Kwami mentions, about how to call the Macedonian language in contexts of giving place name variants of Greek places, has indeed been a long-standing bone of contention. | |||
=== "Arguing for the enemy" === | |||
As the proposals and rationales have been growing on some sub-pages, I'm beginning to feel that I find some of the arguments adduced for the "opposing" proposals much more worth taking seriously than others, and a few red herrings are finding their way into the pages. Do you guys think we could find a way to edit each other's proposed rationales together, with a view not to ''defeating'' the "other side's" argument, but first of all with a view to condensing it into those arguments that we all agree are the most valid? It would be a lot more efficient for later stages of the process if in some place we had a "cleaned-up" view of the argumentation, where each proposal is supported only by those arguments about which we can all agree they are the ones that are worth taking seriously, free of obvious red herrings or false factual premises and so on. ] ] 18:01, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
I had some ideas for guidelines covering these things, in one of my earlier drafts (see ]). What do people think, should we or can we still introduce these topics in the process here? ] ] 06:41, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Tagging articles == | |||
:I'd have no problem with introducing these topics. I don't know about what the others think... --] (]) 08:01, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Somehow those who want to participate will have to be directed to here. See ]. This has to be done first for the sake of fairness. ] <sup><font size="-2">]</font></sup> 12:33, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::No objection to raising the topic. I think the guidelines to which Fut. Perf. links above probably represent the best solution. <span style="font-family:Gill Sans;">]''']''']</span> 14:10, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I agree with Andrew. -- ] (]) 14:14, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Future's verbage looks good to me. But it needs a tweak to distinguish Macedonian Slavic from Macedonian Greek. The Greek dialect should never be left as just "Macedonian" to avoid confusion. Either "Macedonian Greek" or "Macedonian dialect of Greek". From what I understand there is no linguistic distinction between the Greek dialects (or, rather, subdialects) of Greek Macedonia and Macedonia, so there should be no need to distinguish between "Greek Macedonia Greek" and "Macedonian Greek". The latter term should be sufficient to discuss all issues related to this northern dialect of Greek. (] (]) 14:25, 27 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::::: Perhaps, if the refs agree, we can just put a draft along the above lines to another subpage and invite tweaks and informal comments on it in parallel to the current process. Since the draft mostly describes existing, relatively stable practice, and nobody has so far demanded any radical changes of status quo such as major page moves, this might work without the formal trouble of competing "proposals" and polling. But it would still be useful to have it documented and sealed as being a widely agreed-upon consensus so it could then be attached to the final set of guidelines. As far as I'm aware, the only real issue with those conventions has been the use of "]" in context related to the linguistic minority in Greece (and the dispute in the past has been less over the wording in the text itself, than over where that link should redirect to.) ] ] 14:53, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::Relevant links would include ] and ]. As for wording, I prefer "]" or "local Slavic", because my first reading of "Macedonian Slavic" would be the language of ROM, which is not necessarily what is meant: It would not clear that ''Костур'' is the local Slavic name of ] rather than what we'd find on a map published by the govt. of the ROM, which given current politics is not helpful. However, if the wording is Fut.Perf's "Macedonian and Bulgarian", although it's still not clear to me that it's the traditional local name, at least the reader wouldn't worry about it being part of a current political battle between Skopje and Athens. | |||
: I have so far given notice at WP:AN, the ethnic conflicts noticeboard, ] and ]. I'm not really convinced we should notify all the talk pages of all the hundreds of articles where the country is mentioned in passing, that's just not very practical. But a few of the most pertinent sub-articles would probably be good, that's true. ] ] 12:53, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Tagging is a remedy, so its implementation is mandatory. Here is my suggestion: | |||
{{Consensus|This article is currently subject to ''']''', as laid out in the final decision of the "Macedonia 2" arbitration case. If you are a new editor, or an editor unfamiliar with the situation, please follow the guidelines laid out in the above link. If you are unsure if your edit is appropriate, discuss it on this talk page first. | |||
::::::Neither the Greek nor the Slavic should be left to just "Macedonian". IMO, the Slavic should not be called just "Slavic" either (which we had at one point), since that implies that it's also the Polish & Russian name/pronunciation. ] (]) 19:26, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
A discussion to consider the preferred current and historical names for the four entities known as "Macedonia" has been opened at ].}} | |||
~ ] <sup><font size="-2">]</font></sup> 12:58, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: |
::::::: Perhaps we should move this discussion to a more specialised place? As a brief response, I find "local Slavic" only justified where we deal with a distinctively local dialect form. But ''Kostur'' is, for all I know, the standard form in both literary Macedonian and Bulgarian, and it may or may not be identical in the local dialect. ] ] 19:32, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | ||
:: About your tag draft, I don't think it's very productive to link the newbies to the arbitration case first thing, especially not through a cryptic abbreviation like "1RR". In any case, I'd prefer to use such tags only once a conflict or edit-warring danger has materialised on a given article. Let's keep the 1RR warning and the discussion notification separate issues. ] ] 13:07, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Point taken for "local". But since "Greek Slavic" includes both Macedonian and Bulgarian, I think it would make the situation fairly clear, and not raise concerns about a possible political fight. ] (]) 19:41, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::After a week it would be a good time to update the disputed title template at ] to link here.] <sup>]</sup> 13:20, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: Except that "Greek Slavic" would be a highly idiosyncratic usage of ours. I don't think it's used much anywhere else. "Macedonian Slavic" works better and is also more precise – there are also other forms of Slavic in Greece, most notably the Bulgarian of the ]. ] ] 19:48, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::: Bulgarian and FYROMacedonian Slavic are the same thing... why so much hassle? Call it Bulgarian and end of the matter. ] (]) 14:32, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::: In my view, “Macedonian Slavic” is better than “Greek Slavic” in the same way that London French would be better than English French, should the situation arise. To call the Slavic language or ethnicity simply “Macedonian” in a context such as the Greek administrative district of Macedonia is to deny the majority of the Greek population of Hellenic Macedonia to identify with their region, ethnic background and indeed with their own history (http://macedonia-evidence.org/obama-letter.html). Of the two varieties of Slavic idioms (languages), that of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and that of Hellenic Macedonia, I think there should be a distinction made where it matters, when relevant by qualifying it as the “local Macedonian Slavic”. More difficult is the issue of ethnicities, as it is inconceivable that the Macedonian ethnicity can jump from one people (ancient and modern Macedonians of Greece) to another people (modern Slavs of the Republic of Macedonia) but presumably some formula has to be found to describe the ethnicity of the Republic of Macedonia’s Slavs that remains an unresolved issue not just for Misplaced Pages.] (]) 04:38, 4 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
Could we have a view from the referees perhaps, on whether and how to integrate this issue in the further process? Thanks, --] ] 07:53, 29 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:My question here is to what extent this is a significant dispute? Can someone summarise the various positions if there's a row about it, or can this be fixed in a relatively calm manner? ] (]) 07:09, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: I'll try. As you are probably aware, Macedonian ethnogenesis is a rather recent spin-off from what was earlier – until the early-to-mid 20th century – predominantly identified as Bulgarian. The tricky thing is how to deal with the people and the language in geographical contexts that were never politically under the control of the official Yugoslav Macedonian state, the main driving force behind this ethnogenesis. This goes particularly for the minority in Greece. All except the most intransigent nationalists on the Macedonian side agree that we must be careful about labelling the people there ethnic Macedonians, because only a minority within the minority politically identifies as such; others today self-identify as Slavic-speaking Greeks. By consequence, not all of the speakers in Greece would identify their language as "Macedonian". Nevertheless, their dialects are treated as part of Macedonian by the overwhelming majority of present-day international scholarship. The POV issue here comes both from Greek editors, who will of course again oppose the use of "Macedonian" either as an ethnonym or as a language name in these contexts, and from Bulgarian editors, who demand that the older identification of those dialects as Bulgarian be given equal status with any other. In my personal view, that means giving ] to what is ''today'' internationally a fringe position, but Bulgarian editors never tire of quoting 19th-century and early-20th-century sources describing local people as Bulgarians and making a big fuss over it. We once determine "]" as a viable solution, but then the dispute went on about where to link that. Currently it's a section redirect to a part of the ] article. ] ] 08:32, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Thanks for the summary. To what extent do editors here think the results of a discussion on this topic would be influenced by the proposals currently under discussion? I'm asking to try to see how we might organise another discussion, whether to run it in parallel, or if it will be dependent on the current issues, and can that discussion finish ''after'' these polls are closed in approximately 10 days. ] (]) 11:38, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::It seems that the players change for this discussion--rather than Greek vs Macedonian, we have Macedonian vs Bulgarian. I may be simplifying the issue too much. It also doesn't seem like the proposals on the table will affect the language name issue. A new discussion might be in order. (] (]) 12:45, 1 July 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::: I'd say it's largely independent. The first set of proposals only covers the disambiguation technicalities for page titles. If someone had wanted to rename the ] article, that ought to have been done within the same framework as the present poll, but I don't think that's on the agenda. The new proposal mostly codifies uncontentious material about wording conventions in article text – most of it is quite obvious and we need it only so we will have something solid to point the unavoidable edit-warriors to. The only potentially contentious bit is the one about the Slavic-speakers in Greece. My suggestion is we start a discussion in parallel and just see where the next few days lead us. I am hoping we can settle that part just by discussing and tweaking a common guideline draft together, rather than having to go through a formal choice between competing proposals. ] ] 14:22, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Fine. My suggestion is to begin a discussion on a new set of pages - mark these pages with the {{tl|underconstruction}} tag, link them from the discussion sidebar and do not include endorsement sections. Let the discussion run its course over there - if it finishes later than this current batch, we'll decide what to do then. I suspect that we can close the current batch, and let the new discussion run over a bit if it is needed, since the issues are not conflated. We'll check this with Arbcom nearer the time if this becomes a likely scenario. ] (]) 15:28, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::: Okay. Draft now at ], for lack of a better title. ] ] 16:11, 1 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
== The Future of the internet == | |||
:::::Indeed. The kind of "outsiders" we want are people who actually understand wiki policy and its application, not newbies who may or may not have simply read the policy pages. ''']]''' 13:36, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
I suggest you read the book "the future of the Internet" if you think banning new members and nonaccoubt holders from contributing to a sensitive discussion, important to many outside the Wiki community, is in any way consistent with the values Wikipefia and the Internet itself were built on. For the record I am NOT Odin5000 but after reading how he was treated there is no way I'll set up an account. The inconsistency and double standards are mind-boggling. | |||
::::::Very much so. The tag as it stands right now would simply direct all the Macedonia-obsessed drive-by editors to this discussion, with predictably disruptive results. -- ] (]) 19:14, 12 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
I do not understand why this statement: | |||
::'''Absolutely must be this option: | |||
::a)maintains NPOV | |||
::b)is consistent with the official UN name | |||
::c)reflecting what Greeks call a place should be a no-brainer for Greek relate articles. Would we refer to Canada as being "western" as per Greenland perception, instead of "northern" in articles about USA?''' | |||
is so dangerous it must be deleted with such fervor and energy. Are people so afraid of debate? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 18:01, 27 June 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:::::::Agreed. ] (]) 13:31, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: |
:The fundamental problem is that your a) is mutually exclusive with your b) and your c). That's been fairly well demonstrated time and time again. (] (]) 18:37, 27 June 2009 (UTC)) | ||
::Anon IP is also only looking at small slice of why Odin got into trouble. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 18:39, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I'd also suggest if you are a new user to start with articles that need improvement, there are many things that need change that are not controversial at all, don't jump in debates that involve Misplaced Pages policies if you don't even know what those policies are -- that's what's called "common sense". ] 18:56, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
=== User talk template === | |||
::Odin5000 was banned because he was a disruptive single-purpose account whose only purpose was to attempt to artificially shift the appearance of consensus. At first, I was going to let him voice his opinion, but his combative response when I told him to shorten his 1300-byte rants (which, I noticed at that point, he copy/pasted to each page, showing that he was not interested in discussion, but rather only in pushing his version of ]). That is why he was banned from the discussion. He was blocked from editing ''period'' when he blatantly refused to abide by the ban, or at least to go through the proper channels to appeal it. He certainly did know what ] was, in any case. | |||
Maybe it's better to not tag the articles, but notify individual editors through a user talk warning when there's a danger of edit warring. I created a template {{tl|uw-1rrMac}}. It currently says the following: | |||
::At this point, I have no plans to apply a universal ban to all new accounts, but I can assure you that if a new account refuses to listen to me when I tell them they need to do something such as shorten their comment, they will end up banned, and their endorsements will be reverted. Also note that this discussion is emphatically not a vote, and sheer force of numbers will not influence the final decision. It is far better to make a clear, '''concise''', and ] endorsement for each issue than it is to recruit hundreds of people from some forum to come and copy/paste the same boilerplate text to every page one hundred times. | |||
{{uw | |||
::I (and I assume the other referees as well) am not interested in why a particular choice is "right" or "wrong", because everyone has different opinions on what is right and wrong. I am interested in why a particular choice meets or does not meet the relevant policies and guidelines, specifically ] and ]. Any endorsement that does not include references to these two policies, or at least a reference to one of the points listed in the "rationale" for each proposal, will almost certainly be ignored. ]]] 15:09, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
|level=1 | |||
|Please do not ] over the terminology used to refer to ]{{#if:Example|, as you did at ]}}. Misplaced Pages has a policy of using the most ] generally used in English to refer a country, and/or the name that a country chooses to use for itself, no matter if these names are politically acceptable to third parties (see the ]). The ] has ] that all edits affecting the Macedonia naming issue are subject to a '''one-revert restriction''': no editor is allowed to undo another editor's action more than once within 24 hours. In cases where a binding consensus guideline has been reached, editors restoring the consensus version are not subject to this restriction. {{#ifeq:|discuss|A general guide on how to apply the naming rules to Macedonia topics is currently being developed at ]. }}{{#ifeq:|nofyrom| There is already a firm consensus that the abbreviation "FYROM" should not be used to refer to the country. }}{{#ifeq:|noformer| There is already a firm consensus that the provisional UN term "the former Yugoslav Republic..." should not generally be used in Misplaced Pages, with minor exceptions in some articles. }}{{#ifeq:|noskopje| There is already a firm consensus that non-standard terms for the country, such as "Skopje", "Fyrom" or "Vardarska", cannot be used in Misplaced Pages. }} | |||
}} | |||
There are additional parameters that can be used to warn against particular types of anti-consensus edits, such as inserting abbreviated "FYROM". Optionally, it can also include a link to this discussion (that would be especially useful when posted to an established editor who might have something legitimate to contribute here, but I wouldn't normally use it for hit-and-run IPs.) ] ] 12:14, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Question regarding possible different usage of names used in other sources == | |||
:Actually the tag (which is required by ArbCom anyway) which you developed above was fine except for the last sentence about the ArbCom and this discussion. Delete the last sentence with the link and I don't have any objections to it. The warning is a good idea, too, but again, leave the link to this discussion out of it. (] (]) 12:42, 14 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
This might be difficult to find an answer to, and that might be one reason why I'm not sure it has been addressed before. In general, any news piece in particular, and sometimes books and journal articles, will use the full "identifying" name of the subject only once or so in the very beginning of the piece, and then use an abbreviated name in the bulk of the content. Thus, for instance, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), is generally only given that or a similar identification once in the beginning of the piece, and becomes Senator Reid or something equivalent in almost all later references. In cases like that, I would have to say that the usage which would be most relevant to us would be the name used the first time in the relevant source, Granted, the specific example may not be the best, but President Cleveland and other historical individuals will often have the same conventions apply to them. Has anyone checked to examine if there is a significant differnce between the first "identifying" name or description of the country in other sources and the more frequent "regular" usage thereafter? <br> | |||
::Yeah, one would assume that an established editor with something legitimate to contribute wouldn't be edit-warring over the name. Sure, there are a number of reasons for which they might make a single revert, or they could be reverting vandalism, but those who need to be told not to edit-war by the template most likely won't be such users. ''']]''' 13:02, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
I know this is a kind of strange request, but I hope it's clear enough. ] (]) 18:26, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: Well, uhm, it seems such a remote possibility, but hard as it is to believe, I've heard rumours that Macedonia revert wars between established users have on some rare occasions happened. You and me and everybody else here present would of course never have had anything to do with that. ] ] 13:10, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Lol, point taken, but I meant in future (too tired for a pun). Humour me: can you think of any user, existing or hypothetical, whom you would need to tell not to edit-war about this with the above template, and would expect to contribute constructively here? That's different to simply informing an established editor, who may have unknowingly involved themselves in this mess, of the centralised discussion. You don't need a template for that. ''']]''' 14:15, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: I'm not sure what you mean: is your question how this effect would have affected the statistics we used as evidence for the question of the page title? I can only answer about those parts I did, of course. Where I used Google searches, I generally counted the first occurrence of the string "Macedonia" that was displayed in the google list for each document – that means it would generally be the first in each document, thus the one most likely to have the longer formal phrase, if such was used. In the corpus searches, I used an exhaustive list of all occurrences in each text, but made no systematic distinction between first and subsequent occurrences within one text. – Or is your question whether we should do something similar ourselves? Well, yes, obviously: if and where we decide to use a longer formal phrase either in a page title or on the first occasion within one article, we should of course be free to use the shorter version subsequently. That's what Proposal A in the "other articles" page provides for. As you quite rightly observe, it's just what natural good writing usually does as a matter of common sense. ] ] 19:09, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Disagree on comment about scholarly usage and evidence == | |||
::Basically, I guess I'm saying that, at least in my eyes, we should probably count the first mention of a name or "identifier" in each of these other sources as the one relevant to the "count" for determining the "most common usage". So, if a source were to call the country "the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" by that name in the first refernce to the country, regardless of whatever name they use thereafter in subsequent mentions, it seems to me that the name that should be "counted" as being the one that source used should in determining the "most common usage" should be the FYROM, in this instance. Similarly if they used for the first reference to the country the name "Macedonia (Skopje)", "Republic of Macedonia", or some other name, that name should be counted as being the name used when determining what is the "most common usage" elsewhere. We don't call the article on the ] US or USA, even though both of those abbreviations are used more commonly, and I think it would probably be best to try to observe the same principles here as well. ] (]) 19:40, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I don't agree, and your example with ] can be used against your argument, we don't use "United States of America" either. Actually, I bet many example of FYROM use are only mentions that this is the UN name, if in the rest of the article is called Macedonia than that's the name that is relevant. ] 20:02, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::You may have a point regarding the reference to the UN use and the name FYROM, and, personally, I would think counting all UN or related publications as a single "usage", and count any documents from any other specific governmental entities, NGOs, or similar organizations as only one "usage" per entity as well. But it seems to me that whatever name (or short description, like "the country of Macedonia") other sources use to identify the country for their readers in the beginning of the material specifically regarding the country should be relevant to our determining most common usage, because that is, really, the "name" they are giving it to their readers. From that point on, once the identity of the subject is established, sources often use any number of terms for several entities. ] (]) 20:15, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Well the UN name has a special status, remember that is not even considered a formal name of the republic but rather a temporary reference.] 20:21, 27 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::In the best of all possible worlds, someone would be paid to carry on the research that John Carter suggests in order to come up with an up-to-the-minute accurate appraisal of what English usage actually is based on all possible sources. But we're all volunteers here. We just have to make do with sampling of reliable sources and interpretation of the results. (] (]) 01:27, 28 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::::::I gather from the above that the answer is "No, this has not been done." Without such information, however, the samplings are at least somewhat suspect and makes their reliability and usefulness suspect as well. ] (]) 17:23, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::: Two things: first, as I said, for the Google searches, it in fact was done implicitly, because the counting was based on the first occurrence in each document, so if the document used "f.Y." in that position, the count would have likely picked it up. And in the American corpus, the total count of "f.Y." tokens, no matter in what text position, was so small it would not have made a significant effect anyway. Second, we are no longer focussing on the question whether "M.", "R.o.M." or "f.Y.R..." is the most common appellation of the country anyway – nobody has ever seriously claimed that anything is more common than plain "M.". The only matter that is relevant for the choice between A and B/C is the other way round: which referent is the most commonly meant when the name "M." is used? For that question the occurrence or non-occurrence of "f.Y.R." is of hardly any relevance. ] ] 18:52, 28 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::The input on the Google searches is very appreciated. And I wasn't using FYROM as anything other than an example anyway, so don't lay too much emphasis on that. One other question which does come to mind, which might be a minor one, is that I think maps might not be particularly useful in determining whether ] or ] would be the preferred choice. Most of the maps I've ever seen make it fairly clear that differently "colored" sections are different countries, as are the areas within the heavier outlines, and I think just about everyone with even an elementary school education would implicitly recognize that the separated area called "Macedonia" on the map is the "country of Macedonia". So simply verbally referring to the country as "Macedonia" when the basically universally understood setup of the map makes it clear that it is a country, making the use of the word "country" or its equivalent redunndant, would be implicitly understood by pretty much everyone. On that basis, without any more or less independent print content in the same source I would think that maybe maps should be counted as being at best "neutral" regarding which is the preferred name. Even if there is additional text, it might be subject to internal style guidelines of consistency of naming, so the text, if it existed, might not be particularly useful in that regard either. ] (]) 14:12, 29 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::: Let's put it this way: Maps don't tell us anything about whether some addition should be used for the purpose of disambiguation (because they don't have disambiguation needs like ours). They do tell us something about whether this or that version must be used or avoided for the sake of correctness. ] ] 15:04, 29 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== New page to examine == | |||
The comment about "scholarly usage uses Macedonia to name the ancient kingdom" is not referenced. The current "evidence" of this is based on JSTOR. JSTOR digitally archives journals dating back through the ''entire 20th century'' and generally does not contain the most recent 5-10 years of the journals it includes. Therefore the counts at JSTOR are skewed in favor of non-Republic uses of Macedonia because of the heavy inclusion of pre-1990 issues and the non-inclusion of the most recent issues. Better evidence of this is needed if this is going to be one of the "consensus" bullets. Right now, I do not agree with this point. (] (]) 22:56, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:Another problem I have with the comment about scholarly usage is that any scholar who works (or wants to work) in Greece, and wants official permission from the appropriate Greek government office to conduct their research, or gets funding from the Greek government or a Greek research institution, is going to be forced by that reality to use "former Yugoslav" in all their publications or else risk any possibility of working in Greece in the future. This reality would also skew the scholarly citations that might otherwise read simply "Macedonia". These two factors lead to the evidence for "Macedonia" usage among scholars being skewed. This is probably a minor bullet since scholars aren't going to come to Misplaced Pages for information anyway. I suggest that bullet be deleted because the information is not really verifiable. (] (]) 23:18, 12 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::The ancient kingdom is generally called Maceonia or Macedon in works by classical historians and classicists. I don't think this is controversial, but I could easily be wrong. ] (]) 04:33, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I suggest that assertions like this should be signed with the username of who added them. There are some other "facts" that I might be contested.] <sup>]</sup> 06:05, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::No, that's the worst idea, let's try to build a document that we all agree with not having different statement contested and commented over and over, that '''exactly''' why we don't sign them. ] 07:20, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Taivo, your second comment, I think, is over-dramatising it a bit, and I'm not certain it is true. In any case, the issue here was not so much what the scholars' preferred naming choice is when referring to the country, but what their most frequently meant referent is when they use the name. And the usage of "former Yugoslav" in academic sources is so relatively rare that it hardly distorts the statistics for that latter question. Also, there's little reason why the statistics should be much distorted particularly by people working in close academic contact with or dependence from Greece; we are not talking about specialised fields like archaeology here. – BTW, I have another google statistics for web content of .edu domains somewhere; will upload it on Monday. ] ] 06:29, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I added an additional element to that, while that might be true that's clearly driven by context, if somebody talks about "ancient Macedonia" they will use Macedonia without any reason to disambiguate the name, if somebody talks about "Macedonian soccer team" they don't have any reason to say "no, we are not talking about ancient Macedonia, we are talking about Former Yugoslav..." Context is clear in those scholarly works about ancient Macedonia, same for Misplaced Pages, we don't need to use "Ancient Macedonia" every time we refer to it in an article about history, just like we don't need to disambiguate Macedonia when we talk about clear current issues, there's no chance to confuse Macedonia soccer team with Ancient Macedonia soccer team for example... ] 17:35, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Agree with the contextualization. A sociology or political science or agricultural journal won't be talking about ancient Macedonia, just as an archeology journal won't be talking about modern Macedonia (much). (] (]) 19:52, 13 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
See ], for a proposal relating to adjectival issues surrounding reference to individuals in the country whose name is under dispute ] (]) 09:06, 3 July 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Nationality declarations == | |||
Some editors have suggested participants in this process might want to declare their own ethnic affiliations to avoid suspicions of block votes. The idea has met with some objections. Self-declarations that have already been listed (voluntarily) have been moved to ]. This will not form part of the final decision-making process. ] ] 06:55, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Macedonia term and modern usage - Compose of a neutral map == | |||
<s>: Yea, like moving them to a sub page is any different. Just adds one click. Oh and if we are keeping one POINTy discussion we have to keep the other response sections too with all of my responses. My comments cannot be summarized as "some objections", sorry. That declarations should be moved to each user's userspace where they belong. I have made every effort to begin here with a cool spirit. It is not me that began to poison that. I truly am sorry.] <sup>]</sup> 07:05, 13 June 2009 (UTC)</s> | |||
:: I want to move on.] <sup>]</sup> 07:08, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm glad you decided that, I was preparing a large plank to hit your head with... :D ] 07:09, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Macedonia first of all is an ancient kingdom and then everything else. To what you refer as macedonia boundaries in this page, you refer only the last 100 years. I guess we miss some thousands years of definition. This page lack of information, facts, and education. What you call boundaries of Macedonia todays, you refering to the Turkish Vilayet of Thessaloniki, Monastir and Kosovo. However due the Ottoman Empire period, nowhere is reffering to the area as macedonia. However Turks make their vilayets not according to geographic term or ethnic groups areas, but they make vilayets according to the mix of population, because this cause less revolts and plus the local nations fight each other. Also in all Ottoman censuses, nowhere is mentioned any "macedonian" nation. So where was located Macedonia the previous centuries? Macedonia due the Byzantine period referred to the Themas of Thessaloniki, Strymon and Macedonia (which located in todays East Macedonia and Thrace. Evidence of that we can find into the Bulgarian Nationalism in the first and second wars and in the some previous years. VMRO, an originally Bulgarian organization which claims Macedonia to unite it with rest Bulgaria, was set mainly by Bulgarians, which Greeks and Albanians join in common goals of sending Turks away. Bulgarians refer to Macedonia as it was the Themas of Thessaloniki, Strymon and Macedonia, plus the Shopluk area. In Byzantine period Macedonia Thema was in the area of Adrianople, which VMRO claims also as Macedonia (See Bulgarian Nationalism and maps related to VMRO). VMRO exist as organization till today with claims over Vardar region due the high Bulgarian population in Shopluk area. Also there is another new VMRO of Skopje origin created the last decade and is the current political party and government in Skopje (FYROM). For the record, Bulgarians and Slavs came in the region of Balkans in the 6th century AD according of what they say and their history. Macedonia thema was relocated in late Byzantine period for strategic reasons and mainly due of the came of Bulgarians and Slavs in the area of Balkans after the 6th century and the wars between Byzantines and Bulgarians. In Roman period Macedonia was a cross road and located mainly from Durres in Albania all across the "Egnatia Odos". Is impotant to mention that Skopje city is all that period, never was part of Macedonia. However the City of Skopje original name was Scupi (Roman), Shkupi(Illyrian) and proof of that is the even latest period of Ottoman Empire which the City of Skopje known as Uskup, the name Skopje is recently invented and name it. Before even the Roman period, was the Hellenistic Era, even in that time Skopje city was not into the Macedonia's borders. There are questions such, why Alexander the Great spread Hellenism and not Macedonian stuffs if he spoke another language? Why he order Athenean Greek ships to explore red sea and find a route to India? What for was the Oath of Alexander in Opis? Why left no evidence of "Macedonism" instead all left are Greek if Macedonia and Greece was two different things? Probably because Macedonia is nothing more than Greece. What about the Kingdoms after Alexander's the Great era? Why Alexander had Greek teacher and not macedonian if it's different language? How they communicate? And for those who believe that Philippos does not like rest Greeks, why he teach Greek to his son and why he had Greek name as he and his son? Let's go to some definition. In ancient Greece there was no single thing called Greece, but there was region cities/states which fought each other and make alliances for glory and power. Notable is the Peloponnesian war which keeps for 50 years between Sparta (Lakaidemonians) and Athena. Each side had other Greek region cities/states as their alliances. For example Macedonia was with Sparta and Thebes with Athena etc. However when the so called Barbarians came in the area, Greeks stop fight each other, they form all together an army and send away the Barbarians, after that they continue their internal wars. Alexander the Great wanted to lead a campaign to Asia against Persians, however the rest states doubt if he can lead that due his very young age. For this reason he had to proof his self against the opposite alliance and did it. Note that areas such Epirus or Sparta was not set foot because they came from same alliance. After he prove his self to the opposite alliance he recruit army, which not include Spartans as respect of their legend in their epis battles of Thermopulai against Persians. The main reason of Alexander the Great of his campaign to Asia, was to take revenge for all Greeks about the wars of the previous centuries and of course as dreamed a free world. Greeks are all those which came from same nation and share same language, gods, tradition and civilization. A state or kingdom does not make the nation. Nation is people of same origin, and doesn't matter if they have one or more states. Example is the Albanians, are spread in Albania, Kosovo and FYROM, they have two states, they mainly are spread to another one, but they are from one nation. About the Vergina Sun, the sun of Vergina has been found to various Greek locations and is a symbol that represents the Olympian Gods mainly, the four elements etc. Actually is a Greek symbol and have found centuries prior Alexander's era in various locations within the Ancient Greece regions cities/states. About the language, Makedonia, Alexandros and Filippos has a meaning in Greek language. What it means in Skopski language? In Skopski language all those words has no meaning and is some plain words. And if all is different with Macedonia and Greece, how can those words has meaning in Greek language but not in Skopski language? What about the Skopski names and traditions, language? How can be related with Macedonia? And if you tell me that all change from time to time. Still how can be everything completly change? And if we speak about the Slav-Macedonian. Slavs came after 6th AD in the region of Balkans, they came 1000 years after Alexander's the Great death. Bible reffers also to the Macedonia. There are more problem to consider about the new State of Macedonija, the 35% of the total population are Ethnic Albanians which Skopski republic want to name them "macedonians" by force. Is important to know that all those Albanians who makes the 35% of the total population of FYROM, they didn't migrate there recently, but this place was their natural home before even the slavs came to the region. We mention about the city of Skopje for it's original name etc. earlier. Also there are more minorities groups in FYROM who are not refer to their selfs as "macedonians" Another issue is the Shopluk area and the Bulgarian population. More notes, into the FYROM parliament there are two official languages, Albanian and Skopski, anyone can speak whatever want, also Bulgaria issue passports to Skopski people because it decides that Skopski people are Bulgarians, passport issued to them just by fill up one form in the Bulgarian embassy. Is very known that FYROM people can understand better the Bulgarian subtitles than the Serbian one. Other remarks, the VMRO never claimed the Greek name of Macedonia or Alexander the Great, but they claim territory as due the centuries they lived and spread to that territories as outcome of the wars between Greeks and Bulgarians and they call the region Macedonia, as they learned from Greeks when they appear in Balkans in the 6th century. Today Bulgarians has no intentions to the historic Macedonia, but they have to Vardarska region (FYROM) which Shopluk located and many Bulgarians live. After VMRO failed to accomplish it claims, Yugoslavia turn that propaganda into it's own favour by renain the regions to sosialistic internal republics with extension views against Bulgarians, Greeks and Albanians. This change happened due the communist changes, as same happened to Communist Russia at that time. After the second world war, a civil war comes in Greece between the communists and democratics. Communist take their supplies from Yugoslavia which aims to expend to Macedonia by using the communism as an excuse. Yugoslavians of the Vardarska commited genocide against Greeks and they mess into internal matters. Prior that it had followed the plan of Yugoslavias extension to Bulgaria, Greece and Albania, and for this reason happened the renames of the regions to socialistic republics, to fullfill that plans and to create claims from nowhere. However and this propaganda failed. After the break up of the Yugoslavia, the Republic of Macedonija (FYROM) born. The only way to survive while is landlocked, is to take from others and to invent history if wants to survive. The first part, of adopt Bulgarian language and tradition it was already there as also the name, as given to the communist era. Now that communism in Yugoslavia collapse and the break, the area was landlocked and with no major population. However the first President of Republic of Macedonija (FYROM), make it clear that they are Slavs and they have no connection with Alexander the Great and his Macedonia (check videos). We can continue very much more further. Mention also that in the Ottoman Empire, even in 18th century was newpapers in Greek language, with names "Pharos" and "Makedonia" ... based in Thessaloniki. | |||
::Future is a gentleman and he saved the day. ] <small>]</small> 07:11, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Good move. My motive in self-declaration was simply to clarify things. Many of the users I've encountered have decided (according to their various viewpoints) that I must be Turkish, or Armenian, or Greek, or... Rather than adopt the ], I thought I'd just say who I was for once and for all. ] (]) 12:55, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
'''<big>COMPOSE OF A NEUTRAL MAP</big> | |||
::::Thank you very much Kafka Liz for your elegant and principled answer. It really means a lot to me. Let's try to allow Lady ] to recuperate in the hopes that she returns some day to these pages. Hopefully when she gets better she can expel cynicism and bad faith once and for all. ] <small>]</small> 13:13, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Now let's back to wiki, a neutral map must not lay only to one side, but to show all sides. A neutral map must write in english or local language the name of the area according to what each state call the area. Then the map must write the names of the countries as it's nation wall it self and as others call the other nations. This will represent all sides and names in one and is very enough fair. Also the boundaries of Macedonia must be dotted, and within the dots and rest area to mention the name of the country, inside dots must be written all countries related to Macedonia region. Colors must be the main national colors, blue, red and green. Map must present also the ancient Macedonian kingdom and it's capital cities. Also additional can be a light line of the expand of Macedonia during Alexander's the Great time but remember that was a time of few years only according to the whole Macedonia's Kingdom period. This will be a very neutral map which will respect everyone.''' <small><span class="autosigned">— Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 23:35, 23 December 2011 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> | |||
:::::Thanks to everyone who's cooperating with this proposal, as transparency can only be a good thing in this process. I'm sure the appropriate conclusions can be drawn from refusals to be transparent. -- ] (]) 14:24, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== North Macedonia and naming convention == | |||
::::::Generally speaking, I'm not sure any conclusions can or should be drawn. Many users, myself included, are reluctant to disclose ''any'' personally identifying information online. My personal philosophy is that all necessary conclusions can be drawn from the content of a user's edits. For myself, though, I've grown tired of hiding or appearing to hide things. ] (]) 14:41, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Giving the current ], the premisses that underlined this discussion are about to change. It's important that a new standard is set and well visible to the community in order to stop infighting. That includes, in my opinion, getting a new page with the updated standard and replace every Macedonia-related current Name Convention warnings with the new one in order to avoid confusion. Do you pretend to update this page as well as ] or create new ones? - ] (]) 19:34, 7 February 2019 (UTC) | |||
:::::::Definitely agree with Liz. Now if we could move on from this and concentrate on the rest of the centralised discussion (the parts that will solve problems) that would be great :) ''']]''' 15:00, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Thank you Kafka Liz once more. Thank you BalkanFever. I expected no less from you and you did not disappoint me. As far as transparency, let's not confuse the issues. I consider myself to be exceedingly transparent. I edit under my real name. I consider this to be very transparent. Let's not confuse transparency with usage of anti-intellectual metrics to score cheap and silly conclusions. Other than that I echo BalkanFever: Let's move on. ] <small>]</small> 15:12, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::: Id rather we all go with ], we are all Greeks.] <sup>]</sup> | |||
:::::::::Sure, then we'll be free to construct fairy tales that votes like in ] have nothing to do with the national POV of the participants. ] 17:38, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::::Nobody said that, I actually said I find that a natural thing. Americans do it too. However here we don't vote. Here we will talk by the books, right? ] <sup>]</sup> 18:47, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::::Let's hope so. ] 19:13, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Danke schön== | |||
Danke schön Future for erasing (moving to a subpage) the nationalities section. ] <small>]</small> 06:56, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: Having settled this (hopefully), let's return to the more substantial issue about what to do with our national affiliations: could I hear your thoughts on section "Decision process"? ] ] 06:58, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I did not have time to study it in depth but from what I saw so far I really like your proposal. Good work Future. Tasos (] <small>]</small> 07:01, 13 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::I need a bit of time for a detailed reply and maybe a few suggestions. ] <small>]</small> 07:05, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I added my thoughts, I don't think it's necessary to say which side you are on, we just need to present what we agree upon, and then present alternative solutions in neutral language and then let other people decide. ] 07:06, 13 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Ireland == | |||
I would suggest to have a look on what is going on at ] as an example on how to go about. I would not say we have to follow that example, just look at it to get ideas. In the case of Ireland, the discussion is moderated. ] <sup><font size="-2">]</font></sup> 01:07, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:In reading through the Ireland statements, you can see why I don't think "endorsements" are anything that we want to try here. It's very hard to find any of these statements that aren't supported by about half the endorsers and opposed by about half the endorsers. It simply throws the whole discussion into a very stark and polarized light. (] (]) 12:57, 14 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
==Macedonia referee appointments== | |||
The arbitration committee has appointed a group of three admins it is sure will make a good team to help solve the issues here. The admins are: ], ], and ]. To an amicable resolution...for the committee. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 23:21, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Good choices all - I welcome their involvement. Thanks for letting us know. -- ] (]) 23:32, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::No problem. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 23:34, 14 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::One additional thing that would help - the centralized discussion badly needs to have someone overseeing it clerk-style to deal with problematic conduct by participants. Is there anyone who you could find for that role? -- ] (]) 01:08, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Is there anyone you know of off hand who is interested? ]]] 04:07, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I concur with ChrisO. Furthermore, the present whole structure of discussion looks a bit chaotic as it is difficult to navigate around and there are multiple threads developing at the same time. Worse, it seems that the whole discussion has started in the wrong order. If it first settled the wikipedia name for the country, then all else would be much easier to sort out. The ''']''' is left on the tree while discussions are spread all over the place. Probably, the current discussion has already painted the entire picture and it may be time to somehow go straight for reaching a consensus on the name of country article. This will reduce the number of A, B, C,... etc. "solutions" and ensuing redundant arguments. ] (]) 04:48, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I'll ask around and see if anyone's interested. Please do the same, if you can. -- ] (]) 06:57, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::::The three referees are empowered to handle the behavior problems here, contact them on their talk page if you to get their attention. It's best if those participating in the discussion don't as they're involved. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 20:41, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{discussion top}} | |||
==Dealing with disruptive participants?== | |||
{{resolved| contact one of us if there is a problem, and we will handle it case-by-case. ] (]) 09:10, 16 June 2009 (UTC)}} | |||
Frankly I'm on the verge of withdrawing from this process because of the disruptive behaviour of one particular participant. Is there any mechanism for asking for someone to be excluded from the discussion on the grounds of disruption? It is yet more of the wikilawyering and bad-faith nationalism that we've seen before, and for which Kekrops and Avg were topic-banned. It's very discouraging to see that despite everything that's happened some people's behaviour ''still'' has not changed. -- ] (]) 06:52, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Don't know if we are talking about the same person, but I'm out of the discussion, I much rather prefer to talk to the walls than to be nitpicked to death. ] 07:43, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: This was of course predictable. The argumentative smokescreen (or drowning-the-debate-in-drivel) tactics has always been successfully used in these debates. ] ] 08:02, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: Indeed. It's a deliberate tactic, of course - flooding out everyone else with reams of argumentative drivel. We saw this in the arbitration case and now we're seeing it here, from the same individual. -- ] (]) 08:11, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: Well, I'm actually not convinced of bad faith on his part; but it's still quite disruptive. It's just his hyper-active ways in debate. The problem is that his argumentative logorrhoea drowns the good arguments on ''both'' sides. I would much rather have a shorter and much more convincing summary of the arguments opposed to my own side, so that outside readers will be quickly able to take it all in and judge, than these reams and reams of just-slightly-besides-the-point ramblings that will neither convince readers nor allow them to be convinced of the opposite, but will just turn them away shaking their heads instead. ] ] 08:32, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Doesn't ] apply to this page? ] (]) 17:05, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: Sure, it does. ] ] 17:09, 15 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Just to be sure, who are you talking about? ]]] 01:50, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::See my email. (] (]) 02:25, 16 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::::I've read most of the contributions of the person that you don't dare to speak about (really, why this mystery?). It seems that the definition of disruptive behaviour, given by the person who provoked this mess (my turn to introduce some mystery) and who was warned in multiple occasions, leading eventually to desysop (my turn to throw some mud), coincides with argumentation against "our position" which may be valid so let's throw some mud and discredit the opponent side. Tactics of throwing mud right and left has been occurring very often in this affair, and this proposal is one of those attempts. Congratulations gentlemen, your effort to reach consensus on an issue like that, has taken Misplaced Pages to another level (lower that is). We find once again the same persons that were admonished, warned etc... to participate in the resolution of this issue, yet they accuse another person of "disruptive behaviour". That's a great start. Also, any naming policy that you use to justify transfer to the article to Macedonia is good since it is wikipedia policy, whereas any policy that serves the positions of the other side becomes "wikilawyering". This is a great example you give as distinguished members of the wikipedia. Demonstration of bad faith has reached a new high. Congratulations. | |||
::::Regards. Another "nationalist" "disruptive" greek user. ] (]) 07:28, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
After that lovely rant, I can't see that there's anything useful in keeping this thread open. It seems to me we should directly ask our referees for action if action needs taking; does this sound like a plan? I really think it'd be best to mark this archived this now. ] ] 08:08, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{discussion bottom}} | |||
== Some rules regarding the presentation and discussion of proposals == | |||
Having observed some of the recent discussion, J.delanoy, Shell Kinney and myself have agreed a set of rules to be applied to the proposals on all the subpages of this debate. They are as follows: | |||
* People can submit as many proposed solutions as they like - if identical, or near-identical ones appear, they can be condensed by the three of us into a smaller number as necessary. There will probably be some practical cutoff time after which a new proposal won't get enough time to be discussed, but there isn't a strict limit for now. | |||
* Proposals should not refer to other proposals directly - there is no need for comparisons of this kind within proposals as the natural option should emerge from the subsequent discussion | |||
* Proposals to be discussed on the appropriate talkpage, with rapid archiving of procedural threads that have been resolved | |||
* No proposals to be struck out or moved by other editors - part of the reason we're here is to evaluate consensus in relation to the guidelines, per the Arbcom case. A mixture of discussion and policy review will weed out unworkable proposals, whilst giving everyone the opportunity to air their views. | |||
This will mean that some of the existing proposals have to be reworked slightly, but there is no longer a need to debate these procedural points, and you can get on with presenting and discussing the options to move forward independently. Any comments, complaints or concerns, let us know. ] (]) 16:03, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: Sounds reasonable. Any views on modalities of how to edit "opposing" rationales, as we've been doing? ] ] 16:07, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::If it's in good-faith and doesn't lose the meaning or is to comply with the rules we've set out, I don't see a problem; provided you accept that in the former case, if the editor reverts to their old version, then you'll need to accept that and discuss changes calmly ] (]) 16:16, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Does this mean that we should cease to enrich the "arguments against" sections or that they will be moved to the talk pages? ] <sup>]</sup> 16:57, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I would prefer that you make your arguments against a proposal in the form of your alternative proposal, but if you want to directly discuss another person's proposal, the talk page would be the place for that. ]]] 18:32, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::I think the current format in ] is needed, we need a section that synthesizes "arguments against the proposal" because otherwise people will read rosy descriptions of the proposals without knowing the drawbacks (following the talk page wordy and unstructured debates is probably not reasonable). That being said I don't think that that section should be an excuse to dump any imaginable argument there, it should be limited to, let's say max. 5, well thought drawbacks of the proposal. ] 19:02, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::: I agree with red shoe on this. Both the pro and the contra sections should be as terse and concise as possible. Also, I think it's inefficient to have arguments in the contra sections that are really just restatements of arguments made elsewhere in the pro section of another proposal. There are ''some'' arguments that really just serve as contra arguments against one proposal without being automatically pro arguments for a specific other proposal, but those are relatively few. ] ] 20:20, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::There's nothing in the above that explicitly prohibits a pro/con format. But individual proposals should not become a subjective commentary on the merits of other proposals - as such, as j.delanoy says, it may be better to have these arguments against as part of the talkpage discussion. ] (]) 10:00, 17 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Requests for the referees== | |||
Since it's now been clarified that the referees will be actively intervening on these pages, I've added this section to keep requests to them in one visible central location. Please add requests below with a subheader for each. (I'll be adding one in a minute.) -- ] (]) 18:57, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
===Closing threads=== | |||
Could I please ask referees, when closing threads, to add the <nowiki>{{discussion top}}</nowiki> and <nowiki>{{discussion bottom}}</nowiki> tags to the top and bottom of the thread, to make it clear that it's closed? I've done that for the closed thread above. -- ] (]) 18:58, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{discussion top}} | |||
===Personal attacks and point-scoring=== | |||
Unfortunately some people are engaging in unproductive and off-topic personal attacks and tendentious attempts at point-scoring, on this page and in the proposals. In particular: | |||
* was added to a closed thread by {{user|GK1973}}. I have removed it per ]. | |||
* On ], there have been a couple of attempts to add off-topic point-scoring by {{user|Shadowmorph}} (removed by myself, restored by Shadowmorph, and finally ). The circumstances of the page moves in April are not relevant to a discussion on ''future'' naming. | |||
Could the referees please make it clear to participants that personal attacks and tendentious point-scoring are disallowed? They serve no constructive purpose and only serve to inflame and poison the discussion. -- ] (]) 19:10, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:(ec) I have explained adequately in the talk page why that note has to be included to inform outsiders of the ''relevant'' background of the status quo (in short). I don't know how referring to a status quo would be in-topic but alluding that the status quo was natural or consensus of the community by failing to inform the readers of how it was imposed is off-topic. On other pages whole blocks of texts from the ARBMAC2 decision where pasted so I fail to understand how since we are referring to the status quo we should even link to the findings about the moves. My recommendation would be for '''removing all references to any status quo''', current or previous, including the comparisons between proposals and the status quo if we don't include at least a link to how the current status quo was imposed. Hiding those facts is POV-pushing. I.e.: a note referring to background regarding actions that have happened is removed by the very person the note is referring to. The note did not include any other info other than the fact that the status quo was imposed without consensus. Those are the facts. | |||
:It would be nice if ChrisO also said above that Future reincluded a more NPOV version of the note that ChrisO subsequently again removed. However I only reverted once and I am keeping my promise to not edit war about it. I leave it to you to make your judgments. | |||
:I was asked here to be open (by Heimstern) so I am adding this last paragraph even though I didn't have an initial intention to do this. ChrisO has made been assumptions of bad faith on repeated occasions from the start of this discussion even going as far as suggesting that conclusions should be drawn about editors that simply used their right to not reveal their ethnic affiliation. just to follow the suggestions of ChrisO. ChrisO should have been already blocked for that part (WP:AGF violation per ARBMAC, if ARBMAC does apply here). | |||
:It seems like certain people have been striving to "expel" me from these pages; ChrisO and man with one red shoe have been closing watching to see if I make a single revert or a "pattern of editing" that is questionable enough to propose a ban on me. I have repeatedly been the subject of multiple personal attacks and assumptions of bad faith but didn't operate so in the same spirit. So this is a defensive comment by me.] <sup>]</sup> 19:45, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I'm not seeking to get rid of you - I only want you to contribute productively. If you're not willing to do that you shouldn't be participating in this discussion. How we got here is completely irrelevant to these discussions. We're here to find a way forward, not to relitigate an arbitration case. Your note was unnecessary and served no useful purpose. It ''is'' necessary and useful to state what the current status quo is, and what the previous status quo was - as I've said before, we're not operating in a vacuum or with a blank slate, and the fact is that we ''do'' have a status quo. -- ] (]) 19:56, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::''@ChrisO'' Yes, I would love that. As long as everybody understands that ChrisO... Btw, who closed the thread in question? When I commented it was wide open and proposing very peculiar "suggestions" and accusations against an unnamed editor. This beautiful and very informative gray box was not there and a simple "resolved" icon does not actually consist a warning that nobody should comment on what was written, as is the case now. So what is this? And what constituted my input a personal attack? Did I accuse anybody of anything? I only mentioned that I agreed with YOUR opinion, regarding editors who BEYOND DOUBT have been sanctioned by the ArbCom. I did not accuse any unnamed editor of things that he was never formally charged of or sanctioned for. I just mentioned that some have officially been deemed disruptive and should we ban editors from a discussion, then we should start with them. It was a proposal, not an accusation. You in turn accuse me of a personal attack (against you?). Can an admin please clarify this for me? What is the attack I made? That I used first person plural when I asked "Are we nuts?" If, so, then I take it back... although I don't know people here personally, I doubt that they are nuts.... And how about the personal attacks evident in the now "closed" section? I also propose that the referees take a look into the matter and state their opinion on the conduct of everyone involved... It is very interesting that you close your "ranting" (not a nice word, is it?) with the phrase ''The circumstances of the page moves in April are not relevant to a discussion on ''future'' naming.''. First, because it was you (plural) who attacked someone (maybe me? I cannot tell, since unnamed accusations may be directed at anyone...) for past conduct as perceived by you (plural) and secondly, because it was you (plural) who brought forward the issue of disruptive editors. In my vocabulary, "disruptive" can be justifiably used for editors sanctioned for such kind of behavior, one of whom is you (a fact, not an attack nor a claim). I will not get into a discussion over that issue, but I believe that your "formal", "legalistic" attitude above was demeaning and misleading and I perceived it as a personal attack against me. I urge the referees to comment on this case, so that I finally understand what constitutes a "personal attack" or a "rant" in Misplaced Pages, since I seem to misinterpret the policies when I read through them... ] (]) 19:57, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::The discussion was closed following Heimstern's request and marked with "Resolved" by Fritzpoll at 09:10, 16 June 2009 (UTC). You added your rant (yes, that's what it was) at 17:58, 16 June 2009 (UTC). Please don't edit closed threads and don't post unproductive comments that serve only to inflame the situation. If you're not willing to be civil and productive, please go away. -- ] (]) 19:58, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Do you read what you post??? Do you sincerely accuse me of incivility and inflammatory ranting??? Do you consider my support to your idea unproductive? What does this say about you? If you're not willing to be civil and productive, please go away. Oh... and let an admin answer that... please, let us stop arguing with each other when there are admins here perfectly capable of guiding us through this process. ] (]) 20:10, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
All right, enough. I do not care what the status of the article ''was'' or is. What matters is what it will be. As Misplaced Pages does not cite precedent in making decisions relating to content, it is irrelevant how or why something became the "status quo" or ceased to be the status quo. Also, quit bickering. It is seriously distracting. This dispute is complicated enough without unnecessarily adding editor conduct into the mix. ]]] 20:26, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
I second what J.delanoy had to say; what happened in the past on Misplaced Pages isn't relevant to the discussion. Focus needs to be on finding a current consensus, not on who did what when. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:54, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Thank you, I agree and I'm perfectly happy to move on. I posted a set of ] a short time ago that I hope will inform the discussion in a ''positive'' way. -- ] (]) 21:47, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Ok lets move on. Thank you for constructive contribution with new evidence. I might have some words about those and/or make a similar research about common English usage in specific domains. Since the talk page of MOSMAC2 does not seem a good place to discuss that new evidence would it be possible to add it in the evidence page of this discussion so that analysis talks can be initiated there? Or I could post my observations in this talk page. | |||
::initial observation: "General encyclopedias - various meanings, no clear trend"; since Misplaced Pages is a generic encyclopedia too I doubt why we have to elaborate into specific domains and not generic domains. I think Taivo said something like that too, but anyway it is my opinion. Some scrutiny and analysis still needs to be done about that research about usage of the word. For one thing the sample of books seems small to make a sound statistical argument (looking at individual domains). ] <sup>]</sup> 22:10, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
{{discussion bottom}} | |||
== "Background" section == | |||
The "Background" section on the central page has been growing in an uncontrolled way. Can we please keep that section reduced to really just the few basic facts that a new outside reader needs for their first orientation? As far as the presentation of "common usage" is concerned, my take is that the only bits that are really needed for first orientation and pretty much idisputably established are the following: | |||
# The country is most frequently called plain "Macedonia". | |||
# In general-purpose, present day common English publications, the term "Macedonia" refers most frequently to the country. | |||
# In older English usage (pre-1990s), it refers more often to the wider area or to the ancient kingdom. | |||
# The country article has far more readers than all other articles. | |||
These four facts are indisputable, and further nitpicking over them at this point would really no longer be a sign of a constructive attitude. All other details belong to those pages where they serve as arguments for specific proposals, but not on the central page, especially if their validity and their relevance as arguments are not consensus. ] ] 19:36, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I concur but do so in a factually accurate manner (the text should reflect the citations)] <sup>]</sup> 19:44, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Future Perfect's simple and accurate wording is fine with me. (] (]) 19:47, 16 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::: I also agree to this wording. These are facts, although not the sole arguments as to the issue in question. ] (]) 20:00, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Clearing the Air == | |||
Jeez, I sent an email to J.Delanoy after he asked who people were talking about when it came to "disruptive behavior". I didn't intend it to be such a bruhaha to send J.Delanoy an private email so that he knew the context, but I guess with this topic, there is no alternative to public disclosure. (This is ''my'' email, so a disclosure is not inappropriate.) Here's what I wrote to J.Delanoy: "Just in case no one has mailed you, the disruptive participant is Shadowmorph. I agree with Future Perfect, that he's probably acting in good faith, but his on and on and on nitpicking and just off-topic "evidence" and "logic" are drowning the discussion in herring." It's nothing that hasn't been said already six times, so can we just get on with the discussion? Note that I assume good faith on his part. Note also that elsewhere in this discussion (on another page) I offered this same advice directly to him and he thanked me for it. So please, let's move on. (] (]) 21:08, 16 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
::Thanks Taivo, I was the one who insinuated to JDelanoy (in his talk page), among other things, that the mentioning of this letter was intimidating to third parties. ] (]) 21:18, 16 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== region or dab == | |||
''moved talk page comment by IP to relevant page: '' | |||
== How to move on? == | |||
I notice that discussion over the last few days has concentrated almost entirely on the "main article" issue. On that page, I believe the relevant arguments are now all stated, and what discussion is still ongoing seems to be going in circles already. It's unlikely that anything much fundamentally new is going to be said there. | |||
So, how do we move forwards? Time to get some actual decision process going? Do the referees want more outside opinion, and if yes, in what form? | |||
At the same time, the situation at the other subpages is quite different. I had expected more discussion at least on the open issues at "international organizations" and "other article titles". | |||
At the "other articles" subpage, no discussion has occurred at all and no competing proposal has been filed. Should we assume that the existing proposal is already consensus? | |||
] ] 08:48, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Speaking on behalf of the referees, we think that we need some fresh input. This will be done by the following: | |||
:*On Monday, the current discussions will end, and the talkpages will be archived. The proposals should be finalised by point. | |||
:*The proposal pages shall be advertised at ], the Village Pump, and relevant noticeboards. | |||
:*The discussion shall proceed in an RfC format - there will be two sections. In the first section, single line endorsements with reasons shall be permitted, but no direct replies will be permitted. There will be a second section for discussion, where endorsement reasons shall be discussed | |||
:Consensus will be determined by strength and weight of the arguments and adherence to our policies and guidelines, not by the number of endorsements, which will act only as a guide. ] (]) 09:08, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Will the current participants be excluded from the new discussion or will this discussion simply be continued on the new page? And since you're going to advertise, be ready for gigabytes of and . (] (]) 09:34, 20 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::Current participants who've helped create the proposals aren't restricted from continuing with the discussion. We're aware that there are likely to be a number of arguments that are based on personal feeling. Consensus will not be determined via a simple count of editors who like a particular proposal; the merit of arguments and their relevance to policy will be the deciding factor. ] <sup>]</sup> 00:21, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Can I ask please, what happens in the case that no consensus is found? ] <sup>]</sup> 20:52, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Then the arbitrators make a decision on usage and we all live with it. (] (]) 22:23, 21 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
I honestly have to wonder how effective this is likely to be. Remember the comments in the arbitration case about how we needed to get away from the "vote fetish" that plagues Misplaced Pages? This issue involves a fairly complex intersection of policies and real-world usage. How likely is it that the average uninvolved Wikipedian will be able to absorb all of that? Since consensus cannot trump policy, what happens if opinion is in favour of a solution that violates policy (as several of the solutions advanced here do)? Is there even any point in advertising policy-violating solutions? Also, isn't this simply opening the door for nationalist partisans to mobilise and swamp the discussion? We're here precisely because the Misplaced Pages community has proved unable to find any consensus on this issue; what makes anyone think that the community will miraculously reach a consensus after ''seven years'' of internecine wrangling? -- ] (]) 22:49, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:From the very beginning in discussing this whole process I've opposed any kind of vote-like behavior, but it seems that "outside endorsements" (by previously uninvolved editors who are neutral) are some kind of Holy Grail sought after, but never found. This exercise will, as I have said from the outset and as ChrisO states here as well, bring out all the nationalist socks, meats, anon IPs, and SPAs to flood the discussion with more meaningless blather. What's the point? The three arbitrators here are knowledgeable enough and well-versed enough in the arguments to make a well-informed decision. (] (]) 23:12, 21 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::The point is that Misplaced Pages is a ] and doesn't have an editorial committee to decide its content. Not in this case, nor in any other case. It is edited by "anyone". That's why Misplaced Pages operates by "consensus". The referees can help in countering the "gaming" effects if any as mentioned by ARBMAC2. Personally I don't see any gaming will be attempted by the ].] <sup>]</sup> 23:45, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::Shadowmorph, where have you been for the last two months? You know good and well that consensus is not going to be reached here by normal means. ARBMAC2 has a specific process to move past stalemate when consensus is not possible. It will have to be used here. The "endorsement process" is a waste of time, I'm afraid, for the reasons that I've stated before and the reasons that ChrisO stated above. (] (]) 00:18, 22 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
== Disputing "largely agreed upon facts" == | |||
The first "fact", says that the state's most frequent name in common English usage is simply "Macedonia" and is supported by as a source. A google news search can hardly be considered a good indicator of common usage; it doesn't conform with ] as it includes ''opinion pieces'' and articles that don't ''predate the material's inclusion in Misplaced Pages''. Furthermore, searching for occurrences of the word "Macedonia" in google news, includes articles that mention the country as "Republic of Macedonia" and "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia", of which "Macedonia" is a substring. It also includes articles where officials from that country are quoted as referring to it as "Macedonia", which is not necessarily an endorsement of that name by the news organization. Moreover, searching for news articles provides inherently skewed results, as the mainstream news media are not as interested in archaeological findings as they are in recent political issues. That is exactly why they were called '''new'''s in the first place! A google news search only includes news articles that were published in the past month; obviously this would leave out volumes of scholarly findings that happened to occur before that. Finally, I would like to note that the ] explicitly states that ''"For information about academic topics, such as physics or ancient history, scholarly sources are preferred over news stories."'' | |||
The second "fact", the one saying that present-day English usage in general-purpose sources uses "Macedonia" in referrence to the country, is not supported by any evidence. I would really be interested in seeing ] backing that statement. As far as I know, everyday English usage of the word "Macedonia" comes in many different contexts. In some instances, the meaning might be clear from the context in which it is used. For example, if people are talking about ancient history, then the word is definitely referring to ]. In some other instances, however, the meaning is ambiguous and people are forced to add an extra sentence or two to avoid confusing others. | |||
Moving on to the fourth "fact", which states that wikipedia's article on the country has a larger readership than other Macedonia articles, I would like to question how reliable it is to look at these statistics. Given ArbCom's finding on ], it is reasonable to assume that a large number of the visits to the country's article were by editors who wanted to either correct inaccuracies, find out about the naming dispute, edit war or participate in talk page discussions. The truth is that we have no way of knowing what people do once they land on the country's article; they might read the article, edit it, click on one of the other Macedonia articles on the hat link or even go post in the talk page! To make matters even worse, article hits were significantly inflated by televised news reports (, ) in the Republic, that told people to visit the article on wikipedia.--] (]) 12:33, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: Yawn. I'm not going to respond; every single point of this has been discussed, refuted, discussed again and refuted again a thousand times. If any ''new'' outside reader finds there's some merit in these points, please tell me and I'll respond; otherwise I'll just let it stand as yet another example of the tired old smokescreen tactics. ] ] 12:40, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Please be more civil when responding to my concerns. These statements were listed as "largely agreed upon facts", even though they are not largely agreed upon. I hardly see why pointing this out qualifies as "smokescreen tactics". --] (]) 13:07, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: I raised some legitimate concerns. Please do not dismiss them as unacceptable filibustering and '''please''' do not accuse me of bad faith! () Also note that 1RR is in place. We are obviously in disagreement about this... we should be able to resolve it like gentlemen, without resorting to personal attacks! --] (]) 13:48, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: I have nothing further to contribute to this than an appeal to the referees to step in and exclude Radjenef from the proceedings. I still maintain that this is obviously unconstructive behaviour designed for no other purpose than to obstruct the process. ] ] 13:56, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: I agree, it's better if the referees step in. I have already Fritzpoll about your conduct... just letting you know. --] (]) 14:17, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::It should be noted that the google news search is a google UK search. I'm not sure if that is significant, but it might be. Personally, I also very much question google news as a source for current usage as well. The BBC, I know, has a guide to how to use names, and I believe I heard a few weeks ago NPR has a similar unofficial guide. Google news will, basically, reflect the style guidelines of the news services which most frequently mention the country more than anything else, and will likely be slanted toward the news services which most frequently cover the country, for whatever reason, and reflect their style guide. I am not sure how to address that problem, if it should be addressed, but I think it is reasonable to mention it. Regarding the fourth point, that the main article for the country is likely the most frequently accessed article, I've found it to be the case that the main article for a country is almost literally universally the most often accessed article, and, at this point, see no reason to question it unless specific evidence to the contrary is presented. ] (]) 18:20, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::: The solution is to do several searches from different domains. So far we have common Google web searches, web searches restricted to .edu domains, web searches restricted to individual news organisations, Google news, Google books, and a general-purpose linguistic corpus of present-day American speech. Every one of these surveys supports the claim that the country is more often called by the simple name than by anything else; and every one except Google Books (i.e. all present-day data sources) support the claim that the name is used much more often for the country than for the other referents. As for the issue that some sources have their individual style guides, yes of course they do, but then again, (a) if these are high-profile media, their influence will ultimately determine what our readers are familiar with, and (b) news organisations are unlikely to uphold naming conventions that are incompatible with their readers' expectations. ] ] 19:50, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::: In addition, I would also say that although ''individual'' news organisations may have their own style guides, what we're concerned with is what the usage is ''in aggregate''. If we focused on, say, just the BBC or NPR, then obviously that organisation's style guide would be reflected in our results. You would get the same effect if you just focused on (for instance) National Geographic maps or the Encyclopaedia Britannica. But what Fut. Perf. and I have been doing is assessing usage ''in aggregate'' across a wide range of sources - media, reference works, encyclopedias and cartographic products. Having a sample that is as large and as broad as possible ensures that the results are not skewed by the style guides of a few individual sources. By the way, I've amended the Google search link to eliminate the UK news search domain. (The results are not actually that different - the news search domain attribute ("&ned=uk" in this case) simply weights the results so that media sources from the country referenced are listed first. You get the same results, just ordered differently depending on which country is referenced.) -- ] (]) 01:33, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Per the complaint to my talkpage, I will comment here. Radjenef: "largely agreed on" does not mean unanimously agreed on. Besides yourself, is there another editor here who holds your position on this matter? If not, the substance of your argument is best saved for later than for a presentational issue. Fut. Perf: I know you are feeling frustrated, but the best way to avoid rsponding to comments is not to respond at all - if the arguments lack merit, we'll find that on our own ] (]) 00:27, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:The main problem with Radjanef's changes is that - as usual - they're not based on any evidence at all, and he simply ignores the reams of evidence gathered . Radjanef has not bothered to do anything other than put forward unsourced assertions and dispute unarguable facts. For instance, if he disagrees with the compiled from stats.grok.se, he should put forward a counter-argument ''based on hard evidence'', not simply slap tags over it and rant about it. Fut. Perf. is quite right to be frustrated (not to say disgusted) with this conduct. It's exactly this kind of behaviour that made the recent arbitration case necessary in the first place, and I for one certainly won't hesitate to go back to arbitration enforcement and request a topic ban on Radjanef if necessary. If he can't or won't contribute constructively, he should go away or be kept away. -- ] (]) 00:46, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::The kind of behaviour that made the recent arbitration case necessary is available for all to in the final decision. In any case, however, I am willing to sidestep the personal attacks and reiterate the fact that I have raised some legitimate concerns. I never ignored any reams of evidence; I made a very specific post arguing against the validity of the said evidence. Other users, like John Carter and El-greco, have already expressed similar concerns towards some of the evidence. So far, nobody has bothered responding to my arguments, though I've seen plenty of "yawns", personal attacks and requests to ban me from the discussion. While we're at it, I'd like to point out one more thing about the fourth "fact": it claims that the article on the country has a much larger '''readership''' than all other Macedonia articles, yet the evidence provided (however skewed they may be, since kanal5 TV urged viewers to visit wikipedia) only exhibit '''hits'''. Like I said, we have no way of knowing what people do once they land on the country's article; they might read the article, edit it, click on one of the other Macedonia articles on the hat link or even go post in the talk page! --] (]) 16:17, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I find it ironic that ChrisO criticizes behaviours about this issue. In my knowledge it was ChrisO course of actions that made the recent arbitration case necessary following his unilateral actions and abuse of his administrative powers for which he was warned and condemned . I personally am dissapointed that users that have demonstrated this kind of conduct (in multiple occasions it seems) are permitted to participate in this process and I wonder if ARBCOM would think the same way. On what it concerns me, this process has completely lost its credibility thus I have stopped participating. I would expect that this issue would have been taken care of by completely uninvolved parties; however it wasn't, thus I felt necessary to introduce my POV, to counter-balance. I see now that all my proposal edits have been methodically removed from the project page. If you think that this is the way to achieve consensus, you are wrong.] (]) 09:54, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I'm happy that you freely admit that you are here to introduce your POV. ] 10:13, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::At least, ''I'' admit it. Oh, and you actually agree with me on my points above , though you only find it useful to delimit my phrase about introducing my POV. Great. ] (]) 14:40, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::''(ec)'' As a matter of fact, a topic ban was proposed for ChrisO. The fact that it was rejected probably answers your implied question about what AC thinks of having someone it admonished participating in this discussion. They could have removed him from it, but they didn't. Frankly, your bringing his behaviour up here is nothing more than an effort to discredit your opponent based on past behaviour rather than based on what really matters: the strength of his arguments. ] ] 10:17, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::What arguments. The great majority of ChrisO "arguments" in this page is about disruptive behaviours and who should post or not post. Radjenef posted some valid points, but I didn't see any counter-arguments about these, and "Yawn" is not a counter-argument. For example, he stated that FYROM media has encouraged people to visit the page, thus infalting the number of visits. Where is the counter-argument about that? ] (]) 14:40, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Oh, and you're mistaken to say ChrisO's action caused the RFAr to be filed. It had already been agreed upon to do so well in advance; ChrisO's move just caused it to occur a few days ahead of schedule. What really caused the RFAr to be filed was stonewalling by nationalists who wouldn't accept any term for the country north of Greece on ] except "FYROM". ] ] 10:20, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::I was not refering exclusively to ChrisO actions concerning the move of the article. Also, FYROM is a perfectly valid term in the context it was put, FYROM is the name of the country for almost half of the world (but this is not the subject here). FYI, for the entire greek community, anything else except FYROM is offensive, not just "nationalists". Anyway, this is not the subject here, but I am not convinced of some people's intentions here. Some people should have been involved more actively in clearing up the hundreds of articles speaking of ] and ] as countries, instead of ] and ] (and more other examples) and then I would be convinced of their objective involvement. ] (]) 14:40, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Sorry it's offensive to the Greek community, but that has no bearing on how it should be named in Misplaced Pages. ] ] 14:43, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Page protected== | |||
Gents, today's edits, dare I say edit warring, over the discussion page is not good form. I've restored it to the last version prior to today's edits, which is the 11:22, June 17, 2009 version, and protected it for two weeks. I've notified the referees. I take no sides in the dispute of today's edits, but this should have been worked on the talk page, not rv'd repeatedly on the discussion page itself. The referees are will handle this issue and are free to unprotect it when they deem fit. <span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 14:10, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:I added refs for the assertions currently on the page. If I unprotect the page (I'm waiting to see what Fritzpoll and/or Shell Kinney think), I do not want to see {{tl|fact}} tags and so forth all over the place. If you disagree with something, discuss it on the talk page. If you want to add something to the page, include a reference for it. ]]] 15:03, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Thanks for adding back my link to Jstor. I understand what you say about {{tl|fact}} tags. What do you recommend we do about things that are listed as "largely agreed upon facts", when in fact they are disputed? I am perfectly open to discussion, yet I do not understand what I am supposed to do when the other editor says "''not worth responding to''", "''Whoever still "disputes" these facts is not acting in good faith''" and "''obviously disruptive, no discussion''". Why don't we just move all of these statements to the evidence section? Though they could be used as evidence to support one solution or the other, most of them clearly do not form an undisputed background for the case... --] (]) 15:59, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::"Largely agreed upon" doesn't mean everyone agrees.<span style="font-family:Verdana,sans-serif"> — ] • ] • </span> 17:00, 20 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I think it should be clear that if you make a change to the main page and someone reverts, the next step is discussion. There's going to be very little tolerance for edit warring or other disruptive actions. As far as resolving disputes, there are more than just two editors interested in this discussion; if you and one other person can't reach an agreement, wait and let others respond as well. I also agree with J.delanoy, references would be helpful when adding new material. ] <sup>]</sup> 00:11, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::I agree with the comments from my colleagues. We are here to determine a broader consensus of action, and I have already warned about the need to discuss reversions. I will unprotect the page, with the following warning: '''further edit warring will be sanctioned by blocks and ultimately by bans from discussion on these pages'''. Discussion is why we are here, and mindlss reverts are not the way to advance your position. ] (]) 00:20, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
==International recognition== | |||
We seemed to have lost some of the international recognition lines from the background summary, what was there before was out of date, and what was added to replace it was flawed. I've taken the liberty of amending this accordingly . To summarise: | |||
* We had somehow lost the fact that most of the UN's member states (now two-thirds of the total, including most of the English-speaking world) recognise Macedonia under its constitutional name. This is a very important point, as it influences common usage in those countries. The page had previously said that "just over half" of the UN's member states employ this usage. I believe that figure was taken from the original MOSMAC1, but the international diplomatic position has shifted decisively in Macedonia's favour in the two years since that was written. | |||
* Some data had been added, sourced to ], to state that "12 states recognise the country under it's UN reference, and 34 states/entities either do not hold formal diplomatic relations with the country, or it is unknown what reference they use to refer to the country". I'm afraid we can't be definitive about that. I had a major role in compiling that list, which is mainly sourced to public statements about diplomatic activity between Macedonia and other countries. We do know (because it's been stated on several occasions) that 125 countries as of February 2009 recognised Macedonia under its constitutional name. We do not know for sure how many countries use the UN reference or how many do not have diplomatic relations. Both of those categories of states must be among the remaining 67 countries, but we don't have enough evidence to say exactly how many are in each of those two categories. | |||
* Not every international organisation employs the exact UN usage - some have come up with their own variants ("FYR of Macedonia", for instance). | |||
Hope this makes sense... -- ] (]) 01:14, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== "Background" evidence disputed == | |||
Regarding addition to the "background" section by Radjenef: this claim is still factually wrong; discussion now moved to ]. ] ] 17:23, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: Just noting here that I will remove these claims again some time during the next 12 hours, both from the "Background" section and from the "int.orgs" sub-page, unless somebody else does it before me, as I believe I have brought forward incontrovertible evidence it is incorrect. ] ] 20:26, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:: Already done. We had the same issue in compiling the list on ] of countries that use whichever name or reference - editors were citing sources that said nothing about the particular country's position on the issue. Another editor raised this issue in which led to the list being greatly amended and numerous instances of OR removed (a task in which I was heavily involved). In the present case, we have a UN document which says nothing about the naming dispute, but which lists Macedonia under its UN provisional reference. It doesn't even come from the Macedonian government but from the UN General Assembly. To support the kind of assertion made by Radjanef, you would need a document issued by the Macedonian government itself or from a reliable third party that spoke ''explicitly'' of how the Macedonian government uses the UN terminology. This particular source doesn't come close. -- ] (]) 20:37, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::: I am sorry, are we discussing the quality of sources or not? Because in a section right below we agreed that any sentence does not have to be reliable sourced but only backed up by a footnote. Fut. Perf. said so himself that WP:OR is only for article space. A Google News query could also be thought of as original research, doesn't it? ] <sup>]</sup> 21:00, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: We're not talking about whether some piece of information fulfils some formal "reliability" criterion according to our content rules for articles, but about whether that piece of information is ''correct''. The claim that the country regularly (let alone exclusively) uses "f.Y.R." in its dealings with international organisations is demonstrably wrong. ] ] 21:08, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::: Looking at what you've posted on the international organizations sub-page, it's clearly wrong. -- ] (]) 21:11, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Sourcing to reliable sources needed == | |||
I understand that some backing up must be linked for the statements and that they are not citations. | |||
However notes 3,4,5,6 are actually citations. Misplaced Pages's policy about sourcing also has power in project space too. I don't understand how we can mix citations to reliable sources together with links to userspace essays. | |||
And who is the "largely agreed upon" referring to? The 10 editors, tops that have been writing here? Are we a good sample of the community? ] <sup>]</sup> 20:07, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:The reference syntax is often used in project space to add footnotes, as appears on a number of our project pages. It is acceptable, since the footnotes explicitly indicate the nature of the citation. Change is therefore unnecessary and only likely to provoke conflict. We want these pages stable by tomorrow ] (]) 20:11, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
: It's not an article, but an internal discussion page. ] is about articles, as is ]. The evidence notes are purely for the sake of convenience, as a reminder provided among Wikipedians of what we consider suitable documentation of facts. And whether it's formally presented as a footnote or inline is of course totally irrelevant from the perspective of "reliability". ] ] 20:23, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::Ok, misconception cleared. However I'm afraid the background section is not the best factual summary we could have but I guess its not important since we are in project space that only Wikipedians would read. I respect the need for stability but I though that some sentences should need to be sourced better, that's all. | |||
:::For the record I have stated that I am not going to re-add again any wording about those footnotes.] <sup>]</sup> 20:28, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::I don't mind if you would like to close (or collapse, whatever) this thread if you want to.] <sup>]</sup> 20:31, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
Regardless of who raised that particular concern, I really think that it was a very valid one and one that we should seriously consider. Indeed, we have yet to see any reliable source about the number of countries "officially" recognising the country's constitutional name. I would appreciate it if someone would add the missing evidence or strike the statement off the list. --] (]) 02:17, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:The list found at ] contains all the reliable sources and over the last two months there has been a very solid effort to make sure that all the sources there were reliable. This has been stated several times during these discussions. (] (]) 02:20, 22 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:I agree that it should be removed if reliable and verifiable sources aren't included. ] (]) 02:23, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Reference to ] added. Since this is not an article, but a discussion, then that is a sufficient reference to the relevant information and the reliable sources quoted at that place. (] (]) 02:31, 22 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::Taivo, don't delete my edits. Please, it. About the "sources", the reference in the article about the naming dispute is the same as in the project page (http://www.vlada.mk/?q=node/2273). It's the very same verbal claim by Milososki. There are no reliable, verifiable sources regarding this. Not even a list in their Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Nothing. Zero. Find sources. If you don't, you will violate Misplaced Pages's rules. ] (]) 02:51, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::You are a topic-banned user, SQRT. It is as if you are not speaking here. I will defer to the arbitrator's request below. (] (]) 04:22, 22 June 2009 (UTC)) | |||
:::If a comment needs to be removed from these pages, please let the referees handle it. In the meantime there is a discussion open at AE to consider SQRT5P1D2's participation, why don't we let that run its course first? ] <sup>]</sup> 03:04, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::The verbal claim is named on the Macedonian goverment's website. That is a reliable source. The fact that it opposes someone else's point of view does not make it unreliable. ] ] 03:51, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::There's also a hell of a lot more references than just that one ]. ] ] 03:59, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::It's self-serving, which undermines its use as a reliable source. We wouldn't accept a Greek government website that claimed that half the countries use FYROM. Same problem. We could count them, one by one. We could say "the majority." We could say "except for Greece, Britain, and a few smaller countries." But 125 needs a source that is reliable for that piece of information. ] (]) 04:03, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Three quarters of European Countries, well-source through the Macedonia naming dispute link Heimstern provided. ] (]) 04:06, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::{{ec}}That's actually an interesting idea. I am going to write a letter to the American embassies of both countries, and see what results I get. ]]] 04:07, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::I don't see that a Greek government website would be unreliable, either (biased, of course, but hard facts tend to be solidly represented, regardless of POV). The other sources are clearly better, though, so we should rely mainly on those. ] ] 04:17, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::If your letter does get answered it should be posted since it would be helpful information in order to adequately cover the positions of both countries on that. Right now the WP page linked above uses Greek official sources for some citations and RoM official sources for others so as mixing two biased sources in one paragraph. It also uses both Greek biased news sources and RoM biased news sources for citations too. Really reliable outside sources should better be used if found.] <sup>]</sup> 06:38, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::::::::Unfortunately not many other sources can be found. Nobody else cares. Either way, this discussion is starting to look like it's about the ] article now; as such any further discussion ''might'' be better placed at that talk page rather than here. ''']]''' 16:41, 22 June 2009 | |||
::::::::: I agree about that. ] <sup>]</sup> 06:42, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
(outdent) I would suggest out of respect to this process and the controversy of whether his topic ban applies that SQRT5 abstains from this discussion until the case for his participation is cleared. ] <sup>]</sup> 06:30, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:Oh, and I concur that quoting Milososki is not the good way to go in terms of reliably sourcing a number. Project space might be flexible but it should not contain whatever political claim there is without attribution. So the sentence should say that "the foreign minister Milososki claims that ... ...".] <sup>]</sup> 06:42, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
::Should I include the attribution in the page? Only the number 125 needs attributino, the "two thirds" can be changed to "about two thirds". Does someone else agrees that the number needs to be attributed to "official Rom sources put the number at 125"? I think that saying "about two thirds" and a link to the WP page should be more than enough for the background section we have here ] <sup>]</sup> 06:49, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::The 125 figure has been widely reported - see e.g. published only 10 days ago, and article of November 2008. I see no reason to doubt it. The figure, after all, comes from the Macedonian foreign ministry, which is both an official source and the definitive source of information on Macedonia's foreign relations. There is no indication that Greece disputes the figure. -- ] (]) 07:10, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::: from BBC: quote:''In a November 2008 interview, Macedonian Foreign Minister Antonio Milososki said "it is important that 125 countries worldwide have recognised Macedonia's constitutional name,"''. That is called proper attribution, that's what I am saying.] <sup>]</sup> 08:46, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::Facts: one (1) self-serving source, making a verbal claim. There isn't even a list with the claimed numbers, in their ministry of foreign affairs (http://mfa.gov.mk/default1.aspx?ItemID=310). Not to mention that many countries in the "bilateral relations" list, such as Australia, don't have established relations with the "Republic of Macedonia" but with the "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia". Another instance that their MFA is not a reliable source. Ιf it is "important" and there are actual data to back it up, it should be there. Or in another government website. Or anywhere. But the statement cannot be verified and has no place in Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 11:55, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:::::::If the BBC's not good enough for you, I guess it just goes to show that nothing will suffice for you if it supports this fact. Either way, the sources at the Macedonia naming dispute article are probably better for these purposes, if more of a pain to read though. ] ] 12:06, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
==Questions about disambiguation== | |||
I'm unclear about the rationale for some of the disambiguation-based solutions being advanced here (i.e. those where ] reverts to being a disambiguation page), so for those editors who favour such solutions, I'll pose the following questions: | |||
1) It's generally agreed that there are only four leading meanings for "Macedonia". Why is having a disambiguation page superior to having a hatnote at the top of the most-used page, as at present? If the aim is to direct a minority of readers to the other three pages, isn't this already being achieved through the hatnote? | |||
2) Since the great majority of readers have always gone to the country page, what is gained by forcing them through a disambiguation page that they don't need? | |||
3) Is there any hard evidence that readers are being disadvantaged in any way by the current naming structure? | |||
Any answers? -- ] (]) 22:55, 21 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
:1) ''Only'' four? In ], the prime example for disambiguation (appearing in the policy text), there are ''only'' three common meanings. What is your point? | |||
:2) is disputed. Right now Fut's numbers suggest a 9:1 ratio of users choosing the country but noone can say for sure what the readers of the dab page were chosing when Macedonia was a dab page. Hits specifically to en.wikipedia.org/Macedonia are about 1000/day and of those it has been '''conjectured''' that 900 are happy to stay there (?). Of course that is only a conjecture since no experiment was made when ] was a dab page so as we could see without any doubt. Furthermore hit statistics are not as reliable as unique users. Even if we had reliable numbers how much a majority is considered a "great" majority? | |||
::Furthermore ask yourself what is lost by forcing users to go through a dab page: it's 10 seconds and a click and that only for one part of the users. Consider that together with '''what is at stake''': stability, edit wars, violation of NPOV as perceived "by some", disambiguation problems or semiological confusion in the hat link, loss of encyclopedic value due to ], (all those in my opinion). | |||
:2) even so we gain neutrality to say the least. | |||
:3) Yes one minority of users is obviously disadvantaged. Also there is a possibility that uninformed or lay readers might be mislead or even miss some content they might otherwise read (e.g. to read the history section of the country rather than read the region article). Is there any evidence that readers are being ''advantaged'' by the current status quo? I mean other than they avoid the dab page (they gain 10 seconds and a click) while also avoid seeing what other "Macedonias" exist? | |||
::Personal opinion: A dab in some cases will be educative for the general user or even incite him to learn other things. That is even more so for Macedonia. But I could support dab pages in other places too, I learned many things from having a query direct me to a dab page rather than a specific topic. Speaking for myself I don't see going through a dab page such a bad thing but rather a good thing.Therefore the users are actually more disadvantaged now. ] <sup>]</sup> 00:17, 22 June 2009 (UTC) | |||
== Deadline today == | |||
Towards the end of the day, proposals and all submissions will be opened up for community presentation and discussion per our earlier comments. At this time, comments on the talkpage may be archived, and some structural alterations will take place to facilitate endorsements and discussion. ] (]) 08:32, 22 June 2009 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 13:20, 4 February 2023
The objective of this page is to reach consensus on Macedonia-related naming issues in Misplaced Pages articles |
For discussion on this page from the first phase of the discussion, see /Archive 1. For the particular thread that resulted in the decision of which proposals were put forward, see here and here. |
Macedonia discussion |
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Main page (talk) |
Topic pages |
Main articles (talk) Other page titles (talk) Greece (talk) International orgs. (talk) Other articles (talk) Miscellaneous (talk) |
Links |
WP:MOSMAC • WP:ARBMAC2 WP:NAME • WP:DAB WP:NCON • WP:NCGN |
Articles |
Country • Region Greek • Ancient Disambig • Terminology Naming dispute |
Results |
Consensus (talk) |
v • d • e |
Request for comment
I have opened a Request for comment on this dispute. Please see the main page and subpages for more information. J.delanoyadds 21:26, 25 June 2009 (UTC)
- Looks good. I don't suppose you need us regulars to register our own endorsements again at this stage, right? BTW, as you may have seen, I've sent a number of notifications to editors and article talk pages. Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:22, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Anyone other than the referees may endorse proposals. J.delanoyadds 13:32, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Since I am not familiar with how the "RfC" process normally works, may I ask please if we can endorse multiple proposals? (as in first choice, second choice, etc.). I have first choices but would like to endorse one or two proposals as second and third choices on the pages. Shadowmorph 20:19, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Different RfCs work in different ways, but in this particular one the message at the top of the page asks that we only endorse one proposal. -- ChrisO (talk) 20:25, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you, I missed that text (always rapidly scrolling down :-) ).Shadowmorph 21:04, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I do however disagree since many users might be looking for a compromise rather than sticking to a single proposal as is apparent by swaying endorsements and many endorsements that indicate a second choice in their comments.
- May I suggest to change that into a maximum of two endorsements.
- Please realize that we have to have an indication of a second preference of endorsements so that consensus can be reached. Shadowmorph 21:27, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Advertising this discussion
I saw Future placed a notice at talk:Greece and talk:Macedonia I remember something the referees said about advertising to Village Pump (looked it up:WP:VILLAGE), the WP:CENT and elsewhere. We need to gather outside opinions here as suggested by ARBCOM. I remember some other places mentioned in ARBMAC2. I would suggest to advertise at more places where more outside users that might be interested and third parties can see (talk:Greece and talk:Macedonia is more for the immediately interested).Shadowmorph 08:42, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- You're right. I've done
WP:WPPWP:VPP and the centralised discussion box now. Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:49, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Not sure what place you meant, but that link is WikiProject Philosophy :) BalkanFever 08:56, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I notified Talk:Bulgaria, Talk:Albania, Talk:Serbia (regions with parts in the Macedonia region) using Future's notification note. Also Talk:Balkans (locus).
- I also notified the Talk:Macedonia (ancient kingdom) (second place in page hits from the main Macedonia articles). Shadowmorph 09:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Odin5000 Blocked and topic banned
(copied from my post to Odin5000's talk page, if there's enough evidence for a CU, please let me know) Blocked 72 hours, see this which was posted after the final warning by Sarek. You are also banned from anything related to the Macedonia dispute, including talk pages, central discussions, ANI threads, anything at all, indefinitely. — Rlevse • Talk • 18:23, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Swaying endorsements
Is this form of commenting about individual votes acceptable during the process?. I want a definite answer about this and where the referees stand on that part. If the answer is that minor campaigning is appropriate and not gaming this consensus-finding process, then I might want to know to adjust my course of action accordingly. Shadowmorph 19:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- We've been asked by the ArbCom and referees to justify our recommendations with reference to policies and guidelines. If the basis for their recommendation is unclear from what they've posted, or there's an issue with an assertion that's been made in a recommendation, there's no harm in asking for a clarification or mentioning a point that may have been overlooked. It's to everyone's advantage if there's absolute clarity about what is being recommended and why the particular recommendation is being made. It would be improper to ask people on their talk pages to change their !votes and I'd strongly advise against anyone thinking of doing that. -- ChrisO (talk) 19:18, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- If the individual has already participated in the discussion, and has made their view known, then this violates neither the spirit nor the substance of the canvassing guidelines. Contacting editors who have not participated would be more problematic. Fritzpoll (talk) 19:28, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Let's clarify this. NPOV is a key (arguably the key) issue in this matter. If you check the main articles discussion page, you'll see that (for instance) John Carter has just posted a description of why he thinks NPOV's criteria aren't sufficient in this case. He's addressed the issue of NPOV directly. In a handful of cases in the present main articles discussion, where contributors have not addressed the NPOV issue in recommending proposals, I've asked them to consider clarifying their recommendations. It's certainly not indiscriminate and I've not asked anyone to change their !vote. I've likewise not contacted anyone who hasn't participated, addressing the concern Fritzpoll raises. -- ChrisO (talk) 19:33, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Based on the diffs, I'm happy with what ChrisO has done. I was clarifying the situation in general to address Shadowmorph's comment that he might adjust (his) course of action accordingly, and not impugning the specific instance raised here. Fritzpoll (talk) 19:46, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you. -- ChrisO (talk) 19:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I also want to clarify to Shadowmorph that these are not "votes". This is a Request for Comment action with commenters organizing their comments in sections labelled "endorsements". This is not, not, not a poll and there are no "votes" here. The referees have made it abundantly clear that even if a "majority" of endorsers favor one or another proposal, they will be guided primarily by policy adherence and not by counting noses. (Taivo (talk) 19:58, 26 June 2009 (UTC))
- Thank you, for the clarification. Don't worry I won't be campaigning to users unless one "has already participated in the discussion". In that case I will feel free to comment on the talk page of that one about his endorsement. However I couldn't find any other place where Hiberniantears has participated in this discussion (or stating a preference on the Macedonia naming) before he signed his endorsement for proposal B.
- Taivo I know these are not votes but I also know that consensus should be assessed with reviewing each endorsement on the basis of the arguments provided. Exactly because this is not a vote is because a user who is so marginally close between two proposals that he easily sways his "vote" should be regarded as a less strong indication he being a part of this consensus. Shadowmorph 20:15, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I also want to clarify to Shadowmorph that these are not "votes". This is a Request for Comment action with commenters organizing their comments in sections labelled "endorsements". This is not, not, not a poll and there are no "votes" here. The referees have made it abundantly clear that even if a "majority" of endorsers favor one or another proposal, they will be guided primarily by policy adherence and not by counting noses. (Taivo (talk) 19:58, 26 June 2009 (UTC))
- Thank you. -- ChrisO (talk) 19:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Based on the diffs, I'm happy with what ChrisO has done. I was clarifying the situation in general to address Shadowmorph's comment that he might adjust (his) course of action accordingly, and not impugning the specific instance raised here. Fritzpoll (talk) 19:46, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Let's clarify this. NPOV is a key (arguably the key) issue in this matter. If you check the main articles discussion page, you'll see that (for instance) John Carter has just posted a description of why he thinks NPOV's criteria aren't sufficient in this case. He's addressed the issue of NPOV directly. In a handful of cases in the present main articles discussion, where contributors have not addressed the NPOV issue in recommending proposals, I've asked them to consider clarifying their recommendations. It's certainly not indiscriminate and I've not asked anyone to change their !vote. I've likewise not contacted anyone who hasn't participated, addressing the concern Fritzpoll raises. -- ChrisO (talk) 19:33, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- If the individual has already participated in the discussion, and has made their view known, then this violates neither the spirit nor the substance of the canvassing guidelines. Contacting editors who have not participated would be more problematic. Fritzpoll (talk) 19:28, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Also SheffieldSteel said in Caspian blue's talk page that ChrisO has contacted many of the editors who signed Misplaced Pages:Centralized_discussion/Macedonia/main_articles#Users_who_endorse_Proposal_B asking them to change or justify their position. So this has not been a single case. I guess I can proceed in the same fashion then. Shadowmorph 20:26, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- No, he's wrong. I have already resolved this with him on his talk page and he has clarified his recommendation. -- ChrisO (talk) 20:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Ok, but it is true that at least 3 users other than Hiberniantears were notified in the same way. Diffs: 1st :, 2nd: , 3rd: . Shadowmorph 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Also noticeable is that man with one red show shifted his endorsement from this, into this after your helpful comments. No problem. Shadowmorph 20:50, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Ok, but it is true that at least 3 users other than Hiberniantears were notified in the same way. Diffs: 1st :, 2nd: , 3rd: . Shadowmorph 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- No, he's wrong. I have already resolved this with him on his talk page and he has clarified his recommendation. -- ChrisO (talk) 20:34, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- (ec) But the fact that this isn't a vote is reason not to worry about "swaying" of one or two persons. Nothing's being counted here, so 5-4 or 4-5 doesn't matter. The referees are looking more for any concerns or points that haven't already been made by the half dozen of us participants. They're getting input, so an endoresement is simply a data point, not a determining factor. (Taivo (talk) 20:28, 26 June 2009 (UTC))
- I don't see how signing an endorsement does not constitute participation on these pages. The votes don't matter, the numbers are not important - all we principally care about is the argument Fritzpoll (talk) 20:36, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I understand. It is now clear that informing users that signed endorsements about the arguments of the other proposals is appropriate. Thank you. Shadowmorph 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- It isn't automatically appropriate - it depends on how you do it. Please don't be tempted to spam people with appeals to change their votes. -- ChrisO (talk) 20:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you, let me say that I am not an automaton and I have reason. Shadowmorph 20:52, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I am rather concerned about who is contacting whom about what. My understanding is that ChrisO's article move from Republic of Macedonia to Macedonia led (directly or indirectly) to a large amount of drama, an Arbcom case, ChrisO's desysopping, and ultimately to this discussion. Now ChrisO seems to be contacting only those editors who've endorsed Republic of Macedonia over Macedonia, i.e. those who effectively disagree with his original article move. Are there no other editors whose position might need to be clarified? Is there no other editor who could tell them? SHEFFIELDSTEEL 21:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I can't see why he isn't entitled to discuss an editor's position with them on their talkpage, provided they have already expressed an opinion here (i.e. he is not trying to bring fresh eyes to support proposal A) - can't the editors in question tell him to sod off if they don't like it? Is Fritzpoll being unusually dense? :) Fritzpoll (talk) 21:12, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- (ec) I'm naturally rather interested in the NPOV issue, since I wrote the naming conflict guidelines and the relevant section of NPOV. Hence my concern that it's addressed adequately in the arguments. My sole concern here has been, where editors have not addressed NPOV, to ask whether they could clarify their recommendations to address this point. If they have addressed it, as John Carter for instance has, I have not asked them for clarifications (and I have in fact complimented John on being so clear about his recommendation ). I might add that I think it is rather inappropriate for you to post followups like this one which are obvious assumptions of bad faith, particularly as Fritzpoll has stated that he is happy with my actions. I have already asked you to remove those followups in good faith, and I would appreciate it if you could do so. Finally, please do not assume (as you appear to be doing) that I am somehow persona non grata on the Macedonia issue. My involvement in this discussion was fully endorsed (and indeed encouraged) by the ArbCom. -- ChrisO (talk) 21:16, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I am rather concerned about who is contacting whom about what. My understanding is that ChrisO's article move from Republic of Macedonia to Macedonia led (directly or indirectly) to a large amount of drama, an Arbcom case, ChrisO's desysopping, and ultimately to this discussion. Now ChrisO seems to be contacting only those editors who've endorsed Republic of Macedonia over Macedonia, i.e. those who effectively disagree with his original article move. Are there no other editors whose position might need to be clarified? Is there no other editor who could tell them? SHEFFIELDSTEEL 21:09, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you, let me say that I am not an automaton and I have reason. Shadowmorph 20:52, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- It isn't automatically appropriate - it depends on how you do it. Please don't be tempted to spam people with appeals to change their votes. -- ChrisO (talk) 20:47, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- I understand. It is now clear that informing users that signed endorsements about the arguments of the other proposals is appropriate. Thank you. Shadowmorph 20:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Also SheffieldSteel said in Caspian blue's talk page that ChrisO has contacted many of the editors who signed Misplaced Pages:Centralized_discussion/Macedonia/main_articles#Users_who_endorse_Proposal_B asking them to change or justify their position. So this has not been a single case. I guess I can proceed in the same fashion then. Shadowmorph 20:26, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
(outdent) Re Shadowmorph's continuing worries about "swaying votes": This is not a poll! If Proposal X gets 25 endorsements but barely follows policy and Proposal Y gets 1 endorsement but follows policy precisely, then Proposal Y is the one the referees will accept. They're looking for input and new perspectives, not a majority of users siding with X or Y. Who cares if one or two people "change" their endorsements. Maybe it's because ChrisO's interpretation of policy is more solid and not based on Greek politics. But don't get your hackles up about it. It's not a vote! (Taivo (talk) 21:25, 26 June 2009 (UTC))
- I think the case is that the referees are looking to assess what the consensus of the community is in conjunction to the policy. Not just "looking for input". Otherwise there would be no point in all this, right? Shadowmorph 21:29, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- No assumptions of bad faith here, ChrisO. There is no doubt in my mind that you are convinced you are doing the right thing. SHEFFIELDSTEEL 21:31, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you for clarifying that. Could you please address my request about your user talk page followups? -- ChrisO (talk) 21:41, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- Yes, that's right, but consensus isn't about the number of people stating a particular opinion - it is about the quality of those opinions. Fritzpoll (talk) 21:44, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
- No assumptions of bad faith here, ChrisO. There is no doubt in my mind that you are convinced you are doing the right thing. SHEFFIELDSTEEL 21:31, 26 June 2009 (UTC)
Changing proposals
Just to make this clear. I thought it was before, but apparently not.
Do not change any part of any of the proposals' wordings. At all. (obvious typographical errors are of course exempt)
If you simply must make a change, post to the appropriate talk page first, but please note that it is extremely unlikely that any significant changes will be made, under any circumstances. You had two weeks to make changes, so if you didn't do it then, don't do it now. People who endorse a proposal want what they are endorsing to remain consistent. Thanks, J.delanoyadds 05:09, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Thank you for clarifying this for us. I understand now that the only parts to be edited are the endorsements, with everything else remaining the same. In light of the fact that we've recently invited many people to comment on these proposals, I would like to ask how they are supposed to voice their disagreement with the policy rationale of specific proposals. I apologise if my edits were seen by some as disruptive. I look forward to a fruitful cooperation with everyone in this case. --Radjenef (talk) 08:33, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
IP editors
- Also, I haven't talked to the other referees, but I think that we should disallow IPs from endorsing proposals. This is contentious enough without IPs making it even worse. If you are really serious about helping to solve this, I think you can create an account. J.delanoyadds 05:13, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- To me, this is an absolute no-brainer. If we're going to forbid SPAs, how can we possibly allow IPs, which have even less status than SPAs? Such IPs are furthermore just as single-purpose as SPAs. Heimstern Läufer (talk) 05:17, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- but that's catch 22. If you care enough to create an account, you can't contribute because you're an SPA. I didn't set up an account because I saw how you treated a guy you called an SPA - deleted his words and blocked him. So what is the casual reader, who sees something they know is wrong to do? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 166.137.132.16 (talk • contribs) 05:31, June 27, 2009
- why is Misplaced Pages suddenly only the domain of old boys anyway? What happened to "anyone can edit"? Heimstern, until such time as IPs are banned from discussing, please reinstate my opinions on the page you protected. I'd also like an apology from the guy who deleted my words without referee consensus.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 166.137.132.16 (talk • contribs) 05:33, June 27, 2009
- People who are brand new to Misplaced Pages don't know what an SPA is or that things operate by consensus. If you'd like to participate in the discussion, you are welcome to use your account. If you've already had your say under that name, please remember that we are not counting votes here - saying the same thing twice will not make your support count any more. Shell 05:42, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- To me, this is an absolute no-brainer. If we're going to forbid SPAs, how can we possibly allow IPs, which have even less status than SPAs? Such IPs are furthermore just as single-purpose as SPAs. Heimstern Läufer (talk) 05:17, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
Hi Shell, I appreciate your sentiment. Unfortunately that is NOT the case. I posted one opinion supporting proposal C for what Skopje should be referred to in articles about Greece, and inexplicably had my comments deleted. Another user Orion500? had their support of proposal C also deleted. He's now been blocked and topic banned. There is no statement on the page that new users and IPs cannot contribute to the discussion, so what are we supposed to do? It is quite obvious those that support proposal A are prepared to delete arguments to make sure their POV is pushed through. I also had my comments deleted by J.delanoy of another users talk page. The level of hostility and threat to new users who may be very concerned about what the encyclopedia says is quite extreme and bizzarre. So again, I appreciate you sentiments but invite you to see the history pages of the proposal to discover the reality.
- To the anonymous IP. It doesn't matter which side of the issue you are on. It was decided early on in this process that anonymous IPs, single-purpose accounts, and new accounts would be excluded from the process. This isn't a vote, so numbers of endorsements will not decide the issue. (Taivo(talk) 14:19, 27 June 2009 (UTC))
- Taivo if that is the case then why was the page not semi protected for just established users? Why were there no instructions saying this? How is a new user to know they are not welcome to edit, if the edit button works and they CAN post a comment. How are we to know?? It seems to me that you create your own mess by saying one thing and doing the other. Did you not read Shells comment above? He/she welcomed new user comments but you are saying no. Furthermore J.deloney raised the issue suggesting that IP users be not allowed to contribute INDICATING that at this moment THEY ARE. You do not suggest a change that is already policy.
Therefore, the deletion of my comments on the page should be reverted if there is to be any consistency, consensus and no hypocrisy.
- Look, you obviously are familiar with Misplaced Pages, so lets drop the disruption. If you'd like to participate, you know how to do so. If you don't want to use your existing account, there's nothing any of us can do for you. If you are Orion500, I would suggest that this is a poor direction to take and will only lead to trouble. Shell 15:16, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- All right then. Until the other two referees get on to say what their opinions are, you may consider all IPs banned from endorsing proposals. J.delanoyadds 15:14, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree, IPs and most likely any brand new accounts will be unable to participate. Otherwise its just too open to gaming. Shell 15:22, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with your call to ban IP editors. May I suggest, however, a way of appeasing the IP editors themselves? If one of them has an exceptionally brilliant policy-based idea in support of one of the proposals, they can contact one of the regular editors (probably one who endorses the same proposal) and ask them to add it to their rationale. Alternatively, we could create a sandbox area for IP editors, from which we could draw ideas, even though they wouldn't be participating in any of the regular discussion. --Radjenef (talk) 10:41, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with the ban of IP editors on the endorsement side - why don't we let IPs comment on the talkpage if they have a good idea? Fritzpoll (talk) 11:02, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- That seems a reasonable compromise. Though judging from the performance of the IP editors so far, I suspect we're not likely to see anything particularly constructive. -- ChrisO (talk) 11:04, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with the ban of IP editors on the endorsement side - why don't we let IPs comment on the talkpage if they have a good idea? Fritzpoll (talk) 11:02, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with your call to ban IP editors. May I suggest, however, a way of appeasing the IP editors themselves? If one of them has an exceptionally brilliant policy-based idea in support of one of the proposals, they can contact one of the regular editors (probably one who endorses the same proposal) and ask them to add it to their rationale. Alternatively, we could create a sandbox area for IP editors, from which we could draw ideas, even though they wouldn't be participating in any of the regular discussion. --Radjenef (talk) 10:41, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree, IPs and most likely any brand new accounts will be unable to participate. Otherwise its just too open to gaming. Shell 15:22, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
Did we forget something?
Kwamikagami, with his endorsement post at the Greece-related page , draws our attention to one topic domain that we seem to have forgotten in this RfC setup: the naming of languages and ethnicities. While in most domains this is relatively straightforward, and I trust we can decide many things involving article naming issues in analogy with whatever gets decided for the geographical terms, there are a few notorious problems in certain corners – the one Kwami mentions, about how to call the Macedonian language in contexts of giving place name variants of Greek places, has indeed been a long-standing bone of contention.
I had some ideas for guidelines covering these things, in one of my earlier drafts (see User:Future Perfect at Sunrise/MOSMAC3#Proposal 4: Adjectival use, ethnicity and language). What do people think, should we or can we still introduce these topics in the process here? Fut.Perf. ☼ 06:41, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'd have no problem with introducing these topics. I don't know about what the others think... --Radjenef (talk) 08:01, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- No objection to raising the topic. I think the guidelines to which Fut. Perf. links above probably represent the best solution. Andrew Dalby 14:10, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I agree with Andrew. -- ChrisO (talk) 14:14, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Future's verbage looks good to me. But it needs a tweak to distinguish Macedonian Slavic from Macedonian Greek. The Greek dialect should never be left as just "Macedonian" to avoid confusion. Either "Macedonian Greek" or "Macedonian dialect of Greek". From what I understand there is no linguistic distinction between the Greek dialects (or, rather, subdialects) of Greek Macedonia and Macedonia, so there should be no need to distinguish between "Greek Macedonia Greek" and "Macedonian Greek". The latter term should be sufficient to discuss all issues related to this northern dialect of Greek. (Taivo (talk) 14:25, 27 June 2009 (UTC))
- Perhaps, if the refs agree, we can just put a draft along the above lines to another subpage and invite tweaks and informal comments on it in parallel to the current process. Since the draft mostly describes existing, relatively stable practice, and nobody has so far demanded any radical changes of status quo such as major page moves, this might work without the formal trouble of competing "proposals" and polling. But it would still be useful to have it documented and sealed as being a widely agreed-upon consensus so it could then be attached to the final set of guidelines. As far as I'm aware, the only real issue with those conventions has been the use of "Macedonian Slavic" in context related to the linguistic minority in Greece (and the dispute in the past has been less over the wording in the text itself, than over where that link should redirect to.) Fut.Perf. ☼ 14:53, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Future's verbage looks good to me. But it needs a tweak to distinguish Macedonian Slavic from Macedonian Greek. The Greek dialect should never be left as just "Macedonian" to avoid confusion. Either "Macedonian Greek" or "Macedonian dialect of Greek". From what I understand there is no linguistic distinction between the Greek dialects (or, rather, subdialects) of Greek Macedonia and Macedonia, so there should be no need to distinguish between "Greek Macedonia Greek" and "Macedonian Greek". The latter term should be sufficient to discuss all issues related to this northern dialect of Greek. (Taivo (talk) 14:25, 27 June 2009 (UTC))
- I agree with Andrew. -- ChrisO (talk) 14:14, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- No objection to raising the topic. I think the guidelines to which Fut. Perf. links above probably represent the best solution. Andrew Dalby 14:10, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Relevant links would include Varieties of Modern Greek and Slavic dialects of Greece. As for wording, I prefer "Greek Slavic" or "local Slavic", because my first reading of "Macedonian Slavic" would be the language of ROM, which is not necessarily what is meant: It would not clear that Костур is the local Slavic name of Kastoria rather than what we'd find on a map published by the govt. of the ROM, which given current politics is not helpful. However, if the wording is Fut.Perf's "Macedonian and Bulgarian", although it's still not clear to me that it's the traditional local name, at least the reader wouldn't worry about it being part of a current political battle between Skopje and Athens.
- Neither the Greek nor the Slavic should be left to just "Macedonian". IMO, the Slavic should not be called just "Slavic" either (which we had at one point), since that implies that it's also the Polish & Russian name/pronunciation. kwami (talk) 19:26, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Perhaps we should move this discussion to a more specialised place? As a brief response, I find "local Slavic" only justified where we deal with a distinctively local dialect form. But Kostur is, for all I know, the standard form in both literary Macedonian and Bulgarian, and it may or may not be identical in the local dialect. Fut.Perf. ☼ 19:32, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Point taken for "local". But since "Greek Slavic" includes both Macedonian and Bulgarian, I think it would make the situation fairly clear, and not raise concerns about a possible political fight. kwami (talk) 19:41, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Except that "Greek Slavic" would be a highly idiosyncratic usage of ours. I don't think it's used much anywhere else. "Macedonian Slavic" works better and is also more precise – there are also other forms of Slavic in Greece, most notably the Bulgarian of the Pomaks. Fut.Perf. ☼ 19:48, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Bulgarian and FYROMacedonian Slavic are the same thing... why so much hassle? Call it Bulgarian and end of the matter. 87.219.85.254 (talk) 14:32, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- In my view, “Macedonian Slavic” is better than “Greek Slavic” in the same way that London French would be better than English French, should the situation arise. To call the Slavic language or ethnicity simply “Macedonian” in a context such as the Greek administrative district of Macedonia is to deny the majority of the Greek population of Hellenic Macedonia to identify with their region, ethnic background and indeed with their own history (http://macedonia-evidence.org/obama-letter.html). Of the two varieties of Slavic idioms (languages), that of the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and that of Hellenic Macedonia, I think there should be a distinction made where it matters, when relevant by qualifying it as the “local Macedonian Slavic”. More difficult is the issue of ethnicities, as it is inconceivable that the Macedonian ethnicity can jump from one people (ancient and modern Macedonians of Greece) to another people (modern Slavs of the Republic of Macedonia) but presumably some formula has to be found to describe the ethnicity of the Republic of Macedonia’s Slavs that remains an unresolved issue not just for Misplaced Pages.Skamnelis (talk) 04:38, 4 July 2009 (UTC)
- Bulgarian and FYROMacedonian Slavic are the same thing... why so much hassle? Call it Bulgarian and end of the matter. 87.219.85.254 (talk) 14:32, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- Except that "Greek Slavic" would be a highly idiosyncratic usage of ours. I don't think it's used much anywhere else. "Macedonian Slavic" works better and is also more precise – there are also other forms of Slavic in Greece, most notably the Bulgarian of the Pomaks. Fut.Perf. ☼ 19:48, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Point taken for "local". But since "Greek Slavic" includes both Macedonian and Bulgarian, I think it would make the situation fairly clear, and not raise concerns about a possible political fight. kwami (talk) 19:41, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
Could we have a view from the referees perhaps, on whether and how to integrate this issue in the further process? Thanks, --Fut.Perf. ☼ 07:53, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
- My question here is to what extent this is a significant dispute? Can someone summarise the various positions if there's a row about it, or can this be fixed in a relatively calm manner? Fritzpoll (talk) 07:09, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'll try. As you are probably aware, Macedonian ethnogenesis is a rather recent spin-off from what was earlier – until the early-to-mid 20th century – predominantly identified as Bulgarian. The tricky thing is how to deal with the people and the language in geographical contexts that were never politically under the control of the official Yugoslav Macedonian state, the main driving force behind this ethnogenesis. This goes particularly for the minority in Greece. All except the most intransigent nationalists on the Macedonian side agree that we must be careful about labelling the people there ethnic Macedonians, because only a minority within the minority politically identifies as such; others today self-identify as Slavic-speaking Greeks. By consequence, not all of the speakers in Greece would identify their language as "Macedonian". Nevertheless, their dialects are treated as part of Macedonian by the overwhelming majority of present-day international scholarship. The POV issue here comes both from Greek editors, who will of course again oppose the use of "Macedonian" either as an ethnonym or as a language name in these contexts, and from Bulgarian editors, who demand that the older identification of those dialects as Bulgarian be given equal status with any other. In my personal view, that means giving undue weight to what is today internationally a fringe position, but Bulgarian editors never tire of quoting 19th-century and early-20th-century sources describing local people as Bulgarians and making a big fuss over it. We once determine "Macedonian Slavic" as a viable solution, but then the dispute went on about where to link that. Currently it's a section redirect to a part of the Macedonian language article. Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:32, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks for the summary. To what extent do editors here think the results of a discussion on this topic would be influenced by the proposals currently under discussion? I'm asking to try to see how we might organise another discussion, whether to run it in parallel, or if it will be dependent on the current issues, and can that discussion finish after these polls are closed in approximately 10 days. Fritzpoll (talk) 11:38, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- It seems that the players change for this discussion--rather than Greek vs Macedonian, we have Macedonian vs Bulgarian. I may be simplifying the issue too much. It also doesn't seem like the proposals on the table will affect the language name issue. A new discussion might be in order. (Taivo (talk) 12:45, 1 July 2009 (UTC))
- I'd say it's largely independent. The first set of proposals only covers the disambiguation technicalities for page titles. If someone had wanted to rename the Macedonians (ethnic group) article, that ought to have been done within the same framework as the present poll, but I don't think that's on the agenda. The new proposal mostly codifies uncontentious material about wording conventions in article text – most of it is quite obvious and we need it only so we will have something solid to point the unavoidable edit-warriors to. The only potentially contentious bit is the one about the Slavic-speakers in Greece. My suggestion is we start a discussion in parallel and just see where the next few days lead us. I am hoping we can settle that part just by discussing and tweaking a common guideline draft together, rather than having to go through a formal choice between competing proposals. Fut.Perf. ☼ 14:22, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- Fine. My suggestion is to begin a discussion on a new set of pages - mark these pages with the {{underconstruction}} tag, link them from the discussion sidebar and do not include endorsement sections. Let the discussion run its course over there - if it finishes later than this current batch, we'll decide what to do then. I suspect that we can close the current batch, and let the new discussion run over a bit if it is needed, since the issues are not conflated. We'll check this with Arbcom nearer the time if this becomes a likely scenario. Fritzpoll (talk) 15:28, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- Okay. Draft now at Misplaced Pages:Centralized discussion/Macedonia/miscellaneous, for lack of a better title. Fut.Perf. ☼ 16:11, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- Fine. My suggestion is to begin a discussion on a new set of pages - mark these pages with the {{underconstruction}} tag, link them from the discussion sidebar and do not include endorsement sections. Let the discussion run its course over there - if it finishes later than this current batch, we'll decide what to do then. I suspect that we can close the current batch, and let the new discussion run over a bit if it is needed, since the issues are not conflated. We'll check this with Arbcom nearer the time if this becomes a likely scenario. Fritzpoll (talk) 15:28, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks for the summary. To what extent do editors here think the results of a discussion on this topic would be influenced by the proposals currently under discussion? I'm asking to try to see how we might organise another discussion, whether to run it in parallel, or if it will be dependent on the current issues, and can that discussion finish after these polls are closed in approximately 10 days. Fritzpoll (talk) 11:38, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
- I'll try. As you are probably aware, Macedonian ethnogenesis is a rather recent spin-off from what was earlier – until the early-to-mid 20th century – predominantly identified as Bulgarian. The tricky thing is how to deal with the people and the language in geographical contexts that were never politically under the control of the official Yugoslav Macedonian state, the main driving force behind this ethnogenesis. This goes particularly for the minority in Greece. All except the most intransigent nationalists on the Macedonian side agree that we must be careful about labelling the people there ethnic Macedonians, because only a minority within the minority politically identifies as such; others today self-identify as Slavic-speaking Greeks. By consequence, not all of the speakers in Greece would identify their language as "Macedonian". Nevertheless, their dialects are treated as part of Macedonian by the overwhelming majority of present-day international scholarship. The POV issue here comes both from Greek editors, who will of course again oppose the use of "Macedonian" either as an ethnonym or as a language name in these contexts, and from Bulgarian editors, who demand that the older identification of those dialects as Bulgarian be given equal status with any other. In my personal view, that means giving undue weight to what is today internationally a fringe position, but Bulgarian editors never tire of quoting 19th-century and early-20th-century sources describing local people as Bulgarians and making a big fuss over it. We once determine "Macedonian Slavic" as a viable solution, but then the dispute went on about where to link that. Currently it's a section redirect to a part of the Macedonian language article. Fut.Perf. ☼ 08:32, 1 July 2009 (UTC)
The Future of the internet
I suggest you read the book "the future of the Internet" if you think banning new members and nonaccoubt holders from contributing to a sensitive discussion, important to many outside the Wiki community, is in any way consistent with the values Wikipefia and the Internet itself were built on. For the record I am NOT Odin5000 but after reading how he was treated there is no way I'll set up an account. The inconsistency and double standards are mind-boggling. I do not understand why this statement:
- Absolutely must be this option:
- a)maintains NPOV
- b)is consistent with the official UN name
- c)reflecting what Greeks call a place should be a no-brainer for Greek relate articles. Would we refer to Canada as being "western" as per Greenland perception, instead of "northern" in articles about USA?
is so dangerous it must be deleted with such fervor and energy. Are people so afraid of debate? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 166.137.133.13 (talk) 18:01, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- The fundamental problem is that your a) is mutually exclusive with your b) and your c). That's been fairly well demonstrated time and time again. (Taivo (talk) 18:37, 27 June 2009 (UTC))
- Anon IP is also only looking at small slice of why Odin got into trouble. — Rlevse • Talk • 18:39, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'd also suggest if you are a new user to start with articles that need improvement, there are many things that need change that are not controversial at all, don't jump in debates that involve Misplaced Pages policies if you don't even know what those policies are -- that's what's called "common sense". man with one red shoe 18:56, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Odin5000 was banned because he was a disruptive single-purpose account whose only purpose was to attempt to artificially shift the appearance of consensus. At first, I was going to let him voice his opinion, but his combative response when I told him to shorten his 1300-byte rants (which, I noticed at that point, he copy/pasted to each page, showing that he was not interested in discussion, but rather only in pushing his version of The Truth™). That is why he was banned from the discussion. He was blocked from editing period when he blatantly refused to abide by the ban, or at least to go through the proper channels to appeal it. He certainly did know what WP:ANI was, in any case.
- At this point, I have no plans to apply a universal ban to all new accounts, but I can assure you that if a new account refuses to listen to me when I tell them they need to do something such as shorten their comment, they will end up banned, and their endorsements will be reverted. Also note that this discussion is emphatically not a vote, and sheer force of numbers will not influence the final decision. It is far better to make a clear, concise, and relevant endorsement for each issue than it is to recruit hundreds of people from some forum to come and copy/paste the same boilerplate text to every page one hundred times.
- I (and I assume the other referees as well) am not interested in why a particular choice is "right" or "wrong", because everyone has different opinions on what is right and wrong. I am interested in why a particular choice meets or does not meet the relevant policies and guidelines, specifically WP:DAB and WP:NAME. Any endorsement that does not include references to these two policies, or at least a reference to one of the points listed in the "rationale" for each proposal, will almost certainly be ignored. J.delanoyadds 15:09, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
Question regarding possible different usage of names used in other sources
This might be difficult to find an answer to, and that might be one reason why I'm not sure it has been addressed before. In general, any news piece in particular, and sometimes books and journal articles, will use the full "identifying" name of the subject only once or so in the very beginning of the piece, and then use an abbreviated name in the bulk of the content. Thus, for instance, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), is generally only given that or a similar identification once in the beginning of the piece, and becomes Senator Reid or something equivalent in almost all later references. In cases like that, I would have to say that the usage which would be most relevant to us would be the name used the first time in the relevant source, Granted, the specific example may not be the best, but President Cleveland and other historical individuals will often have the same conventions apply to them. Has anyone checked to examine if there is a significant differnce between the first "identifying" name or description of the country in other sources and the more frequent "regular" usage thereafter?
I know this is a kind of strange request, but I hope it's clear enough. John Carter (talk) 18:26, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I'm not sure what you mean: is your question how this effect would have affected the statistics we used as evidence for the question of the page title? I can only answer about those parts I did, of course. Where I used Google searches, I generally counted the first occurrence of the string "Macedonia" that was displayed in the google list for each document – that means it would generally be the first in each document, thus the one most likely to have the longer formal phrase, if such was used. In the corpus searches, I used an exhaustive list of all occurrences in each text, but made no systematic distinction between first and subsequent occurrences within one text. – Or is your question whether we should do something similar ourselves? Well, yes, obviously: if and where we decide to use a longer formal phrase either in a page title or on the first occasion within one article, we should of course be free to use the shorter version subsequently. That's what Proposal A in the "other articles" page provides for. As you quite rightly observe, it's just what natural good writing usually does as a matter of common sense. Fut.Perf. ☼ 19:09, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Basically, I guess I'm saying that, at least in my eyes, we should probably count the first mention of a name or "identifier" in each of these other sources as the one relevant to the "count" for determining the "most common usage". So, if a source were to call the country "the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" by that name in the first refernce to the country, regardless of whatever name they use thereafter in subsequent mentions, it seems to me that the name that should be "counted" as being the one that source used should in determining the "most common usage" should be the FYROM, in this instance. Similarly if they used for the first reference to the country the name "Macedonia (Skopje)", "Republic of Macedonia", or some other name, that name should be counted as being the name used when determining what is the "most common usage" elsewhere. We don't call the article on the United States US or USA, even though both of those abbreviations are used more commonly, and I think it would probably be best to try to observe the same principles here as well. John Carter (talk) 19:40, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I don't agree, and your example with United States can be used against your argument, we don't use "United States of America" either. Actually, I bet many example of FYROM use are only mentions that this is the UN name, if in the rest of the article is called Macedonia than that's the name that is relevant. man with one red shoe 20:02, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- You may have a point regarding the reference to the UN use and the name FYROM, and, personally, I would think counting all UN or related publications as a single "usage", and count any documents from any other specific governmental entities, NGOs, or similar organizations as only one "usage" per entity as well. But it seems to me that whatever name (or short description, like "the country of Macedonia") other sources use to identify the country for their readers in the beginning of the material specifically regarding the country should be relevant to our determining most common usage, because that is, really, the "name" they are giving it to their readers. From that point on, once the identity of the subject is established, sources often use any number of terms for several entities. John Carter (talk) 20:15, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Well the UN name has a special status, remember that is not even considered a formal name of the republic but rather a temporary reference.man with one red shoe 20:21, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- In the best of all possible worlds, someone would be paid to carry on the research that John Carter suggests in order to come up with an up-to-the-minute accurate appraisal of what English usage actually is based on all possible sources. But we're all volunteers here. We just have to make do with sampling of reliable sources and interpretation of the results. (Taivo (talk) 01:27, 28 June 2009 (UTC))
- I gather from the above that the answer is "No, this has not been done." Without such information, however, the samplings are at least somewhat suspect and makes their reliability and usefulness suspect as well. John Carter (talk) 17:23, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- Two things: first, as I said, for the Google searches, it in fact was done implicitly, because the counting was based on the first occurrence in each document, so if the document used "f.Y." in that position, the count would have likely picked it up. And in the American corpus, the total count of "f.Y." tokens, no matter in what text position, was so small it would not have made a significant effect anyway. Second, we are no longer focussing on the question whether "M.", "R.o.M." or "f.Y.R..." is the most common appellation of the country anyway – nobody has ever seriously claimed that anything is more common than plain "M.". The only matter that is relevant for the choice between A and B/C is the other way round: which referent is the most commonly meant when the name "M." is used? For that question the occurrence or non-occurrence of "f.Y.R." is of hardly any relevance. Fut.Perf. ☼ 18:52, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- The input on the Google searches is very appreciated. And I wasn't using FYROM as anything other than an example anyway, so don't lay too much emphasis on that. One other question which does come to mind, which might be a minor one, is that I think maps might not be particularly useful in determining whether Macedonia or Macedonia (country) would be the preferred choice. Most of the maps I've ever seen make it fairly clear that differently "colored" sections are different countries, as are the areas within the heavier outlines, and I think just about everyone with even an elementary school education would implicitly recognize that the separated area called "Macedonia" on the map is the "country of Macedonia". So simply verbally referring to the country as "Macedonia" when the basically universally understood setup of the map makes it clear that it is a country, making the use of the word "country" or its equivalent redunndant, would be implicitly understood by pretty much everyone. On that basis, without any more or less independent print content in the same source I would think that maybe maps should be counted as being at best "neutral" regarding which is the preferred name. Even if there is additional text, it might be subject to internal style guidelines of consistency of naming, so the text, if it existed, might not be particularly useful in that regard either. John Carter (talk) 14:12, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
- Let's put it this way: Maps don't tell us anything about whether some addition should be used for the purpose of disambiguation (because they don't have disambiguation needs like ours). They do tell us something about whether this or that version must be used or avoided for the sake of correctness. Fut.Perf. ☼ 15:04, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
- The input on the Google searches is very appreciated. And I wasn't using FYROM as anything other than an example anyway, so don't lay too much emphasis on that. One other question which does come to mind, which might be a minor one, is that I think maps might not be particularly useful in determining whether Macedonia or Macedonia (country) would be the preferred choice. Most of the maps I've ever seen make it fairly clear that differently "colored" sections are different countries, as are the areas within the heavier outlines, and I think just about everyone with even an elementary school education would implicitly recognize that the separated area called "Macedonia" on the map is the "country of Macedonia". So simply verbally referring to the country as "Macedonia" when the basically universally understood setup of the map makes it clear that it is a country, making the use of the word "country" or its equivalent redunndant, would be implicitly understood by pretty much everyone. On that basis, without any more or less independent print content in the same source I would think that maybe maps should be counted as being at best "neutral" regarding which is the preferred name. Even if there is additional text, it might be subject to internal style guidelines of consistency of naming, so the text, if it existed, might not be particularly useful in that regard either. John Carter (talk) 14:12, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
- Two things: first, as I said, for the Google searches, it in fact was done implicitly, because the counting was based on the first occurrence in each document, so if the document used "f.Y." in that position, the count would have likely picked it up. And in the American corpus, the total count of "f.Y." tokens, no matter in what text position, was so small it would not have made a significant effect anyway. Second, we are no longer focussing on the question whether "M.", "R.o.M." or "f.Y.R..." is the most common appellation of the country anyway – nobody has ever seriously claimed that anything is more common than plain "M.". The only matter that is relevant for the choice between A and B/C is the other way round: which referent is the most commonly meant when the name "M." is used? For that question the occurrence or non-occurrence of "f.Y.R." is of hardly any relevance. Fut.Perf. ☼ 18:52, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- I gather from the above that the answer is "No, this has not been done." Without such information, however, the samplings are at least somewhat suspect and makes their reliability and usefulness suspect as well. John Carter (talk) 17:23, 28 June 2009 (UTC)
- In the best of all possible worlds, someone would be paid to carry on the research that John Carter suggests in order to come up with an up-to-the-minute accurate appraisal of what English usage actually is based on all possible sources. But we're all volunteers here. We just have to make do with sampling of reliable sources and interpretation of the results. (Taivo (talk) 01:27, 28 June 2009 (UTC))
- Well the UN name has a special status, remember that is not even considered a formal name of the republic but rather a temporary reference.man with one red shoe 20:21, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- You may have a point regarding the reference to the UN use and the name FYROM, and, personally, I would think counting all UN or related publications as a single "usage", and count any documents from any other specific governmental entities, NGOs, or similar organizations as only one "usage" per entity as well. But it seems to me that whatever name (or short description, like "the country of Macedonia") other sources use to identify the country for their readers in the beginning of the material specifically regarding the country should be relevant to our determining most common usage, because that is, really, the "name" they are giving it to their readers. From that point on, once the identity of the subject is established, sources often use any number of terms for several entities. John Carter (talk) 20:15, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- I don't agree, and your example with United States can be used against your argument, we don't use "United States of America" either. Actually, I bet many example of FYROM use are only mentions that this is the UN name, if in the rest of the article is called Macedonia than that's the name that is relevant. man with one red shoe 20:02, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
- Basically, I guess I'm saying that, at least in my eyes, we should probably count the first mention of a name or "identifier" in each of these other sources as the one relevant to the "count" for determining the "most common usage". So, if a source were to call the country "the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" by that name in the first refernce to the country, regardless of whatever name they use thereafter in subsequent mentions, it seems to me that the name that should be "counted" as being the one that source used should in determining the "most common usage" should be the FYROM, in this instance. Similarly if they used for the first reference to the country the name "Macedonia (Skopje)", "Republic of Macedonia", or some other name, that name should be counted as being the name used when determining what is the "most common usage" elsewhere. We don't call the article on the United States US or USA, even though both of those abbreviations are used more commonly, and I think it would probably be best to try to observe the same principles here as well. John Carter (talk) 19:40, 27 June 2009 (UTC)
New page to examine
See Misplaced Pages:Centralized discussion/Macedonia/miscellaneous, for a proposal relating to adjectival issues surrounding reference to individuals in the country whose name is under dispute Fritzpoll (talk) 09:06, 3 July 2009 (UTC)
Macedonia term and modern usage - Compose of a neutral map
Macedonia first of all is an ancient kingdom and then everything else. To what you refer as macedonia boundaries in this page, you refer only the last 100 years. I guess we miss some thousands years of definition. This page lack of information, facts, and education. What you call boundaries of Macedonia todays, you refering to the Turkish Vilayet of Thessaloniki, Monastir and Kosovo. However due the Ottoman Empire period, nowhere is reffering to the area as macedonia. However Turks make their vilayets not according to geographic term or ethnic groups areas, but they make vilayets according to the mix of population, because this cause less revolts and plus the local nations fight each other. Also in all Ottoman censuses, nowhere is mentioned any "macedonian" nation. So where was located Macedonia the previous centuries? Macedonia due the Byzantine period referred to the Themas of Thessaloniki, Strymon and Macedonia (which located in todays East Macedonia and Thrace. Evidence of that we can find into the Bulgarian Nationalism in the first and second wars and in the some previous years. VMRO, an originally Bulgarian organization which claims Macedonia to unite it with rest Bulgaria, was set mainly by Bulgarians, which Greeks and Albanians join in common goals of sending Turks away. Bulgarians refer to Macedonia as it was the Themas of Thessaloniki, Strymon and Macedonia, plus the Shopluk area. In Byzantine period Macedonia Thema was in the area of Adrianople, which VMRO claims also as Macedonia (See Bulgarian Nationalism and maps related to VMRO). VMRO exist as organization till today with claims over Vardar region due the high Bulgarian population in Shopluk area. Also there is another new VMRO of Skopje origin created the last decade and is the current political party and government in Skopje (FYROM). For the record, Bulgarians and Slavs came in the region of Balkans in the 6th century AD according of what they say and their history. Macedonia thema was relocated in late Byzantine period for strategic reasons and mainly due of the came of Bulgarians and Slavs in the area of Balkans after the 6th century and the wars between Byzantines and Bulgarians. In Roman period Macedonia was a cross road and located mainly from Durres in Albania all across the "Egnatia Odos". Is impotant to mention that Skopje city is all that period, never was part of Macedonia. However the City of Skopje original name was Scupi (Roman), Shkupi(Illyrian) and proof of that is the even latest period of Ottoman Empire which the City of Skopje known as Uskup, the name Skopje is recently invented and name it. Before even the Roman period, was the Hellenistic Era, even in that time Skopje city was not into the Macedonia's borders. There are questions such, why Alexander the Great spread Hellenism and not Macedonian stuffs if he spoke another language? Why he order Athenean Greek ships to explore red sea and find a route to India? What for was the Oath of Alexander in Opis? Why left no evidence of "Macedonism" instead all left are Greek if Macedonia and Greece was two different things? Probably because Macedonia is nothing more than Greece. What about the Kingdoms after Alexander's the Great era? Why Alexander had Greek teacher and not macedonian if it's different language? How they communicate? And for those who believe that Philippos does not like rest Greeks, why he teach Greek to his son and why he had Greek name as he and his son? Let's go to some definition. In ancient Greece there was no single thing called Greece, but there was region cities/states which fought each other and make alliances for glory and power. Notable is the Peloponnesian war which keeps for 50 years between Sparta (Lakaidemonians) and Athena. Each side had other Greek region cities/states as their alliances. For example Macedonia was with Sparta and Thebes with Athena etc. However when the so called Barbarians came in the area, Greeks stop fight each other, they form all together an army and send away the Barbarians, after that they continue their internal wars. Alexander the Great wanted to lead a campaign to Asia against Persians, however the rest states doubt if he can lead that due his very young age. For this reason he had to proof his self against the opposite alliance and did it. Note that areas such Epirus or Sparta was not set foot because they came from same alliance. After he prove his self to the opposite alliance he recruit army, which not include Spartans as respect of their legend in their epis battles of Thermopulai against Persians. The main reason of Alexander the Great of his campaign to Asia, was to take revenge for all Greeks about the wars of the previous centuries and of course as dreamed a free world. Greeks are all those which came from same nation and share same language, gods, tradition and civilization. A state or kingdom does not make the nation. Nation is people of same origin, and doesn't matter if they have one or more states. Example is the Albanians, are spread in Albania, Kosovo and FYROM, they have two states, they mainly are spread to another one, but they are from one nation. About the Vergina Sun, the sun of Vergina has been found to various Greek locations and is a symbol that represents the Olympian Gods mainly, the four elements etc. Actually is a Greek symbol and have found centuries prior Alexander's era in various locations within the Ancient Greece regions cities/states. About the language, Makedonia, Alexandros and Filippos has a meaning in Greek language. What it means in Skopski language? In Skopski language all those words has no meaning and is some plain words. And if all is different with Macedonia and Greece, how can those words has meaning in Greek language but not in Skopski language? What about the Skopski names and traditions, language? How can be related with Macedonia? And if you tell me that all change from time to time. Still how can be everything completly change? And if we speak about the Slav-Macedonian. Slavs came after 6th AD in the region of Balkans, they came 1000 years after Alexander's the Great death. Bible reffers also to the Macedonia. There are more problem to consider about the new State of Macedonija, the 35% of the total population are Ethnic Albanians which Skopski republic want to name them "macedonians" by force. Is important to know that all those Albanians who makes the 35% of the total population of FYROM, they didn't migrate there recently, but this place was their natural home before even the slavs came to the region. We mention about the city of Skopje for it's original name etc. earlier. Also there are more minorities groups in FYROM who are not refer to their selfs as "macedonians" Another issue is the Shopluk area and the Bulgarian population. More notes, into the FYROM parliament there are two official languages, Albanian and Skopski, anyone can speak whatever want, also Bulgaria issue passports to Skopski people because it decides that Skopski people are Bulgarians, passport issued to them just by fill up one form in the Bulgarian embassy. Is very known that FYROM people can understand better the Bulgarian subtitles than the Serbian one. Other remarks, the VMRO never claimed the Greek name of Macedonia or Alexander the Great, but they claim territory as due the centuries they lived and spread to that territories as outcome of the wars between Greeks and Bulgarians and they call the region Macedonia, as they learned from Greeks when they appear in Balkans in the 6th century. Today Bulgarians has no intentions to the historic Macedonia, but they have to Vardarska region (FYROM) which Shopluk located and many Bulgarians live. After VMRO failed to accomplish it claims, Yugoslavia turn that propaganda into it's own favour by renain the regions to sosialistic internal republics with extension views against Bulgarians, Greeks and Albanians. This change happened due the communist changes, as same happened to Communist Russia at that time. After the second world war, a civil war comes in Greece between the communists and democratics. Communist take their supplies from Yugoslavia which aims to expend to Macedonia by using the communism as an excuse. Yugoslavians of the Vardarska commited genocide against Greeks and they mess into internal matters. Prior that it had followed the plan of Yugoslavias extension to Bulgaria, Greece and Albania, and for this reason happened the renames of the regions to socialistic republics, to fullfill that plans and to create claims from nowhere. However and this propaganda failed. After the break up of the Yugoslavia, the Republic of Macedonija (FYROM) born. The only way to survive while is landlocked, is to take from others and to invent history if wants to survive. The first part, of adopt Bulgarian language and tradition it was already there as also the name, as given to the communist era. Now that communism in Yugoslavia collapse and the break, the area was landlocked and with no major population. However the first President of Republic of Macedonija (FYROM), make it clear that they are Slavs and they have no connection with Alexander the Great and his Macedonia (check videos). We can continue very much more further. Mention also that in the Ottoman Empire, even in 18th century was newpapers in Greek language, with names "Pharos" and "Makedonia" ... based in Thessaloniki.
COMPOSE OF A NEUTRAL MAP
Now let's back to wiki, a neutral map must not lay only to one side, but to show all sides. A neutral map must write in english or local language the name of the area according to what each state call the area. Then the map must write the names of the countries as it's nation wall it self and as others call the other nations. This will represent all sides and names in one and is very enough fair. Also the boundaries of Macedonia must be dotted, and within the dots and rest area to mention the name of the country, inside dots must be written all countries related to Macedonia region. Colors must be the main national colors, blue, red and green. Map must present also the ancient Macedonian kingdom and it's capital cities. Also additional can be a light line of the expand of Macedonia during Alexander's the Great time but remember that was a time of few years only according to the whole Macedonia's Kingdom period. This will be a very neutral map which will respect everyone. — Preceding unsigned comment added by ГоранМирчевски (talk • contribs) 23:35, 23 December 2011 (UTC)
North Macedonia and naming convention
Giving the current Prespa agreement, the premisses that underlined this discussion are about to change. It's important that a new standard is set and well visible to the community in order to stop infighting. That includes, in my opinion, getting a new page with the updated standard and replace every Macedonia-related current Name Convention warnings with the new one in order to avoid confusion. Do you pretend to update this page as well as Misplaced Pages:Naming conventions (Macedonia) or create new ones? - Sarilho1 (talk) 19:34, 7 February 2019 (UTC)