Revision as of 13:36, 29 June 2018 editNeilN (talk | contribs)134,455 edits →Result concerning Rusf10← Previous edit | Revision as of 15:11, 29 June 2018 edit undoMastCell (talk | contribs)Edit filter managers, Administrators43,155 edits →Result concerning Rusf10: minority reportNext edit → | ||
Line 456: | Line 456: | ||
*::Fine with the strongly worded warning to Rusf10, but I do think a caution to all editors involved to turn down the battleground mentality is needed. As I mentioned above, this seems to single out one bad actor among several simply because they have a certain ideological stance compared to the others. --] (]) 13:31, 29 June 2018 (UTC) | *::Fine with the strongly worded warning to Rusf10, but I do think a caution to all editors involved to turn down the battleground mentality is needed. As I mentioned above, this seems to single out one bad actor among several simply because they have a certain ideological stance compared to the others. --] (]) 13:31, 29 June 2018 (UTC) | ||
*::I am almost prepared to give Rusf10 a topic ban here over their JAMA comments. If you are calling something published in a very solid source (as determined by other Misplaced Pages editors - not me) "garbage" you'd better have other solid sources that detail why that piece is garbage, and not just your own personal opinion. That is blatant POV editing. I agree with {{u|Vanamonde93}} and {{u|GoldenRing}} in saying that admins uphold written policy as it stands. I disagree with {{u|Fish and karate}} that VM deserves any warning. --] <sup>]</sup> 13:36, 29 June 2018 (UTC) | *::I am almost prepared to give Rusf10 a topic ban here over their JAMA comments. If you are calling something published in a very solid source (as determined by other Misplaced Pages editors - not me) "garbage" you'd better have other solid sources that detail why that piece is garbage, and not just your own personal opinion. That is blatant POV editing. I agree with {{u|Vanamonde93}} and {{u|GoldenRing}} in saying that admins uphold written policy as it stands. I disagree with {{u|Fish and karate}} that VM deserves any warning. --] <sup>]</sup> 13:36, 29 June 2018 (UTC) | ||
* I'm with ]; the ''JAMA'' comments by Rusf are substandard enough that I'd consider sanctions on those grounds. encapsulates an impressive volume of fallacies and misunderstandings of policy, aggravated by the aggressive ignorance he's displayed in the thread in question. Just in that one diff: | |||
:::* {{green|"Drmies, is under the false impression that everything published in an academic journal must be true..."}}... Drmies neither said nor implied any such thing; this is a bad-faith misrepresentation of an opponent's position. | |||
:::* {{green|"... which is really no more intelligent than saying "I read it on the internet, it must be true".}} Advocating for ''JAMA'' as a reliable source (which it is) is quite different from claiming anything on the Internet must be true. This is, again, a bad-faith misrepresentation. It also indicates a deep misunderstanding of policy; one fundamental determinant of reliability is the venue in which a claim is published. Rusf chooses to ignore this, and to pretend that it makes no difference with regard to reliability whether a source is published in ''JAMA'' or on a random website. | |||
:::* {{green|"BTW, I forgot to mention that I believe the guy who wrote this is an economist, not a environmental scientist, which gives him even less creditably"}} . was written by two people, not one "guy". One of the two authors is a statistician who specializes in climate change and health policy. It's somewhat ignorant to suggest that an economist is unsuited to comment on the impact of policy changes on measurable outcomes (that is, after all, one key aspect of economics), but it's worse to misrepresent the article's authorship in an attempt to undermine it. | |||
* More generally, Rusf's tone in is aggressively partisan and displays either ignorance of, or contempt for, basic site policy on sourcing. I don't doubt that there are other offenders in the topic area, and identifying and handling Rusf's editing doesn't give them a pass. But this is obviously someone whose input in the topic area is a massive net-negative in terms of both tone and content, and this is exactly the sort of behavior that we need less of. Discretionary sanctions exist to deal with this kind of thing. Like NeilN, I would favor a topic ban, although I recognize that I'm in the minority. At a minimum, it should be made clear to Rusf that his behavior isn't appropriate and that, if it continues, a topic ban will result. ''']''' <sup>]</sup> 15:11, 29 June 2018 (UTC) |
Revision as of 15:11, 29 June 2018
"WP:AE" redirects here. For the guideline regarding the letters æ or ae, see MOS:LIGATURE. For the automated editing program, see WP:AutoEd.
Noticeboards | |
---|---|
Misplaced Pages's centralized discussion, request, and help venues. For a listing of ongoing discussions and current requests, see the dashboard. For a related set of forums which do not function as noticeboards see formal review processes. | |
General | |
Articles and content | |
Page handling | |
User conduct | |
Other | |
Category:Misplaced Pages noticeboards |
Click here to add a new enforcement request
For appeals: create a new section and use the template {{Arbitration enforcement appeal}}
See also: Logged AE sanctions
Important informationShortcuts
Please use this page only to:
For all other problems, including content disagreements or the enforcement of community-imposed sanctions, please use the other fora described in the dispute resolution process. To appeal Arbitration Committee decisions, please use the clarification and amendment noticeboard. Only autoconfirmed users may file enforcement requests here; requests filed by IPs or accounts less than four days old or with less than 10 edits will be removed. All users are welcome to comment on requests except where doing so would violate an active restriction (such as an extended-confirmed restriction). If you make an enforcement request or comment on a request, your own conduct may be examined as well, and you may be sanctioned for it. Enforcement requests and statements in response to them may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. (Word Count Tool) Statements must be made in separate sections. Non-compliant contributions may be removed or shortened by administrators. Disruptive contributions such as personal attacks, or groundless or vexatious complaints, may result in blocks or other sanctions. To make an enforcement request, click on the link above this box and supply all required information. Incomplete requests may be ignored. Requests reporting diffs older than one week may be declined as stale. To appeal a contentious topic restriction or other enforcement decision, please create a new section and use the template {{Arbitration enforcement appeal}}.
|
Paul Siebert
No action. Sandstein 07:10, 23 June 2018 (UTC) |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning Paul Siebert
I was very reluctant to submit this request and thought it might be avoided. Therefore, prior to filing any requests, I tried to explain to Paul that his editing was problematic (whole thread), but he responded with offenses (diffs #5, #6, "that's a lie", "you continue to pretend"). Moreover, he continued doing the same (for example, diffs #1, #2 and #9). All these discussions were related to Eastern Europe. In addition, Paul produces very long and fruitless discussions on article talk pages and refuses to accept consensus or the lack of consensus. For example, speaking about "Black Book", he posted this question a few years ago. He recently re-posted it again . He received no support, but still continue defaming the author of the book on WP pages (diffs #1 and #2). I do not know if his sources to discredit Stéphane Courtois are cherry-picked or just random, however they do not support the assertion by Paul that the notable academic has been involved in a scientific misconduct. I believe it is a BLP violation and WP:OR by Paul. @Woogie10w. I am not surprised you do not want edit this subject. I think one problem is that Paul clearly exhibits an WP:TE editing pattern on the talk page (diffs #1, #2, #10, and #12; #9 was also related to this page). He also starts multiple threads trying to discredit the "Black Book of Communism", which is probably one of the best academic RS on the subject of this page. He does it over and over again: ,,,. And he continue doing the same on this AE page - see his response below . @Paul Siebert. "Troll" again ? I do not find your arguments convincing, sorry.
@TTAAC. In the first chapter of Black Book Courtois provides his own numbers of victims, which are not based on the chapters by Margolin and Werth, and he does not tell these numbers are based on their chapters. Therefore, the numbers must be explicitly attributed to Courtois. That is what I did in this edit. For some reasons Paul called this my edit "POV pushing" (link #12; at the bottom of the diff he tells I made "misleading edit summary" in this edit. Wrong. It was correct edit summary and good edit.).
Discussion concerning Paul SiebertStatements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. Statement by Paul SiebertI have to skip the most ridiculous accusations because of space limitations. 1. Re: Forgery etc: reliable sources say that Courtois "manipulated" or "deliberately inflated" some figures, which he then used as a proof for his theory. A beginning if the discussion of this question can be found here, all diffs cannot be provided because there were a lot of them). Manipulation of figures by Courtois lead to a serious conflict between Courtois and his co-authors: Two main contributors of this book (Werth and Margolin) claimed that Courtois took the figures produced by them and produced the figures that were considerably inflated as compared to the original data. Such manipulation is not necessarily tantamount to forgery, but it is very close. That is exactly what I say ("it seems Courtois simply forged his figures"), and a well documented public scandal over this story demonstrates that my statement was hardly an exaggeration. 2. redundant 3. Re: "if a person behaves as a troll, then it is reasonable to conclude they are a troll": To explain this, I need to briefly describe a content dispute in a formal way. Durin a discussion, I said: "I agree that the facts A and B did occur. However, I disagree that C follows from A and B. MVBW twisted my words, and claimed "You admitted that A and B did occur, which mean you yourself agreed with C". To me, such behaviour is a typical trolling. 4. Re: "You cannot pretend you are an educated and skillful person..." Truncation completely changed the meaning of this sentence. A brief summary of my full post is: "You are smarter than the posts you make, please, return to a rational discussion". (MVBW is a scientist who is supposed to be familiar with the criteria applied to scientific publications and good articles). 5. Re: "This is an unsubstantiated accusation of bad faith" (partially addressed above (#4)). The whole discussion can be seen here. Obviously:
6. Re: This diff see above. 7. Re: "last phrase at the bottom of the diff". A key point here is that the exact translation of the word "расстрелять" (that means not "execution" (a general term), but "shooting"). Obviously, if one sees this my phrase taken out of context, it looks somewhat rude. However, taking into account that, as a rule, any discussion with MVBW makes several rounds where all arguments are being repeated ad nauseum, some degree of irritation is quite understabdable. 8. Re: "if you see no anti-Semitism in these Solzhenitsyn's words, that tells something about you" retrospectively, I see that it was just misunderstanding. I thought we were discussing this statement, whereas that book described the same subject in two different chapters, and the wording in another chapter was less anti-Semitic. 9. Re: "Long political rant" Actually, it was a friendly discussion between Woogie10w and me on our talk pages, where Woogie10w and I disclosed some personal information about our ancestors. I feel very uncomfortable that a third person wedged into this discussion, and I am not intended to discuss the details here. Although Woogie10w and I interact very rarely, I think he is a very kind and interesting person, and I am glad he thinks the same about me. Since I believe off-Wiki communication is something we should avoid, my email is disabled, so a talk page dialogue was the only way to communicate with Woogie10w. In my opinion, MVBW's behaviour in this particular case was profoundly dishonest. 10. Re: "accusing Collect of deliberately violating a policy" Don't have space to discuss this unrelated story. 11. Re: "misleading edit summary" In reality, (MVWB was acting against talk page consensus (see the "War breaks out in Europe; a pretext for a Soviet invasion" section). 12. Re: "a thread started by Paul on article talk page" This thread must be read in full from the beginning to the final TFD's post. It is a representative example of MVBW's behaviour. I just wanted to add that although I know MVBW since very early times (starting from his conflict with another user, which gave a start to the WP:EEML story, when MVBW was editing under the currently deleted account "Biophys"), I still assumed MVBW's good faith until June 2018. Regrettably, after this case, I have no possibility to assume it any more. --Paul Siebert (talk) 04:45, 20 June 2018 (UTC) References
Statement by GPRamirez5I regret that I don't have more time to write testimony and assemble evidence right now, but I stand by the ANI case I brought against MVBW, and I second everything that has been said here in Paul Siebert's defense. GPRamirez5 (talk) 16:29, 21 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by (--Woogie10w (talk) 13:15, 20 June 2018 (UTC))I got involved in this discussion about Mass Killing under Communist regimes and gave up. The discussion degenerated into a gigantic POV storm because the editors, including myself, were not discussing the source Courtois. When I tried to discuss the various sources related to the topic I was ignored. The editors I interacted with constantly argued based on their own POV rather than citing reliable sources. I suspect that the editors were acting in good faith but were not familiar the topic and the sources. In my case I made the big mistake of wasting my time engaging a long winded discussion that involved my own POV, I realized my mistake and opted out of the discussion. Paul was acting in good faith and really needs to base his arguments on reliable sources that can be verified. I have hard copies of the sources and am willing to work with editors who want to improve the article.--Woogie10w (talk) 13:15, 20 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by TheTimesAreAChangingTo give context to Paul Siebert's (admittedly unnecessarily inflammatory) "forgery" accusation against Courtois, it should be noted that Courtois authored the introduction to the Black Book, in which he purported to summarize the conclusions of the book's various contributors—notably Nicolas Werth, author of the chapters on the Soviet Union, and Jean-Louis Margolin, author of the chapters on China, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia. (The Soviet Union, China, and Cambodia account for the great majority of all mass killings under communist regimes.) In the introduction, Courtois claimed that approximately 100 million individuals died as a result of communist regimes during the 20th century, compared to the roughly 25 million victims of Nazi Germany. To reach this total, Courtois cited estimates of the death toll attributable to communism in specific countries; for example, Courtois gave the figures of 65 million deaths in China, 20 million deaths in the Soviet Union, and 1 million deaths in Vietnam. Werth and Margolin, however, used somewhat lower and more speculative numbers for China and the Soviet Union, and Margolin (pp. 565–575) concluded only that North Vietnam's land reform was accompanied by Side comment by SMcCandlishAn obvious part of the problem here is that the entire Mass killings under Communist regimes page is basically a giant multi-pronged WP:Coatrack. These are not all one topic, and putting them together is a WP:POV and WP:OR exercise, verging on propaganda. These should be split into separate articles on each government (and should not use the loaded word "regime", per MOS:WTW). I think that would go a long way to defusing conflict; a pseudo-encyclopedic article like this a magnet for PoV-pushing in both directions. And don't capitalize "communist", per MOS:ISMCAPS. — SMcCandlish ☏ ¢ 😼 16:14, 21 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by Volunteer MarekI have some mixed thoughts on the issue of MVBW and Paul Siebert, but as concerns this edit summary by GPRamirez5 I believe that's what's usually called "casting WP:ASPERSIONS". You can't make allegations like that against another editor without solid evidence, especially in an edit summary (which means it's impossible to strike or undue the comments).Volunteer Marek (talk) 16:35, 21 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by CollectI note my name has appeared above. My goal would be a short article on the topic of "Noncombatant deaths attributed to communist regimes" as is clear on the talk page. I note that Paul seems to have made a substantial number of contributions to the talk page, and a substantial amount of verbiage. Some of that verbiage is, per Paul, self-attributed to English not being his first language, but other example indicate that he feels exceedingly strongly on the topic, to the extent of accusing others of lying, violating Misplaced Pages policy, and more, and some of his charges are poorly worded or unsupportable. I also note that an IP has posted on his talk page aspersions about some editors here. Paul has greatly misapprehended my positions and made charges about me which are ill-worded, inapt, and objectionable. (see above diffs) I did not issue a complaint mainly because in his large number of edits to the article talk page (I suggest looking at the quantity and length of such edits might be useful), he has iterated such charges for a long time now. Thus I ask that the complaint be viewed as being of a serious nature, devolving on the Misplaced Pages principles of affording all editors due respect, and not simply lashing out at them. IMHO, it would not hurt Paul to have a vacation from the article in question, though. Say, a month or so? Collect (talk) 18:29, 21 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by Vanamonde93SMcCandlish's assessment is quite correct. The page has been constructed in a manner that does not represent consensus among sources, and this construction itself is then used to exclude and/or stonewall any changes to the sources. It is completely unsurprising that tempers are getting frayed. I've taken Paul to task myself over his tendency to open numerous and lengthy discussions, but that's hardly a blockable offense, and I would concur with Sandstein's assessment of this report. Vanamonde (talk) 06:47, 23 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by (username)Result concerning Paul Siebert
|
GizzyCatBella
GizzyCatBella is topic-banned from the World War II history of Poland. Sandstein 19:59, 25 June 2018 (UTC) |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning GizzyCatBella
Revision as of 10:41, 19 February 2018 alerted + previous AE discussions.
This is beyond not following WP:BRD, and previous conduct on this article (by a different user handle) has been covered outside of Misplaced Pages here - by Morris S. Whitcup. This is the second re-revert - diff. This version contains a number of sentences sourced to Rossino. Rossino, however contains a single sentence mentioning Stawiki - Following more editing - 11:13, 24 June 2018 contains the following misrepresentations:
notified.Icewhiz (talk) 11:45, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Additional comments by Icewhiz
Icewhiz (talk) 06:45, 25 June 2018 (UTC)
Discussion concerning GizzyCatBellaStatements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. Statement by GizzyCatBellaThis report was filed at 11:45, June 24, 2018 (Talk page and the whole conversation with the filing user before the report was presented can be found here )
At all times I was acting in good faith (genuinely). The version about the Jewish life reverted to was seven years old ,(note that not a single word or source in that version was mine) that is why I said it was the most stable, not because I intended to keep that version. I meant to start with an old version. I planned to edit it over the span of few hours, confirm and update sources, include information about the Jewish life before the war, during, about the 1739 synagogue (two actually), about a Polish mob massacre of Jews, about the 1942 Nazi ghetto, about the cloth and hats factories, distillery, a wartime picture and about the current Jewish cemetery. At all times I had in mind this version and the objections of the opposing user despite his hostile attitude. I went through normal editing process; I modified the article best to my knowledge, I asked the opposing user for assistance (3 times) and worked my way down, so the article resembled the opposite user's preferred version. Article resembled others editors version before the report has been submitted. Despite all of this the user went ahead and filed the report choosing one first edit only, omitting everything else and claiming usage of ill sources which were not even mine. This sadly indicates to me ill intentions. Please note that the same user already reported me for placing a tag on his talk page . Having said all of that I must also say that I'd try to be more careful with restoring stuff in the future. I'll try to use a template “editing in progress” (is such template available? I think it is.) Important – IM NOT AN ANTISEMITE(!).GizzyCatBella (talk) 19:25, 25 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by EaldgythThere is definitely some misuse/misrepresentation of sources in this edit by GCB. The edit makes the statement "Ethnic Polish families were being rounded up by newly formed Jewish militia" and sources it to this article (?). The closest thing I can find in the source that discusses the deportations of Poles is the paragraph starting "Yet arrest by the NKVD was not the only means of repression.." but that paragraph does not support the information in the article. First - it is discussing the deportations that took place throughout the period of Soviet rule. Second, it notes that Poles made up 60% of the deportees in the area - so a sweeping statement that "ethnic Poles" without qualifying that other ethnicities were also deported is incorrect based on the source. Further ... no mention in the paragraph mentions "Jewish militia" at all. Lastly, the deportations from the Lomza and Bialystok areas took place in 1941, not in 1939 as implied by the placement of the sourced sentence. The other possible paragraph in the source that is meant to support this statement starts "Other leading scholars.." but this doesn't support this statement either - as it states "Jewish militiamen helped NKVD agents send local Poles into exile" first - this is a quote from Dov Levin, and second it doesn't say that the Jewish militia was the only force that sent people into exile. The source also notes in the next paragraph some reasons why Jews may have been over-represented in the Soviet occupation administration and concludes "It seems then that the outburst of Polish anti-Semitism in reaction to the arrival of German forces was largely based on a stereotype of the "Jewish-Communist" that was shared by anti-Semites across Europe."... which definitely is not reflected in the use made of this source in the article. The same source is used to source "Some Poles, who emerged from their forest hideaways, including prisoners released by the Nazis from the NKVD prisons" - but there is not a single mention of the word "prisoners" in the source article, and the four mentions of "prison" do not support this at all. Ealdgyth - Talk 13:54, 24 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by Volunteer Marek@Sandstein: (and User:Ealdgyth) - how are you guys missing it? Just do a search for "militia". "Musiał found that in many cases Jewish militia members directly participated in mass arrests and deportation actions. " and "Dov Levin has similarly concluded "the labeling of the Soviet administration as a 'Jewish regime' became widespread when Jewish militiamen helped NKVD agents send local Poles into exile."", and " In eastern Poland, the vision of Jews greeting the Red Army, and in isolated cases of Jews in militia uniform assisting the NKVD, appeared to bear out the deepest suspicions of a nefarious Jewish-Bolshevik alliance." The last one doesn't say it was the case, but the first two sentences do. You can question the reliability of the source but that's a content dispute and since this has been in the article for some time there's nothing wrong with GCB restoring a previous stable version.Volunteer Marek (talk) 17:27, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Sandstein and Blade - you guys didn't read a source carefully and you go and accuse an editor of anti-semitism???? Volunteer Marek (talk) 17:31, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Here it is again. Note that the text is not supported just by Polish historians, but also by Jewish ones, such as Yitzhak Arad, Dov Levin and Jan Gross. As has already been pointed out, GZB was restoring a stable version from August 2017 in response to several of Icewhiz's edits (which removed relevant sourced material). If you want to blame somebody for that text, then blame whoever put it in: , which was this guy.
Re Sandstain's removal of my comments - just read the freakin' source, and look at the edit history of that article before you go accusing editors of anti-semitism! You owe them at least that much! GizzyCatBella REMOVED the info you bring up in statement herself, just minutes later. All she was restore an older version of the article to work off of. And the stuff on the Jewish militia - which is no longer in the article BECAUSE Gizzy removed it - is in the source! Sandstein you need to strike that odious and false WP:ASPERSION.Volunteer Marek (talk) 21:25, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Re Icewhiz’s newest diff-padding – these are all about a month old. Most concern issues which were discussed at the time (e.g. use of Anna Poray). They are not BLP vios – just disagreements over what sources are acceptable. These discussions continue. Icewhiz’s reflexive and false crying of “HOAX!!!” at any edit he disagrees with (even when these are based on sources – ones which Icewhiz happens to disagree with), is just indicative of his WP:BATTLEGROUND attitude.Volunteer Marek (talk) 07:14, 25 June 2018 (UTC) Note: restoring an older version as a basis for improvement, then proceeding with changes, is standard editing procedure on Misplaced Pages. If the final version Gizzy left had all the problems of the original version then maybe there'd be a basis for sanctions. But as has been pointed out repeatedly, Gizzy's final version removed almost all the problematic content (and probably would have gotten to all of it, if Icewhiz didn't jump in with this report) and is very close to Icewhiz's version from March.Volunteer Marek (talk) 19:55, 25 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by SMcCandlishTending toward Volunteer Marek's interpretation (if not tone), and Piotrus's "the article was going through a perfectly normal WP:BRD process". Citing a source that's critical of some group action that happened to have involved Jews, and which even Jewish writers also cite, doesn't make an editor an anti-Semite, but someone doing their editorial "job". While I have some minor involvement in the broader topic area, about a year or two ago (esp. about the Polish army of the era), I don't know enough about the subject and the real-world conflicts between people researching it to know whether this is aspect of the "job" is being done well. But the knee-jerk rush to T-ban and indef is not supportable, and is a good example why AE (and ArbCom) have to stay out of content disputes. This isn't addressing user behavior, it's a half-assed decision that some sources in a content dispute are preferable to some other sources in it (which is what most content disputes boil down to). I agree with Ealdgyth that GizzyCatBella appears to have
Statement by My very best wishesThe edit by GizzyCatBella (in the comment by Sandstein below) was apparently only the first in the series of edits by GizzyCatBella who wanted to create an entirely different version, as follows from their edits made before the submission of this request by Icewhiz. Therefore, making any sanctions on the basis of this diff (or any other intermediate edits by GizzyCatBella) seems to be unjustified. It also appears that Icewhiz submitted this report at the very moment when GizzyCatBella was working to fix the content after the objections by Icewhiz on the article talk page . This is clearly a battleground behavior by Icewhiz, in my opinion. He may or may not be right about sources used in the initial edit by GizzyCatBella, but he had to wait until GizzyCatBella completes their editing and discuss on the talk page any possible disagreements about new version prior to submitting this request. Moreover, even the initial edit/revert by GizzyCatBella , does not strike me as something deserving a topic ban or an "antisemitic propaganda". The edit does not removes anything about the atrocities by Nazi. It only inserts some info about the previous Soviet occupation, followed by the atrocities by Nazi, i.e. in chronological order. My very best wishes (talk) 19:38, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by MyMoloboaccountGizzyCatBella didn't add the disputed information as some claim, he restored a previous version of the article that somebody else added.I also note that he politely asked Icewhiz to wait and let him finish the articlethis hostile attitude and threats??? Please stop. Will you please let me work on it? I started already and I would really welcome your input and help. Can you work with me to improve the article please?.He then removed unfounded allegationsis a communist, so ethnicity removed unless a secondary source found confirming ethnicity of local communist. But I don't think it is crucial anyway. Please read the edits carefully, GizzyCatBella actually agreed with Icewhiz and removed what he was disputing. To sum it up.
Why is this request in the first place, if GCB actually agreed with Icewhiz and removed this information?
Interestingly, it seems Icewhiz falsified a source himself on the similar issue in a different subject, claiming that villagers massacred by Jewish-Partisant unit were supposedly hunting down Jews However I checked the source and there is nothing about Naliboki village on page 280.There is mention about Jewish partisants raids in Naliboki Forest on page 283 and their attacks against local population which authors show as example of change from victim to perpetrator role.Naliboki village and Naliboki forest are two different locations. If we are dealing here with falsifying sources than perhaps this can be looked as well by admins. To make it easier, I even uploaded a screenshot from the source in question showing that there is nothing about Naliboki village on page 280.If admins believe this is not the place for this, that is ok with me, I can ask about this in other thread as there is additional information I would like to point out. --MyMoloboaccount (talk) 20:36, 24 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by PiotrusI agree with SMcCandlish, it's ridiculous to declare someone an anti-Semite and block them for that (and that isn't even what Icehwiz is claiming). The RR violation is dubious (editing in progress) and I don't see what is really actionable here outside RR, rulings in interpretation of sources are for ArbCom, not a random AE admin. That said, 'both sides' seem to have a lot of problem with interpreting the sources (see MyMolobo's comment on Inewhiz). This entire topic is overdue for a proper ArbCom review, and this AE should not end with penalizing any editor, but refer this entire mess to the ArbCom. Polish-Jewish topics have become unstable in the last half a year, as several relatively new editors turned them into a battleground, as I am sure regulars here have noticed (since there were several mostly non-actionable but illustrative reports here). This needs to stop. PS. I've finally gotten around to reviewing Talk:Stawiski. This is a very short talk page, and it makes it clear that GCB was in the process of rewriting this, explained this to I., and asked for few hours to be allowed to finish this. Instead, he reported her here. If there is something concerning here, it is the WP:BATTLEGROUND attitude from the reporter, IMHO, who instead of AGF waiting few hours, tries to win content disputes over here. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 05:03, 25 June 2018 (UTC)
PS. I think we are arriving at the stable version of the Stawiski. I stand by my initial assessment that this entire AE thread is unnecessary (the article was going through a perfectly normal WP:BRD process), but it showcases serious WP:BATTLEGROUND issues present and merits IMHO a deeper ArbCom review of more then a single editor. --Piotr Konieczny aka Prokonsul Piotrus| reply here 09:00, 25 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by François RobereThe change in question does two thing: 1) accuses Jews of killing Poles, and 2) shifts the blame for killing Jews from Poles to Germans. The first cites the references cited by a journal article re-posted in a blog. Did anyone actually read the sources? The second tries to excuse the Poles: "Some Poles... were led to acts of revenge-killing in German presence." What's "led to act"? What are they, sheep? Other sources supporting Icewhiz's revision: Kossak, Zofia (May 1942). "Proroctwa sie wypelniaja". Prawda. No. 5.:
Bender, Sara (2015). "Not Only in Jedwabne: Accounts of the Annihilation of the Jewish Shtetlach in North-eastern Poland in the Summer of 1941". Holocaust Studies. 19 (1): 1–38. doi:10.1080/17504902.2013.11087369. Retrieved 2018-06-25.:
This is what GizzyCatBella is trying to sanitize, and not for the first time. She's made numerous biased or misleading edits and comments (also notice edit summary) (as an IP) . We've already had source restrictions placed on one article , but obviously that's not enough; either the user is banned, or the entire topic area is placed under new restrictions. And one more thing: Volunteer Marek, who commented above in his particular style - spiteful and condemning (edit summary) (last comment) - has been warned against doing so repeatedly . Another editor was already banned from the topic for WP:BATTLEGROUND ; I urge the admins to consider the same here. François Robere (talk) 17:54, 25 June 2018 (UTC) Statement by (username)Result concerning GizzyCatBella
All right. My first instinct was to decline action as a content dispute. But some of these edits by GizzyCatBella appear, at first glance, very dubious. In , GizzyCatBella removes an apparently reliably sourced mention of an anti-Jewish pogrom in WWII Poland. Instead, GizzyCatBella ascribes a 1939 deportation of "ethnic Polish families" to "Jewish communists" and "Jewish militia". I'm by no means knowledgeable about the history of this place and period, but this strikes me as very surprising to say the least, and would need very good sourcing. Instead, Icewhiz appears to be correct that Rossino, the source cited by GizzyCatBella (however reliable it may be - a web archive of a blog copy of a copyvio?) does not appear to mention anything of the sort. On the basis of this first assessment, I suspect that GizzyCatBella is using Misplaced Pages to for anti-semitic propaganda by misrepresenting sources; all in violation of any number of policies. Unless GizzyCatBella has a really good explanation for this, I can't see any other outcome but a long block and a topic ban. Sandstein 13:27, 24 June 2018 (UTC)
|
Rusf10
This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.
Requests may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs (not counting required information), except by permission of a reviewing administrator.
Request concerning Rusf10
- User who is submitting this request for enforcement
- Volunteer Marek (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log) 07:40, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- User against whom enforcement is requested
- Rusf10 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
Search CT alerts: in user talk history • in system log
- Sanction or remedy to be enforced
- Misplaced Pages:Arbitration/Requests/Case/American politics 2#Discretionary sanctions (1932 cutoff): Also BLP
- Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
1.June 26 Asserts, without evidence, that a living person (David Cutler) " hates Donald Trump". Also asserts that the subject (Cutler) is "fringe theorist" because "he's a professor, he's liberal, he's worked in Democratic administration". Apparently being a liberal academic automatically makes you "fringe".
- The same comment (as well as some others, see below), also makes some concerning assertions concerning reliable sources:
- "That's another fallacy, because something is published in a medical journal, it must be creditable."
- "But because this guy is an academic (over 90% of which happen to be liberal), we're supposed to believe that is of high integrity and wouldn't just write a political piece"
- " I wouldn't trust anything this guy says." - apparently because SOME OTHER academic did something at sometime (it's not exactly clear)
- Generally Misplaced Pages considers academic, scholarly sources to be top-quality sources, better than newspaper articles, magazines, etc. Taken together with other comments, it's pretty clear that Rusf10 has the polar opposite view - according to him academic sources are the least ones we should trust. This is an explicit admission that the user is not willing to follow our policy on reliable sources when it comes to articles concerning American politics.
2.June 25 "Drmies, is under the false impression that everything published in an academic journal must be true which is really no more intelligent than saying "I read it on the internet, it must be true"" - appears to say that stuff published in academic journal is no better than "stuff found on the internet". Again, a pretty fundamental opposition to our policy on reliable sources.
3.June 26 " You don't have any intent to follow WP:NPOV, since its clear that you here to push a certain viewpoint, so don't lecture me on policies." - Attacks other editors and ascribes motivations to them rather than discussing content.
4.June 26 Doubles down on the "hates Trump" BLP violating claim because... he looked at the guys twitter which apparently has some criticism of Trump's policies. It should be obvious that being critical of some Trump policy is not the same thing as "hating" Trump.
More minor (at least IMO) but still problematic
- June 25 "Daivd (sic) Cutler worked in both the Clinton and Obama administrations, so don't try to act like be is some highly-respected non-partisan scholar" - this is also border line BLP vio (Cutler is actually very very highly respected)
- June 24 "You clearly don't like Trump and that's fine, but it doesn't mean you get to trash his article" - Unnecessarily ascribes motivations and beliefs to other editors
- June 24 WP:NOTAFORUM violation
- Diffs of previous relevant sanctions, if any
N/A
Note: @Fish and karate: despite what User:Lionelt insinuates, I don't have a topic ban on Donald Trump. User:JFG is also incorrect that I am "restricted" from that article. The only thing here is that I told NeilN, after he asked, that I'd leave the article alone for a few days. Also I have not cast WP:ASPERSIONS against anyone. I presented diffs in an appropriate forum. If you don't find these convincing, that's fine. But it's not aspersions, it's dispute resolution. You should also look at the diffs provided by User:MrX below.
- If discretionary sanctions are requested, supply evidence that the user is aware of them (see WP:AC/DS#Awareness and alerts)
For BLP
For post 1932 American politics
- Additional comments by editor filing complaint
Here is the broader discussion. Rusf10 appears to have a... strange, idea of how academia and academic publishing works. He also appears to be reflexively distrustful of academic and scholarly sources. Several users, including User:Drmies and User:Neutrality have tried reasoning with him and explaining to him how it works, but it fells on a bit of deaf ears.
- Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested
Discussion concerning Rusf10
Statements must be made in separate sections. They may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator.
Administrators may remove or shorten noncompliant statements. Disruptive contributions may result in blocks.
Statement by Rusf10
This is a waste of everyone's time and should boomerang on Volunteer Marek just for bringing this here. Is he really trying to take me to AE because I said a professor "hates Trump"? Regardless of whether or not he truly hates him, its 100% he doesn't like him, so this request is really petty. What Volunteer Marek doesn't want you know is that I'm criticizing an opinion piece being used as a reliable source. I never said everything published in an academic journal is not reliable, but an opinion piece that has not been peer-reviewed with a disclaimer is probably not reliable. Any claim that 80,000 people are going to die should obviously be viewed with skepticism. And this edit came right after VM said "And again, your comment basically indicates that you have no intent of following Misplaced Pages's policy on reliable sources (you dismiss academic and scholarly sources out of hand)." , so how is what I said any worse? The reset of the diffs VM provided are even more petty, so I'm not even going to respond to them. One thing is clear, VM doesn't like his views challenged.--Rusf10 (talk) 08:46, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Volunteer Marek:
I presented diffs in an appropriate forum. If you don't find these convincing, that's fine. But it's not aspersions, it's dispute resolution.
That's a dishonest statement. This forum is not for dispute resolution, its for bringing sanctions. And you know that too because you been here many times before. If there wasn't a reason for a WP:BOOMERANG before, now there is.You should also look at the diffs provided by User:MrX below.
Those are even worse than the one's you provided and several are taken out of context.--Rusf10 (talk) 17:42, 26 June 2018 (UTC) - @Drmies:I thought you'd sit this one out, but since you're here, let me point out that your behavior here is troubling as well, especially for an admin. to start you just accused me of having a " complete lack of knowledge of how science, publishing, and peer review works" and being a "nihilist."
- Threatening me "OK, so here we have another editor referring to an article in JAMA as "piece of garbage". You have disqualified yourself for this discussion, and from any future RS discussion you partake in."
- Personal attack on another editor (not me) "First stop gaslighting with your "don't like someone's expressed opinion". "It seems that you are expressing an opinion"--yes, I am, but it has nothing to do with politics. My opinion is that you are not capable of judging what is and what isn't a reliable source, given your comments here. "
- " I know Trumpers don't like science"
- "That the right would go post-truth, who could have thunk that two decades ago. "
@NeilN: In that diff, I was trying to make the point that an opinion piece published anywhere (including a medical journal) is still an opinion piece. Perhaps I could have said it differently, but this came after Drmies attacked me. Here is his comment which I was referring to . Being that he is an admin, I took that to be a threat. And now he has come here and piled on even more personal attacks. Look at the diffs I posted, Drmies behavior is clearly unacceptable for an admin.--Rusf10 (talk) 02:22, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by Lionelt
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't Volunteer Marek banned from the Trump article? – Lionel 08:49, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by JFG
Content dispute, RfC in progress, nothing to see here. — JFG 09:55, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
@Lionelt: VM is only restricted from editing the Donald Trump article. This thread is about Presidency of Donald Trump. — JFG 09:55, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by SPECIFICO
As documented in the diffs VM provided, Rusf10 has openly explicitly and repeatedly denied core WP sourcing policies and gratuitously defamed living persons whose professional work was under discussion on the article talk page. This user has failed to respond to the pleadings of numerous editors who have explained this problem and why such behavior is unacceptable. This editor has already drained way too much time and attention, and despite all these good faith attempts to redirect Rusf10's behavior, he has chosen to continue and to escalate his rhetoric. This user has rejected core WP policies and Guidelines and should be TBANed from BLP and American Politics articles. SPECIFICO talk 12:32, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
Rusf10's insipid rebuke of Drmies is all the confirmation we need to know that he is unwilling to abide by WP norms in these articles. SPECIFICO talk 18:51, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by MrX
As evidenced by Volunteer Marek, Rusf10 is exhibiting consensus-inhibiting behaviors described in WP:GAMING, WP:NPA, and WP:BLP. Specifically, personal attacks, filibustering, ad hominems about academic sources and similar disparagement of living people, assumptions of bad faith.
- Examples
- Falsely claims that Al Gore predicted that the world would end in 2016 - False claim about a living person
- "... its clear that you here to push a certain viewpoint, so don't lecture me on policies." - Assumption of bad faith
- "This is being pushed into the article because it fits into the narrative that Donald Trump is evil." - Assumption of bad faith and politicizing disputes
- "Sorry, I have to correct you, but one of the authors of this piece of garbage was a woman" - Incendiary rhetoric
- "(any more stupid questions?)" - Assumption of bad faith
- "And I now know that David Cutler worked in the Clinton and Obama administrations, so he clearly has a bias." - Ad hominem
A few of such comments could be dismissed as roughhousing, but the intensity and frequency have become disruptive. In fairness, I will say that Rusf10 has made a number of constructive comments at other article talk pages.
Also, there is no basis whatsoever for sanctioning Volunteer Marek.- MrX 🖋 15:17, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- Pardon me Fish and karate, but did you really just call my above examples "misrepresenting others contributions out of context" and "shockingly poor form", and suggest that I be warned for it? I'm not even sure how to react to that, but "shocking" is an adjective I might use. Please explain how any the above six diffs misrepresent what Rusf10 wrote.(Note: This is not a rhetorical request; I would like for you actually do it, as required by policy). Please also clarify, for future reference, what the expectations are for quoting a user's comments as evidence at AE. The widespread practice that I've observed is to quote the offending sentence or phrase, and link with a diff to the full comments (which, by the way, also shows the full context). In fact, there is a 500 word limit at AE, so how exactly would that work? Should entire conversations be copy pasted here? I can do that now if that would help you to gain clarity about where sanctions should be applied. Please advise. - MrX 🖋 11:54, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by Drmies
I'm just baffled by some editors' opinions which betray a complete lack of knowledge of how science, publishing, and peer review works. That someone could think that an opinion piece in JAMA wouldn't be vetted is amazing to me, and that this would be equivalent to "something on the internet" is ... well. So in that sense, given that kind of lack of understanding, it may well be a good idea to ban them from sensitive areas. I just looked at all the opposes in the discussion, and one or two make the argument that it's UNDUE right now (User:Markbassett argued along those lines)--that's valid. What is different for this editor is not just the empty argument (they're not the only one) but also sort of nihilism which in the end undercuts RS, for starters. Drmies (talk) 16:35, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
Statement by (username)
Result concerning Rusf10
- This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the sections above.
- Definitely no action to take here, this is a nonsense. I'm inclined to wonder whether VM's Donald Trump topic ban needs to be broadened a little bit to cover closely-related articles. I would note he has an arbitration sanction which states he is "strongly warned against casting general aspersions against editors who as "pro-Trump"." Fish+Karate 11:18, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- I would note that MrX's suggesting this (read it in context with the post to which it's replying) is "incendiary rhetoric" is very, very unfair. @Vanamonde93: My thoughts are that this is a quibble over whether or not a source is reliable or not between two very stubborn people who have opposing views on the matter. What it is not is something that should result in a sanction. I can see Rusf10's point, in that the source in question, although it has been published in a journal, is an opinion piece on an environmental issue written by two social scientists which was not peer-reviewed (as per this) so what it contains ought not to be taken as a 100% stone cold fact and ought not to be granted the same level of credibility as a proper, peer-reviewed, scientific study. So I do think in this instance Rusf10 was not acting from an incorrect starting point. I can see Volunteer Marek's point, in that the approach Rusf10 is taking is rather bulldozery and argumentative. I would love for them both to be able to work out the issue and then leave each other alone. Misplaced Pages has tens of thousands of editors and you don't need to fight every battle. And more to the point, you don't need to see them as battles in the first place. Fish+Karate 08:38, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Fish and karate: I'm actually not so bothered by the "not everything in journals is reliable" diff. Questioning a source based on the quality of the publication is necessary. Questioning a source based on partisanship isn't, because WP:NPOV and WP:RS make no allowance for supposed partisanship. I am more bothered by stuff like this, together with persistent assumptions of bad faith. That said, I'm not in favor of sanctions either. I would suggest a warning, which I'll try to put together below. Vanamonde (talk) 09:08, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Vanamonde93: I think a warning (possibly to both parties) around combative attitudes is reasonable. Fish+Karate 09:15, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @NeilN: I would agree with most of what Rusf10 said in that diff. It's not right to assume everything published in every journal is the gospel truth, particularly if the work in question is explicitly described as an opinion piece. I wouldn't agree with his first sentence, but I can see what he's trying to say overall, albeit not particularly collegiately. Fish+Karate 08:42, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Fish and karate: I'm actually not so bothered by the "not everything in journals is reliable" diff. Questioning a source based on the quality of the publication is necessary. Questioning a source based on partisanship isn't, because WP:NPOV and WP:RS make no allowance for supposed partisanship. I am more bothered by stuff like this, together with persistent assumptions of bad faith. That said, I'm not in favor of sanctions either. I would suggest a warning, which I'll try to put together below. Vanamonde (talk) 09:08, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I would note that MrX's suggesting this (read it in context with the post to which it's replying) is "incendiary rhetoric" is very, very unfair. @Vanamonde93: My thoughts are that this is a quibble over whether or not a source is reliable or not between two very stubborn people who have opposing views on the matter. What it is not is something that should result in a sanction. I can see Rusf10's point, in that the source in question, although it has been published in a journal, is an opinion piece on an environmental issue written by two social scientists which was not peer-reviewed (as per this) so what it contains ought not to be taken as a 100% stone cold fact and ought not to be granted the same level of credibility as a proper, peer-reviewed, scientific study. So I do think in this instance Rusf10 was not acting from an incorrect starting point. I can see Volunteer Marek's point, in that the approach Rusf10 is taking is rather bulldozery and argumentative. I would love for them both to be able to work out the issue and then leave each other alone. Misplaced Pages has tens of thousands of editors and you don't need to fight every battle. And more to the point, you don't need to see them as battles in the first place. Fish+Karate 08:38, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I would caution Rusf10 against expressing his personal views about the work of living people so forcefully (diff 1) and to take care when summarizing other editors' views (diff 2). Diff 2 is particularly concerning because if Rusf10 feels that's an accurate view of Drmies' position then I have to question if they are able to participate productively in this area which often requires the careful reading and summarizing of source material. No action against VM. --NeilN 14:43, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- Rusf10, do you have any comment on this diff? --NeilN 01:26, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Too many cases have passed by AE /ArbCom where editors have expressed negative opinions of BLPs but these simply go as non-actions within these , as 1) its a problem through WP, there's no reason to single out any one person unless we're going to go full bore across all editors, which would hit a lot of established editors, and 2) most of the time, it's clear these are opinions and not factual claims, to any casual reader. I agree that all editors should be asked to tone down any personal feelings they have towards BLPs as per NeilN above, and to try to argue for inclusion or omission of BLP material without getting into their personal opinions of said BLP. It helps to avoid the BLP line and can reduce the battleground mentality editors seem to have in these areas. --Masem (t) 15:42, 26 June 2018 (UTC)
- While Rusf10's commentary on talk pages is far from ideal (stuff like this being a case in point), I don't see a need to sanction them from a BLP perspective, though I would agree with NeilN that a caution is in order. I am far more concerned at their misunderstanding of NPOV. They seem to be under the impression that neutrality has something to do with finding an arbitrary midpoint between two arbitrarily divided political positions in one country; which has nothing to do with how Misplaced Pages defines neutrality. We define NPOV in terms of significant viewpoints in reliable secondary sources. Now Rusf10 is welcome to disagree with that definition, but they are still required to edit within it, and their commentary about academic publishing suggests that they may not be able to do so. This problem goes deep, and is not something that can be sorted out by a block or a restricted topic-ban; and I'm not keen on imposing a sweeping t-ban right off the bat. So, I would support a strongly worded warning, with the expectation that further evidence of misunderstanding NPOV and our concept of reliable sources may result in a wide topic-ban. There's also the issue of their continued assumptions of bad faith. Since this request has been open for a while: @Fish and karate, NeilN, and Masem: what are your thoughts? Vanamonde (talk) 05:10, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Without opening up that discussion here, that stance on NPOV is very much debatable and has been at the center of many many disputes for at least 4+ years, and remains an issue (see , for example, this recent VPP discussion. So no, we cannot fault them on how they view NPOV; where we can find fault if there is any here is in aspects of related to WP:TE or WP:IDHT behavior if the talk page consensus has come down one way or another that we can talk some type of action against. --Masem (t) 05:26, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Masem: Feel free to ignore my definition of what NPOV is not; but my statement of what it is is from the policy, nearly word for word, and if we're unwilling to enforce that we have a problem. Vanamonde (talk) 05:41, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Let me restart: while that is what NPOV says, that wording is a point of contention for 4+ years, moreso in the last two (that link one example of considering what's wrong with NPOV that could be addressed) Rusf10's free to question the particular application of NPOV in a contentious area (keeping in mind that even policies are not absolute), but has to avoid the TE/IDHT in the same discussions if a consensus had previously been reached about how NPOV applies. --Masem (t) 05:58, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Masem: Feel free to ignore my definition of what NPOV is not; but my statement of what it is is from the policy, nearly word for word, and if we're unwilling to enforce that we have a problem. Vanamonde (talk) 05:41, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Without opening up that discussion here, that stance on NPOV is very much debatable and has been at the center of many many disputes for at least 4+ years, and remains an issue (see , for example, this recent VPP discussion. So no, we cannot fault them on how they view NPOV; where we can find fault if there is any here is in aspects of related to WP:TE or WP:IDHT behavior if the talk page consensus has come down one way or another that we can talk some type of action against. --Masem (t) 05:26, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Sorry, Masem, while I might agree with you that the wording of NPOV has been contentious and that Rusf10 is free to question it, they should not be free to question it in particular applications of the policy. Just for our own sanity, we can't have editors relitigating the meaning of the policy every time there is an RfC on the use of a particular source and to do so is nakedly disruptive. If Rusf10 wants to change the policy, then there are venues available to try to do so and they should use them. So, to the degree that this is a dispute about the meaning of NPOV, Rusf10 should have the policy explained to them and be warned that fighting over the text of policy on article talk pages is disruptive and could lead to sanctions.For the rest of it, I read through the discussion a few days ago (a little after this complaint was filed) and haven't looked at it since; it struck me then as a simple dispute over whether a source should be regarded as a reliable. If that is still in dispute, it is a straightforward matter for RSN to decide. I don't see the BLP portion of this complaint as actionable; that same statement has me far more worried that Rusf10 is treating the dispute as a battleground - David Cutler "fits all the requirements," by which I think he means all the requirements for certain editors to want the material included. I'm not in favour of sanctions yet, but if Rusf10 continues down this path they will come. GoldenRing (talk) 07:21, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Precisely. You don't have to agree with the policy (I dislike parts of it myself), but if you want to change it, VPP is thataway. In all specific cases, you've to follow it as written. Vanamonde (talk) 07:56, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Fish and karate, Masem, GoldenRing, and NeilN: Apologies for the many pings What do you think of the following: "Rusf10 is warned not to assume bad faith in other editors and not to treat Misplaced Pages as a battleground, and is reminded that disagreements with policy should be brought to the community rather than litigated on article talk pages." Vanamonde (talk) 09:47, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I'm ok with that in and of itself but would change "warned" to "reminded" (let's not assume bad faith ourselves). It is missing any reference to the other party, though, who should be trouted for bringing this bunkum to ARE in the first place, and I'd be inclined to warn MrX about misrepresenting others contributions out of context, which is shockingly poor form. Fish+Karate 10:02, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- @Fish and karate: I'm unimpressed with Marek's language (as I've frequently told him) but I was involved in a content dispute with him over the 1973 Chilean coup some three years ago, and though it makes not the slightest difference to my judgement here I will stick to the letter of the law and not comment on sanctions with respect to him. I haven't reviewed Mr. X's conduct in detail yet, but I will do so, and if you wish to propose something in the meantime please go ahead. Vanamonde (talk) 10:07, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- Fine with the strongly worded warning to Rusf10, but I do think a caution to all editors involved to turn down the battleground mentality is needed. As I mentioned above, this seems to single out one bad actor among several simply because they have a certain ideological stance compared to the others. --Masem (t) 13:31, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I am almost prepared to give Rusf10 a topic ban here over their JAMA comments. If you are calling something published in a very solid source (as determined by other Misplaced Pages editors - not me) "garbage" you'd better have other solid sources that detail why that piece is garbage, and not just your own personal opinion. That is blatant POV editing. I agree with Vanamonde93 and GoldenRing in saying that admins uphold written policy as it stands. I disagree with Fish and karate that VM deserves any warning. --NeilN 13:36, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I'm ok with that in and of itself but would change "warned" to "reminded" (let's not assume bad faith ourselves). It is missing any reference to the other party, though, who should be trouted for bringing this bunkum to ARE in the first place, and I'd be inclined to warn MrX about misrepresenting others contributions out of context, which is shockingly poor form. Fish+Karate 10:02, 29 June 2018 (UTC)
- I'm with NeilN; the JAMA comments by Rusf are substandard enough that I'd consider sanctions on those grounds. This diff alone encapsulates an impressive volume of fallacies and misunderstandings of policy, aggravated by the aggressive ignorance he's displayed in the thread in question. Just in that one diff:
- "Drmies, is under the false impression that everything published in an academic journal must be true..."... Drmies neither said nor implied any such thing; this is a bad-faith misrepresentation of an opponent's position.
- "... which is really no more intelligent than saying "I read it on the internet, it must be true". Advocating for JAMA as a reliable source (which it is) is quite different from claiming anything on the Internet must be true. This is, again, a bad-faith misrepresentation. It also indicates a deep misunderstanding of policy; one fundamental determinant of reliability is the venue in which a claim is published. Rusf chooses to ignore this, and to pretend that it makes no difference with regard to reliability whether a source is published in JAMA or on a random website.
- "BTW, I forgot to mention that I believe the guy who wrote this is an economist, not a environmental scientist, which gives him even less creditably" . The piece in question was written by two people, not one "guy". One of the two authors is a statistician who specializes in climate change and health policy. It's somewhat ignorant to suggest that an economist is unsuited to comment on the impact of policy changes on measurable outcomes (that is, after all, one key aspect of economics), but it's worse to misrepresent the article's authorship in an attempt to undermine it.
- More generally, Rusf's tone in this entire thread is aggressively partisan and displays either ignorance of, or contempt for, basic site policy on sourcing. I don't doubt that there are other offenders in the topic area, and identifying and handling Rusf's editing doesn't give them a pass. But this is obviously someone whose input in the topic area is a massive net-negative in terms of both tone and content, and this is exactly the sort of behavior that we need less of. Discretionary sanctions exist to deal with this kind of thing. Like NeilN, I would favor a topic ban, although I recognize that I'm in the minority. At a minimum, it should be made clear to Rusf that his behavior isn't appropriate and that, if it continues, a topic ban will result. MastCell 15:11, 29 June 2018 (UTC)