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*'''Comment''' As {{u|G-Dett}} already wrote it, I'd like to point out to another AfD : [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Allegations of French apartheid]]. A lot of the arguments here have already been discussed overthere. I did not had the opportunity to express my opinion overthere, but i do think that all the Allegations of... are NPOV articles, mainly an unliked list of quotes where ''apartheid'' appears in without any relations inbetween them, and that they should be deleted. '''BUT''' if no more reasons are given here to delete this article than there were overthere to delete the french article, i would see no particular reason to delete this one, and to keep the french one. [[User:NicDumZ|NicDumZ]] <font color="red">[[User_talk:NicDumZ|~]]</font> 13:31, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' As {{u|G-Dett}} already wrote it, I'd like to point out to another AfD : [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Allegations of French apartheid]]. A lot of the arguments here have already been discussed overthere. I did not had the opportunity to express my opinion overthere, but i do think that all the Allegations of... are NPOV articles, mainly an unliked list of quotes where ''apartheid'' appears in without any relations inbetween them, and that they should be deleted. '''BUT''' if no more reasons are given here to delete this article than there were overthere to delete the french article, i would see no particular reason to delete this one, and to keep the french one. [[User:NicDumZ|NicDumZ]] <font color="red">[[User_talk:NicDumZ|~]]</font> 13:31, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
:*You can't establish the legitimacy of one article based on its superficial resemblance to another article; that's what got us into this whole mess. There are eight "allegations of apartheid" articles, seven of which have no secondary sources establishing the notability of the allegations they describe. Each of these has mimicked the phraseology and format of the sourced article, in the hopes of tricking editors into evaluating them collectively. See for example the comment by Urthogie (author of six of the dummy articles) below.--[[User:G-Dett|G-Dett]] 14:39, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
:*You can't establish the legitimacy of one article based on its superficial resemblance to another article; that's what got us into this whole mess. There are eight "allegations of apartheid" articles, seven of which have no secondary sources establishing the notability of the allegations they describe. Each of these has mimicked the phraseology and format of the sourced article, in the hopes of tricking editors into evaluating them collectively. See for example the comment by Urthogie (author of six of the dummy articles) below.--[[User:G-Dett|G-Dett]] 14:39, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

*'''Keep''' or '''Merge'''-- it's not NPOV to keep some countries with sources and remove other countries with sources.--[[User:Urthogie|Urthogie]] 14:23, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
*'''Keep''' or '''Merge'''-- it's not NPOV to keep some countries with sources and remove other countries with sources.--[[User:Urthogie|Urthogie]] 14:23, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
*'''Keep''' or '''Merge'''. --[[User:Shamir1|Shamir1]] 14:39, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
*'''Keep''' or '''Merge'''. --[[User:Shamir1|Shamir1]] 14:39, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
*'''Comment'''. Please note that various [[WP:AGF|bad faith]] [[Appeal to motive|appeals to motive]] and [[Proof by assertion|proofs by assertion]] are not relevant to AfDs. Also, red herrings regarding "secondary sources" are just that, [[red herring]]s. [[User:Jayjg|Jayjg ]]<sup><small><font color="DarkGreen">[[User_talk:Jayjg|(talk)]]</font></small></sup> 15:50, 26 July 2007 (UTC)

Revision as of 15:50, 26 July 2007

Allegations of American apartheid

Allegations of American apartheid (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log)

This article’s subject is a certain class of rhetorical statement – an “allegation of apartheid” – of which it produces five or six instances, arranged in a small quote farm. The subject matter in which these five or six rhetorical statements arise is – in every instance – racial segregation in the United States. There are no secondary sources describing the allegation itself (giving its history, for example, or describing its political or rhetorical effects, or saying who uses it and who doesn’t, or contesting its legitimacy); indeed, no secondary sources indicating that the allegation or phrase or meme or whatever is itself even notable. There are prominent memes relating to contemporary American racism that have occasioned a great deal of secondary-source commentary – for example “institutional racism” and “de facto segregation” – but “American apartheid” isn’t one of them. There are only these five or six primary-source examples of its use, data-mined and gathered together by a Wikipedian who is interested in them for other reasons – namely, so that the resulting “article” built around them can be used as leverage in his ongoing efforts to secure the deletion of Allegations of Israeli apartheid, through a kind of unofficial horse-trading whereby he agrees to cease his disruptions upon satisfaction of his demands.

The primary sources consist of: two supreme court opinions; the title of a book and a review of the book (the book uses the word “apartheid” generically and doesn’t discuss South Africa, and the review appears never to mention either); and the title of a Harper’s article (again, which seems to mention neither apartheid nor South Africa), later expanded into a book. Each of these is a primary source; it uses the word “apartheid,” hence "alleging" it.

Wikipedia’s notability guidelines clearly require that “sources address the subject directly in detail." The subject here is the allegations, which none of the sources addresses directly. The notability guideline also stresses that sources are "defined on Wikipedia as secondary sources." WP:NOR stresses that "most articles should rely predominantly on secondary sources," while conceding that "there are rare occasions when they may rely on primary sources."

This is not one of those rare occasions, and no exception needs to be made. All of this subject matter will merge very nicely into Racial segregation in the United States, given that is in every case what the sources here are actually talking about.

The distinction between primary and secondary sources isn't some odd technicality. It is a crucial mechanism for establishing notability "objectively" (as WP:N and WP:NOR explain), and for leading hobby-horse articles like this one off the track and behind the stables, where they may be summarily shot. If a topic is important, there will be secondary-source commentary on the topic itself. The word "nigger" is a notable epithet. We know this not through primary-source materials in which it's used, but rather through secondary-source material in which it's discussed.

The issue for this AfD is only the lack of sourced notability of the analogy itself – not any supposed "outrageousness" of it. Indeed, the half-dozen examples of the phrase gather by our original researcher do not appear to have occasioned any outrage at all; what commentary and controversy they generated had to do with American segregation itself, not the phrase "American apartheid." America's own legacy of racial oppression – slavery, sharecropping, Jim Crow, lynchings, the KKK, segregation defacto and dejure, schoolgirls being spit on and old ladies sent to the back of the bus, firehoses and police beatings – has left it with an enormously rich native vocabulary for current discrimination; we no more need to import our metaphors from South Africa than Brazil needs thence to import its mangoes. Which is probably why when these four or five sources used the term "apartheid," no one noticed. This article should be deleted as part of a disingenuous campaign that has had a profoundly disruptive effect on other parts of Wikipedia; its salvageable content will move seamlessly into Racial segregation in the United States. G-Dett 22:05, 24 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

  • Delete POV fork. Titles must be as neutral as possible, but this one doesn't even try to appear neutral. The title throws mud, and some it it will lodge in the mind of the reader. Any relevant material belongs in articles about racism, segregation and slavery. Golfcam 22:38, 24 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete. This is a synthesis of primary sources which is quite redundant with other articles we already have. Closing admin, please don't be swayed by votes that this should be linked to other articles - the only thing they have in common are the word "apartheid" in the title.--Cúchullain t/c 22:55, 24 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • comment judged by itself, the article seems rescuable, & I am reluctant to vote for a delete on the basis of allegations about a cabal. Could the nom substantiate? DGG (talk) 23:14, 24 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Well, first of all DGG the motives of this article's creator is really a secondary issue; substantiated or unsubstantiated, it is not a reason in itself to delete. The reason to delete is that the article has no secondary sources, no objective evidence of its topic's notability, and is clearly nothing more than an odd, exotic POV-fork from Racial segregation in the United States. Your vote to keep or delete shouldn't hinge on the motives of those cultivating this hothouse-plant-miniature-quote-farm-POV-fork; that said, I will answer your question. First of all, there's no "cabal." A cabal is a secret organization full of intrigue, usually up to no good. What we have here, by contrast, are openly affiliated editors up to no good in broad daylight. Have a look at the edit histories of Allegations of Chinese apartheid, Allegations of American apartheid, Allegations of tourist apartheid in Cuba, etc.; see who creates these articles, who sustains them with substantive edits, who defends them in AfDs, etc. Then go look at any of the six AfD's for Allegations of Israeli apartheid; the very editors who have objected vehemently to that article because of the word "apartheid" in its title have created and sustained seven or eight "allegations of apartheid" articles, as well as the "allegations of apartheid" template and of course Allegations of apartheid. If you object to any of these on WP:UNDUE, WP:NOR, or WP:N grounds, these editors will wave the policy issues aside and make clear that the problem for them is an Israel article with the word "apartheid" in its title, plain and simple, and that if their demand for the deletion of that article is satisfied, they'll agree to delete the seven or eight badly sourced "allegations of apartheid" articles they've created and heretofore defended through block-voting at AfDs. Again, no cabal; the demands are more or less open and candid, even if the delivery is slightly oblique and euphemistic in a Corleone-ish kind of way. See the recent AfD discussion for Allegations of French apartheid, which survived because of block-voting from the non-cabal. See also Wikipedia:Centralized discussion/Apartheid, which is a collective attempt to deal with the disruption caused by all this. Let me know if you have any other questions.--G-Dett 15:44, 25 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
as for some other questions I had--I totally agree with G-Dett that the article must be judged by itself, and so I did. AGF, I prefer to interpret the introduction of some of the other articles as a reasonable attempt to avoid singling out Israel, which would be political POV as it is hardly the only offender. But, I had not realised there was a community discussion. since there is, this AfD can be seen as a well-intentioned but incorrect attempt to assume the result of that discussion. if we're discussing the general question of how to handle these articles, the discussion of how to deal with an individual one should wait on that. If its decided to do it differently in general, this discussion becomes moot.DGG (talk) 00:17, 26 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Whatever direction the free-form community discussion takes or doesn't take, individual articles will need to comply with policy. The question for the "allegations" articles is not who the "offenders" are – we are not a tribunal – but rather where the allegations have become a notable topic in themselves, as established by secondary sources, per policy.--G-Dett 00:29, 26 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • You can't establish the legitimacy of one article based on its superficial resemblance to another article; that's what got us into this whole mess. There are eight "allegations of apartheid" articles, seven of which have no secondary sources establishing the notability of the allegations they describe. Each of these has mimicked the phraseology and format of the sourced article, in the hopes of tricking editors into evaluating them collectively. See for example the comment by Urthogie (author of six of the dummy articles) below.--G-Dett 14:39, 26 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]