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::::::::I am not trying to defend paleoconservativism or Crisis Magazine or Paul Kengor. All I am trying to show is that, once again, globohomo can refer to both homogenization and homosexual. That's it. Nothing more. ] (]) 08:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC) | ::::::::I am not trying to defend paleoconservativism or Crisis Magazine or Paul Kengor. All I am trying to show is that, once again, globohomo can refer to both homogenization and homosexual. That's it. Nothing more. ] (]) 08:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC) | ||
::I have a very strong impression that the most prominent purpose of using a word like Globohomo on this Misplaced Pages article is indeed to reduce Cultural Marxism to a conspiracy theory à la 4chan. If, however, an article about cultural Marxism needs to include that kind of trickery to 'prove' that cultural Marxism can be pushed aside as a conspiracy theory (which then obviously cannot be criticized for its underlying serious ideology as an extension upon Marxist theory) then I think we have clear evidence that Misplaced Pages should indeed not always be trusted as an at least objectivity-loving source. Notice I said "not always be trusted". I find most Misplaced Pages articles highly trustworthy, but this one looks like a clear exception to this observation. ] (]) 11:07, 6 July 2024 (UTC) | ::I have a very strong impression that the most prominent purpose of using a word like Globohomo on this Misplaced Pages article is indeed to reduce Cultural Marxism to a conspiracy theory à la 4chan. If, however, an article about cultural Marxism needs to include that kind of trickery to 'prove' that cultural Marxism can be pushed aside as a conspiracy theory (which then obviously cannot be criticized for its underlying serious ideology as an extension upon Marxist theory) then I think we have clear evidence that Misplaced Pages should indeed not always be trusted as an at least objectivity-loving source. Notice I said "not always be trusted". I find most Misplaced Pages articles highly trustworthy, but this one looks like a clear exception to this observation. ] (]) 11:07, 6 July 2024 (UTC) | ||
:::The reason this article refers to "Cultural Marxism" proponents as promoting a conspiracy theory is that this represents the consensus of the reliable sources on the topic. The only form of {{tq|objectivity}} available on wikipedia is to reflect the consensus of reliable sources. | |||
:::There are many articles on wikipedia that discuss {{tq|underlying serious ideology as an extension upon Marxist theory}} - just not "Cultural Marxism", because according to RS "Cultural Marxism" isn't such an extension. Instead, RS describe "Cultural Marxism" as an antisemitic trope and kudgel of culture wars in the USA. ] (]) 11:44, 6 July 2024 (UTC) | |||
:The "We Hunted The Mammoth" article can be found , and correctly states: | :The "We Hunted The Mammoth" article can be found , and correctly states: | ||
:<blockquote>And so “globohomo” has come to mean something like “the global homosexual/Jewish conspiracy to degenerate our culture up real good with drag queens and anal sex and possibly Ben Shapiro.”</blockquote> | :<blockquote>And so “globohomo” has come to mean something like “the global homosexual/Jewish conspiracy to degenerate our culture up real good with drag queens and anal sex and possibly Ben Shapiro.”</blockquote> |
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Cultural Marxism
'Cultural Marxism refers to a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory'
Response:
The characterization of 'Cultural Marxism' as a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory serves as a means to discredit & cancel legitimate criticisms of Marxist ideology.
While Antonio Gramsci never explicitly coined the term 'Cultural Marxism,' it accurately represents principles within his neo-Marxist philosophy.
This characterization mirrors the approach often taken towards critiques of Critical Race Theory, whereby dissenting voices are categorized as racism. GaryI1965 (talk) 05:31, 8 June 2024 (UTC)
- I there any argument, evidence or source supporting those claims? Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 07:48, 8 June 2024 (UTC)
- «The characterization of 'Cultural Marxism' as a far-right antisemitic conspiracy theory serves as a means to discredit & cancel legitimate criticisms of Marxist ideology.» => Because you say so? Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 12:16, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
- Are articles from The Atlantic, The Telegraph, BBC News, Huff Post, The Conversation, SPLC, the Tab, The Jewish Chronicles, VICE, Rewire News Group, the New York Times, the Guardian reliable academic sources? Proconsul74 (talk) 23:49, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- You should know how to figure that out by reading Misplaced Pages policies (eg. WP:RS), not by asking others. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:3DBC:CC54:C7EC:7FDE (talk) 12:40, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- This is not an answer to my question. You misplaced your comment or you try to move the discussion away from GaryI1965's «source: trust me bro» statement. As for your question: No, articles from The Atlantic, The Telegraph, BBC News, Huff Post, The Conversation, SPLC, the Tab, The Jewish Chronicles, VICE, Rewire News Group, the New York Times, the Guardian are not reliable academic sources because those are not academic sources. Here the academic sources about the Cultural Marxism narrative (in no specific order):
- Jérôme Jamin, Anders Breivik et le marxisme culturel : Etats-Unis/Europe, Amnis, https://journals.openedition.org/amnis/2004
- Jérôme Jamin, Cultural Marxism and the Radical Right, The Post-War Anglo-American Far Right, https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057/9781137396211_4
- Jérôme Jamin, Cultural Marxism: A survey, Religion Compass, https://doi.org/10.1111/rec3.12258
- Tanner Mirrlees, The Alt-right's Discourse on "Cultural Marxism": A Political Instrument of Intersectional Hate, Atlantis, https://journals.msvu.ca/index.php/atlantis/article/view/5403
- Martin Jay, Dialectic of Counter-Enlightenment: The Frankfurt School as Scapegoat of the Lunatic Fringe, Salmagundi, https://www.jstor.org/stable/41638676
- Andrew Woods, Cultural Marxism and the Cathedral: Two Alt-Right Perspectives on Critical Theory, Critical Theory and the Humanities in the Age of the Alt-Right, https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-18753-8_3
- Rachel Busbridge, Cultural Marxism: far-right conspiracy theory in Australia’s culture wars, Social Identities, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13504630.2020.1787822
- Joan Braune, Who's Afraid of the Frankfurt School? 'Cultural Marxism' as an Antisemitic Conspiracy Theory, Journal of Social Justice, http://transformativestudies.org/publications/journal-of-social-justice/past-issues-jsj/journal-of-social-justice-volume-9-2019/
- Andrew Lynn, Cultural Marxism, The Hedgehog Review, https://hedgehogreview.com/issues/the-evening-of-life/articles/cultural-marxism
- John Richardson, 'Cultural Marxism' and the British National Party, Cultures of Post-War British Fascism, https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/10.4324/9781315727257-12
- Robles & Berrocal, Conspiración y meme en la alt-right. Notas sobre el mito del marxismo cultural / Conspiracy and Meme on the Alt-right: Notes on the Myth of Cultural Marxism, Re-visiones, https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=7211207
- As far as i know, this list is complete until 2023. Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 19:30, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- Are articles from The Atlantic, The Telegraph, BBC News, Huff Post, The Conversation, SPLC, the Tab, The Jewish Chronicles, VICE, Rewire News Group, the New York Times, the Guardian reliable academic sources? Proconsul74 (talk) 23:49, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- e cultural Marxist conspiracy theory is not a legitimate criticism of Marxism, which is why it is a conspiracy theory. Unlike rational criticisms, it relies on false claims. TFD (talk) 01:25, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
- This is not a correct response to @GaryI1965, who definitely did not argue that cultural Marxism would be a criticism of Marxism. On the contrary, it is a prolongation of Marxism with other means - a softer, culturally oriented approach towards the kind of utopian equity that Marxism was projecting. Cultural Marxism is linked with Critical Theory in that it is a critical approach to liberalism (read: the West), which has in more recent decades delivered Critical Race Theory ('reverse racism' would be a good term for it too, as 'toxic Whiteness' is one of its many irrational component ideas - simply positing that the West can be entirely defined by its colonial past).
- It does indeed show a strong anti-Semitic tendency, but that does not make it a conspiracy theory. Anti-Semitism was not originally as obvious within cultural Marxism as it is today, Israel being deliberately projected as an example of Western colonialism (with Jews now being 'White' too, by definition - a reversal of earlier anti-Semitic depictions of Jews).
- To call cultural Marxism a conspiracy theory should therefore be suspect, as it obviously delegitimizes serious critique against it as a full-blown argumentative ideology rooted in an undeniable Marxist idealist sub-layer. It is indeed an anti-realist ideology, but anti-realist ideology is no conspiracy theory either, it is a position at the opposite end of empiricism and must be dealt with through proper argumentation. And this is being done: in fact all serious writers against 'wokism' (such as Caroline Fourest, Douglas Murray, Glenn Loury, Greg Lukianoff, Helen Joyce, Helen Puckrose, James A. Lindsay, Jonathan Haidt, Jordan B. Peterson, Susan Neiman, Thomas Sowell, and many others) are obviously serious critics of Critical Race Theory, Critical Social Justice, Intersectionality Theory, DEI, and all other related idioms - these authors are by no means dismantling a 'conspiracy theory'. Western institutions, academia, established media, cultural organisations, are largely imbued with woke ideology which has indeed some roots in Cultural Marxism (even while an anti-realist position does not need to rely on anything Marxist in order to push its political hyper-progressive agenda). Bernard.Libbrecht (talk) 10:55, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
2024-06 Berkeley
Older versions of the Misplaced Pages article link Special:permalink/566221148#External links a blog article by Bruce Miller, November 21, 2011, A crackpot far-right theory on the Frankfurt School and "political correctness",
- http://townsendlab.berkeley.edu/frankfurt-school-working-group/blogs/crackpot-far-right-theory-frankfurt-school-and-political-correc
- http://townsendcenter.berkeley.edu/node/38/frankfurt-school-working-group/blogs/crackpot-far-right-theory-frankfurt-school-and-political-correc
I can not find this blog article in The Wayback Machine. I can not find any part of the encompassing blog in The Wayback Machine. Help?
I found a comment by some «Bruce Miller» under a blog article by Ben Alpers, July 25, 2011, The Frankfurt School, Right-Wing Conspiracy Theories, and American Conservatism, https://s-usih.org/2011/07/frankfurt-school-right-wing-conspiracy/ Is this useful?
By the way last april a youtube channel published a video chapter about the Cultural Marxism narrative: Some More News (which is not just Cody Johnston, there is a whole team behind him), Elon Musk's Hitler Problem, 2024-04-04, chapter 9 Wokeness & the roots of Cultural Marxism, from 49:33 to 57:49, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xDyPSKLy5E4#t=49m Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 08:53, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
Globohomo
The article implies this word is a combination of homophobia and anti-globalization. But then in the same paragraph implies it is a combination of globalization and homogenization (which I had thought it was). Should the paragraph be written so it is more clear? Captchacatcher (talk) 17:49, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- The first source cited in the section does suggest to me that "globohomo" is a homophobic theory, as well as antisemitic. Newimpartial (talk) 18:44, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I thought it meant "global homosexuality" with similar connotations to "international Jewry" but it is perfectly possible that different dingbats are using it in different ways. DanielRigal (talk) 19:39, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I agree that the paragraph is need of clarification. I am also of the understanding of "globohomo" as referring to unified "globalization" and "homogenization." I have never before heard of it used as referring to "globalization" + "homophobia," "homosexuality," or homophobic beliefs.
- In present form, the section does favor the "homophobic/homosexual" version as the primary use and suggests that the "homogenization" use is secondary. "Globalization" + "homogenization" in tandem is a common point of discussion in scholarship in cultural anthropology, international studies, foreign affairs, regional studies, international development, etc. The pairing of "Globalization" and "homosexuality/homophobia" is definitely fringe in comparison.
- -
- Barnet, Richard and John Cavanaugh. 2001. "Homogenization of Global Culture," in The Case Against the Global Economy. Routledge Press.
- Hassi, Abderrahman and Giovanna Storti. 2012. "Globalization and Culture: The Three H Scenarios," in Globalization - Approaches to Diversity. IntechOpen Press.
- O'Hara, Sabine U and Adelheid Biesecker. 2003. "Globalization: Homogenization or Newfound Diversity?" Review of Social Economy 61 (3), p. 281-294.
- https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20120522-one-world-order
- https://en.wikipedia.org/Cultural_homogenization#:~:text=Cultural%20homogenization%20is%20an%20aspect,David%20E.
- Many more sources available. Amlans (talk) 02:11, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- What do these sources have to do with "globohomo",the trope of the conspiracy theory? Are they cited by conspiracy theorists? Newimpartial (talk) 02:17, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Huh? I'm not following the relevance of your questions.
- This discussion is about the issue of the "globohomo" section explaining the "globohomo" concept as primarily referencing "globalization" and "homosexual"/"homophobic" and secondarily referencing "globalization" and "homogenization" when the opposite is true. These sources support that.
- "Globaliztion" + "homogenization" is standard. "Globalization" + "homosexual" or "homophobic" or "homophobia" is fringe. Amlans (talk) 04:16, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- To answer youe question, this article is about the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory, which uses the "globohomo" concept specifically. Uses of globalization + homogenization that don't use "globohomo" or aren't by Cultural Marxism conspiracy theorists aren't relevant here.
- In other words, this article is about the fringe usage. Newimpartial (talk) 09:51, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- And that's totally fine! I'm not arguing against that. That's not what this discussion is about. Amlans (talk) 15:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- The policy-relevant topic of this discussion is supposed to be, what do adherents of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory mean when they refer to "globohomo"? As far as I can tell, the unequivocal answer from reliable sources is, "a homophobic conspiracy theory/alt-right meme about globalization". Amlans has not produced any reliable sources suggesting that these figures mean anything else when they invoke the "globohomo" trope, so unless they can offer RS to the contrary, I don't see the point in further "substantive discussion" of this issue. Newimpartial (talk) 18:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- A central concern of this discussion is still not being addressed.
- I fully agree that the core function of the paragraph should be explanation of conspiratorial use of globohomo. I am not trying to suggest otherwise. The point that myself, and I think OP, are trying to make is that this section needs to take more care in its attempt to connect+differentiate conspiratorial "globohomo" from legitimate, non-conspiratorial conversations on globalization/homogenization.
- In other words, the section's present wording is unclear in such a way that it seemingly lumps any conversation on the subject of globalization/neoliberalism/homogenization/uniculture in with conspiratorial use of globohomo. Which is wrong because legitimate, non-conspiratorial conversations on globalization/neoliberalism/homogenization/uniculture have long been in existence before, and totally separate from, the 4chan globohomo concept.
- Does that make sense? Amlans (talk) 22:18, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't understand why Amlans thinks
legitimate, non-conspiratorial conversations on globalization
are a relevant topic for this article. I would observe the following:- the current article text by no means denies that such discourse exists;
- "legitimate" discussion of cultural homogenization doesn't use the 4chan meme "globohomo"; and
- alt-right conspiracy theorists are invoking the meme, not the "legitimate" discourse.
- Based on these three observations, I don't think the article paragraph needs to do anything different from what it is currently doing. If we have good RS that differentiate explicitly between "globohomo" and "legitimate" cultural homogenization discourse, then great, but I would point out that the opening paragraph of this section seemed determined to confound the two (and possibly bury the homophobic meme), which is contrary to the purpose of the article text. Newimpartial (talk) 11:08, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- I don't understand why Amlans thinks
- The policy-relevant topic of this discussion is supposed to be, what do adherents of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory mean when they refer to "globohomo"? As far as I can tell, the unequivocal answer from reliable sources is, "a homophobic conspiracy theory/alt-right meme about globalization". Amlans has not produced any reliable sources suggesting that these figures mean anything else when they invoke the "globohomo" trope, so unless they can offer RS to the contrary, I don't see the point in further "substantive discussion" of this issue. Newimpartial (talk) 18:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- And that's totally fine! I'm not arguing against that. That's not what this discussion is about. Amlans (talk) 15:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- What do these sources have to do with "globohomo",the trope of the conspiracy theory? Are they cited by conspiracy theorists? Newimpartial (talk) 02:17, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Globohomo is a 4chan "manosphere" idea that men are being feminized and turned gay. It's a combination of Globalism and the Gay agenda, designed to sound humorous and witty. It involves homogenization, but I don't think that's what the term means, the people who came up with the portmanteau just aren't that sophisticated, they're not academics, they're random young people on 4chan and 8chan 1, 2, 3. They've included "homo" because they know it's a slur, and think that's clever.
- The concept comes from the "Manosphere" who are concerned with their testosterone levels, and the perceived "feminization" of men. The term is on par with "soy boys" and "cucks".... it's anti-feminist, anti-LGBT terminology, not well considered critique. It's nothing that advanced. Some (perhaps polite minded) people have later decided it must mean "Global Homogenization" but they simply haven't been exposed to it in context, as used in the wild. The Gay Rights website GLAAD discusses this here 4 claiming the origin of that conception is the popular blog "We Hunted The Mammoth" - but their site is currently down, so their research can't be viewed. Others have decided it's an art style that already existed under the name Corporate Memphis, which whilst it fits in with the homogenization idea, was already quite dated when the term came along, and already had a name.
- In its broadest sense, "globohomo" is considered a Jewish plot, to make White American Men into gays and transgender people, as a way to diminutize American power. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 04:14, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Please see my above responses. The combined discussion of globalization and homogenization has a long, legitimate, well-documented history in many realms of scholarship. It is the dominant/mainstream combination.
- 4chan conversations on globalization and homosexuality are new and fringe. Amlans (talk) 04:19, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
"The combined discussion of globalization and homogenization has a long, legitimate, well-documented history in many realms of scholarship"
No academic in that discourse uses the term "Globohomo". What you're saying makes as much sense as adding racial slurs to the page on homosexuality and pretending they're legitimate "because gay people already existed". We're discussing a term here, not a concept. If you want to discuss the concept of Globalization, the place to do that would be on the Globalization page. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 04:24, 24 June 2024 (UTC)- That's a huge leap and not at all equivalent to the case I am making.
- I'm suggesting that the decades on decades on decades of conversation on globalization and homogenization by well-regarded scholars, evidenced in the smallest form by the examples I provided, legitimizes the assertion that globohomo primarily refers to globalization and homogenization, as acknowledged in public platforms (see below) - regardless of whether or not the scholars themselves shorthanded it that way - and secondarily to the 2016 emergence of 4chan users saying globohomo and referring to homosexuality.
- It's a conversation on mainstream versus fringe.
- https://en.wiktionary.org/globohomo
- https://digitalcultures.net/slang/internet-culture/globohomo/#google_vignette
- https://gnet-research.org/2023/09/22/from-british-imperialism-to-globohomo-analysing-the-irish-far-rights-engagement-with-irish-nationalism-on-telegram/
- https://crisismagazine.com/opinion/paleoconservatives-and-american-identity Amlans (talk) 04:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Globohomo is a 4chan "manosphere" idea that men are being feminized and turned gay. Globohomo is also a long-standing, reputable academic debate on cultural homogenization by way of ever-increasing globalization.
- It is both. Amlans (talk) 05:32, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
Globohomo is also a long-standing, reputable academic debate on cultural homogenization by way of ever-increasing globalization.
- no it's not. The sources you're citing are only about the right wing usage. None of them are academic discussions of globalization and homogenization, that use the term "globohomo" because it's not a term used that way by academics.- If academics don't use the term in their discussions of globalization and homogenization - then globohomo is a term limited to the fringe. So the page should describe it as such, rather than dragging academics by claiming they'd use such a stupid term in their
"debate on cultural homogenization"
. They don't, so we're not about to describe them as doing so without any sources showing they do so (sources that aren't focused on investigating alt-right politics, and their terms). - So unless you have multiple longstanding sources where academics are discussing globalization and the homogenization of cultures using the term "globohomo" then we're not going to describe them as doing so. To do so would be WP:Original Research, and not permitted. The page is about the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory - not all and any academic discussion that may come up everywhere. That's why we have a page for globalization - and it's not the page for Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. So we're not writing an article on globalization. Is that clearer? 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 07:46, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- No...the sources I am citing are not, as you state, only about right wing usage. Please do your due diligence and review the sources I provided again. Amlans (talk) 07:52, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- As per the current Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory page we're on the talk page of; the conspiracy theory was created from and by Paleoconservatives. Some of the editors of Crisis Magazine for instance are believers in the conspiracy theory (eg. Paul Kengor) - so this is not a legitimate source. It's a non-academic source, edited by some adherents of the conspiracy theory. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:35, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Okay but you're once again glossing over the mere fact that there are two ways that globohomo is used. Homosexual and the homoginzation. Once again, that is all that I, and OP, are trying to express.
- I am not trying to defend paleoconservativism or Crisis Magazine or Paul Kengor. All I am trying to show is that, once again, globohomo can refer to both homogenization and homosexual. That's it. Nothing more. Amlans (talk) 08:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- As per the current Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory page we're on the talk page of; the conspiracy theory was created from and by Paleoconservatives. Some of the editors of Crisis Magazine for instance are believers in the conspiracy theory (eg. Paul Kengor) - so this is not a legitimate source. It's a non-academic source, edited by some adherents of the conspiracy theory. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:35, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- No...the sources I am citing are not, as you state, only about right wing usage. Please do your due diligence and review the sources I provided again. Amlans (talk) 07:52, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have a very strong impression that the most prominent purpose of using a word like Globohomo on this Misplaced Pages article is indeed to reduce Cultural Marxism to a conspiracy theory à la 4chan. If, however, an article about cultural Marxism needs to include that kind of trickery to 'prove' that cultural Marxism can be pushed aside as a conspiracy theory (which then obviously cannot be criticized for its underlying serious ideology as an extension upon Marxist theory) then I think we have clear evidence that Misplaced Pages should indeed not always be trusted as an at least objectivity-loving source. Notice I said "not always be trusted". I find most Misplaced Pages articles highly trustworthy, but this one looks like a clear exception to this observation. Bernard.Libbrecht (talk) 11:07, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- The reason this article refers to "Cultural Marxism" proponents as promoting a conspiracy theory is that this represents the consensus of the reliable sources on the topic. The only form of
objectivity
available on wikipedia is to reflect the consensus of reliable sources. - There are many articles on wikipedia that discuss
underlying serious ideology as an extension upon Marxist theory
- just not "Cultural Marxism", because according to RS "Cultural Marxism" isn't such an extension. Instead, RS describe "Cultural Marxism" as an antisemitic trope and kudgel of culture wars in the USA. Newimpartial (talk) 11:44, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- The reason this article refers to "Cultural Marxism" proponents as promoting a conspiracy theory is that this represents the consensus of the reliable sources on the topic. The only form of
- The "We Hunted The Mammoth" article can be found archived here, and correctly states:
And so “globohomo” has come to mean something like “the global homosexual/Jewish conspiracy to degenerate our culture up real good with drag queens and anal sex and possibly Ben Shapiro.”
- As well as pointing out that the term originated in the Pick Up Artist and Manosphere community. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 04:21, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- You seem to be misunderstanding me and appear to be ignoring the point that I am trying to make.
- I do not deny that "globohomo" is used to refer to a "globo homosexual" conspiracy. I see that and acknowledge that is true.
- It is also true that "globohomo" refers to globalization homogenization which is a well-documented, long-standing, legitimate conversation/point of study point in academic disciplines with no connection to the above "globo homosexual" conspiracy.
- As OP pointed out, this article presently posits the "homosexual" play on the words as the primary use/point of origin while OP understands the opposite to be true.
- I am saying that based upon the longstanding history of legitimate globalization homogenization conversation, contrasted with the very recent emergence of this "homosexual" iteration that you point out, I believe it is more logical to assert that "homogenization" is mainstream and "homosexual" is fringe, and I therefore agree with OP's suggestions to edit. Amlans (talk) 05:08, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
"legitimate globalization homogenization conversation"
no academic discussion of globalization uses the phrase "globohomo" as a term. If you have evidence showing otherwise, you should include it. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 07:36, 24 June 2024 (UTC)- I provided you with four sources that very clearly use globohomo in the context of "global homogenization" (one of the sources you yourself attempted to use to suggest the phrase only refers to homosexuality while the source very clearly states otherwise...).
- Use of the term, or not, by an academic is not the end-all-be-all standard of judgment here. And very clearly so as the standard use you are arguing for is one with origins on 4chan.
- Again, please refer to:
- https://en.wiktionary.org/globohomo
- https://digitalcultures.net/slang/internet-culture/globohomo/#google_vignette
- https://gnet-research.org/2023/09/22/from-british-imperialism-to-globohomo-analysing-the-irish-far-rights-engagement-with-irish-nationalism-on-telegram/
- https://crisismagazine.com/opinion/paleoconservatives-and-american-identity
- None of those sources are what was requested, which was
multiple longstanding sources where academics are discussing globalization and the homogenization of cultures using the term "globohomo"
andsources that aren't focused on investigating alt-right politics, and their terms
. All the sources you listed are non-academic sources, which only discuss "globohomo" in the context of alt-right politics. None of them are discussions of globalization in general which use the term "globohomo". Because legitimate discussions of globalization that are from reliable sources DON'T USE the phrase "globohomo"... showing sources that are just people talking about the alt-right doesn't qualify as "legitimate discussions of globalization" from "reliable sources". 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:25, 24 June 2024 (UTC)- But "multiple longstanding sources where academics are discussing globalization and the homogenization of cultures using the term 'globohomo' and sources that aren't focused on investigating alt-right politics, and their terms" are not the standard by which whether or not globohomo is judged refer to globaliziation. That is an arbitrary standard that you are attempting to enforce here.
- And I'm not sure why you keep coming back to "sources that are just people talking about the alt-right" as an issue...
- In the context of this discussion, all that is needed to be shown is that globohomo is sometimes used to refer to globalization/homogenization. Not just 4chan globo/homosexual. And all four of the sources I provided do exactly that. Amlans (talk) 08:46, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- There is no long standing history of the term "globohomo" being used in relation to legitimate discussions of globalization. None of your sources are longstanding. See WP:NOTDICT and WP:DICTIONARIES. I'm not even a strong believer that the term "globohomo" has much of anything to do with the "Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory" and feel the page is WP:coatracking by including it here. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:52, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- And none of the sources using "globohomo" to refer to homosexuality are longstanding either! And that's fine!
- It's a concept...that supposedly originated on 4chan...in the year 2016...like... Amlans (talk) 08:57, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- There is no long standing history of the term "globohomo" being used in relation to legitimate discussions of globalization. None of your sources are longstanding. See WP:NOTDICT and WP:DICTIONARIES. I'm not even a strong believer that the term "globohomo" has much of anything to do with the "Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory" and feel the page is WP:coatracking by including it here. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:52, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- None of those sources are what was requested, which was
Sources to Consideration re: antisemitism and conspiracy theory labeling
Asked and answered. Please refer to the FAQ if still in doubt. |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
A. The Frankfurt School is well-documented as being a major driving force in social and political philosophical thought of the 20th and 21st century. See Sources 9, 10, 11, and 12 B. The Frankfurt School is well-documented as being noteworthy for its support of utilizing a “cultural” approach for popularizing Marxism. See Sources 8, 10, 11, and 12 C. It cannot be stated with any definitive authority that the present-day controversy on “cultural marxism” is inherently anti-semtitic, as the subject of discussion is in no way inherently related to Judaism, is not hostile towards Jewish people, and is not hostile towards Jewish beliefs. The subject of controversy in "cultural marxism" debates is Marxism, not Judaism. See Sources 5, 7, and 10. D. Some of the most influential Marxist thinkers of all time have explicitly advocated for the popularization of Marxist through the overpowering of hegemonic thought through mainstream cultural avenues. This is undeniable fact. See Sources 4, 5, 6, and 10 E. Marxist thinking has indeed been growing in popularity. This is undeniable fact. If the Frankfurt Schools is understood as being the driving force of contemporary Marxian thinking (see point A) with a cultural twist (see points B and D), then it is only logical to connect this growth to Frankfurt School roots. See Sources 1, 2, 3, and 9 Amlans (talk) 06:10, 22 June 2024 (UTC) References
Previous post with sources for consideration was disregarded and shut down without any substantive engagement with content. Please do not shut down my discussion before I have the chance to respond. I did not ask any questions, I did not miss the FAQ, I am not confusing this page with Marxist cultural analysis, and my work is not failing at the most fundamental level. I am providing legitimate, substantive information for consideration that very clearly undermines the present page's assertion of the controversial Cultural Marxism theory as factually being A) a conspiracy theory and B) wholesale antisemitic. Again, please, the sources I am putting forward, that I did indeed spend a lot of time gathering, in goof faith, in combination, clearly provide substantive evidence to support that the present page is in need of editing as present assertions are not objective, are not taking the full scope of information on the subject into consideration, and therefore appear to support a blatant bias - A. The Frankfurt School is well-documented as being a major driving force in social and political philosophical thought of the 20th and 21st century. See Sources 9, 10, 11, and 12 B. The Frankfurt School is well-documented as being noteworthy for its support of utilizing a “cultural” approach to popularize Marxism. See Sources 8, 10, 11, and 12 C. It cannot be stated with any definitive authority that the present-day controversy on “cultural marxism” is inherently anti-semtitic, as the subject of discussion is in no way inherently related to Judaism, is not hostile towards Jewish people, and is not hostile towards Jewish beliefs. The subject of controversy in "cultural marxism" is Marxism, not Judaism. See Sources 5, 7, and 10. D. Some of the most influential Marxist thinkers of all time explicitly advocate for the popularization of Marxist thought through the overpowering of hegemonic thought via mainstream cultural avenues. This is undeniable fact. See Sources 4, 5, 6, and 10 E. Marxist thinking has indeed been growing in popularity. This is undeniable fact. If the Frankfurt Schools is understood as being the driving force of contemporary Marxian thinking (see point A) with a cultural twist (see points B and D), then it is only logical to connect this growth to Frankfurt School roots. See Sources 1, 2, 3, and 9 Amlans (talk) 03:40, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
|
Current Reliance Upon Unreliable Sources
This article is presently employing unreliable sources that fail to meet a number of basic wiki conventions.
These sources are not being used in a way that acknowledges their unreliability and/or makes use of their unreliability a point of conversation. Rather, these unreliable sources are being used as foundational evidence/knowledge. This seems like an obvious problem in need of correction.
Source 4 - Jeffries, Stuart - This source does not meet basic guidelines for identifying independent sources WP:IIS Verso Books is an openly radical publishing group with a vested interest in the Frankfurt School.
Source 5 - Braune, Joan - This source does not meet basic standards for WP:SCHOLARSHIP. The “Journal of Social Justice” is published by a fringe, non-profit group and is not supported by an accredited scholarly institution or well-regarded academic press - it does not meet standards for “reliable scholarship.” The journal is not included in relevant, high-quality citation indexes (Elsevier Scopus, ScienceDirect) - it falls into the category of “predatory journals.” The journal mimics the name of established journals - it falls into the category of “hijacked journals.” Overall, the journal is clearly not respected or reviewed by the wider academic community and should therefore “not be considered reliable” according to “POV and peer review in journals” criteria. Additionally, a review of citation index data shows that the article has not entered mainstream academic discourse - it does not meet basic “citation count” standards.
Source 6 - Woods, Andrew - Authored by a pre-PHD university graduate student with no reputation for legitimacy, no history within the field/discipline, no credits...
Source 13 - Woods, Andrew - Same author as Source 6…See discussion above. Additionally, this is published by a magazine that so very obviously does not meet basic standards for independence or basic standards for scholarship. Aside from the obvious bias/partisan/POV issues that are not addressed when the source is used, at less than five years old, the magazine has little to no history of legitimacy. Not regarded in any way in the field, by legitimate scholars, by reputable institutions. No oversight. Furthermore, to make matters worse, leadership has been accused of disturbing predatory behavior. Overall, highly questionable.
Source 14 - Jay, Martin - Verso Books again. See Source 4 discussion.
Source 23 - Berkowitz, Bill - The reputation of the SPLC is well-documented as being questionable at best, wholesale corrupt at worst. An unrelibale source in many ways.
https://www.cnn.com/2019/03/29/us/splc-leadership-crisis/index.html
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2018/06/maajid-nawaz-v-splc/562646/
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/08/24/opinion/southern-poverty-law-center-liberals-islam.html (yes, it’s an op-ed. I know.) Amlans (talk) 04:41, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Source 4, Verso Books is a very large publishing house, with a good reputation, there's no indication that they allow authors to edit their own books. But if you have further questions/issues with this source, the proper place to raise them is the Reliable Sources Notice Board (Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard). That notice board has Wikipedians who specifically deal with verifying whether sources are reliable, perhaps equally importantly they're not involved with discussions here or the politics of this talk page, so can act as an objective sounding board to discuss sources with, and whether they're reliable.
- Source 5 The Journal of Social Justice is published out of Gonzaga University, in Spokane. So is a legitimate journal with oversight from that academic institution. DOCTOR Joan Braune is a PhD in Philosophy, credentialed from the University of Kentucky, and specifically wrote her PhD Thesis on Eric Fromm who was a part of The Frankfurt School. So both the Journal and Braune are qualified, credentialed, have editorial oversight, and have expertise/education on the topic in question. But again, if you have further questions of this source, you should raise them at Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard so someone external can asses them and tell you about them.
- Source 6 Andrew Woods is a PhD candidate at the Centre for the Study of Theory and Criticism located in The University of Western Ontario, so has some level of post-graduate qualification below PhD (you have to, to become a PhD candidate). Whilst a PhD is nice to have as a source, it's not required, a bachelors degree, or some other form of post-graduate level of education in a relevant area, combined with having been published can suffice. In this case, I believe Woods is being used with other sources. Either way, he qualifies. Misplaced Pages accepts all sorts of sources, but it ranks some higher than others, and has some rules around what each type can be relied on or quoted for. Extraordinary claims might need stronger sourcing (as per WP:NN and WP:Fringe), but here, Woods is simply agreeing with the academic consensus, so doesn't need to be a strong source (he has backup). But again, if you disagree you should raise this with the Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard.
- Source 13 Andrew Woods again, but here, he's actually being quoted by name, this is called an in-text attribution. Andrew Woods (as someone with published writings on the topic, and a background from a relevant academic institute), gets a sentence quoted in the article. Andrew Woods is thus being used to give Andrew Woods opinion, it's attributed to him so that it's not in "Wikivoice" - something we're purporting as an objective fact, but is quoted in this way so readers can know this is Woods opinion.
- Source 14 Martin Jay is not just some guy at Verso books. He's the key academic historian of The Frankfurt School and has relevant and long standing qualifications concerning their history. An extraordinarily well qualified academic with relevant credentials from Harvard and Berkley. It is ridiculous of you to raise him as an issue, and shows that perhaps you're not here to WP:BUILD an Encyclopedia, but are perhaps here to just throw mud and see what sticks?
- Source 23 The SPLC is a perennial source ranked as reliable on Misplaced Pages's list of WP:Reliable_sources/Perennial_sources. Again, basic research would have told you this. The SPLC has a history of employing academics and credible research methodologies to investigate hate groups, terrorism, and conspiracy theories. So they have a strong track record in this area (which is why Misplaced Pages accepts their work, because they have editorial oversight, and have employed many credible and credentialed people to form a long standing database of articles, cases, and expertise). The internal personal politics of a place doesn't matter to Misplaced Pages - whether they produce credible, verifiable, and well constructed reporting, does. We're not interested in their politics, we're interested in how accurate their reporting, journalism, and editorial standards are.
- You do not appear to have done basic due diligence in researching your false claims. Every single issue you've brought up has been addressed and refuted. Earlier you were accused of WP:Sealioning - and if you persist in only aiming to tear down, rather than find out, investigate, research, and report (eg. WP:BUILD a reliable encyclopedia) that claim of WP:Sealioning will look more credible. So a friendly piece of advice: Do more research and put more thought into your approach if you're planning to persist. Quick fire mudslinging is not an approach that works well on Misplaced Pages. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 06:14, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- These accusations you are making against me are inappropriate and uncalled for. You are entitled to your own opinion, but I have done due diligence to the best of my capacity. You are entitled to your own opinion, but I am attempting find out, investigate report, and again, I am doing so to the best of my ability. Whether you believe otherwise is nothing but your own personal opinion.
- I am not quick fire mudslinging. I put hours on end into my researching and my thoughts; you are not the ultimate arbitrator on whether or not that is true. You are not the ultimate arbitrator on whether my work is good enough. You are the not the ultimate arbitrator of standards.
- This is a place for community discussion and contribution for and by all who would like to attempt to do so in good faith, as I am, and it is inappropriate for you, or anyone on here, to act otherwise.
- Please keep baseless insults and accusations to yourself. It is out of line, unbecoming, and unnecessary. And please, leave me alone. Amlans (talk) 06:51, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I didn't accuse you of WP:Sealioning I referenced an earlier accusation (see the talk page history for details), and said you need to do better research if you are to persist making claims here, otherwise that accusation may appear accurate. Finding out whether authors have credentials from actual universities, and whether those credentials are relevant to the subject matter is something you've seemingly overlooked. It's something you can do to figure out whether Misplaced Pages will accept those sources/authors.
- It's easy to feel personally attacked, but I merely intended to remind you that your claims need to be substantive if you want to be heard and agreed with. My advice is slow down. Get use to Misplaced Pages and the INTENTIONS behind the policies, ask around on notice boards and at the WP:village pump. Get used to how things work, and how to build a consensus. Arguing with basic and established facts, or flying in the face of a page's history and current consensus is not the best approach.
- You'll find this particular Misplaced Pages page is well researched and established, because it's been through all sorts of challenges. You can flick through, or search the talk page archives at the top of this page - you'll find these discussions go back a while (and are further archived on the Frankfurt_School talk page). The page is how it is, because Misplaced Pages aims to report the academic viewpoint on the topic, and that Misplaced Pages strives for accuracy and quality research. Good luck in future endeavors. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 07:20, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I never said anything about sealioning. Only you have mentioned that.
- Please see my response below. You initially addressed me, and are continuing to address me, as if you unquestionably know what you are talking about and I unquestionably do not, and that is very clearly not the case.
- It appears that you may need to take a good chunk of your own advice. Please leave me alone, and please do not engage with me on this article anymore. Amlans (talk) 07:38, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I will continue to interact in WP:GoodFaith, with the contents of this talk page. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 07:50, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Re: Source 4 - It does not matter that Verso Books has a "good reputation." I don't deny that and that is not the basis by which I am challenging their inclusion. As I already very clearly pointed out, their use on this page very blatantly goes against basic standards of reliability based upon their vested interest in the Frankfurt School, the core of this article's subject matter. It's straightforward.
- Re: Source 5 - You are incorrect. Please do your due diligence in good faith before attempting to shut people down in this manner.
- Dr. Joan Braun is employed at Gonzaga University. The Journal of Social Justice is published by the Transformative Studies Institute - an organization that, as I already shared above, is a fringe, non-profit group not supported by any accredited scholarly institution.
- It does not matter that DOCTOR Joan Braun has a PhD in philosophy if this article + the publisher of this article fail to meet, as I already very clearly stated, all of these other WP:RS standards for, as I already explained, 1) reliable scholarship, 2) predatory journals, 3) hijacked journals, 4) POV and peer review in journals, and 5) citation count.
- Standards pulled from the WP:RS you are attempting to point me to as if I didn't pull these standards I used in my critique directly from that page already...
- Source 6 This Andrew Woods is cited individually in many points of this article. Numerous large chunks of text are being solely attributed to this source.
- Again, please do your due diligence before attempting to shut people down in this manner.
- Source 13 Please see the above comment. The same applies to this Woods source, though to a lesser degree, as the extent of portions of text solely relying upon this source is lesser.
- Source 14 - Please see my commentary on Verso Books and their vested interest in the Frankfurt School, a central topic of this article. Martin Jay's great reputation as an author does not undermine the fact that, as very clearly spelled out across WP:RS, that Verso Books cannot be trusted as a reliable source for THIS particular topic.
- Source 23 I provided a diverse set of articles detailing a broad range of SPLC issues including ones detailing issues with reporting, journalism, editorial standards, and reputation at large. But you are attempting to wholesale shut criticism of this source down by only referring to the couple of sources that did reference internal personal politics. Sure, those may not be the most relevant...but their irrelevancy doesn't discount the relevancy of all the others. Again, please do your due diligence before attempting to shut discussion down in this manner.
- -
- In sum, please do your due diligence before attempting to wholesale shut people down. Careless argumentation is not conducive to productive conversation and goes against the spirit and guidelines of this platform. Amlans (talk) 07:34, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Actually, the academic credentials of authors does count to their reliability. If you have further issues with these sources, you should raise them at the Misplaced Pages:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard, rather than WP:Sealioning here. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 07:49, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- The University of Gonzaga, has also housed a publication titled Journal of Social Justice.
- However, your claims are still dubious, as the one hosted on the transformativestudies website, still lists a Chief Editor, Edition Editor, and Associate Editors here - indicating there is an editorial board with academic oversight and academic standards. This combined with Braune's PhD in philosophy, and specifically on the topic of Frankfurt School member Eric Fromm, means it's still a valid source (especially as we're using an in-text attribution, as described in WP:CITETYPE). So again, Misplaced Pages's bases are covered there. Feel free to contest this at WP:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard if you don't still agree (but you might want to read WP:CITETYPE first). 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:02, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- -Again, please do your due diligence. The title of the social justice journal published by Gonzaga is "One World," not the "Journal of Social Justice."
- - I did not say that academic credentials don't matter wholesale. I said they are not a valid standard to base source reliability upon IF a host of other standards, that, again, I already very clearly listed out, are not met. This is, as I already very clearly explained, explicitly outlined on WP:RS.
- "A claim of peer review is not an indication that the journal is respected, or that any meaningful peer review occurs. Journals that are not peer reviewed by the wider academic community should not be considered reliable, except to show the views of the groups represented by those journals."
- "Predatory journals – Some journals are of very low quality that have only token peer-review, if any (see predatory journals). These journals publish whatever is submitted if the author is willing to pay a fee. Some go so far as to mimic the names of established journals (see hijacked journals). The lack of reliable peer review implies that articles in such journals should at best be treated similarly to self-published sources. If you are unsure about the quality of a journal, check that the editorial board is based in a respected accredited university, and that it is included in the relevant high-quality citation index"
- "Material such as an article, book, monograph, or research paper that has been vetted by the scholarly community is regarded as reliable, where the material has been published in reputable peer-reviewed sources or by well-regarded academic presses."
- "One may be able to confirm that discussion of the source has entered mainstream academic discourse by checking what scholarly citations it has received in citation indexes or lists such as DOAJ. Works published in journals not included in appropriate databases, especially in fields well covered by them, might be isolated from mainstream academic discourse, though whether it is appropriate to use will depend on the context."
- I have very clearly done my due diligence on this subject. Please assume as much. If you are doubtful, please re-read my posts. At this point, I am just repeating the same things over and over again in different ways because you are either intentionally ignoring or accidentally overlooking work that I have already done. Take care. Amlans (talk) 08:33, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Like I said, you should read WP:CITETYPE, for "in text citations", and then before you further WP:Sealion here, you should ask WP:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard about in text citations. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:38, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I am not sealioning; I am not "civilly pushing for a POV." I am pushing for closer adherence to the most basic tenets of WP:NPOV. That's it. Plain and simple.
- Please, no more unnecessary allegations or assumptions of bad faith. Thank you. Amlans (talk) 09:20, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
"I have very clearly done my due diligence on this subject. Please assume as much."
let's test that in some small way. You quoted a policy that tells us to "check that the editorial board is based in a respected accredited university, and that it is included in the relevant high-quality citation index" let's test that for the Journal of Social Justice editorial board. The stuff about citation index scores isn't as relevant here because it's a humanities subject, so any citations that aren't by the author themself is a good sign. You can check this yourself by looking up academics you agree with on the topic and checking their citation scores. Having a citation score is better than having none, just as having some academic qualification in a relevant subject is better than having none.- So proceeding with this, the chief editor of the Journal of Social Justice is John Asimakopoulos, a PhD in Sociology, his citation index is difficult to find (because this is a humanities subject, not a science subject) but it's suggested here works of his authorship have been cited over 100 times. Again citation indexes aren't really used as a measure of quality in humanities, the accuracy and relevancy of statements made are. John Asimakopoulos, is a PhD in a relevant field.
- The edition editor is Deric Shannon - who has a PhD from the University of Connecticut as well as other qualifications. Deric has a citation index of 39.
- Let's save a little time here and just read the Associate editors who are easy to find and list their credentials next to their names: Dana Williams (California State University Chico, Sociology), Jake Alimahomed-Wilson (California State University-Long Beach, Sociology). As you can see they both have relevant qualifications, here's Dana Williams a PhD in Sociology again... and another PhD for Dr. Jake Wilson, this time in Sociology from The University of California, Riverside.
- So there you go, four PhDs on one editorial board. They all check out in line with the policy you claim to have done due diligence on. You told me to
Please assume as much
... but when I checked that assumption, it turned out the "editorial board" of the journal was "based in a respected accredited university," (multiple of them in fact) "and that it is included in the relevant high-quality citation index.". Turns out the editorial board WAS from relevant areas of study, with relatively high quality citation indexes. So your suggestion for us to just assume you were right, was bad advice. We can just check! No biggie, nothing personal. - Again, if you keep begging the question, question flooding and WP:CPOV pushing, then that's what people are going to think you're doing here. Face it, we've dotted our i's and crossed our t's here. The research done on this topic appears to be well sourced, accurate, and based in Misplaced Pages's policies for determining reliable and appropriate sourcing on a topic. Those policies aren't flawed. The content isn't flawed. The research isn't flawed. It's all aiming to accurately represent the facts around The Frankfurt School and their writings. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:F136:28B7:1B72:FAB9 (talk) 01:55, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
- Like I said, you should read WP:CITETYPE, for "in text citations", and then before you further WP:Sealion here, you should ask WP:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard about in text citations. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:1976:4608:F3D:3D0C (talk) 08:38, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- This WP:WALLOFTEXT appears to be an exercise in WP:IDONTLIKEIT - the sources objected to here (4,5,6, etc.) are high-quality, peer-reviewed sources; the arguments made against them by Amlans apprar to be purely ad hominem in nature - or, even more, are arguments "by contagion" of a kind associated with conspiracy theorists themselves. Verso is not some kind of partisan "house organ", which appears to he Amlans' main point here.
- What is more, these sources are used in the article to support the mainstream scholarly view of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory, which is the topic of this article. These are the opposite of extraordinary claims, so WP:EXTRAORDINARY standards do not apply. Again, this appears to be an (extraordinarily muscular) effort by Amlans to engage in a WP:CPOV push by excluding sources they simply don't like. Newimpartial (talk) 10:05, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- You are not engaging in substantive discussion of the feedback I am providing re: these sources. You are instead assuming bad faith and attempting to wholesale dismiss me by making use of baseless, personalized claims against me. This is not in accordance with this talk page's policy.
- My arguments are not ad hominem or are not arguments by contagion. I have very clearly made arguments rooted in basic Wiki policy, and very clearly pointed to all of this basic policy with great attention to detail. Nothing at all extraordinary.
- Re: Verso - I already very clearly explained that I am not making a case for Verso being across-the-board unreliable. I am showing that they are not reliable within the context of this article, which is exactly how sources should be assessed. To suggest Verso is not a blatantly ideological entity, with vested interest in the Frankfurt School at that, is laughable. They very explicitly are by their own admission. And that's okay! Just not for this article.
- Again, I'm happy to engage in substantive discussion re: the reliability of sources, but have no desire, interest, or responsibility to engage in status quo stonewalling. Conversation in that vein goes against the guidelines, purpose, and spirit of this talk page. Please refrain from pulling me into discussion of that sort here. Amlans (talk) 15:51, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Amlans, you have asserted without evidence that
Verso Books is an openly radical publishing group with a vested interest in the Frankfurt School
(emphasis added). I understand that you believe Verso publications have a conflict of interest with respect to the topic of this article, but your view appears to be original research on your part, so we can't take that view into account in deciding on article text. I would recommend the following, with respect to venue:- If you believe restrictions should be placed on the use of Verso publications on Misplaced Pages because of conflict of interest, the correct venue for that would be WP:RSN.
- You appear to believe that it is against
basic Wiki policy
to cite publications from major academic presses within their area of specialization, but that is not the case. The correct venue for that discussion could be the Teahouse, or WP:VPP. - If you believe editors of this page are engaged in
status quo stonewalling
, that is a conduct issue and is not relevant on an article Talk page (in fact, you appear to be casting WP:ASPERSIONS). The place to raise such an issue is at a centralized forum like WP:AN or WP:ANI. - If you believe there is something specific to this topic in particular that makes the use of Verso publications unsuitable, you can make that argument here, but unless you find independent, reliable sourcing that supports your position there is no reason for other editors to engage in
substantive discussion
because your belief is not grounded in evidence or enwiki policy.
- I referred to your arguments as "ad hominem" and "contagion" because that appears to be their nature. To propose that we should not use articles from peer-reviewed journals because you don't approve of the academic affiliations of their authors is an argument reflecting both ad hominem and contagion. This is especially ironic because you have proposed, elsewhere on this page, that we ought to reflect in this article the views of writers without relevant credentials published in non-peer-reviewed blogs and 'zines.
- Given this context, I don't think I am
assuming bad faith
when I point out that your evaluations of sources seem to be influenced primarily by whether or not you like what they have to say on this article's topic. Your evaluations certainly do not reflect the policies of Misplaced Pages about source quality outlined at WP:RS and elsewhere. Newimpartial (talk) 16:55, 24 June 2024 (UTC)- Not sure whether it's accidental or intentional, but this response misrepresents or misinterprets very straightforward statements I have made.
- Point 1. I already clearly stated that I am not wholesale discounting Verso as a source across Misplaced Pages in its entirety. I am stating that present use of Verso within the confines of this article does not meet Wiki policy.
- This page is indeed the correct venue for this discussion.
- Point 2. This inference is incorrect. That is not what I believe. See Point 4.
- Point 3. You're accusing me of inappropriately using this page to discuss personal conduct...in response to my request that you not use this page to discuss personal conduct...that I made after you used this page to make disparaging suggestions against me...That is twisted.
- Point 4. This is incorrect. I'm reviewing this article's sources...in tandem with Misplaced Pages's policies...to see if said sources meet said policies...and I'm pointing out exactly what discrepancies I'm finding. That's exactly how assessment of source suitability is to be done.
- RE: Verso - Verso does not just publish about the Frankfurt School, Verso is a publisher for the Frankfurt school including Adorno, Benjamin, Marcuse, and Habermas. And this article's content in defense of the Frankfurt School...relies upon this Frankfurt School publisher (Verso)...to defend the Frankfurt School. It's that simple. This is unacceptable by the most basic of standards. Please see WP:ISP if you would like a reference and further clarification - the "Examples" section may be particularly helpful for this specific conversation.
- Misc.
- Misc. 1. I never proposed that we "not use articles from peer-reviewed journals because don't approve of the academic affiliations of their authors."
- You do not know what academic affiliations I personally disapprove of...because I've never stated what academic affiliations I personally disapprove of...because that information is not relevant to this discussion...which is exactly why I have not brought it into my assessments and have instead focused on what is appropriate to rely upon...which is Misplaced Pages policy...which I've pointed to as needed.
- Misc. 2. I have, at times, presented non-credentialed work in accompaniment to credentialed work to point out the existence of diversity of viewpoints, and that's a fine thing to do. I am, except when in accordance with Wiki policies, which is rarely, not of the belief that non-credentialed work be used authoritatively.
- Misc. 3. Again...
- Your assumption about the primary influence of my assessments is incorrect.
- Your assumption about what I like and dislike is also incorrect, though that is none of your business anyway.
- And it was already unquestionably out of line from the beginning. But at this point, in light of the excessive ends I have gone to name, link, and point to these valid primary influences, any further attempts to assess, characterize, or inquire into personal characteristics of my own on this, or any page, unless explicitly prompted to do so by me, is not welcome. Please respect that.
- Misc. 4. As I have now directly stated multiple times, my evaluations of sources certainly do reflect the policies of Misplaced Pages because the only tools I am referencing in source evaluations are the policies of Misplaced Pages outlined at WP:RS and elsewhere. These references are explicit and extensive.
- -
- If editors are unhappy with Misplaced Pages's standards, that is not my burden to bear or problem to solve. Amlans (talk) 21:29, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- We are back to a WALLOFTEXT situation here. The major premise of the WALL seems to be that Amlans understands and is correctly interpreting enwiki P&Gs while all other participants in this discussion are not. This premise is unproven and to me it seems unlikely. Concerning the numbered "points":
- points 1, 2 and 4 - enwiki P&Gs do not call for us to discount an academic publisher (as biased, or wherever) because of its back catalogue. The result of Amlans' proposed principle - used to argue against the inclusion of Verso sources in this article - would be that specialized academic journals could not be used within their area of specialization (because such publications serve the interests of the publisher by promoting the specialty). This style of argument is incompatible with Misplaced Pages's assessment of reliable sources.
- I would point out in particular the telling language used in point 4,
to defend the Frankfurt School.
In the context of this topic, the only interpretation I can come up with here is "to defend the Frankfurt School against claims made by proponents of the conspiracy theory". But this Misplaced Pages article can't be reasonably construed as a "defense" of Marxists against those claims - for one thing, that would give the "arguments" of the CT far more credence than they deserve. Also, the main use of Verso publications in this article is to analyze the CT and not to interpret Marxism or the Frankfurt School. So Amlans's argument says more about their perspective on the "debate", IMO, than it does about source considerations for this article. - point 3 - accusations of STONEWALLING are a behavioural issue and out of scope for this forum; accusing editors of inappropriate behaviour in the wrong forum, and without evidence, is what WP:ASPERSIONS means onwiki. Amlans, please stop doing that.
- misc 1 - Amlans proposed that Andrew Woods's peer-reviewed contribution to an anthology published by Springer not be used because Amlans did not approve of their credentials. I suppose "affiliations" wasn't the precise term for me to use, but my point stands - Amlans offered an ad hominem argument to exclude relevant, peer-reviewed sourcing.
- misc 2 and 3 - if there is one thing I have learned on this Talk page, it is that using unreliable sourcing
to point out the existence of a diversity of viewpoints
isn't very helpful when some of those "viewpoints" are based in reality and documented in reliable sources, and other "viewpoints" are not. Editors have frequently moved from, "X viewpoint exists! See (unreliable) source Y!" to "this article should reflect X viewpoint as well as ABC", where ABC is the range of perspectives offered by reliable sources. In such a situation, enwiki P&Gs don't actually allow us to relativize ABC by situating X as an "alternative viewpoint" to it. - misc 4 - this assertion appears to be false, because enwiki P&Gs do not actually support the exclusion of Verso sources, Woods, etc. What is more, no explanation has been offered why to exclude these sources while paying attention, e.g., to the unreliable sources offered within Amlans's source list on antisemitism. If this isn't an exercise in WP:ILIKEIT/WP:IDONTLIKEIT - then, well, I am open to another explanation, but "just reflecting the policies of Misplaced Pages" is not a plausible interpretation of Amlans's choice of sources to use and to disparage here.
- Barring direct questions, I intend for this to be my last contribution in this exchange; I don't think there is anything left to discuss that is in-scope for this Talk page. Newimpartial (talk) 11:56, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- That is not the basic premise of my "wall."
- The premise of my "wall" is that you have failed to substantively engage with debate of my interpretations of P&Gs. Instead, you have repeatedly attempted to write me and my thoughts off, not just for yourself but as some supposed all-powerful authority of this article + page, by repeatedly throwing out arguments and accusations based upon blatant misrepresentations/misinterpretations of my words. Just as you have done here, once again. Amlans (talk) 13:11, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- We are back to a WALLOFTEXT situation here. The major premise of the WALL seems to be that Amlans understands and is correctly interpreting enwiki P&Gs while all other participants in this discussion are not. This premise is unproven and to me it seems unlikely. Concerning the numbered "points":
- I already refuted all your points, and as you've been told, left wing academic sources are used for left wing academic concepts. That's not a conflict of interest so much as the idea that you need to have studied some Marxism to know what's true and false in regards to Marxism. You need to have studied The Frankfurt School to know what's true and false about The Frankfurt School. Claiming that "Verso books is too leftist to be used as a source" or "Stuart Jefferies is in on The Frankfurt School so can't be used as a source" - is just a sign that you don't understand Misplaced Pages. We use sources that are relevant to the topic at hand, and we don't spread conspiracy theories - like the idea of a left wing mind virus that infects authors or institutions - Verso books isn't suddenly a
"Frankfurt School publisher"
just because they've published books on The Frankfurt School. Just like you wouldn't suddenly be an Oxford professor if you were to write a book about Oxford professors. If you can't distinguish between publishing writing about a topic, and professing a belief in line with that topic (or having a membership to an organization that is about believing in that topic) - then WIKIPEDIA is NOT the place for you. Now please stop using this page as a WP:FORUM to make your conspiracy theorist "mind virus" infection claims. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:6D02:FF03:7182:3E92 (talk) 04:14, 25 June 2024 (UTC)- But all of this is somewhat moot, as The Frankfurt School AREN'T on trial here. It would be perfectly acceptable to have their complete works in the sources of this page, just as we have them on the page for The Frankfurt School. We know exactly what they did and didn't say because they're a well studied, documented, and published group. The factuality of what they did and didn't say isn't in question. This is why we can say Stuart Jefferies gives an accurate account of their history, where as a Catholic Rightwing conspiracy publication doesn't. This is the nature of the WP:FRINGE policy. It gives weight and the benefit of the doubt to factual academic sources, and allows Misplaced Pages to disparage those that can be shown to not be factual, or to be misinformation. This can be done across all conspiracy theories from the Moon landing conspiracy theories to John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theories to 9/11 conspiracy theories - because they too are all well documented, and we have a good idea of what can and can't be said to be true of those events and the people involved. This page is no different. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:6D02:FF03:7182:3E92 (talk) 05:19, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- You have not refuted all of my points simply because you state that you have refuted all of my points.
- You've engaged in substantive conversation with one of my points, namely Dr. Braun's article, and as shown in black and white, you were incorrect about a number of very basic facts on the author and journal. Amlans (talk) 13:20, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- Sure, if you don't know what an in text citation is. But, if you do, you'll understand your point was refuted. All your points have been. They've all been addressed in line with policy. The policy based explaination for each point you've raised has been explained to you. 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:51AB:A68C:EA45:D784 (talk) 17:12, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- I mean, that's the thing isn't it - you've claimed all these sources are biased without being able to show any factual errors or incorrect statements they've made about The Frankfurt School. Because you don't have any, because they're accurate sources familiar with what The Frankfurt School wrote about and did. Their bias is towards knowledge of the topic. That's a bias all sources on Misplaced Pages have. The nature of good sourcing is to be accurate. This is why you've not shown any inaccuracies in the sources you're complaining about and saying are "biased". 2405:6E00:22EC:AA6E:BD50:7899:BF60:4720 (talk) 18:18, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
- Amian is confusing reliability and bias. A PhD thesis is deemed to be reliable even if it is biased. That's because facts are verifiable, that is, they are either true or false, regardless of one's opinions. Whether or not the Frankfurt School's approach to cultural studies is good or bad is a matter of opinion. Whether or not they are central to a conspiracy to overthrow Western civilization by encouraging gender reassignment is a matter of fact, that is, it's either true or false. TFD (talk) 13:23, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Amlans, you have asserted without evidence that
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