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{{collapse top|Talk page access revoked, please contact ] by email if you wish to appeal your ban. ] (]) 19:57, 26 March 2013 (UTC)}}
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==Apologies== == Apology ==
I didn't notice the template on the Beebe article. Sorry about editing it. ] (]) 17:43, 8 January 2011 (UTC)


In some comments I posted on various articles, which have now been administratively removed, I referred to you as a "creationist". In looking for the evidence I based this on, it now appears to me that I entirely misread it, and came to a completely wrong conclusion. Therefore, I apologize for calling you a creationist, and will attempt to be more accurate - both in general and concerning you - in the future. Yours, ] (]) 18:16, 22 January 2017 (UTC)
:There's nothing to apologize for; it's fine with me if you want to edit the article. Just because I'm in the process of revising it doesn't mean I don't welcome contributions from other editors, and for me to have that attitude would be ]. --] (]) 22:26, 8 January 2011 (UTC)


::That template is usually a means of saying "I'm in the middle of a long and complicated edit, don't screw this up by editing the page" - ] (]) 23:25, 8 January 2011 (UTC) :Instead of trying for what you post about me to be more accurate, I would rather you stop bringing me up in general. Is that option not on the table? --] (]) 21:31, 24 January 2017 (UTC)
::That's entirely up to you. ] (]) 01:27, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
:::No, it isn't. Please don't try to put your behavior off onto me. The only thing that controls whether you continue bringing me up is how much attention you choose to pay to me. --] (]) 02:09, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
::::Sorry, but that simply isn't the case. You're not some innocent newbie being picked on for no good reason, you've been a disruptive element on Misplaced Pages for quite a while -- except, of course, for the period when you were site banned. If you do something that I see, and believe requires commenting on, I will do so. If you simply edit without causing trouble or disruption, you won't hear from me at all - so, you see, it's entirely '''''your behavior''''' which is the controlling factor. Don't worry, though, I won't say a thing to anyone about your apparent inability to graciously accept an apology when it's offered to you. ] (]) 03:12, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
:::::How do you expect me to react to an apology that includes a built-in warning that you're going to continue talking about me and monitoring my edits? You've already told me in Jimbo's user talk that you're unable to assume good faith about any edit I make anywhere on the project. ("You used up your stock of AGF a long, long time ago.") Don't give me this story about my behavior being what determines the outcome--you've already told me point-blank that you're going to assume bad faith about my edits regardless of what I do.


:::::Please understand that at this stage, I don't actually expect to change your attitude about this. But down the road, I would like to be able to show other people that I asked you nicely to stop trying to police my edits, and that you refused. --] (]) 04:03, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
== Leg wings ==


== ArbCom 2017 election voter message ==
Hey, it's not a bad idea to have something on this but I'm not sure there would be enough material on this for a separate article. Maybe you should try adding it as a subsection in the main wing article (or maybe more appropriately ]) and if its gets to be too much, spin it off from there. Also I'm unaware of anyone proposing that the "hind wings" of ''Anchiornis'' actually had any aerodynamic function (they're certainly much smaller than in ''Microraptor'', and the foot feathers of ''Pedopenna'' are downright tiny compared to the rest of the leg), so I'm not sure how much verifiable mileage you'll be able to get out of those, other than the fact that they may be homologous with the obviously aerodynamic structures on ''Microraptor''. ] (]) 00:02, 26 January 2011 (UTC)


{{Ivmbox|Hello, Captain Occam. Voting in the ''']''' is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.
== Letter to The Economist January 29th–February 4th 2011 ==


The ] is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the ]. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose ], ], editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The ] describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.
The ] on ] is mentioned in a letter to ''The Economist.'' -- ] (], ]) 01:44, 1 February 2011 (UTC)


If you wish to participate in the 2017 election, please review ] and submit your choices on the ''']'''. ] (]) 18:42, 3 December 2017 (UTC)
== Removing posts from other users' talk pages ==
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<!-- Message sent by User:Xaosflux@enwiki using the list at https://en.wikipedia.org/search/?title=Misplaced Pages:Arbitration_Committee_Elections_December_2017/Coordination/MMS/02&oldid=813406680 -->


== E-mail ==
You removed an edit I made on ]. I wonder whether you could please avoid doing so in future, even if you disagree with the views expressed? Jimbo can remove any user's comments from his talk page if he wishes; he may in fact do so with what I wrote, even with a disparaging edit summary, and that does not particularly bother me. Thanks, ] (]) 17:48, 2 February 2011 (UTC)


I received an unsolicted e-mail from you, using Misplaced Pages's e-mail link.
== FYI ==


I have no need of either correction nor advice from the like of you. You are '''''specifically''''' directed not to e-mail me again. If you do, I will take the matter directly to ArbCom. ] (]) 03:28, 3 April 2018 (UTC)
You are involved in a recently-filed request for arbitration. Please review the request at ] and, if you wish to do so, enter your statement and any other material you wish to submit to the Arbitration Committee. Additionally, the following resources may be of use—
* ];
* ].


Thanks,<!-- Template:Arbcom notice --> ] (]) 05:58, 6 February 2011 (UTC) :Well, I'm curious to see how that works out for you. --] (]) 03:32, 3 April 2018 (UTC)


== Arbitration Enforcement ==
==Thanks so much==
] proud! ] (]) 23:47, 13 February 2011 (UTC)]].


I am required to notify you that I am filing a complaint against you on Arbitration Enforcement. ] (]) 05:23, 3 April 2018 (UTC)
Thanks, I’m glad someone appreciates the work I’m putting into this article.


== Indefinitely blocked ==
I wonder if anyone will eventually appreciate the work I do enough to award me a barnstar. Who gets them and who doesn’t seems like it’s as much a matter of popularity as the quality of one’s work. If my saying this comes off as asking for one from you, though, please don’t take it that way: I definitely don’t think I deserve one yet, and I don’t think I’ll feel like I do until after I’ve finished rewriting the article. --] (]) 00:56, 14 February 2011 (UTC)


Per ] at ], I have indefinitely blocked you and disabled your use of the Misplaced Pages email system. This is a standard admin block, and not an arbitration enforcement action, and as such, can be appealed through the normal processes, which you can find at ]. ] (]) 15:49, 4 April 2018 (UTC)
== "Dave" ==


== Clarification request ==
Hey! The fact is I'm not sure many paleontologists give it much thought. It's very ingrained in most people's minds as ''Sinornithosaurus'' sp. or cf. ''Sinornithosaurus'' because of the first Ji papers referring to it as such. However as far as I'm aware all phylogenetic analyses which include it as a separate OTU find it closer to, usually sister to, ''Microraptor''. Unless I missed something. Running a quick search on my own paper collection I also found the description of the second ''Anchiornis'' specimen also recovers it as the sister taxon of ''Microraptor'', as does the ''Tianyuraptor'' and ''Epidexipteryx'' descriptions. Mickey Mortimer also recoveries the same position in the Theropod Database phylogeny. Several other recent papers like Therion & Henderson 2007 simply treat it as dromaeosauridae indet. and no longer refer to it as cf. ''Sinornithosaurus''. So despite the inertia helped along by the decision not to name it (hence ''Sinornithosaurus''+qualifier becoming the de facto name), it seems very unlikely to be ''Sinornithosaurus'' and I can't find any instances of anybody supporting that idea with actual data, and not just referencing the similarities noted in the initial description. ] (]) 09:42, 17 February 2011 (UTC)


In light of your block, your ] has been declined. For the Arbitration Committee, ]] 15:41, 8 April 2018 (UTC)
==The Bathysphere article==
{{UTRS-unblock-user|21796|Jun 11, 2018 22:36:52|closed}}--] (]) 22:36, 11 June 2018 (UTC)
Hi! Thanks so much for your note about Dr. Beebe and the bathysphere. I do appreciate you asking me about your plans, but really there is no need at all - you are doing a magnificent job and I am thrilled with all you have been doing. I think your idea to get the bathysphere article up to scratch before completing the Beebe article makes good sense, but it might be worthwhile popping a brief note explaining what you are doing on the Beebe Talk Page. BTW, is there any chance you could add that wonderful early photo (File:BeebeGuiana.png) of Dr. Beebe with his collecting net, sun umbrella, etc. into the article soon - maybe before you do the bathysphere one? It is just such a wonderful image! I think it will make the article really interesting to many who come upon the page. Cheers, and thanks for all your fine work - I am so happy someone has taken it up properly. ] (]) 22:56, 27 February 2011 (UTC)


{<s>unblock | reason=I previously made an unblock request via UTRS, and in response I was instructed to make the same request using the unblock template in my user talk. This is a truncated version of my UTRS request.
==Talkback==
{{talkback|Ukexpat|Thanks.|ts=14:58, 5 March 2011 (UTC)}}


Over the past month, I've tried to discuss an issue affecting the basis for my block on the ArbCom mailing list, but ArbCom ultimately told me that this particular issue can't be addressed privately, and that if I wish to raise it I must do so in a public request. Since I'm currently blocked, doing that isn't possible at the moment. However, ArbCom also has told me that since I'm under a standard admin block, it isn't within their remit to review the block or grant an exception to it. I contacted an arbitration clerk, ], about how I should proceed in this situation, and he instructed me to request an unblock under the following conditions:
==A. E. (Ted) Hill==
Hi again! Thanks for your note. I am pleased to hear you plan to do more on the Beebe article and have ordered David Snow's book (yes, it has some interesting details about Beebe - especially about his love of Winnie the Pooh - I'll leave it at that, as I don't want to spoil the story for you). I got my copy from England too - but it only took a week or ten days to get way out here in the wilds of northern Queensland - so you shouldn't have a very long wait.


# If unblocked, the only edits I will make will be to raise this issue with ArbCom (along with required notifications), and nothing else. I'll also disable my Misplaced Pages e-mail feature, so that there can be no suspicion that I'm using Misplaced Pages for anything else besides the ArbCom inquiry. (This second part was my own idea, not Penwhale's.)
A. E. (Ted) Hill was my father - his full name was Alfred Edward Hill - but all his friends and family referred to him as "Ted". I don't think it matters much how he is referred to but he preferred A. E. (Ted) Hill - he didn't like the Alfred particularly - probably because it was his father's first name too. Please excuse me if I ramble on a bit about him - I just hope it doesn't sound too much like boasting but I should tell you a bit about him, as he was a remarkable man in his own right and it may help you get a bit of the ambience of the "crowd" Beebe gathered around him in Simla, Trinidad. When Dad was young he designed, built and flew a new kind of gyrocopter and several gliders and founded the first "Montreal Light Airplane Club," which was active for some years. He wanted to go to university and become an aeronautical engineer but my grandfather refused to help him unless he did something "useful" like medicine or law - so he did medicine and determined he would excel at it.
# After my request to ArbCom is closed, if no action has been taken to modify my block, I'll be blocked again under the same terms as my current block, without prejudice to making a normal unblock request at a later point.


Since what I'm requesting isn't a full lifting of my block, I don't think this is the time or the place to discuss the block's merits. However, if admins want more background about the basis for it, I recommend reading the request for clarification that I made shortly before being blocked, along with the responses from arbitrators: Please note that the issue I've recently tried to discuss with ArbCom is not the same one that I raised there; it's a separate issue that I haven't brought up in public yet. I think it's too complex to describe in an unblock request, but I've explained it in detail to Penwhale, so if possible I would like whichever admin reviews this request to please contact him for more details.
He went to McGill (Canada's premier medical school) and took degrees in medicine and surgery before WWII broke out, when he joined the airforce and did a degree in aviation medicine. He was bitterly dissapointed when he discovered that he would not be allowed to fly because he was a doctor and they were in such short supply. He was stationed in Newfoundland for most of the war, flying medical missions to rescue sailors from the huge merchant convoy fleets that were sent regularly from Halifax to England bringing war supplies to the beleaguered British (often carrying material from the US as well - even before it got into the war). The Germans torpedoed many of these ships and the losses were huge. His memories of the war were dominated by freezing and spend countless boring hours by himself in the back of unheated aircraft flying back and forth for hours over the North Atlantic and never being allowed to touch the controls of a plane. He hated the cold and determined that, after the war, he would move to the tropics. To this end he took a degree in tropical medicine and was also given a scholarship to do a degree in internal medicine as well, becoming a Fellow of the Royal Canadian Society of Physicians. And then he moved to Trinidad and set up in private practice.


Although I'm making this unblock request in public, I also ask that whatever discussion admins have about it please occur somewhere other than one of the public noticeboards. Past noticeboard threads related to the R&I arbitration case have sometimes become magnets for harassment and personal attacks, against me or other users, and I'd like my request to be handled in a way that doesn't risk a repeat of that outcome. ] (]) 23:49, 13 June 2018 (UTC)
He was the only doctor on the island who had a degree in tropical medicine (as well as the only ]), so he soon became an advisor to the Health Department, as well as to the large American navy base there and began to collaborate very closely with Dr. ] and others at the ] as well as doing some ground-breaking research of his own (he had a small laboratory of his own attached to his office where he performed various medical tests that were otherwise unavailable in Trinidad, as well as his own research). There was quite a crowd of scientists at both Dr. Beebe's establishment and the Virus Laboratory who not only supported each other on various projects - but also used to socialise together. On weekends I remember going out many times on archaeological digs with a group of them at sites which were being destroyed by erosion (] beach middens) or by building developments, as well as looking for rare orchids, birdwatching, and visiting caves and mud volcanoes. Dr. Beebe and Dad became close friends and used to spend hours chatting together about everything under the sun. They were both atheists and loved sharing the odd joke about religion. So, it was only natural that he became Will Beebe's doctor. When Dr. Beebe became very sick with his swollen mouth ("my mango mouth") and (I think - if I remember correctly) heart problems, our whole family often went up from Port of Spain to Simla for the weekend. We would usually stay at Asa Wright's home. Dad would attend to Will and we would all have a "holiday" together. It was as a result of these visits and my own interest that I began assisting Will Beebe and other scientists there, and later on, at the Virus Laboratory where I worked my school holidays for many years from age 9 onwards until I was 20. Sorry to be so long-winded - but I thought this all might be of some interest to you. Thanks again for your major improvements to the Beebe article - you are doing him proud! Cheers and best wishes, ] (]) 00:06, 7 April 2011 (UTC)


Note: this request is no longer current; I'll make a new request below. --] (]) 12:05, 6 July 2018 (UTC)</s>}
:Thanks for all the information. I’d suspected for a while that you were Dr. Hill’s son, but it’s still very interesting to know so much more about him. You probably know that we can’t include most of this in the article, though—Robert Welker’s book only devotes a couple of pages to your father, so unless there’s another reliable source that talks about him in this context, anything else we mention about him in the article would be unsourced.
*Just two comments as the blocking admin: while this is not an AE block, so any administrator may lift it without my consent, this was based on the rough consensus of administrators at AE. As such I think an unblock would be best to go to AN even though it technically doesn’t have to. 2) I’d encourage the reviewing admin to read the UTRS appeal and the comments I put in there and Penwhale did as well. Namely, in my view Captain Occam lied in his UTRS request. That might be a factor in favour of just declining this outright. I don’t feel very strongly either way about this block, and I’ll leave it up to others to decide, but I thought those pieces of material fact were important for any reviewer to know. ] (]) 23:59, 13 June 2018 (UTC)
::Could you please clarify what you feel that I've lied about? It's possible that I've made a mistake or oversimplified something, but I don't think that I stated any deliberate falsehoods.


::After putting some thought into this, I have an idea what you're referring to: I said in my UTRS appeal that I thought the blocking admin supported me being unblocked under these conditions. My comment about that was based on an exchange I had with Penwhale in which he said that he had talked to you on IRC, and that you felt that you shouldn't lift the block unless it was discussed at AN first. My (apparently wrong) assumption was that if you were opposed to my being unblocked under these conditions, you wouldn't have offered that suggestion about how to proceed.
:I’d also been wondering whether you knew William Beebe while he was alive, and now I see the answer is that you did. Is there anything else you can tell me about what he was like in person? Obviously personal memories that haven’t been published anywhere can’t go in the article either, but I find Beebe fascinating in general, and I’d love to hear some of what you can remember about him. --] (]) 00:34, 7 April 2011 (UTC)


::Is that what you're referring to? If it was, that wasn't a deliberate lie, but a case of me assuming too much based on what Penwhale told me (and I apologize for doing that). --] (]) 00:20, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
Hi again! Glad you enjoyed the reminiscences. Yes, I am well aware that they can't be used in a WP article - but that's fine. Also, although I think the world of my father, and he did conduct some original research, I don't think he was probably "notable" enough to deserve a seperate article in WP.
:::Thanks, I was ambiguous because I wanted to respect the privacy of the UTRS ticket, but I’ll explain more now since you asked: Yes, that is what I’m referencing, but your explanation here doesn’t make it any better: you didn’t once mention AN in the UTRS ticket even though you apparently knew that I thought there should be a discussion there and that I thought this should be done in public, you also did not just claim that I didn’t oppose the unblock, but that I supported it: I don’t. I’m neutral on it, which is very different than supporting. I was also unfamiliar with any proposed unblock conditions. I’ll let Penwhale speak for himself as to if he feels you misrepresented him. Anyway, I’m not going to comment more on this, but I did want for the reviewing admin to be aware. ] (]) 00:46, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
::::I feel that a lot of the trouble I've gotten into at Misplaced Pages has been the result of people attributing a malicious purpose to mistakes that I made from misreading social cues. It was clueless of me to assume you supported unblocking me based on what Penwhale told me, but cluelessness isn't the same as deliberately lying. I'm autistic, so I've sometimes had this problem in real life also. I think it would be a benefit to everyone if the Misplaced Pages community could learn to ] in these types of situations. --] (]) 01:12, 14 June 2018 (UTC)


:I'll chime in here. Echoing what Tony said above, I'm also not very happy as to have to explain to Tony (in the same UTRS) that what I told you is ''very different'' from what you posted: (1) I never once said whether Tony supported it, only mentioning that he mentioned AN; (2) I also never once said that I supported the unblock - '''because''' I am RL friends with the person acting as our intermediate, it wouldn't have been correct for me to attempt to influence the unblock decision. I merely stated that self-offering the unblock condition would result in a higher chance of you being unblocked to raise the issue. Saying in your unblock request that I supported your unblock is, in fact, untrue and unfortunately misrepresenting me. I will take your comment above this as an apology, but please be careful to not assume what people meant in messages. - ] &#124; <sup>] and ]</sup> 01:59, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
About Dr. Beebe: when I first met him he would have been in his late 70s and I was just a young boy - so my memories of him are those of a child, albeit one who spent some time with him and was fortunate enough to have him as a mentor. He was a great teacher and, when I first knew him he was still fit enough to take long walks in the bush and even to climb nearby trees so he could see into nests on adjoining trees. He was always very patient with me and taught much of what I know about bushcraft, scientific observation and recording, proposing hypotheses and then checking them, etc., etc., etc. He was always full of infectious wonder and enthusiasm and his deep love of nature certainly brushed off on me as well many other people. He was a great raconteur and was (I was told) always a favourite with the ladies. He believed deeply in meticulous observations and constant rechecking and was particularly upset when people made observations about animals in human terms (though he loved Walt Disney's and A.A. Milne's creations). He also had an impish sense of humour and when just the two of us were out in the forest he would often tell me a joke with a wonderful twinkle in his eye. I always enjoyed his company and don't remember a single cross word. He was endlessly patient with me while explaining some scientific titbit of information and would often surreptitiously check the next time I visited to see if I had remembered and understood the point he had made. I always looked to him as an exceptional person, a real living genius and a source of great inspiration but also as a true friend, always easy to be with, and one of the few adults I felt I could confide in and trust. He was truly a great man - yet never snobbish or too busy to share some new discovery and the wonder that went with it to anyone who might be interested. As he got older and frailer he spent a lot of time on his verandah with some huge binoculars (which he had had specially made for him - "the biggest binoculars in the world!") on a heavy-duty tripod, checking on nesting birds and watching entrances to animals' shelters - often right across, on the other side of the valley from his verandah. I also got to visit him once at the ] in New York where he had a permanent office. He had two or three ] monkeys playing with him, jumping on his back, etc. I remember him talking fondly of his "brothers." Sincerely, ] (]) 03:48, 7 April 2011 (UTC)
::Yes, I have to be more careful about that. What I should've done is ask you about this before assuming it was the case. I'll try not to make this mistake again. --] (]) 02:26, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
I would be willing to unblock for you to make a request to the committee. I have two provisos:
*I've emailed the committee to ask if there is any point allowing you to make a request at ARCA; if any such request would just be rejected out-of-hand, I don't see any point in the unblock (I'm not asking them to pre-judge the case, just whether it would cross the bar of being considered at all). I'm waiting for their response.
*An unblock would be on the basis that you are banned from everywhere except ARCA and this page. Can you please confirm that this is in line with your expectation?
{{re|TonyBallioni}} I don't see the point in taking this to AN if the unblock is on the basis of such tight restrictions, but if you seriously object then please let me know. ] (]) 11:42, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
*{{u|GoldenRing}}, while it is a regular admin block and you are free to do so, I am also of the opinion that individual administrators as a matter of practice should not unilaterally undo blocks that were taken on the basis of consensus. I am neutral on any unblock here, but for the fact that there was a clear consensus of uninvolved administrators to block, I think it would be irresponsible to unblock without taking it to AN, so I strongly object. I also am beyond confused as to why you would even want to make such unblock conditions. It’s a waste of time for the sake of wasting time if the end result is that the committee rules at ARCA but he stays indefinitely blocked by community consensus or individual adminstrator action. So, to answer your question: yes, I strongly oppose this on multiple grounds. I think an unblock here shouldn’t be only for the sake of ARCA, and if it is beyond that, I think it needs to go to AN. ] (]) 12:17, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
**GR, just reread the request (I was recalling a convo with Penwhale about his general request to be unblocked and responding to that, not the blue box, which is why I was confused.) Your conditions make more sense now, but my answer remains the same: I think it’s time wasting for the sake of time wasting under these conditions, and I’ll go further and say it’s an attempt to try to get the committee to review a block outside their normal remit, and I also think that any unblock of this account in general needs to go to AN. ] (]) 12:45, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:::{{ping|GoldenRing}} I agree to the conditions you've described, with the one exception that when I make the ARCA request, I'll have to be able to post the required notifications to other users potentially affected by it. Aside from that, though, I understand that I'll be banned from all pages aside from ARCA and my user talk. (Please note that the request I would be making is a request for clarification, not an amendment request. It isn't about my block itself, but it's about a question that affects the basis for it.)
:::I also want to reiterate that if at all possible, I would like my request to not be discussed at AN. Aside from the reason I mentioned in the unblock template, I also don't think my request can be adequately evaluated without reviewing the background information that I've sent to Penwhale, which I would prefer to not be posted in public. If it's your view that I shouldn't be unblocked unilaterally by a single admin, is there another place where my request could be discussed with other admins, such as on IRC? --] (]) 13:01, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
::::That background information is not private as evidenced by the fact that the committee has declined to review this block on that basis. Knowing what it is in general terms, I also think it’s a distraction from the reason you were blocked: using email to nibble around the edges of an ArbCom imposed ban and to try to organize editing task forces in secret. Those were considered disruptive enough by administrators at AE to merit an indef block just under regular admin discretion, and likely would have resulted in one at ANI regardless of the ArbCom restrictions because that type of thing is disruptive and cuts away at the trust of the community, especially when done by an editor who has had issues in the area in the past. ] (]) 13:12, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:::::{{re|TonyBallioni}} I think that if there's any prospect of success at ARCA, and the committee has refused to hear the matter privately, they should be given the opportunity as a matter of fairness. I also don't think unilaterally undoing a consensus-endorsed block ''solely for the purpose of an appeal'' is much outside norms; but at any rate I will see what the committee says. I'm a bit perplexed about why the committee would do this - it seems on the extreme end of bureaucratic to me - which is why I've asked them for clarification about whether there is any point in all of this. ] (]) 13:43, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:::::TonyBallioni: for the most part the information I'm referring to isn't something that I've tried to discuss with ArbCom yet. Has Penwhale shown it to you? You seem to be making assumption about what it involved that aren't accurate.


:::::I don't dispute the basis for my block itself. However, the initial consensus in the AE report about me had been to give me a standard one-month AE block, and the information I'm referring to concerned the basis for the decision to make it indefinite instead. For example, one of the main reasons for making it indefinite was the assumption about what my motives were for becoming involved in the psychometrics task force. I think I can demonstrate that this assumption was incorrect, but doing so would rely on material I've written for other websites, including some where I use my real name.
:Thanks for telling me all of this. When I admire a person it’s always a unique experience to talk to someone who’s known them, and you’re the only person I’ve encountered for whom this is true in William Beebe’s case.


:::::I'm pinging {{ping|Penwhale}} here, because I don't feel that it's productive for us to argue about the contents of something when it isn't clear whether you've seen it or not, and when I don't want to describe it in detail. --] (]) 13:49, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:My own history with William Beebe is not nearly as interesting, I’m afraid, since when he died I wasn’t even born yet. I first learned about Beebe in 2003. I’ve always been interested in evolution, especially bird evolution, and the first I heard about him was that his Tetrapteryx hypothesis had been confirmed by the discovery of ''Microraptor gui''. At first I didn’t know much about him beyond that, but I was intrigued by the brief references that articles about Tetrapteryx and ''Microraptor'' made to some of his other accomplishments—things like referring to him as an “ornithologist and deep-sea explorer”, or mentioning his pheasant expedition. Most famous paleontologists have only one or two major ideas or discoveries that they’re known for, but I got the impression that Tetratperyx was only the tip of the iceberg in Beebe’s case, and I was curious to know what else he’d accomplished. As I learned more about him, I was amazed by how little-known he is in modern times, considering the amount that he contributed to multiple areas of biology. I think he deserves a lot more recognition than he gets, and expanding Misplaced Pages’s article about him is one way I’m hoping to help remedy that.
::::::You’re mad because you think one of the admins there was involved (I’m betting {{u|MastCell}} based on what you’ve said, as he’s the one that suggested indef.) That’s a basis for an appeal, sure, but that doesn’t need ArbCom to review, and your refusing to discuss it here doesn’t make you look good in my opinion.) ] (]) 14:02, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:::::::Okay, it sounds like you understand what issue I want to raise with ArbCom. The admin involvement issue isn't the only thing I discussed in my information for Penwhale, but that is what I've been trying to ask ArbCom about.


:::::::Could you please clarify what you have in mind when you say that's a basis for an appeal? When I was discussing this matter with ArbCom, one of the arbitrators (Euryalus) offered to send MastCell e-mail advising him to consider himself involved with respect to that arbitration case, but individual arbitrators don't have any special authority, so I don't think the question or whether he's involved or not can be regarded as settled before ArbCom as a whole gives an opinion.
:For around ten years on and off I’ve been writing poetry about paleontology topics, and a few months ago I decided I should write a poem about William Beebe. It’s , if you’re interested in reading it. It’s not often that one of my poems is read by someone who has the degree of familiarity with the subject matter that you have about Beebe, so I would definitely enjoy hearing what you think of it. --] (]) 19:54, 7 April 2011 (UTC)


:::::::If what you're suggesting is that I should lay out a case in the unblock template as to why I think he's an involved admin, please try to be realistic about what you're expecting here. How could I go about presenting such a case without discussing the articles from which I'm topic banned? Even though this technically could be considered an exception to my topic ban (since it's for the purpose of an appeal), I think it's extremely unlikely that admins look favorably on such a request. --] (]) 14:57, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
What a fabulous poem - thanks for that! It is great to see that someone still thinks of Dr. Beebe and his many accomplishments. He was so well-known and admired during his lifetime (probably because of his many articles in National Geographic and his numerous inspiring books based on his adventures), but so poorly known after his death. I can only guess that this is partly because he lived in the age before TV was common and people still looked to magazines and books for their education and entertainment. Thanks also for all the work you are putting into the WP article on Beebe - I really appreciate your efforts to honour him - he certainly was a unique and wonderful person. ] (]) 22:27, 9 April 2011 (UTC)


*{{replyto|GoldenRing}} no, because they aren’t allowed to edit at all. A ruling at ARCA has no impact on this block. Having reread everything multiple times now, I’m 100% opposed to unblocking on these terms. They can appeal their regular block in itself if they want, and then seek further clarification at ARCA, but until the block is dealt with, ARCA is pointless. This unblock appeal should not be granted on these terms. If CO wishes to appeal his block, he should appeal it on the merits. I’m neutral as to an outcome of a merits based appeal, but strongly oppose this scenario. ] (]) 13:54, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
== Advice ==


:*{{re|TonyBallioni}} Well, the response from an arb was that the ARCA route is not viable, so my suggestion is off the table anyway. Captain Occam, I think Tony's suggestion below is your best course here. I'm happy to copy to AN on your behalf - just let me know if required. ] (]) 16:06, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
The discussion that you are having about issues concerning R&I seems to contravene your extended topic ban:
*] and ] are indefinitely banned from the topic of Race and Intelligence on any page of Misplaced Pages, including user talk pages. This includes RFC/Us about other editors where the behavior of that user on R&I is one of the major topics. These two editors should not participate in noticeboard discussions where the main topic is an article that is under R&I or the behavior of an editor who is closely associated with R&I. They are free to respond at noticeboards whenever their own editing is mentioned.


===Unblock discussion break===
Your first edit has already been forwarded to an arbitrator. Please could you stop that discussion now? Thanks, ] (]) 21:03, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
CO, moving this down here because it’s getting long: the issue of MastCell’s involvement is not something ArbCom would normally consider in a standard unblock request of a non-AE action, but is something subject to peer review either through the unblock process or through AN. Additionally, he is not the blocking admin, I am. I blocked on the basis of consensus at AE that the problems went beyond just a simple TBAN violation, and that while it was unclear whether or not the emails constituted one, your conduct was disruptive enough to merit an indef block at the time regardless of that. ARCA could overrule that I suppose, but it’s not normally something they would do for an action that was specifically taken as non-AE because all the admins there were unclear what was allowed by AE, but agreed that disruption had occurred and on the course of action that needed to be taken.{{pb}}In terms of an unblock, here is what I think you should do: lay out what you plan to edit if you are unblocked. You should focus on why this block is no longer needed. You can get into the INVOLVED question, but that’s unlikely to make people sympathetic to you if you dwell on it for too long, in large part because MastCell was only one admin of many. Focus on what positive contributions you would make. If you do that, I’m more than willing to copy the appeal to AN and unblock if there is consensus to do so. The reason I’m pretty strong on the AN point is that the indef decision was based on an informal consensus of admins that would have been enough for a community-based sanction on another noticeboard. I stand behind my block and think it’s outside of ArbCom’s usual remit, which is why I oppose the above conditions, but if you have a case for being unblocked that the community can judge, I think you should have the chance to make it. ] (]) 15:14, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
:Well, I guess this means I'm going to have to bite the bullet and endure being the subject of an AN discussion. Since my unblock request hasn't been acted on yet, can I write my summary of why I think I should be unblocked as a comment here, instead of using the unblock template again? --] (]) 11:11, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
::A thought - possibly disable/strike the current unblock request and make a new one below when you have the explanation all ready? I think that might be better than leaving it open with the possibility of someone declining it when it's not meant to be current. ] (]) 11:45, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
:::I can't seem to get the strikethrough template to work inside the unblock template, but I've added a note saying that the request is no longer current. --] (]) 12:05, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
::::I've disabled the template by taking out a "{" and added the strike - hope that's OK. ] (]) 12:39, 6 July 2018 (UTC)


Okay, I'm ready now. My updated request is below.
:I’ve been careful not to violate my topic ban in that discussion, and will continue to be careful about that. I haven’t mentioned anything there about race and intelligence articles, or the R&I arbitration case. Discussing how you’ve treated me and Ludwig outside of these articles for the past few months is not disallowed by my topic ban. --] (]) 21:10, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
::From my point of view, it does appear that you are breaking your topic ban: on a user talk page you are discussing the behaviour of an editor who is closely associated with R&I. None of this seems helpful. Whatever the issue, in view of the ambiguity, it seems ill-advised to continue the discussion. It's fine to do it off-wiki. Both of you have wiki-email accounts and there you can say whatever you like. Thanks, ] (]) 21:17, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::Mathsci, from your point of view every time Occam sneezes it's a violation of some rule or other, and you ''do so revel'' in trying to punish him for anything and everything. Have you considered a career as a dominatrix? You have a knack for it, and you can make a crapload of money in that field. {{=)|biggrin}} --] 22:18, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
::::Why not read ]? It's very well written and seems helpful. ] (]) 22:39, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::Mathsci: why do you still consider yourself closely associated with race and intelligence articles? You haven’t participated in these articles since the R&I arbitration case ended last August, and you agreed to stay away from them permanently as a condition for your topic ban being lifted. If you still consider yourself closely associated with race and intelligence even after agreeing to that, and after having not participated in the articles for the past seven months, then I think that’s the real problem here. --] (]) 22:30, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
::::Because I was one of the main parties in ] and you were discussing me and related matters in precisely that context. ] (]) 22:39, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::::LOL, and ROFL. I am reminded of one of Oscar Wilde's witticisms: "A bore is someone who deprives you of solitude without providing you with company." --] 22:58, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
::::::You obviously haven't read ]. It is really rather good and I'm sure you would enjoy it. Who knows, you might even experience some kind of ]. ] (]) 23:03, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::::::I am reminded of one of Abraham Lincoln's quips: "A hypocrite is someone who murders his parents, then pleads for mercy on the grounds that he's an orphan." You may have the last word if you like, not much point in carrying on with this discussion. --] 23:17, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::::"you were discussing me and related matters in precisely that context."


{{<s>unblock | reason=As I've said in a few other places, I accept that my block itself was valid, and if it had been a standard one-month AE block I'd have waited it out rather than trying to appeal. However, considering this was my first topic ban violation, I think that a one-month block (or three months, which is now how long it's been) would have been a more appropriate result than an indefinite one.
:::::No, I wasn’t. I was discussing you in the context of your frivolous attempt to get me site-banned in February, and your more recent behavior towards Ludwigs2 in the AE sanction handling case. I didn’t mention the R&I case at all. --] (]) 23:08, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
:::::::Isn't TrevelyanL85A2 known to you and Ferahgo-the-Assassin in real life ? Wasn't the Request for amendment to ]? Were the people you claimed had left WP because of me not directly related to R&I? Any way ArbCom has the diff. ] (]) 23:11, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
::::::::Anyway, I suggest you drop the subject now. It is a serious matter. If in doubt, you can ask {{admin|EdJohnston}} for guidance. ] (]) 23:22, 9 April 2011 (UTC)
{{od}} Captain Occam, ArbCom clarified things for you here.
{{quote box|@Captain Occam. In its simplest interpretation, the requires you to disengage completely both directly and indirectly from the topic ("including user talk pages"), unless specifically responding to others ("They are free to respond at noticeboards whenever their own editing is mentioned"). This means it prevents you making even coded or oblique references. If you wish to avoid further sanction, perhaps the safest way for you to interpret how this applies to you is to ask yourself before you make an action/edit how you would perceive the same edit/action if it had been made by a topic-banned adversary of yours. If you conclude that such an action/edit of theirs arguably breaches the restriction, don't make a similar one yourself.}}


Blocking me for a month had been the initial consensus in the results section of the AE report about me, until MastCell presented his argument that I should be indeffed based on what he thought my motives were, which shifted the direction of the discussion to make the outcome an indefinite block instead. This matters because MastCell probably is an involved admin with respect to the R&I arbitration case, and shouldn't have commented in that section. Shortly before my block I discussed this matter via e-mail with a member of ArbCom, Euryalus, and Euryalus offered to send MastCell e-mail advising him to refrain from further participation in that section of the report. I don't have the space here to present the evidence for why he's an involved admin (and my interaction ban prevents me from discussing some of it in public), but I've shown this evidence privately to ] and I invite his comment.
Note the use of the words "coded and oblique" which applies exactly here. ] (]) 23:41, 9 April 2011 (UTC)


Since the decision to block me indefinitely instead of for a month was based largely on an assumption about my motives for helping to set up the ], I think it's important to point out that this assumption was incorrect. I'm not sure how one is supposed to go about proving something about their thoughts, but there's one piece of evidence that seems to have been overlooked: ], who created the task force and did most of the work setting it up, has a perspective about intelligence and behavioral genetics that's very close to the opposite of mine. If my goal had in fact been to advance my point of view on those topics, it would have made no sense for me to help set up a task force with him in charge.
:This isn’t an interaction ban, Mathsci. I don’t talk about the original R&I case or the articles anymore, but when you’re continuing to consistently make attempts to get me blocked or banned, talking about that in the context of what’s wrong with your behavior falls into the same category as replying to you here. Your efforts at this are an ongoing issue, and dealing with it requires being able to talk about it. And I can see that you still haven’t let this go, because you’re continuing to bring up your accusation of sockpuppetry/meatuppetry/whatever, involving someone who’s made ''no edits of any sort since January''. Does this mean it’s time for you to post yet another AE or amendment thread about me, despite ArbCom having asked you to stop doing that? It’s been a whole two months since your previous attempt, after all.


At the time, it didn't occur to me that my involvement in this task force would be viewed as a topic ban violation, because I assumed that the scope of my topic ban was the same as the scope of the ]. (That is, "the intersection of race/ethnicity and human abilities and behaviour, broadly construed"; the edits for which I was blocked involved human abilities and behavior but did not involve race or ethnicity.) As I said in the that I made shortly before being blocked, now that I more accurately understand how the scope of my topic ban is interpreted, I intend to avoid all content at Misplaced Pages related to psychometrics or intelligence for as long as my topic ban is in effect. I didn't understand this about my topic ban in March, but now that I do, there isn't a danger of me repeating this particular mistake. I'm also open to the idea of disabling my Misplaced Pages e-mail feature, if the community feels that this should be an unblock condition.
:By the way, as far as I know the most recent editor who said that they were quitting the project because of you was Julian Birdbath, who had nothing to do with the R&I topic. --] (]) 00:04, 10 April 2011 (UTC)
::Zarboublian is indefinitely blocked as a sockpuppet of A.K.Nole. So is Julian Birdbath. So is Taciki Wym. These were all the same wikistalker, who tracked my edits.


My interests at Misplaced Pages are pretty eclectic, but other people can get an idea of what I'd edit if unblocked based on my editing history from January 2017 until I became involved in the psychometrics task force this past March. I edited articles related to religion, video games and books, and my editing history going forward will be similar to that. If I can muster the time and energy for it, I also hope to eventually raise ] to FA status, having previously turned this article from start-class into a GA. (See the article's edit history from April 2010 to June 2011.) In the past I've also been one of the main people maintaining that article, so even if I never manage to get it up to FA status, I would like to at least continue making Wikignome formatting edits as I did . --] (]) 03:17, 8 July 2018 (UTC)</s>}}
::You already tried to include a discussion of R&I and ] in the latest AE case and were told you could not, except by email to ArbCom. So that fairly well defines what you can or cannot talk about. As far as the latest discussion you initiated is cocerned, I did not make a report at ] this time, as I thought a message here would suffice. Any further discussion spontaneously initiated by you making "coded or oblique" reference to R&I or ] could result in a report at ], not necessarily by me. ] (]) 00:27, 10 April 2011 (UTC)


:I did indeed evaluate the information provided to me, and I do agree with the assessment that MastCell should be considered involved in situations like this. Other than that, anything I want to say would be made at AN when the thread is made as they serve better purpose there (and would get more eyes anyway). - ] &#124; <sup>] and ]</sup> 18:41, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
==Notification of proposed motion==
::{{ping|Penwhale}} If you're planning to comment there, I'd appreciate you doing so sometime soon. Otherwise the AN thread may progress to the point that it's too late to affect its outcome, which sort of defeats the purpose of commenting there. --] (]) 22:07, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
This is to notify you that a ] the terms of ] of the Race and Intelligence arbitration case has been made and a motion which may affect you has been filed ].
*Copied to AN . ] (]) 18:54, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
For the Arbitration Committee, &nbsp;] <sup>]</sup> 03:59, 13 April 2011 (UTC)


{{ping|TonyBallioni}} I'd like to say something regarding Cullen's comment in the AN thread, so I'd appreciate you copying it over:
== ] ==


I haven't yet addressed my actions in support of Emil Kirkegaard (]), and since that was the subject of Bishonen's comment that ] is referencing there, I'd like to address it now. Deleet has gone into a fair amount of detail about his political views, and I'm 100% sure he isn't actually a Neo-Nazi. He apparently is a left-leaning centrist: However, he also loves to provoke people on social media, and he seems to enjoy how others react to his making those sorts of Nazi-related references. (Incidentally, I've complained to him about this, not because I think these sorts of jokes reflect his actual beliefs but because of how they create problems for others who interact with him.)
By at ], a majority of the Arbitration Committee has voted to amend the above case:


Here is the reason that I think Emil is a valuable editor: he is, at this point in time, the only person editing articles related to human intelligence who studies the topic professionally. Aside from what he's written for his own self-published journals, he has authored two papers on the topic in ], the field's most prominent journal, three presentations for the ] (I'm not sure how to link to those), and 15 papers in ]. I think this sort of thing matters a lot. On any highly technical topic, the quality of Misplaced Pages's articles tends to depend on the depth of knowledge of the people who edit them.
<blockquote>That the following replace the terms in ]:


I'd like to reiterate that I accept I shouldn't have gotten involved in this issue at all, but if anyone thinks that by supporting Deleet I've been supporting a Neo-Nazi, I object to that characterization because it's inaccurate. --] (]) 20:40, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
:<big>'''Editors reminded and discretionary sanctions (amended)'''</big>
:Copied the diff of this over because it's very long: . ] (]) 21:05, 8 July 2018 (UTC)


{{ping|TonyBallioni}} {{ping|GoldenRing}} I hope it's becoming clearer why I wanted to avoid having this discussion at AN. Aside from Cullen, this discussion has only attracted attention from editors who were my opponents in the original R&I disputes that led to the 2010 arbitration case. This group of people comprises less than 1% of the Misplaced Pages community, but when I'm the subject of a discussion at a noticeboard, for some reason they always tend to be among the first to show up. Later votes in these discussions tend to follow the pattern established by the first few votes, so even when uninvolved editors eventually do comment there, they probably won't significantly affect the outcome.
:5.2) Both experienced and new editors contributing to articles relating to the area of conflict (namely, the intersection of race/ethnicity and human abilities and behaviour, broadly construed) are reminded that this is a highly contentious subject and are cautioned that to avoid disruption they must adhere strictly to fundamental Misplaced Pages policies, including but not limited to: maintaining a ]; avoiding ]; carefully citing disputed statements to ]; and avoiding ] and ].
:To enforce the foregoing, ] are authorized for any editor making any edit relating to the area of conflict anywhere on Misplaced Pages.
:Sanctions may not be imposed for edits made prior to the passing of this motion but ] may be given and should be ].
:All sanctions imposed under the original remedy shall continue in full force.</blockquote>


I knew that this was going to happen if I were the subject of an AN thread, which is why I wanted my unblock request to be evaluated by uninvolved admins who don't have an emotional stake in the result. It's possible my unblock request would have been denied in that case also, but I don't believe it can be fairly evaluated by people who have this kind of history with me. But there's nothing that can be done about that now, is there?
On behalf of the Arbitration Committee, <span style="text-shadow:grey 0.118em 0.118em 0.118em; class=texhtml"> ''']'''</span> ] 11:45, 15 April 2011 (UTC)
:''']


(In case it isn't clear, this is not something I'm asking to have posted in the AN thread; it's just a general comment/question for both of you.) --] (]) 23:53, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
==]==


Had you noticed this has reopened? I only did today. I stopped looking in after discussion faded away. Now I've put it on my watchlist. I've just checked and find the preceding one was opened just over two years ago and has still not been closed and archived. ] (]) 14:49, 20 May 2011 (UTC) Please copy over this response to Power-enwiki (who is an uninvolved editor): I've already agreed to avoid all content related to human intelligence for as long as I'm topic banned, and I've been avoiding all content related to race for several years. If the community would like to formalize this agreement as a broadening of my topic ban, I'm fine with that outcome. --] (]) 00:28, 9 July 2018 (UTC)


{{ping|TonyBallioni}} I have another reply to Power-enwiki that I'd like to be copied over: I'd like you to understand the history of this request. I initially tried to discuss the admin involvement issue on the ArbCom mailing list, without requesting an unblock yet, because I was fully aware that it generally doesn't look good to raise this sort of issue in the unblock request itself. In response, I was told that this matter couldn't be discussed on the mailing list, and if I wished to raise it with ArbCom I'd have to be unblocked and then raise it in public. (I also was told that since my block is a normal admin block, it wasn't within ArbCom's remit to grant an exception to it.) Next, following a suggestion from Penwhale, I requested a conditional unblock for the sole purpose of raising the issue with ArbCom, with the restriction that I make no other edits, and the understanding that I'd be blocked again after the request was resolved. I eventually was told that this, too, wasn't possible. With that background, the consensus of the admins with whom I was discussing this issue (TonyBallioni, GoldenRing and Penwhale) was that I should make a regular unblock request to be posted at AN, and could mention the issue there.
:No, I hadn't noticed that, although I'm not sure why I would have, since I've never participated that discussion. Were you wanting me to offer my opinion about something there? --] (]) 15:16, 20 May 2011 (UTC)


If you look at the discussion about this in my user talk, you'll see how reluctant I was to follow that advice, but eventually I decided an editor in my situation shouldn't ignore instructions from admins. What else was I supposed to do, aside from giving up and accepting what appeared to be a violation of ] that impacted me directly? At that point, if I'd continued insisting that this issue be addressed before I tried to request an unblock, I could've been accused of having a ] attitude. This situation seems typical of my experience at Misplaced Pages: in most situations like this one, there is no way for me to proceed that I won't be criticized for (aside from just giving up, as I said). I'm damned if I do and damned if I don't. --] (]) 04:59, 9 July 2018 (UTC)
== ] ==


Note to admins: I've now withdrawn my unblock request, and I'm fine with the AN thread being closed now. I'd predicted from the start that it wouldn't be possible for me to be unblocked under these circumstances, but between Euryalus' e-mail and Penwhale's comments at AN, and MastCell's choice to not respond to those comments despite being notified of the discussion and being active while it was open, I feel that the admin involvement issue is now addressed about as well as it can be (at least for the present). This outcome hopefully should enable me to make another unblock request at some point in the future that will have a greater chance of success.
I just convert all the citations in references section to use a template. Added some <nowiki>{{Harvnb}}</nowiki> tags. Ran the manually... It cleans up citations and adds missing info. Moved the footnote section to use four columns instead of five. There are two Dablinks in the article; ] and ]. ] (]) 20:58, 30 May 2011 (UTC)


{{ping|Penwhale}} thanks again for your patience and your dedication to upholding policy. Misplaced Pages would be a better place if there were more people like you on ArbCom, and if you ever decide to run for ArbCom, you'll have my vote.
Ah crap. Sorry about the mixup. It is fixed. Couple of things
#In the text, the Welker references use 1976 and 1977 as the years. But in the references section, 1975 is the year. Are they all the same reference?
#I can't get the Fucheng reference to "click" correctly. I'm not sure what it is, but will still try and work on it.
#There are two references of the style "Beebe, C. W. The Bird p. 187, quoted in Gould (2004) p. 104". I'm not sure if this is correct. Normally, you would cite Beebe and leave Gould out of it as Beebe is the original source. But, I'm not sure about a quoted citation. I'd probably just reference Beebe.
#They birth date and death date of Beebe is not sourced.
#In the infobox, there is one award that is referenced. Is there references for the others?
#Bathysphere (4 times) and Trinidad (5 times) maybe over wikilinked.
] (]) 05:15, 1 June 2011 (UTC)


==William Beebe article== == Notice ==
] There is currently a discussion at ] regarding an issue with which you may have been involved.&nbsp;The thread is ]. <!--Template:ANI-notice--> ] (]) 18:51, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
Hi! I just got the chance this morning to go right through the Beebe articvle again. You have done a MAGNIFICENT job with it - it is a real credit to you. I made numerous edits - almost all of a very minor nature - trying to save space by eliminating double spaces between sentences, replacing "pages" with "pp" and the like. There was very little else I could see to do that would have improved it. Congratulations and thanks. ] (]) 18:40, 31 May 2011 (UTC)


== Your email ==
:Sorry about broken references and I apologise for any inconvenience. Also, unfortunately, I won't be able to help with the template - I am only here in Vancouver, Canada for another few days (to celebrate my mother's 97th) - so I will be really busy with family matters. Then, next Monday we leave for 5 weeks travel in China. I do hope it goes well and smoothly, though. I am worried others may find the article a bit long but, other than this, I think the article is ready to submit for consideration for GA status and I send you all best wishes for that. I have had great fun showing the article to some of my family here who had met Beebe and they were all thrilled to see it. Thanks again for the hard work you have put into it - it is much appreciated.


Your talk page access is enabled. If you wish to make an appeal, it should be made in public. Contrary to your claims, nothing that is eligible for suppression is involved here, and it does not require an oversighter to review. ArbCom has refused to consider your appeal, because it is not an AE action and the private information you wish to use is 100% irrelevant to your block and therefore your unblock request. I did not consider that when making it, so there is no reason at all that you should be able to appeal to random oversighters rather than making an open appeal. If you want to appeal, your only option is to do it publicly on your talk page. ] (]) 03:08, 3 November 2019 (UTC)
==Appealing topic ban==
You would need to show that your contributions would be a net positive. My best advice is to contribute non-controversially to some other topic you enjoy; the Beebe article seems to be a great start. However, I do not think an appeal would be successful at this point. ] '']'' 21:05, 16 July 2011 (UTC)


:{{reply to|TonyBallioni}} I have been trying to resolve this matter privately, because it's very difficult to discuss it in public without discussing the content of oversighted material, and also because I don't think it's appropriate to have an on-Wiki discussion about the lawsuit that presumably is why the material in question was oversighted. But attempts to communicate with you about it privately haven't been successful, so I guess at this point my only choice is to try to discuss it with you here.
== FYI ==


:When my initial e-mail about this issue to you and the other functionaries did not receive a response, I raised the matter in private with another oversighter, ]. After I explained the situation to him, he invited me to submit an unblock request to him and you by e-mail, so that it could be reviewed in private by oversighters, and I followed his advice. Based on your comment here about my unblock request, it seems like you may not have been aware that Oshwah had invited me to do this. After you commented here, I discussed the matter privately with Oshwah again, and he's told me that he then sent you a second e-mail explaining the situation to you. However, Oshwah told me yesterday that you have not responded to that second e-mail, either. I'm sure you're a busy person, but your lack of communication is making this situation much more difficult.
Please see ]. ] (]) 21:39, 9 August 2011 (UTC)


:Even if you personally do not think the material that's been oversighted is relevant to my block, you also have said that any unblock request I make must be evaluated by the community at AN, and the community clearly ''does'' think that it is relevant. When I made an unblock request in July of last year, this material was brought up at AN by Cullen328 as a reason I should not be unblocked, which gave the material more exposure, and Cullen328's argument also was impossible to address in a meaningful way without bringing up non-public information about the lawsuit. If I make another public unblock request and it is copied to AN, it is inevitable that this material will be brought up there again, because it was explicitly given by the AE admins as a reason my block should be made indefinite, even if you did not personally consider it.
== ] ==


:When I explained this situation to Oshwah, he agreed that the most reasonable course of action is to have my unblock request evaluated privately by oversighters, but he does not seem comfortable with doing that if you're opposed to the idea. If you are opposed to it, it would be helpful if you could engage more directly with the issue that Oshwah and I have tried to raise, because your comment here does not really address the central problem with making an unblock request that will be evaluated in public. One other administrator, ] has also been involved in the discussion about this situation (although he hasn't seen the oversighted material), so I encourage him to comment here as well. --] (]) 23:19, 26 November 2019 (UTC)
Did you want to review this, or shall I? ] (]) 05:26, 13 September 2011 (UTC)
::I have little left to say on the topic. I've provided some advice on the course of action I felt you should take, and that advice is the general advice I would give everyone who asks about how they should approach an appeal. I understand your concerns about the past discussions, sanctions and the over-sighted material, but it's clear that you're going to get no where unless you simply make a public appeal. -- ] (]) 23:24, 26 November 2019 (UTC)
:Ferahgo and I just recently finished spending around six hours looking through the past six months of archives of the abortion talk page, so I don’t especially feel like doing this again for another article right now. I’m fine with you searching the archives of the opposition article if you like. I might be ready to do this again for another article in another week or so, but you’re welcome to search any of the other articles in this topic area before that. --] (]) 07:03, 13 September 2011 (UTC)


:::Thanks for the comment. As I'm sure you're aware, I do not think it's possible for me to do that unless the issue of non-public information is addressed somehow, so I'll need to wait for further advice from Oshwah and TonyBallioni before deciding what to do.
==]==


:::Let me suggest one other possible solution. Since my block is an ordinary admin block rather than a community ban, it isn't strictly necessary for it to be evaluated at AN; the reason TonyBallioni copied my previous request to AN was that my indefinite block was the consensus of several admins commenting at AE, so he thought that my unblock request should also be evaluated by multiple admins. (I hope I have that right; I'm very wary of accidentally misrepresenting his views, because that's a mistake I've made before.) However, at this point, there are at least four admins who have been involved in this discussion: yourself, Oshwah, TonyBallioni, and ] (although Penwhale considers himself involved). And all of these admins have at least some understanding of the relevant issues, even if they don't all know the exact details.
You may be interested in this. ] (]) 18:09, 24 November 2011 (UTC)


:I’m assuming this relates to my comments on proposed decision for the abortion arbitration case. Is this project something that would help with the issue Jclemens and I expressed concern about there, about the ways that editors can sometimes escape the consequences of severe incivility? --] (]) 18:40, 24 November 2011 (UTC) :::Here's what I suggest: I can make a public unblock request here, under the condition that it will be evaluated only by admins who are following this issue, rather than by the wider community at AN. This would presumably avoid the problem of the material that's been oversighted being brought up at AN as a reason to keep me blocked, the way happened last time. A second benefit of this approach is that it would avoid the past problem of the discussion about my request being dominated by my former opponents from the 2010 R&I arbitration case. Would this be a workable solution? --] (]) 00:03, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
*I will repeat what I have said literally every time this has been raised. Suppressed content had zero impact on this block and would have zero impact on this unblock. Your only option is a public appeal without raising material that is suppressable. ] (]) 06:52, 27 November 2019 (UTC)


::Okay, but can you please address the specific thing that I and Oshwah have been asking? Even though I know your view is that the material that has been oversighted is irrelevant to my block, there are other admins who do not share your view, and have already made it clear (in response to my unblock request last July) that they ''do'' consider it relevant. Consequently, if I make a public unblock request that is copied to AN, this material will almost certainly be brought up there as a reason to keep me blocked, as happened in the previous discussion there, regardless of your personal views on whether it is relevant or not. This is what I've been trying to communicate to you all this time, and I'm not sure how to be any clearer about it.
::I do have a few ideas about that, yeah. Initially I hope it to be a big think tank, where we can pool ideas and come up with workable proposals. <font face="Forte">] <sup>]</sup></font> 23:13, 24 November 2011 (UTC)


::This is the issue that needs addressing, and it's why I suggested above that I could make a public unblock request in my user talk that will be evaluated only by the admins who are already paying attention to this situation, instead of by the wider community at AN. I need to know whether that's a workable solution, or if there is some better solution to the issue that I've been trying to raise here. --] (]) 11:33, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
:::I’m kind of doubtful about whether a Wikiproject would be able to fix this problem. The real problem is with admins, and the inconsistent way they handle sanctioning of editors.
:::No. You don’t get to play pick an admin or dictate the rules upon which your unblock request will be heard. I can say the material you think is relevant is irrelevant because I’m the administrator who placed the block and I know that it had zero impact on the block being placed, despite your attempts to claim otherwise.{{pb}}The ''only'' thing relevant to any unblock discussion is your conduct and how you plan to behave going forward. Not the conduct of another administrator and certainly not suppressed material that has nothing to do with you.{{pb}}Finally, there’s a very strong argument that you’re community banned and that none of the admins you’ve talked to have the ability to unblock without discussion: you withdrew your last unblock request when it was 7-1 opposed. If it had lasted longer, the odds of you being unblocked would have been very low. These circumstances are basically what ] was designed for: preventing individual admins from acting without community consensus. You can make an appeal and it can be copied to AN like last time. ] (]) 14:42, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
::::If I'm going make another public unblock request and have it copied to AN, I'd like to know ahead of time how it will be handled if administrators continue to make arguments against unblocking me that are based on the material I brought up in my e-mail. I'm glad you think this material is irrelevant, but you must surely be aware that what I'm predicting is still likely to happen, because it happened both in the original AE report and in the subsequent AN discussion. Since you consider this material irrelevant, are you willing to do anything to prevent it continuing to be used as an argument in subsequent discussions? --] (]) 15:20, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
:::::I just re-read the last unblock discussion and don’t see anything that would be eligible for suppression. If that occurs, email the oversight list and someone will suppress it. ] (]) 15:33, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
::::::I am referring to the made by Cullen328: "Bishonen's observations back then were especially persuasive", as well as his , which was in response to my rather weak attempt at addressing these concerns without bringing up the lawsuit. And is the comment by Bishonen that Cullen328 was calling attention to. I don't think I should quote the relevant part of Bishonen's comment, because that comment was repeating some of the specific allegations that are the subject of the libel lawsuit, but if you read the entirety of Bishonen's comment I think you'll know what I'm referring to. When I brought up my block in the Wikipediocracy Discord, other people there who are familiar with the lawsuit immediately recognized Bishonen's comment as something that had been inappropriate to post in public. But based on Cullen328's comments in the AN discussion, it seems most admins aren't aware of the problem with referencing or repeating this material.


:::If you’re interested in pursuing this idea, though, someone else who I think you should contact is ]. For a while he was working on a proposal that he called the “town sheriff”, in which the editors involved in a topic would elect an uninvolved admin who has the responsibility of ensuring that everyone remains civil on those articles. It sounded like a promising idea, but I don’t think he’s still working on it. If you’re interested in discussing ways to solve the problem of incivility getting overlooked, I think you should ask Ludwigs2 about his town sheriff idea. --] (]) 07:31, 25 November 2011 (UTC) ::::::If you were to oversight the comments in the original AE report that are repeating allegations related to the lawsuit, that would go a long way towards addressing my concerns. Is that something it's possible to do at this point, when it's more than a year later? --] (]) 16:07, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
:::::::OK. I agree with Cullen that Bishonen's argument is persuasive, or the other way around. I do not see any libel lawsuit, nor do I see what any of this has anything to do with any lawsuit. That someone on Wikipediocracy thinks part of Bishonen's comment is inappropriate one way or another, that's part for the course. Also, we don't negotiate over who gets to request an unblock and in what particular manner, or what should be oversighted to alleviate the indef-blocked user's concerns. Also, we are wasting our time here; I mean, ''you'' are wasting our time here. TPA revoked. ] (]) 01:21, 28 November 2019 (UTC)
*As you still appear to be searching for a random oversighter to unblock you off-wiki, I'll explain this more clearly to you: your talk page access has been revoked. This means that your only venue of appeal is ]. There was nothing that is suppressed that was considered while placing your block, so requesting that an oversighter review it is not needed. If you continue to maintain that somehow private information is related to your appeal, it is exceptionally unlikely that your appeal will even be considered as this is plainly false, and continued insistence on this fact means it is very unlikely you will be a productive contributor. I will also note for any reviewing UTRS admin that as you withdrew your last appeal while it was in the process of being declined at AN, any appeal should also go through community review there. ] (]) 02:55, 28 November 2019 (UTC)


== Talk page access ==
::::I have many ideas in my head. The main purpose of the project (at least at this stage) is a central place to pool ideas. The more heads together, the more likely we can come up with something, methinks. <font face="Forte">] <sup>]</sup></font> 07:36, 25 November 2011 (UTC)


Hi,
:::::Actually, it was nothing to do with abortion. I simply posted these notices to everyone who responded to DR RfCs. ] (]) 11:11, 29 November 2011 (UTC)


I have allowed your TPA again in order that you may respond here to questions raised at ]-- ] (]) 00:45, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
== Hugo Chávez ==


{{reply to|5 albert square}} I have a question for ]. At https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Partial_blocks, the Misplaced Pages community is reaching a consensus to allow partial blocks, which prevent a person from editing in some areas but not in others. Since there is concern that I'll cause future disruption if unblocked, would you support turning my block into a partial block, so that I'm technically prevented from editing in the areas where there is fear of me causing disruption? I would be willing to accept that restriction as an unblock condition.
Please don't (unintentionally) glorify banned users by highlighting their names or discussing the merits of their edits, such as at ]. I assume you are not contesting the ban (particularly not at an article talk page), so per WP:DENY, nothing about the user should be discussed. When you notice an admin revert an edit without comment and immediately indef the account for "abusing multiple accounts", it would be reasonable to assume the admin knows what they are doing, and it's not helpful to (unintentionally) speak up for the banned user by commenting on whether the admin has breached WP:INVOLVED. Obviously a proposed edit is justified by various policies, and never by a reference to the actions of a banned user. ] (]) 08:43, 3 December 2011 (UTC)


I actually would appreciate being placed under a partial block to enforce my topic ban, so that there can be no future ambiguity about which articles it covers. --] (]) 09:30, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
== Misplaced Pages tool inquiry ==


{{reply to|5 albert square}}
Is there a way to figure out where you have cross paths with another editor from 2 or 3 years ago? My memory isn't a ] on some of these past interactions. ] (]) 21:48, 10 December 2011 (UTC)


I've got one more statement that I'd like to be copied to the AN thread. To be clear, I am NOT threatening any sort of legal action here; I'm just describing an already-existing case between two other parties.
:If there’s a way to do that, I don’t know what it is. Why does it matter? --] (]) 23:35, 10 December 2011 (UTC)


The libel case that I've been referring to in my user talk, and "background" referred to in ferret's comment, is the case. The statements for which Kirkegaard is suing the defendant are primarily about a different issue, but the claim that Kirkegaard is a neo-Nazi also is covered in the case. (It's mentioned in "post two" in the ruling.) As explained , the ruling on December 11 found these statements to be defamatory, and now the burden is on the defendant (Smith) to justify them.
I'm not sure about you but if someones name sounds familiar and there is a gut reaction to that name I would like to be able to reference my past dealings with them and confirm my gut feeling is accurate. ] (]) 23:38, 10 December 2011 (UTC)


I called Deleet an "alleged neo-Nazi", rather than just a "neo-Nazi", because after a statement has been legally found to be defamatory, it seems unwise to repeat it uncritically. There are fair number of editors who are familiar with this case, who could hopefully provide more details about it, because this case is relevant to how some of Smith's statements ended up being repeated in newspapers.
:After looking around a little, it looks like there is a way: . Sorry or not remembering about this in my first comment. --] (]) 23:54, 10 December 2011 (UTC)
Thanks sir! ] (]) 23:57, 10 December 2011 (UTC)


I had been hoping it would be possible for me to make an unblock request without being attacked based on these statements. Clearly, my attempt to avoid that outcome did not go well. But I'd like everyone to understand that ''this'' what my off-Wiki discussions with admins have been about. I never asked or expected any admin to unblock me single-handedly; these discussions were only about whether there was any possible way for me to make an unblock request without being attacked based on what is now, from a legal standpoint, a defamatory statement. I'm sorry for wasting the community's time, and the time of multiple admins, with this pointless attempt.
{{response|alatari}}


Whether Deleet is a neo-Nazi or not, he's still a rather unpleasant and abrasive person, and I've never considered him a friend. However, I'm also a firm believer in the perspective taken by ], meaning I think that even the most despicable person should be welcomed at Misplaced Pages as long as their conduct complies with Misplaced Pages's policies. (At the time when I defended Deleet in April 2018, he appeared to be a productive editor, because he had been editing for a decade with a clean block log.) I recognize that the principle described in that essay may turn out to be the hill that I die on, and if that ends up being what happens, I'll accept it. --] (]) 18:27, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
== Blocked under Arbitration Enforcement ==


{{reply to|Eggishorn}} When I said "I assumed its scope was limited to articles that discuss both race and intelligence in combination", I was referring to why I initially believed it did not violate my topic ban to participate in the ill-fated psychometrics task force (which related to intelligence, but not to race). My involvement in that task force was one of the major reasons originally given for my block. --] (]) 19:41, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
Based on the review of your editing in the last year, and in particular your return to the project (after an extended break) specifically to comment on the proposed sanctions related to {{user|Orangemarlin}} in the '']'' arbitration case and edits related to the same user following this case, it is clear that you have returned to the disruptive behaviour and ] mentality that was sanctioned in the '']'' arbitration case. I hereby ban you for one year under the discretionary sanctions of the ''Abortion'' arbitration case for the continuation of this battlefield behaviour directed at Orangemarlin during and following the ''Abortion'' case.
:{{reply to|Captain Occam}} the block you are currently appealing is the April 14, 2018 block which is specifically: "(per Special:Permalink/834221440#Captain_Occam". That is the AE request I mentioned in my oppose. Claims that the psychometrics task force is the "major reason" given in your block are simply not borne out by the record. That participation may have been part of your personal context behind the email you sent, but the actual reasons given are not what you claim. I stand by my evaluation that you are being untruthful in your request, which does not bode well for your possible future participation. Despite opposing your unblock, I honestly hope that you have a happy and productive New Year. ] ] ] 19:51, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
::{{reply to|Eggishorn}} Could you please at least add a link to my response in your statement? Even if you think that I'm incorrect about this being a major part of the reason for my block, it wasn't a ''deliberate'' falsehood. I recognize that my unblock request is probably going to fail, but I still have a problem with others assuming that I told such a bald-faced lie in it. --] (]) 20:03, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
:::{{reply to|Captain Occam}} I have done so and also re-edited my comment to recognize that characterization. ] ] ] 20:13, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
::::Thanks. --] (]) 20:14, 7 January 2020 (UTC)


Could an admin (or anyone else) please copy my comment to the AN discussion? While I suspect it's now too late to change the outcome of that discussion, it's still very important to me for others to understand what I explained in that comment. --] (]) 07:03, 8 January 2020 (UTC)
As you have a history of developing high quality content (specifically the ] article), this ban may be modified after three months to permit you to edit only in content-related areas of the project, and specifically to create and/or improve articles. Prior to unblocking, you must provide the name of the article(s) you intend to edit, and evidence that you have conducted research on these articles by posting a list of proposed reference sources for inclusion.


==Unblock request declined at ]==
Appeal of this sanction may be made to the Arbitration Committee. As I am acting in the role of administrator for this arbitration enforcement, I will recuse on any non-public discussion of this ban for as long as I remain a member of the Arbitration Committee. ] (]) 03:43, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
Hi, Captain Occam. I have closed your unblock request on AN as declined. The consensus was pretty clear, and unless I've missed something it's been more than 24 hours since anybody commented, so it seemed as well to put the discussion out of its misery. ] &#124; ] 20:07, 9 January 2020 (UTC).

:I need you to clarify something for me. How discretionary sanctions work is that the first time an editor engages in sanctionable conduct, they’re formally notified of the discretionary sanctions, and if they fail to heed the warning they’re then sanctioned. I was never notified of the discretionary sanctions in the abortion topic area, and I actually was not aware that my conduct in the AN/I thread was sanctionable. (You’re the first uninvolved administrator who’s told me this directly.) Isn’t the appropriate course of actions under discretionary sanctions for me to be formally notified about this, not a ban without a warning? --] (]) 04:18, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
::Well, if you prefer, I can simply file this under the '']'' arbitration case instead. You've certainly had your warning there. ] (]) 04:28, 13 December 2011 (UTC)

:::But in order for it to be a discretionary sanction under ARBR&I, it would have to have happened in a discussion related to that topic. (Where I couldn’t have participated anyway, since I’m topic banned.) The discretionary sanctions from that case were eventually expanded to cover all articles related to race differences, but I still don’t see how that can apply to my comments about a conflict on abortion and evolution articles.

:::Look, if you think my comments were out of line, I’ll accept your admonishment and also probably want some advice on how to avoid this problem in the future. But this sanction really seems out of process for the reason I mentioned above. There's a reason why discretionary sanctions are intended to be preceded by a warning, and if I’d been warned before receiving this ban, the warning would have been enough to make me change my behavior. --] (]) 04:42, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
::::Captain Occam, you parachuted yourself into discussion of an arbitration proposed decision and your first edit in over three months was to criticize the lack of sanction against an editor you have subsequently claimed to have no history with. You have done nothing since your return but participate in disputes. This is a continuation of the behaviour for which you remain sanctioned under the R&I case, and as you were participating in the discussion of the Abortion case, you are aware that discretionary sanctions were passed in that case. There was plenty of feedback even in the early edits of the ANI threads that your behaviour was not acceptable and, in fact, the community was discussing sanctions directed at you. I'm not biting; please feel free to appeal to the Arbitration Committee. ] (]) 04:50, 13 December 2011 (UTC)

:::::All right. There are two more things I need to ask about this:

:::::1: What do I need to do to appeal this decision to the arbitration committee? Since I'm blocked, I can't post an amendment thread.

:::::2: The autoblock against my IP address also affects ], because she shares an IP address with me. That doesn't seem entirely fair, since she had nothing to do with any of the discussion regarding OrangeMarlin. Is there any way to prevent her from suffering from the consequence of a mistake that was only mine, not hers? --] (]) 05:08, 13 December 2011 (UTC)

# Because this is an arbitration enforcement, it can only be appealed at the AE Noticeboard or directly to the Arbitration Committee. Since you are blocked, you can email the Committee at ''{{NonSpamEmail|arbcom-l|lists.wikimedia.org}}'' .
# The autoblock lasts for up to 24 hours and then automatically disappears. ] has not edited in the last 4 weeks and has fewer than 20 edits since the beginning of October. If she is desperate to edit sooner than 22 hours from now, she can ask to have your autoblock lifted. ] (]) 05:19, 13 December 2011 (UTC)
I have to agree with the Captain. He was not warned about his being subject to Abortion sanctions. To "simply file this under the Race and intelligence" has the appearance of arbitrary and unequal treatment. The appropriate remedy is to acknowledge that the ban is out of policy and block him for incivility at a length based on his most recent block. &ndash; ] <sup>(])</sup> 02:30, 15 December 2011 (UTC) If the banning admin refuses to correct their error, I would be amenable to posting the appeal at AE NB on behalf of the Captain. &ndash; ] <sup>(])</sup> 02:33, 15 December 2011 (UTC)

:I’ve already appealed this block to the arbitration committee via e-mail, but you’re welcome to contact either Risker or any of the other arbitrators. One other arbitrator who I expect to understand this situation is Jclemens, since he knows what caused me to start paying attention to the abortion topic area. But I don’t think any of them are going to notice if you just comment here and nowhere else.

:I don’t recommend posting about this at AE, and there’s a specific reason why not. Something I noticed in the AN/I thread about OrangeMarlin is that most of the editors who opposed me there are the exact same group of editors who opposed me more than a year ago in R&I related disputes. Most of the editors I’m thinking of weren’t involved in either the abortion case, or the evolution dispute that was the AN/I thread’s original subject. I don’t know how to explain why all of these people suddenly showed up again to oppose me in a dispute completely unrelated to R&I, but it seems as though they care about opposing me in any dispute I’m ever involved in. In other words, if you try to post an appeal on my behalf at AE, I suspect you’re just going to be shouted down by this same group of editors. I’m hopeful that ArbCom will make the right decision about this, though. --] (]) 03:19, 15 December 2011 (UTC)

== Arbitration amendment ==

I know you're blocked, but I should still follow due process I guess. http://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Amendment#Request_to_amend_prior_case:_Race_and_intelligence -] (]) 21:34, 8 January 2012 (UTC)

==Deletion review for ]==
An editor has asked for a ] of ]. Because you closed the deletion discussion for this page, speedily deleted it, or otherwise were interested in the page, you might want to participate in the deletion review. <!-- This originally was from the template {{subst:DRVNote|PAGE_NAME}} ~~~~ --> ] (]) 23:31, 17 January 2012 (UTC)

== Arbitration Committee Review ==

Please be advised that the Arbitration Committee has now opened a ] of the background relating to the Request for Amendment at which you are a party. A Review is a streamlined version of case, with a short window for presenting evidence.

The Committee invites any evidence you may wish to give ''directly related'' to any of the following matters:

# Is Mathsci engaging in improper conduct in respect of Ferahgo the Assassin?
# Is Mathsci being harassed by socks?
# Should Mathsci be pursuing socks in the R&I topic?
# Are the contributions of Ferahgo the Assassin and Captain Occam, outside of article space, functionally indistinguishable?
# Should Ferahgo the Assassin be site-banned coterminously with Captain Occam per WP:SHARE?

Since you are currently blocked, evidence should be presented to the committee via email at {{NonSpamEmail|arbcom-l|lists.wikimedia.org}} (please see ]) and should be sent by 26 March 2012 at the very latest.

For the Arbitration Committee

--] &#124; ] 21:03, 16 March 2012 (UTC)

==] Closed ==
The arbitration review of the Race and Intelligence case has now closed and the final decision is viewable at the link above.

The following remedies have been enacted:

# {{User|Mathsci}} is admonished for engaging in battlefield conduct
# {{User|Ferahgo the Assassin}} and {{User|Captain Occam}} are site-banned from Misplaced Pages for a period of no less than one year. After one year has elapsed, a request may be made for the ban to be lifted. Any such request must address all the circumstances which lead to this ban being imposed and demonstrate an understanding of and intention to refrain from similar actions in the future.
# {{User|SightWatcher}} is indefinitely banned from editing and/or discussing the topic of Race and Intelligence on any page of Misplaced Pages, including user talk pages, or from participating in any discussion concerning the conduct of editors who have worked in the topic. This editor may however within reason participate in dispute resolution and noticeboard discussions if their own conduct has been mentioned.
# {{User|TrevelyanL85A2}} is indefinitely banned from editing and/or discussing the topic of Race and Intelligence on any page of Misplaced Pages, including user talk pages, or from participating in any discussion concerning the conduct of editors who have worked in the topic. This editor may however within reason participate in dispute resolution and noticeboard discussions if their own conduct has been mentioned.


For the Arbitration Committee,

--] &#124; ] 02:08, 14 May 2012 (UTC)

==Arbitration motion regarding ]==
Resolved by at ] that:

<blockquote>
FoF 2.5 in the ] be amended to read: ''Mathsci has engaged in borderline personal attacks and frequent battleground conduct''.
</blockquote>

For the Arbitration Committee,

-- ] (]) 06:06, 26 May 2012 (UTC)

== '''The Olive Branch''': A Dispute Resolution Newsletter (Issue #1) ==

Welcome to the first edition of ''The Olive Branch''. This will be a place to semi-regularly update editors active in ] (DR) about some of the most important issues, advances, and challenges in the area. You were delivered this update because you are ], but if you would prefer not to receive any future mailing, just add your name to ].
]
In this issue:
* '''Background''': A brief overview of the DR ecosystem.
* '''Research''': The most recent DR data
* '''Survey results''': Highlights from Steven Zhang's April 2012 survey
* '''Activity analysis''': Where DR happened, broken down by the top DR forums
* '''DR Noticeboard comparison''': How the newest DR forum has progressed between May and August
* '''Discussion update''': Checking up on the Wikiquette Assistance close debate
* '''Proposal''': It's time to close the ]. Agree or disagree?
<big><center>]</center></big>

--''The Olive Branch'' 18:53, 4 September 2012 (UTC)
<!-- EdwardsBot 0345 -->

== Banned user template ==

A sitting arbitrator says: According to this I am going to remove the template. If somebody is really eager to demonstrate how cruel senseless one could be, please go ahead and revert me. Thanks. ] (]) 17:20, 26 March 2013 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 20:07, 9 January 2020


Archives

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7


Apology

In some comments I posted on various articles, which have now been administratively removed, I referred to you as a "creationist". In looking for the evidence I based this on, it now appears to me that I entirely misread it, and came to a completely wrong conclusion. Therefore, I apologize for calling you a creationist, and will attempt to be more accurate - both in general and concerning you - in the future. Yours, Beyond My Ken (talk) 18:16, 22 January 2017 (UTC)

Instead of trying for what you post about me to be more accurate, I would rather you stop bringing me up in general. Is that option not on the table? --Captain Occam (talk) 21:31, 24 January 2017 (UTC)
That's entirely up to you. Beyond My Ken (talk) 01:27, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
No, it isn't. Please don't try to put your behavior off onto me. The only thing that controls whether you continue bringing me up is how much attention you choose to pay to me. --Captain Occam (talk) 02:09, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
Sorry, but that simply isn't the case. You're not some innocent newbie being picked on for no good reason, you've been a disruptive element on Misplaced Pages for quite a while -- except, of course, for the period when you were site banned. If you do something that I see, and believe requires commenting on, I will do so. If you simply edit without causing trouble or disruption, you won't hear from me at all - so, you see, it's entirely your behavior which is the controlling factor. Don't worry, though, I won't say a thing to anyone about your apparent inability to graciously accept an apology when it's offered to you. Beyond My Ken (talk) 03:12, 1 February 2017 (UTC)
How do you expect me to react to an apology that includes a built-in warning that you're going to continue talking about me and monitoring my edits? You've already told me in Jimbo's user talk that you're unable to assume good faith about any edit I make anywhere on the project. ("You used up your stock of AGF a long, long time ago.") Don't give me this story about my behavior being what determines the outcome--you've already told me point-blank that you're going to assume bad faith about my edits regardless of what I do.
Please understand that at this stage, I don't actually expect to change your attitude about this. But down the road, I would like to be able to show other people that I asked you nicely to stop trying to police my edits, and that you refused. --Captain Occam (talk) 04:03, 1 February 2017 (UTC)

ArbCom 2017 election voter message

Hello, Captain Occam. Voting in the 2017 Arbitration Committee elections is now open until 23.59 on Sunday, 10 December. All users who registered an account before Saturday, 28 October 2017, made at least 150 mainspace edits before Wednesday, 1 November 2017 and are not currently blocked are eligible to vote. Users with alternate accounts may only vote once.

The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Misplaced Pages arbitration process. It has the authority to impose binding solutions to disputes between editors, primarily for serious conduct disputes the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the authority to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail.

If you wish to participate in the 2017 election, please review the candidates and submit your choices on the voting page. MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 18:42, 3 December 2017 (UTC)

E-mail

I received an unsolicted e-mail from you, using Misplaced Pages's e-mail link.

I have no need of either correction nor advice from the like of you. You are specifically directed not to e-mail me again. If you do, I will take the matter directly to ArbCom. Beyond My Ken (talk) 03:28, 3 April 2018 (UTC)

Well, I'm curious to see how that works out for you. --Captain Occam (talk) 03:32, 3 April 2018 (UTC)

Arbitration Enforcement

I am required to notify you that I am filing a complaint against you on Arbitration Enforcement. Beyond My Ken (talk) 05:23, 3 April 2018 (UTC)

Indefinitely blocked

Per this thread at WP:AE, I have indefinitely blocked you and disabled your use of the Misplaced Pages email system. This is a standard admin block, and not an arbitration enforcement action, and as such, can be appealed through the normal processes, which you can find at Misplaced Pages:Guide to appealing blocks. TonyBallioni (talk) 15:49, 4 April 2018 (UTC)

Clarification request

In light of your block, your clarification request has been declined. For the Arbitration Committee, Miniapolis 15:41, 8 April 2018 (UTC)

This blocked user is asking that their block be reviewed on the Unblock Ticket Request System:

Captain Occam (block logactive blocksglobal blocksautoblockscontribsdeleted contribsabuse filter logcreation logchange block settingsunblockcheckuser (log))


UTRS appeal #21796 was submitted on Jun 11, 2018 22:36:52. This review is now closed.


--UTRSBot (talk) 22:36, 11 June 2018 (UTC)

{unblock | reason=I previously made an unblock request via UTRS, and in response I was instructed to make the same request using the unblock template in my user talk. This is a truncated version of my UTRS request.

Over the past month, I've tried to discuss an issue affecting the basis for my block on the ArbCom mailing list, but ArbCom ultimately told me that this particular issue can't be addressed privately, and that if I wish to raise it I must do so in a public request. Since I'm currently blocked, doing that isn't possible at the moment. However, ArbCom also has told me that since I'm under a standard admin block, it isn't within their remit to review the block or grant an exception to it. I contacted an arbitration clerk, user:Penwhale, about how I should proceed in this situation, and he instructed me to request an unblock under the following conditions:

  1. If unblocked, the only edits I will make will be to raise this issue with ArbCom (along with required notifications), and nothing else. I'll also disable my Misplaced Pages e-mail feature, so that there can be no suspicion that I'm using Misplaced Pages for anything else besides the ArbCom inquiry. (This second part was my own idea, not Penwhale's.)
  2. After my request to ArbCom is closed, if no action has been taken to modify my block, I'll be blocked again under the same terms as my current block, without prejudice to making a normal unblock request at a later point.

Since what I'm requesting isn't a full lifting of my block, I don't think this is the time or the place to discuss the block's merits. However, if admins want more background about the basis for it, I recommend reading the request for clarification that I made shortly before being blocked, along with the responses from arbitrators: Please note that the issue I've recently tried to discuss with ArbCom is not the same one that I raised there; it's a separate issue that I haven't brought up in public yet. I think it's too complex to describe in an unblock request, but I've explained it in detail to Penwhale, so if possible I would like whichever admin reviews this request to please contact him for more details.

Although I'm making this unblock request in public, I also ask that whatever discussion admins have about it please occur somewhere other than one of the public noticeboards. Past noticeboard threads related to the R&I arbitration case have sometimes become magnets for harassment and personal attacks, against me or other users, and I'd like my request to be handled in a way that doesn't risk a repeat of that outcome. Captain Occam (talk) 23:49, 13 June 2018 (UTC)

Note: this request is no longer current; I'll make a new request below. --Captain Occam (talk) 12:05, 6 July 2018 (UTC)}

  • Just two comments as the blocking admin: while this is not an AE block, so any administrator may lift it without my consent, this was based on the rough consensus of administrators at AE. As such I think an unblock would be best to go to AN even though it technically doesn’t have to. 2) I’d encourage the reviewing admin to read the UTRS appeal and the comments I put in there and Penwhale did as well. Namely, in my view Captain Occam lied in his UTRS request. That might be a factor in favour of just declining this outright. I don’t feel very strongly either way about this block, and I’ll leave it up to others to decide, but I thought those pieces of material fact were important for any reviewer to know. TonyBallioni (talk) 23:59, 13 June 2018 (UTC)
Could you please clarify what you feel that I've lied about? It's possible that I've made a mistake or oversimplified something, but I don't think that I stated any deliberate falsehoods.
After putting some thought into this, I have an idea what you're referring to: I said in my UTRS appeal that I thought the blocking admin supported me being unblocked under these conditions. My comment about that was based on an exchange I had with Penwhale in which he said that he had talked to you on IRC, and that you felt that you shouldn't lift the block unless it was discussed at AN first. My (apparently wrong) assumption was that if you were opposed to my being unblocked under these conditions, you wouldn't have offered that suggestion about how to proceed.
Is that what you're referring to? If it was, that wasn't a deliberate lie, but a case of me assuming too much based on what Penwhale told me (and I apologize for doing that). --Captain Occam (talk) 00:20, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
Thanks, I was ambiguous because I wanted to respect the privacy of the UTRS ticket, but I’ll explain more now since you asked: Yes, that is what I’m referencing, but your explanation here doesn’t make it any better: you didn’t once mention AN in the UTRS ticket even though you apparently knew that I thought there should be a discussion there and that I thought this should be done in public, you also did not just claim that I didn’t oppose the unblock, but that I supported it: I don’t. I’m neutral on it, which is very different than supporting. I was also unfamiliar with any proposed unblock conditions. I’ll let Penwhale speak for himself as to if he feels you misrepresented him. Anyway, I’m not going to comment more on this, but I did want for the reviewing admin to be aware. TonyBallioni (talk) 00:46, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
I feel that a lot of the trouble I've gotten into at Misplaced Pages has been the result of people attributing a malicious purpose to mistakes that I made from misreading social cues. It was clueless of me to assume you supported unblocking me based on what Penwhale told me, but cluelessness isn't the same as deliberately lying. I'm autistic, so I've sometimes had this problem in real life also. I think it would be a benefit to everyone if the Misplaced Pages community could learn to assume no clue in these types of situations. --Captain Occam (talk) 01:12, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
I'll chime in here. Echoing what Tony said above, I'm also not very happy as to have to explain to Tony (in the same UTRS) that what I told you is very different from what you posted: (1) I never once said whether Tony supported it, only mentioning that he mentioned AN; (2) I also never once said that I supported the unblock - because I am RL friends with the person acting as our intermediate, it wouldn't have been correct for me to attempt to influence the unblock decision. I merely stated that self-offering the unblock condition would result in a higher chance of you being unblocked to raise the issue. Saying in your unblock request that I supported your unblock is, in fact, untrue and unfortunately misrepresenting me. I will take your comment above this as an apology, but please be careful to not assume what people meant in messages. - Penwhale | 01:59, 14 June 2018 (UTC)
Yes, I have to be more careful about that. What I should've done is ask you about this before assuming it was the case. I'll try not to make this mistake again. --Captain Occam (talk) 02:26, 14 June 2018 (UTC)

I would be willing to unblock for you to make a request to the committee. I have two provisos:

  • I've emailed the committee to ask if there is any point allowing you to make a request at ARCA; if any such request would just be rejected out-of-hand, I don't see any point in the unblock (I'm not asking them to pre-judge the case, just whether it would cross the bar of being considered at all). I'm waiting for their response.
  • An unblock would be on the basis that you are banned from everywhere except ARCA and this page. Can you please confirm that this is in line with your expectation?

@TonyBallioni: I don't see the point in taking this to AN if the unblock is on the basis of such tight restrictions, but if you seriously object then please let me know. GoldenRing (talk) 11:42, 4 July 2018 (UTC)

  • GoldenRing, while it is a regular admin block and you are free to do so, I am also of the opinion that individual administrators as a matter of practice should not unilaterally undo blocks that were taken on the basis of consensus. I am neutral on any unblock here, but for the fact that there was a clear consensus of uninvolved administrators to block, I think it would be irresponsible to unblock without taking it to AN, so I strongly object. I also am beyond confused as to why you would even want to make such unblock conditions. It’s a waste of time for the sake of wasting time if the end result is that the committee rules at ARCA but he stays indefinitely blocked by community consensus or individual adminstrator action. So, to answer your question: yes, I strongly oppose this on multiple grounds. I think an unblock here shouldn’t be only for the sake of ARCA, and if it is beyond that, I think it needs to go to AN. TonyBallioni (talk) 12:17, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
    • GR, just reread the request (I was recalling a convo with Penwhale about his general request to be unblocked and responding to that, not the blue box, which is why I was confused.) Your conditions make more sense now, but my answer remains the same: I think it’s time wasting for the sake of time wasting under these conditions, and I’ll go further and say it’s an attempt to try to get the committee to review a block outside their normal remit, and I also think that any unblock of this account in general needs to go to AN. TonyBallioni (talk) 12:45, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
@GoldenRing: I agree to the conditions you've described, with the one exception that when I make the ARCA request, I'll have to be able to post the required notifications to other users potentially affected by it. Aside from that, though, I understand that I'll be banned from all pages aside from ARCA and my user talk. (Please note that the request I would be making is a request for clarification, not an amendment request. It isn't about my block itself, but it's about a question that affects the basis for it.)
I also want to reiterate that if at all possible, I would like my request to not be discussed at AN. Aside from the reason I mentioned in the unblock template, I also don't think my request can be adequately evaluated without reviewing the background information that I've sent to Penwhale, which I would prefer to not be posted in public. If it's your view that I shouldn't be unblocked unilaterally by a single admin, is there another place where my request could be discussed with other admins, such as on IRC? --Captain Occam (talk) 13:01, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
That background information is not private as evidenced by the fact that the committee has declined to review this block on that basis. Knowing what it is in general terms, I also think it’s a distraction from the reason you were blocked: using email to nibble around the edges of an ArbCom imposed ban and to try to organize editing task forces in secret. Those were considered disruptive enough by administrators at AE to merit an indef block just under regular admin discretion, and likely would have resulted in one at ANI regardless of the ArbCom restrictions because that type of thing is disruptive and cuts away at the trust of the community, especially when done by an editor who has had issues in the area in the past. TonyBallioni (talk) 13:12, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
@TonyBallioni: I think that if there's any prospect of success at ARCA, and the committee has refused to hear the matter privately, they should be given the opportunity as a matter of fairness. I also don't think unilaterally undoing a consensus-endorsed block solely for the purpose of an appeal is much outside norms; but at any rate I will see what the committee says. I'm a bit perplexed about why the committee would do this - it seems on the extreme end of bureaucratic to me - which is why I've asked them for clarification about whether there is any point in all of this. GoldenRing (talk) 13:43, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
TonyBallioni: for the most part the information I'm referring to isn't something that I've tried to discuss with ArbCom yet. Has Penwhale shown it to you? You seem to be making assumption about what it involved that aren't accurate.
I don't dispute the basis for my block itself. However, the initial consensus in the AE report about me had been to give me a standard one-month AE block, and the information I'm referring to concerned the basis for the decision to make it indefinite instead. For example, one of the main reasons for making it indefinite was the assumption about what my motives were for becoming involved in the psychometrics task force. I think I can demonstrate that this assumption was incorrect, but doing so would rely on material I've written for other websites, including some where I use my real name.
I'm pinging @Penwhale: here, because I don't feel that it's productive for us to argue about the contents of something when it isn't clear whether you've seen it or not, and when I don't want to describe it in detail. --Captain Occam (talk) 13:49, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
You’re mad because you think one of the admins there was involved (I’m betting MastCell based on what you’ve said, as he’s the one that suggested indef.) That’s a basis for an appeal, sure, but that doesn’t need ArbCom to review, and your refusing to discuss it here doesn’t make you look good in my opinion.) TonyBallioni (talk) 14:02, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
Okay, it sounds like you understand what issue I want to raise with ArbCom. The admin involvement issue isn't the only thing I discussed in my information for Penwhale, but that is what I've been trying to ask ArbCom about.
Could you please clarify what you have in mind when you say that's a basis for an appeal? When I was discussing this matter with ArbCom, one of the arbitrators (Euryalus) offered to send MastCell e-mail advising him to consider himself involved with respect to that arbitration case, but individual arbitrators don't have any special authority, so I don't think the question or whether he's involved or not can be regarded as settled before ArbCom as a whole gives an opinion.
If what you're suggesting is that I should lay out a case in the unblock template as to why I think he's an involved admin, please try to be realistic about what you're expecting here. How could I go about presenting such a case without discussing the articles from which I'm topic banned? Even though this technically could be considered an exception to my topic ban (since it's for the purpose of an appeal), I think it's extremely unlikely that admins look favorably on such a request. --Captain Occam (talk) 14:57, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
  • @GoldenRing: no, because they aren’t allowed to edit at all. A ruling at ARCA has no impact on this block. Having reread everything multiple times now, I’m 100% opposed to unblocking on these terms. They can appeal their regular block in itself if they want, and then seek further clarification at ARCA, but until the block is dealt with, ARCA is pointless. This unblock appeal should not be granted on these terms. If CO wishes to appeal his block, he should appeal it on the merits. I’m neutral as to an outcome of a merits based appeal, but strongly oppose this scenario. TonyBallioni (talk) 13:54, 4 July 2018 (UTC)
  • @TonyBallioni: Well, the response from an arb was that the ARCA route is not viable, so my suggestion is off the table anyway. Captain Occam, I think Tony's suggestion below is your best course here. I'm happy to copy to AN on your behalf - just let me know if required. GoldenRing (talk) 16:06, 4 July 2018 (UTC)

Unblock discussion break

CO, moving this down here because it’s getting long: the issue of MastCell’s involvement is not something ArbCom would normally consider in a standard unblock request of a non-AE action, but is something subject to peer review either through the unblock process or through AN. Additionally, he is not the blocking admin, I am. I blocked on the basis of consensus at AE that the problems went beyond just a simple TBAN violation, and that while it was unclear whether or not the emails constituted one, your conduct was disruptive enough to merit an indef block at the time regardless of that. ARCA could overrule that I suppose, but it’s not normally something they would do for an action that was specifically taken as non-AE because all the admins there were unclear what was allowed by AE, but agreed that disruption had occurred and on the course of action that needed to be taken.

In terms of an unblock, here is what I think you should do: lay out what you plan to edit if you are unblocked. You should focus on why this block is no longer needed. You can get into the INVOLVED question, but that’s unlikely to make people sympathetic to you if you dwell on it for too long, in large part because MastCell was only one admin of many. Focus on what positive contributions you would make. If you do that, I’m more than willing to copy the appeal to AN and unblock if there is consensus to do so. The reason I’m pretty strong on the AN point is that the indef decision was based on an informal consensus of admins that would have been enough for a community-based sanction on another noticeboard. I stand behind my block and think it’s outside of ArbCom’s usual remit, which is why I oppose the above conditions, but if you have a case for being unblocked that the community can judge, I think you should have the chance to make it. TonyBallioni (talk) 15:14, 4 July 2018 (UTC)

Well, I guess this means I'm going to have to bite the bullet and endure being the subject of an AN discussion. Since my unblock request hasn't been acted on yet, can I write my summary of why I think I should be unblocked as a comment here, instead of using the unblock template again? --Captain Occam (talk) 11:11, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
A thought - possibly disable/strike the current unblock request and make a new one below when you have the explanation all ready? I think that might be better than leaving it open with the possibility of someone declining it when it's not meant to be current. Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 11:45, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
I can't seem to get the strikethrough template to work inside the unblock template, but I've added a note saying that the request is no longer current. --Captain Occam (talk) 12:05, 6 July 2018 (UTC)
I've disabled the template by taking out a "{" and added the strike - hope that's OK. Boing! said Zebedee (talk) 12:39, 6 July 2018 (UTC)

Okay, I'm ready now. My updated request is below.

{{unblock | reason=As I've said in a few other places, I accept that my block itself was valid, and if it had been a standard one-month AE block I'd have waited it out rather than trying to appeal. However, considering this was my first topic ban violation, I think that a one-month block (or three months, which is now how long it's been) would have been a more appropriate result than an indefinite one.

Blocking me for a month had been the initial consensus in the results section of the AE report about me, until MastCell presented his argument that I should be indeffed based on what he thought my motives were, which shifted the direction of the discussion to make the outcome an indefinite block instead. This matters because MastCell probably is an involved admin with respect to the R&I arbitration case, and shouldn't have commented in that section. Shortly before my block I discussed this matter via e-mail with a member of ArbCom, Euryalus, and Euryalus offered to send MastCell e-mail advising him to refrain from further participation in that section of the report. I don't have the space here to present the evidence for why he's an involved admin (and my interaction ban prevents me from discussing some of it in public), but I've shown this evidence privately to user:Penwhale and I invite his comment.

Since the decision to block me indefinitely instead of for a month was based largely on an assumption about my motives for helping to set up the psychometrics task force, I think it's important to point out that this assumption was incorrect. I'm not sure how one is supposed to go about proving something about their thoughts, but there's one piece of evidence that seems to have been overlooked: user:Everymorning, who created the task force and did most of the work setting it up, has a perspective about intelligence and behavioral genetics that's very close to the opposite of mine. If my goal had in fact been to advance my point of view on those topics, it would have made no sense for me to help set up a task force with him in charge.

At the time, it didn't occur to me that my involvement in this task force would be viewed as a topic ban violation, because I assumed that the scope of my topic ban was the same as the scope of the ARBR&I discretionary sanctions. (That is, "the intersection of race/ethnicity and human abilities and behaviour, broadly construed"; the edits for which I was blocked involved human abilities and behavior but did not involve race or ethnicity.) As I said in the request for clarification that I made shortly before being blocked, now that I more accurately understand how the scope of my topic ban is interpreted, I intend to avoid all content at Misplaced Pages related to psychometrics or intelligence for as long as my topic ban is in effect. I didn't understand this about my topic ban in March, but now that I do, there isn't a danger of me repeating this particular mistake. I'm also open to the idea of disabling my Misplaced Pages e-mail feature, if the community feels that this should be an unblock condition.

My interests at Misplaced Pages are pretty eclectic, but other people can get an idea of what I'd edit if unblocked based on my editing history from January 2017 until I became involved in the psychometrics task force this past March. I edited articles related to religion, video games and books, and my editing history going forward will be similar to that. If I can muster the time and energy for it, I also hope to eventually raise William Beebe to FA status, having previously turned this article from start-class into a GA. (See the article's edit history from April 2010 to June 2011.) In the past I've also been one of the main people maintaining that article, so even if I never manage to get it up to FA status, I would like to at least continue making Wikignome formatting edits as I did here. --Captain Occam (talk) 03:17, 8 July 2018 (UTC)}}

I did indeed evaluate the information provided to me, and I do agree with the assessment that MastCell should be considered involved in situations like this. Other than that, anything I want to say would be made at AN when the thread is made as they serve better purpose there (and would get more eyes anyway). - Penwhale | 18:41, 8 July 2018 (UTC)
@Penwhale: If you're planning to comment there, I'd appreciate you doing so sometime soon. Otherwise the AN thread may progress to the point that it's too late to affect its outcome, which sort of defeats the purpose of commenting there. --Captain Occam (talk) 22:07, 8 July 2018 (UTC)

@TonyBallioni: I'd like to say something regarding Cullen's comment in the AN thread, so I'd appreciate you copying it over:

I haven't yet addressed my actions in support of Emil Kirkegaard (user:Deleet), and since that was the subject of Bishonen's comment that User:Cullen328 is referencing there, I'd like to address it now. Deleet has gone into a fair amount of detail about his political views, and I'm 100% sure he isn't actually a Neo-Nazi. He apparently is a left-leaning centrist: However, he also loves to provoke people on social media, and he seems to enjoy how others react to his making those sorts of Nazi-related references. (Incidentally, I've complained to him about this, not because I think these sorts of jokes reflect his actual beliefs but because of how they create problems for others who interact with him.)

Here is the reason that I think Emil is a valuable editor: he is, at this point in time, the only person editing articles related to human intelligence who studies the topic professionally. Aside from what he's written for his own self-published journals, he has authored two papers on the topic in Intelligence, the field's most prominent journal, three presentations for the International Society for Intelligence Research (I'm not sure how to link to those), and 15 papers in The Winnower. I think this sort of thing matters a lot. On any highly technical topic, the quality of Misplaced Pages's articles tends to depend on the depth of knowledge of the people who edit them.

I'd like to reiterate that I accept I shouldn't have gotten involved in this issue at all, but if anyone thinks that by supporting Deleet I've been supporting a Neo-Nazi, I object to that characterization because it's inaccurate. --Captain Occam (talk) 20:40, 8 July 2018 (UTC)

Copied the diff of this over because it's very long: . TonyBallioni (talk) 21:05, 8 July 2018 (UTC)

@TonyBallioni: @GoldenRing: I hope it's becoming clearer why I wanted to avoid having this discussion at AN. Aside from Cullen, this discussion has only attracted attention from editors who were my opponents in the original R&I disputes that led to the 2010 arbitration case. This group of people comprises less than 1% of the Misplaced Pages community, but when I'm the subject of a discussion at a noticeboard, for some reason they always tend to be among the first to show up. Later votes in these discussions tend to follow the pattern established by the first few votes, so even when uninvolved editors eventually do comment there, they probably won't significantly affect the outcome.

I knew that this was going to happen if I were the subject of an AN thread, which is why I wanted my unblock request to be evaluated by uninvolved admins who don't have an emotional stake in the result. It's possible my unblock request would have been denied in that case also, but I don't believe it can be fairly evaluated by people who have this kind of history with me. But there's nothing that can be done about that now, is there?

(In case it isn't clear, this is not something I'm asking to have posted in the AN thread; it's just a general comment/question for both of you.) --Captain Occam (talk) 23:53, 8 July 2018 (UTC)

Please copy over this response to Power-enwiki (who is an uninvolved editor): I've already agreed to avoid all content related to human intelligence for as long as I'm topic banned, and I've been avoiding all content related to race for several years. If the community would like to formalize this agreement as a broadening of my topic ban, I'm fine with that outcome. --Captain Occam (talk) 00:28, 9 July 2018 (UTC)

@TonyBallioni: I have another reply to Power-enwiki that I'd like to be copied over: I'd like you to understand the history of this request. I initially tried to discuss the admin involvement issue on the ArbCom mailing list, without requesting an unblock yet, because I was fully aware that it generally doesn't look good to raise this sort of issue in the unblock request itself. In response, I was told that this matter couldn't be discussed on the mailing list, and if I wished to raise it with ArbCom I'd have to be unblocked and then raise it in public. (I also was told that since my block is a normal admin block, it wasn't within ArbCom's remit to grant an exception to it.) Next, following a suggestion from Penwhale, I requested a conditional unblock for the sole purpose of raising the issue with ArbCom, with the restriction that I make no other edits, and the understanding that I'd be blocked again after the request was resolved. I eventually was told that this, too, wasn't possible. With that background, the consensus of the admins with whom I was discussing this issue (TonyBallioni, GoldenRing and Penwhale) was that I should make a regular unblock request to be posted at AN, and could mention the issue there.

If you look at the discussion about this in my user talk, you'll see how reluctant I was to follow that advice, but eventually I decided an editor in my situation shouldn't ignore instructions from admins. What else was I supposed to do, aside from giving up and accepting what appeared to be a violation of WP:INVOLVED that impacted me directly? At that point, if I'd continued insisting that this issue be addressed before I tried to request an unblock, I could've been accused of having a WP:IDHT attitude. This situation seems typical of my experience at Misplaced Pages: in most situations like this one, there is no way for me to proceed that I won't be criticized for (aside from just giving up, as I said). I'm damned if I do and damned if I don't. --Captain Occam (talk) 04:59, 9 July 2018 (UTC)

Note to admins: I've now withdrawn my unblock request, and I'm fine with the AN thread being closed now. I'd predicted from the start that it wouldn't be possible for me to be unblocked under these circumstances, but between Euryalus' e-mail and Penwhale's comments at AN, and MastCell's choice to not respond to those comments despite being notified of the discussion and being active while it was open, I feel that the admin involvement issue is now addressed about as well as it can be (at least for the present). This outcome hopefully should enable me to make another unblock request at some point in the future that will have a greater chance of success.

@Penwhale: thanks again for your patience and your dedication to upholding policy. Misplaced Pages would be a better place if there were more people like you on ArbCom, and if you ever decide to run for ArbCom, you'll have my vote.

Notice

Information icon There is currently a discussion at Misplaced Pages:Administrators' noticeboard regarding an issue with which you may have been involved. The thread is Captain Occam unblock request. TonyBallioni (talk) 18:51, 8 July 2018 (UTC)

Your email

Your talk page access is enabled. If you wish to make an appeal, it should be made in public. Contrary to your claims, nothing that is eligible for suppression is involved here, and it does not require an oversighter to review. ArbCom has refused to consider your appeal, because it is not an AE action and the private information you wish to use is 100% irrelevant to your block and therefore your unblock request. I did not consider that when making it, so there is no reason at all that you should be able to appeal to random oversighters rather than making an open appeal. If you want to appeal, your only option is to do it publicly on your talk page. TonyBallioni (talk) 03:08, 3 November 2019 (UTC)

@TonyBallioni: I have been trying to resolve this matter privately, because it's very difficult to discuss it in public without discussing the content of oversighted material, and also because I don't think it's appropriate to have an on-Wiki discussion about the lawsuit that presumably is why the material in question was oversighted. But attempts to communicate with you about it privately haven't been successful, so I guess at this point my only choice is to try to discuss it with you here.
When my initial e-mail about this issue to you and the other functionaries did not receive a response, I raised the matter in private with another oversighter, User:Oshwah. After I explained the situation to him, he invited me to submit an unblock request to him and you by e-mail, so that it could be reviewed in private by oversighters, and I followed his advice. Based on your comment here about my unblock request, it seems like you may not have been aware that Oshwah had invited me to do this. After you commented here, I discussed the matter privately with Oshwah again, and he's told me that he then sent you a second e-mail explaining the situation to you. However, Oshwah told me yesterday that you have not responded to that second e-mail, either. I'm sure you're a busy person, but your lack of communication is making this situation much more difficult.
Even if you personally do not think the material that's been oversighted is relevant to my block, you also have said that any unblock request I make must be evaluated by the community at AN, and the community clearly does think that it is relevant. When I made an unblock request in July of last year, this material was brought up at AN by Cullen328 as a reason I should not be unblocked, which gave the material more exposure, and Cullen328's argument also was impossible to address in a meaningful way without bringing up non-public information about the lawsuit. If I make another public unblock request and it is copied to AN, it is inevitable that this material will be brought up there again, because it was explicitly given by the AE admins as a reason my block should be made indefinite, even if you did not personally consider it.
When I explained this situation to Oshwah, he agreed that the most reasonable course of action is to have my unblock request evaluated privately by oversighters, but he does not seem comfortable with doing that if you're opposed to the idea. If you are opposed to it, it would be helpful if you could engage more directly with the issue that Oshwah and I have tried to raise, because your comment here does not really address the central problem with making an unblock request that will be evaluated in public. One other administrator, user:Ferret has also been involved in the discussion about this situation (although he hasn't seen the oversighted material), so I encourage him to comment here as well. --Captain Occam (talk) 23:19, 26 November 2019 (UTC)
I have little left to say on the topic. I've provided some advice on the course of action I felt you should take, and that advice is the general advice I would give everyone who asks about how they should approach an appeal. I understand your concerns about the past discussions, sanctions and the over-sighted material, but it's clear that you're going to get no where unless you simply make a public appeal. -- ferret (talk) 23:24, 26 November 2019 (UTC)
Thanks for the comment. As I'm sure you're aware, I do not think it's possible for me to do that unless the issue of non-public information is addressed somehow, so I'll need to wait for further advice from Oshwah and TonyBallioni before deciding what to do.
Let me suggest one other possible solution. Since my block is an ordinary admin block rather than a community ban, it isn't strictly necessary for it to be evaluated at AN; the reason TonyBallioni copied my previous request to AN was that my indefinite block was the consensus of several admins commenting at AE, so he thought that my unblock request should also be evaluated by multiple admins. (I hope I have that right; I'm very wary of accidentally misrepresenting his views, because that's a mistake I've made before.) However, at this point, there are at least four admins who have been involved in this discussion: yourself, Oshwah, TonyBallioni, and user:Penwhale (although Penwhale considers himself involved). And all of these admins have at least some understanding of the relevant issues, even if they don't all know the exact details.
Here's what I suggest: I can make a public unblock request here, under the condition that it will be evaluated only by admins who are following this issue, rather than by the wider community at AN. This would presumably avoid the problem of the material that's been oversighted being brought up at AN as a reason to keep me blocked, the way happened last time. A second benefit of this approach is that it would avoid the past problem of the discussion about my request being dominated by my former opponents from the 2010 R&I arbitration case. Would this be a workable solution? --Captain Occam (talk) 00:03, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
  • I will repeat what I have said literally every time this has been raised. Suppressed content had zero impact on this block and would have zero impact on this unblock. Your only option is a public appeal without raising material that is suppressable. TonyBallioni (talk) 06:52, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
Okay, but can you please address the specific thing that I and Oshwah have been asking? Even though I know your view is that the material that has been oversighted is irrelevant to my block, there are other admins who do not share your view, and have already made it clear (in response to my unblock request last July) that they do consider it relevant. Consequently, if I make a public unblock request that is copied to AN, this material will almost certainly be brought up there as a reason to keep me blocked, as happened in the previous discussion there, regardless of your personal views on whether it is relevant or not. This is what I've been trying to communicate to you all this time, and I'm not sure how to be any clearer about it.
This is the issue that needs addressing, and it's why I suggested above that I could make a public unblock request in my user talk that will be evaluated only by the admins who are already paying attention to this situation, instead of by the wider community at AN. I need to know whether that's a workable solution, or if there is some better solution to the issue that I've been trying to raise here. --Captain Occam (talk) 11:33, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
No. You don’t get to play pick an admin or dictate the rules upon which your unblock request will be heard. I can say the material you think is relevant is irrelevant because I’m the administrator who placed the block and I know that it had zero impact on the block being placed, despite your attempts to claim otherwise.The only thing relevant to any unblock discussion is your conduct and how you plan to behave going forward. Not the conduct of another administrator and certainly not suppressed material that has nothing to do with you.Finally, there’s a very strong argument that you’re community banned and that none of the admins you’ve talked to have the ability to unblock without discussion: you withdrew your last unblock request when it was 7-1 opposed. If it had lasted longer, the odds of you being unblocked would have been very low. These circumstances are basically what WP:CBAN was designed for: preventing individual admins from acting without community consensus. You can make an appeal and it can be copied to AN like last time. TonyBallioni (talk) 14:42, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
If I'm going make another public unblock request and have it copied to AN, I'd like to know ahead of time how it will be handled if administrators continue to make arguments against unblocking me that are based on the material I brought up in my e-mail. I'm glad you think this material is irrelevant, but you must surely be aware that what I'm predicting is still likely to happen, because it happened both in the original AE report and in the subsequent AN discussion. Since you consider this material irrelevant, are you willing to do anything to prevent it continuing to be used as an argument in subsequent discussions? --Captain Occam (talk) 15:20, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
I just re-read the last unblock discussion and don’t see anything that would be eligible for suppression. If that occurs, email the oversight list and someone will suppress it. TonyBallioni (talk) 15:33, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
I am referring to the comment made by Cullen328: "Bishonen's observations back then were especially persuasive", as well as his follow-up comment, which was in response to my rather weak attempt at addressing these concerns without bringing up the lawsuit. And here is the comment by Bishonen that Cullen328 was calling attention to. I don't think I should quote the relevant part of Bishonen's comment, because that comment was repeating some of the specific allegations that are the subject of the libel lawsuit, but if you read the entirety of Bishonen's comment I think you'll know what I'm referring to. When I brought up my block in the Wikipediocracy Discord, other people there who are familiar with the lawsuit immediately recognized Bishonen's comment as something that had been inappropriate to post in public. But based on Cullen328's comments in the AN discussion, it seems most admins aren't aware of the problem with referencing or repeating this material.
If you were to oversight the comments in the original AE report that are repeating allegations related to the lawsuit, that would go a long way towards addressing my concerns. Is that something it's possible to do at this point, when it's more than a year later? --Captain Occam (talk) 16:07, 27 November 2019 (UTC)
OK. I agree with Cullen that Bishonen's argument is persuasive, or the other way around. I do not see any libel lawsuit, nor do I see what any of this has anything to do with any lawsuit. That someone on Wikipediocracy thinks part of Bishonen's comment is inappropriate one way or another, that's part for the course. Also, we don't negotiate over who gets to request an unblock and in what particular manner, or what should be oversighted to alleviate the indef-blocked user's concerns. Also, we are wasting our time here; I mean, you are wasting our time here. TPA revoked. Drmies (talk) 01:21, 28 November 2019 (UTC)
  • As you still appear to be searching for a random oversighter to unblock you off-wiki, I'll explain this more clearly to you: your talk page access has been revoked. This means that your only venue of appeal is WP:UTRS. There was nothing that is suppressed that was considered while placing your block, so requesting that an oversighter review it is not needed. If you continue to maintain that somehow private information is related to your appeal, it is exceptionally unlikely that your appeal will even be considered as this is plainly false, and continued insistence on this fact means it is very unlikely you will be a productive contributor. I will also note for any reviewing UTRS admin that as you withdrew your last appeal while it was in the process of being declined at AN, any appeal should also go through community review there. TonyBallioni (talk) 02:55, 28 November 2019 (UTC)

Talk page access

Hi,

I have allowed your TPA again in order that you may respond here to questions raised at WP:AN-- 5 albert square (talk) 00:45, 7 January 2020 (UTC)

@5 albert square: I have a question for User:Deepfriedokra. At https://en.wikipedia.org/Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Partial_blocks, the Misplaced Pages community is reaching a consensus to allow partial blocks, which prevent a person from editing in some areas but not in others. Since there is concern that I'll cause future disruption if unblocked, would you support turning my block into a partial block, so that I'm technically prevented from editing in the areas where there is fear of me causing disruption? I would be willing to accept that restriction as an unblock condition.

I actually would appreciate being placed under a partial block to enforce my topic ban, so that there can be no future ambiguity about which articles it covers. --Captain Occam (talk) 09:30, 7 January 2020 (UTC)

@5 albert square:

I've got one more statement that I'd like to be copied to the AN thread. To be clear, I am NOT threatening any sort of legal action here; I'm just describing an already-existing case between two other parties.

The libel case that I've been referring to in my user talk, and "background" referred to in ferret's comment, is the Emil Kirkegaard v Oliver Smith case. The statements for which Kirkegaard is suing the defendant are primarily about a different issue, but the claim that Kirkegaard is a neo-Nazi also is covered in the case. (It's mentioned in "post two" in the ruling.) As explained here, the ruling on December 11 found these statements to be defamatory, and now the burden is on the defendant (Smith) to justify them.

I called Deleet an "alleged neo-Nazi", rather than just a "neo-Nazi", because after a statement has been legally found to be defamatory, it seems unwise to repeat it uncritically. There are fair number of editors who are familiar with this case, who could hopefully provide more details about it, because this case is relevant to how some of Smith's statements ended up being repeated in newspapers.

I had been hoping it would be possible for me to make an unblock request without being attacked based on these statements. Clearly, my attempt to avoid that outcome did not go well. But I'd like everyone to understand that this what my off-Wiki discussions with admins have been about. I never asked or expected any admin to unblock me single-handedly; these discussions were only about whether there was any possible way for me to make an unblock request without being attacked based on what is now, from a legal standpoint, a defamatory statement. I'm sorry for wasting the community's time, and the time of multiple admins, with this pointless attempt.

Whether Deleet is a neo-Nazi or not, he's still a rather unpleasant and abrasive person, and I've never considered him a friend. However, I'm also a firm believer in the perspective taken by User:Pudeo/Wikipedia is not a thought police, meaning I think that even the most despicable person should be welcomed at Misplaced Pages as long as their conduct complies with Misplaced Pages's policies. (At the time when I defended Deleet in April 2018, he appeared to be a productive editor, because he had been editing for a decade with a clean block log.) I recognize that the principle described in that essay may turn out to be the hill that I die on, and if that ends up being what happens, I'll accept it. --Captain Occam (talk) 18:27, 7 January 2020 (UTC)

@Eggishorn: When I said "I assumed its scope was limited to articles that discuss both race and intelligence in combination", I was referring to why I initially believed it did not violate my topic ban to participate in the ill-fated psychometrics task force (which related to intelligence, but not to race). My involvement in that task force was one of the major reasons originally given for my block. --Captain Occam (talk) 19:41, 7 January 2020 (UTC)

@Captain Occam: the block you are currently appealing is the April 14, 2018 block which is specifically: "(per Special:Permalink/834221440#Captain_Occam". That is the AE request I mentioned in my oppose. Claims that the psychometrics task force is the "major reason" given in your block are simply not borne out by the record. That participation may have been part of your personal context behind the email you sent, but the actual reasons given are not what you claim. I stand by my evaluation that you are being untruthful in your request, which does not bode well for your possible future participation. Despite opposing your unblock, I honestly hope that you have a happy and productive New Year. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 19:51, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
@Eggishorn: Could you please at least add a link to my response in your statement? Even if you think that I'm incorrect about this being a major part of the reason for my block, it wasn't a deliberate falsehood. I recognize that my unblock request is probably going to fail, but I still have a problem with others assuming that I told such a bald-faced lie in it. --Captain Occam (talk) 20:03, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
@Captain Occam: I have done so and also re-edited my comment to recognize that characterization. Eggishorn (talk) (contrib) 20:13, 7 January 2020 (UTC)
Thanks. --Captain Occam (talk) 20:14, 7 January 2020 (UTC)

Could an admin (or anyone else) please copy my comment here to the AN discussion? While I suspect it's now too late to change the outcome of that discussion, it's still very important to me for others to understand what I explained in that comment. --Captain Occam (talk) 07:03, 8 January 2020 (UTC)

Unblock request declined at WP:AN

Hi, Captain Occam. I have closed your unblock request on AN as declined. The consensus was pretty clear, and unless I've missed something it's been more than 24 hours since anybody commented, so it seemed as well to put the discussion out of its misery. Bishonen | talk 20:07, 9 January 2020 (UTC).