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::::Furthermore, if I am right that our policy needs to be changed, then my advocacy of this is NOT a conflict of interest issue: I am not specifically advocating in this issue for inclusion of my links; That I did the latter in the past does not somehow negate this larger issue. I certainly don't seek a ban against Calton in his RfC, but he has violated actual and real rules, and is guilty of not only rudeness but also (if I am right about how we don't cite our sources) he would be guilty of cutting up articles and bad editing, even if he were polite. Even though I've commented that his behaviour is inappropriate and needs to be dealt with, '''I'm not''' seeking his ban, but if ''you'' seek a ban, he would be more worthy of one than would I. Did you see his RfC? '''''One more thing:''''' '''Saying that a person can't edit on a page where he has expert or first-hand knowledge because of a conflict of interest would effectively stop all doctors from editing medical articles and stop all biologists from editing biology articles, and we'd lost a lot of our expertise;''' '''''Is that what you want?'''''--[[User:GordonWatts|GordonWatts]] 18:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
::::Furthermore, if I am right that our policy needs to be changed, then my advocacy of this is NOT a conflict of interest issue: I am not specifically advocating in this issue for inclusion of my links; That I did the latter in the past does not somehow negate this larger issue. I certainly don't seek a ban against Calton in his RfC, but he has violated actual and real rules, and is guilty of not only rudeness but also (if I am right about how we don't cite our sources) he would be guilty of cutting up articles and bad editing, even if he were polite. Even though I've commented that his behaviour is inappropriate and needs to be dealt with, '''I'm not''' seeking his ban, but if ''you'' seek a ban, he would be more worthy of one than would I. Did you see his RfC? '''''One more thing:''''' '''Saying that a person can't edit on a page where he has expert or first-hand knowledge because of a conflict of interest would effectively stop all doctors from editing medical articles and stop all biologists from editing biology articles, and we'd lost a lot of our expertise;''' '''''Is that what you want?'''''--[[User:GordonWatts|GordonWatts]] 18:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
:::::Gordon, if you wish to discuss the validity of using certain links or lobby for policy change, you need to do that in the appropriate forum. Advocating for it and offering it as compromise in the middle of discussion of a proposal to ban you is not the right place.

:::::You editing the Terri Schiavo articles is a ''completely'' different situation to, say, a doctor editing the [[heart]] article and I'm actually quite surprised that you don't get that. I know you self-proclaim yourself a Terri Schiavo expert and you've tried to claim "special standing" and "recognized authority" status on those articles.[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Government_involvement_in_the_Terri_Schiavo_case&diff=next&oldid=107556203] I do not accept that claim and I don't believe the majority of editors would either. I don't know if you ''are'' an expert or even how that would measured and quantified, and I don't think it even matters. But what I do know is you have a clear conflict of interest and you should not be editing these articles. I think if you could put your belief about your status and significance in the case aside when you're on this website, and follow [[WP:COI]] and [[WP:RS]], many of your problems would be resolved. I don't have a problem with you suggesting changes on the talk pages or discussing article content there, but you should not directly edit these articles or add links to your site to any article. '''[[User talk:Sarah_Ewart|Sarah]]''' 14:05, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
::The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented: this was in response to his continuing to flog the dead horse of inserting his personal external links after continually being told that they weren't going in, period. I told him that if he continued, I'd request the ban. He continued, I requested.
::The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented: this was in response to his continuing to flog the dead horse of inserting his personal external links after continually being told that they weren't going in, period. I told him that if he continued, I'd request the ban. He continued, I requested.
::''if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction'' You're looking at that request: what '''else''' did you think this whole thread was about? Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters.
::''if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction'' You're looking at that request: what '''else''' did you think this whole thread was about? Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters.

Revision as of 14:05, 18 February 2007


Template loop detected: Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Community sanction/Header


Restored Open RFC that was not listed

Just restored an rfc that was no longer listed at WP:RFC:

Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Abu badali

--Kim Bruning 19:38, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It would appear that Radiant! removed a number of elderly and stale RfCs, but did not archive them - probably not a good idea, and I may look into it and try to link the missing ones into the archives. The Abu badali one really should be closed and archived, though; it seems to be providing a pretty good bulls-eye, and if the issue hasn't been resolved in the nearly three months since it was filed, then it should probably move to arbitration. Tony Fox (arf!) 21:22, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, well, I suggest folks go take a look anyway. --Kim Bruning 22:55, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I second the call for arbitration. Abu badali has simply ignored the Rfc for 3 months, in spite of the fact that dozens of people have endorsed it. I'm surprised that there has been no administrative action taken against him. Jeffpw 22:34, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Vandalism by IP Address: 70.106.74.152

Sorry to post something like this here, but I don't know where else to tell people about it.

I was looking at the United States Chamber of Commerce page when I noticed that it was pretty severely vandalized. Then, looking at the history I saw that it was by someone with the IP address 70.106.74.152. (Sorry, I don't know how to link that to a contribution history.) Anyway, this person/address has about 500 edits, many of which seem to be pure vandalism.

Can someone tell me where I should report it? I'm at work now, so I don't have enough time to revert all those myself... --65.210.108.102 20:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC) (sorry, I forgot to sign it the first time) --65.210.108.102 20:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

WP:AIV is probably the best place :P. Yuser31415 20:40, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I looked there before I posted here, but I didn't think it was appropriate--that pages says "after repeated warnings," but I haven't given any warnings yet. Anyway, since that was the only good place to do it, I went ahead and posted there. Thanks! --65.210.108.102 21:42, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'm guessing you're not going to have a lot of luck over at WP:AIV because it's been several days since 70.106.74.152 (talk · contribs) has gotten any warnings. It's a shared IP from a school so the vandalism pretty much has to be active for action to be taken. You should read Wikipedia:WikiProject user warnings/Help:Introduction to learn how you can post your own warnings on vandals' talk pages. Hope that helps some! —Elipongo (Talk|contribs) 03:51, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and please consider getting a login name. Among other things it gives a way to communicate with you to help in dealing with problems like this. Raymond Arritt 04:09, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Proposal to community ban CroDome (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · nuke contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)

Hello. I'd like to introduce you to our latest POV-warrior, CroDome (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · nuke contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log). Examples of his behavior include [1], [2], [3], and then (here we go) [4], and this comment:

You talk of ethnic hatred? I am today forced to live with Serbians. Do you know that every single moment of my life is fear? You might never know when a Serb couldn't attack me from a corner and cut my throat! I don't want to die, I want to live - but many Serbs have proven hostile to me, and I think that they want nothing but even more dead Croats, and they've aimed at me. You cannot possibly know how I feal, for you're not in Serbia (one of the most fascist governments on erth). (I cannot find the diff, perhaps the revision has been oversighted.)
Here is the diff: diff Maîtresse 21:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

He proceeded to nominate Kubura (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log) for adminship [5], and when Kubura did not accept [6], CroDome proceeded to badger him with [7] this comment.

In regards to this unacceptable behavior on CroDome's part, I believe we as a community should stop this user from editing permanently. Therefore, I propose a community ban for this user. Yuser31415 20:49, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Diffs 7 & 8 will come up blank because I deleted the RFA. Nom didn't want it and it appeared to be POV motivated without his consent. It was never listed for comment, so I removed it completely.--Isotope23 21:00, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
A little bit of devil's advocacy here: What if the guy really has been harrassed and threatened in real life? There's certainly a history of such discord between the relevant groups. I can see a community ban on the basis of the RfD shenanigans alone. But I'm a little uneasy about statements that he has been harrassed (which may well be true for all we know) being used as evidence against him. Raymond Arritt 21:05, 15 February 2007 (UTC)Had I seen some of the edits cited below I wouldn't have brought this up. Raymond Arritt 22:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It is certainly sad if he has been attacked before in real life, but Wikipedia is not a place to nuture hatred or fear. Yuser31415 21:36, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Point taken, thanks. Raymond Arritt 22:14, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If one harbours hatred towards an ethnic group for whatever reason, and their edits clearly reflect this hatred with no attempt to even mask it let alone leave it behind before saving, then this editor does not belong on wikipedia. This is Wikipedia, not a personal blog to display your bias and POV (which he is certainly using it as). Maîtresse 22:02, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - We do not need this kind of editing: I see nothing bar disruption, personal attacks, POV-warring and incivility. Point me, please, to a single productive edit this user has made, because I'm seeing none myself.

Moreschi Request a recording? 21:08, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Comment, I don't see much positive here, but I can't really get behind a WP:BAN of an editor who has never gotten so much as a block. An indef of the account is one thing, but IMO a ban is a pretty severe place to start.--Isotope23 21:18, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • <edit conflict>Comment I agree with Isotope23. A ban for a user with 41 edits seems rather harsh - especially as the account is only 3 days old. I was going to oppose on the grounds that it very early days inhis wiki career but looking at the user's talk page I can see lots of warnings and not much in the way of learning. Indef block as a vandal by all means but I just can't see how this user is so objectional that they have earned a community ban so quickly. --Spartaz 21:38, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • User may appear to be new to Wiki but then one must question how within a few days he already nominated someone for adminship or even knew HOW to nominate someone. I have been here for what "appears to be" longer than CroDome and I still don't know how to nominate someone. Or even, how does the user know what adminship entails? How would the user know where to find all this information in such a short time span... All of these raise red flags. Maîtresse 22:36, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Support, this is unacceptable racism that has no place on Wikipedia. I don't know if he's trying to be funny or if this is deeply rooted vandalism, but it is still dead wrong. Ban Block him ASAP. Please note: I was unaware of the implications of "ban". I think we should block him for a bit, and see what happens. DoomsDay349 22:41, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Question Where are the diffs detailing where someone has attempted to educate the user? Navou banter / contribs 22:45, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

diff Maîtresse 22:48, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
diff Maîtresse 22:49, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thank you for providing Diffs, however, at this time I can not support a community ban. Note the user is new, and without a block log. I must strongly encourage the community to use DR and strongly encourage the application of WP:BLOCK where appropriate. Without a block history for disruption or policy violation, I can not at this time support a ban. Regards, Navou banter / contribs 22:56, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Disagree with ban, but agree that this editor's conduct has been unacceptable. The editor should be given a clear and final warning that blanket statements regarding any race (or editors of that race) are absolutely unacceptable and will result in a quickly-escalating series of blocks. If this advice is ignored even after implementing several such blocks, I would reconsider. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 22:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I find the above users' optimism misplaced. He has exhausted the patience of every editor he has come into contact with. (Even the one he nominated for adminship.) But I am no admin, so it is up to the editors that have such authority to take any action. If a ban will not be enacted, then I support an immediate block (as has been requested on WP:AIV before, with regard to said user). Maîtresse 23:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I am not optimistic, I just don't agree with banning a new editor who has not received so much as a block before. There is a dispute resolution process, and I have not see any diffs that link to mediation, a request for comment, etc. If you look at the banning policy it says that "Users are banned as an end result of the dispute resolution process, in response to serious cases of user misconduct.", whereas in this case the process hasn't even been initiated. Veesicle (Talk) (Contribs) 23:40, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I am not too familiar with the dispute resolution process thank you for pointing it out. However, the process HAS been initiated, the First and Second steps are complete. If further formal steps have to be taken, then could the users involved in this discussion help out? Maîtresse 23:50, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I disagree with an idefinate ban, WP:BITE and assume good faith come to mind, the issue raised about early knowledge of the RFA process needs to be considered in the light of these comments. I find these comment more disturbing than those of a newbie as they inflammed the situation using general defamatory sweeping statements about admins, yet I look past this as an attempt to be seen as supportive of the editor. I think that if edits by User:CroDome continue to be uncivil then blocks should be applied. Gnangarra 00:25, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

First of all - I hate no nation. Kubura already notified me that GreaterSerbian supporters will try to push me off Wikipedia - I can't believe he was right.

Worst of all, ZA DOM SPREMNI is not fascist. Every Croat knows it. Labeling it as fascist is just like caling the Croat people fascist? Are you going to ban now Maitresse??? --CroDome 00:37, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, it is fascist: [diff]. Read. Maîtresse 01:05, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Are you not getting it? Your statement "The Greater Serbian supporters will try to push me off Wikipedia" do you not realize that that is a huge racist blanket statement? This is what we're talking about here. DoomsDay349 00:41, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - based on this users contributions and knowledge of Wikipedia policy, I am strongly inclined to believe that this user is a single purpose account/sock puppet used simply for trolling and disruption. Perhaps to test the limits of a what an editor can get away with before being blocked/banned? Although this user has not had many contributions, I don't think you can point a single positive contribution, and this user shows absolutely no sign of being able to respect Wikipedia policy and be a positive contributor to Wikipedia. // Laughing Man
  • Comment - I think it will be helpful for other Wikipedians to review this user's previous User Page which was deleted, as well his Request for adminship that was also deleted. Is possible that we can restore them in a temporary subpage so others who did not get a chance to see them can review? // Laughing Man 01:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The unacceptable comments from the user's original Userpage can be found in my contribution to their talkpage (following: With regard to the following quotes from your userpage:) as I copied them there to illustrate what was wrong with the comments. Maîtresse 01:37, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block, no opinion on ban. Usually the sorts of people we bring up for banning have block logs a mile long -- this account is only a few days old, only has a few edits, and has never been blocked, prior to this discussion; on the other hand, Laughing Man brings up an important point that may rebut that general practice. With that in mind, I do think we should block, perhaps indefinitely. I can't bring myself to support a ban in this case, but I won't specifically oppose it either. – Luna Santin (talk) 02:25, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block for now, we can re-evaluate this if that proves to be unsuccessful. PSUMark2006 talk | contribs 03:09, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I support block but I am strongly opposed to a community ban on a four day old account that has never been blocked before. I'm also rather shocked to see a proposal for a community ban before a request for a block. He might end up needing to be community banned, but he also might just need an education instead of having Yuser31415 edit warring over his userpage and threatening him with blocks. I find CroDome's behaviour and comments completely unacceptable but I also don't think the way this guy has been treated has helped the situation at all. Sarah 09:16, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Can some admin block him then? I don't know for how long, I am not familiar with blocking. His actions up until now certainly warrant at least one block. Maîtresse 09:42, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose ban. Support Sarah Ewart's block, though. Also, per Wikipedia:Disruptive editing support from editors who are actively involved in a dispute with the user in question should be discounted when tallying this or any other community ban decision. For such editors the ethical approach is to comment upon the discussion and disclose any conflict. DurovaCharge! 21:27, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please note; I was unaware at first what ban meant; I though it was a synonym for block. I've changed my status to supporting a block, for a week, which is good, but if it persists, please, please ban him. DoomsDay349 22:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
We do our best to help people adapt to site standards before resorting to bans. Let's hope this person becomes a good editor. DurovaCharge! 00:30, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block, neutral on ban. WP:BITE doesn't apply as this person clearly is not a newbie - how many newbies know procedure this well? Suggest WP:RFCU so that the block will be applied to this user's socks (of which there are doubtless some number exceeding zero, following the same reasoning). Raymond Arritt 04:16, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Charles Dunbar

I would like to contact the author of the piece on Charles Davidson Dunbar of Hamilton. I have some correspondence from William Dunbar, believed to be Charles's father, in some old fishing books. D. Maley <email removed by PTO 04:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC)> —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.53.50.54 (talk) 03:26, 16 February 2007 (UTC).[reply]

I'm not sure what you mean by the "author of the piece on Charles Davidson Dunbar". Wikipedia is a wiki, and because of anybody can edit the article, so there are loads of "authors". That page is in dire need of cleanup, though. I'll clean it up when I get around to it, maybe. However, any help in cleaning up/expanding that page would be great for the encyclopedia. I hope this helps; I don't really understand your comment. Cheers, PTO 04:13, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Here's the edit history for that article. You might contact the editors through their user talk pages or, if you have verifiable factual information you could add that to the article yourself. DurovaCharge! 00:38, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

IP user making personal attacks/civilty.

What should happen to this user? He has repeatedly violated WP:NPA and WP:CIVIL? He has been blocked for 12 hours. However, he has brought up unnecessary nonsense on the AIDS talk page, as well as other incidents. I was thinking about bringing this up with another admin, but I want to know what the community thought about this matter. Thanks. Real96 06:01, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Try WP:AN. Sounds like an administrative discussion rather than a general community thing. DurovaCharge! 00:35, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Done. Thanks, Durova! Real96 03:46, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, I see that Rylong blocked him for 31 hours. Real96 03:48, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community ban request on User:GordonWatts

GordonWatts (talk · contribs) is a single-issue account whose single issue is Terri Schiavo. Through his entire time on Wikipedia, he has been vexatious, disruptive, argumentative, and intent on pushing his version of events on any all articles connected to Terri Schiavo. Things had stabilized after he went away about a year ago, but he's back with the same act. His latest is to press beyond all reasonable standards for the inclusion of external links to his personal Geocities/AOL Homepage websites, calling the newspapers on par with the New York Times -- or maybe even better, since he claims to be an authority. Despite universal opposition -- except for the brief resurfacing of an old POV-pushing comrade from the worst of the Terri Schiavo edit wars -- that the links utterly failed external link policies, he persists with disruptive, vexatious, long-winded, barely-connected-to-reality and garishly colored* elaborations. Check out the talk pages for Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case and Talk:Terri Schiavo and you'll see what I mean.

His cranking out of thousands of words of his self-serving (helping to fill 40-odd pages of archives), garishly colored nonsense -- supported by (almost) no one -- filling up the talk pages is disruptive and distracting. It always has been, it is now, and -- given Gordon's track record of not understanding plain-English explanations to him, his sense of righteousness unencumbered by evidence or outside opinion, and his inability to disengage unless absolutely forced to (and even then merely as a pause before trying a different tactic later on) -- always will be. Enough is enough, and encouraging him is ill-advised. You'll note that even people who are sympathetic to him still get the full-on Gordon Watts loghorrea when contradicting him, which is as disruptive a way of driving off disagreement as I can think of not involving personal threats as I can imagine.

He's been told "no", but still he persists. Enough. He's not going to magically become better, and it's time he was shown the door. --Calton | Talk 13:34, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Not a violation, actually, but really really annoying.
As noted here, in a timed display of similar thinking, I support this. For the record, I have never edited any article connected to the Terri Schiavo case and took a look at the incident because Gordon asked for help on the AN/I board. I see no indicators that this user is anything more than a single issue poster who's presence on the page is to ensure that he can engage in self-promotion, his actions are fundementally not "wikipedian" - they are to promote himself rather than build a better encyclopedia. Having said that, if editors felt this was too harsh, I would also support a limited community ban which restricts him from adding his own newspapers freely-hosted websites and editting Terri Schiavo related articles. --Fredrick day 13:44, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Fredrick day. Gordon is essentially only on Wikipedia to contribute to Terri Schiavo related articles, and his main interest has been adding his own sites to the articles (which are nearly unanimously considered to not meet WP:External links). A restriction from editing Schiavo case articles should be adequate. Leebo86 13:54, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
As noted here, where I thanked others for participating, I have long stopped editing on the Schiavo articles (or any articles for that matter), and have accepted concensus. The few occasional replies to others' posts is not unreasonable; To ban a user for responding to a post to him sounds vindictive. (If you don't like what is posted and don't want me to reply to you, then simply ignore that page and don't post on it. I am not going to start talking to myself -or, if I do, then we can deal with that when, uh, I mean IF, it happens.) To ban a user who has stopped editing on the articles in question and accepted concensus is not necessary -and sounds like revenge for taking a stand. You're move.--GordonWatts 14:23, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I Support a community ban. First, as a disclosure because of the political nature of his disputes, I have never edited any of the articles related to Terri Schiavo or any of the related sociological or political issues. The issues with Gordon are long term and extreme enough for a community ban. He has repeatedly attempted to inject his point of view into the articles related to Terri Schiavo, but in a back handed, voluminous, and wikilawyering way. Separate from that, he has repeatedly tried to elevate his own status and stature by extreme self promotion. He has an obsession with the issue and with the dead woman, and one could argue that there are conflict of interest issues as well.
But that is not the crux of the issues with Gordon. He does not understand our Project's policies and guidelines, interprets and bends those he does for his own benefit rather than the benefit of the project or of the community. Nor does he, I believe, have the ability to understand our community norms. I do not believe that his acts are specifically malicious - but the volume and persistence of his acts and ignorance has long ago exhausted the community's patience. And he is annoying to an extreme level.
Multiple times he has said that he is leaving or cutting back his activities, only to not cut back at all or to later return full force.
Gordon has a talent, for sure, but his talents lie in churning out thousands of words on small issues, and repeating himself ad nauseum and in ignorance of those around him. As he is fond of reminding everybody and their cousin, he has his own websites. Wikipedia is not a sounding board for his views and obsessions. Gordon can not be fixed. I know it is extreme, but he needs to go away. --Jeffrey O. Gustafson - Shazaam! - <*> 14:30, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"extreme self promotion...our Project's policies and guidelines..." If you will note, Jeff, this disagreement about my websites is only a minor issue, with many other links being deleted willy-nilly. I'm not the only one to share that concern: If you note in this diff, one of my opponents even admits that "I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out." So, you are focusing on someone who had long ago accepted concensus (a waste of time) -and don't focus on the bigger picture, the actual Wikipedia project you mention above, where other editors agree that there is a problem with "personal websites are being ruthlessly removed." As long as people post nonsense to me, I have a right to reply; If you don't want me to reply here in talk, then simply don't post to me; Simple as that. You seem to want to egg on the matter -even though I have not only accepted the concensus but also abided by it; You don't see me adding ANY links, those I support -or those I oppose. As a matter of fact, besides not editing on the article pages, I may not even reply to future posts in this thread, so I may just not edit at all. Then, what are you going to? Ban someone who posts an occasional reply to a talk page? Overkill. Your move.--GordonWatts 14:40, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"So, you are focusing on someone who had long ago accepted concensus" What exactly is "long ago" in this statement? It can't have been more than a day or so, because I only stumbled across this issue in the last few days. Leebo86 14:44, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In wikipedia parlance, a few days is a long time, because of the fast pace here. That I had accepted concensus before your post -and stopped editing on the article page before your post -and stopped even posting to the talk page -except to post in reply -is the salient point -which shows me that you are asking for something after the fact. If the only problem you perceive is me replying to your posts (since I am not editing the article -or threatening to), then the solution is simple: Just don't post to me, and I can't reply! I would, if I were you, do this. I may not even post a reply to this page -be put on notice: I have a real life -but your question seemed a sincere and good one. NOW, arighty: You all are going to have to take care of wikipedia, because you all won the concensus.--GordonWatts 14:49, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
a long time ago? today is a long time ago? --Fredrick day 14:55, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"a long time ago?" First, I want to answer Frederick's question here, as it seems genuine and seeking the truth: When I said that I had not edited in a long time, I was specifically referring to the article pages. (You're going to have ongoing discussion on the talk pages.)
  • The last time I edited the Gov't involvement in Terri Schiavo page was here at 12:51, 13 February 2007, where I revered based on this logic: (rv: #1: I did not "add" my link - I partially reverted, and that was the outcome; #2: I am not adding a news source, but rather advocacy; Address why other "blogs" are allowed and I won't revert you..).
  • The last time I edited the Public opinion & activism / Terri Schiavo case pg was here back on Feb 09, where I fixed a spacing typo.
  • The last time I edited the main Terri Schiavo page was here at 12:05, on 13 February 2007, because (Revert to version 107541828 (11:58, 12 February 2007) because massive deletions of many links were made without having reached proper Concensus or discussion on talk page.)
So, yes, it WAS a long time ago that I edited, a good number of days, and I never came anywhere the "3 revert" rules because I wanted to reach the end-result by consensus -not bullying. Was I wrong to refuse to bully and push here?--17:22, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
  • I support an article ban from subjects related to Terry Schiavo and an outright ban on linking his website, enforced if necessary by blacklisting it. Whether Gordon can be a productive editor elsewhere is unproven, let him prove himself, but there is little doubt that his edits to Schiavo articles have been disruptive and vain, and that cannot continue. he evidently has some capacity or self-delusion so I would like to clarify something: while numerous editors have been kind and patient explaining to Gordon why his actions are problematic, it would not matter where this material is hosted or who added the links, it fails WP:RS by a wide margin. The content itself is the problem, not where it is hosted or who added the links, although they are certainly the problem in terms of user conduct. This is precisely the kind of material we intended to exclude when WP:RS was written. Guy (Help!) 15:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I support banning him from pages related to Terry Schiavo, and blacklisting the links as promotional. He seems to be wasting people's time and misusing the talk pages to such an extent that it is interfering with the project. Tom Harrison Talk 15:39, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • The applicable guideline is Wikipedia:Disruptive editing. Being annoying is just that - annoying, but I don't think there's any malice or ill motive in his actions. He just seems very dedicated to asserting that Terri Schiavo was murdered by Democrats and euthanasia is evil. It's not even a matter of admitting when he's wrong, as he will do so, but continue to press the case in a different way, failing to learn anything. I am in a dilemma. I do not want a ban at this point for Gordon, but I worry about what else can be done. I have tried reasoning with him on more than one occasion, and it has a short-term effect at best. A warning to knockit off won't work, as he's had those before, and a ban from editing Schiavo and related articles would be pointless, as he only edits Schiavo and related articles (n.b. - nothing wrong with a narrow focus - many very fine editors only edit one or a few articles). Being annoying and writing long messages on talk pages is his sole crime. He hasn't edit warred (much) over the links, just complained volubly on the talk page about their removal. Annoying: yes, disruptive: a little, but malicious: no. If he had just edit warred, he'd have got a 24 hour block, but because he spoke up (albeit at great length, over and over) he's being community banned? I don't like that. Suggest a self-imposed break, and if Gordon doesn't learn when he returns, then we're looking at a ban. But there's been no warnings about this, and so I cannot support a ban. Proto  15:57, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I'm not personally familiar with the history here, but if an editor has been around a long time and still not found a way to make himself useful, and if he's causing harm to the project (even somewhat minor harm), simple cost/benefit analysis suggests that we'd be better off without him, right? Since his goals are apparently not compatible with the goals of Wikipedia, the solution seems obvious. Let him do his soapboxing on his own website, it's not useful here. Friday (talk) 20:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I strongly oppose a ban, per Proto. I've seen a lot of Gordon on Wikipedia, and while I often wish he would act differently, a lot of people who were irritated by him have behaved disgracefully towards him, and with impunity. I won't bother to search for diffs, as this is not an RfC or an RfArb, but, if people wish to verify any particular incidence, I'm sure I could look them up. This was the second message ever posted on Gordon's talk page (other than by Gordon himself). If that how we are supposed to treat newcomers? Duckecho wrote some rather nasty stuff making fun of Gordon on his own userpage, and then went to the Terri Schiavo talk page to invite editors to come along and look at it. Duckecho also, at one stage, moved all of Gordon's posts on the Terri Schiavo talk page away from where they had been posted down to the bottom of the page with an edit summary "Creating a sandbox for the kids to play in while the adults work on the article", and reverted me twice when I undid it on the grounds that attacking another editor's dignity does not help Wikipedia. On one occasion, when Gordon left a message at Calton's talk page, which Calton may well have found irritating, but which was not a personal attack, Calton deleted it with the edit summary "reverting not-very-bright troll".[8] When Gordon, at the time of his unsuccessful RfA, kept telling everyone that he had never been blocked, Carnildo blocked him for one second, entering as the reason that Gordon kept pointing to his clean block log. Even recently, when Gordon called Calton "Cal" (which I'm sure was not intended to give offence, as lots of editors use abbreviations of names) , and Calton replied with something like "Only my friends get to call me Cal, Gordy-boy." I just see example after example of people taking away the dignity of someone who gets on their nerves.

I believe that the the addition of Gordon's links would be contrary to WP:COI, WP:RS, and WP:EL, regardless of their merit. But he isn't edit warring over it; he's just posting extremely long rebuttals to everyone who disagrees with him. That's hardly something you ban someone for, expecially if you take into account that he has been treated extremely rudely by other users, and has never shown himself to be malicious. If you don't like his long replies, then don't respond. Gordon does not edit war — certainly not more than his opponents. He never vandalizes. He annoys people by telling them (in great detail) why they're wrong and he's right. In response to Friday's post about not having found a way to make himself useful, Gordon has often been very helpful to the article, correcting spelling errors, improving format, taking a photo of Terri Schiavo's grave, so as to reduce the number of Fair Use images. As Proto says, he's not malicious. I very much commend Proto for his efforts at fairness, both here, and in a recent message on Gordon's talk page. I strongly recommend to Calton that before trying things like community bans, he try to place more importance on the dignity of users with whom he disagrees. I strongly disagree with the idea that we don't have to treat other users with respect if we find them disruptive. Calton does valuable work here, and I've often noticed it, but some indication of kindness towards users who annoy him would make his work more valuable. Musical Linguist 00:01, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I also strongly oppose a ban per Proto. Gordon AND Calton could both act better, nothing Gordon has done requires a Community Ban. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 00:47, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Duckecho wrote some rather nasty stuff making fun of Gordon on his own userpage
Wrong. Duckecho debunked Gordon's long-standing claim-- one he still maintains -- of being a major participant in the legal shenangins surrounding the Terri Schiavo case, Gordon frequently bragging about he "did better than Jeb Bush" and even trying to use that as a wedge in his most recent crusade. It's nasty in the sense that a dash of cold water is nasty.
But he isn't edit warring over it...
Yes he has, as a glance at the edit history would show, just not to the point of hitting the 3RR limit.
...he's just posting extremely long rebuttals to everyone who disagrees with him. That's hardly something you ban someone for...
it is, given its extreme disruption and its intent of wearing down anyone who disagrees with him. It's been done before: User:Herschelkrustofsky, User:Terryeo, User:Everyking, and a few others whose names I can't recall come to mind.
As Proto says, he's not malicious.
Immaterial. He's disruptive and shown himself to be incapable of learning.
when Gordon left a message at Calton's talk page, which Calton may well have found irritating, but which was not a personal attack, Calton deleted it with the edit summary "reverting not-very-bright troll".
Reaching back 16 months for "evidence" is really stretching, don't you think? And the edit summary could have been better phrased but was nonetheless accurate: Gordon WAS trolling, part of a long series of condescending messages peppering my page (some edit summaries: What's the matter, Calton: Can't stand the criticism of fellow-editors? and If you need forgiveness on this or other matters from me, I will grant it.
Funny, though, how your extensive research missed Gordon's attempt at an RFC against me at the same time as the above for "excessive reverting": he left messages on the pages of two editors with whom I'd had disgreements -- including one who'd just been banned by ArbCom, Gordon leaving his message just below the ArbCom notification [9] -- then came immediately to my Talk page claiming that he and four other editors (note the difference in numbers) had gotten together to file an RFC. [10] Note that he hadn't even bothered waiting for any replies before making his claim that "two definitely are" here. The false sincerity of the message text (Please note that I don't act in revenge, but in prevention, the best medicine, an ounce of which is worth a pound of cure -and I'm courteous and polite to give you a heads up, because you deserve a chance to run while you have a chance. I would expect no less from my own honorable adversaries) was particularly choice. Unctuous smarm is no better than active hostility.
Gordon has often been very helpful to the article, correcting spelling errors, improving format, taking a photo of Terri Schiavo's grave, so as to reduce the number of Fair Use images
Gordon is not uniquely or even especially valuable in that context -- a machine can correct spelling errors -- and given his extreme ownership issues surrounding the Terri Schiavo articles, a net drag, given that he requires constant supervision -- which he contests at every turn, sucking up time and energy.
Whether he's a nice guy or an evil, mustache-twirling villian is completely irrelevant as to the issue of whether he's disruptive: "sincere" disruption is no different from "malicious" disruption, no matter how many excuses you make for it. --Calton | Talk 01:20, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think any of the above from User:Calton is particularly helpful or necessary to this discussion. Most of the comments made by "Duckecho" would be considered hearsay and unless said by "Duckecho" here, should be striken from the record. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 01:27, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This isn't a court of law, Mr. Dershowitz. --Calton | Talk 07:54, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No it's not, but you sure as hell are acting like it is. A court that is run by Calton and Calton alone where Calton should get what he wants, when he wants, and be damned the rules and people he has to run over to get it in the process. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 15:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose. Concur in part, and dissent in part, from Musical Linguist above: I agree that ferocity of Calton's attacks on Gordon Watts are excessive and very snarky for an experienced editor who wants to claim victim status. The two of them seem to have inexhaustible time to go and back and forth since Calton commenced this Wikiwar on 9 February, 2007. Nevertheless, Gordon Watts, the activist, is part of the story of the government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case, unless one wishes to fully revise history. Without much effort I found these by narrowing a Google search to .gov [11] and [12] and there is likely more in .com and .org, subtracting out his personal web site. Those petitions have already been memorialized in this Schiavo resource site [13] and should be referenced in our article as well. What Gordon Watts, the Wikipedia editor, appears to lack is the ability to kowtow to Calton as well as some HTML skills. No ban is called for. I agree with all of the others who are calling for a little more self-restraint by the warriors. patsw 01:41, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Nevertheless, Gordon Watts, the activist, is part of the story of the government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case, unless one wishes to fully revise history. Utterly irrelevant spin, but not even wrong: readers are invited to peruse Duckecho's exxhaustive debunking of Gordon's long-standing claim. --Calton | Talk 01:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Shouting is not necessary and let Duckecho know that he can come here and comment on this discussion. Please, though, let's keep this discussion on track. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 01:55, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No one is shouting, Duckecho isn't here but the debunking is easily read by anyone, the discussion IS on track, and you should stop with the wikistalking, already. --Calton | Talk 02:04, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Not Wikistalking, just defending a friend. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 02:09, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Reality varies: you never even heard of the guy until you enlisted his help this week. --Calton | Talk 07:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, cause he was being harrassed by you. I just gave him a simple RfC link which preceded the request for this community ban. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 15:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose.Per Musical Linguist and Proto.Giovanni33 02:19, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I Oppose a community ban. I read through Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case and I think Gordon has exhausted Calton's patience, but I don't think he has yet exhausted the community's patience. I agree that Gordon is very trying, annoying and he seems to have a very warped sense of self-importance. However, I don't see anything that I feel justifies a community ban. He has only been blocked twice: once on 19 September 2005 for one second for "pointing to his clean block log as a reason why he should be made an admin". The second block was for 12 hours on 02:16, 25 September 2005 for "violation of agreement at Talk:Terri Schiavo". In the last 17 months, Gordon has not been blocked at all. before supporting a community ban, I would rather see more blocks of increasing lengths used where necessary. A community ban should be a last resort. Gordon has a clear conflict of interest with regard to all the Schiavo articles and his links are clearly inapprorpriate, but he has agreed not to edit the Schiavo articles further.
Also, Calton needs to stop being antagonistic, provocative, bullying and rude towards Gordon. I don't know if there's some ruling (from anyone other than Calton) that says that Gordon is not allowed to comment on the relevant article's talk pages, but if there is, I couldn't find it. All I could find was Calton repeatedly declaring that "Gordon is not free to rebut" matters discussed on the article's talk page. This is bullying. Gordon has already agreed not to edit the articles, if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction, rather than declaring it as a personal decree. Gordon's behaviour is disruptive and annoying, but I think a community ban at the present time is premature. Sarah 07:10, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Gordon has already agreed not to edit the articles" Well, let me clarify: I promised that I had not edited the main article pages for a good while, several days; I was making a promise about the past, not the future; also, please see my reply to Frederick above, where I made another promise about the past (it's easier to promise about the past, since it can't be changed) -I gave my word and promised I came nowhere near the 3-revert rule. I do not recall promising to not ever edit on the Schiavo pages; In fact, many people stick to their area of expertise, and while I edit a little everywhere, I am expert in only a few issues. I did strongly imply (if not promise) to not edit for a short while to give the issue time to cool off- and I also strongly implied (if not promised) to try accept consensus and not irritate or edit war with my global neighbours -and to be more flexible. Indeed, I may be guilty to being too talkative, and we all get ticked at times, but if I am guilty of spending lots of talk page space over something (hopefully to educate and seek consensus), then Calton is also guilty of the same thing: He posts long, irritating posts. Indeed, even as we speak, as pointed out by OrangeMonster, Calton has an RfC against him: Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Calton -and lots of people agree Calton has need for improvement. Not only is his behaviour bad, but also, his editing style is bad; He cuts too many things out of Wikipedia, so we can't cite our sources, and this will be a problem whether or not I regularly edit here. I already cited that even one editor, who disagreed with me on my page being used as a reference, concedes that I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out. OK, while no one seems to agree that my newspaper should be a references, I'll AGREE with you that it may not be totally reliable (and by extension, so also, some smaller papers and blogs). BUT, these smaller news sources ARE partly reliable -hey! We don't all just write lies all the time, but that's what is implied by "not reliable." I'll offer a compromise here: Why don't we consider revising our application of the policy to allow for these smaller papers to be included -so long as they have supporting sources, that is, instead of citing just to, say, my paper, we can cite to 2 or 3 smaller blogs; In fact, even when using the NY Times as a source, we ought to have a "supporting" source, just to make sure we cite our sources.--GordonWatts 17:38, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, you're not helping yourself at all. Making promises about the past is ridiculous. You have a conflict of interest and should not be editing any of those pages. Your links are completely unacceptable for the articles. You either need to accept these things or you're going to have to accept a community ban. Sarah 17:53, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I have accepted the consensus and not threatened to violate it; however, what if this editor is right in her claims that we are not citing our sources? Also, I am not advocating specifically for "my" pages. That my pages are one of many that are arbitrarily excluded no less makes my point a valid one; So, please understand that I am NOT seeking to promote my websites, but if smaller news papers ARE indeed partly reliable but arbitrarily excluded, then I am right to speak up on that general issue, and those would bring up "my" newspapers are conflating (confusing) the point and side-stepping the issue. Indeed, if all I'm guilty of is advocating a change in policy (note that I've accepted the consensus on the issue of links to my page), then this is not a crime; it is something all should do: Advocate for change where change is necessary. You are confusing my advocacy of my links with my advocacy of the bigger issues of our policy. I am doing the latter, not the former--GordonWatts 18:00, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think Gordon may have misunderstood something I said. He links to this post, and asks if I may be right in my claims that we are not citing our sources. I certainly never intended to make such a claim. I said, "I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out. After you recover from your surprise, it actually seems a good idea." I was referring to the Gillian McKeith article, where a lot of criticism of McKeith was placed in the article, with references that linked to a blog. Some administrators have explained that we can't use that material, unless the criticism is found in a better source. The idea was not that we'd use it, and not cite our sources (which is what Gordon seems to think I meant), but that we shouldn't use it at all, unless it's in a reliable source. If the information is notable and newsworthy, it will presumably be found in The Times, or a similar source. I was actually saying to Gordon that the policy seems very strict, but that once you get used to it, it makes sense. ElinorD (talk) 21:39, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for clarifying your intent; It was not my intent to mischaracterize or misquote you; If what you say is true (and I'm sure it is), then the situation is even worse then my initial estimation: Even if we don't cite our sources but at least leave in the material, we can come back to it; By deleting sections of encyclopaedic entries for which only "non-notable" sources exist, we slice the Encyclopaedia in pieces, since, after all, we can either get several "non-notable" sources -or make a note that the sources are in question; That way we don't miss a beat -and preserve the record of history. MANY times an act or action will be witnessed or reported on only by a "non-notable" source, such as the time I was the only news reporter in one oral argument for George Felos, when he came before the court a block from my home in Lakeland. Yet that even really occurred and should be reported -as it happened -and if there are concerns about the source, then call the Schindlers; They can confirm whether or not the "non-notable" news report was true or not, and this will be your check-and-balance.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Furthermore, if I am right that our policy needs to be changed, then my advocacy of this is NOT a conflict of interest issue: I am not specifically advocating in this issue for inclusion of my links; That I did the latter in the past does not somehow negate this larger issue. I certainly don't seek a ban against Calton in his RfC, but he has violated actual and real rules, and is guilty of not only rudeness but also (if I am right about how we don't cite our sources) he would be guilty of cutting up articles and bad editing, even if he were polite. Even though I've commented that his behaviour is inappropriate and needs to be dealt with, I'm not seeking his ban, but if you seek a ban, he would be more worthy of one than would I. Did you see his RfC? One more thing: Saying that a person can't edit on a page where he has expert or first-hand knowledge because of a conflict of interest would effectively stop all doctors from editing medical articles and stop all biologists from editing biology articles, and we'd lost a lot of our expertise; Is that what you want?--GordonWatts 18:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, if you wish to discuss the validity of using certain links or lobby for policy change, you need to do that in the appropriate forum. Advocating for it and offering it as compromise in the middle of discussion of a proposal to ban you is not the right place.
You editing the Terri Schiavo articles is a completely different situation to, say, a doctor editing the heart article and I'm actually quite surprised that you don't get that. I know you self-proclaim yourself a Terri Schiavo expert and you've tried to claim "special standing" and "recognized authority" status on those articles.[14] I do not accept that claim and I don't believe the majority of editors would either. I don't know if you are an expert or even how that would measured and quantified, and I don't think it even matters. But what I do know is you have a clear conflict of interest and you should not be editing these articles. I think if you could put your belief about your status and significance in the case aside when you're on this website, and follow WP:COI and WP:RS, many of your problems would be resolved. I don't have a problem with you suggesting changes on the talk pages or discussing article content there, but you should not directly edit these articles or add links to your site to any article. Sarah 14:05, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented: this was in response to his continuing to flog the dead horse of inserting his personal external links after continually being told that they weren't going in, period. I told him that if he continued, I'd request the ban. He continued, I requested.
if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction You're looking at that request: what else did you think this whole thread was about? Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters.
My user page says at the top "It's clean-up duty, mopping up after the dishonest, incompetent, and fanatical." Gordon is all three, in spades, and whatever limited value he has -- other than a single-minded devotion to one subject (or, more precisely, one single view of a single subject) -- is far outweighed by his negatives. This place is not reform school or personal therapy, it's an encyclopedia, and I can't imagine what possible benefit there is in attempting a salvage job on someone who refuses to be salvaged. Between his previous and current antics at Terri Schiavo, at attempting to bully his way into making it a feature article, and his world-class wikilawyering at his spectacularly unsuccessful adminship bid (including an attempt at an end run by appealing to Jimbo to just give him the job, votes be damned), I'm trying to imagine HOW anyone thinks he's going to suddenly turn into a good contributor. --Calton | Talk 07:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented. I looked quickly at Talk:Government_involvement_in_the_Terri_Schiavo_case#Enough and I see at least three times you insisted that Gordon was not free to rebut:
  • "No more arguments, no more rationalizations, no more long-winded, disruptive, self-serving rebuttals..." --Calton | Talk 14:49, 15 February 2007
  • "Gordon's free to rebut. No, he's not..." .-Calton | Talk 22:34, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
  • "Gordon is free to rebut. No, he isn't: hundreds and thousands of words of his self-serving nonsense..." -Calton | Talk 00:02, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
While the first one was just your opening warning to Gordon that you would request a community ban if he continued with that behaviour, the other two were replies to User:Leebo86 and User:Hipocrite who disagreed with your edict. At least three is more than once and therefore "repeated". I don't think that is false or "wildly misleading."
You're looking at that request: what else did you think this whole thread was about? That's exactly my point, Calton: you declared editing restrictions before you even brought it to the community.
Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters. I don't know who the stalker is or whether that is a general comment or if it's directed specifically at me, but what you've actually got is several people responding to your request and telling you that they don't think a community ban is appropriate yet. I'd be willing to support a community ban if other editors cut antagonising him AND there was a recent record of blocks. Is his behaviour disruptive enough to warrant a block? If it is, have him blocked a few times and see if that has any impact. If it isn't disruptive enough to warrant a block, how on earth can it warrant a ban? I don't think this is unreasonable, nor do I think that telling you your attitude and behaviour is unhelpful and Gordon that his attitude and behaviour is "very trying, annoying..." and "disruptive" and warning him that he is headed for a community ban is "enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth." Also, I thought you posting on Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case the link to that blog that ridiculed Gordon was pretty damn nasty. Sarah 12:17, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Since Sarah has supported me and seems to be taking a responsible attitude towards being fair, it has bothered me that there was a small difference of opinion -in which she commented that I should not edit the Terri Schiavo articles. Yes, I agree that I have some conflict of interest here, but it has just now dawned on me: I think she may feel my motives on this article were less than pure. (And if she doubts my motives, I'm sure that my detractors would doubt them even more.) So, I feel a obligation to clarify one big thing: In the many edits I've made, I DO have a hidden agenda: To better Wikipedia -and to have fun and make friends in the process; Proof of that claim is the fact that I often make sure opposing views and opposing links (that is, views with which I disagree) are presented. I even recently added Michael Schiavo's website to the main Terri Schiavo article, even though I was against him in my recent court case! To prove that my detractors are wrong, please note that here at 04:41am, way back on 18 January 2007, I added a link to Michael Schiavo's site to the main article. I don't want to argue much for myself, even as 10 of Trades suggested, but this one link is proof I'm not biased or in possession of a bad agenda. However, if MY website is helpful as a source (in one case, I was the only reporter present in an important oral argument hearing), then my pushing of my website is not per se pushing my own agenda: Most websites I support for inclusion are NOT my own -even those which are not pro-life like me. OK, now that I've got this off my chest, I apologise for the length of this page, but so many questions and accusations require some rebuttals hither and yon.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • There is ONE take home message I hope none of us miss: We are unpaid editors, and while it is good that we expect a lot out of the articles, when unpaid persons are asked to sit in judgment of a peer, the quality of the inquest suffers, and instead of getting frustrated or blaming yourselves, please understand that you can't be expected to be a professional judge when you're not paid enough to do the job right. So, in conclusion, we must STRIVE for the stars -but we MUST NOT expect too much -lest we be disappointed; Be humble in your expectations, and you won't get disappointed; I hope this has encouraged my fellow-editors, for that was the hope.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Since Sarah has supported me... Gordon, I just need to clarify something: I think your behaviour is extremely problematic and I think that if you continue as you have in the past, you are heading for a community ban. There is a difference between thinking that you haven't entirely "exhausted the community's patience" yet and actually supporting you. I don't think you should be banned at the present time because I think we should exhaust other options such as blocking, restrictions etc, but I do not support you carrying on as you have been. Sarah 12:24, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Why are people talking about how other editors have been rude to him? It looks like it's true, certainly, but it's utterly irrelevant to the issue at hand. The big concern I see here is the conflict of interest. Any editor who's goals do not coincide with the goals of the project must either change their ways, or be shown the door. However it looks to me like an rfc might be a better place to hash this out- it seems we've no shortage of people with opinions on this topic. Friday (talk) 18:26, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The behaviour of all the parties to a conflict is often relevant when we seek to evaluate the behaviour of a particular editor. Context is important. Some editors – I have in mind particularly Calton, and this is by no means the only conflict where his own attitude is a problem – check the requirements of WP:CIVIL at the door as soon as they believe they're dealing with someone who is a waste of their time. While that assessment may in some cases be correct, the rudeness often fans flames and spreads conflict. Gratuitous rudeness doesn't help Wikipedia, except for the very rare case where a timewasting editor can be bullied into silence and departure. (Even then, this is often not the best possible outcome.)
That said, GordonWatts has been a single-issue editor since his arrival here. His continued debating here and elsewhere does seem to indicate that he has trouble with letting go of arguments. I can understand the frustration with trying to deal with an editor who is certain that we'll all come around to his point of view if he just explains it one more time.
GordonWatts' RfA a year ago was not a pretty thing, and I fear that he has not sufficiently internalized Wikipedia's practices and culture since then. Nevertheless, an RfC might be a good idea to identify the scope and nature of the problems here. I note that his block log has been clean for more than a year, although he did take a couple of very long breaks during that time. If the problems are simply related to his conflict of interest in evaluating his own blog as a reliable source, I can't in good conscience support a flat ban. As Proto says above, it appears "Being annoying and writing long messages on talk pages is his sole crime. He hasn't edit warred (much) over the links, just complained volubly on the talk page about their removal." Incidentally, aside from the links issue, does anyone have a comment on the quality of his writing? Is he improving the articles that he works on? TenOfAllTrades(talk) 18:57, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the evaluation; it may be the most correct yet. I'll answer your last question about my edits: I don't edit very often, sometimes taking long Wikipedia:Wikibreaks, but when I do edit (over the long run), the edit history of the articles I sometimes edit show usually very GOOD edits, both in regards to finding typos AND in regards to making sustentative changes. However, your opinion may differ. What I will tell you is this: When I make edits, I usually DON'T get his type of negative attention, which would imply that I am a good editor, that is, mixing common sense editing and good manners. (Either one or the other won't work: You can't be a stupid but polite editor. You also can't be a good but rude editor and do well. Check the edit history of the few pages I've edited recently -or check MY edit history -if you want to see.--GordonWatts 19:12, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Of what I have read, and I will be the first to admit that I am no expert on the Schiavo subject only what I seen on CNN. But, of what I have read of Gordon's writing, his writing appears to be VERY well written and explains things at detail. Much better than anything I can write. My personal opinion is that is does improve the articles that he works on. Writing as articulate as Gordon's is something I would like to see more of here. Again, this is just my opinion on the quality of his writing per TenOfAllTrades (I ain't getting in the debate outside that). - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 19:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'll add a few diffs to supstantiate Orange Monster's claim here -and help him out:
First, look at the last 500 edits of the Terri Schiavo page here, by far, more contentious and difficult than the Gov't Involvement page. Most of my edits seem to be accepted by the community. I rest my case -and await an answer to my question to Sarah where she says as person can't edit at all on pages where conflict of interest would apply. The Conflict of interest only applies to edits which promote the person -not just any old edit.--GordonWatts 19:21, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Adding Nancy Cruzan link a sustentitive edit; revert a typo wikilinking some dates we missed earlier (minor grammar/clarification edits: add ... + date + wikilink of date + time span of institutionalization + clarify *which* court was petitioned by Michael + grammar of "upholding" lower court decision) m (→State involvement: Terri's Law - balance: I concur and agree with Calton that ACLJ is explicitly conservative, but as a nod to Johnlu 78759, I add this to remove bias by an inclusionist method.) PS: That edit was later reverted, and I didn't edit-war over it, but my edit here looked good, so I did it.--GordonWatts 19:27, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, I'm really looking for third party evaluation of the quality of your edits. This thread exemplifies part of what other people have found – for lack of a better word – 'annoying' about your participation on talk pages. You really, really, really need to learn when it's best to stand aside, and that it isn't necessary to have your finger in every pie or your signature on the last word of every discussion. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:26, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I totally agree that I should not have HAD to reply to your question AT ALL, because the other editors should be able to look into the edit history all by themselves -but we both know that not all people can find the article edits you sought -since not all would look in the right places. That said, I've done my part; If you all want answers to these matters, you will have to seek them out; Other than answer a passing question, I have no more to add: This is a big waste of time to argue over this matter -for all parties. I have a real life, and so do you all: Don't let these things stress you all too much! Live life and have fun.--GordonWatts 19:33, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree; A 3rd-party evaluation is more objective, but I think it's only fair to help out a little bit. One last comment: While this page is long, and partly due to my crimes of being too talkative, much of the long-windedness is that of other people. I hope we all can learn to argue less over trivial points; Life is too short, and THAT is the bigger picture -no matter my or others' situation.--GordonWatts 19:30, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, you're not taking the hint. Let someone else get a word in edgewise in this discussion. You're not helping yourself or anyone else. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:46, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK; as you ask. Acknowledged and done.--GordonWatts 19:49, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community discussion on User:NuclearUmpf

Formerly Special:Contributions/Zer0faults, users sole contributions are edit warring on 9-11 conspiracy theories, edit warring on political arguments, and following editors he disagrees with to other artcles with the express intent of reverting them repeatedly without discussion. Hipocrite - «Talk» 20:07, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Major Work:

Album Articles:

Under zer0faults

In other words stop lying. --NuclearZer0 20:20, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

For those concerned, this is what Hipocrite is complainig about:

  • Hipocrite added fact tag: [15]
  • I added citation: [16]

I think he added the tag cause he thought a source couldnt be found, I now see on the talk page he doesnt like Joseph Newcomer. But as you can see, providing sources is much of what I do. --NuclearZer0 20:24, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

What's the point of this thread? Head over to requests for comment if you want a "community discussion" of a particular user. DurovaCharge! 00:34, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Essay vs. Soapboxing

Where does one end and where does the other begin. If an essay is created, then it is open to editors to change by consensus, but how far can it change? Can consensus change an essay into something opposing it's original position? If an essay is just one person's point of view and many other disagree then should that essay stand?

I know several of you know exactly which essay I have in mind, however, please lets keep this general, because my interest in this topic goes beyond any one essay. This is something I think needs to be more clearly spelled out. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 16:08, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's an interesting question. I've noticed that essays in the Wikipedia space tend to retain their original points of view, most of the time (and yes, this is one time when we are not strictly NPOV, by consensus) -- however, they are indeed open to "merciless editing." Essays in the user space are generally safe from this. An essay in the Wikipedia space is not actually protected by any policy I know from being changed completely from its original intent--it just doesn't happen that way most of the time. Most of the time. Perhaps we've found an exception. Antandrus (talk) 16:13, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Essays in the user space are generally safe from this.", I must disagree, people don't own their userspace, and an essay in that space should be treated as common property just as much as any other place, unless I am very wrong. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 18:09, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
to Quote from WP:PG --
An essay is any page that is not actionable or instructive, regardless of whether it's authorized by consensus. Essays tend to be opinionated. Essays need not be proposed or advertised, you can simply write them, as long as you understand that you do not generally speak for the entire community. If you do not want other people to reword your essay, put it in your userspace. It does not follow that any page that is not a policy or a guideline is therefore an essay; there are plenty of pages in the Wikipedia namespace that are none of the three.
This does appear to make it acceptiable to "own" an essay in your user space. Gnangarra 19:31, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
...after edit conflict with the above...
I'm afraid you're very wrong, but don't take it too hard. :D As a matter of courtesy, essays in userspace are generally left as the author wrote them, and merciless editing – unless specifically invited – is frowned upon. Putting an essay in one's own userspace is way of saying, "This is my opinion". It's not polite for a third party to come along and say, "Your opinion is incorrect/stupid/badly expressed, so I rewrote it for you. You'll like your new opinion much better."
This is not to say that community standards don't apply to userspace. If someone writes an essay with the theme 'The following Wikipedians are assholes', then it would be appropriate to step in and ask them to change or delete the page. There's also nothing which prevents an editor from copying an essay from another user's space (everything here is under the GFDL, after all) and modifying it to suit themselves.
Honestly though, I think that it's even silly to edit war over essays in Wikipedia space. If you disagree with an opinion piece, then write a rebuttal or a statement of support for a contrary position. Add appropriate links to the 'See also' sections of each essay, and you're done. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:41, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Additional guidelines from Wikipedia:User_page#How do I create a user subpage?
There are several common uses for user subpages:
3.To delineate views on Wikipedia, its functioning, or behavior of Wikipedians in general.
This also supports the position that essay in user space are acceptiable. It's considered polite to avoid substantially editing another's user page and subpages without their permission, however the space does still belong to the community Gnangarra 19:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
HighinBC, clarification: I meant that people generally don't edit them, not that they can't or shouldn't. Antandrus (talk) 20:40, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
So I could create an essay in my userspace presenting my own POV, and expect it to not be subjected to alternate points of view? That is a privilege I would rather do without, I would go to a web hosting site if I wanted to put something like that up. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 20:45, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Keep in mind that POV is only inherently a bad thing when it comes to text of articles. Essays and user pages may absolutely reflect a certain point of view. IMO, essays you write in your own user space are mostly ignored anyway.. but if you do go far outside of community norms, such a page may wind up at WP:MFD. In Wikipedia space, it would be more likely to generate debate and rewriting, but in user space, it's pretty much request deletion or nothing. Mangojuicetalk 20:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Mostly, yes. If you don't want to exercise that privilege, of course you're welcome to put your own opinion essays elsewhere. In general we allow people a reasonable amount of freedom in their own userspace, as long as they're not disrupting the project and as long as they are making useful contributions.
Note that in general there's much more tolerance for Wikipedia-related essays. If someone is using their userspace solely to publish political screeds, as an outlet for original research, or to attack other editors, then intervention is more likely. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 21:00, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think that essays in userspace should really be edited, at least in the main text. In essence, the individual is saying, "These are my views on this given issue." It doesn't make much sense for another person to come by and say, "No, these are your views and insights on this issue." If anything, creating to or adding a response or criticism section seems like a better avenue for input. Or, at least, I would take it as strongly implied that if I had an essay, say, evaluating Wikipedia in my userspace that it would have an implicit prefix of "bitnine's analysis of..." It's not an issue of ownership, just that there is an implicit attribution there, and someone else altering an essay is somewhat akin to editing a (POV or not) quotation. I'd say you should consider refraining from altering a userspace essay in the same manner you'd consider refraining from altering an attributed quotation. At best, qualifiers or responses should be added to provide a context. Bitnine 10:44, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And as an additional note, I don't think this necessarily meshes entirely with the general dampening on soapboxing. Wikipedia is definitely not the place to go on about your least favorite racial group or your favorite political party. You should go somewhere else if the subject of an essay is unrelated in such a manner. That sort of thing is going to be detrimental without much in the ways of redeeming features. However, being able to discuss your views on and analysis of Wikipedia (I think, at least) is something necessary and beneficial to the project. That isn't to say that such essays can't be bad or even disruptive, but a categorical declaration probably shouldn't be made. Bitnine 10:53, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Interesting issue - I'm aware of an essay (in Wiki space) which was created essentially as a snip of comments a second person left on an unrelated talk page. While GFDL clearly says one releases their content to be used for any purpose, I am not really sure whether the writer of the actual comment can expressly withhold permission for a talk page comment to be incorporated as somebody else's essay (albeit with appropriate attribution). Any ideas? Orderinchaos78 05:30, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

So to summarise the salient points:

  • Essays are used for people to express their opinion about Wikipedia (but not about other things, because that would be soapboxing);
  • Essays in the project namespace are open to editing like any other page, whereas essays written by a user in their own user space are customarily not edited as they are meant to represent one individual's point of view;
  • Wherever they may be located, essays must adhere to the behavioural policies, just like any other page.

Add to this if I've missed anything important. --bainer (talk) 11:39, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community ban?

Does anyone have any objections as to community banning Jacknicholson aka Marshall2.0 aka Marshallbanana and any new sock that appears? He has:

  1. Edit warred at various articles, breaking 3RR with his accounts and with a range of dynamic IPs in order to insert silly videos or blatantly false information.
  2. Deleted 3RR reports concerning him from the noticeboard
  3. Attacked various users, notably User:jesup, creating the Marshall2.0 accounts to make a WP:POINT sock accusation against him
  4. Repeatedly vandalised my and others' pages (my entire userspace is semiprotected as of now) using several dozen dynamic IPs all originating from BellSouth

He has not:

  1. Actually done anything useful

The last bit of userspace-related vandalism is discussed here, and I'm pretty sure that it's the same user as the vandalism took place outside of school hours and from adresses all originating from the same ISP, as well as with intervals of at least a few minutes between each addition. yandman

Hi Yandman, could you justify indefinitely blocking them as vandalism / troll only accounts? If so, I would suggest you go ahead. Addhoc 12:05, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I'm going to block MarshallBanana indef anyway for the reasons stated above, I just prefer it to be a community ban so as to make processing the next sock that appears faster. yandman 12:22, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Restored Open RFC that was not listed

Just restored an rfc that was no longer listed at WP:RFC:

Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Abu badali

--Kim Bruning 19:38, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It would appear that Radiant! removed a number of elderly and stale RfCs, but did not archive them - probably not a good idea, and I may look into it and try to link the missing ones into the archives. The Abu badali one really should be closed and archived, though; it seems to be providing a pretty good bulls-eye, and if the issue hasn't been resolved in the nearly three months since it was filed, then it should probably move to arbitration. Tony Fox (arf!) 21:22, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, well, I suggest folks go take a look anyway. --Kim Bruning 22:55, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I second the call for arbitration. Abu badali has simply ignored the Rfc for 3 months, in spite of the fact that dozens of people have endorsed it. I'm surprised that there has been no administrative action taken against him. Jeffpw 22:34, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Vandalism by IP Address: 70.106.74.152

Sorry to post something like this here, but I don't know where else to tell people about it.

I was looking at the United States Chamber of Commerce page when I noticed that it was pretty severely vandalized. Then, looking at the history I saw that it was by someone with the IP address 70.106.74.152. (Sorry, I don't know how to link that to a contribution history.) Anyway, this person/address has about 500 edits, many of which seem to be pure vandalism.

Can someone tell me where I should report it? I'm at work now, so I don't have enough time to revert all those myself... --65.210.108.102 20:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC) (sorry, I forgot to sign it the first time) --65.210.108.102 20:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

WP:AIV is probably the best place :P. Yuser31415 20:40, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I looked there before I posted here, but I didn't think it was appropriate--that pages says "after repeated warnings," but I haven't given any warnings yet. Anyway, since that was the only good place to do it, I went ahead and posted there. Thanks! --65.210.108.102 21:42, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'm guessing you're not going to have a lot of luck over at WP:AIV because it's been several days since 70.106.74.152 (talk · contribs) has gotten any warnings. It's a shared IP from a school so the vandalism pretty much has to be active for action to be taken. You should read Wikipedia:WikiProject user warnings/Help:Introduction to learn how you can post your own warnings on vandals' talk pages. Hope that helps some! —Elipongo (Talk|contribs) 03:51, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and please consider getting a login name. Among other things it gives a way to communicate with you to help in dealing with problems like this. Raymond Arritt 04:09, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Proposal to community ban CroDome (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · nuke contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)

Hello. I'd like to introduce you to our latest POV-warrior, CroDome (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · nuke contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log). Examples of his behavior include [17], [18], [19], and then (here we go) [20], and this comment:

You talk of ethnic hatred? I am today forced to live with Serbians. Do you know that every single moment of my life is fear? You might never know when a Serb couldn't attack me from a corner and cut my throat! I don't want to die, I want to live - but many Serbs have proven hostile to me, and I think that they want nothing but even more dead Croats, and they've aimed at me. You cannot possibly know how I feal, for you're not in Serbia (one of the most fascist governments on erth). (I cannot find the diff, perhaps the revision has been oversighted.)
Here is the diff: diff Maîtresse 21:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

He proceeded to nominate Kubura (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log) for adminship [21], and when Kubura did not accept [22], CroDome proceeded to badger him with [23] this comment.

In regards to this unacceptable behavior on CroDome's part, I believe we as a community should stop this user from editing permanently. Therefore, I propose a community ban for this user. Yuser31415 20:49, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Diffs 7 & 8 will come up blank because I deleted the RFA. Nom didn't want it and it appeared to be POV motivated without his consent. It was never listed for comment, so I removed it completely.--Isotope23 21:00, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
A little bit of devil's advocacy here: What if the guy really has been harrassed and threatened in real life? There's certainly a history of such discord between the relevant groups. I can see a community ban on the basis of the RfD shenanigans alone. But I'm a little uneasy about statements that he has been harrassed (which may well be true for all we know) being used as evidence against him. Raymond Arritt 21:05, 15 February 2007 (UTC)Had I seen some of the edits cited below I wouldn't have brought this up. Raymond Arritt 22:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It is certainly sad if he has been attacked before in real life, but Wikipedia is not a place to nuture hatred or fear. Yuser31415 21:36, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Point taken, thanks. Raymond Arritt 22:14, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
If one harbours hatred towards an ethnic group for whatever reason, and their edits clearly reflect this hatred with no attempt to even mask it let alone leave it behind before saving, then this editor does not belong on wikipedia. This is Wikipedia, not a personal blog to display your bias and POV (which he is certainly using it as). Maîtresse 22:02, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - We do not need this kind of editing: I see nothing bar disruption, personal attacks, POV-warring and incivility. Point me, please, to a single productive edit this user has made, because I'm seeing none myself.

Moreschi Request a recording? 21:08, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Comment, I don't see much positive here, but I can't really get behind a WP:BAN of an editor who has never gotten so much as a block. An indef of the account is one thing, but IMO a ban is a pretty severe place to start.--Isotope23 21:18, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • <edit conflict>Comment I agree with Isotope23. A ban for a user with 41 edits seems rather harsh - especially as the account is only 3 days old. I was going to oppose on the grounds that it very early days inhis wiki career but looking at the user's talk page I can see lots of warnings and not much in the way of learning. Indef block as a vandal by all means but I just can't see how this user is so objectional that they have earned a community ban so quickly. --Spartaz 21:38, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • User may appear to be new to Wiki but then one must question how within a few days he already nominated someone for adminship or even knew HOW to nominate someone. I have been here for what "appears to be" longer than CroDome and I still don't know how to nominate someone. Or even, how does the user know what adminship entails? How would the user know where to find all this information in such a short time span... All of these raise red flags. Maîtresse 22:36, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Support, this is unacceptable racism that has no place on Wikipedia. I don't know if he's trying to be funny or if this is deeply rooted vandalism, but it is still dead wrong. Ban Block him ASAP. Please note: I was unaware of the implications of "ban". I think we should block him for a bit, and see what happens. DoomsDay349 22:41, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Question Where are the diffs detailing where someone has attempted to educate the user? Navou banter / contribs 22:45, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

diff Maîtresse 22:48, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
diff Maîtresse 22:49, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Thank you for providing Diffs, however, at this time I can not support a community ban. Note the user is new, and without a block log. I must strongly encourage the community to use DR and strongly encourage the application of WP:BLOCK where appropriate. Without a block history for disruption or policy violation, I can not at this time support a ban. Regards, Navou banter / contribs 22:56, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Disagree with ban, but agree that this editor's conduct has been unacceptable. The editor should be given a clear and final warning that blanket statements regarding any race (or editors of that race) are absolutely unacceptable and will result in a quickly-escalating series of blocks. If this advice is ignored even after implementing several such blocks, I would reconsider. Seraphimblade Talk to me Please review me! 22:58, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I find the above users' optimism misplaced. He has exhausted the patience of every editor he has come into contact with. (Even the one he nominated for adminship.) But I am no admin, so it is up to the editors that have such authority to take any action. If a ban will not be enacted, then I support an immediate block (as has been requested on WP:AIV before, with regard to said user). Maîtresse 23:33, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I am not optimistic, I just don't agree with banning a new editor who has not received so much as a block before. There is a dispute resolution process, and I have not see any diffs that link to mediation, a request for comment, etc. If you look at the banning policy it says that "Users are banned as an end result of the dispute resolution process, in response to serious cases of user misconduct.", whereas in this case the process hasn't even been initiated. Veesicle (Talk) (Contribs) 23:40, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I am not too familiar with the dispute resolution process thank you for pointing it out. However, the process HAS been initiated, the First and Second steps are complete. If further formal steps have to be taken, then could the users involved in this discussion help out? Maîtresse 23:50, 15 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I disagree with an idefinate ban, WP:BITE and assume good faith come to mind, the issue raised about early knowledge of the RFA process needs to be considered in the light of these comments. I find these comment more disturbing than those of a newbie as they inflammed the situation using general defamatory sweeping statements about admins, yet I look past this as an attempt to be seen as supportive of the editor. I think that if edits by User:CroDome continue to be uncivil then blocks should be applied. Gnangarra 00:25, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

First of all - I hate no nation. Kubura already notified me that GreaterSerbian supporters will try to push me off Wikipedia - I can't believe he was right.

Worst of all, ZA DOM SPREMNI is not fascist. Every Croat knows it. Labeling it as fascist is just like caling the Croat people fascist? Are you going to ban now Maitresse??? --CroDome 00:37, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, it is fascist: [diff]. Read. Maîtresse 01:05, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Are you not getting it? Your statement "The Greater Serbian supporters will try to push me off Wikipedia" do you not realize that that is a huge racist blanket statement? This is what we're talking about here. DoomsDay349 00:41, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - based on this users contributions and knowledge of Wikipedia policy, I am strongly inclined to believe that this user is a single purpose account/sock puppet used simply for trolling and disruption. Perhaps to test the limits of a what an editor can get away with before being blocked/banned? Although this user has not had many contributions, I don't think you can point a single positive contribution, and this user shows absolutely no sign of being able to respect Wikipedia policy and be a positive contributor to Wikipedia. // Laughing Man
  • Comment - I think it will be helpful for other Wikipedians to review this user's previous User Page which was deleted, as well his Request for adminship that was also deleted. Is possible that we can restore them in a temporary subpage so others who did not get a chance to see them can review? // Laughing Man 01:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The unacceptable comments from the user's original Userpage can be found in my contribution to their talkpage (following: With regard to the following quotes from your userpage:) as I copied them there to illustrate what was wrong with the comments. Maîtresse 01:37, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block, no opinion on ban. Usually the sorts of people we bring up for banning have block logs a mile long -- this account is only a few days old, only has a few edits, and has never been blocked, prior to this discussion; on the other hand, Laughing Man brings up an important point that may rebut that general practice. With that in mind, I do think we should block, perhaps indefinitely. I can't bring myself to support a ban in this case, but I won't specifically oppose it either. – Luna Santin (talk) 02:25, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block for now, we can re-evaluate this if that proves to be unsuccessful. PSUMark2006 talk | contribs 03:09, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I support block but I am strongly opposed to a community ban on a four day old account that has never been blocked before. I'm also rather shocked to see a proposal for a community ban before a request for a block. He might end up needing to be community banned, but he also might just need an education instead of having Yuser31415 edit warring over his userpage and threatening him with blocks. I find CroDome's behaviour and comments completely unacceptable but I also don't think the way this guy has been treated has helped the situation at all. Sarah 09:16, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Can some admin block him then? I don't know for how long, I am not familiar with blocking. His actions up until now certainly warrant at least one block. Maîtresse 09:42, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose ban. Support Sarah Ewart's block, though. Also, per Wikipedia:Disruptive editing support from editors who are actively involved in a dispute with the user in question should be discounted when tallying this or any other community ban decision. For such editors the ethical approach is to comment upon the discussion and disclose any conflict. DurovaCharge! 21:27, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Please note; I was unaware at first what ban meant; I though it was a synonym for block. I've changed my status to supporting a block, for a week, which is good, but if it persists, please, please ban him. DoomsDay349 22:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
We do our best to help people adapt to site standards before resorting to bans. Let's hope this person becomes a good editor. DurovaCharge! 00:30, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support block, neutral on ban. WP:BITE doesn't apply as this person clearly is not a newbie - how many newbies know procedure this well? Suggest WP:RFCU so that the block will be applied to this user's socks (of which there are doubtless some number exceeding zero, following the same reasoning). Raymond Arritt 04:16, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Charles Dunbar

I would like to contact the author of the piece on Charles Davidson Dunbar of Hamilton. I have some correspondence from William Dunbar, believed to be Charles's father, in some old fishing books. D. Maley <email removed by PTO 04:10, 16 February 2007 (UTC)> —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 70.53.50.54 (talk) 03:26, 16 February 2007 (UTC).[reply]

I'm not sure what you mean by the "author of the piece on Charles Davidson Dunbar". Wikipedia is a wiki, and because of anybody can edit the article, so there are loads of "authors". That page is in dire need of cleanup, though. I'll clean it up when I get around to it, maybe. However, any help in cleaning up/expanding that page would be great for the encyclopedia. I hope this helps; I don't really understand your comment. Cheers, PTO 04:13, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Here's the edit history for that article. You might contact the editors through their user talk pages or, if you have verifiable factual information you could add that to the article yourself. DurovaCharge! 00:38, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

IP user making personal attacks/civilty.

What should happen to this user? He has repeatedly violated WP:NPA and WP:CIVIL? He has been blocked for 12 hours. However, he has brought up unnecessary nonsense on the AIDS talk page, as well as other incidents. I was thinking about bringing this up with another admin, but I want to know what the community thought about this matter. Thanks. Real96 06:01, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Try WP:AN. Sounds like an administrative discussion rather than a general community thing. DurovaCharge! 00:35, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Done. Thanks, Durova! Real96 03:46, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, I see that Rylong blocked him for 31 hours. Real96 03:48, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community ban request on User:GordonWatts

GordonWatts (talk · contribs) is a single-issue account whose single issue is Terri Schiavo. Through his entire time on Wikipedia, he has been vexatious, disruptive, argumentative, and intent on pushing his version of events on any all articles connected to Terri Schiavo. Things had stabilized after he went away about a year ago, but he's back with the same act. His latest is to press beyond all reasonable standards for the inclusion of external links to his personal Geocities/AOL Homepage websites, calling the newspapers on par with the New York Times -- or maybe even better, since he claims to be an authority. Despite universal opposition -- except for the brief resurfacing of an old POV-pushing comrade from the worst of the Terri Schiavo edit wars -- that the links utterly failed external link policies, he persists with disruptive, vexatious, long-winded, barely-connected-to-reality and garishly colored* elaborations. Check out the talk pages for Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case and Talk:Terri Schiavo and you'll see what I mean.

His cranking out of thousands of words of his self-serving (helping to fill 40-odd pages of archives), garishly colored nonsense -- supported by (almost) no one -- filling up the talk pages is disruptive and distracting. It always has been, it is now, and -- given Gordon's track record of not understanding plain-English explanations to him, his sense of righteousness unencumbered by evidence or outside opinion, and his inability to disengage unless absolutely forced to (and even then merely as a pause before trying a different tactic later on) -- always will be. Enough is enough, and encouraging him is ill-advised. You'll note that even people who are sympathetic to him still get the full-on Gordon Watts loghorrea when contradicting him, which is as disruptive a way of driving off disagreement as I can think of not involving personal threats as I can imagine.

He's been told "no", but still he persists. Enough. He's not going to magically become better, and it's time he was shown the door. --Calton | Talk 13:34, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Not a violation, actually, but really really annoying.
As noted here, in a timed display of similar thinking, I support this. For the record, I have never edited any article connected to the Terri Schiavo case and took a look at the incident because Gordon asked for help on the AN/I board. I see no indicators that this user is anything more than a single issue poster who's presence on the page is to ensure that he can engage in self-promotion, his actions are fundementally not "wikipedian" - they are to promote himself rather than build a better encyclopedia. Having said that, if editors felt this was too harsh, I would also support a limited community ban which restricts him from adding his own newspapers freely-hosted websites and editting Terri Schiavo related articles. --Fredrick day 13:44, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree with Fredrick day. Gordon is essentially only on Wikipedia to contribute to Terri Schiavo related articles, and his main interest has been adding his own sites to the articles (which are nearly unanimously considered to not meet WP:External links). A restriction from editing Schiavo case articles should be adequate. Leebo86 13:54, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
As noted here, where I thanked others for participating, I have long stopped editing on the Schiavo articles (or any articles for that matter), and have accepted concensus. The few occasional replies to others' posts is not unreasonable; To ban a user for responding to a post to him sounds vindictive. (If you don't like what is posted and don't want me to reply to you, then simply ignore that page and don't post on it. I am not going to start talking to myself -or, if I do, then we can deal with that when, uh, I mean IF, it happens.) To ban a user who has stopped editing on the articles in question and accepted concensus is not necessary -and sounds like revenge for taking a stand. You're move.--GordonWatts 14:23, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I Support a community ban. First, as a disclosure because of the political nature of his disputes, I have never edited any of the articles related to Terri Schiavo or any of the related sociological or political issues. The issues with Gordon are long term and extreme enough for a community ban. He has repeatedly attempted to inject his point of view into the articles related to Terri Schiavo, but in a back handed, voluminous, and wikilawyering way. Separate from that, he has repeatedly tried to elevate his own status and stature by extreme self promotion. He has an obsession with the issue and with the dead woman, and one could argue that there are conflict of interest issues as well.
But that is not the crux of the issues with Gordon. He does not understand our Project's policies and guidelines, interprets and bends those he does for his own benefit rather than the benefit of the project or of the community. Nor does he, I believe, have the ability to understand our community norms. I do not believe that his acts are specifically malicious - but the volume and persistence of his acts and ignorance has long ago exhausted the community's patience. And he is annoying to an extreme level.
Multiple times he has said that he is leaving or cutting back his activities, only to not cut back at all or to later return full force.
Gordon has a talent, for sure, but his talents lie in churning out thousands of words on small issues, and repeating himself ad nauseum and in ignorance of those around him. As he is fond of reminding everybody and their cousin, he has his own websites. Wikipedia is not a sounding board for his views and obsessions. Gordon can not be fixed. I know it is extreme, but he needs to go away. --Jeffrey O. Gustafson - Shazaam! - <*> 14:30, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"extreme self promotion...our Project's policies and guidelines..." If you will note, Jeff, this disagreement about my websites is only a minor issue, with many other links being deleted willy-nilly. I'm not the only one to share that concern: If you note in this diff, one of my opponents even admits that "I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out." So, you are focusing on someone who had long ago accepted concensus (a waste of time) -and don't focus on the bigger picture, the actual Wikipedia project you mention above, where other editors agree that there is a problem with "personal websites are being ruthlessly removed." As long as people post nonsense to me, I have a right to reply; If you don't want me to reply here in talk, then simply don't post to me; Simple as that. You seem to want to egg on the matter -even though I have not only accepted the concensus but also abided by it; You don't see me adding ANY links, those I support -or those I oppose. As a matter of fact, besides not editing on the article pages, I may not even reply to future posts in this thread, so I may just not edit at all. Then, what are you going to? Ban someone who posts an occasional reply to a talk page? Overkill. Your move.--GordonWatts 14:40, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"So, you are focusing on someone who had long ago accepted concensus" What exactly is "long ago" in this statement? It can't have been more than a day or so, because I only stumbled across this issue in the last few days. Leebo86 14:44, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
In wikipedia parlance, a few days is a long time, because of the fast pace here. That I had accepted concensus before your post -and stopped editing on the article page before your post -and stopped even posting to the talk page -except to post in reply -is the salient point -which shows me that you are asking for something after the fact. If the only problem you perceive is me replying to your posts (since I am not editing the article -or threatening to), then the solution is simple: Just don't post to me, and I can't reply! I would, if I were you, do this. I may not even post a reply to this page -be put on notice: I have a real life -but your question seemed a sincere and good one. NOW, arighty: You all are going to have to take care of wikipedia, because you all won the concensus.--GordonWatts 14:49, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
a long time ago? today is a long time ago? --Fredrick day 14:55, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"a long time ago?" First, I want to answer Frederick's question here, as it seems genuine and seeking the truth: When I said that I had not edited in a long time, I was specifically referring to the article pages. (You're going to have ongoing discussion on the talk pages.)
  • The last time I edited the Gov't involvement in Terri Schiavo page was here at 12:51, 13 February 2007, where I revered based on this logic: (rv: #1: I did not "add" my link - I partially reverted, and that was the outcome; #2: I am not adding a news source, but rather advocacy; Address why other "blogs" are allowed and I won't revert you..).
  • The last time I edited the Public opinion & activism / Terri Schiavo case pg was here back on Feb 09, where I fixed a spacing typo.
  • The last time I edited the main Terri Schiavo page was here at 12:05, on 13 February 2007, because (Revert to version 107541828 (11:58, 12 February 2007) because massive deletions of many links were made without having reached proper Concensus or discussion on talk page.)
So, yes, it WAS a long time ago that I edited, a good number of days, and I never came anywhere the "3 revert" rules because I wanted to reach the end-result by consensus -not bullying. Was I wrong to refuse to bully and push here?--17:22, 17 February 2007 (UTC)
  • I support an article ban from subjects related to Terry Schiavo and an outright ban on linking his website, enforced if necessary by blacklisting it. Whether Gordon can be a productive editor elsewhere is unproven, let him prove himself, but there is little doubt that his edits to Schiavo articles have been disruptive and vain, and that cannot continue. he evidently has some capacity or self-delusion so I would like to clarify something: while numerous editors have been kind and patient explaining to Gordon why his actions are problematic, it would not matter where this material is hosted or who added the links, it fails WP:RS by a wide margin. The content itself is the problem, not where it is hosted or who added the links, although they are certainly the problem in terms of user conduct. This is precisely the kind of material we intended to exclude when WP:RS was written. Guy (Help!) 15:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I support banning him from pages related to Terry Schiavo, and blacklisting the links as promotional. He seems to be wasting people's time and misusing the talk pages to such an extent that it is interfering with the project. Tom Harrison Talk 15:39, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • The applicable guideline is Wikipedia:Disruptive editing. Being annoying is just that - annoying, but I don't think there's any malice or ill motive in his actions. He just seems very dedicated to asserting that Terri Schiavo was murdered by Democrats and euthanasia is evil. It's not even a matter of admitting when he's wrong, as he will do so, but continue to press the case in a different way, failing to learn anything. I am in a dilemma. I do not want a ban at this point for Gordon, but I worry about what else can be done. I have tried reasoning with him on more than one occasion, and it has a short-term effect at best. A warning to knockit off won't work, as he's had those before, and a ban from editing Schiavo and related articles would be pointless, as he only edits Schiavo and related articles (n.b. - nothing wrong with a narrow focus - many very fine editors only edit one or a few articles). Being annoying and writing long messages on talk pages is his sole crime. He hasn't edit warred (much) over the links, just complained volubly on the talk page about their removal. Annoying: yes, disruptive: a little, but malicious: no. If he had just edit warred, he'd have got a 24 hour block, but because he spoke up (albeit at great length, over and over) he's being community banned? I don't like that. Suggest a self-imposed break, and if Gordon doesn't learn when he returns, then we're looking at a ban. But there's been no warnings about this, and so I cannot support a ban. Proto  15:57, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I'm not personally familiar with the history here, but if an editor has been around a long time and still not found a way to make himself useful, and if he's causing harm to the project (even somewhat minor harm), simple cost/benefit analysis suggests that we'd be better off without him, right? Since his goals are apparently not compatible with the goals of Wikipedia, the solution seems obvious. Let him do his soapboxing on his own website, it's not useful here. Friday (talk) 20:18, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I strongly oppose a ban, per Proto. I've seen a lot of Gordon on Wikipedia, and while I often wish he would act differently, a lot of people who were irritated by him have behaved disgracefully towards him, and with impunity. I won't bother to search for diffs, as this is not an RfC or an RfArb, but, if people wish to verify any particular incidence, I'm sure I could look them up. This was the second message ever posted on Gordon's talk page (other than by Gordon himself). If that how we are supposed to treat newcomers? Duckecho wrote some rather nasty stuff making fun of Gordon on his own userpage, and then went to the Terri Schiavo talk page to invite editors to come along and look at it. Duckecho also, at one stage, moved all of Gordon's posts on the Terri Schiavo talk page away from where they had been posted down to the bottom of the page with an edit summary "Creating a sandbox for the kids to play in while the adults work on the article", and reverted me twice when I undid it on the grounds that attacking another editor's dignity does not help Wikipedia. On one occasion, when Gordon left a message at Calton's talk page, which Calton may well have found irritating, but which was not a personal attack, Calton deleted it with the edit summary "reverting not-very-bright troll".[24] When Gordon, at the time of his unsuccessful RfA, kept telling everyone that he had never been blocked, Carnildo blocked him for one second, entering as the reason that Gordon kept pointing to his clean block log. Even recently, when Gordon called Calton "Cal" (which I'm sure was not intended to give offence, as lots of editors use abbreviations of names) , and Calton replied with something like "Only my friends get to call me Cal, Gordy-boy." I just see example after example of people taking away the dignity of someone who gets on their nerves.

I believe that the the addition of Gordon's links would be contrary to WP:COI, WP:RS, and WP:EL, regardless of their merit. But he isn't edit warring over it; he's just posting extremely long rebuttals to everyone who disagrees with him. That's hardly something you ban someone for, expecially if you take into account that he has been treated extremely rudely by other users, and has never shown himself to be malicious. If you don't like his long replies, then don't respond. Gordon does not edit war — certainly not more than his opponents. He never vandalizes. He annoys people by telling them (in great detail) why they're wrong and he's right. In response to Friday's post about not having found a way to make himself useful, Gordon has often been very helpful to the article, correcting spelling errors, improving format, taking a photo of Terri Schiavo's grave, so as to reduce the number of Fair Use images. As Proto says, he's not malicious. I very much commend Proto for his efforts at fairness, both here, and in a recent message on Gordon's talk page. I strongly recommend to Calton that before trying things like community bans, he try to place more importance on the dignity of users with whom he disagrees. I strongly disagree with the idea that we don't have to treat other users with respect if we find them disruptive. Calton does valuable work here, and I've often noticed it, but some indication of kindness towards users who annoy him would make his work more valuable. Musical Linguist 00:01, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I also strongly oppose a ban per Proto. Gordon AND Calton could both act better, nothing Gordon has done requires a Community Ban. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 00:47, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Duckecho wrote some rather nasty stuff making fun of Gordon on his own userpage
Wrong. Duckecho debunked Gordon's long-standing claim-- one he still maintains -- of being a major participant in the legal shenangins surrounding the Terri Schiavo case, Gordon frequently bragging about he "did better than Jeb Bush" and even trying to use that as a wedge in his most recent crusade. It's nasty in the sense that a dash of cold water is nasty.
But he isn't edit warring over it...
Yes he has, as a glance at the edit history would show, just not to the point of hitting the 3RR limit.
...he's just posting extremely long rebuttals to everyone who disagrees with him. That's hardly something you ban someone for...
it is, given its extreme disruption and its intent of wearing down anyone who disagrees with him. It's been done before: User:Herschelkrustofsky, User:Terryeo, User:Everyking, and a few others whose names I can't recall come to mind.
As Proto says, he's not malicious.
Immaterial. He's disruptive and shown himself to be incapable of learning.
when Gordon left a message at Calton's talk page, which Calton may well have found irritating, but which was not a personal attack, Calton deleted it with the edit summary "reverting not-very-bright troll".
Reaching back 16 months for "evidence" is really stretching, don't you think? And the edit summary could have been better phrased but was nonetheless accurate: Gordon WAS trolling, part of a long series of condescending messages peppering my page (some edit summaries: What's the matter, Calton: Can't stand the criticism of fellow-editors? and If you need forgiveness on this or other matters from me, I will grant it.
Funny, though, how your extensive research missed Gordon's attempt at an RFC against me at the same time as the above for "excessive reverting": he left messages on the pages of two editors with whom I'd had disgreements -- including one who'd just been banned by ArbCom, Gordon leaving his message just below the ArbCom notification [25] -- then came immediately to my Talk page claiming that he and four other editors (note the difference in numbers) had gotten together to file an RFC. [26] Note that he hadn't even bothered waiting for any replies before making his claim that "two definitely are" here. The false sincerity of the message text (Please note that I don't act in revenge, but in prevention, the best medicine, an ounce of which is worth a pound of cure -and I'm courteous and polite to give you a heads up, because you deserve a chance to run while you have a chance. I would expect no less from my own honorable adversaries) was particularly choice. Unctuous smarm is no better than active hostility.
Gordon has often been very helpful to the article, correcting spelling errors, improving format, taking a photo of Terri Schiavo's grave, so as to reduce the number of Fair Use images
Gordon is not uniquely or even especially valuable in that context -- a machine can correct spelling errors -- and given his extreme ownership issues surrounding the Terri Schiavo articles, a net drag, given that he requires constant supervision -- which he contests at every turn, sucking up time and energy.
Whether he's a nice guy or an evil, mustache-twirling villian is completely irrelevant as to the issue of whether he's disruptive: "sincere" disruption is no different from "malicious" disruption, no matter how many excuses you make for it. --Calton | Talk 01:20, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think any of the above from User:Calton is particularly helpful or necessary to this discussion. Most of the comments made by "Duckecho" would be considered hearsay and unless said by "Duckecho" here, should be striken from the record. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 01:27, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
This isn't a court of law, Mr. Dershowitz. --Calton | Talk 07:54, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No it's not, but you sure as hell are acting like it is. A court that is run by Calton and Calton alone where Calton should get what he wants, when he wants, and be damned the rules and people he has to run over to get it in the process. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 15:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose. Concur in part, and dissent in part, from Musical Linguist above: I agree that ferocity of Calton's attacks on Gordon Watts are excessive and very snarky for an experienced editor who wants to claim victim status. The two of them seem to have inexhaustible time to go and back and forth since Calton commenced this Wikiwar on 9 February, 2007. Nevertheless, Gordon Watts, the activist, is part of the story of the government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case, unless one wishes to fully revise history. Without much effort I found these by narrowing a Google search to .gov [27] and [28] and there is likely more in .com and .org, subtracting out his personal web site. Those petitions have already been memorialized in this Schiavo resource site [29] and should be referenced in our article as well. What Gordon Watts, the Wikipedia editor, appears to lack is the ability to kowtow to Calton as well as some HTML skills. No ban is called for. I agree with all of the others who are calling for a little more self-restraint by the warriors. patsw 01:41, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Nevertheless, Gordon Watts, the activist, is part of the story of the government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case, unless one wishes to fully revise history. Utterly irrelevant spin, but not even wrong: readers are invited to peruse Duckecho's exxhaustive debunking of Gordon's long-standing claim. --Calton | Talk 01:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Shouting is not necessary and let Duckecho know that he can come here and comment on this discussion. Please, though, let's keep this discussion on track. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 01:55, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
No one is shouting, Duckecho isn't here but the debunking is easily read by anyone, the discussion IS on track, and you should stop with the wikistalking, already. --Calton | Talk 02:04, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Not Wikistalking, just defending a friend. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 02:09, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Reality varies: you never even heard of the guy until you enlisted his help this week. --Calton | Talk 07:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, cause he was being harrassed by you. I just gave him a simple RfC link which preceded the request for this community ban. - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 15:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose.Per Musical Linguist and Proto.Giovanni33 02:19, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I Oppose a community ban. I read through Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case and I think Gordon has exhausted Calton's patience, but I don't think he has yet exhausted the community's patience. I agree that Gordon is very trying, annoying and he seems to have a very warped sense of self-importance. However, I don't see anything that I feel justifies a community ban. He has only been blocked twice: once on 19 September 2005 for one second for "pointing to his clean block log as a reason why he should be made an admin". The second block was for 12 hours on 02:16, 25 September 2005 for "violation of agreement at Talk:Terri Schiavo". In the last 17 months, Gordon has not been blocked at all. before supporting a community ban, I would rather see more blocks of increasing lengths used where necessary. A community ban should be a last resort. Gordon has a clear conflict of interest with regard to all the Schiavo articles and his links are clearly inapprorpriate, but he has agreed not to edit the Schiavo articles further.
Also, Calton needs to stop being antagonistic, provocative, bullying and rude towards Gordon. I don't know if there's some ruling (from anyone other than Calton) that says that Gordon is not allowed to comment on the relevant article's talk pages, but if there is, I couldn't find it. All I could find was Calton repeatedly declaring that "Gordon is not free to rebut" matters discussed on the article's talk page. This is bullying. Gordon has already agreed not to edit the articles, if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction, rather than declaring it as a personal decree. Gordon's behaviour is disruptive and annoying, but I think a community ban at the present time is premature. Sarah 07:10, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Gordon has already agreed not to edit the articles" Well, let me clarify: I promised that I had not edited the main article pages for a good while, several days; I was making a promise about the past, not the future; also, please see my reply to Frederick above, where I made another promise about the past (it's easier to promise about the past, since it can't be changed) -I gave my word and promised I came nowhere near the 3-revert rule. I do not recall promising to not ever edit on the Schiavo pages; In fact, many people stick to their area of expertise, and while I edit a little everywhere, I am expert in only a few issues. I did strongly imply (if not promise) to not edit for a short while to give the issue time to cool off- and I also strongly implied (if not promised) to try accept consensus and not irritate or edit war with my global neighbours -and to be more flexible. Indeed, I may be guilty to being too talkative, and we all get ticked at times, but if I am guilty of spending lots of talk page space over something (hopefully to educate and seek consensus), then Calton is also guilty of the same thing: He posts long, irritating posts. Indeed, even as we speak, as pointed out by OrangeMonster, Calton has an RfC against him: Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment/Calton -and lots of people agree Calton has need for improvement. Not only is his behaviour bad, but also, his editing style is bad; He cuts too many things out of Wikipedia, so we can't cite our sources, and this will be a problem whether or not I regularly edit here. I already cited that even one editor, who disagreed with me on my page being used as a reference, concedes that I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out. OK, while no one seems to agree that my newspaper should be a references, I'll AGREE with you that it may not be totally reliable (and by extension, so also, some smaller papers and blogs). BUT, these smaller news sources ARE partly reliable -hey! We don't all just write lies all the time, but that's what is implied by "not reliable." I'll offer a compromise here: Why don't we consider revising our application of the policy to allow for these smaller papers to be included -so long as they have supporting sources, that is, instead of citing just to, say, my paper, we can cite to 2 or 3 smaller blogs; In fact, even when using the NY Times as a source, we ought to have a "supporting" source, just to make sure we cite our sources.--GordonWatts 17:38, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, you're not helping yourself at all. Making promises about the past is ridiculous. You have a conflict of interest and should not be editing any of those pages. Your links are completely unacceptable for the articles. You either need to accept these things or you're going to have to accept a community ban. Sarah 17:53, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I have accepted the consensus and not threatened to violate it; however, what if this editor is right in her claims that we are not citing our sources? Also, I am not advocating specifically for "my" pages. That my pages are one of many that are arbitrarily excluded no less makes my point a valid one; So, please understand that I am NOT seeking to promote my websites, but if smaller news papers ARE indeed partly reliable but arbitrarily excluded, then I am right to speak up on that general issue, and those would bring up "my" newspapers are conflating (confusing) the point and side-stepping the issue. Indeed, if all I'm guilty of is advocating a change in policy (note that I've accepted the consensus on the issue of links to my page), then this is not a crime; it is something all should do: Advocate for change where change is necessary. You are confusing my advocacy of my links with my advocacy of the bigger issues of our policy. I am doing the latter, not the former--GordonWatts 18:00, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I think Gordon may have misunderstood something I said. He links to this post, and asks if I may be right in my claims that we are not citing our sources. I certainly never intended to make such a claim. I said, "I'm active on other pages, and I'm finding that blogs and personal websites are being ruthlessly removed, with the instruction to find the same information elsewhere, or leave it out. After you recover from your surprise, it actually seems a good idea." I was referring to the Gillian McKeith article, where a lot of criticism of McKeith was placed in the article, with references that linked to a blog. Some administrators have explained that we can't use that material, unless the criticism is found in a better source. The idea was not that we'd use it, and not cite our sources (which is what Gordon seems to think I meant), but that we shouldn't use it at all, unless it's in a reliable source. If the information is notable and newsworthy, it will presumably be found in The Times, or a similar source. I was actually saying to Gordon that the policy seems very strict, but that once you get used to it, it makes sense. ElinorD (talk) 21:39, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for clarifying your intent; It was not my intent to mischaracterize or misquote you; If what you say is true (and I'm sure it is), then the situation is even worse then my initial estimation: Even if we don't cite our sources but at least leave in the material, we can come back to it; By deleting sections of encyclopaedic entries for which only "non-notable" sources exist, we slice the Encyclopaedia in pieces, since, after all, we can either get several "non-notable" sources -or make a note that the sources are in question; That way we don't miss a beat -and preserve the record of history. MANY times an act or action will be witnessed or reported on only by a "non-notable" source, such as the time I was the only news reporter in one oral argument for George Felos, when he came before the court a block from my home in Lakeland. Yet that even really occurred and should be reported -as it happened -and if there are concerns about the source, then call the Schindlers; They can confirm whether or not the "non-notable" news report was true or not, and this will be your check-and-balance.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Furthermore, if I am right that our policy needs to be changed, then my advocacy of this is NOT a conflict of interest issue: I am not specifically advocating in this issue for inclusion of my links; That I did the latter in the past does not somehow negate this larger issue. I certainly don't seek a ban against Calton in his RfC, but he has violated actual and real rules, and is guilty of not only rudeness but also (if I am right about how we don't cite our sources) he would be guilty of cutting up articles and bad editing, even if he were polite. Even though I've commented that his behaviour is inappropriate and needs to be dealt with, I'm not seeking his ban, but if you seek a ban, he would be more worthy of one than would I. Did you see his RfC? One more thing: Saying that a person can't edit on a page where he has expert or first-hand knowledge because of a conflict of interest would effectively stop all doctors from editing medical articles and stop all biologists from editing biology articles, and we'd lost a lot of our expertise; Is that what you want?--GordonWatts 18:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, if you wish to discuss the validity of using certain links or lobby for policy change, you need to do that in the appropriate forum. Advocating for it and offering it as compromise in the middle of discussion of a proposal to ban you is not the right place.
You editing the Terri Schiavo articles is a completely different situation to, say, a doctor editing the heart article and I'm actually quite surprised that you don't get that. I know you self-proclaim yourself a Terri Schiavo expert and you've tried to claim "special standing" and "recognized authority" status on those articles.[30] I do not accept that claim and I don't believe the majority of editors would either. I don't know if you are an expert or even how that would measured and quantified, and I don't think it even matters. But what I do know is you have a clear conflict of interest and you should not be editing these articles. I think if you could put your belief about your status and significance in the case aside when you're on this website, and follow WP:COI and WP:RS, many of your problems would be resolved. I don't have a problem with you suggesting changes on the talk pages or discussing article content there, but you should not directly edit these articles or add links to your site to any article. Sarah 14:05, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented: this was in response to his continuing to flog the dead horse of inserting his personal external links after continually being told that they weren't going in, period. I told him that if he continued, I'd request the ban. He continued, I requested.
if Calton wants him also restricted from responding on the talk page, he needs to get an appropriate injunction You're looking at that request: what else did you think this whole thread was about? Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters.
My user page says at the top "It's clean-up duty, mopping up after the dishonest, incompetent, and fanatical." Gordon is all three, in spades, and whatever limited value he has -- other than a single-minded devotion to one subject (or, more precisely, one single view of a single subject) -- is far outweighed by his negatives. This place is not reform school or personal therapy, it's an encyclopedia, and I can't imagine what possible benefit there is in attempting a salvage job on someone who refuses to be salvaged. Between his previous and current antics at Terri Schiavo, at attempting to bully his way into making it a feature article, and his world-class wikilawyering at his spectacularly unsuccessful adminship bid (including an attempt at an end run by appealing to Jimbo to just give him the job, votes be damned), I'm trying to imagine HOW anyone thinks he's going to suddenly turn into a good contributor. --Calton | Talk 07:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
The use of the adverb "repeatedly" is false or at least wildly misleading and the context misrepresented. I looked quickly at Talk:Government_involvement_in_the_Terri_Schiavo_case#Enough and I see at least three times you insisted that Gordon was not free to rebut:
  • "No more arguments, no more rationalizations, no more long-winded, disruptive, self-serving rebuttals..." --Calton | Talk 14:49, 15 February 2007
  • "Gordon's free to rebut. No, he's not..." .-Calton | Talk 22:34, 15 February 2007 (UTC)
  • "Gordon is free to rebut. No, he isn't: hundreds and thousands of words of his self-serving nonsense..." -Calton | Talk 00:02, 16 February 2007 (UTC)
While the first one was just your opening warning to Gordon that you would request a community ban if he continued with that behaviour, the other two were replies to User:Leebo86 and User:Hipocrite who disagreed with your edict. At least three is more than once and therefore "repeated". I don't think that is false or "wildly misleading."
You're looking at that request: what else did you think this whole thread was about? That's exactly my point, Calton: you declared editing restrictions before you even brought it to the community.
Instead, we get people (who frankly ought to know better) enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth instead, and at least annoying wikistalker hopping on the bandwagon hoping to recruit supporters. I don't know who the stalker is or whether that is a general comment or if it's directed specifically at me, but what you've actually got is several people responding to your request and telling you that they don't think a community ban is appropriate yet. I'd be willing to support a community ban if other editors cut antagonising him AND there was a recent record of blocks. Is his behaviour disruptive enough to warrant a block? If it is, have him blocked a few times and see if that has any impact. If it isn't disruptive enough to warrant a block, how on earth can it warrant a ban? I don't think this is unreasonable, nor do I think that telling you your attitude and behaviour is unhelpful and Gordon that his attitude and behaviour is "very trying, annoying..." and "disruptive" and warning him that he is headed for a community ban is "enabling his dysfunctional behavior and feeding his overweening sense of self-worth." Also, I thought you posting on Talk:Government involvement in the Terri Schiavo case the link to that blog that ridiculed Gordon was pretty damn nasty. Sarah 12:17, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Since Sarah has supported me and seems to be taking a responsible attitude towards being fair, it has bothered me that there was a small difference of opinion -in which she commented that I should not edit the Terri Schiavo articles. Yes, I agree that I have some conflict of interest here, but it has just now dawned on me: I think she may feel my motives on this article were less than pure. (And if she doubts my motives, I'm sure that my detractors would doubt them even more.) So, I feel a obligation to clarify one big thing: In the many edits I've made, I DO have a hidden agenda: To better Wikipedia -and to have fun and make friends in the process; Proof of that claim is the fact that I often make sure opposing views and opposing links (that is, views with which I disagree) are presented. I even recently added Michael Schiavo's website to the main Terri Schiavo article, even though I was against him in my recent court case! To prove that my detractors are wrong, please note that here at 04:41am, way back on 18 January 2007, I added a link to Michael Schiavo's site to the main article. I don't want to argue much for myself, even as 10 of Trades suggested, but this one link is proof I'm not biased or in possession of a bad agenda. However, if MY website is helpful as a source (in one case, I was the only reporter present in an important oral argument hearing), then my pushing of my website is not per se pushing my own agenda: Most websites I support for inclusion are NOT my own -even those which are not pro-life like me. OK, now that I've got this off my chest, I apologise for the length of this page, but so many questions and accusations require some rebuttals hither and yon.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • There is ONE take home message I hope none of us miss: We are unpaid editors, and while it is good that we expect a lot out of the articles, when unpaid persons are asked to sit in judgment of a peer, the quality of the inquest suffers, and instead of getting frustrated or blaming yourselves, please understand that you can't be expected to be a professional judge when you're not paid enough to do the job right. So, in conclusion, we must STRIVE for the stars -but we MUST NOT expect too much -lest we be disappointed; Be humble in your expectations, and you won't get disappointed; I hope this has encouraged my fellow-editors, for that was the hope.--GordonWatts 04:28, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Since Sarah has supported me... Gordon, I just need to clarify something: I think your behaviour is extremely problematic and I think that if you continue as you have in the past, you are heading for a community ban. There is a difference between thinking that you haven't entirely "exhausted the community's patience" yet and actually supporting you. I don't think you should be banned at the present time because I think we should exhaust other options such as blocking, restrictions etc, but I do not support you carrying on as you have been. Sarah 12:24, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Why are people talking about how other editors have been rude to him? It looks like it's true, certainly, but it's utterly irrelevant to the issue at hand. The big concern I see here is the conflict of interest. Any editor who's goals do not coincide with the goals of the project must either change their ways, or be shown the door. However it looks to me like an rfc might be a better place to hash this out- it seems we've no shortage of people with opinions on this topic. Friday (talk) 18:26, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

The behaviour of all the parties to a conflict is often relevant when we seek to evaluate the behaviour of a particular editor. Context is important. Some editors – I have in mind particularly Calton, and this is by no means the only conflict where his own attitude is a problem – check the requirements of WP:CIVIL at the door as soon as they believe they're dealing with someone who is a waste of their time. While that assessment may in some cases be correct, the rudeness often fans flames and spreads conflict. Gratuitous rudeness doesn't help Wikipedia, except for the very rare case where a timewasting editor can be bullied into silence and departure. (Even then, this is often not the best possible outcome.)
That said, GordonWatts has been a single-issue editor since his arrival here. His continued debating here and elsewhere does seem to indicate that he has trouble with letting go of arguments. I can understand the frustration with trying to deal with an editor who is certain that we'll all come around to his point of view if he just explains it one more time.
GordonWatts' RfA a year ago was not a pretty thing, and I fear that he has not sufficiently internalized Wikipedia's practices and culture since then. Nevertheless, an RfC might be a good idea to identify the scope and nature of the problems here. I note that his block log has been clean for more than a year, although he did take a couple of very long breaks during that time. If the problems are simply related to his conflict of interest in evaluating his own blog as a reliable source, I can't in good conscience support a flat ban. As Proto says above, it appears "Being annoying and writing long messages on talk pages is his sole crime. He hasn't edit warred (much) over the links, just complained volubly on the talk page about their removal." Incidentally, aside from the links issue, does anyone have a comment on the quality of his writing? Is he improving the articles that he works on? TenOfAllTrades(talk) 18:57, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for the evaluation; it may be the most correct yet. I'll answer your last question about my edits: I don't edit very often, sometimes taking long Wikipedia:Wikibreaks, but when I do edit (over the long run), the edit history of the articles I sometimes edit show usually very GOOD edits, both in regards to finding typos AND in regards to making sustentative changes. However, your opinion may differ. What I will tell you is this: When I make edits, I usually DON'T get his type of negative attention, which would imply that I am a good editor, that is, mixing common sense editing and good manners. (Either one or the other won't work: You can't be a stupid but polite editor. You also can't be a good but rude editor and do well. Check the edit history of the few pages I've edited recently -or check MY edit history -if you want to see.--GordonWatts 19:12, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Of what I have read, and I will be the first to admit that I am no expert on the Schiavo subject only what I seen on CNN. But, of what I have read of Gordon's writing, his writing appears to be VERY well written and explains things at detail. Much better than anything I can write. My personal opinion is that is does improve the articles that he works on. Writing as articulate as Gordon's is something I would like to see more of here. Again, this is just my opinion on the quality of his writing per TenOfAllTrades (I ain't getting in the debate outside that). - SVRTVDude (Yell - Toil) 19:14, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I'll add a few diffs to supstantiate Orange Monster's claim here -and help him out:
First, look at the last 500 edits of the Terri Schiavo page here, by far, more contentious and difficult than the Gov't Involvement page. Most of my edits seem to be accepted by the community. I rest my case -and await an answer to my question to Sarah where she says as person can't edit at all on pages where conflict of interest would apply. The Conflict of interest only applies to edits which promote the person -not just any old edit.--GordonWatts 19:21, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Adding Nancy Cruzan link a sustentitive edit; revert a typo wikilinking some dates we missed earlier (minor grammar/clarification edits: add ... + date + wikilink of date + time span of institutionalization + clarify *which* court was petitioned by Michael + grammar of "upholding" lower court decision) m (→State involvement: Terri's Law - balance: I concur and agree with Calton that ACLJ is explicitly conservative, but as a nod to Johnlu 78759, I add this to remove bias by an inclusionist method.) PS: That edit was later reverted, and I didn't edit-war over it, but my edit here looked good, so I did it.--GordonWatts 19:27, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, I'm really looking for third party evaluation of the quality of your edits. This thread exemplifies part of what other people have found – for lack of a better word – 'annoying' about your participation on talk pages. You really, really, really need to learn when it's best to stand aside, and that it isn't necessary to have your finger in every pie or your signature on the last word of every discussion. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:26, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I totally agree that I should not have HAD to reply to your question AT ALL, because the other editors should be able to look into the edit history all by themselves -but we both know that not all people can find the article edits you sought -since not all would look in the right places. That said, I've done my part; If you all want answers to these matters, you will have to seek them out; Other than answer a passing question, I have no more to add: This is a big waste of time to argue over this matter -for all parties. I have a real life, and so do you all: Don't let these things stress you all too much! Live life and have fun.--GordonWatts 19:33, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree; A 3rd-party evaluation is more objective, but I think it's only fair to help out a little bit. One last comment: While this page is long, and partly due to my crimes of being too talkative, much of the long-windedness is that of other people. I hope we all can learn to argue less over trivial points; Life is too short, and THAT is the bigger picture -no matter my or others' situation.--GordonWatts 19:30, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Gordon, you're not taking the hint. Let someone else get a word in edgewise in this discussion. You're not helping yourself or anyone else. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:46, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
OK; as you ask. Acknowledged and done.--GordonWatts 19:49, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community discussion on User:NuclearUmpf

Formerly Special:Contributions/Zer0faults, users sole contributions are edit warring on 9-11 conspiracy theories, edit warring on political arguments, and following editors he disagrees with to other artcles with the express intent of reverting them repeatedly without discussion. Hipocrite - «Talk» 20:07, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Major Work:

Album Articles:

Under zer0faults

In other words stop lying. --NuclearZer0 20:20, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

For those concerned, this is what Hipocrite is complainig about:

  • Hipocrite added fact tag: [31]
  • I added citation: [32]

I think he added the tag cause he thought a source couldnt be found, I now see on the talk page he doesnt like Joseph Newcomer. But as you can see, providing sources is much of what I do. --NuclearZer0 20:24, 16 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

What's the point of this thread? Head over to requests for comment if you want a "community discussion" of a particular user. DurovaCharge! 00:34, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Essay vs. Soapboxing

Where does one end and where does the other begin. If an essay is created, then it is open to editors to change by consensus, but how far can it change? Can consensus change an essay into something opposing it's original position? If an essay is just one person's point of view and many other disagree then should that essay stand?

I know several of you know exactly which essay I have in mind, however, please lets keep this general, because my interest in this topic goes beyond any one essay. This is something I think needs to be more clearly spelled out. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 16:08, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

It's an interesting question. I've noticed that essays in the Wikipedia space tend to retain their original points of view, most of the time (and yes, this is one time when we are not strictly NPOV, by consensus) -- however, they are indeed open to "merciless editing." Essays in the user space are generally safe from this. An essay in the Wikipedia space is not actually protected by any policy I know from being changed completely from its original intent--it just doesn't happen that way most of the time. Most of the time. Perhaps we've found an exception. Antandrus (talk) 16:13, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"Essays in the user space are generally safe from this.", I must disagree, people don't own their userspace, and an essay in that space should be treated as common property just as much as any other place, unless I am very wrong. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 18:09, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
to Quote from WP:PG --
An essay is any page that is not actionable or instructive, regardless of whether it's authorized by consensus. Essays tend to be opinionated. Essays need not be proposed or advertised, you can simply write them, as long as you understand that you do not generally speak for the entire community. If you do not want other people to reword your essay, put it in your userspace. It does not follow that any page that is not a policy or a guideline is therefore an essay; there are plenty of pages in the Wikipedia namespace that are none of the three.
This does appear to make it acceptiable to "own" an essay in your user space. Gnangarra 19:31, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
...after edit conflict with the above...
I'm afraid you're very wrong, but don't take it too hard. :D As a matter of courtesy, essays in userspace are generally left as the author wrote them, and merciless editing – unless specifically invited – is frowned upon. Putting an essay in one's own userspace is way of saying, "This is my opinion". It's not polite for a third party to come along and say, "Your opinion is incorrect/stupid/badly expressed, so I rewrote it for you. You'll like your new opinion much better."
This is not to say that community standards don't apply to userspace. If someone writes an essay with the theme 'The following Wikipedians are assholes', then it would be appropriate to step in and ask them to change or delete the page. There's also nothing which prevents an editor from copying an essay from another user's space (everything here is under the GFDL, after all) and modifying it to suit themselves.
Honestly though, I think that it's even silly to edit war over essays in Wikipedia space. If you disagree with an opinion piece, then write a rebuttal or a statement of support for a contrary position. Add appropriate links to the 'See also' sections of each essay, and you're done. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 19:41, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Additional guidelines from Wikipedia:User_page#How do I create a user subpage?
There are several common uses for user subpages:
3.To delineate views on Wikipedia, its functioning, or behavior of Wikipedians in general.
This also supports the position that essay in user space are acceptiable. It's considered polite to avoid substantially editing another's user page and subpages without their permission, however the space does still belong to the community Gnangarra 19:48, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
HighinBC, clarification: I meant that people generally don't edit them, not that they can't or shouldn't. Antandrus (talk) 20:40, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
So I could create an essay in my userspace presenting my own POV, and expect it to not be subjected to alternate points of view? That is a privilege I would rather do without, I would go to a web hosting site if I wanted to put something like that up. HighInBC (Need help? Ask me) 20:45, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Keep in mind that POV is only inherently a bad thing when it comes to text of articles. Essays and user pages may absolutely reflect a certain point of view. IMO, essays you write in your own user space are mostly ignored anyway.. but if you do go far outside of community norms, such a page may wind up at WP:MFD. In Wikipedia space, it would be more likely to generate debate and rewriting, but in user space, it's pretty much request deletion or nothing. Mangojuicetalk 20:51, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Mostly, yes. If you don't want to exercise that privilege, of course you're welcome to put your own opinion essays elsewhere. In general we allow people a reasonable amount of freedom in their own userspace, as long as they're not disrupting the project and as long as they are making useful contributions.
Note that in general there's much more tolerance for Wikipedia-related essays. If someone is using their userspace solely to publish political screeds, as an outlet for original research, or to attack other editors, then intervention is more likely. TenOfAllTrades(talk) 21:00, 17 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think that essays in userspace should really be edited, at least in the main text. In essence, the individual is saying, "These are my views on this given issue." It doesn't make much sense for another person to come by and say, "No, these are your views and insights on this issue." If anything, creating to or adding a response or criticism section seems like a better avenue for input. Or, at least, I would take it as strongly implied that if I had an essay, say, evaluating Wikipedia in my userspace that it would have an implicit prefix of "bitnine's analysis of..." It's not an issue of ownership, just that there is an implicit attribution there, and someone else altering an essay is somewhat akin to editing a (POV or not) quotation. I'd say you should consider refraining from altering a userspace essay in the same manner you'd consider refraining from altering an attributed quotation. At best, qualifiers or responses should be added to provide a context. Bitnine 10:44, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And as an additional note, I don't think this necessarily meshes entirely with the general dampening on soapboxing. Wikipedia is definitely not the place to go on about your least favorite racial group or your favorite political party. You should go somewhere else if the subject of an essay is unrelated in such a manner. That sort of thing is going to be detrimental without much in the ways of redeeming features. However, being able to discuss your views on and analysis of Wikipedia (I think, at least) is something necessary and beneficial to the project. That isn't to say that such essays can't be bad or even disruptive, but a categorical declaration probably shouldn't be made. Bitnine 10:53, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Interesting issue - I'm aware of an essay (in Wiki space) which was created essentially as a snip of comments a second person left on an unrelated talk page. While GFDL clearly says one releases their content to be used for any purpose, I am not really sure whether the writer of the actual comment can expressly withhold permission for a talk page comment to be incorporated as somebody else's essay (albeit with appropriate attribution). Any ideas? Orderinchaos78 05:30, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

So to summarise the salient points:

  • Essays are used for people to express their opinion about Wikipedia (but not about other things, because that would be soapboxing);
  • Essays in the project namespace are open to editing like any other page, whereas essays written by a user in their own user space are customarily not edited as they are meant to represent one individual's point of view;
  • Wherever they may be located, essays must adhere to the behavioural policies, just like any other page.

Add to this if I've missed anything important. --bainer (talk) 11:39, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Community ban?

Does anyone have any objections as to community banning Jacknicholson aka Marshall2.0 aka Marshallbanana and any new sock that appears? He has:

  1. Edit warred at various articles, breaking 3RR with his accounts and with a range of dynamic IPs in order to insert silly videos or blatantly false information.
  2. Deleted 3RR reports concerning him from the noticeboard
  3. Attacked various users, notably User:jesup, creating the Marshall2.0 accounts to make a WP:POINT sock accusation against him
  4. Repeatedly vandalised my and others' pages (my entire userspace is semiprotected as of now) using several dozen dynamic IPs all originating from BellSouth

He has not:

  1. Actually done anything useful

The last bit of userspace-related vandalism is discussed here, and I'm pretty sure that it's the same user as the vandalism took place outside of school hours and from adresses all originating from the same ISP, as well as with intervals of at least a few minutes between each addition. yandman

Hi Yandman, could you justify indefinitely blocking them as vandalism / troll only accounts? If so, I would suggest you go ahead. Addhoc 12:05, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I'm going to block MarshallBanana indef anyway for the reasons stated above, I just prefer it to be a community ban so as to make processing the next sock that appears faster. yandman 12:22, 18 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]