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    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:

    • request administrative action against editors violating a remedy (not merely a principle) or an injunction in an Arbitration Committee decision, or a contentious topic restriction imposed by an administrator,
    • request contentious topic restrictions against previously alerted editors who engage in misconduct in a topic area designated as a contentious topic,
    • request page restrictions (e.g. revert restrictions) on pages that are being disrupted in topic areas designated as contentious topics, or
    • appeal arbitration enforcement actions (including contentious topic restrictions) to uninvolved administrators.

    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}}.

    Appeals and administrator modifications of contentious topics restrictions

    The Arbitration Committee procedures relating to modifications of contentious topic restrictions state the following:

    All contentious topic restrictions (and logged warnings) may be appealed. Only the restricted editor may appeal an editor restriction. Any editor may appeal a page restriction.

    The appeal process has three possible stages. An editor appealing a restriction may:

    1. ask the administrator who first made the contentious topic restrictions (the "enforcing administrator") to reconsider their original decision;
    2. request review at the arbitration enforcement noticeboard ("AE") or at the administrators' noticeboard ("AN"); and
    3. submit a request for amendment ("ARCA"). If the editor is blocked, the appeal may be made by email.

    Appeals submitted at AE or AN must be submitted using the applicable template.

    A rough consensus of administrators at AE or editors at AN may specify a period of up to one year during which no appeals (other than an appeal to ARCA) may be submitted.

    Changing or revoking a contentious topic restriction

    An administrator may only modify or revoke a contentious topic restriction if a formal appeal is successful or if one of the following exceptions applies:

    • The administrator who originally imposed the contentious topic restriction (the "enforcing administrator") affirmatively consents to the change, or is no longer an administrator; or
    • The contentious topic restriction was imposed (or last renewed) more than a year ago and:
      • the restriction was imposed by a single administrator, or
      • the restriction was an indefinite block.

    A formal appeal is successful only if one of the following agrees with revoking or changing the contentious topic restriction:

    • a clear consensus of uninvolved administrators at AE,
    • a clear consensus of uninvolved editors at AN,
    • a majority of the Arbitration Committee, acting through a motion at ARCA.

    Any administrator who revokes or changes a contentious topic restriction out of process (i.e. without the above conditions being met) may, at the discretion of the Arbitration Committee, be desysopped.

    Standard of review
    On community review

    Uninvolved administrators at the arbitration enforcement noticeboard ("AE") and uninvolved editors at the administrators' noticeboard ("AN") should revoke or modify a contentious topic restriction on appeal if:

    1. the action was inconsistent with the contentious topics procedure or applicable policy (i.e. the action was out of process),
    2. the action was not reasonably necessary to prevent damage or disruption when first imposed, or
    3. the action is no longer reasonably necessary to prevent damage or disruption.
    On Arbitration Committee review

    Arbitrators hearing an appeal at a request for amendment ("ARCA") will generally overturn a contentious topic restriction only if:

    1. the action was inconsistent with the contentious topics procedure or applicable policy (i.e. the action was out of process),
    2. the action represents an unreasonable exercise of administrative enforcement discretion, or
    3. compelling circumstances warrant the full Committee's action.
    1. The administrator may indicate consent at any time before, during, or after imposition of the restriction.
    2. This criterion does not apply if the original action was imposed as a result of rough consensus at the arbitration enforcement noticeboard, as there would be no single enforcing administrator.
    Appeals and administrator modifications of non-contentious topics sanctions

    The Arbitration Committee procedures relating to modifications and appeals state:

    Appeals by sanctioned editors

    Appeals may be made only by the editor under sanction and only for a currently active sanction. Requests for modification of page restrictions may be made by any editor. The process has three possible stages (see "Important notes" below). The editor may:

    1. ask the enforcing administrator to reconsider their original decision;
    2. request review at the arbitration enforcement noticeboard ("AE") or at the administrators’ noticeboard ("AN"); and
    3. submit a request for amendment at the amendment requests page ("ARCA"). If the editor is blocked, the appeal may be made by email through Special:EmailUser/Arbitration Committee (or, if email access is revoked, to arbcom-en@wikimedia.org).
    Modifications by administrators

    No administrator may modify or remove a sanction placed by another administrator without:

    1. the explicit prior affirmative consent of the enforcing administrator; or
    2. prior affirmative agreement for the modification at (a) AE or (b) AN or (c) ARCA (see "Important notes" below).

    Administrators modifying sanctions out of process may at the discretion of the committee be desysopped.

    Nothing in this section prevents an administrator from replacing an existing sanction issued by another administrator with a new sanction if fresh misconduct has taken place after the existing sanction was applied.

    Administrators are free to modify sanctions placed by former administrators – that is, editors who do not have the administrator permission enabled (due to a temporary or permanent relinquishment or desysop) – without regard to the requirements of this section. If an administrator modifies a sanction placed by a former administrator, the administrator who made the modification becomes the "enforcing administrator". If a former administrator regains the tools, the provisions of this section again apply to their unmodified enforcement actions.

    Important notes:

    1. For a request to succeed, either
    (i) the clear and substantial consensus of (a) uninvolved administrators at AE or (b) uninvolved editors at AN or
    (ii) a passing motion of arbitrators at ARCA
    is required. If consensus at AE or AN is unclear, the status quo prevails.
    1. While asking the enforcing administrator and seeking reviews at AN or AE are not mandatory prior to seeking a decision from the committee, once the committee has reviewed a request, further substantive review at any forum is barred. The sole exception is editors under an active sanction who may still request an easing or removal of the sanction on the grounds that said sanction is no longer needed, but such requests may only be made once every six months, or whatever longer period the committee may specify.
    2. These provisions apply only to contentious topic restrictions placed by administrators and to blocks placed by administrators to enforce arbitration case decisions. They do not apply to sanctions directly authorized by the committee, and enacted either by arbitrators or by arbitration clerks, or to special functionary blocks of whatever nature.
    3. All actions designated as arbitration enforcement actions, including those alleged to be out of process or against existing policy, must first be appealed following arbitration enforcement procedures to establish if such enforcement is inappropriate before the action may be reversed or formally discussed at another venue.
    Information for administrators processing requests

    Thank you for participating in this area. AE works best if there are a variety of admins bringing their expertise to each case. There is no expectation to comment on every case, and the Arbitration Committee (ArbCom) thanks all admins for whatever time they can give.

    A couple of reminders:

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    • When a request widens to include editors beyond the initial request, these editors must be notified and the notifications recorded in the same way as for the initial editor against whom sanctions were requested. Where some part of the outcome is clear, a partial close may be implemented and noted as "Result concerning X".
    • Enforcement measures in arbitration cases should be construed liberally to protect Misplaced Pages and keep it running efficiently. Some of the behaviour described in an enforcement request might not be restricted by ArbCom. However, it may violate other Misplaced Pages policies and guidelines; you may use administrative discretion to resolve it.
    • More than one side in a dispute may have ArbCom conduct rulings applicable to them. Please ensure these are investigated.

    Closing a thread:

    • Once an issue is resolved, enclose it between {{hat}} and {{hab}} tags. A bot should archive it in 7 days.
    • Please consider referring the case to ARCA if the outcome is a recommendation to do so or the issue regards administrator conduct.
    • You can use the templates {{uw-aeblock}} (for blocks) or {{AE sanction}} (for other contentious topic restrictions) to give notice of sanctions on user talk pages.
    • Please log sanctions in the Arbitration enforcement log.

    Thanks again for helping. If you have any questions, please post on the talk page.

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    Nagorno-Karabakh article

    Request concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh article

    Relevant article
    Nagorno-Karabakh (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    Misplaced Pages:ARBAA2#Standard discretionary sanctions
    Notes

    Misplaced Pages:Sockpuppet investigations/Xebulon/Archive#08 February 2012 has a fuller description of the issue, courtesy of Golbez (talk · contribs). See also #Nagorno-Karabakh, above. Opening a formal report to allow for fuller discussion as to potential sanctions to address this situation. T. Canens (talk) 10:48, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    Notification

    Discussion concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh article

    I have two objections against this idea, and one proposal.

    1. The text of standard discretionary sanctions says
      (i) that the subjects of discretionary sanctions are some particular users, not articles;
      (ii) that the sanctions are applied after the user has been properly warned.
      In connection to that, the very idea to impose editing restrictions on some article as whole is not in accordance with the discretionary sanctions concept, because
      (i) that means that all users (not only those who edit war in this area) appear to be sanctioned, and
      (ii) the Sandstein's sanctions had been applied without proper warning. For example, if we look at the Mass killings under Communist regimes and at the WP:DIGWUREN, we see that I had never been formally warned (I have never been mentioned on the WP:DIGWUREN page). Nevertheless, my editorial privileges (as well as the privileges of overwhelming majority of the Wikipedians) appear to be restricted. That restriction of my editing privileges is almost tantamount to topic ban and I do not understand why have I been placed under such topic ban. Similarly, although I have no interest in the Karabakh area, however, I cannot rule out a possibility that I may decide to edit some Karabakh related area in future. In connection to that, I do not understand why should my editing privileges to be restricted in advance, despite the fact that I committed no violations of WP policy.
    2. Whereas the Sandstein's sanctions made the admin's life dramatically easier, the result is by no means satisfactory. The article appeared to be frozen in quite biased state, and tremendous work is needed to fix a situation. If we look even at the very first opening sentence, we will see that it starts with the data taken from The Black Book of Communism, arguably the most influential, and the most controversial book about the subject. Do we add credibility to Misplaced Pages by using such sources without reservations? My attempts to move this statement to the article's body and to supplement it with necessary commentaries had been successfully blocked by the users who, by contrast to myself had been already sanctioned per WP:DIGWUREN, and the only reasons they appeared to be able to do that was masterful usage of formal nuances of the Sandstein's sanctions. As a result, I (as well as other reasonable editors) decided to postpone our work on this article, because the efforts needed to implement even small improvements are not commensurate with the results obtained. As a result, we have the article, which appeared to be frozen in totally unsatisfactory states. This fact does not bother the admins, because there is no edit wars any more, but the fact that some article gives a totally biased picture (and that this situation cannot be fixed) is extremely dangerous for Misplaced Pages. Yes, there is no visible conflict, however, the most harmonious place in the world is a graveyard.

    By writing that, I do not imply that no sanctions are needed. However, these sanctions should be in accordance with the discretionary sanctions' spirit, i.e. they should be directed against the users who had already committed some violations in this area, and who had alrfeady been properly warned. In the case of WP:DIGWUREN, we already have a list of such users, so it would be quite natural to restrict only those users (more precisely, those who had been warned during last 2-3 years). For other users no restrictions should exist (although, probably, article's semi-protection to exclude IP vandalism would be useful). For Karabakh articles, I suggest to create a similar page (if no such page exists yet): starting from some date, every user committing 3RR or similar violation is added to this list, so s/he cannot make any edit to this article until the change s/he propose is supported by consensus as described by Sandstein. I fully realise that that may initially create some problem for the admins, however, that will allow us to develop Karabakh related articles, which is much more important.--Paul Siebert (talk) 16:56, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    PS. In addition to the MKuCR, we have other articles that were placed under restrictions (such as Communist terrorism, which is under 1RR). This is also not in accordance with the discretionary sanctions spirit: nowhere on that page can you find a statement that the admins are authorised to place unspecified number of users under edit restrictions without proper warning. I think by applying these sanctions the admins exceeded their authority. In my opinion, such a restriction may exist only for some concrete users, and should be implemented in a form of the list which is being permanently modofied by adding those who abuse their editing privileges, and by excluding those who committed no violations during, e.g. last 2-3 years.--Paul Siebert (talk) 17:09, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    I see you point, and understand your concerns. But the problem in this article is caused not by the established editors. Those are known very well, and more or less behave. The problem here are new and recently created accounts with very limited history of contributions, which pop up one after another just to rv or vote. Some are quacking very loudly, but nothing is done. For instance, I mentioned in the CU request the account of Spankarts (talk · contribs), which was created only to vote for deletion of an article. Do we need a CU for such accounts? As for sanctions, those affecting only the established users are not effective, because such measures benefit only those who use socks to evade restrictions. For instance, the sanctions imposed on Caucasian Albania clearly did not work. The edit warring there was waged by User:Vandorenfm and User:Gorzaim, both of whom eventually turned out to be socks of the banned User:Xebulon (btw, the edit warring on Nagorno-Karabakh was started by the same 2 accounts). At that time Sandstein imposed a sanction that read: All editors with Armenia/Azerbaijan-related sanctions are banned from editing this article and its talk page. For the purposes of this ban, these editors are all who have at any time been the subject of remedies, blocks or other sanctions logged on the case pages WP:ARBAA or WP:ARBAA2, irrespective of whether or not these sanctions are still in force or whether they were imposed by the Arbitration Committee or by administrators. But since all long time editors in AA area were at some point under some sort of sanctions, this pretty much opened the doors for sock and meatpuppetry, since new accounts were not under any prior sanctions. The result is that the article reflects the views of the sockmaster, who was free to make any edits he wished, and established editors could not remove even unreferenced OR claims. This is why the article about Caucasian Albania is in such a poor condition now. The sock account even managed to place an established user on a 1 year topic ban: Note the complaint of the sock: The immediate concern is his editing of the article on Caucasian Albania, where User:Twilight Chill continues waging an edit war against 5 (five) other unrelated editors (Aram-van, Gorzaim, Vandorenfm, MarshallBagramyan, Xebulon). 4 of 5 accounts that he mentioned turned out later to be socks (User:Aram-van, User:Gorzaim, User:Vandorenfm, and User:Xebulon). Nice, isn't it? I have a reason to believe that the sockmaster is happily editing under a new account now, and having a good laugh at arbitration enforcement. Something similar is now going on in Nagorno-Karabakh. I don't know whether they use socks or not, but clearly a lot of SPAs are being engaged. Therefore I think the solution implemented by Sandstein on Mass killings under communist regimes is much better. At least something should be done to prevent mass edit warring with the use of new accounts. Otherwise this is not going to work. Grandmaster 18:42, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    No. You simply don't understand what those sanctions mean. Such sanctions may work well only if they are directed against a limited set of users who, despite being warned, continue their disruptive activity. It is ridiculous to effectively block WP community from editing of some particular articles simply because a limited amount of users appear to be unable to collaborate.--Paul Siebert (talk) 19:52, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    But I'm not proposing to block the whole wikicommunity. I believe well established users should be allowed to edit freely any article. However the activity of new and recently created users should be limited on contentious articles. I agree with the proposal that the user should have at least 500 edits, preferably outside of AA area, to be allowed to edit an article like Nagorno-Karabakh. Otherwise you will get a bunch of SPAs which turn up only to rv or vote. Grandmaster 21:36, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    @ T. Canens. Thank you for providing a link to the Armenia-Azerbaijan 2 discussion. Unfortunately, I overlooked this discussion and was not able to present my arguments timely. Let me point out, however, that Kirill's idea that "(a) that the editnotice on the article constitutes a sufficient warning as required by ¶2" is not fully correct: ¶2 implies that a warning is issued to the editor, who "repeatedly or seriously fails to adhere to the purpose of Misplaced Pages". In other words, the full sequence of the events that lead to discretionary sanctions is:

    1. Some editor working in the area of conflict "repeatedly or seriously fails to adhere to the purpose of Misplaced Pages";
    2. A warning has been issued for him (obviously, this warning is supposed to contain a reference to some wrongdoing)
    3. If violation continues, sanctions are imposed.

    However, in a case of article wide sanctions the edit notice is being issued to everyone and in advance, so the user appears to be sanctioned simply by virtue of his interest to this topic. That is a blatant violation of our WP:AGF principle. Moreover, whereas one can speculate if 1RR itself or block for its violation is the actual sanctions, the article's full protection is already a sanction, which has been applied to whole WP community. I have a feeling that the idea of a possibility of article wide sanction should be re-considered as intrinsically flawed.--Paul Siebert (talk) 19:47, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    @ T. Canens. Re you "we have never required evidence of "repeated or serious" misconduct before a warning may be issued." Well, my # 1 was probably too strict. However, you have to agree that some misconduct is supposed to take place before the warning is issued. The discretionary sanction text says
    "Prior to any sanctions being imposed, the editor in question shall be given a warning..."
    In other words, according to this text a warning is issued to the editor, whose behaviour seems problematic. A typical example of such warning contains a reference to some concrete example of misconduct by the user in question. Alternativelly, the warning may be issued as a result of the AE request , however, I am not familiar with the case when some good faith user appears to be arbitrarily warned for no reasons. Nowhere in the sanction's text can you find allowance of a blanket warning to everyone who just happened to express interest to Eastern Europe, Karabakh or Palestina-Israel. Therefore, the edit notice is just information, not a formal warning.
    Moreover, you forgot one more important fact. Per WP:DIGWUREN, the Mass killings under Communist regimes article is fully protected, so the editorial privileges of all users appeared to be revoked before they got a chance to commit any violation. That means that sanctions have been applied even before the user got a change to read the "warning" (which, as I have demonstrated, is not a warning at all). Do you see any logic here? --Paul Siebert (talk) 17:58, 27 February 2012 (UTC)
    PS Re you "in fact, the provision does not require any misconduct before a warning". If that is the case, then that such warning simply becomes a new rule that all Wikipedians are supposed to observe, i.e. a new policy. Does that mean that we have different policies for different fields within the same Wikiproject? And if this is a local policy, then why only admins/arbitrators are allowed to participate in its creation? As far as I know, admins and ordinary users have equal rights to write and modify policy...--Paul Siebert (talk) 18:20, 27 February 2012 (UTC)

    I would like to ask admins to have a look at the most recent SPI request by an uninvolved user on one of the accounts engaged in Nagorno-Karabakh article: While there's no technical evidence to prove sockpuppetry, behavioral evidence provided by The Devil's Advocate is pretty alarming. There are user accounts that only act as revert machines. What are we supposed to do with those? The fact that 3 unrelated editors, including an admin, filed SPI requests mentioning the same accounts I believe demonstrates that there are reasons for concern. Grandmaster 16:57, 29 February 2012 (UTC)

    There is a reason for concern and that is Grandmaster/Tuscumbia/TheDevil'sAvocate own disruptive sock-machine that continues churning foul-faith SPI reports which are now disregarded and closed without much ado . See my full comments. Dehr (talk) 20:56, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
    That's quite an interesting accusation. If you check, The Devil's Advocate is registered in 2007 and has about 4000 edits, and almost none of them in AA area. I never knew this user before I encountered his name on Xebulon's SPI request. If you still believe that we are each other's socks, you are more than welcome to file an SPI request.Grandmaster 21:46, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
    That is a clear problem with User:Grandmaster. He invents policies but does not want such policies be applied to him. One can argue that The Devils Adv is part of your sock-farm but you conspired to hide him so well that SPIs would not help. So, let's then disregard SPIs and ban you both on charges, as Dehr suggested, for WP:TROLL, WP:AGF and WP:BATTLEGROUND. Winterbliss (talk) 05:09, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
    Nice. So I've been hiding him for 5 years, but we've never edited the same article, and our paths only crossed now? Compare that to all those accounts that popped up since September 2011, after the previous bunch of Xebulon socks were banned, and who all edit the same articles, and some appear only to rv or vote. I would like to ask admins here a question. Are there any reasons to consider the accounts of Oliveriki (talk · contribs) or Spankarts (talk · contribs) to be good faith accounts? I think the latter account is the most blatant one, other than deredlinking his user page, it only made 3 edits, all of which are votes for deletion of contentious articles at AFDs. If it is not an SPA, then what is it? Grandmaster 10:22, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
    Both of them seem rather blatant to me. Oliveriki's only significant contributions have just been to get involved in edit wars to support Xebulon or his socks. The January 24th revert restoring a 28k Xebulon sock edit that had been reverted months before was pretty damn disruptive.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 17:25, 2 March 2012 (UTC)

    I appreciate the comment by WGFinley, but I want to ask a question. Is it Ok to create SPAs just to rv or vote? Should the votes by such accounts count, and the rvs in highly contentious articles amidst heated disputes not considered disruptive? Everyone can ask his friends, relatives, acquaintances, etc create accounts to promote a certain position. How can disruption by SPAs be stopped? Shouldn't the activity of new accounts be restricted on contentious articles? As for SPIs, admins are involved in filing them as much as everyone else is, see for instance this: , the very first SPI was filed by the advice of the admins. And later SPIs were filed by unrelated users, some of whom do not even edit AA articles, and a wikipedia admin. That shows that there are serious reasons for concern that make all these people file the SPI requests. When one sees new accounts that pop up one after another to rv contentious articles or take part in AFDs, it makes him think that it is not just a mere coincidence. And also, filing SPIs is pretty useless nowadays. There are so many mass puppeteers (Paligun, Xebulon, Hetoum I, Ararat arev to name just a few), that figuring out who's who is almost impossible. But something needs to be done to stop disruption. Grandmaster 17:13, 2 March 2012 (UTC)

    I find certain statements by Winterbliss to be a rude violation of WP:AGF. For instance, a generalizing statement like "Azerbaijanis are not interested to develop the article Nagorno-Karabakh because academic sources are not on their side" are unacceptable. He implies that a user cannot be a good contributor to an article because of his ethnicity. And secondly, there's no consensus at talk for the edits of the banned user, who was using a number of socks to have the article his way. Please note that the edits by Bars77, Vandorenfm, and Gorzaim were made after their master (Xebulon) was banned, so the sock accounts were editing in defiance of the ban, which justifies the revert. Not a single established editor supported the edits of the banned user. Those supporting are all recently created accounts. Vandorenfm and Gorzaim were banned as socks on 15 and 18 September 2011, and here are user creation logs of all accounts currently supporting the edits of the banned user at talk of NK article:

    October 1, 2011 Dehr (talk | contribs) created a user account
    November 11, 2011 Sprutt (talk | contribs) created a user account
    November 16, 2011 Zimmarod (talk | contribs) created a user account
    November 19, 2011 Winterbliss (talk | contribs) created a user account
    January 9, 2012 Nocturnal781 (talk | contribs) created a user account

    I find it highly unusual (to say the least) that all those editors created accounts and flocked to a certain page to support edits of a certain editor, who happened to evade his ban using multiple sock accounts. Grandmaster 22:46, 4 March 2012 (UTC)

    First, it is clear from the context that I never meant to generalize about ethnic Azerbaijanis but meant instead users who declared themselves to be from Azerbaijan on their talk pages and who participate(d) in tendentious editing in the AA2 area. I should have been more clear on that though. Secondly, Grandmaster's position that above mentioned accounts are socks has been argued out WP:Ad nauseam by repeating the same points over and over again, a method of filibustering a consensus on talk pages and applying psychological pressure on administrators in this talk. That is a rude violation of WP:AGF. You have been warned and are way over your head on that already. You created this discussion in bad faith and it should be closed immediately. Furthermore, I believe that some previous accounts were blocked as sockpuppets under similar pressure/brainwashing as per WP:SOAP. This tactic might have numbed the judgement of admins so that they developed prejudicial position visavis the victims of bad-faith SPIs filed by you, User:Tuscumbia and other users banned in RusWiki as meat-machine. User:Gorzaim and Vandorenfm might have been targets of such pressure tactics and could have been blocked unfairly. You placed a sock tag on User:Gorzaim in violation of the fact that User:Gorzaim was NOT a confirmed sock of User:Xebulon. Please be aware of WP:TROLL, WP:AGF, WP:BATTLEGROUND, WP:SOAP and WP:NPA as per where it is said: a personal attack are accusations about personal behavior that lack evidence. Grandmaster should also understand that he is engaged in a campaign to drive away productive contributors as per , a disruptive tactic described in Misplaced Pages:Disruptive editing. Winterbliss (talk) 04:50, 5 March 2012 (UTC)
    First off, I did not accuse the above accounts of sockery, I just drew attention to their user creation logs, which strangely coincide with the period following the ban of 2 sock accounts, Gorzaim and Vandorenfm. And I find your arguments in defense of the socks of the banned user to be unconvincing. You repeatedly said that Gorzaim and Vandorenfm became innocent victims of misjudgment and prejudice by the admins. But if one looks at the SPI requests that resulted in their ban, the CU showed that Vandorenfm was the same as Bars77: , and Bars77 was a CU confirmed sock of Xebulon: Can you see any prejudice here? As for Gorzaim, the result of CU on him was " Likely. He edits from different ISPs, but they geolocate to the same general area. There are many overlaps with user agents as well. J.delanoy." Please note that sockpuppetry is established not just on the basis of a perfect IP match. Eventually, it is up to the admins to decide on the basis of technical and behavioral evidence if an account is a sock. In this case we had 2 users with the same geolocation making identical edits to the same pages. Their IPs might have not been absolutely identical, but the behavioral evidence showed that this could have been home/work situation, so the evidence available to the admins allowed them to rule that Gorzaim was also a sock. And wikilawyering is pointless, you said that I "created this discussion in bad faith and it should be closed immediately", but I started this AE request because I was advised to do so by the admin who handled the SPI requests. This is yet another violation of WP:AGF on your part. Grandmaster 09:24, 5 March 2012 (UTC)
    Grandmaster, given that you have filled your above posts with "tuscumbiaobsession"-style allegations about sockpuppets, and that you have cited my name, I now consider myself free to be involved in this RfA. Meowy 14:12, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
    I don't make any rules here, so you are free to do what you want. But I don't think that I ever brought up your name. The only time that I mentioned you was when I responded to Winterbliss reposting your post from another board. I thought that it was resolved at that thread. But I don't see that this particular discussion has any direct relation to you. Grandmaster 15:40, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
    As part of your case (rather than just as a warning of a possible restriction like you did earlier) you cited my name using a wikilink that is the post that is above the one I just made. Because you also initiated this arbitration request, I consider that this means I am now part of the subject of your request and so I am free to comment (though I have not yet decided if I will). Meowy 21:08, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
    According to your restriction, you must be a subject of the request to be able to comment. However I don't see your name in any post above, so I don't see how you can have any involvement in this matter. Of course it is up to you whether to comment or not, and up to the admins to decide whether your appearance here is a violation of your topic ban. Grandmaster 21:37, 6 March 2012 (UTC)
    You did not make specific editors the subject of this request. But you are now giving, to support the request you initiated, a long list of editors that you seem to want blocked, most of which at one time or another, as you know, were falsely accused by Tuscumbia of being sockpuppets of me. And when doing this you made an explicit connection by placing a link to a page about me. So I am included. Given Tuscumbia's obsession, I think many people are now included. Meowy 22:30, 6 March 2012 (UTC)

    I would like to propose a solution that could possibly reduce the disruption on the article in question. As one could see from the evidence posted here, this article attracts a lot of sock and meat puppetry, and it is not a recent problem. This happened in the past as well: I think we need a solution that would bring to minimum the disruption that could be caused. There was a proposal here that I think made a lot of sense. To decrease sock/meatpupetry, the accounts that have less than 500 edits, including substantial number of edits outside of AA area, should not be allowed to revert the article. This would prevent accounts like Oliveriki from coming out of nowhere and reverting the article back to the 5 months old version created by the socks of banned user. If new users have any ideas, they are free to propose them at talk. Also, no large rewrites should be allowed without the general consensus on the talk of the article. And by consensus I mean not the agreement reached by 5 recent accounts among themselves, but the consensus reached by both sides of the dispute, or when that is not possible, consensus reached with involvement of a larger Misplaced Pages community in accordance with WP:DR. At present what we see is that the article is still being reverted to non-consensus version, sometimes with misleading edit summaries: Grandmaster 17:26, 6 March 2012 (UTC)

    Unarchived, since this report was not formally closed. Grandmaster 08:44, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Statement by Winterbliss

    This report filed by User:Grandmaster represents yet another spasm of endless bad-faith, baseless complaints pushed over, over, and over again by a tightly-knit team of Azerbaijani users who target unrelated accounts in a coordinated fashion with the purpose of limiting editing activity on specific pages. They falsely accuse unwanted editors in sockpuppetry and try to discredit their productive work by making false statements about their editing practices. Now these efforts are getting really desperate and disruptive because Grandmaster’s earlier pranks to discredit his opponents and filibuster consensus-building on talk Nagorno-Karabakh pages are failing. But regardless of Grandmaster's filibustering and manipulating (e.g. WP:WL) discussion and consensus building on Nagorno-Karabakh talk pages proceeds as planned and according to Golbez's earlier recommendations (despite his declared exit from the scene). Various issues and parts of the texts are discussed one by one, and neutral, third-party and high-quality sources are used to support write-ups. This may not be am super-ideal process but most people involved seem to try hard to comply with the earlier guidelines set by Golbez. All participants were CU-checked and are unrelated. Golbez asked to "re-own" earlier texts and one of the participants (Zimmarod I beleive) did that promptly, explaining rationale of every good-faith addition that was deleted → .

    Grandmaster’s report is based on lies, and he came to AE forum with unclean hands. One is that User:Xebulon “has been disrupting Wikepedia for years.” Xebulon’s account was created 10.24.10 and closed on 7.7.11, and no connections between him and earlier accounts were established.

    Grandmaster filed and SPI request accusing as many as 9 (!) editors of being sockpupptes but not only his effort went bust but his SPI was categorized as disruptive when CU showed lack of any relation among the editors by User:Tnxman307. Furthermore, per User:Tnxman307’s comment “As far as I can tell, the same group of users accuse the same opposing group of being sockpuppets. Nothing has ever come of this. Frankly, I think it's disruptive and pointless and am inclined to decline these on sight.”

    It has been known that Grandmaster was coordinating editing of a large group of Azerbaijani user in Russian wiki from here information on meta-wiki and here by being the head of 26 Baku Commissars. There is also evidence that Grandmaster uses off-wiki coordination on the pages of English wiki as well: take a look at this curious exchange - , , which are requests of off-wiki communication between Grandmaster and User:Mursel.

    In the recent past such reports, mainly AE and SPI requests, were routinely filed by Grandmaster’s friend User:Tuscumbia, who got recently topic banned for one year on the charge of WP:BATTLEGROUND and racist comments about ethnic origin of academic references . Just a few examples of Tuscumbia's fishing trips: , , , , . That is how Tuscumbia’s practice of harassing SPIs was described by an independent Lothar von Richthofen:

    • "Checkuser is not for fishing. If you can present actual evidence other then "they make edits that I don't like and it makes me mad so I want to harass them with SPIs on the offhand chance that they will turn up to be the same people, then maybe a new Checkuser might be in order. Otherwise, your invocation of phantom sockpuppeteers is borderline disruptive.

    User:Grandmaster who was so far editing on an on-and-off basis with rather long periods of absence from WP suddenly hit the Nagorno Karabakh talk pages one day after Tuscumbia’s removal from AA area, picking up right where Tuscumbia left off . Grandmaster’s and Tuscumbia’s behavior is identical: conspiratorial accusations in sockpuppetry, repeating the same points over and over again, a method of filibustering a consensus used most recently by User:Tuscumbia in talks on Murovdag. User:Grandmaster acts as User:Tuscumbia’s placeholder, if not as his loudly quacking meatpuppet who came to man the post of his banned comrade as soon as Tuscumbia got into trouble.

    It is high time to restrict Grandmaster’s disruptive conduct by limiting his access to editing AA-related topics.

    "(despite his declared exit from the scene)." I just want to point out that my recovering sanity allows me to take a disconnected view at the topic, rather than avoiding it altogether. So my declared exit was from caring and being involved; I can still observe and perhaps even discuss. --Golbez (talk) 01:14, 27 February 2012 (UTC)

    Zimmarod's point of view

    User:Paul Siebert said it well above . Sanctioning simply by virtue of someone's interest in a topic, or because of loose suspicions that there are some users who are proven not to be sockpuppets in multiple SPIs but can theoretically be found socks or meats in an unspecified time in the future is a blatant violation of the WP:AGF principle. This is in fact total absurdity. Imagine a court issuing a verdict clearing the accused of charges; but then the complainant pops up and suggests to incarcerate or execute the formerly accused right away simply because of his lingering suspicions or because in the future the accused can be found guilty of something else. It is like I may suggest to run a CU on Golbez or T. Canens accusing them in being Grandmaster's socks, and when it turns out that they are not socks, I will propose to get rid of their administrative powers on WP:DUCK charges simply because I am not happy with the results of SPIs and want to get rid of Golbez or T. Canens anyway. We on the Nagorno-Karabakh article try to be as constructive as possible and work toward a consensual input of edits after discussion. I now own the old edits, not some Xebulon. Many are tempted to restore the old edits at once but we decided not to do that and be selective and work incrementally, discarding non-consensual parts as we go. What is the problem? Ah, I know. All this runs counter to the strategy of User:Grandmaster who is unhappy. Instead of him writing long passages on this topic he could be more succinct, and say honestly: "I want to own the article Nagorno-Karabakh by excluding everyone from editing. I tried to play the old game of accusing a bunch of users in being socks, and that did not work out. Now I want them all excluded on absurd excuses simply because I exhausted my arsenal of disruptive tricks, and my meat-pals like User:Tuscumbia cannot help me since they are (again) banned for racism and wp:battleground." Zimmarod (talk) 20:40, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by George Spurlin

    Reading the above comments I see intense wiki lawyering and users attacking each other. Let me take a different approach and talk about myself. I have been a wikipedian for about 9 months, and this subject area happens to be one of my interests, and if I was limited to participate, most likely I would've found a better place to spend my time. Lets not forget that this is the 💕 that anyone can edit! --George Spurlin (talk) 20:07, 27 February 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by The Devil's Advocate

    My assessment of this situation is that SPI has proven inadequate at dealing with some of the obvious sockpuppetry going on. Vandorenfm and Gorzaim were two accounts that got subjected to three separate checks before it finally came to light that they were socks of Xebulon once new accounts popped up to compare them with. This suggests these sockmasters have proven very capable at evading detection from checkusers. I am not sure how many of these editors are socks, but there is definitely something shady going on with some of them. Not sure if doing anything about this one page will address that issue.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 18:28, 29 February 2012 (UTC)

    It seems that User:Gorzaim's account was NOT found to be a sock of Vandorenfm or Xebulon based on SPIs. It was closed simply because of an arbitrary decision of the administrator HelloAnnyong . I am inclined to believe that since those 3 accounts which were showing as unrelated in so many previous SPIs are truly unrelated and were closed as a result of a mistake or a technical glitch. Dehr (talk) 21:41, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
    This is alarming but also reveling: same tactics, same phrases. User:Grandmaster and The Devil's Advocate QUACK painfully similar. Both were defending the banned User:Tuscumbia who was editwarring in Nagorno's article and . Both filed similar SPI useless and disruptive reports on the oft-cited user Xebulon. They are coordinating their SPI operations . Dehr (talk) 21:12, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
    Nothing revealing about that. I saw the case and was planning to comment even before Grandmaster commented at my talk page. The first SPI was filed because an AE case was closed on the basis that accusations of sockpuppetry be taken there and several of the admins commenting at the AE case felt strongly that there was something to the accusations of sockpuppetry against users such as Winterbliss and George Spurlin.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 21:57, 29 February 2012 (UTC)
    Yes indeed The Devil's Advocate, please be aware of WP:TROLL, WP:AGF (as per Dehr) and also WP:BATTLEGROUND.

    On the Sandstein restriction, one thing I think makes sense is having a 1RR per week limit on the article.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 15:27, 3 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by Dehr

    This issue has now clearly transformed into a WP:TROLL and WP:AGF concern, when a coordinating cluster of editors attack and harass the other group on highly suspicious pretenses (e.g. the conspiratorial but baseless "SPIs do not show anything but SOMETHING is going on"). The loudly QUACKING User:Grandmaster and The Devil's Advocate shoot one foul-faith SPI after next attempting to disrupt the development of the Nagorno and related articles. One of these SPIs was filed today by The Devil's Advocate. I am calling on the administrative operatives to stop these attacks and deal with the disrupting account User:Grandmaster. Dehr (talk) 21:28, 29 February 2012 (UTC)

    Comment about User:Golbez and WP:CIVILITY

    User Golbez has acted as a self-appointed watchman of the article for some time and there are people who believe that his participation had been generally helpful. But as of late he has been outright disregarding WP:CIVILITY which casts serious doubt on merits of his endorsement of this AE request. Some examples of incivil conduct by Golbez:

    • See edit summary: “you know what, fuck it, i yield. i don't have time for this petty bullshit, not until arbcom can give us the power to summarily ban every last nationalist on wikipedia.”
    • “Sir or madam, you have made my fucking night.”
    • “This idiotic revanchism, this useless irredentism, means nothing to me”
    • “A pox upon both your houses.” - written in a pamphlet by Golbez which is not too bad in fact, but it shows that he was determined not to develop any subject-matter expertise and wrongfully praised that attitude as impartiality.

    It would be helpful if Golbez could act as an arbiter distinguishing filibustering from honest disagreements on talk pages but he failed to be such an arbiter. Instead he chose profanities and sided with disruptive users. So far he supported felonious User:Tuscumbia and User:Brandmeister (each are/were recently topic banned of one year for disruptive conduct), and was freezing the Nagorno-Karabakh article on the versions supported by these two users. He praised User:Tuscumbia as someone who “follows the rules” on the very day (!) when Tuscumbia got banned after exhausting himself in multiple WP:BATTLEGROUNDs . Here Golbez teams up with Grandmaster, supporting his disruptive idea . Just too many inconvenient facts. I would also like to bring you comment by User:Meowy who well characterized Golbez as a careless and failing administrator :

    • Regarding the comments by Golbez (who, if my memory is right, I consider to be one of the better-informed administrators and generally OK in his aims and actions): "Shall I start issuing blocks based solely on the duck test?" Is this a warning or is it meant to be ironic? "Since they were found to be unrelated, I am left with few civil options." ....erm .... since they were found to be unrelated you really have no business making further discussion about them in relation to sockpuppetry, and to continue otherwise is an example of bad faith.

    Winterbliss (talk) 04:54, 1 March 2012 (UTC)

    Hold on - since you are pushing my name into this - I did not characterise Golbez as "a careless and failing administrator", I was saying that I was disappointed that he was failing in this instance by refusing to just accept the finding that proved the accounts he thought were related were not related. Meowy 21:34, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
    • It is probably worth mentioning that the above mentioned Meowy (talk · contribs) is just back from a 1 year block for sockpuppetry. So his comment at SPI request page is not surprising. Meowy is also indefinitely banned from commenting at WP:AE on AA related matters, so I don't know whether it is Ok to repost his comments here. Grandmaster 10:35, 1 March 2012 (UTC)
      My above comment, made to clarify a misrepresentation of my views, will be the only post I intend make here. If Winterbliss's misinterpretation of what I had written elsewhere were to be removed along with the quote, then my comment about it can also be removed. However, it is just you who say this is an AA2-related thread. The comments from all the unconnected editors indicate that it is NOT that because the powers you wish to see simply do not exist under AA2, and that to make them exist would mean making a fundamental change to the way Misplaced Pages editing works. So it is actually a policy change that would affect all of Misplaced Pages. Meowy 22:06, 1 March 2012 (UTC)

    I am amused that my attack on irredentism and revanchism is somehow incivil. Or that thanking you for giving me a good larf is somehow bad.

    So, I'm not sure what the point of this subsection is, seeing how I'm pretty much out of the Caucasian clusterfuck at the moment - are you suggesting there be sanctions placed upon me, or are you just filling space? If the former, there's an actual place to go to do that; if the latter, you've at least made me grin. I seriously thought this was going to be about all the time I've characterized the editors of those articles as children, so this really could have been done better. I give it a C-. Also, I've been here a skosh longer than you, so I actually know what I'm talking about. Anyway, I think the fundamental problem here is, for some reason I thought the provisions of AA2 had expired or at least had been tempered; if I knew I could throw any of you kids on a 1 revert restriction, my sanity might still be with us. Is this still the case, anyone who is familiar with the situation? Then again, looking at the list of bans and blocks placed because of AA2, and still no long-term change... clearly it would seem that AA2 has failed.

    Meowy, I accepted the finding that the accounts weren't related... that doesn't change the fact that at the very least, Oliveriki should be blocked for disruption - reverting back to a four-month-old version with a blatant lie for an edit summary on an AA-related article should be an instablock. My failure was not in executing it, but actually trying to get people to discuss before going all revert happy.

    I guess I've burnt bridges on my way out, so I probably won't be able to go back in with the same cachet I had before (You know, the cachet that got me accused of being both Armenian and Azeri? Those were the days. You don't know how hilarious it is that you accuse me of being pro-Azeri. Oh, newbies, what would life be like without their naivete?), but ... eh. It's Misplaced Pages's loss, not mine. If I really was THE only person holding those articles together, then that appears to be a structural problem that the whole project needs to figure out how to fix. Someone else can pick up the pieces; I have maps to make and governors to list. --Golbez (talk) 22:41, 1 March 2012 (UTC)

    Reply to Gatoclass

    Hello Gatoclass. Thank you for taking the time to take another look at the issue again. However, I regret to notice that you at times misreport on the facts and have taken an approach that is not well balanced.

    • First, User:Tuscumbia was recently blocked from AA2 for one full year and not for six months (as Gatoclass misreports). Take a look one more time: . This misreport shows that Gatoclass failed to invest enough time and effort to inspect the entire situation honestly. I do not want to assume at this moment that he intentionally tries to protect users banned for WP:BATTLEGROUND.
    • Second, in the bigger order of things, it does not really matter if texts in WP articles are developed by socks, fox, schmocks or frogs. The only thing that matters is the quality of the text itself i.e. if it complies with the WP standards for neutrality and accuracy. I don’t and no one really should care if there were xebulons, babelons or schmebulons writing the text. If it is good, it should be in the article. You are right, however, that since someone was banned (in good or bad faith), it makes re-inputting good quality texts a bit tricky, procedurally speaking, and certain rules should be observed. And some (big or small) parts of the previous writeup can be thrown away. The users were warned about this by Golbez, and they are complying by discussing these issues before they change the article. Please familiarize yourself with the part “Proposed Rewrite” . Per Golbez’s recommendation, User:Zimmarod took a look at the parts of the article deleted last year, looked at sources and assessed the quality of the deleted paragraphs in the section “Restored part of the text discussion by Zimmarod” . Ideas how to develop the article should be discussed on talk pages but there should be a policy punishing repeating the same points over and over again per WP:IDHT and filibustering honest discussions per WP:FILIBUSTER.
    • One favorite method of users like User:Grandmaster to disrupt editorial process is to repeating the same points over and over again alleging that consensus is not reached (although it is reached). Please understand that it is WP:TE, specifically subsection “Disputing the reliability of apparently good sources” , “Repeating the same argument without convincing people” and above everything “deleting the cited additions of others” .
    • I talked about this before but let me repeat this again: Azerbaijanis Many Azerbaijani WP users are not interested to develop the article Nagorno-Karabakh because academic sources are not on their side. To familiarize yourself with this argument please take a look how User:Tuscumbia was trying to filibuster and stonewall against academic references on talk pages in Murovdag . They try to ban their Armenian opponents as socks so that edits they made would forever be silenced or suppressed. In other words, they try to ban people in order to suppress ideas that these people express. Imagine a situation that there is a WP dispute in the article about the Moon. One group of editors believes the Moon is a pancake hanging in the air, the other thinks it is a natural satellite of the Earth. The group saying it is a celestial object was found to be a sock who gets banned. Does this mean his the notion that the Moon is a natural satellite of the Earth shall be forever removed from and suppressed in the article? Nonsense, right? That is exactly what the Azerbaijani editors want to happen and that is why they harass their opponents with SPIs – they believe this creates pressure on administrators who would eventually get tired and would concede in arbitrarily declaring the opposite group as socks, regardless of actual evidence. This is not an excuse to be biased against them all but is something to keep in mind.
    • Your allegations about accusing Zimmarod in WP:SOAP and WP:NPA are unconvincing. There were no personal attacks and no propaganda or advertisements. And what about bad-faith SPIs that were criticized by several administrators??? Gatoclass ignores this entirely. Comparing users from Azerbaijan, which is a nationalist dictatorship indeed, with China or the USSR makes sense. In all three cases, we deal with people who are likely to be brainwashed by state propaganda, and have a lack of understanding of how open-source collaborative projects like Misplaced Pages should work in terms of WP:NPOV.
    • One last point about User:Vandorenfm and User:Gorzaim who were accused and banned for supposedly being socks of User:Xebulon. I really did not want to go into that but the more I hear about them the more I am convinced that they these two were banned under pressure and with no or little evidence of sockpuppetry, especially User:Gorzaim, who as someone (Dehr?) mentioned previously, was banned by User:HelloAnnyong without any technical evidence of sockpuppetry. And banning User:Vandorenfm could be a mistake made under the psychological pressure of relentless bad-faith SPIs, which blurred the vision and numbed the senses of the administrators. Winterbliss (talk) 22:07, 3 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning the Nagorno-Karabakh article

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
    • The Sandstein sanction (the one used on Mass killings under Communist regimes) is a rather drastic remedy, so I'd like to hear from other uninvolved admins before taking any action on that front.

      Also, the status quo is rather...unsatisfactory, and I have a feeling that this thread will take a while to conclude. I'll be interested in hearing suggestions as to any temporary sanctions on the article while this thread is pending. T. Canens (talk) 11:10, 26 February 2012 (UTC)

    I don't see what a sanction like that will achieve, because if an article is already in poor shape (and it usually is when it is a BATTLEGROUND topic), then all it's going to do is empower POV pushers to prevent improvement to the page. That certainly seems to be the case with the Mass killings article mentioned - after more than a year under this sanction, I don't think that article could be described as either neutral or well written. In fact, I'd say there's probably a good case for vacating that sanction at this point.
    As regulars at this page will probably be aware, I did start work on an alternative "lightweight" AE-type process about a year ago, although other commitments have prevented me moving forward with it. I still think it would be worth a tryout, but it needs a rewrite and I haven't been able to find the time yet.
    I'm not sure what else might be done in the meantime to improve articles in contentious topic areas, but one possible option would be to require anyone who wants to edit such pages to have, say, 500 mainspace edits outside the topic area before editing within it, as well as at least half their ongoing contribution outside it. A restriction like that might at least put a break on sockpuppetry, and hopefully encourage erstwhile POV pushers to make positive contributions elsewhere on the project. That is one option.
    Another might be to give one or more respected admins draconian powers over particularly troublesome articles, allowing them to make decisions about what content is or is not permissible. An option like that would of course run the risk of the article coming to reflect the particular bias of the admins in question, but an article controlled by a couple of responsible administrators should still end up better than one in the control of POV pushers and their socks. There would still be some problems to resolve however, such as how to choose the admins in the first place, and what method of appealing their decisions might be put in place. Regardless, whatever method might be chosen, I think there must surely be a widespread recognition by now that current methods of dispute resolution are not doing the job and that new approaches must be tried. Gatoclass (talk) 14:26, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    Having now read through the Xebulon sockpuppetry thread linked above, I think Grandmaster's suggestion of permitting admins to simply block any account per the duck test, as Moreschi did on previous occasions, might be the simplest solution for the current problems with this article. Gatoclass (talk) 14:59, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    I'm inclined to agree with you on that last suggestion; that's de facto what happens in some places already (Chinese-Taiwan issues, for instance), so formalizing it might not be a bad idea. I have enough faith in our admin corps to know it when they see it. The other ideas are certainly worth discussing, but I think that would require broader community input. The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 18:23, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    That's true. Sandstein's sanction pretty much froze that article because nobody can get consensus on anything, and that is pretty unsatisfactory. DUCK blocks don't need AE authority though; they have always been allowed. We could hand out a bunch of sock/meatpuppetry blocks (which is which doesn't matter since we treat them identically). However, SPI didn't see enough evidence for a block and that does concern me. Another possibility is to put this group of editors under a collective revert restriction. T. Canens (talk) 19:03, 26 February 2012 (UTC)
    I must say I have some misgivings about the notion of DUCK blocks, as a possible side effect is the alienation of new, good faith users. A revert restriction that favoured established users would be another alternative. I would like to take a closer look at the article before commenting further however. Gatoclass (talk) 07:36, 28 February 2012 (UTC)
    • @Paul Siebert: we have never required evidence of "repeated or serious" misconduct before a warning may be issued; in fact, the provision does not require any misconduct before a warning. DSN allows for sanctions on an editor who "despite being warned...repeatedly or seriously fails to adhere to the purpose of Misplaced Pages, any expected standards of behavior, or any normal editorial process". Repeated or serious misconduct is required for sanctions, not for a warning. T. Canens (talk) 17:36, 27 February 2012 (UTC)
    • I too have concerns about the "Sandstein Option" having the desired effect for the article. The way these folks scrap regarding Nagorno-Karabakh is remarkable though, I've had to admin disputes over an abandoned mosque and the name of a mountain range of all things. The national tensions in this area of the world are profound and, like other areas, those folks want to bring their battles here. I have great concerns about the misuse of SPI as well. Yes, a lot of people sock in this area and there's probably off-wiki canvassing in this area but we can't use that as justification for immediately assuming an editor is from that without proof. I am also having growing concerns about the "SPI Patrol" that is, those who regularly submit largely unfounded SPI requests. Therefore, what I would suggest, is a more stringent approach to single purpose accounts. Simply put, they are politely warned they are editing in a conflict area as an SPA and as such they can find themselves subject to sanction quite readily if they're engaging in TE or causing disruption. This eliminates a lot of the guesswork in socking and just brings them to account for their behavior. There's nothing wrong with being an SPA, it just opens you up to scrutiny in conflict areas. --WGFinley (talk) 15:09, 2 March 2012 (UTC)

    Having found the time to do a little more research on the history of the article and the users concerned, it seems the following has occurred:

    Between about June and August 2011, the article was gradually taken from about 60k to 95k bytes by several users since banned for sockpuppetry, including Bars77, Vandorenfm, and Gorzaim. After these accounts were banned, Ehud Lesar reverted the article back to the 60k version in September, per WP:BAN. Lesar then found himself in an edit war with several other users, most of whom also turned out to be socks. The article then remained relatively stable on the 60k version for about five months, until January 24, when Oliveriki, a user with only a handful of edits, reverted back to the 95k version with the misleading edit summary "rest references". This triggered a renewed edit war over the two versions, with the participants this time including Tuscumbia (currently serving a six-month one year ban for another issue) Zimmerod, Brandmeister and Winterbliss.

    My initial conclusions are, firstly, that Oliveriki renewed an old edit war and did so with a highly misleading edit summary,] also failing to explain his reasons for restoring about 30k of content on the talk page. The fact that this user has only a handful of edits is also a concern. Secondly, Zimmarod restored the contested 95k version three times, the last time justifying his restoration per WP:BAN due to Tuscumbia's ban, ignoring the fact that the content he was restoring was itself originally added by sitebanned users. Zimmarod has also made disparaging remarks on the article talk page about his opponents, in breach of WP:SOAPBOX AND WP:NPA: "Azerbaijani editors always discard anything that runs against the spirit and letter of official state propaganda of their bizarre oil dictatorship headed by the uncrowned KGB monarch Aliyev. Azerbaijani futile fight against Western academia is like the objections of of the state-brainwashed Chinese or Soviets against Western accusations of human rights abuse" and "I think five editors spend a month in empty talk with a stubborn POV-pusher." As a consequence, I think both editors should as a minimum be formally warned of AE sanctions.

    With regard to the edit warring, most of the reverts on both sides have been made on the grounds of WP:BAN, presumably from the clause which states that Anyone is free to revert any edits made in defiance of a ban. I do not see however, where the policy states that edits made by a user before his ban can be reverted on sight. Regardless, the policy also states that Wikipedians in turn are not permitted to post or edit material at the direction of a banned editor (sometimes called proxy editing or proxying) unless they are able to confirm that the changes are verifiable and they have independent reasons for making them. From this, I conclude that if an edit originally made by a since banned user is restored by another user in good standing, then that edit should be discussed as a legitimate edit and not simply re-reverted per the first WP:BAN clause.

    Finally, with regard to the contested content itself, I agree with Golbez, who suggested that it is not appropriate in such a contested article to add so much content in a single edit without discussion, and that the additions need to be discussed section by section by the parties concerned so that outstanding issues can be properly addressed. Gatoclass (talk) 08:39, 3 March 2012 (UTC)

    I'm concerned that Winterbliss has seized upon a minor error in my conclusions above to cast aspersions on my honesty and integrity. Since his comments were directed at me personally, I think it best to leave it to other admins to decide whether or not such comments are acceptable in the light of the evidence presented in their support. Gatoclass (talk) 08:06, 4 March 2012 (UTC)

    Before making any further comments on this case, I intend to wait for resolution of my recently filed request for clarification. Anyone with an interest in the topic area is welcome to comment on the request. My apologies for any inconvenience while this issue is being resolved. Gatoclass (talk) 08:23, 8 March 2012 (UTC)

    Unarchived. T. Canens (talk) 02:50, 18 March 2012 (UTC)

    Had I realized my request for clarification would still be open almost two weeks after filing it, I would have withdrawn from the case at the outset. I think it best that I do so now since I have no way of knowing when the request will be closed, and I think it unfair to the respondents to expect them to wait any longer. Once again, my apologies to all concerned for the inconvenience. Gatoclass (talk) 10:04, 21 March 2012 (UTC)

    DIREKTOR

    BoDu (talk · contribs) is banned from the topic of the former Yugoslavia for 90 days, broadly construed. The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 03:05, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

    Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.

    Request concerning DIREKTOR

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
    BoDu (talk) 14:47, 14 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    DIREKTOR (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    Misplaced Pages:ARBMAC
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
    1. 24 February 2012 Personal attack.
    2. 24 February 2012 Disrespectful comment.
    3. 2 March 2012 Harassment is alleged without clear evidence.
    4. 3 March 2012 Taunting and another allegation without clear evidence
    5. 4 March 2012 Taunting.
    6. 4 March 2012 Deletion of my comment after I tried to discuss the user's behaviour on his talk page.
    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    It is clear that there is an unfolding pattern of incivility by User:DIREKTOR.

    The statement by DIREKTOR below shows once again why he is an disruptive editor. Instead of talking on-topic (his conduct), he is talking off-topic (my conduct). BoDu (talk) 16:25, 15 March 2012 (UTC)
    This request is concerning DIREKTOR. I have no problem discussing my conduct, but this is not place to do so. As you can see above, I said that the statement by DIREKTOR is disruptive, and the consequences of that are obvious in the last 24 hours or so. This request is becoming request concerning myself. I can't believe that the administrators did not warn DIREKTOR to stop talking off-topic and instead submit a request for enforcement against me. I can't believe that the administrators allowed themselves to be drawn into the off-topic discussion.
    @Lothar von Richthofen, removing comments from one's personal talkpage is allowed, but the problem here is how it was done. My comment was a attempt to resolve dispute, and his response was the deletion with following statement: "Talk to someone who cares to listen". It's humiliating. BoDu (talk) 17:00, 16 March 2012 (UTC)
    @Lothar von Richthofen, I apologize, I didn't know about that. NULL said that "the sequence of events doesn't indicate forum shopping, but simply someone following instructions and being redirected, by others, to more appropriate venues", and that's my point as well. Even this request I submitted only after instructed to do so by Salvio giuliano. I don't see why you agree with DIREKTOR that this report is likely another disruptive forum-shopping attempt. No editor who has self-respect will allow another editor to act persistently in a disrespectful manner, and I provided sufficient evidence that DIREKTOR behaves in such way.
    @EdJohnston, the conditional unblock given by Salvio was that I undertake not to undo those edits again and start a WP:DRN thread. Regarding the edits, you can check my contributions and see that I have not engaged in any edit war, not just the former Yugoslavia but anywhere on Misplaced Pages. Concerning the DRN thread, you already know I accomplished that instruction. BoDu (talk) 16:40, 17 March 2012 (UTC)
    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning DIREKTOR

    Statement by DIREKTOR

    I would not want to give the impression that I think it "beneath me" to properly answer a WP:AE report, but considering the circumstances of the report and who posted it, I'm having a difficult time taking it seriously. I would like everyone to please note that this seems to be merely the latest installment of a WP:FORUMSHOPPING war conducted by User:BoDu in order to prevail by "alternative" means in a content dispute on Template:Yugoslav Axis collaborationism. After being blocked and literally forced to stop edit-warring against everyone, the user posted a thread on WP:DRN, tried to delete the whole template on WP:TFD, reported me on WP:ANI, canvassed various admins to sanction me, and so on. Now WP:AE. All this because his edits do not have consensus, and he obviously really wants to have his way. Now, I'm biased as hell, but if this charade charade isn't disruptive I have an inaccurate understanding of the term. -- Director (talk) 18:44, 14 March 2012 (UTC)

    @NULL. While others have given the user ideas on where exactly to continue his forumshopping, imo its forumshopping nonetheless. The succession of threads was not posted by the users that suggested this or that, but by BoDu himself - I don't think anyone suggested this sustained campaign. And the fact itself that BoDu was continuously being shown the door really illustrates what I mean about all this being content-related POV pushing. Also, I fail to see the logic of proceeding from edit-warring to ANI to DRN to TFD and then to AE. Is the user trying to resolve a content dispute or address behavioral grievances? Well, I'd say neither. By edit-warring, by blocking opponents, by "winning" the dispute, or by deleting the whole template(!) - he gets to remove the info he's been trying to remove all along. And I think its rather obvious that's what this forumshopping-spree is about. -- Director (talk) 07:59, 16 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning DIREKTOR

    Comment by Lothar von Richthofen

    Some of DIREKTOR's comments are heated and a bit uncivil, but nothing really egregious has been demonstrated. I'd also like to point out to the submitter that removing comments from one's personal talkpage is 100% allowed. The evidence provided by DIREKTOR in his statement brings into question the conduct of BoDu. I would agree with him that this report is likely another disruptive forum-shopping attempt. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 18:57, 15 March 2012 (UTC)

    @BoDu: Discussion of your own behaviour is completely relevant. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 18:28, 16 March 2012 (UTC)

    No action for a few days; is this to be resolved and/or closed? ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 02:47, 24 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by NULL

    Without commenting on the validity of the AE request itself and with no knowledge of the dispute, the allegation of forum shopping is unfounded, or at very least unfair. BoDu raised the matter at ANI first and was told by both GiantSnowman and BWilkins that the appropriate venue was DRN. He then took the matter to DRN, where it was closed as inappropriate for the board and TransporterMan directed him to TFD. He then raised the issue at TFD. The sequence of events here doesn't indicate forum shopping, but simply someone following instructions and being redirected, by others, to more appropriate venues. – NULLtalk
    edits02:06, 16 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning DIREKTOR

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.

    Boomerang?

    When I first posted Direktor hadn't responded yet, now that he has I'm thinking he has provided good evidence of a forum shopping boomerang. We may need to take some action regarding that. --WGFinley (talk) 19:59, 15 March 2012 (UTC)

    Muhammad Images

    This discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.
    The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

    To: The Committee (this is a motion to amend but it is not clear where this goes, sorry)

    Regarding
    Arbitration Commitee case on images of Muhammad

    To Amend time for discussion in Muhammad images case

    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it

    Motion: This week Misplaced Pages:Requests for comment/Muhammad images opened, after mediation to construct the RfC. Of course, no one yet knows what consensus may emerge, if any, but we do know that, although shorter times for leaving the RfC open were discussed during mediation, that did not gain support and it is now shceduled to last 30 days. This takes us past the deadline in the case (two months), please amend. Alanscottwalker (talk) 13:02, 24 March 2012 (UTC)

    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)

    Not applicable.

    Additional comments by editor filing complaint
    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested

    N/A

    Discussion concerning Muhammad Images Case

    Statement by Muhammad Images Case

    Comments by others about the request concerning Muhammad Images Case

    Result concerning Muhammad Images Case

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.

    Wrong venue. What you are looking for is requests for amendment. T. Canens (talk) 05:53, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    Now at WP:A/R/A#Request to amend prior case: Muhammad images. Closing. T. Canens (talk) 06:16, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    Vecrumba

    No action taken. T. Canens (talk) 23:14, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it.

    Request concerning Vecrumba

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
    Russavia 15:15, 25 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    Vecrumba (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    Misplaced Pages:EEML#Editors_restricted
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
    1. 25 March 2012 Accuses me of engaging in personal attacks, accuses me of breaching my interaction ban, interjects himself into an issue which doesn't involve him on my talk page
    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
    1. Misplaced Pages:EEML#Log_of_blocks.2C_bans.2C_and_restrictions - has been blocked 3 times (24 hours, 24 hours, 3 weeks) for breaching this interaction ban
    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    All times here are my local time. At 2256 on 24 March, I responded to a question by another editor on my talkpage - an issue which does not concern Vecrumba at all. At 2302 I received an email from Vecrumba thru the wikipedia email system in which he accused me off getting on the "anti-evil EE nationalist ball", and in which he asked what someone of EE heritage did wrong to me or my family, and in which he said I have a bottomless well of vitriol. He also accused me of "Polophibic (sic) crap". I ignored this email. As 0552 25 March he posted the above to my talk page -- again he is not involved. This is a direct breach of his interaction ban as per the EEML case. I removed his interaction ban breach. At this point I noticed that at 2217 on 24 March he sent EdJohnston an email, obviously pushing for action for something that neither are actually familiar with. At 0055 on 25 March Ed replied telling him to post his concerns on wiki. I told Ed that what Vecrumba posted on my talk page is not what he had in mind, and asked him to take action (knowing the interaction ban is in place). Ed has refused. Ed's comment about not remembering the interaction ban is irrelevant -- Vecrumba knows he is under an interaction ban with me, as per the above bans (and amendment requests in which he and others participated in).

    Background (the only background which is relevant): I am working on an article on the Polandball meme to have it on DYK on 1 April. Read my response as noted above for some more links on this meme. What is on my userpage is a great example of this meme, with a Misplaced Pages theme...and yes, 90% of Polandball cartoon are about Polandball. Anyway, this is totally irrelevant, but it gives a little context for the cartoon currently on my userpage. It does not excuse Vecrumba sending me accusatory emails thru the system (for which I am now asking him NEVER to send me email again) and it does not excuse Vecrumba for wilfully breaching his interaction ban with me, on a matter that does not concern him in the slightest, and in such a way that attempts to portray me as acting inappropriately in relation to interaction bans I am currently under.

    I am also requesting that Vecrumba be blocked for a week - this was the length of my last block for a single revert on an article, not talk page personal attacks.

    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning Vecrumba

    Statement by Vecrumba

    I communicated my concerns to Ed Johnston. He suggested I comment at Russavia's talk. He may have been unaware of the additional interaction ban. I was understandably upset by Russavia's grossly inappropriate "humor", if that's what slandering an entire nationality of WP editors as vandals passes for on Misplaced Pages these days. I realized later (after posting) I did not mention the additional ban to Ed at the time; one should not expect everyone to be up on everyone's ban, for which I apologize.

    I suggest Russavia clean up his grossly disrespectful racist humor behavior.

    The interaction ban exempts necessary dispute resolution. I had hoped communicating to Russavia on his talk (as suggested) would be a more effective means for registering and resolving my dispute with his conduct as I have no desire for filing enforcement requests which only create a piling on of all the usual participants and admonishments to all to play nice.

    In 100% transparency, I should mention I communicated my concerns privately (Wiki Email) to Russavia, which expression has been acknowledged here, apparently. All Russavia had to do was delete the cartoon strip as inappropriate and our dispute resolution would have been resolved and closed. The offending cartoon:File:Poland can into Misplaced Pages.jpg is still there. There is no place for this on Misplaced Pages. VєсrumЬаTALK 01:59, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Russavia grossly (combatively) mischaracterizes the tone of my note to him. I'll be glad to post it, I just don't have access to my personal email at work. Russavia is not my enemy. I only object to Polophobic insults (by anyone) characterizing Eastern Europeans as Misplaced Pages vandals being touted as humor (and being posted on Misplaced Pages). Had I posted Russavia's (IMHO cynical) attempt to misdirect attention away from the issue at hand by appearing to make Russia fair game as my user page, I have no doubt a slew of editors would be screaming for my head on a platter for my blatant provocation. Shall I post something like that for my user page for a month or so and see what happens? Aha! Perhaps something about scrubbing Putin squeaky clean and reverting anything that is less than complementary as WP:UNDUE, WP:POV, WP:COATRACK, WP:RECENTISM, etc., while girlie calendars issued in his honor constitute encyclopedia-worthy expressions of fawning popular sentiment in his favor. Yes, I expect that such an act on my part will surely have an immediate positive effect on WP:COLLEGIALITY. There is plenty Russavia can work on while staying away from Eastern Europe broadly interpreted as he always appears to be loaded for bear—nor do I begrudge him that opportunity. I only request Russavia exhibit good sense and good manners—failing that, a permanent topic ban is a last resort. VєсrumЬаTALK 15:05, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
    That Russavia was/is working on an article is immaterial. If anything, it's an even worse abuse to use the guise of creating encyclopedic content to insult fellow editors of a nationality with whom one has a proven record of vituperative conflagration. VєсrumЬаTALK 15:23, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning Vecrumba

    I feel this request is meritless. More, I am concerned that Russavia put that image on his userpage specifically to get a reaction from one of Misplaced Pages's Polish editors. I asked Russavia to remove the image - he "xxballs" drawings are political satire and some are mildly humorous, but in my opinion, what is/was on his talkpage is intended as an attack on Polish editors of the English Misplaced Pages, and cannot really be interpreted any other way. --Elen of the Roads (talk) 21:14, 25 March 2012 (UTC)

    An individual with Russavia's history of explosive nationally-related disputes should really know better than to put such things in prominent places. While I personally find the comics to be generally chuckle-inducing, I also understand that not everyone feels that way about them. Some people find them quite offensive. I find Russavia's actions here to be at best tastelessly tactless, and at worst belligerent baiting. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 21:34, 25 March 2012 (UTC)

    Vecrumba sent me an email. I gave poor advice when I suggested very generally that he make his views known somewhere on the wiki. If I'd checked the language of WP:IBAN I would have realized that his only option was to ask an 'administrator to take action against a violation of an interaction ban by the other party...' The cartoon itself doesn't seem to me to violate an interaction ban. I am not inclined to block Vecrumba for posting on Russavia's talk although that was unwise (in retrospect). Russavia is being an optimist if he thinks the Polandball cartoons are not going to be perceived by Polish editors as an attack on them. If we want a policy-compliant way of assessing community reaction to the cartoon, an WP:MFD is one option. In my opinion, the IBAN doesn't prevent Vecrumba from replying in this AE, since the complaint is about him, and a response from him would fall under 'limited and necessary dispute resolution.' EdJohnston (talk) 23:06, 25 March 2012 (UTC)

    Request is meritless. Plus, Russavia's baiting of Poles seems to have been intended to draw them in. To then complain that they were offended and contacted him is absurd.Malick78 (talk) 14:57, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning Vecrumba

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.

    Oliveriki

    Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.

    Request concerning Oliveriki

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
    Grandmaster 00:04, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    Oliveriki (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    Misplaced Pages:ARBAA2#Standard discretionary sanctions
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
    1. October 2, 2010 rv in support of the banned user
    2. December 6, 2010 rv in support of the banned user
    3. December 8, 2010 rv in support of the banned user
    4. January 24, 2012 rv in support of the banned user
    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
    1. Warned on December 8, 2010 by Tuscumbia (talk · contribs)
    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    There is a request about article level sanctions on Nagorno-Karabakh above, but I believe that the behavior of this particular user needs to be reviewed by the admins on a personal basis because of all the disruption that he caused. This user has made to date only 13 edits, but the disruption caused was massive. Oliveriki was registered on October 2, 2010, and the same day he made 3 edits: first two were deredlinking his user and talk pages, and third edit was a revert on Culture of Nagorno-Karabakh in support of Xebulon (talk · contribs), the mass sock puppeter, banned from wikipedia: Next 2 edits were also reverts on the same page in support of the same banned user. After making those 3 rvs he disappeared for almost a year, reappearing in October 2011 to make a few cosmetic edits here and there. On December 2, 2011 he makes another revert: of this edit: , and disappears until January 24, 2012, when he emerged again and reverted Nagorno-Karabakh back to a 4 months old version by the banned user Xebulon with a false edit summary: , thus starting a massive edit war. Admin Golbez described what went on that article here: I agree with Golbez when he said that "at the very least, Oliveriki should be blocked for disruption - reverting back to a four-month-old version with a blatant lie for an edit summary on an AA-related article should be an instablock". Considering all the disruption caused by this user, I believe that at the very least Oliveriki should be permanently topic banned from all AA related articles. Indeed, his minimal contribution was mostly edit warring on most contentions AA articles, proxying for the banned user, reverting articles to the versions made by Xebulon or his socks. Oliveriki came clean out of checkuser, but according to WP:BAN#Edits_by_and_on_behalf_of_banned_editors, "new accounts which engage in the same behavior as a banned editor or blocked account in the same context, and who appear to be editing Misplaced Pages solely for that purpose, are subject to the remedies applied to the editor whose behavior they are imitating". This means that Oliveriki should be placed on the same remedies as indefinitely banned Xebulon, which ones exactly I leave to the discretion of the admins. Grandmaster 00:04, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning Oliveriki

    Statement by Oliveriki

    Grandmaster’s AE report is unreasonable and the sysops should really take care of his own highly problematic account. Grandmaster is a user with a long history of upsetting activity in the most contested AA2 articles. It is laughable what Grandmaster is accusing me of. It is the second report on Nagorno-Karabakh that he filed just recently. Isn’t it just about too much for one user? Reverts are not forbidden, and I never reverted on “behalf” of anyone, especially Xebulon. And please note that Xebulon had not been banned at that time when I reverted. Xebulon got banned as late as on 11 April, 2011 , i.e. 5 months after I reverted in places that Grandmaster mentioned in diffs. Please also see that I reverted edits of WP’s highly disruptive accounts, which were all sanctioned both before and after my reverts, including User:Brandmeister, banned before for 6 months before his edits in diffs and for one year after ; and User:Quantum666 who is banned from AA2 area indefinitely and was sanctioned around the time when I reverted his edits . My reverts were all explained in edit summaries. Yes I am an infrequent editor, but editing infrequently is not a onjectionable. I have recently published my first article, Azgapet. Grandmaster misinterprets WP:BAN which mentions new accounts specifically but I am not a new account. I was a new account when I participated in the Culture of Nagorno-Karabakh debate but the editors like Xebulon who were active on that page had not been banned at that time as mentioned before. When WP:BAN talks about such matters it mentions sock puppets but I am not a sock puppet of anyone which was proven in several SPIs. Grandmaster also mentioned a “warning” issued by User:Tuscumbia; User:Tuscumbia had been a highly disruptive account and he got banned for 6 months shortly after issuing his “warning” to me, and now he is banned for edit warring from AA2 for one year . Tuscumbia’s “warning” was a way of being disruptive. All in all, it is a report as meritless as it is troublesome and I ask for a remedial measure for Grandmaster’s bad faith action. Oliveriki (talk) 18:03, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning Oliveriki

    Those diffs are stale.In other cases users were warned about it that such filing may lead to sanctions.--Shrike (talk) 09:36, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning Oliveriki

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.

    Russavia

    Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.

    Request concerning Russavia

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
    VolunteerMarek 08:49, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    Russavia (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    ARBRB Russavia restricted
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
    1. WP:IBAN explicitly states that a user under an interaction ban is not allowed to undo editor Y's edits to any page (whether by use of the revert function or by other means).. This is exactly what this is. Note that my edit did not address the user in any way and focused solely on content.
    2. WP:IBAN explicitly states that a user under an interaction ban is not allowed to reply to editor Y in discussions or make reference to or comment on editor Y anywhere on Misplaced Pages, whether directly or indirectly. The edit in question violates both of these provisions. Note that my edit made no reference to Russavia but only discussed the sources of the article.
    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)

    Russavia is a veteran of AE. He has engaged in battleground and nationalist editing for a long time. WP:AE is strewn with Russavia-related requests. After being interaction banned he has violated the interaction ban numerous times:

    1. Blocked on by Timotheus_Canens (talk · contribs)
    2. Warned on by EdJohnston (talk · contribs)
    3. Blocked on by AGK (talk · contribs)

    and too many others to list.

    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    As has already been pointed out numerous times before Russavia's behavior in this regard follows a familiar pattern. He makes edits which are either extremely provocative (in this case posting the racist cartoon to his userpage, before it was reverting users he is under an interaction ban with) or which are outright violations of his interaction ban.

    At that point, the users who he has an interaction ban with are in a quandary. They can either ignore him - lest they violate the interaction ban themselves - which only seems to encourage him, or they can respond to him and risk the fact that the admins are not discerning enough to tell who is responsible. This is just another variation on a familiar theme.

    Given the frequency, and, more importantly, the predictability, with which Russavia violates his interaction ban and keeps kicking over the ants nests, he should be indefinitely banned until he provides adequate promises that he will refrain from continuing in this pattern of behavior. Basically, he should be expected to observe his interaction ban, nothing less or nothing more. In that sense an INDEF BAN would be preventative (rather than punitive).

    At the very least, given the perennial trouble he is causing here Russavia needs to be simply topic banned with anything to do with Eastern or Central Europe. He appears simply not to be able to help himself and just has to always cause unneeded trouble. Note that for the most part this topic ban would not stop Russavia from continuing contributing in areas where he is actually productive (aviation, diplomatic relations) - although, honestly, at this point, who cares about that. If you show yourself unable to be ale to follow a simple interaction ban so many times, then you don't deserve the kind of consideration that is warranted by a topic ban vs. an outright indef ban.

    Just please, stop this insanity already, it's been going on for way too long.

    @TC/BotNLs

    I don't think that is referring to me as I have not made any edits which could be interpreted as an IBAN violation.VolunteerMarek 20:18, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    @Timothy In response to: Volunteer Marek (commenting on a DYK nomination by someone you are interaction banned with is a bad idea)

    As you have yourself noted in the past, and as the ArbCom has itself established, WP:IBAN very clearly states: "the editors are generally allowed to edit the same pages or discussions as long as they avoid each other". My comment at the Polandball/DYK was a technical notification of an ongoing AfD and did not reply, comment or refer to Russavia in any way what so ever, and hence is not in any way an interaction ban violation. VolunteerMarek 08:36, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    @Timothy - 2 In response to: VM, that DYK nomination was started by Russavia. You commented directly under the nomination in opposition to it. This is very far from the acceptable case in which two people participate in different parts of the same discussion without interacting with each other.

    Yes it was started by Russavia. But WP:IBAN, yourself in the past, as well as the ArbCom explicitly says "the editors are generally allowed to edit the same pages or discussions as long as they avoid each other", so I don't understand what your point is. Yes, commented under the nomination. Where else was I supposed to comment? Above it? VolunteerMarek 14:02, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    @Timothy - 3 I don't know how else to state this but your comment directly contradicts the wording of WP:IBAN that "the editors are generally allowed to edit the same pages or discussions as long as they avoid each other". It also contradicts previous statements made by the ArbCom as well as previous statements made on this very board (possibly including ones by yourself).

    Repeatedly asserting something is true ("it was an IBAN violation because I think it was") does not make it true, especially when it's obviously at odds with what's written and what can be easily checked/verified.

    At this point I strongly suggest that you first go to the Misplaced Pages:Banning policy page and change the wording there - of course you should seek WP:CONSENSUS to do so - and only then start banning people for violating the new wording. But you can't ban people for violating a policy that hasn't yet been written - well, I guess you can, per WP:IAR but then be explicit about that.VolunteerMarek 16:09, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    I should also point out, Timothy, that while at one point you proposed a stricter interpretation of IBANS , this proposal was never implemented in practice, it was never actually further discussed, and it was directed at Russavia and another editor, not myself. You can't jump the gun and try to implement this proposal by fiat without discussion and in cases where it doesn't apply.

    Comment on Malick78's presence here

    Malick78 has been following me around Misplaced Pages, stalking my edits. I have asked him several times to desist and he has been warned my multiple editors to cut it out. He has no business being here. He was not in any way involved or concerned here. His only presence here is his continued hounding of me. (I can easily provide numerous other diffs).

    As long as we're talking IBANs, can we please have an IBAN for Malick78 on his interactions with me.

    Response to Malick78

    Yes, Malick, you came here exactly because someone on my talk page pointed (you) here. - in other words you were WP:CANVASSed here by a banned abusive account. That "someone else" is actually group of IP editors that have been harassing me off and on Misplaced Pages, including making edits which had to be oversighted as they violated WP:OUT and were purely abusive and disruptive . And you damn well know this. Because you have been stalking and harassing me as well, this creep (or creeps) have latched onto your talk page - after an article's talk page had to be semi-protected to shut up their abuse - as a fellow traveler. YOU have been all to glad to provide them a platform for their continued abuse as your talk page documents. Not only are you willfully providing a venue for banned editor(s) to continue their harassment campaign but you are also acting in concert with him/her/them by showing up here with your bullshit accusations on their instructions.

    And your accusations are exactly that. Note that NO ONE else has ever said anything to me about "me stalking you" - this is purely your own invention. Several uninvolved editors HAVE TOLD YOU on the other hand to leave me the fuck alone, to which you responded with some kind of Cartmanesque "I do wat I wan!" - the diffs I provided above show this as well.

    If I come across as a bit irate, that's because I am. The harassment campaign by this/these shitheads has been going on for awhile and not a single thing has been done about it. Combine the stress of that with your persistent, odious behavior and, yes, my patience is running a bit thin here.VolunteerMarek 22:25, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    • I'll take the liberty of responding here, since it'll make more sense to everyone. Hope that's ok. Firstly, I suggest you calm down and don't swear. Secondly, "uninvolved" editors includes Piotrus - your EEML buddy? That's hardly a neutral person. Thirdly, I know little of the supposed activities of the IPs. Sure they left comments on my page recently, and yes, the don't have a high opinion of you. I didn't invite them, btw. They sought me out. But the vast majority of their/his/her posts are about article content. Sorry to burst your bubble. Oh, and lastly, if you are going to start sections complaining about me on this page - please mention me in the edit summary. You have failed to do so twice (you left the summaries blank), while I've mentioned you in all my summaries. Malick78 (talk) 22:41, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment on Skapperod

    Skapperod is mistaken. He states which he authored himself - i.e. that I wrote the IBAN wording. This is simply false. I did not author the WP:IBAN "myself". The provisions of the IBAN page were written by User:Sandstein on August 13th. What I did is copy Sandstein's wording and started a separate page so that some matters could be clarifed, however this was redirected back to the general banning policy by T. Canens shortly there after.

    Since Skapperod is very obviously wrong here, I'd appreciate it if he struck his comment.VolunteerMarek 07:30, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment on Russavia and Moreschi

    Very quickly, I feel compelled to address this bit of misrepresentation of Misplaced Pages-history by Russavia, particularly since it appears that the administrator he references, Moreschi, is no longer active.

    Russavia says:

    User:Moreschi (...) wrote an essay on what he calls the nationalist plague on Misplaced Pages. He also made a list of areas of Misplaced Pages that suffer from edit warring and disruptive editing along nationalist lines. These essays and lists have in the past and are still used presently by editors to deal with nationalist editing on Misplaced Pages; usually resulting in AE or Arbcom banishment

    This makes it sound like Russavia's "Polandball" was merely following in the noble tradition of Moreschi by ... provoking "nationalist" editors who are a plague. Or something. Not sure what the point is exactly. Regardless, this is stuffing words in the mouth of a departed editor/administrator.

    Here's the thing. Click on Russavia's contributions. Then click on his block log. What is the first block entry you see on there? That's right, it says:

    18:21, 15 September 2008 Moreschi (talk | contribs) blocked Russavia (talk | contribs) (account creation blocked) with an expiry time of 2 weeks (Harassment of User:Biophys)

    In other words, it was exactly RUSSAVIA'S behavior (back in 2008) which Moreschi considered a "nationalistic plague" as evidenced by this block (if anyone feels like doing some wiki-archeology they can find all kinds of ol' diffs from AN/I and ol' AE which give more support for that). The way I remember it - and I've been around long enough to remember it - at the time Moreschi actually already wanted to block Russavia indefinitely/long term for ... well, for basically the kind of stuff that Russavia has been up to since 2008.

    So it's pretty ironic - hell, it turns things up on their head - for Russavia to be quoting Moreschi here as if somehow the ghost of Moreschi supported Russavia's atrocious behavior, which has been ongoing since 2008. Moreschi blocked Russavia back then (and this was way long before there was any "EEML" or anything), warned him and tried to curtail the kind of behavior on display here.

    And we're still stuck in 2008. No wonder Moreschi got fed up and left. VolunteerMarek 04:16, 30 March 2012 (UTC)


    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning Russavia

    Statement by Russavia

    I am still going to make a statment, but I am currently dealing with a more important issue at Misplaced Pages:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Unacceptable_homophobic_attacks_by_Youreallycan.2Foff2riorob. If you guys want to institute a 6-month block, go ahead, and I will appeal it later, but at this point in time, a direct homophobic attack against myself is more important to me, than dealing with trolling and baiting (which I have evidence of). I am also quite disappointed that Vecrumba chose to obviously troll with this edit summary - I am glad he is glad that a 6 month block has been proposed, and that this is classed as a successful day at the office, but Vecrumba, that's not a good move on your part, and it certainly takes away from "Russavia the evil troll" that he (and others) is pushing. I hope that admins will be more the wiser after I post an actual statement, if it is still required. Russavia 07:42, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

    • Please note that User:Nug is under an interaction ban with me. This is a dispute which involves me. Doesn't not involve. His arrival at this dispute, again, and I reinforce, does not involve him, is troublesome, especially as it displays the same behaviour from the EEML days in which they back up each other in disputes, but attempt to have me sanctioned -- even if he has not stated an opinion on me, his turning up here is obviously to get his buddies off the hook, leaving me the only one with sanctions being placed. I can only guess who is going to turn up next. As some admins have suggested a VERY long harsh ban for me, his appearance is totally inappropriate and a breach of this ban. Russavia 09:51, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Please also note, I am busy collecting diffs and links which I am going to be asking admins to look at, because this is turning to the exact sort of behaviour from EEML days. I will also address the DYK revision as well. But I am still for the most part concentrating on the other matter, but I will post an explanation of article and userpage for uninvolved admins to look at. Russavia 09:51, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    Polandball issues
    G'day mate, me be of Australiaball

    For the satirical (and original version) of this statement, refer to User:Russavia/PolandballAE. Given the number of accusations being levelled against me, I unfortunately am required to respond in detail. I am hoping that admins, who have not already made their minds up (perhaps outside AE people are required too) will give this a look at, because these issues do not belong at AE.

    So that everyone is reading off the same page, I am not Russian, but Australian and I’ve long been a fan of Polandball meme. Please read the article in its entirety, so that you understand the concept and how the meme works -- failing to understand the concept will not allow you to be better informed. Also refer to my satirical response on my talk page which shows that the meme is not only limited to “Polandball”.

    Article explained

    I came across some news articles on the meme on the web, and thought an article is viable because of the nature of the sources (newspapers and cultural magazines). With Google translate, I managed to write most of the article. I did “recruit” help from some native Polish speakers in translating parts that I wasn’t able to understand. These same Polish speakers also found additional sources for me. I would never have even started writing the article if I didn’t believe it was notable -- as we can see many uninvolved editors also agree with this assessment. Uninvolved editors will be explained later.

    The reason for my writing the article when I did, is that April’s Fools is coming-up and it is the perfect opportunity for it to appear on the front page. Nothing more-nothing less. That is how I operate as an editor, always have and always will. Anything else relating to the actual article is a content-dispute and it is not actionable at AE unless there are circumstances such as falsifying information or sources (refer Pantherskin)...none of which have been demonstrated. I will present evidence of false (and serious) accusations being made against myself by numerous editors, separately. Other than that, the article is not relevant to this request, as much as people want to make it an issue.

    Userpage explained

    For the last week when I've looked at my watchlist, there is a notice prominently at the top which states "The community discussion on image use within the Muhammad article as requested by the Arbitration Committee is now open for discussion." This goes to the core of both the article, and the images on my userpage, that being Misplaced Pages is not censored. I did replace my userpage with a Polandball cartoon. Have any of you seen The Simpsons episode where Gabbo was introduced? GABBO! GABBO! GABBO! This was done in much the same way, except I did probably err by not simply using File:Polandball.PNG as the image. Perhaps that would have been more effective in introducing this to Misplaced Pages.

    User:Moreschi (who I believe is British, and hence why Britainball is used in the cartoons), wrote an essay on what he calls the nationalist plague on Misplaced Pages. He also made a list of areas of Misplaced Pages that suffer from edit warring and disruptive editing along nationalist lines. These essays and lists have in the past and are still used presently by editors to deal with nationalist editing on Misplaced Pages; usually resulting in AE or Arbcom banishment (hence why Britainball is used to demonstrate this).

    The cartoons -- of which there are now two -- File:Poland can into Misplaced Pages.jpg (Polandball) and File:Russia can into space.jpg (Russiaball), with more to come (perhaps Germanyball will be next) take a look at nationalistic editing on Misplaced Pages, according to the "Plague" essay, yet in a satirical way in the style of Polandball. One needs to refer to the article to see that "Polandball" (this includes all "countries" by default) plays on national/ethnic megalomania, national complexes and stereotypes, so our cartoons do the same thing.

    Don't for a minute think that EEML editors speak for their entire country. The Polish editors who helped me with translations and finding articles, find not only the Polandball meme, but also the cartoons currently on my userpage, as hilarious. When I asked one editor if he knew of Polandball, his response..."I love Polandball". I can also show evidence of one Polish editor who finds the cartoon hilarious. This demonstrates that humour is subjective.

    Elen of the Roads (who unfortunately has now resorted to calling me a troll) said that she found them funny, but say "the cartoons are saying that Polish editors on the English Misplaced Pages are vandals". Unfortunately she hasn't commented on the "Russiaball" cartoon -- most people seem to be focussed on only one, but whilst ignoring the other (and future others). I disagree with this assessment. The Blade below says he finds them funny (the Russian one too Blade?). The cartoons no more says that any national or ethnic groups are vandals, than User:Moreschi/The Plague/Nationalist hotspots says that all editors in those areas are edit warriors and disruptive. I look at Misplaced Pages:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement#Nagorno-Karabakh_article and one could think that this userpage essay isn't an opinion, but statement saying that all editors in the areas listed are disruptive. The essay doesn't assume good faith, does it? Or does it? Or do people read too much into things? These cartoons are simply satire at work.

    Category:Misplaced Pages humor has over 1,000 pages that contain humour, including “disruptive” AfD nominations, and other things that were they to occur in mainspace, would see people banned. It is the humour that keeps these things on Misplaced Pages, and this is the same thing. So, some people are upset by it, I’m Aussie, it’s in the Aussie blood to laugh at ourselves and others, and I am not going to change who I am, because a couple of people who have historically been hostile towards me are having their nationalist sensitivities being satired on in user or project space. People simply need to stop taking themselves so seriously all the time (Internet not always serious business) and learn to laugh. Or are we that anally retentive and prudish as a community that we can't laugh at ourselves?

    Unfortunately, no-one really bothered to engage with me in honest and open discussion, but rather people had already made up their minds about it and decided I was automatically "guilty". I was not extended good faith by many people. Russavia 12:37, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Interaction ban breach

    I did revert Radeksz/Volunteer Marek's edit to the AfD, only to avoid the drama. Go figure!

    VM is under an interaction ban with me, and to go after a DYK that I was working on, is an interaction ban breach.

    During the actual EEML case, VM (previously know as Radeksz) introduced evidence where on how I noted problems with a DYK written by Piotrus (although I was also doing other DYK stuff at the same time). He wrote:

    And note that in this particular case Russavia is jumping feet first into as much controversy as he can:

    The article Colonies of Poland concerns Courland (now Latvia), Belarus and Ukraine - all successor states of the Soviet Union, never mind Eastern European topics as stated by ArbCom.

    The article was created by Piotrus, so Russavia is going straight for somebody who's involved in this case as well.

    Then Russavia proceeds to comment on the DYK nomination made by Piotrus, again in a very provocative fashion .

    Seriously - this guy can't avoid violating his blocks and bans or staying out of trouble for more than a few days even as this case is ongoing!

    If VM thought that I was going after Piotrus back in 2009, why would he not think that by doing what he did at the DYK that I created does not fulfill the same type of behaviour that he accused me of then? Or was it just battleground behaviour back then? Or is it battleground behaviour now? It's one of the other -- or is it both? I say both.

    I likely should not have reverted his comment at my DYK nomination, but as he says I have predictability (notice how he bolds it) -- he knows that I would likely revert him, so he purposely came after something I was working on in order to provoke me, and to cause me to revert him. He did this at the time of my last block too (after which AE refused to look at this type of behaviour from). This is both trolling me, and baiting me, in order to get a response.

    In future, I will not revert these editors, and hope to avoid the drama. I will bring it to the attention of an uninvolved admin for their action.

    Also, please look at this edit on the article from Marek. This is clearly disruptive editing on the part of Marek.

    Further information on the other issues mentioned will be forthcoming. Russavia 12:34, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Evidence of co-ordination, trolling, baiting and harassment

    I am currently compiling evidence of co-ordination, trolling, baiting and harassment of myself both onwiki and offwiki which it is pertinent that admins be aware of; for any blocks that are handed out need to take into account these issues. Of course, I am willing to leave it at that for the time being so long as:

    1. there is not a one-sided block of myself
    2. and so long as any block I receive is not draconian as some have suggested.

    The interaction ban breaches on the DYK were as bad as one another so an equal block of all editors who have breached the interaction ban would be warranted in this case.

    I am happy to leave the other issues lay at the moment (at least as it relates to most EEML editors) and I can address those at a more pertinent time. Russavia 12:39, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Couple of responses to individual editors
    • Lothar I don't expect you to AGF in anything I do; so much so, you might want to look at who actually created the cartoons. Twasn't me.
    • Vecrumba I am not taking the bait, because this is not a "Soviet legacy" dispute. Trying to frame it as one might be seen as an escalation, and I am not doing that.
    • Henrik, et al. Xeno was not acting in his official capacity as an Arbitration Committee member---but merely as an individual editor. He didn't engage in discussion with me before removing. He is welcome to discuss with me on a personal level, as an editor just like me. All editors opinions on this project hold equal weight -- for example, I can show you instances where people have reverted JW. A combative setting such as AE is not the place to be discussing such things.
    Involved editors and harassment

    Many people are familiar with Wikipediareview.com but Wikipediaforum.com was created after TheKohser was banned from Wikipediareview, as a venue for the diehards to hang out and engage in off-wiki personal attacks on WP editors, implied canvassing (posting of links to on-wiki discussions to which they flock to to support each other), and likely outing of editors. Volunteer Marek is a member of both. Other members include banned EricBarbour, Mbz1, amongst others.

    Here (archived) is a thread which discusses me in which Volunteer Marek is quite active.

    • User:Jayen466 - is a "global moderator" of Wikipediaforum.com - of which Marek is a member, and now has a grudge on myself, because in my capacity as an admin on Commons, I have closed controversial decisions inline with Commons policy. Also has a problem with my calling of a controversial RFC/U of User:Fae of being homophobic (which 30 editors agreed with). Also arrived at the AfD as a result of Marek's obvious canvassing . Blamed me for an unwarranted homophobic attack on myself -- and seemed to imply that "Queer agenda" is used in a positive way (it's not!!!!). Is hardly an outside and neutral observer in this case, but has a vested interest in having me banned, and is obviously here to support his fellow member - deserves a WP:DIGWUREN warning, so that in future an interaction ban can be sought if he continues.

    Statement by EdJohnston

    I am sorry to see that Russavia, who I have worked with before, and has made a lot of contributions, seems to be losing his perspective. Russavia's magnification of this dispute into the battle of the century is what I find alarming. Criticizing members of Arbcom has a feeling of a last resort about it. Russavia was previously blocked one week for violation of an interaction ban with Vecrumba per this AE request in November 2011. He seems to believe that this justifies draconian enforcement against Vecrumba now, who in this case is just proclaiming that he was offended by the cartoon. The block of Russavia for violating the EEML interaction ban last November involved article changes where Russavia undid four content edits by EEML members on a variety of articles. Vecrumba's attitude in the current dispute is less than perfect but I am not clear on why he would be sanctioned as severely as Russavia. If all parties would back down gracefully I myself would close with no action, but since I gave some advice to Vecrumba that has been mentioned in this case, I won't close this myself. I agree with the views that User:Henrik has expressed in the Result section (at 17:10 on 26 March). EdJohnston (talk) 18:25, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning Russavia

    Please provide a specific ruling on the unprovoked Polophobic insult that Poles are Misplaced Pages vandals. In absolutely no way shape manner or form does it fit within the so-called internet whatever-it-is of yet another way to promulgate derisive stereotypes under the guise of "humor" or "jokes". If you walk away, you legitimize racist assaults on all Eastern European editors.

    My necessary dispute is the attack on all Polish Misplaced Pages editors, thereby automatically including members of EEML, that is, dredging up past conflict. One cannot attack a larger group and maintain that is not an attack on a subset of that group. My dispute is not with the article documenting a meme, as is alleged, it is with using said meme, now that an article exists, to in turn create/upload (Greyhood) and post as one's user page (Russavia) a Misplaced Pages-specific attack. VєсrumЬаTALK 13:11, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    As Russiavia now paints himself to be a victim at my and EEML hands, let me be clear:

    • There is no place on WP for "humor" which attacks identified groups of editors, whether they are gay, Polish, or pink elephants; I don't give a crap about the Polandball article, as to whether it is encyclopedic is a separate discussion, my issue is with the Polophobic attack graphic, there is NOTHING humorous about Russavia's posting of it as his user page given his perennially belligerent attitude (just read the with terminal prejudice deletion edit summaries he provides when removing conduct complaints on his user page).
    • Russavia's suggestion that we should be apparently laughing WITH him at Greyhood's graphic attacking Polish editors pours more salt into the wound and only digs his grave deeper.
    • Russavia is the instigator of bad blood here, no one else is responsible for his reprehensible inability to get along with editors, particularly with whom he disagrees over the Soviet legacy.

    If I had complained about a homophobic attack, the righteous would all arise. Instead, I'm made out to be the attacker here because I dispute a clear and unequivocal provocation, that is, Russavia once again lashing out at his editorial "enemies"--and for whatever reason, I am once again the lightning rod for his pathetic wrath even though I never even mentioned him (a couple of times in passing) in the alleged EEML plot, thousands of emails over half out to get Russavia (Alex Bakharev's mischaracterization so gross as to be an outright lie, but convenient for Russavia's victimology particulalry at my hands). I am tired of Russavia's woe is me, I am an innocent being raped yet again by the evil EEML Vecrumba. VєсrumЬаTALK 16:07, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Rusavia, there is no "bait." The only arena where you and Polish/Eastern European editors intersect and revert is regarding the Soviet legacy. Your "humor" in posting Greyhood's graphic is no such thing, it is an attack on your editorial opposition. As you are an intelligent and capable—indeed, cooperative (!)—editor outside this arena, I can only find your derisive "humor" to be provocative and malicious in intent. It is for others here to decide whether or not to view it in the same manner. VєсrumЬаTALK 18:10, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Russavia, with a proverbial 'loose cannon' like you, the list of "parties involved" in the dispute could stretch on quite a while. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 17:41, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    Russavia sees enemies under every sofa cushion - even attacking me on Arbitration pages where I have nothing in particular to do with him or her. Currently I trust the ArbCom members are aware of multiple page postings wherein R, who has engaged in baiting YRC on an on-going basis, has gotten him blocked for what is "homophobic attacks" or the like.

    While I recognize that R is an admin on Commons, that does not mean he or she has any privileges on WP proper at all, and the iterated behaviour of baiting others is, per ArbCom, actionable by ArbCom or any admin - edit comments such as homophobic attacks at this point are more important to deal with -- and a quick note on trolling), repeated accusations of people being on WP pages because of CANVASS violations jayen466 is not credible -- canvassing is occurring at http://www.wikipediaforum.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?p=1855&sid=58d8c4eac217e9cf6f60ea706f44a695#p1855), requesting a 1 week block to match my last interaction ban block), threatening Herostratus with If you repeat such things about editors again, I'll report you myself and ask for a block, etc.

    (sticking to only a short period of time as there are way too many examples of this in the contribution log - other edit summaries warning to DC to watch step given that there is an ANI discussion considering community banning him , explaining, exactly why this is homophobic harrassment), collect needs to do the honourable thing here and stop claiming uninvolvement in issues he is knee deep in) ( which was a clear and nitable violation of ArbCom editing rules in itself) , no coren, but everytime you masturbate, god kills a kitten.....I was personally responsible for the death of 10 kittens alone today.....today was a good day :)), Did someone contact you about it? Yes or no? You can answer that.) , no longer in my userpage -- is now in main space -- haters hate elsewhere pls) , ad nauseam.

    I iterate my post some time back:

    Russavia has done her best to make those who were willing to give her leeway (such as I) rethink that position. I have always spoken against Draconian solutions, but Russavia has operated on the misapprehension that all who do not back her are her enemy (sigh). In the case at hand, "blocks all around" would reward her behaviour, which I fear is unwise. The iterated debate system of saying that one will respond at a future date, or that one is "retired" for some small period of time, especially when such a responses is not then made, is also a problem. Collect (talk) 19:44, 26 October 2011 (UTC) Collect (talk) 12:52, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    WRT not bringing in "everything under the sun" - Russavia has opened the door wide with "Evidence of co-ordination, trolling, baiting and harassment. and I suggest that if she or he has opened that door, that it not be closed. Further that discussion Wikipedia_talk:Banning_policy#IBAN_wording on the actual wording of the iBan (tm Apple) does not comport with an opinion that Vecrumba violated it as written and understood. In short - boomerang time with the latest shots fired by Russavia. Cheers. Collect (talk) 13:11, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Block 3 months, require essay "100 Contributions of Poland to the world": The user needs to intensely focus on the reverse of writing those articles which were wp:Attack pages or wp:NPA "national attacks" against Poland or other people. By requesting a 100-topic essay (as a talk-page section), the user could demonstrate 3-month research and focus on the positive contributions of people from Poland (Frederick Chopin, Marie Curie, Wiktor Kemula, Leopold Infeld re Einstein, etc.). The attention, diversity and balance among the 100 topics would indicate the seriousness of studying the nation's culture, in a positive manner, rather than creating "Polandball" (AfD) with talk of "focusing on Polish megalomania" (or similar insults). -Wikid77 (talk) 15:52, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Tim, I'm concerned that you're making an overly broad reading of WP:IBAN. Volunteer Marek's comment at the DYK was informative and didn't comment on or reply to Russavia. Marek has been bold and updated WP:IBAN to reflect your point of view, but I believe his comment was within a reasonable good-faith interpretation of WP:IBAN as it read at that time. — Malik Shabazz /Stalk 18:08, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Agree with Tim. A DYK filed by one party means that ANY comment opposing it by the other is by definition against the party that filed it. VM wanted to scupper Russavia's DYK - hence mentioned the AFD. He knew what he was doing, and broke the spirit of the rules of the ban. Any complaint about wording is just an attempt to game the system, it seems to me. Malick78 (talk) 21:04, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Oh, and why are we just referring to the first DYK nom? VM makes a host of comments at the AFD trying to get the Russavia-started page deleted. He also added a link to the article mentioning a failed Russian space mission (to make a point, since one of the phrases of the meme is about Poland never having entered the space race). It's both petty and confrontational. And in defiance of the interaction ban surely.Malick78 (talk) 21:20, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • If those two edits are all you have, that's a pretty piss-poor "stalking" case. More like a cursory glance at your Special:Contributions page one evening. User contributions are public, and there is no restriction on people looking at them and editing to the same pages. You're just coming here to gripe. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 22:14, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • 3 month topic ban on Poland, Fucking, arses, cock rings and chickens, public masturbation etc. - There's something untoward in at 07:42, 28 March 2012 (UTC) claiming here the need to defend oneself from the outburst of YouReallyCan/Off2rioRob who was baited (very easily and successfully) with Russavia's boast of getting Fucking, Austria onto the DYK front page, ....and then at 10:21, 24, 28, 28 March 2012 edits and edit summaries on Template:Did you know nominations/Zhirinovsky's ass ‎ (we really have grown into a community of prudes -- mericuuuuh....fuck yeah....we're gonna censor your fucking wikipedia, mericuuuuh fuck yeah) 10:24, 28 March 2012 (Fucking was on the front page at DYK too you know ;)) 10:21, (an arse is an arse, an ass is an ass, a fanny is a fanny, a fanny is a...fill in the blank...) ......repeating the same juvenile boast of getting Fucking onto WP's shopwindow as caused the explosion that delightedly got a dinosaur editor blocked. (and lest I be a prude too, for the record my own attention was canvassed by Russavia in gaming DYK and RM and making edits that would mislead non-Russian knowing editors to believe that "ass" was innocent in Russian) In ictu oculi (talk) 01:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
      • Agree with In ictu oculi, though I'd make it 6. Make no mistake: Russavia is the source of all the dramah here, and engineered it – knowingly and intentionally. --JN466 18:39, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    • A couple of things, Russavia. First of all, if you check the nearly 30 editors who endorsed your view in the Fæ RfC, you will find my name among them, at number 5.
    • Secondly, the reason I am here is comments like these. The first one of these is absolutely appalling, and I am still absolutely amazed that Jimbo let this kind of comment stand on his talk page without comment. It is that post, Russavia, that is the reason why I am here. You are an embarrassment to this project until you have the good sense to apologise to Natasha. --JN466 21:07, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    Comments by Lothar von Richthofen

    Russavia's attempts to slither away from scrutiny of the Polandball-userpage-debacle are pathetic. Maybe some editors need to "lighten up", maybe not. But anyone who buys the "only trying to introduce the meme here" line is gullible beyond belief. A comic depicting Polish Wikipedians as shit-scrubbing vandals would raise eyebrows anywhere, but when it is plastered across the userpage of an editor well-known for explosive conflicts with editors from Poland and Eastern Europe, it cannot be interpreted as anything but malicious. The last shred of credibility that the "I was only having fun, fellas!" defence had was vapourised by R's testy reversion of Xeno's removal of the comic. Russavia was the one "trolling" and "baiting" here. The comic alone should be viewed as an IBAN violation. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 15:34, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Russavia, even if I believed for a second that you came here to "teach the world to laugh", I'd still say that you shouldn't. Your past history with regards to all things Eastern Europe (incl. Poland) precludes your doing so. You are too controversial already; making malicious "satire" directed at Polish Wikipedians is the no-no of no-nos for you. It's best to leave these things to people with cleaner hands, and I am sure that you do know that, no matter how dumb you play. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 16:01, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    I DGAF if you created the cartoon or not; it is not central to the point I am making. More relevant is the fact that you plastered a giant image of it across your userpage. Whether or not Xeno was acting as an arb in removing is another red herring. You know that he is an arb. Yes, as editors we are all the same, but that does not change the fact that some editors have been elected to positions of higher responsibility. Arbs act in dispute situations. His remark "This is simply not collegial, please don't display this here" is reasonably interpretable as indicating intervention in such a situation—maybe not formally, but certainly informally. Combined with your childish, combative "do not touch my userpage thank you" edit summary, your reversion becomes even more WP:POINTy. Your cartoon-related antics are inexcusable baiting, your attempts to weasel out of responsibility notwithstanding. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 17:52, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    @TC: VM would not have interacted with Russavia if not for the cartoon incident, which took place before the AfD comment and the DYK comment. Pretty much everyone sees that Russavia emblazoned the cartoon across his userpage in a malicious trolling/baiting attempt. VM, a Polish editor, swallowed the bait. While I don't like to point fingers, Russavia did instigate this one. That should at least be a mitigating factor for any consideration of sanctions for VM (though I am inclined to see any discussion relating to that provocateurish comic as potentially falling under dispute resolution). ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 11:57, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    @Greyhood: You talk awfully much about Vecrumba in your statement. Do note, however, that he is neither "defendant" nor "plaintiff" in this case, and that his participation here has been minimal. You make precisely one mention of VM, who is a main figure in this dispute (and also Polish). I would advise you to stay on topic.
    Re all of your points about humour and satire: See my replies to Russavia above. The fact that the individual in question has such a long history of conflict in national disputes means that this is not "getting offended at every next thing". If I were to be involved in long-standing and bitter animosity with a redhead that had gone on across years and spilled over onto every noticeboard known to en-wiki, and then one day turn around and put up a 1000px image saying that "gingers have no souls". On the userpage of another editor who was not involved in such disputes, it would be just considered in poor taste. But on my page, there is no real way that that can reasonably be considered innocuous.
    Re "nothing blatantly and objectively wrong": This is an absurd claim. Satire is not "objective" to begin with, and "blatantness" all depends on the individual. Multiple administrators have voiced strong concerns in this thread about Russavia's use of the cartoon, so I don't think that it is so clear-cut as you are spinning it to be.
    Re harassment: The homophobia-related harassment (which is real) has not been much a part of this case, so that's not really relevant. WF has also not played much of a role; only JN can be argued as being directed here from that (unless I missed someone).
    Re "people baiting Russavia here": I take offence to this. You need to learn that making comments against a user in an arbitration request is not necessarily baiting. By your loose definition of the term, I could easily make the claim that you are baiting Vecrumba—so much space in your statement devoted to such a minor party in the dispute does not look good.
    Re "old or recent opponents": What, you think AE is where uninvolved users with no prior knowledge of the dispute come to solve everything? Puh-leeze. That's unreasonable on so many levels. A fair number of uninvolved admins have, however, commented here. Their view of R's antics is generally less than favourable.
    Re "if these creations are disputable": I have already mostly addressed this above, but I will give this special clarification: the cartoons per se are not the centre of this dispute. Russavia's use of a particular one in XXL size on his userpage—reverting over an arbitrator who removed it and told him sternly and informally that it was not acceptable—is. ~~ Lothar von Richthofen (talk) 14:50, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    IBAN wording relevancy

    VM was prohibited from interaction with R not per IBAN, which he authored himself, but by remedy 11 of the EEML arbcom:

    WP:IBAN in turn was written by VM months after this remedy was applied:

    The arbcom remedy was to stop eg the pattern of EEML members provoking R into actions that could serve as a basis for a report. It should be read "Leave R alone, widely construed," and there should be no argument here whether a caveat VM himself had introduced on a different page later should be applied here. The argument should focus on whether VM's comments on R's DYK entry were made "for purposes of legitimate and necessary dispute resolution," which is the only caveat granted to VM's remedy by arbcom. Especially, since VM has in the opening post of this AE report emphasized the "predictability" of R's reaction. Skäpperöd (talk) 06:50, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    I correct the above per as follows: Sandstein had introduced a similar wording to WP:BAN more than a week before VM wrote IBAN, meaning that there already existed a similar wording on WP:BAN.
    However, even if taking Sandstein's version of BAN#IBAN for invoking the above-cited caveat, this invokation is still not justified as it is not IBAN applying here, but the arbcom ruling in WP:EEML, written month before Sandstein's and VM's IBAN introduction of said caveat to IBAN. Skäpperöd (talk) 07:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Statement by Greyhood

    • As the sole author of the comic, which surprisingly for me became a part of so much controversy, I'm more involved to this issue than some users here, so I'd like to make a statement in a separate section.
    • In this discussion I've already answered Vecrumba about his claim that this cartoon "can insult.. all Eastern Europeans by extension". I've intended to write a special statement for AE from scratch, but for the lack of time I'll cite some of my explanations given to Vecrumba:
    How does "Baltic heritage" is relevant here at all? As for the Eastern European heritage - that's obviously too broad a thing (that may include Russia and South Slavs) and it is extremely strange to claim that anything here "can insult.. all Eastern Europeans by extension". As for the Polish heritage, please note that Poles reacted to this cartoon in much more calm way and some even did like it - apparently they are simply better aware of the Polandball meme and find it not wise to angrily react at the humor involving national stereotypes.
    The cartoon was created by me alone and I did not consult with Russavia while making it. And while making it, I had no single thought about actual Polish editors on Misplaced Pages. I simply had a task to create a cartoon illustrating the meme, but also to make something new and not entirely repeating the scenarios of the existing Polandball cartoons. Misplaced Pages humor was an obvious idea - and then Polandball just assumed its typical role, a character and a persona which one would be very wrong (and lacking a sense of humor and irony) to consider the same thing as the Polish nation or particular Polish editors.
    Finally, really strange to hear these complaints from you, who apparently liked Putin on the Ritz. Even more strange was to read your suggestion that if you started mocking Putin on your userpage, the Russians would rush to complain about it. Not really - firstly, I must admit a part of Russians really do not like Putin, and secondly, as far as I know, Russians, with many of their faults, at least tend to have a well developed sense of irony. The same goes for the Russophile editors (though this term is not entirely correct on my part) - note that Russavia not only created Putin on the Ritz, but voted keep for this much more mocking satire on Putin. At the same time I supported keeping Putin on the Ritz and have no particular objections against Putin in bra too. Valid satire is valid, and no point censoring it - this is not the same as adding incorrect or undue information to the articles.
    • It seems for me that the problem is about the fact, that some people accept satire about some subjects but yet oppose satire about other, not very different subjects. I agree, of course, that humor and satire must be treated carefully and used in appropriate contexts. But for me it is also obvious that different people have different sense of humor and different view of the world. There are multiple articles and userpages on Misplaced Pages with which contents I disagree with or even could have got offended with, if not for the habit of not getting offended at every next thing which I'm not comfortable with. I could not understand, or rather, I could not approve that some editors plunge into attacking other users with different views and with different understanding of what is allowed and what is not, without attempts at constructive discussion first. Especially I could not approve that when the issue in question is just humor. Of all the admins involved here, only User:Elen of the Roads attempted such discussion with Russavia on his talk, and that discussion did not result in conclusive demonstration of why the usage of the meme was not appropriate.
    • The situation was complicated by the fact that Vecrumba, while under i-ban with Russavia, entered his talk page, seeking to get offended by something he had no relation to. Then the situation was further complicated by i-bans between Russavia and Marek.
    • Then there is a massive on-wiki harassment of Russavia by the users having grudges against him because of his recent opposition to homophobic attacks on user Fae and because of other reasons, with some of such users apparently being also users of Wikipediaforum and coming from a thread there (not to mention the offensive stuff directed at Russavia on that forum itself). That, with the fact that most people baiting Russavia here and at the other recent related discussions are his old or recent opponents, is most worrying.
    • I won't claim that Russavia (or myself in that part of the story where I was involved) acted always correctly. Of course anyone could be criticized and anyone's actions and views could be challenged. But the fact that many other users have found the image and the Polandball article OK (or at least not objected to them while been aware of them) shows that there was nothing blatantly and objectively wrong about these creations (the meme subjects are not prohibited, nor is satire - and the opposition to both things is a great deal subjective). If these creations are disputable, these disputes could have been resolved and should have been resolved in correct way (there are AfD procedures), without breaching the i-bans and a massive harassment including off-wiki. GreyHood 13:53, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Discussion concerning Volunteer Marek and Vecrumba

    Tim, your interpretation of VM's posting a note as a violation of WP:IBAN is contrary to all earlier understanding of what is permitted after a clarification related to a previous AE report. This understanding was demonstrated by the subsequent participation by those under a mutual iBan including VM in the AfD. To state VM's note to the DYK page is now a violation when participation in an earlier AfD was perfectly okay seems to be rather arbitrary and unfair on VM.

    With regard to Vecrumba, the fact there already exists another AE report involving him above to which he was permitted to comment, and noting that this report essentially covers the same contentious area of Polandball as that other report, surely this report can effectively be considered to be an extention of the dispute that Vecrumba was legitimately attempting to resolve above and which you closed with no action. Therefore it is somewhat unfair to now sanction Vercrumba for commenting here while he was permitted to participate in that other concurrent case relating to essentially the same area of dispute, particularly given that it appears that some admins seemed to have continued their discussion relating to that other report here. --Nug (talk) 09:05, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning Russavia

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
    • Misplaced Pages editing in contentious areas only work when all parties work towards consensus and respect. Some editors are able to respectfully interact with editors with other views. Some are not able to do it. Unfortunately it falls upon us to eject those who can not work in a respectful and collegial manner and abide by both the rules and spirit of Misplaced Pages from the discussion, lest they poison the discussion for everybody. User:Russavia is a veteran at WP:AE and other conflict resolution venues; by now this user must surely know what we expect from editors. Nationalistic jokes, which quite obviously would provoke a reaction and escalate long running conflict, is not it. henriktalk 17:10, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
    • I see interaction ban violations both ways. Two weeks blocks for each, I'd say. T. Canens (talk) 05:51, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    Vecrumba was unwise, but did apparently take advice from an admin (ED Johnstone) before embarking on Russavia's takpage (see above section). Does that offer any mitigation? --Elen of the Roads (talk) 15:46, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Just so I'm 100% clear, are you referring to Russavia and Volunteer Marek? The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 18:51, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
      Russavia (the undoing is bad), Volunteer Marek (commenting on a DYK nomination by someone you are interaction banned with is a bad idea), and Vecrumba (this thread is nowhere near necessary DR for him). T. Canens (talk) 07:15, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
      If someone wants to make a request against Russavia on matters unrelated to this alleged interaction ban violation, they should start their own thread. This thread is messy enough without people bringing in everything under the sun.

      VM, that DYK nomination was started by Russavia. You commented directly under the nomination in opposition to it. This is very far from the acceptable case in which two people participate in different parts of the same discussion without interacting with each other.

      Unless any uninvolved admin strenuously objects, I'm implementing the two-week blocks in 24 hours, without prejudice to a longer block or other sanction on any of the parties as a result of any future threads. T. Canens (talk) 13:48, 28 March 2012 (UTC)

      I can't think of a way that you could comment in that particular discussion without violating your interaction ban. That there are some cases in which both parties to an interaction ban may participate in the same discussion does not mean that in every discussion both may participate. T. Canens (talk) 14:09, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    I'd usually say two weeks is justified for the interaction ban violation, but note that would be this users 12th block. That, along with the provocative nature of recent contributions, escalation of conflicts, and long term failure to adhere to the collegial and respectful interaction we strive for leads me to think a much longer block would be justified. I suggest 6 months. User:Russavia has made many positive contributions to Misplaced Pages, but this user needs to start deescalating and defusing situations rather than inflaming them. Or failing that, not be part of the discussions. henriktalk 20:00, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    As it is not clear how much of Russavia's block log was tainted by WP:EEML, the history of blocks prior of that case is of somewhat limited value, in my opinion. If someone starts a different thread about the questionable recent edits, we can work out some additional sanctions there. T. Canens (talk) 13:48, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Much as I hate to say it, I think Tim's solution above is the right one. It does seem like a pretty clear interaction ban violation from all involved, and it's an ongoing issue with them. The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 16:55, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
      User:Vecrumba's post in this section, though now stricken, was a clear violation of the interaction ban. I am less convinced by User:Volunteer Marek's violation; I have to largely echo Malik Shabazz's comments above. But I can't see how User:Russavia's judgement in reverting an arb to restore this version of his user page isn't hugely problematic. He should well know that it would be provocative (not to mention in violation of the above arbitration remedy) and I'd hate to set a precedent that users with interaction bans can lob potshots at the other side as long as it's done in the form of cartoons. But perhaps T.Canens is right in that it would be a matter better discussed as a separate thread, as the original complaint did not seek to address this issue. henriktalk 20:31, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
    Upon a second look, I agree with you that Volunteer Marek is much less in the wrong here; I'd be fine with letting him off. As to Vecrumba and Russavia, though, both clearly violated their interaction ban. And I also agree with you about the cartoon Russavia posted (though I confess I had to laugh when I saw it, I also know it's far from helpful). The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 04:39, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    • My opinion on sanctions is as follows.
      I believe User:Russavia started this thing knowing that Polish editors would respond to it. The cartoon on his userpage was not political satire, it was a specific accusation that Polish Misplaced Pages editors are disruptive sockmasters. He ought to be sanctioned for that even if it doesn't violate an arbitration decision, as this would be the consequence were it any other editor making any such allegation about any other section of the community, refusing to remove it, and restoring it in the face of removal by one of the Arbitrators.
      I believe User:Vecrumba should not be sanctioned for one post here which he has struck - it was unwise, and probably a technical breach, but it had already been agreed by contributors to the request about him that his comments on Russavia's talkpage should not provoke a sanction, and it does read that he was simply echoing what he had said there.
      User:Volunteer Marek is more problematic, as he did make several comments at the article AFD, as well as at DYK, and the comments do to an extent refer to the editor as well as the content, although they are focused on the content mostly. I cannot see this warranting as serious a sanction as Russavia's actions. None of this would have happened if Russavia had not been trying to engineer it (I honestly cannot believe that Russavia somehow did not anticipate exactly the response he got).

    I do also have a concern about the wording of these bans, as there is the possibility that they give an advantage to a first mover on any side, by preventing any further discussion by other parties likely to have an interest. Much more thought on how to address that required though. Elen of the Roads (talk) 11:55, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    • I basically agree with Elen (and with Lothar): Russavia's addition of a – shall we call it contentiuous? – contentious cartoon to his userpage was nothing but trolling, considering his area of interest. I believe he should receive a longish block or, alternatively, an indefinite topic ban from all edits relating to Central and Eastern Europe across all namespaces. I also believe that neither Vecrumba nor Volunteer Marek should be sanctioned and I would strongly oppose the imposition of a block on either of them. Regarding the former, I once again share Elen's opinion, so I'll not repeat it now. Regarding the latter, currently, the relevant policy states the editors are generally allowed to edit the same pages or discussions as long as they avoid each other. It may be unwise to do so, it may even invite drama in certain cases, but the point is that it is allowed and, so, Volunteer Marek should not be sanctioned either. Salvio 10:54, 30 March 2012 (UTC)
    With one side of the ban being the nominator and an extremely short discussion, I fail to see how being the first to oppose the nomination could count as "avoiding each other". T. Canens (talk) 11:28, 30 March 2012 (UTC)
    The point is that they are prohibited from interacting with each other – or from commenting on and interacting with each other –; I fail to see how writing Please note that the article is now up at AfD and is very much inappropriate for being featured on Misplaced Pages's front page. can be construed as a violation of such a restriction: VolunteerMarek was expressing his opinion on the DYK nomination. Also it is worth noting that Russavia immediately undid the edit, which is something I had originally missed. Salvio 18:15, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    DHeyward

    Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.

    Request concerning DHeyward

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
    The Devil's Advocate (talk) 23:22, 26 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    DHeyward (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    Misplaced Pages:Requests_for_arbitration/September 11 conspiracy theories#Standard discretionary sanctions and Misplaced Pages:Requests_for_arbitration/September 11 conspiracy theories#Decorum particularly the part regarding harassment.
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
    1. 05:45, 27 February 2012 Comments on User:MONGO's talk page to accuse me of being a sockpuppet based on, from what I can tell, my mere editing of the 9/11 topic area in a way he dislikes.
    2. 05:47, 2 March 2012 He reverts my request that he not make such remarks in the future and that he rescind a similarly frivolous accusation against another editor that he had in his userspace.
    3. 2 March 2012 Votes "delete per Devil's advocate" in a completely unrelated deletion discussion where I voted keep.
    4. 17:51, 6 March 2012 Reverts my comment at his talk page noting that I had not voted delete in the AfD.
    5. 07:05, 11 March 2012 Starts an AN case requesting the lifting of Tom's topic ban that resulted from a report I filed against Tom. Dhey makes several attacks against me in his opening statement, calling me an "inclusionist" for 9/11 conspiracy theories and completely misrepresenting the nature of my report by implying it was about Tom only labeling a subset of conspiracy theories as antisemitic and never linking to the actual report where it would be clear this was not the case. An editor responding to the AN case is clearly influenced by this manipulation of the facts as that editor suggests I could have cherry-picked information, though anyone who looks at the case would see it was not cherry-picking at all. DHeyward neglecting to provide that information left people to draw incendiary conclusions about me.
    6. 16:03, 11 March 2012 Likens my AE case against Tom to Jeffrey Dahmer complaining about not getting his preferred last meal.
    7. 08:41, 18 March 2012 Goes to MONGO's talk page again to accuse me of being a sockpuppet.
    8. 22:13, 21 March 2012 Closes an RfC I started on an issue in the 9/11 topic area five hours after it starts claiming that there was a consensus despite there being only five comments, all but one being from editors involved in the previous discussion.
    9. 06:07, 26 March 2012 Reverts my addition of a relevant wikilink to the lede of a completely unrelated article.
    10. 06:36, 26 March 2012 Goes into another completely unrelated article, one that I created, to remove material I added.
    11. 06:51, 26 March 2012 Removes quotation marks from a direct quote in that article on the basis that putting it in quotes is a BLP issue.
    12. 20:44, 26 March 2012 Reverts my undoing of the top two changes.
    13. 02:50, 27 March 2012 Replaced my comments on his talk page with "derpo derp derp" after I informed him about this case.
    14. 04:30, 27 March 2012 Reverts my removal of the above rewrite.
    15. 17:22, 27 March 2012 After I removed the insulting rewrite again and pointed to WP:TPO and WP:POLEMIC he creates a "derpchive" including the conversation with me (no comment attributed to me is retained but the implication is the same), and an older discussion with User:John.
    16. 22:28, 27 March 2012 In an apparent response to the listing of the above diff, DHeyward removes the bit involving John, but leaves the conversation with me in the "derpchive" even though it is a blatant indirect attack on me.
    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)

    Editor is fully aware of the discretionary sanctions per his AN request above to lift the topic ban where he repeatedly cites the discretionary sanctions, his commenting on an AE case above to push for a topic ban against me, and I also asked him on his talk page to stop his actions or I would report him, to which he responded by saying "begone troll" claiming that he was just responding to a peer review.

    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    I should note that Dhey's actions above only concern his harassment towards me and are not the only issues with his conduct. The AE case above filed against MONGO includes details of his editing actions with regards to a warning section in the main 9/11 article on top of his close of the RfC. He appears to have edited sporadically with month-long gaps prior to this recent spurt with the vast majority of his recent edits being somehow related to going after me. Whether his motivations are general disagreement with my contributions to the 9/11 topic area or a desire to get revenge for Tom's topic ban, which has since been lifted, is unclear to me. I was more than willing to tolerate his frustrations in the 9/11 topic area, but his persistence in being involved in an unconnected article I created and that I am trying to get to Good Article and hopefully Featured Article status has exhausted my patience.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 23:22, 26 March 2012 (UTC)

    The conduct is at issue here Tom and Toa. Hounding can mean going to articles that have nothing to do with the topic area just to go after an editor. It is DHeyward's conduct that falls under the discretionary sanctions in the 9/11 topic area. He plainly admits that he got to that article from looking over my contributions. Why do you think he was looking over my contributions except due to my involvement in the 9/11 topic area?--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 03:38, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    @Elen I suggest you take a second look at the diffs as many do pertain directly to the topic area. Particularly, check diffs #1 and #2 (the other editor mentioned was also frivolously accused of sockpuppetry by DHey after becoming involved in the 9/11 topic area) and diffs #5 - #8. "Hounding" and "harassment" can certainly expand beyond the concerned topic area and that is what this is and nothing more. There is no "personal dispute" here.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 00:40, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    The discussion on MONGO's talk page was prompted by a topic ban Tom harrison received for an AE report I filed on his edits in the 9/11 topic area and the sock DHey mentions has edited in the 9/11 topic area. In the case of the other editor I mentioned in the second diff, that editor was only accused after showing up on the 9/11 talk page. Diffs #5 and #6 involve an AN case specifically about lifting Tom's ban from the 9/11 topic area. Diff #7 has him naming sockpuppets who all edited in the 9/11 topic area. Diff #8 clearly relates to the 9/11 topic area.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 15:28, 30 March 2012 (UTC)
    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning DHeyward

    Statement by DHeyward

    I'm not quite sure what this has to do with 9/11 or an arbcom decision. I'll stand by this copy edit which TDA believes is the root of all evil and subverting his will. I don't even know what part of the article is his though I do admit to following a problematic POV editor to BLP's and other articles that have specific policies against POV and defamation. I submit that my version as edited is superior to the one that he insists on using to cast aspersions on a living person. This is an encyclopedia, not a forum to direct highly charged, partisan rhetoric at political opponents. Even quotable highly-partisan rhetoric is not acceptable when neutral language accomplishes the same goal of informing the reader. Insisting on calling a candidate an "insurgent" is beyond the pale regardless of the source. Burn me at the stake if NPOV and BLP are can be ignored because partisan editors wish to convey their version of reality. BTW, TDA's first edit is the indication that he wasn't a new user when he started. His obtuse style and general lack of social skills lends me to believe he is an editor that has changed account names frequently (though legitimately) and I am not prepared to name him at this point. Once again though, the abuse of process rears it's ugly head. --DHeyward (talk) 02:37, 27 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning DHeyward

    • This request is friviolous. The article where these edits took place (Krista Branch) has nothing to do with 9/11 or conspriacy theories; Krista Branch is a conservative Christian singer. The discretionary sanctions applied to 9/11 conspiracy theories don't apply to all articles generally, and they don't apply here. If The Devil's Advocate doesn't like DHeyward's edits, or vice versa, they should hammer out a consensus at Talk:Krista Branch; although if The Devil's Advocate keeps reverting, it's more likely to get hammered out at the 3rr noticeboard. Tom Harrison 00:12, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    • The Devil's Advocate once again provides us with a casebook example of tendentious editing...yet another witch hunt against someone that fully recognizes that TDA is nothing but trouble. I think I have this guy figured out...he wants an arbcom case with his name on it...so he can waste everyone's time, including numerous editors and the arbitration committee...get permabanned and of course, create a new account so he can come back and do it all over again...it's all about disruption. Perhaps we should do what Dheyward has made a habit of doing...which is simply remove every post he makes to our talkpages and deny him the dramahz he apparently craves.--MONGO 00:49, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    • This is one of the most bizarre nominations I have ever seen. Branch has no relation to 9/11, 9/11 CTs, or anything covered under the 9/11 discretionary sanctions. She isn't covered so there is nothing to enforce. Toa Nidhiki05 00:44, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    • Note: Tom Harrison, MONGO, and Toa are involved editors with the topic area, but that might be obvious by the tone of their comments. Cla68 (talk) 04:15, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
      I think Tom edited the Krista Branch article. Not sure about Mongo and Toa. --DHeyward (talk) 04:41, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
      Well, it was Toa who suggested, on an article talk page, that other editors shun Devil's Advocate. And, there is a related MONGO/Devil's Advocate enforcement action just up the page here a little ways. Cla68 (talk) 04:51, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
      I've never edited the Branch article, nor did I really care for her song. And yes, I suggested a shunning of TDA - a valid, user-initiated measure - so as to stop enabling him to push his views on a particular issue when pretty much everybody disagreed with him. You can't very well argue or POV-push when nobody is willing to listen. Toa Nidhiki05 01:24, 28 March 2012 (UTC)
      I've never edited or commented on the Branch article...I never even heard of her till just a few days ago. But I do appreciate it when you remember to use all caps when spelling MONGO.MONGO 10:46, 27 March 2012 (UTC)
    • This needs to be summarily dismissed since this has nothing to do with 9/11 related pages...TDA placed a request in for the Branch article to be peer reviewed...here on 3/25...Dheyward responded to the request (as did others) and his first edit to the article was on 3/26...TDA reverted Dheyward on 3/26 citing HOUND...Based on widespread disruption by TDA in a number of editing areas, it isn't surprising that Dheyward would be working on a BLP to make sure TDA isn't violating policy.--MONGO 22:47, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning DHeyward

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
    • OK, to be clear. The "Decorum" section of the arbitration is a principle, not a sanction. Discretionary sanctions only apply to editing in the area of 9/11 conspiracy theories. No part of this request relates to editing in the area of 9/11 conspiracy theories, most of it seems to relate to a personal dispute between The Devil's Advocate and DHayward. I recommend the filing party watch out for WP:BOOMERANGs at this point. --Elen of the Roads (talk) 23:06, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    @TDA - I did review the diffs. Taking the two that you cite as particularly significant, the first is commenting on an edit of yours from 2007 about the Six-party talks which he believes suggested you are a sock, and the second is DHayward removing from his own talkpage a comment by you about the same allegation. You two are not IBANed from each other - although perhaps you should be. --Elen of the Roads (talk) 08:31, 30 March 2012 (UTC)
    @TDA - can I repeat, the Decorum section of the arbitration represents a principle not a sanction. The application of discretionary sanction relates to "Articles which relate to the events of September 11, broadly interpreted" Broadly interpreted does not extend to personal interactions between editors not related to articles about the events of September 11. In some RfArs, the Arbs do impose such sanctions - this may be the source of your confusion.If you are in dispute with DHayward about other topics not in the area of 9/11 conspiracy theories, then you need to use another method of dispute resolution, because nothing here is sanctionable under AE. --Elen of the Roads (talk) 13:51, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Shuki

    Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.

    Request concerning Shuki

    User who is submitting this request for enforcement
        ←   ZScarpia   14:35, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
    User against whom enforcement is requested
    Shuki (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
    Sanction or remedy to be enforced
    WP:ARBPIA#Discretionary_sanctions
    Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it

    Violation of the 1RR restriction and disruptive behaviour on the Israeli settlement article.

    1. 19:46, 25 March 2012 Ignoring the issues raised, particularly the neutrality requirement (multiple sources contradict the statement), reinsertion of problematic text which had been removed by Dlv999 after discussion on the talkpage.
    2. 22:44, 25 March 2012 (+ 2hr 58min) After several intervening edits to the article by other editors, the removal of the phrase "the occupied territories" from the text reinserted in diff 1.
    3. 05:08, 26 March 2012 and 05:10, 26 March 2012 (+ 9hr 24min from the first edit) WP:POINTy removal (see the edit comments and the one made by Shuki at 05:12, 26 March 2012 (UTC)) of two citations and the substitution of a fact tag for the second, which had been there to verify that Human Rights Watch had made the statement cited to it.
    Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
    1. 02:07, 12 February 2012 (UTC): indefinitely banned from the Golan Heights article by HJ Mitchell (talk · contribs) as a result of this AE request
    2. 23:08, 2 December 2010 (UTC): blocked for 6 months for abusive sockpuppetry in the ARBPIA area by T. Canens (talk · contribs)
    3. 21:57, 29 November 2010 (UTC): banned from all articles, discussions, and other content within the ARBPIA area for 6 months by T. Canens (talk · contribs) as a result of this AE thread.
    4. 18:39, 1 November 2010 (UTC): restricted to 1RR per day for the entire set of Arab-Israeli conflict-related articles for 2 months by PhilKnight (talk · contribs)
    5. 22:16, 15 September 2010 (UTC): restricted to 1RR for all articles which relate to Israeli settlements in the West Bank and Golan Heights for two and a hhalf months by PhilKnight (talk · contribs)
    6. 08:23, 27 July 2010 (UTC): topic-banned for 1 month from articles about towns, cities, settlements, and other places or locations in Israel and neighbouring countries by Stifle (talk · contribs)
    7. 16:36, 10 April 2010 (UTC): limited to one revert per page per day for three months as a result of this AE thread by Sandstein (talk · contribs)
    8. 16:33, 7 October 2009 (UTC): ARBPIA notification by CIreland (talk · contribs)


    Additional comments by editor filing complaint

    On 25 March], a discussion started about a statement in the Lead of the Israeli settlement article. The principal problem is that the statement is asserting a condition currently persists despite the fact that the source cited dates back to 1997 and that other sources contradict the statement. After a discussion, the sentence containing the statement was deleted.

    Shuki re-inserted the deleted sentence, ignoring the previous objections raised, in particular, the policy requirement that, as other sources contradict the statement, it cannot be expressed as an unqualified statement of fact. In the following ten hours, Shuki made a number of other reversions. A couple of these were, based on the edit comments left and the remark made by Shuki beforehand on the article talkpage, done for a WP:POINTy reason. The second of these was senseless; a citation to a Human Rights Watch document used to verify that a statement made by that organisation had been made by them was deleted and a fact tag inserted.

    When Dlv999 reverted Shuki's re-insertion just outside the 24-hour 1RR limit, Shuki requested that Dlv999 be given an ARBPIA warning. I pointed out to Shuki that, whereas he was complaining that Dlv999 had come close to violating the 1RRR restriction on the article, it looked to me as though he had actually violated it.

    On listing the edits which I thought might violate the 1RR restriction, Shuki replied that the edits shown by the third diff listed above are "not a reversion at all, merely a copyedit" and that (my interpretation) the edit shown in the second diff doesn't count because it reverts part of the text that Shuki had (before intervening edits by others) added back in in his previous edit. Unfortunately, I can't remember all the precedents set here which determine what does or does not count as a reversion as far as the 1RR restriction is concerned, so Shuki may be right about the edit in the second diff, but I feel pretty sure that his claim about the edits in the third diff is fairly incredible.

    Sometimes it looks to me as though editors are projecting their own behaviour onto others. I think that this is a classic case. Shuki is accusing other editors of POV-pushing and ignoring what other editors have written. Given that Shuki ignored issues other editors had raised and the supplied sources which contradict the statement he re-inserted, I think that those descriptions can fairly be applied to him. By pointing out to him that it looked to me as though he had broken the 1RR restriction, my behaviour has become aggressive. I think that the one acting most aggressively is Shuki. In my opinion, he shows a distinct lack of self-awareness. At one point, he takes a pop at Nishidani over the indefinite ban he was given. Perhaps, as someone with a less than salubrious ban and block history himself, including a block for sockpuppeteering, should show a bit more reserve over pointing the finger.

    I think that Shuki shows some signs of having had a bit of a meltdown. He lapses into incoherence at one point. He gets confused about who has said what. And he seems to take Zero, a long-term admin and contributor in the IP area, as a new editor.

    Shuki has asked for a retraction of the suggestion that he may have violated the 1RR restriction. I think that there is a case that he did and, therefore, I have brought it here.

        ←   ZScarpia   14:35, 29 March 2012 (UTC)


    Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested


    Discussion concerning Shuki

    Statement by Shuki

    I'm organizing my thoughts on this frivolous battleground AE but first I'd like to ask that The Blade of the Northern Lights not handle cases regarding ARBPIA. The admin either has a POV on one side or is simply not informed in the area and has shown it on the few AEs that they have participated here already. The admin makes quick and uninformed character judgments without bothering to first verify if the claim even holds water. This is the second time I've seem a blatantly ignorant comment from Blade. --Shuki (talk) 23:11, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Blade. I would expect you be above that... Anyway, it isn't a personal attack, but rather my perception because I see that you handle the other AEs fine. I don't think you have anything against me at all, in the sense that I don't think that you are against me or like-minded editors, but again, your 'first impressions' leave much objectiveness to be desired. I am arranging my reply, but the issue is not ADL here at all and I'm sorry that that is the only thing you see here. --Shuki (talk) 23:31, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    With regard to the issue at hand: Apparently, ZScarpia seems to be using AE to fish for a sanction and innocently verify with the project if I have violated 1RR rather than actually risk accusing me of it. And he has made a few misleading personal comments in the process trying to discredit me. ZScarpia is claiming that I violated 1RR when in fact I reverted once (reinserting the sentence while a discussion was underway) and then shortly after removed problematic wording that does not appear in the source anyway. The second edit of the same sentence was not a rerevert (2RR) of anything or any other edit beforehand. The two edits had no related intervening edits and should be not be considered a R at all. Peculiar though that in this case, the 'not pro-settlement' editors claiming the sentence was not accurate had decided to first remove and then discuss instead of leaving in and discussing. They similarly did not object to another like-sided editor who had just previously insisted that we leave in the 'original' wording of another line while a discussion was underway, and I had accepted that as the 'Jewish-Israeli' discussion was indeed underway.

    This is a content issue that can be discussed collaboratively instead of combatively. One editor suggested a compromise and another editor posted an opposing opinion but the 'not pro-settlement editors' would not have anything to do with that, especially the Dlv999 editor who waited 24hrs +6 min, to make a revert insisting that the sentence be removed. DLv999's edit was clearly gaming though I chose to AGF him when I refrained from being antagonistic when I chose to warn him and did not run to open a kneejerk AE instead. ZScarpia did not have a problem with that skirting of 1RR.

    Blade automatically chose here to remark about ADL 'an organization with an obvious agenda' instead of reviewing the actual issue whether any settlements had been created after the ADL source date. Blade, in fact, a side-discussion had almost started about settlements and outposts (are settlements?) but at that time, but I was already pulling back since I found that the other editors continued to make article edits ignoring the discussion and it was frankly overwhelming. I think we could have civily discussed if the ADL line was accurate or not (if any real settlements had been established afterwards or not) but I was already distanced from taking part, not feeling that I was talking to editors who were even willing to hear reasonable opposing voices (who were scared away).

    In the last two paragraphs of this AE, ZScarpia has made unfortunately uncivil claims, including a direct personal insult of my use of the English language he calls a 'lapse into incoherence', and merely dragging up my history, some of which has nothing to do with the discussion at hand, in order to attack my character. His perception of my 'confused' interaction (another personal attack judgement on my mental state) between other editors is frankly, none of his business, irrelevant to the 1RR claim (if this really is the issue here or not). His accusation of belittling Zero is preposterous. If I was aggressive, I'd open an AE about ZScarpia. I choose not to be. --Shuki (talk) 01:13, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comments by others about the request concerning Shuki

    Comment by The Devil's Advocate

    Calling the removal of a source a "copyedit" seems like a blatant lie. It is clearly a pointy revert so it seems Shuki not only violated 1RR with that edit, but lied about the nature of the edit. Seems like a topic ban is definitely in order absent a vociferous apology.--The Devil's Advocate (talk) 15:45, 29 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by Cptnono

    "I think that Shuki shows some signs of having had a bit of a meltdown. He lapses into incoherence at one point."

    Well, I think that ZScarpia lapses into being er... a dickCptnono (talk) 05:51, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Comment by Dlv999

    In my opinion Shuki's defense and re-insertion of the statement and associated ADL reference does not reach the level of tendentious editing. The statement in question had been part of the article for some time, so Shuki was defending the status quo, not seeking to insert new material. As a content dispute, Shuki had every right to advocate and re-introduce the material that he/she honestly believed was best for the article. The issue with Shuki's conduct arises in his/her behavior once it became clear that the weight of evidence and editors was against his/her position. Instead of acknowledging that consensus was broadly against inclusion, Shuki decided that all the editors that had disagreed with him/her were "POV editors making edits without bothering to take this discussion seriously" variously accusing us of "animosity", "battleground mentality", "combative POV insertion". He/she decided to start deleting other references in the article to make a WP:POINT by claiming to use "Zero's logic", but at the same time still arguing for the retention of the statement in question (thus denying "Zero's logic"). One of these deletions was particularly egregious as ZScarpia has already pointed out. I think the violation of 1RR is pretty clear, but had it not been for Shuki's aggravating behavior I doubt the issue would have even been raised, let alone reached this noticeboard. As it was, Shuki essentially goaded Zscarpia into bringing the complaint. Even now he/she refuses to acknowledge breaching the rule and seems to have brought the same problematic behavior from the talk page to this noticeboard, now even accusing admins of POV, when they do not support his/her interpretation of events. I have already addressed the accusation that my edits were an attempt to "game the system".. Dlv999 (talk) 09:52, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Dlv999, so one time you choose to AGF me, another time you do not. Did I do that to you? Please do not put words in my mouth. I did not accuse 'admins' and there has yet to even be an interpretation of events. Since no one has officially informed you of ARBPIA as I requested, you commenting here is essentially a self-notification. I did not goad ZScarpia at all. I asked him to either retract or stand by the claim. Read WP:CIVIL You should know that one should not make accusations unless they are willing to stand by them. If I were you, I would have stayed out of this, but since you came here, you are now dragged into this AE yourself with your innocent non-violation of 1RR by 6 minutes. --Shuki (talk) 11:07, 30 March 2012 (UTC)
    Interesting piece of advice, that I should have stayed out, considering prior to my comment, I had already featured prominently in your own statement. Anyway, I have given my honest opinion, I would simply ask that uninvolved editors and admins read the relevant talk page discussion and associated edits with an open mind and come to their own conclusions. Dlv999 (talk) 11:39, 30 March 2012 (UTC)

    Result concerning Shuki

    This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
    • I have to agree that using the ADL, an organization with an obvious agenda (whether one agrees with their agenda or not is irrelevant), as the sole source for that kind of claim claim is plainly tendentious. An article ban would certainly seem to be in order, I'll leave it up to other admins whether or not they think something broader should be put in place (I happen to think a 3 or 6 month break from the IP area would do everyone some good, but I'd like to hear from other admins before instituting anything that drastic). The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 22:48, 29 March 2012 (UTC)
      @Shuki; you may want to read WP:BUTT before proceeding; while I'm not particularly bothered by personal remarks they really don't help your case. Does or does not the ADL have a specific agenda? The Blade of the Northern Lights (話して下さい) 23:19, 29 March 2012 (UTC)