This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Valjean (talk | contribs) at 04:13, 29 April 2018 (→The squirrel: ec. Replying and then archiving.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 04:13, 29 April 2018 by Valjean (talk | contribs) (→The squirrel: ec. Replying and then archiving.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)This page has been removed from search engines' indexes.
A citation template I like to use. |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
A basic citation template I like to use. See this citation tool: Yadkard I like to choose a ref name which will remain unique, so I use the last name(s) of the author(s) and publication date. Here's how it works: <ref name="Harding_11/15/2017">{{cite web | last=Harding | first=Luke | title=How Trump walked into Putin's web | website=The Guardian | date=November 15, 2017 | url=http://www.theguardian.com/news/2017/nov/15/how-trump-walked-into-putins-web-luke | access-date=December 24, 2017}}</ref> An alternative date format is the ISO format: "Harding-20171115" References
|
Archives |
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22,TB |
A message for fringe political editors (essay)
Reliable sources stash
Personal stash/sandbox
Personal stash/sandbox | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Trump a "useful fool" - General Michael Hayden
BLP about Public figures
Cambridge Analytica and Project Alamo
POV forks
Dossier history split...sandbox
Comey interview
Lying press#United StatesSee also: Mainstream media § Alternative termsThe term Lügenpresse came into use during the 2016 US presidential election cycle under the moniker of fake news, first largely online in reference to inaccurate or false reporting on social media. The term fake news was later used by the Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. At October 2016 political rallies in the US, Trump supporters shouted the word at reporters in the "press pen". Trump himself often referred to the assembled press at his rallies as "the most dishonest people" and "unbelievable liars". American alt-right white nationalist Richard Spencer used the term in an NPI meeting in Washington, D.C. after Trump's victory in the election. In 2017, Trump himself labeled news sources such as the "failing" New York Times, NBC News, ABC, CBS, and CNN, as "fake news" and "the enemy of the American people". The term fake news, itself a variation on "Lying Press," has gained particular commonplace usage during the Presidency of Donald Trump.
Trump and his followers have often attacked the press, calling them "corrupt", "outright liars", and "the deceitful dishonest media." During the 2016 presidential campaign, the press at Trump's rallies was ridiculed, and sometimes the old Nazi slur Lügenpresse, German for "lying press", was used to attack them. In 2017, Trump labeled The New York Times, NBC News, ABC, CBS, and CNN as "the fake news media" and "the enemy of the American people." References
This is the "Trump exemption" in practice....followed by an appeal. "Do the right thing"? Forget it here. That is not allowed. Practice on Trump articles and talk pages show a clear use of the Misplaced Pages:Trump exemption. I knew it existed, but proof of its existence was finally formalized by an editor with this comment, which contains a redirect to WP:IAR. It was a clear admission that, when dealing with Trump, it was allowable to ignore all PAG. Censorship is allowed in service of his thin skin. It appears that Trumpipedia is part of Misplaced Pages, with its own rules. Drmies recognizes that a section (in each biography article) on the subject of Obama's and Trump's relationship to truth and facts would be radically different because they have radically different understandings and practice, and that's the picture painted by RS. Whether one agrees with Obama or not, he at least recognizes that truth is important, whereas Trump has never given it the time of day. He is the most extreme example of affluenza. I have researched the subject and it's fascinating. Right now, even a few sentences in a short paragraph in any Trump article is pretty much forbidden. I have enough (over 300 very RS) for a rather long article about Trump, but I know that such an article would never be allowed. His supporters here would successfully game the system through wikilawyering, exploiting the DS requirement for a consensus to restore contested content, RfCs, and AfDs. Such an article would be labeled an "attack page", even though it's only a documentation of what RS say, and that is what's supposed to dictate our content. The "Trump exemption" (endless wikilawyering) has become a policy here, used successfully to violate numerous policies. The consensus among RS is that Trump is a "serial liar" in a class by himself, far beyond anything they've ever encountered before. It's a very well-documented character flaw, not just opinions, and yet the dominant view here is that Trump should be given a much longer rope than anyone else and be protected from what RS say. He has that much power here. That's the way it is, and too many admins support that view. These articles should be monitored by numerous admins who are willing to promptly issue DS warnings and topic bans for such obstruction. An appeal: Are there any editors here who will prove me wrong and just follow policy? -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 18:35, 22 April 2018 (UTC) |
Trump's dubious relationship to truth and facts
Trump's dubious relationship to truth and facts |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
This is a very small portion of what's available on Trump's notorious relationship to truth. There is enough material for a very large article. Every single day provides new material. There are plenty of opinions about the subject, but then there are the facts. As Daniel Patrick Moynihan put it: "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts." Lies are easily fact checked, and what fact checkers say should not be confused with opinions. As president, Trump has made a large number of false statements in public speeches and remarks. Trump uttered "at least one false or misleading claim per day on 91 of his first 99 days" in office according to The New York Times, and 1,628 total in his first 298 days in office according to the "Fact Checker" analysis of The Washington Post, or an average of 5.5 per day. The Post fact-checker also wrote, "President Trump is the most fact-challenged politician that The Fact Checker has ever encountered... the pace and volume of the president's misstatements means that we cannot possibly keep up." Glenn Kessler, a fact checker for The Washington Post, told Dana Milbank that, in his six years on the job, "'there's no comparison' between Trump and other politicians. Kessler says politicians' statements get his worst rating — four Pinocchios — 15 percent to 20 percent of the time. Clinton is about 15 percent. Trump is 63 percent to 65 percent." Maria Konnikova, writing in Politico Magazine, wrote: "All Presidents lie.... But Donald Trump is in a different category. The sheer frequency, spontaneity and seeming irrelevance of his lies have no precedent.... Trump seems to lie for the pure joy of it. A whopping 70 percent of Trump’s statements that PolitiFact checked during the campaign were false, while only 4 percent were completely true, and 11 percent mostly true." Senior administration officials have also regularly given false, misleading or tortured statements to the media. By May 2017, Politico reported that the repeated untruths by senior officials made it difficult for the media to take official statements seriously. Trump's presidency started out with a series of falsehoods initiated by Trump himself. The day after his inauguration, he falsely accused the media of lying about the size of the inauguration crowd. Then he proceeded to exaggerate the size, and Sean Spicer backed up his claims. When Spicer was accused of intentionally misstating the figures, Kellyanne Conway, in an interview with NBC's Chuck Todd, defended Spicer by stating that he merely presented "alternative facts". Todd responded by saying "alternative facts are not facts. They're falsehoods." Social scientist and researcher Bella DePaulo, an expert on the psychology of lying, stated: "I study liars. I've never seen one like President Trump." Trump outpaced "even the biggest liars in our research." She compared the research on lying with his lies, finding that his lies differed from those told by others in several ways: Trump's total rate of lying is higher than for others; He tells 6.6 times as many self-serving lies as kind lies, whereas ordinary people tell 2 times as many self-serving lies as kind lies. 50% of Trump's lies are cruel lies, while it's 1-2% for others. 10% of Trump's lies are kind lies, while it's 25% for others. His lies often "served several purposes simultaneously", and he doesn't "seem to care whether he can defend his lies as truthful". Dara Lind described "The 9 types of lies Donald Trump tells the most". He lies about: tiny things; crucial policy differences; chronology; makes himself into the victim; exaggerates "facts that should bolster his argument"; "endorses blatant conspiracy theories"; "things that have no basis in reality"; "obscures the truth by denying he said things he said, or denying things are known that are known"; and about winning. In a Scientific American article, Jeremy Adam Smith sought to answer the question of how Trump could get away with making so many false statements and still maintain support among his followers. He proposed that "Trump is telling 'blue' lies—a psychologist's term for falsehoods, told on behalf of a group, that can actually strengthen the bonds among the members of that group.... From this perspective, lying is a feature, not a bug, of Trump's campaign and presidency." David Fahrenthold has investigated Trump's claims about his charitable giving and found little evidence the claims are true. Following Fahrenthold's reporting, the Attorney General of New York opened an inquiry into the Donald J. Trump Foundation's fundraising practices, and ultimately issued a "notice of violation" ordering the Foundation to stop raising money in New York. The Foundation had to admit it engaged in self-dealing practices to benefit Trump, his family, and businesses. Fahrenthold won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for his coverage of Trump's claimed charitable giving and casting "doubt on Donald Trump's assertions of generosity toward charities." In March 2018, The Washington Post reported that Trump, at a fundraising speech, had recounted the following incident: in a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump insisted to Trudeau that the United States ran a trade deficit with Canada, even though Trump later admitted he had "no idea" whether that was really the case. According to the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the United States has a trade surplus with Canada. Fact checkersHere are a few of Trump's notable claims which fact checkers have rated false: that Obama wasn't born in the United States and that Hillary Clinton started the Obama "birther" movement; that his electoral college victory was a "landslide"; that Hillary Clinton received 3-5 million illegal votes; and that he was "totally against the war in Iraq".
Trump, his supporters, and fake newsFrom: Fake news A 2018 study at Oxford University found that Trump's supporters consumed the "largest volume of 'junk news' on Facebook and Twitter":
A 2018 study by researchers from Princeton University, Dartmouth College, and the University of Exeter has examined the consumption of fake news during the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign. The findings showed that Trump supporters and older Americans (over 60) were far more likely to consume fake news than Clinton supporters. Those most likely to visit fake news websites were the 10% of Americans who consumed the most conservative information. There was a very large difference (800%) in the consumption of fake news stories as related to total news consumption between Trump supporters (6.2%) and Clinton supporters (0.8%). The study also showed that fake pro-Trump and fake pro-Clinton news stories were read by their supporters, but with a significant difference: Trump supporters consumed far more (40%) than Clinton supporters (15%). Facebook was by far the key "gateway" website where these fake stories were spread, and which led people to then go to the fake news websites. Fact checks of fake news were rarely seen by consumers, with none of those who saw a fake news story being reached by a related fact check. Brendan Nyhan, one of the researchers, emphatically stated in an interview on NBC News: "People got vastly more misinformation from Donald Trump than they did from fake news websites -- full stop." (Bolding added)
ReferencesReferences
|
Opinion on talk pages
Opinion on talk pages |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Hi, BR. Factchecker went about it wrong, but he had a valid point. That whole "Why didn’t Clinton use it?" section was OR and I have hatted it. I also extended the hat over an additional portion of your "Gobbledygook" rant, about the Trumpies being surprised when Putin went beyond what they thought was his mandate. We are all entitled to our opinions, but please try not to FORUM on the article talk page. Thanks. --MelanieN (talk) 17:22, 9 April 2018 (UTC)
I really tried to work with Factchecker. But it's like pulling teeth to get anything specific out of him - it's all generalities. And when I finally got a suggestion of one specific thing to look at, and my response was everything he could have desired, his reaction was totally negative. Just general complaints (personal this time) and refusals to name any additional specifics we can talk about. I'm done trying to work with him. And somebody else is going to have to deal with his walls of FORUM-spouting. --MelanieN (talk) 00:23, 10 April 2018 (UTC)
|
False and misleading statements
As president, Trump has made a large number of false statements in public speeches and remarks. Trump uttered "at least one false or misleading claim per day on 91 of his first 99 days" in office according to The New York Times, and 1,628 total in his first 298 days in office according to the "Fact Checker" analysis of The Washington Post, or an average of 5.5 per day. The Post fact-checker also wrote, "President Trump is the most fact-challenged politician that The Fact Checker has ever encountered... the pace and volume of the president's misstatements means that we cannot possibly keep up."
Glenn Kessler, a fact checker for The Washington Post, told Dana Milbank that, in his six years on the job, "'there's no comparison' between Trump and other politicians. Kessler says politicians' statements get his worst rating — four Pinocchios — 15 percent to 20 percent of the time. Clinton is about 15 percent. Trump is 63 percent to 65 percent."
Maria Konnikova, writing in Politico Magazine, wrote: "All Presidents lie.... But Donald Trump is in a different category. The sheer frequency, spontaneity and seeming irrelevance of his lies have no precedent.... Trump seems to lie for the pure joy of it. A whopping 70 percent of Trump’s statements that PolitiFact checked during the campaign were false, while only 4 percent were completely true, and 11 percent mostly true."
Senior administration officials have also regularly given false, misleading or tortured statements to the media. By May 2017, Politico reported that the repeated untruths by senior officials made it difficult for the media to take official statements seriously.
Trump's presidency started out with a series of falsehoods initiated by Trump himself. The day after his inauguration, he falsely accused the media of lying about the size of the inauguration crowd. Then he proceeded to exaggerate the size, and Sean Spicer backed up his claims. When Spicer was accused of intentionally misstating the figures, Kellyanne Conway, in an interview with NBC's Chuck Todd, defended Spicer by stating that he merely presented "alternative facts". Todd responded by saying "alternative facts are not facts. They're falsehoods."
Social scientist and researcher Bella DePaulo, an expert on the psychology of lying, stated: "I study liars. I've never seen one like President Trump." Trump outpaced "even the biggest liars in our research." She compared the research on lying with his falsehoods, finding that his differ from those told by others in several ways: Trump's total rate is higher than for others; He tells 6.6 times as many "self-serving lies" as "kind lies", whereas ordinary people tell 2 times as many self-serving lies as kind lies. 50% of Trump's falsehoods are "cruel lies", while it's 1-2% for others. 10% of Trump's falsehoods are "kind lies", while it's 25% for others. His falsehoods often "served several purposes simultaneously", and he doesn't "seem to care whether he can defend his lies as truthful".
Dara Lind described "The 9 types of lies Donald Trump tells the most". He tells falsehoods about: tiny things; crucial policy differences; chronology; makes himself into the victim; exaggerates "facts that should bolster his argument"; "endorses blatant conspiracy theories"; "things that have no basis in reality"; "obscures the truth by denying he said things he said, or denying things are known that are known"; and about winning.
In a Scientific American article, Jeremy Adam Smith sought to answer the question of how Trump could get away with making so many false statements and still maintain support among his followers. He proposed that "Trump is telling 'blue' lies—a psychologist's term for falsehoods, told on behalf of a group, that can actually strengthen the bonds among the members of that group.... From this perspective, lying is a feature, not a bug, of Trump's campaign and presidency."
David Fahrenthold has investigated Trump's claims about his charitable giving and found little evidence the claims are true. Following Fahrenthold's reporting, the Attorney General of New York opened an inquiry into the Donald J. Trump Foundation's fundraising practices, and ultimately issued a "notice of violation" ordering the Foundation to stop raising money in New York. The Foundation had to admit it engaged in self-dealing practices to benefit Trump, his family, and businesses. Fahrenthold won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting for his coverage of Trump's claimed charitable giving and casting "doubt on Donald Trump's assertions of generosity toward charities."
In March 2018, The Washington Post reported that Trump, at a fundraising speech, had recounted the following incident: in a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Trump insisted to Trudeau that the United States ran a trade deficit with Canada, even though Trump later admitted he had "no idea" whether that was really the case. According to the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the United States has a trade surplus with Canada.
Here are a few of Trump's notable claims which fact checkers have rated false: that Obama wasn't born in the United States and that Hillary Clinton started the Obama "birther" movement; that his electoral college victory was a "landslide"; that Hillary Clinton received 3-5 million illegal votes; and that he was "totally against the war in Iraq".
Sources |
---|
|
Fact checkers
- Donald Trump's file
- Comparing Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump on the Truth-O-Meter
- PolitiFact designated Trump's many campaign misstatements as their "2015 Lie of the Year".
- Fact-checking Trump's TIME interview on truths and falsehoods
- 7 whoppers from President Trump's first 100 days in office
- Donald Trump archive
- Donald Trump, the candidate we dubbed the 'King of Whoppers' in 2015, has held true to form as president.
- The Whoppers of 2017, President Trump monopolizes our list of the year’s worst falsehoods and bogus claims.
- President Trump has made 2,436 false or misleading claims so far.
- Donald Trump: The unauthorized database of false things. The Star's Washington Bureau Chief, Daniel Dale, has been following Donald Trump's campaign for months. He has fact checked thousands of statements and found hundreds of falsehoods.
Sources |
---|
|
Not Waybacking?
You removed https://web.archive.org/web/20180413230951/http://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/politics-government/white-house/article208870264.html from a citation, stating "Let's not adopt the disputed practice of bloating with archiveURL while still live". I was not aware that this was a disputed practice, it simply seems like good form to archive content that may be removed or redirected. Could you kindly let me know where I can read about this dispute, and what the consensus is on archiving content? PvOberstein (talk) 12:52, 14 April 2018 (UTC)
- PvOberstein, that's a fair question, and an edit summary is a poor substitute for more in depth discussion, so thanks for asking. You deserve a better answer. Right now, our non-policy, non-guideline page for the subject is here: Misplaced Pages:Link rot. It doesn't seem to deal with this issue, at least my quick scan of the page didn't spot it.
- I've run into this issue several times and editors have differing opinions, sometimes deleting every single one from the article, so it's a disputed practice. An editor who runs a bot recently got flack for not setting the bot to only add archive.org links to those links which were actually rated deadlink=yes. They added archive.org links to every single ref. They had only begun to use the bot and apologized. AFAIK, they were more careful in the future.
- It creates a huge amount of bloat, and on small articles can easily double the page size, in some sense the same which happens on talk pages where some users have super fancy signatures where the code fills several lines.
- I wonder how many extra servers Wikimedia has just to house all those fancy signatures? Are we talking about hundreds of thousands, or millions of dollars, just for a social media function? Should good faith donations be used for this? While I understand the urge for personalization of signatures, Misplaced Pages is not a social media site, so I'd favor a requirement for basic signatures, with limited frills (IOW a maximum number of bytes), but that's a different subject.
- Here's an example: ]
- I've seen minor squabbles on talk pages about adding archive.org links (it only happens when they are added to live links), but I'm not sure what the actual consensus is, so I'm seeking information on that and will let you know. Pinging MelanieN. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 16:11, 14 April 2018 (UTC)
- PvOberstein, I asked MelanieN and she has replied here. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 04:48, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
Source list, with refs
Main article: Michael Cohen (lawyer)Feel free to add more sources to the bottom and I'll format the references. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 02:55, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- Sources: Mueller has evidence Cohen was in Prague in 2016, confirming part of dossier, McClatchy
- Special counsel has evidence Michael Cohen traveled to Prague: McClatchy, Reuters
- Michael Cohen’s visiting Prague would be a huge development in the Russia investigation, The Washington Post
- Special counsel has evidence Michael Cohen travelled to Prague-McClatchy, The New York Times (duplication of Reuters)
- Mueller has evidence Michael Cohen traveled to Prague, report claims, The Guardian (duplication of Reuters)
- Why the question of whether Michael Cohen visited Prague is massively important for Donald Trump, Vox
- Mueller can prove Cohen made secret trip to Prague before the election: report, The Hill
- Michael Cohen Has Been Under Criminal Investigation for Months, Feds Reveal, The Daily Beast
- Trump Attorney Lied About Prague Trip, Mueller Investigation Reveals, as New Evidence Comes to Light, Newsweek
- Michael Cohen, Once the President’s Trusted Fixer, Emerges as His Greatest Liability, Mother Jones
- Mueller may have evidence corroborating a key dossier allegation about Michael Cohen and Russian collusion, Business Insider
- Renewed denial
- Trump lawyer Michael Cohen denies traveling to Prague, CBS News
- Trump's personal lawyer denies report of Prague meeting with Russians during campaign, Politico
- Trump lawyer Cohen denies media report of Prague trip, Reuters
Prague
Re Prague, I'm thinking it's a bit too soon. Cohen is adamant that he's not been to Prague, and the available evidence seems to support it, barring that Cohen actually has two passports:
- "Cohen said that during the time the report places him in Prague, he was actually with his son visiting USC and meeting with the baseball coach. A USC baseball source confirmed Tuesday night that Cohen and his son had visited USC on August 29th. Cohen said that he was in Los Angeles from the 23rd through the 29th of August, and that the rest of the month he was in New York. He said that his only trip to an EU country over the summer had been a vacation to Italy in July. In one instance, the dossier places the alleged Prague travel in "August/September 2016." Cohen said he was in New York for the entire month of September." Atlantic, 2017
I would give it a few days, as it's mostly speculation at this point, as in: it would be big if the McClatchy reports were true. Which it would be. K.e.coffman (talk) 04:49, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- K.e.coffman, two points:
- I tend to agree that waiting would be good, and that was my first caution on the talk page, but someone else added it, and several have concurred that it was okay. I have let them do their thing. Per WP:PUBLICFIGURE, the coverage is wide enough to justify inclusion as an allegation, as long as it's clear that it's an unproven allegation, and a denial accompanies the content. I think that's the case, but you're welcome to tighten up the language as necessary. I haven't really looked at the addition, just improved the ref format.
We document everything here, including virtually every form of well-documented thing that can squeeze under the umbrella of "the sum total of human knowledge" (Jimbo), and that includes rumors, conspiracy theories, quackery, hoaxes, fraud, lies, fiction, dishonesty, etc, not just proven facts and honesty. Documenting Trump covers the whole gamut, with hardly any of the last item.
- Cohen's denial is like Swiss cheese. The initial denial has holes in it and used non-evidence. He isn't known for honesty, and like Trump, is trained to deny everything to the bitter end. It's a fact that Cohen and others in the Trump orbit fly on private jets (sometimes owned by Russian oligarchs) directly from private US airfields to destinations in Europe, eastern Europe, and Russia, without hardly a trace, like ghosts. They have that kind of money and power. Even if he did use regular commercial jets to fly to Germany and travel from there, it's not inconceivable that he did it very quietly. If he did that, then Mueller likely has the evidence, and that may be what's behind this latest allegation. Cohen is experienced at being sneaky, so I don't give his denials much credence, but he may have met his match in Mueller and his team.
The passport image denial is worthless, and the timing denial as well, as he denied being in Europe in a certain narrow time period (claimed to have been in LA with his son), but the dossier alleges a much broader time period when he could have been in Europe, and his unconfirmed alibi doesn't cover that full time period. At least one of the sources mentions that investigators don't totally believe his alibi. His word is not an alibi. If he flew a private jet, he could have been gone a couple days without anyone here knowing the better. I'm inclined to believe he flew commercial, and Mueller has the record of entry into Germany.
- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 05:22, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- Yeah, it's getting curiouser and curiouser! That's why I posted here rather than at the Talk page, so that it does not come across too much like a forum. I saw this piece where Buzzfeed photographed the insides of Cohen's passport: May 2017. It would be fascinating when it all comes out in the end (I hope). K.e.coffman (talk) 05:20, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- I just added more to my comment above. Yes, I share that feeling. We live in exciting times, a bit too exciting. To think that we are experiencing the possible end of democracy in America, with Obama being the last legitimately elected president for a long time. It's scary.-- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 05:22, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- I'm American, but have lived in Europe most of my adult life, and my passport is like his. I've been in myriad countries without a trace in my passport or elsewhere, and I'm not a spy. I remember when the Schengen Agreement was signed and a new day of free travel started in most of Europe. Suddenly we could just drive from one country to the next without stopping for passport control. Wow! Unfortunately organized crime and human trafficking have taken advantage of that situation. People like Cohen can also do that. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 05:28, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- I just added more to my comment above. Yes, I share that feeling. We live in exciting times, a bit too exciting. To think that we are experiencing the possible end of democracy in America, with Obama being the last legitimately elected president for a long time. It's scary.-- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 05:22, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
- Yeah, it's getting curiouser and curiouser! That's why I posted here rather than at the Talk page, so that it does not come across too much like a forum. I saw this piece where Buzzfeed photographed the insides of Cohen's passport: May 2017. It would be fascinating when it all comes out in the end (I hope). K.e.coffman (talk) 05:20, 15 April 2018 (UTC)
An example of how people these rich people (and also criminals) can travel without any record is this example from when Trump traveled to the 2013 Miss Universe pageant in Moscow, the occasion of the alleged pee pee tape.
- "The flight records, which don’t include names of passengers, don’t show any subsequent international departures for either of Trump’s planes. Instead, Trump made the flight on a Bombardier Global 5000 private jet owned by Phil Ruffin, his partner in the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Las Vegas, according to the New York Times."
The flight is registered, but not the passengers. Without public exposure and social media exposure, these people could travel to places and return, without hardly anyone but a few trusted people knowing. This is an interesting article. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 05:04, 16 April 2018 (UTC)
Dossier
The Cohen material was reverted at the dossier article. To formalize the consensus, I posted a poll. Within minutes, three editors who have never edited the article before showed up to vote, all in the Oppose section. I just thought that was interesting.- MrX 🖋 17:18, 17 April 2018 (UTC)
- The only thing I found interesting about it, MrX, was your belief that I was the only one objecting to its inclusion. It appears to me that, based on all the DS vio warnings the same few editors have placed on TPs of other editors, that several editors who once participated at those articles have chosen the role of (talk page stalker) and, unfortunately, avoid editing content because of the oft unsavory working environment that is common at most political articles. It is much safer to limit contributions to the occasional survey or RfC. It could also be that by including my user name to the section title, it attracted more attention/participation than it would have otherwise. Controversial titles tend to do that, you know? 15:09, 20 April 2018 (UTC)
- Unsupported supposition about editors being socks or whatever is rude, MrX. The whole point of posting a poll is to get feedback from others. Factchecker_atyourservice 05:06, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
- Atsme, I appreciate your note about the oft unsavory work environment. Drmies (talk) 16:32, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
- Unsupported supposition about editors being socks or whatever is rude, MrX. The whole point of posting a poll is to get feedback from others. Factchecker_atyourservice 05:06, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
Competence is required essay
- Misplaced Pages:Village pump (policy)#Does the community agree with WP:CIR?
- Misplaced Pages:Competence is required
You're more experienced than I, so I thought you might be interested in taking a look at these edits .
It's long seemed to me that this essay, while dealing with an important issue, has never presented operational tests or standards that are real-life useful rather than provoking hurt feelings and mutual insults. On the other hand, this edit seems to me to have gone too far in removing context and background for the bare examples. Any thoughts? It would be good if this essay were developed into something that could be applied to editor behavior with clear tests and standards. This would not be an easy task, but on the other hand it would lessen the stupid "IDHT" accusations from CIR editors who can't understand why their views have never been accepted. SPECIFICO talk 13:34, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
- (talk page stalker) I wouldn't be surprised if that all got reverted. There is a large discussion going on right now with CIR to change it from an essay to a supplement here. PackMecEng (talk) 13:54, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
- Oh thanks. Very competent of you. I had no idea. SPECIFICO talk 15:09, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
This is an area where topic bans are very handy. Some editors are very competent in some areas, and not in others. Some are excellent at gnomish editing and can really improve formatting, grammar, spelling, and such things, but they never get the hang of vetting sources, so they should be topic banned from their favorite articles where they cause disruption. It might be pseudoscience, alternative medicine, or politics.
An editor who repeatedly fails to understand that sources like Natural News, Breitbart, and Daily Caller are not RS is incompetent. We may think that what a person believes in real life is none of our concern, but if they continue to use those sources in real life, they will continue to use muddled thinking, and it often spills over into their editing and talk page discussions because they refuse to accept and believe what RS say.
When that happens, a topic ban allows them to improve the encyclopedia on other subjects. Since most of their disruption is often on talk pages, a topic ban keeps them from muddling things and being a time sink. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 16:00, 27 April 2018 (UTC)
Factchecker atyourservice
Note --NeilN 04:14, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
- Crap! I clicked the link and replied, thinking I was on this page. Well, here's my reply to you:
- Indeed. That was my notification, and I have no intent to engage further. I have extended olive branches and gotten abuse. I'm finished with them. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 04:21, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
The squirrel
The squirrel is mother to many nuts. Trump seems to be the squirrel, at least around this website these days. SPECIFICO talk 17:50, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
- Yes, by attacking honest journalism, the last bastion of free speech and the last defense of private citizens, he has succeeded in cutting a large minority off from RS which cover all news, including what he doesn't want his followers to know. The whole situation is nuts, but it's a tactic used by authoritarian dictators to gain mind control.
- Pew Research Center studies many of these things, and their findings are disturbing. Conservatives get most of their news from very few sources, most of them unreliable, while liberals use many RS and avoid the most extreme left-wing sites. We see that here with some editors. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 18:00, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
- @BullRangifer: if you honestly expect me to abide by your "banning" me from your talk page, you cannot go on repeating ad infinitum the same nonsensical personal attacks that I've already shown to be nonsensical. Factchecker_atyourservice 18:22, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
- Did I somehow offend you? No. Take up your dispute with Pew Research Center if you don't like their facts.
- Methinks thou dost protest too much. Now get off my page.
- Stop pinging me.
- Stop mentioning me.
- Stop denigrating and attacking me.
- Just get over it. You seem to have an obsession with putting me down and creating a hostile editing environment for me. I know we don't share political POV, but we should be able to edit collaboratively. That means the hostility has to stop. Do NOT try to reply to this. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 19:47, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
- For the record, they did reply, including restoring a comment I had deleted. They have made four edits to this page after knowing they were not supposed to do so. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 03:07, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
- @BullRangifer: if you honestly expect me to abide by your "banning" me from your talk page, you cannot go on repeating ad infinitum the same nonsensical personal attacks that I've already shown to be nonsensical. Factchecker_atyourservice 18:22, 28 April 2018 (UTC)
Regarding this, if you delete this section they're complaining about then they won't have a leg to stand on if they direct a personal snipe at you again (assuming you keep away from them, too). SPECIFICO should know better than to fan the flames. Resist the temptation. --NeilN 02:31, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
- NeilN, I'm a bit confused. So Factchecker keeps on attacking me long after (in sense of edits, not years) I've ceased mentioning them in any negative manner or spoken to them. They repeatedly go against your pretty clear admonition to not post here, and do so just to insult me and make demands they have no right to make. They make snide remarks about me on other talk pages, while accusing me of making personal attacks when I haven't spoken about or to them. They keep mentioning my essay, which was not written about or to them, but since they self-identify with some of the traits and behaviors mentioned in relation to our policies, they decide to take it personally and try to censor my private essay and my talk page.
- I hope you're not suggesting their behavior should be rewarded. Or do you mean something else? I really don't understand you. What's on my talk page, or in my personal essay, is none of their business if it doesn't mention them. They are literally trying to stifle the expression of views they don't like, even when it doesn't mention them. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 02:58, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
- It's pretty simple. You can either delete a section started off by an inappropriate comment by SPECIFICO and perhaps cool things off or you can leave things be. Either way, I don't expect you or Factchecker_atyourservice to post on each other's talk pages, save for the necessary administrative notes if things get that far. --NeilN 03:11, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
- NeilN, I think you (like the uninvited visitor here) are making entirely too much of my comment. BR and I are old colleagues on the politics articles. We both have generally cordial relations even with editors with whom we often disagree. Mr. Factchecker is entirely too prone to personalize just about everything he does on WP, from what I can see. But the comment I made to BR was not about him and he had no reason to claim otherwise or to bring you in here w/o context to further whatever grudge he's bearing. BR and I share an intermittent frustration relating to many issues and articles *the nuts* and it has nothing to do with Mr. Factchecker person. SPECIFICO talk 04:04, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
- It's pretty simple. You can either delete a section started off by an inappropriate comment by SPECIFICO and perhaps cool things off or you can leave things be. Either way, I don't expect you or Factchecker_atyourservice to post on each other's talk pages, save for the necessary administrative notes if things get that far. --NeilN 03:11, 29 April 2018 (UTC)
(ec)... NeilN, thanks for clearing that up. It really is THIS thread you're talking about. Okay, will do, but I must make a few things clear:
- This is my talk page and neither SPECIFICO's comment, nor my response, were aimed at any particular person, and were in no way improper. In no way was it a personal attack, contrary to the assertion above.
- This move indeed rewards bad behavior and sets a very slippery slope precedent.
- I have not deliberately posted on their talk page since your admonishment.
- This is victim blaming if I ever saw it. I hope that I'm not the only one being singled out, because this is pretty one-sided, considering their actions were not in response to any misdeed of mine. That they interpret all things negative about Trump and those who defend him as a personal attack, well...I'm in good company and they have a problem. They have no right to take offense at a general comment which did not mention them, and they have no right to request I delete it.
- I'm not deleting this because it's the right thing to do. It's not. I'm not sure if doing so violates any of our PAG, but it rewards breaking them.
- I'm doing it because, if I'm in danger of erring, I'd rather err on the side of peacemaking. There can be no excuse for further very personal attacks, not that there was any excuse in the first place.
So after writing this, I'll archive the section, and I know you'll read it in the history. -- BullRangifer (talk) PingMe 04:13, 29 April 2018 (UTC)