Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement
Click here to add a new enforcement request
For appeals: create a new section and use the template {{Arbitration enforcement appeal}}
See also: Logged AE sanctions
Important information Please use this page only to:
For all other problems, including content disagreements or the enforcement of community-imposed sanctions, please use the other fora described in the dispute resolution process. To appeal Arbitration Committee decisions, please use the clarification and amendment noticeboard. Only autoconfirmed users may file enforcement requests here; requests filed by IPs or accounts less than four days old or with less than 10 edits will be removed. All users are welcome to comment on requests except where doing so would violate an active restriction (such as an extended-confirmed restriction). If you make an enforcement request or comment on a request, your own conduct may be examined as well, and you may be sanctioned for it. Enforcement requests and statements in response to them may not exceed 500 words and 20 diffs, except by permission of a reviewing administrator. (Word Count Tool) Statements must be made in separate sections. Non-compliant contributions may be removed or shortened by administrators. Disruptive contributions such as personal attacks, or groundless or vexatious complaints, may result in blocks or other sanctions. To make an enforcement request, click on the link above this box and supply all required information. Incomplete requests may be ignored. Requests reporting diffs older than one week may be declined as stale. To appeal a contentious topic restriction or other enforcement decision, please create a new section and use the template {{Arbitration enforcement appeal}}.
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Wee Curry Monster
Wee Curry Monster is subject to a standard 0RR restriction for all articles about or concerning the history, people, or political status of Gibraltar for 30 days. Wee Curry Monster is warned against bad faith accusations and further disruption. Richard Keatinge is warned to refrain from incivility. All recent, active editors on the articles Gibraltar and Demographics of Gibraltar will be warned that the topic area is subject to discretionary sanctions (Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case/Gibraltar#Discretionary sanctions). |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning Wee Curry Monster
OK, I will support the softer sanctions Vassyana proposes to help improve WMC's behavior (that's my main worry). Hopefully, if this is able to drive the message home to WMC and -at the same time- he realizes that Richard Keatinge and I have accepted to soften the sanctions, he will change his ways, view us in a better light and reduce the tension in the article... I really hope so. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 21:51, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Discussion concerning Wee Curry MonsterStatement by Wee Curry MonsterI have not repeated any of the conduct that lead to my topic ban, rather I have learnt an important lesson regarding WP:CIVIL and have tried to avoid a repeat. This smacks of retaliation, rather than engaging in the consensus process, Imalbornoz has repeatedly engaged in personal attacks and sought admin intevention to remove me from consensus building. We currently have an amicable discussion re content and rather than engaging in that process Imalbornoz is seeking admin intervention yet again. I request that Imalbornoz is warned about WP:CIVIL and in particular the requirement not to bring up past disputes for which an editor has repeatedly apologised and has not repeated the same conduct. Wee Curry Monster talk 23:56, 12 December 2010 (UTC)
Regarding accusation of edit warring in 4 above. May I draw attention to the fact that Imalbornoz is misrepresenting the situation. I was not told I was wrong by User:JodyB rather Imalbornoz misinformed said admin, I later provided clarification [44] and I note the matter was concluded amicably without rancour with an amplification of my edit [45] that considerably improved the article. Admin User:JodyB actually requested that we both cease frivolous complaints [46]. Regarding my comments on tag team edit warring, sadly this has occurred before, and was used to impose content over and above objections. I don't think it is unreasonable to discuss this given the clear and repeated threat to impose content eg [47]. Regarding the repeated misrepresentation of my position. [48] which is presented as [49]. Misrepresentation of my position is common as well as referring to a position from which I've already compromised. I can provide more diffs. Sadly I can provide numerous examples of uncivil comments but I have a thick skin and would prefer to work on content. Wee Curry Monster talk 00:58, 13 December 2010 (UTC) Additional StatementIn response to my edit, which is now complained about, I was the focus of a series of personal attacks [50], [51], [52]. Note the comments did not discuss the edit per WP:BRD but focused solely on the editor. I'm happy to discuss content but will not respond to personal attacks. The text I edited is problematic, it focuses on providing details of what Imalbornoz refers to as "atrocities" and "desecrations", both WP:WORDS that WP:LABEL. Its also completely unbalanced, WP:CHERRY picking certain facts and ignoring others. We attempted an RFC. I requested that text be allowed to stand on merit, that request was ignored and the walls of text referred to in the Arbcom case resulted that deterred any outside opinion. During and prior to the AN/I discussion mentioned below I was subjected to a series of personal attacks. At no point did I respond in kind. None of those responsible have received any sanction as a result. Imalbornoz [53] was warned to refrain from personal attacks but note they were repeated above. Ed states below that Imalbornoz and I were apparently equally guilty of edit warring on 12 November. I do not accept that, I walked away from the discussion [54] following the personal attacks [55]. It was a dumb lame dispute, that was easily solved on the talk page but when the discussion turned intemperate I walked away from it. Note that I did not respond in kind to personal attacks, so I am somewhat bewildered by accusations my conduct was comparable. My edit summaries are and I quote "bombastic", please, what has happened to WP:AGF? I replaced text that violates WP:NPOV with neutral text, stating what was wrong with it. Come on, how else would you summarise that in an edit summary? I also removed a NPOV tag I'd added but please note that when Richard and Imalbonoz "reverted" this was not restored. Please also note the first diff presented by Ed is not a revert, its an edit. There is a serious problem with WP:OWN on this article right now. This case is intended to drive another editor from editing. Please consider the evidence and don't leap to judgement. Wee Curry Monster talk 09:25, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
How do I appeal against this?I am going to appeal against this.
Hence, I would suggest the following: The proposed remedy does not address the problem of baiting on the article. Its the baiting that has caused tempers to fray and was responsible for a lot of the remarks used against me here. I would like it to be noted that despite the baiting I haven't resorted to anything like the same uncivil conduct seen previously. Any remedy should address this and I don't think it does. I would suggest in this respect that the editors Imalbornoz and Richard Keatinge are admonished and reminded that they will be subject to the discretionary sanctions if it is repeated. I feel the proposed topic bans are overly harsh. I have been intently involved in consensus building on the talk page lately. The conduct you seem to think is problematic was some time ago and is not ongoing right now. Hence, this would be punitive not preventative. In order to address edit warring, BTW I don't think the problem is anything like as bad as it has been. Gibraltar should have a 1RR restriction. I think there is a problem with the text that was in the article. It is fundamentally at odds with our policy concerning NPOV. I have tried to discuss this but the response focused on mention of "atrocities" and using WP:WORDS that WP:LABEL. There has not been a policy based argument against my edit, it has focused on dragging up the past and used terms that were baiting. The text there was imposed in the manner alluded to by Pfainuk above. I propose two possible remedies. a) an RFC where text is allowed to stand on merit, with none of the named participants allowed to lobby for their preferred text. b) if medcab take the case. Wee Curry Monster talk 10:21, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Comments by others about the request concerning Wee Curry MonsterIt might be worth noting that recent comments of Imalbornoz have led to the AE reminder and that others in the debate have been engaging in rather baiting behaviour (Richard's long rant accusing Justin of incompetance is especially helpful. And this is a person who claims to be a neutral mediator.). I'd argue it is no place of Imal and Richard to bandy around sanction threats, as they have done, with someone they so clearly despise and have prior history with. Justin has issues with various parts of what is proposed (mostly based around suitability for a main article over a stub), others have similar concerns that overlap on areas with Justin's. It is claimed he is obstructionist...yet Richard and Imalbornoz have proved equally intransigent (Especially in view of Richard, who casually dismisses Justin at every turn, providing no rational as if he is on some hell bent crusade to cause trouble). I hope the person looking at this looks over the history carefully, and looks at the verbal battering one takes from walls of texts that either go around in circles or are out to insult a user. --Narson ~ Talk • 00:26, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
Result concerning Wee Curry Monster
I am currently reviewing the history of the talk page and various links provided. One thing I will immediately take note of is that this is an arbitration enforcement request based loosely on a 3 month topic ban than expired 4 months ago. Further links to any relevant discussions (section links, not diffs, where possible) and admin discussion regarding the matter would be helpful. Please bear with me while I take the time to carefully read over the history and current happenings. I will try to reply in a few hours, but not may be able to do so until tomorrow. Vassyana (talk) 03:07, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
As an immediate action, I have protected the article for two weeks and posted a talk page notice. Vassyana (talk) 02:22, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Here is my general understanding of the background to recent activity, after an in-depth review of the history:
Solutions:
The edit warring by Imalbornoz in December was limited to 2 single reversions, so I see no reason to press a named warning or sanction at this time. All editors should take the time to pursue dispute resolution to help with hashing out consensus. Any further disruption by any editor should be dealt with under sanctions. If no other admin or outside party objects, I will close this discussion, notify editors, and add it to the case documentation. Vassyana (talk) 03:05, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
I agree with Vassyana's summary and the proposed actions. I had a look at this a couple of days ago (and have been monitoring this AE since) and what stood out among the recent edits was the "reverting while discussing" actions of WCM. That has to be discouraged: when a discussion on content is active, editors should refrain from reverting. The circumstances of the revert combined with the inflammatory language used warrant sanctions. The sanctions proposed are appropriate. I also agree with the summary in respect of Richard Keatinge and the proposed action (a warning).--Mkativerata (talk) 03:54, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Sanctions
Logged at the ArbCom case page.[69] Vassyana (talk) 01:09, 16 December 2010 (UTC) |
Benkta
Single purpose, disruptive account out to pick old fights. Indefinitely blocked. |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning Benkta
Abuse of talk page And again, after the prior edit was objected to.
Not applicable. (A user returning with a new account does not get a new warning.)
Discussion concerning BenktaStatement by BenktaComments by others about the request concerning BenktaDo you have any evidence to link this editor with any of the blocked/banned editors you allude to and not just a newbie, albeit a POV-pushing newbie?
Result concerning Benkta
Do you have any evidence to link this editor with any of the blocked/banned editors you allude to and not just a newbie, albeit a POV-pushing newbie? I cannot say with 100% confidence that this is a BfP sock. However, I can say with 100% confidence that this is a single purpose account created to continue prior disputes.[70] Blocked indefinitely as such and notified.[71] Unless there are objections from other administrators, I will close this discussion appropriately. Vassyana (talk) 18:25, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
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Please clarify. Recent decision concerning me
Superseded by appeal, 03:38, 14 December 2010 #Arbitration enforcement action appeal by Dojarca. Deacon of Pndapetzim (Talk) 14:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Mkativerata wrote on my talk page: you are prohibited from commencing or participating in dispute resolution or enforcement processes (including arbitration enforcement) relating to user conduct within the area of conflict (as defined by WP:DIGWUREN#Discretionary sanctions) for a period of two months Following this I request some clarification. 1. Does it mean I am effectively topic-banned from any Eastern-European area, at least from any dispute resolution in that area? 2. Does it mean that enforcement of ArbCom decisions by users who are uninvolved in the corresponding articles henceforward be considered WP:BATTLEGROUND and those users be sanctioned similarly? 3. Can Mkativerata be considered uninvolved administrator here in light of his controversial conduct in previous report regarding Piotrus and also concerning his block of user Igny for his re-incerting the POV template into the much-disputed article Mass killings under Communist regimes [72]? Thank you.--Dojarca (talk) 21:21, 13 December 2010 (UTC) In response: 1. No. The restriction only concerns disputes relating to user conduct. You are free to participate in content-related disputes, such as RfCs. 2. No. Legitimate good faith requests for enforcement are welcome. 3. Obviously I reject the suggestion I am "involved". I note that Igny was blocked for a clear 1RR violation. The other party to that edit (User talk:A50000) war was also blocked, even though he/she did not breach 1RR. Regards --Mkativerata (talk) 21:58, 13 December 2010 (UTC)
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Arbitration enforcement action appeal by Captain Occam
Captain Occam's appeal is declined after being reviewed by two uninvolved administrators. |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Statement by Captain OccamIn the thread where I ended up being sanctioned, EdJohnston initially proposed that under the discretionary sanctions authorized on race and intelligence articles, all topic bans from this case should be extended to every page on Wikipedia. As stated in EdJohnston’s proposal, this would have applied to all five of the editors currently topic banned from these articles: myself, David.Kane (talk · contribs), Mikemikev (talk · contribs), Mathsci (talk · contribs) and Ferahgo the Assassin (talk · contribs). Timothy Canens commented in the thread expressing approval of this idea. Mathsci, the editor who posted the AE complaint, subsequently contacted both EdJohnston and Timothy Canens via e-mail. (Stated by Mathsci here.) Shortly after being contacted privately by Mathsci, EdJohnston modified his proposal in the AE thread to a specific sanction for only me and Ferahgo. No admins other than the two who Mathsci was privately in contact with commented on this new proposal before the thread was closed. When I brought up this sanction in EdJohnston’s user talk, EdJohnston agreed with me that it would have been inappropriate for his decision in this thread to be influenced by private correspondence with the person making the complaint, and denied that this had been the case. He also expressed uncertainty over whether it had been the best idea for him to take action against me in this thread after Mathsci had contacted him privately about this. However, EdJohnston was unwilling to tell me what other than Mathsci’s e-mails had caused him to replace his original proposal, which was a general extension of all topic bans from this case, with a specific sanction for me and Ferahgo. More importantly, even though for me and Ferahgo to be specifically sanctioned implies that we’ve done something wrong to warrant it, he was unwilling to tell me what misbehavior from me and Ferahgo we were sanctioned for. I asked him what we had done to result in this sanction four times, the first three times he responded to other aspects of my posts without answering this question, and the last time (my last comment there), in which I asked him this and nothing else, he did not reply at all. I consider there to be three problems with this decision. The first is inadequate input from the community: before being implemented, this sanction should have been discussed by some uninvolved admins other than the two who had been privately contacted by the editor making the AE complaint. The second problem is that according to Wikipedia:AC/DS, before being sanctioned under discretionary sanctions Ferahgo and I should have been warned that our behavior was a problem. We were not warned, and if we had been told in advance that something we were doing was problematic, we would have been willing to avoid whatever it was from that point forward. And finally, despite multiple requests in his user talk, EdJohnston has been unwilling to tell me what misbehavior on my and Ferahgo’s part this sanction was based on. As far as I know, I haven’t done anything problematic since the end of the arbitration case—of the three diffs from me in Mathsci’s AE complaint, one was telling me Maunus in his user talk that he had misquoted me on the talk page for one of these articles, and the other two are from a discussion that an arbitrator (Coren) had asked me to initiate. According to Wikipedia:Admin#Accountability, as well as this ruling from the Durova arbitration case, admins have a responsibility to explain the justification for the actions they take. EdJohnston has refused to do this, and as a result I still do not know what misbehavior Ferahgo and I were sanctioned for, or even whether this sanction was the result of any misbehavior from us. Since we also were not warned before receiving this sanction, as is required for discretionary sanctons, I think this sanction should be replaced with a warning for her and me to refrain from whatever behavior from us this sanction was based on, if it was based on any. Response to VassyanaThe only possible enforcement whose rationale was discussed in either of those two threads was EdJohnston’s original proposal, which was to make a general extension of all of the topic bans from the R&I case. As I said in the discussion in EdJohnston’s user talk, I would not have considered it a serious problem if that had been done here, since that would not have implied specific wrondoing on anyone’s part. However, the proposal which was discussed there is not the decision which ended up being made. After he was contacted by Mathsci via e-mail, what EdJohnston decided to do was not to make a general extension of all topic bans, but to specifically sanction me and Ferahgo. Since this was a sanction directed at two specific editors, not just a general re-interpreting the outcome of the R&I case, one would assume that Ferahgo and I have done something wrong to warrant this. Ordinarily, editors do not receive individual sanctions if there has not been any problematic behavior for the sanction to be based on. But if Ferahgo and I have done anything to warrant these individual sanctions directed at us, EdJohnston has not been willing to tell us what it was. Whatever problematic behavior this sanction was based on, we also should have been warned about it behavior before being sanctioned for it. Is it clear now what my problem is here? --Captain Occam (talk) 04:56, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Response to Timothy CanensThis is what Wikipedia:AC/DS says: "Prior to any sanctions being imposed, the editor in question shall be given a warning with a link to the decision authorizing sanctions; and, where appropriate, should be counseled on specific steps that he or she can take to improve his or her editing in accordance with relevant policies and guidelines." The purpose of this policy is so that editors who are engaging in problematic behavior can have an opportunity to learn what they’re doing wrong and improve it. In Ferahgo’s and my case we still don’t know what behavior EdJohnston sanctioned us for, because we received no warning before being sanctioned, and when I asked EdJohnston afterwards what behavior he sanctioned us for, he was unwilling to tell me. This definitely goes against the spirit, if not also the letter, of the discretionary sanctions policy. --Captain Occam (talk) 05:13, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by EdJohnstonThe sanction being appealed by Captain Occam is one that I issued due to a previous closure of an AE case. It is easy to search the AE archives for the topic of Race and intelligence by using this URL. There is a precedent for Arbcom getting more strict regarding topic-banned editors engaging in process discussions if you check their recent opinions regarding WP:ARBCC. This suggests that they want people who are under a topic ban to let the issue go, and not continue to press their views in forums like RFC/U. See for instance Wikipedia:Requests for comment/WeijiBaikeBianji. In that RfC you can see opinions being expressed by Captain Occam, Ferahgo the Assassin, and Mathsci. Now Mathsci is on the point of having his topic ban lifted by Arbcom so I did not think that it was important to extend the process sanction to include him. In my thinking, the sanction was only intended to apply to specific editors who were already topic banned. If Arbcom does not lift Mathsci's topic ban, and if there are further problems on R&I regarding him, then the issue on him participating in process discussions should be revisited. EdJohnston (talk) 19:45, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by Timotheus CanensMathsci's emails had no influence whatsoever on the comment I made. They relate only peripherally to Occam, and while they did list a number of diffs apparently related to FtA, I did not look at, and to my best knowledge have never looked at, the contents of said diffs. T. Canens (talk) 05:03, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by MathsciVassayana informed me of this appeal by Captain Occam, of which I was aware. He requested that I comment, although I prefer not to at this stage, I might make more detailed comments at WP:Arbitration/Requests/Amendment at some later date.
Statement by Ferahgo the AssassinEdJohnston, I appreciate your finally explaining this. From my understanding of your comment, you didn't intend to sanction me and Occam for specific misbehavior, but only sought to extend the topic bans from the R&I case in general. Mathsci is therefore excluded only because he's likely to have his topic ban lifted anyway. It'd be helpful if you could clarify whether my interpretation of this is correct. Vassyana and possibly others seem to be under the impression that that there was some specific misbehavior from myself and Occam that warranted the sanction, but based on what you’ve said that doesn’t seem to be the case. Even if this is right, though, it still amounts to two editors being sanctioned without any specific behavior that it’s based on, and no warning either. Whatever the thinking behind this sanction may have been, it still needs to be determined whether the outcome is consistent with policy. -Ferahgo the Assassin (talk) 21:16, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Response to AprockI don't think it's fair to compare Mathsci's editing behavior to only Occam's. Occam and are covered by the same sanction (most likely due to WP:SHARE), so his behavior should be compared to both of ours. I don't think I've ever caused anywhere close to the same level of disruption that Occam did before the arbitration case. I've never edit warred, I've never been an SPA (as should be evident from my editing history), and I've only been blocked once, for accidentally violating my topic ban on Henry Fairfield Osborn, which I acknowledge was a mistake and won't be repeated. Like Occam, I find it difficult to contribute to articles while this drama is going on, but until the past few weeks I’ve been fairly active on Wikipedia and put a lot of effort into contributing to articles as well. -Ferahgo the Assassin (talk) 18:35, 16 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by VsevolodKrolikovI was also notified by Vassyana, so I'm guessing that makes me involved. I can find no difference in behavioral issues between Captain Occam and MathSci that merits this different treatment. EdJohnston refers to the RFC triggering matters: MathSci actually emailed me a few days before the RFC opened, warning me of the possibility of meatpuppetry on the part of Captain Occam and Ferahgo and that ARBCOM was concerned (as he did not notify me on my talkpage for almost two weeks, I didn't read the email till much later). As I have stated before, this emailing of people off-wiki (and also with no public notification that communication has taken place) for me raises concerns about transparency, and it seems just as much an interference in process in the topic as Captain Occam's. I therefore find the difference in treatment difficult to understand. I also don't follow EdJohnston's reasoning that if a ban is probably going to be lifted in the near future, violations of it now are not important. We'd surely be wanting exemplary behaviour in the run up to an early removal. I'd rather have seen both stay topic banned. I think Ludwigs2 is right in saying that neither has really let go.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 02:49, 16 December 2010 (UTC) Discussion among uninvolved editors about the appeal by Captain OccamThis is a very disturbing development in this long running matter. I expect the sanctioning admin to provide a clear explanation of his actions. Xxanthippe (talk) 10:45, 15 December 2010 (UTC).
Since Captain Occam topic ban was effected, the user has consistently managed to find a way to be involved in related controversies. The topic ban was meant to reduce the drama but it appears that Captain Occam is never far from some sort of drama. Pardon the editcountitis, according to Occam's edit count, the user's pattern of contributions is still pretty much the same as it was before the Arbcom case. Occam spends very little time on content contribution, at present only 13%. The bulk of his time seems to be spent on these endless battles on the Wikipedia namespace or canvassing other users for support. Judging by previous trends, I am struggling to foresee a situation in which Captain Occam is not involved in any drama in the future, or where Captain Occam is peacefully contributing to the encyclopedia and a broad range of readers or editors appreciate his work. For this reason, I would suggest that rather than consider Occam's appeal, it might just be a good idea to consider ending much of this drama once and for all by putting a sitewide ban on the table. Wapondaponda (talk) 19:15, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Result of the appeal by Captain Occam
I am contacting the involved editors to comment here. It seems to me that the rationales and circumstances are well-detailed at the following two locations: Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement/Archive75#Captain_Occam and Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Clarification#Request_for_clarification:_WP:ARBR.26I.2Fscope_of_topic_ban_of_Mathsci. Do you have a specific question regarding it? Vassyana (talk) 04:24, 15 December 2010 (UTC) From my perspective reading over the material linked above, I really don't understand what is confusing. I get the clear message that admins were saying "enough is enough" and did what they thought would nip the problem in the bud. The decision clearly indicates why two editors were left out. The context regarding MathSci is also included in the links I provided. It seems very clear that Captain Occam was continuing conflicts by working around restrictions and that was the basis of the sanction. Captain Occam's refusal to acknowledge the conduct and heavy emphasis on tu quoque arguments leaves me disinclined to second guess the sanction. Vassyana (talk) 18:45, 15 December 2010 (UTC) As I see it, Captain Occam
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Arbitration enforcement action appeal by Dojarca
Dojarca blocked for 2 weeks and topic banned for one year after socking was discovered, rendering this appeal moot. |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Procedural notes: The rules governing arbitration enforcement appeals are found in this 2010 ArbCom motion. According to that motion, a "clear, substantial, and active consensus of uninvolved editors" is required to overturn an arbitration enforcement action. To help determine any such consensus, involved editors may make brief statements in separate sections but should not edit the section for discussion among uninvolved editors. Editors are normally considered involved if they are in a current dispute with the sanctioning or sanctioned editor, or have taken part in disputes (if any) related to the contested enforcement action. Administrators having taken administrative actions are not normally considered involved for this reason alone (see WP:UNINVOLVED).
Statement by DojarcaThe ArbCom remedy reads as follows: Any uninvolved administrator may, on his or her own discretion, impose sanctions on any editor working in the area of conflict (defined as articles which relate to Eastern Europe, broadly interpreted) if, despite being warned, that editor repeatedly or seriously fails to adhere to the purpose of Wikipedia, any expected standards of behavior, or any normal editorial process. The following requirements for the remedy did not met: - I did not repeatedly or seriously fail to adhere to the purpose of Wikipedia, any expected standards of behavior, or any normal editorial process That is what I did here and elsewhere in Wikipedia was in line with Wikipedia's policy and if even I made any mistakes somewhere, I ceased any incorrect behavior upon notification. A first notification was always sufficient. If I was somewhere involved in repeated and serious disruptive behavior, please point to such instances. - I was not warned before applying the remedy. Of course, I knew about that ArbCom case and the enacted sanctions because I participated in it. On the other hand, I was not warned about any related to this AE request incorrect behavior from my side. It is obvious that the warning requirement is essential to give a user possibility to cease any wrong behavior before the sanctions and only in the case the user ignores such warnings (i.e. "dispite" them) continues wrong conduct he shall be sanctioned. It is evident also that the warning requirement allows the administrator to formalize what behavior he considers against the rules and what he requires from the user. Since I was not warned, I had no idea of whether I break the rules and how could I improve my doings. Just the fact of my participation in the arbcom case does not allow any administrator to impose any sanction against me without preceding warning. The sanction enacted by Mkativerata not only does not me allow to request for enforcement of ArbCom decisions about the case with which I am familiar and involved, but also prevents me from communicating with uncivil users in the course or normal process, including reporting such basic violations of the rules as 3RR and personal attacks, placing me in a dependence of whether it would be spotted by a random administrator. Henceforward anybode can insult me and I have no right to complain. Statement by MkativerataNoting that I am aware of the appeal. I have no statement to make, feeling my (and other admins') comments in the original AE speak for themselves. I will probably not comment here unless (a) I'm asked a direct question by an uninvolved administrator; or (b) I feel I'm being misrepresented.--Mkativerata (talk) 04:06, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Comment by DojarcaThe diff provided is obviously not a diff for Mkativerata's warning, but a diff of my post. The fact that you put this diff here suggests that you thought I proxied for Offliner which is not the case. If I proxied for Offliner I would say so or at least say that Offliner provided the diffs, but I evaluated the significance of the evidence myself or something similar. Regarding that you consider enforcing ArbCom rulings a battleground behavior. If enforcing ArbCom decision is a battleground, then why the decision itself is not battleground? Maybe we should accuse ArbCom in battleground behavior against the respected EEML group? What can you say about the Offliner's request regarding Martintg? Was it also a "battleground AE"? Which further AE against EEML will be considered battleground? Should all editors who posted here now be considered "warned" and blame themselves if punished following an AE against EEML? Dojarca (talk) 08:07, 14 December 2010 (UTC) Statement (not really more like a puzzlement) by Volunteer MarekUmmmm.... why is that next to last statement [79], using a first person singular, as in referring to Dojarca, signed by User:MathFacts? Am I missing something? Volunteer Marek (talk) 16:09, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
@Timotheus Canens - it might be noteworthy that the MathFacts account was used as recently as two weeks ago to file another spurious AE request against User:Lvivske: [80]. Volunteer Marek (talk) 18:50, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Request for clarification from Petri and othersWait! So I can create various alternate accounts (calling them "sockpuppets" would be a personal attack!!!) for my various activities here on Wikipedia and that's all alright? I can have one account for my Poland related topics, one for my Economics related topics (maybe a separate one for Economics of Poland topics), one for Mexican history topics, one for commenting over at AN/I, one for bringing articles to AfD I don't like, one for voting in ArbCom elections, one for reverting User:Bob (I don't think there really is a User:Bob, but if there is, no offense, Bob), and one for filing spurious requests at Arbitration/Requests/Enforcements? That's all legitimate? Crap! Why didn't anyone tell me? I'll get crackin'... Of course I'm joking. Seriously. Anyone stop and ask "what the hey did Dojarca need that second account for except for the purposes of disruptive battleground behavior"? The apparent intention of some folks here to fall over themselves in trying to come up with some kind of excuse for the guy - especially since in other cases they were quite happy to swing the ban hammer swiftly and heavily, is a bit worrisome. And that's not even addressing Deacon's light weight, "damage control" two week block after he supported Dojarca. Sometimes AE makes my head spin. Volunteer Marek (talk) 01:47, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Responses by Peri Krohn
Please have a closer look! In fact, the evidence shows that Dojarca has done exactly the right thing in using his two accounts. Dojarca (talk · contribs) was involved in controversial political topics which ultimately resulted in the WP:EEML arbcom case. Dojarca withdrew from editing on 17 February 2010 and his few edits after that have been directly linked to the EEML case. These include opening Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Denial of the Holodomor and making an EEML related argument, reverting a move of Occupation of the Baltic republics by Nazi Germany, and participating in Talk:Communist terrorism. When commenting on AE cases relating to the EEML case he has always logged in as Dojarca. MathFacts (talk · contribs) started editing in March 2009. His early edits consist exclusively of non-controversial topics like Indefinite sum. I cannot find any edits in MathFacts edit history to articles that have been in dispute in the DIGWUREN or EEML cases. In November this year he made an edit to Roman Shukhevych (history), that was twice reverted by Lvivske and Galassi, prompting MathFacts to start an AE request on this notice board. I cannot see any overlap here, Even though the Ukraine is in Eastern Europe, I do not think it has ever been in the scope of interest of Dojarca or the EEML group.
If someone disagrees with me, please point out a single edit that MathFacts/Dojarca did with the wrong account. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 20:00, 14 December 2010 (UTC) P.S. – As to the question of whether it is appropriate to comment on the EEML case after withdrawing from the disputes. The EEML topic bans are only temporary and will soon expire. It is quite possible that we will again see the same participants in the same disputes. In the meanwhile I see a trend on the anti-EEML side: these editors too have withdrawn from the topic area – and for the most part, from following the edits of EEML members. This situation has only been possible because of the trust that the topic bans are effective. Inability to enforce the topic bans will force the anti-EEML side to actively engage in the topics and scrutinize EEML edits. I would find such an outcome most unwanted. -- Petri Krohn (talk)
The policy the explicitly allows MathFacts to use Dojarca as an alternate account is Wikipedia:Sock puppetry#Legitimate uses. The example presented for privacy:
Dojarca is now a single purpose account editing only in an extremely narrow topic area of Baltic occupation theories and related process pages. The topic area is highly controversial. Several Eastern European countries have passed laws which criminalize presenting some points-of-view on the topic area. In addition to prison terms people active in the topic area may face travel bans and other harassment from security services and law enforcement officials. In fact, I know of cases, both real and alleged, where Wikipedia editors have been targeted by such actions. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 23:38, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Yes, MathFacts filed an AE request. I cannot see any connection between that dispute and the edits of the Dojarca account. Also I do not accept your argument about "procject space". "Editing project space" in WP:ILLEGIT applies to "misleading, deceiving, disrupting, or undermining consensus." There is no case for misleading or deceiving. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 04:03, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Re: "Dojarca need that second account for?" For editing mathematics related articles without harassment form members of the EEML group. I believe Dojarca was high up in the "enemies list". -- Petri Krohn (talk) 03:49, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by (involved editor 2)Questions by uninvolved NcmvocalistMkativerata,
Discussion among uninvolved editors about the appeal by Dojarca
Result of the appeal by Dojarca
The AE request that prompted this sanction was clearly disruptive. A request was brought against Piotrus by Offliner and resulted in a warning to Piotrus to take a more conservative approach to his topic ban and a restriction for Offliner. Two days later, Dojarca brings a near-identical AE request, only citing even older diffs than Offliner's. I don't see how that could be anything other than disruptive battleground behaviour, so I'm inclined to oppose this appeal. HJ Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 15:33, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
This has been open long enough. Long term socking is usually treated quite harshly, and I have to admit that I was a little surprised that the block was not for longer. Regardless, under the authority of WP:DIGWUREN#Discretionary sanctions, Dojarca (talk · contribs) is banned from all articles, discussions, and other content related to Eastern Europe, broadly construed, for one year. This ban renders the present appeal moot, so it should be closed now. Dojarca is free to appeal this ban when their block expires. T. Canens (talk) 20:42, 16 December 2010 (UTC) |
Arbitration enforcement action appeal by Delicious carbuncle
Sanction overturned on technical grounds (prescribed prior steps regarding warning were not followed as laid down)--Elen of the Roads (talk) 13:19, 17 December 2010 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Procedural notes: The rules governing arbitration enforcement appeals are found in this 2010 ArbCom motion. According to that motion, a "clear, substantial, and active consensus of uninvolved editors" is required to overturn an arbitration enforcement action. To help determine any such consensus, involved editors may make brief statements in separate sections but should not edit the section for discussion among uninvolved editors. Editors are normally considered involved if they are in a current dispute with the sanctioning or sanctioned editor, or have taken part in disputes (if any) related to the contested enforcement action. Administrators having taken administrative actions are not normally considered involved for this reason alone (see WP:UNINVOLVED).
Statement by Delicious carbuncleLet me first set the record straight on a few points which seem to have been misunderstood:
I wish to appeal these sanctions on the following grounds:
Thank you for your time. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 05:56, 14 December 2010 (UTC) Reply to Future Perfect at Sunrise: - I really do not understand your statement. As I have stated above, I believe Sorrentini to be a Scientologist based on the words of her husband. I believed that when I identified her as such in her bio. The information from her husband was in the off-wiki discussion you linked to in the original AE request. I am not sure why you are confused about this. Yes, I believe Cirt created the article because Sorrentini and her husband have split from the Church of Scientology. Further, I believe that Cirt's objection to the sourcing was based on a desire to exclude information about Sorrentini's former connection to the CoS. As I have shown in the ANI thread, Cirt has added that source to several articles. As I have also shown in the ANI thread, Cirt failed to remove the source from several CoS-related articles that they had edited in the last few months. When did Cirt decide it was not a reliable source, and why did they make no effort to remove it from BLPs until I added it to Sorrentini's bio? Why would I have any knowledge of prior discussions about the reliability of the source? I have not participated in them. I have not edited Scientology articles. I am fresh to the topic area. Which discussion would tell me that the source was not reliable? Cirt could not provide one to back their claim that there was consensus against using it. Not only is it impossible for me to prove my ignorance, there isn't even a consensus of which I can be ignorant. Your accusation is simply nonsense. As for "this particular combination of a Wikipedia hounding campaign with the BLP violations being used as tools in this campaign that makes his behaviour so particularly problematic", I do not consider a bluntly frank ANI thread to be "hounding", but I make no apologies for the former - I am out to expose Cirt as the anti-Scientology POV-pusher that I believe them to be. Their actions are harmful to Wikipedia and the time has come for them to stop. Which BLP violations are you referencing here? I have made none in this situation, but I have pointed out many made by Cirt. You clearly do not have a grasp on the facts of the matter. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 08:23, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Reply to DocJames: You seem to be saying that you have concerns about things that were published off-wiki about Cirt - this is a discussion about enforcement of ARBSCI sanctions. Are you in the right room? Delicious carbuncle (talk) 08:43, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Reply to Jehochman: Jehochman, I have already agreed at RSN that the source is unreliable and it should go without saying that I will not use it again. I would not have chosen to use it had it not already been in use at other BLPs. In fact, I cut and pasted most of the citation from where it was used at that time in the BLP of Alexandra Powers to save myself some typing. You have perhaps missed an important detail in all of this. www.truthaboutscientology.com is not a CoS website. In fact, it is the website of someone who is a critic of Scientology (and also runs a site called Scientology Lies). The information contained in the site is drawn from CoS publications. This is an important point so I will try my best to make it clear to those willing to listen. Jehochman says "using a Scientology website to establish that somebody is a follower of Scientology is highly dubious". In actual fact, the use of CoS sources to establish that someone is a Scientologist seems to be common. I believe in some cases those sources are websites with testimonials from the individual, but often the sources are publications which are not available online. It is not clear to me if CoS publications are reliable sources or not since I have no familiarity with them. Cirt's POV-pushing is really just the tip of the iceberg with regard to CoS-related BLP issues, but nothing will likely change while they are free to edit CoS articles. Incidentally, you appear to have been one of the editors to add allegations of spamming to Speedyclick.com, one of the CoS-related (or formerly CoS-related) articles discussed at ANI. That section has been removed since the Spamhaus links are no longer functional. I didn't get a chance to ask you before my topic ban, but if you recall the circumstances of the Spamhaus records, perhaps you could reinstate that section with other sources? Delicious carbuncle (talk) 17:18, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Questions regarding sanctions: I am concerned that these sanctions will prevent me from addressing BLP issues that I identified while looking at CoS-related articles over this past few days. GraemeL has already threatened to block me for bringing those BLP problems to the BLP noticeboard, so I would like to be clear on which activities are proscribed by these sanctions. Can I raise issues at BLPN? Can I edit articles created or edited by Cirt but unrelated to Scientology? Can I edit articles which were formerly associated with Scientology but have been removed from that category? For example, I was planning to nominate Alexandra Powers for deletion. Can I request ARBSCI enforcement based on Cirt's activities or must someone do that? It seems unlikely that anyone else will be willing to take that on. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 21:16, 14 December 2010 (UTC) Reply to Cirt's offer:
Statement by Future Perfect at SunriseI stand by my assessment expressed here [87]. D.c. was, at the very least, insincere when he was claiming there was no dispute about that person being a Sc. member, because his whole motivation in even noticing that article was evidently because he felt Cirt had only written it because the subject had broken with Sc. Under these circumstances, his professions of innocence (begin "fresh to this" and not being aware of prior debates etc.) ring hollow: he deliberately fabricated this incident in order to gain an opportunity of exposing Cirt. It is this particular combination of a Wikipedia hounding campaign with the BLP violations being used as tools in this campaign that makes his behaviour so particularly problematic and which, in my view, makes a long-term sanction necessary. As to my being "involved": I'm not. I gave an administrative comment in the previous ANI thread, warning D.c. that I found his method of accusations problematic and that it made him liable to sanctions. Last time I looked, we are supposed to warn users before sanctioning them, right? – As for Cirt's posting on my page, as I said before, I didn't even read it, and if I had, it would naturally have made me more prejudiced against Cirt than against D.c. Fut.Perf. ☼ 07:26, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by CirtPlease see the initial AE report I had made about Deliciuos carbuncle - the evidence of that user's actions is all there. I admit that I was wrong to post in the manner in which I did about the user to multiple user talk pages. That was inappropriate, and it stemmed from my frustration over ongoing and repeated WP:WIKIHOUNDING against me by Jayen466 (talk · contribs), which has been a quite disturbing pattern for over three years now. I let Jayen466 (talk · contribs)'s WP:WIKIHOUNDING get the better of me, and I became frustrated and acted inappropriately. But the evidence I originally presented about Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs) still stands as valid. -- Cirt (talk) 06:52, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by DocJamesWhat DC has written off Wikipedia is inappropriate harassment [89] [90] A ban or further interaction with Cirt was not proposed because of a persistent pattern of inappropriate editing of Scientology article but for inappropriate behavior WRT another editor.Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 07:14, 14 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by GriswaldoI'm on record already, in more than one venue, regarding the inappropriate nature of these sanctions. I initiated Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#Inappropriate_discretionary sanction_at AE? after a failed direct appeal to User:Future Perfect at Sunrise on their talk page to consider allowing a truly uninvolved admin do the job. It is important to look at the chain of events here.
The combination of 4, 5, and 6 above, in swift succession is disturbing to say the least. Future Perfect claims to be "uninvolved" and to not have read Cirt's appeal on his/her talk page, simply glancing at it as reminder of the AE. Well we cannot know that, nor can we know what Future Perfect's intentions were. All we know is that 1) Future Perfect issued a threat to carbuncle, 2) Cirt asked Future Perfect to come to AE, and 3) Future Perfect made good on his/her threat. If that isn't improper I don't know what is. Then there is the matter of the sanction itself, which appears Draconian to say the least. How can you ban an editor from complaining about policy violations EVER? The supposed "interaction" ban imposed dissallows carbuncle from raising complaints about Cirt, in the area of Scientology. Really? No matter what you think of Cirt it appears to be common knowledge that Cirt has a very strong anti-Scientology POV. And now he gets a free pass from the criticism of an editor who beleives he has crossed the line? How on earth is that ever appropriate? In short I think Future Perfect erred rather egregiously here. I really wish they took my initial request with more humility and simply let someone else deal with this. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 13:16, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Jayen466I propose that the original complaint be re-tried, by a quorum of at least five (5) administrators who have not been solicited by either party, and do not have a history of participation in arbitration cases involving cults. Any decision to reflect consensus among said admins, with a majority of four (4) required to take a decision. Does this sound fair? --JN466 14:25, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Attn. Timotheus CanensTimotheus, I concur with Jehochman, below, and am really grateful to you for your diligence and attention to process detail. Delicious Carbuncle should be warned about two things:
Neither should recur. Apart from that, Delicious Carbuncle does not deserve to be warned for having raised good-faith content and policy concerns about Cirt's editing. No editor should be prohibited from raising such concerns in good faith. In this particular case, several editors and admins feel these concerns may have merit, and that is something for the community or this board to look at and decide at some point in the future. --JN466 13:10, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by Scott MacDonald re BLP issuesI don't care about AE, Scientology or who Canvassed whom, but I do care about BLPs. I make no bones about the fact that I read on Wikipedia Review that Cirt was POV pushing on Scientology matters, so I took a look. I came to the article Jamie Sorrentini, which Cirt had created and maintained. The article was clearly not neutral, it was puffed in every imaginable way (see this version). I don't normally worry about over-positive BLPs, but I googled around and (fairly unreliable) sources identified her connection to Scientology. The blogosphere indicates she's now an noted ex-scientologist (although, again, the sources are unreliable. The article didn't mention Scientology at all, but I wondered about Cirt's motivation and neutrality, so I performed a moderate clean-up, removing some of the puffery. I was met with Cirt's aggressive ownership of the article, and his fairly aggressive attitude [91] when I sought uninvolved input on the BLPNB. Cirt is obviously NOT neutral on such BLPs. It was at this point DC added info to the bio claiming she was a scientologist. The material was a clear BLP violation, and poorly sourced. (More worryingly it presented her as a Scientologist when it appears she is no longer one.) I supported Cirt in the removal of it. See the discussion here However, it appears that DC's motivation was pointed, since Cirt had used exactly the same source on a number of occasions to label living people as Scientologists. So Cirt's objection to it here was hypocritical. See the important discussion here. The Wikipoltics and personalities here are not interesting. What's important is that Cirt is obviously pushing agendas in BLPs and that DC is willing to breach the BLP policy to make a point in response. Cut to the chase: Arbcom ought to ban DC and Cirt from all Scientology related BLPs. We can't have people pushing agendas or fighting wikibattles at the expense of the bios of living people.--Scott Mac 16:50, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by The Resident Anthropologist (talk)I agree with the topic ban and interaction ban whole heartedly, though I disagree with the imposed length of the bans. I think Carbuncle certainly set this up as the between his statements at Wikipeida Review suggest his pleading ignorance here is misdirection. That being said, I am uncomfortable with the way Furture Presents bans appear whether or not it is that way I am unsure. Short timeline
In the results section it clearly says: "This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above." To me this is not about whether DC deserved such remedies, but rather was it appropriate after being requested by Cirt to look at the AE and had been involved in ANI. The question is whether it was truly appropriate for him to consider himself as uninvolved to enforce such actions and whether he violated the WP:INVOLVED Clause of Admin regulations. Frankly I cannot but feel the entire situation is tainted by Future Perfects actions and cannot support these sanctions at this time Evidence Submitted by The Resident Anthropologist (talk) 17:37, 14 December 2010 (UTC) Another StatementThe section Result of the appeal by Delicious carbuncle states: This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the sections above. I feel it is inappropriate for people who have commented at ANI involved with this situation and who's enforcement is under question to be editing within that section The Resident Anthropologist (talk) 17:45, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Comment by GraemeLAs an admin who became involved with the problems surrounding Delicious carbuncle when he moved his grievances to WP:BLPN, I threatened to block him for disruption and wrote here in support of sanctions against him. However, I think that the proposed remedy (being appealed here) was far too harsh, a permanent topic ban should only be used if he continues to try and forum shop and cause disruption to other editors and other (more lenient) sanctions fail to change his behaviour. That said, I think the current proposed sanctions, while in the correct order of magnitude, are (as is being argued by some non-involved admins) on the side of being too lenient, but feel that the current discussions below seem to be zeroing in on an more appropriate response to this editors behaviour. --GraemeL (talk) 20:28, 14 December 2010 (UTC) On reading through some of the numerous and massive threads on this it seems to me that a picture emerges of Cirt being entirely too engaged in our Scientology related articles, to the point where niceties such as proper sourcing and intellectual integrity is thrown to the wind. For a primer see ANI Case study one. Have a look at the initial article Cirt created, as was noted on ANI, it certainly smacks of a preoccupation with scientology, rather than writing good articles. Then note ANI Case study two, where it seems clear that Cirt is not only following the blog but is all but acting as an agent of it, for lack of better words. I took a random jump into Cirts edit history, landing on March, this year, Cirt is very prolific, but I don't think it is too difficult to conclude that there is a pattern that emerges, almost all the articles have a relationship to Scientology. Many of the edits are, taken individually, benign, a fluff word here, removing trivially verifiable information, here, and closing an Afd that has some connection to scientology as keep, here (beckett media discontinued a magazine on neopets ( apparently a product by a company with connections to scientology ). There are numerous edits like these. I do get the impression that the decision on whether a gossip column should be considered an RS for BLP depends on whether the subject is judged to be pro or con Scientology and if the source is positive or negative, always with the result that subjects that Cirt considers to be 'pro scientologists' are put in negative light, or their accomplishments diminished. Note that considering the source that got this whole thing started, Cirt participated in an RfC in 2007 that found it unreliable, here (his nick was smee), yet he himself adds it here in 2009, albeit as an external link. Consider the manner of conflict resolution employed by Cirt throughout this situation. In the RS/N discussion, here, there is a very quick move to open this ANI thread, over something that frankly would hardly merit AN3, 15 minutes after the 3rd addition by DC. Then, shortly after DC starts posting specific issues at ANI, Cirt opens the initial AE thread with an assortment of charges, including forum shopping, though as near as I can tell, the posts by DC simply invited comment at the ANI thread regarding the issues raised, yet Cirt engages in rather blatant canvassing. This statement by Cirt is particularly ironic considering that he himself just opened first RSN then ANI and then an AE: "The problem is there has been no prior attempts by Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs) at dispute resolution or attempts to resolve the matter through discussion. Rather, instead the user repeatedly chooses to escalate the issues directly, and engage in disruption across multiple pages. -- Cirt (talk) 16:30, 13 December 2010 (UTC)". Within the threads themselves, Cirt seems to say almost nothing, indeed it is unnecessary for him to do so as long as there is an unwillingness of the participants to look at the heart of the matter, and less so when there is what amounts to active distraction from it. My own interpretation is that DC did indeed set out to make a case against Cirt, but frankly it seems a case that needed to be made. Within that interpretation I have believe that DC did in fact not intend to leave the BLP with a poorly sourced statement of fact. I should also say that any perceived 'disruption' would be down to Cirts strategy of escalation rather than engagement. In light of this understanding I find the initial AE result missing the mark. There have been a number of suggestions regarding a change of venue for looking at possibly problematic behavior by Cirt, but that is not necessary, the actions of all involved parties is open for investigation and sanction. I don't at the moment remember any prior involvement with Cirt. I don't care much for scientology, I think it is a shame that people can't rest in themselves more, nonetheless I am compelled to speak out against what I read as trying to 'right great wrongs' by way of manipulation, wikilawyering and other tactics meant to sustain a POV rather than engage in open discussion. Especially considering that, unless there is a previous account, Cirt joined wikipedia precisely to engage Scientology see first contributions, such as this (which, if duly sourced and written in a more encyclopedic tone, is an edit I approve wholeheartedly of and sympathize with). The question isn't whether Cirt is fighting 'the good fight', it is if he is fighting it in a manner where there is one. I don't think that we as a community are really mature enough to deal with half measures when it comes to people that can command as much influence as Cirt seems to. I urge you to consider a topic ban on anything related to scientology for Cirt, and either apply it for the same duration for DC or lift it altogether for DC until an actual problem manifests itself. There are plenty of other topics available for editors of their caliber. un☯mi 21:58, 15 December 2010 (UTC) I just came across this exchange with GraemeL which, to my mind, reads as nothing more than an attempt to have DC removed post haste, and a similar one with FisherQueen, note that this is regarding ANI, and prior to the AE round of canvassing. un☯mi 22:47, 15 December 2010 (UTC) It seems that for the initial ANI thread FisherQueen, GraemeL, Jayron32, and HelloAnnyong all got tapped with neutral, non-campaigning notifications. un☯mi 23:14, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by Littleolive oil
Discussion among uninvolved editors about the appeal by Delicious carbuncleResult of the appeal by Delicious carbuncle
I believe the sanction is unnecessary. However, using a Scientology website to establish that somebody is a follower of Scientology is highly dubious. If that fact is relevant to the biography, surely it would be reported by a reliable secondary source. The consensus appears to be against using this source. DC will you abide by the consensus even if you don't agree with it? Cirt, will you drop the matter? Jehochman Talk 16:26, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
The consensus appears to be that DC's topic ban is upheld. Per WP:ARBSCI, this being the first infraction, the ban length is three months, per Courcelles. As for Cirt, this thread is an appeal of a sanction. It is not going to impose a sanction on Cirt, without prejudice to somebody starting a separate thread where evidence of misbehavior by Cirt may be put forward and Cirt given a chance to respond. Finally, if editors involved in this dispute decide to carry on in other venues, they are risking a possible block for WP:BATTLE. If the next administrator, who has not commented here yet, would be so kind as to close the thread, that would be appreciated. Jehochman Talk 21:03, 14 December 2010 (UTC) There is precedent and mandate for imposing restrictions on Cirt if necessary. Per Scott's summary, they seem necessary to me. Topic ban both of them for the same length of time. Note: I don't think this is closable yet, as there is open business. ++Lar: t/c 21:26, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
(undent) It seems like we have a group of people using Wikipedia Review to solicit support for criticizing Crit. Here we find User:Lar and User:Jayen466 for example. [98] Measures may need to be expanded a bit beyond these two to address off site attacks. BTW is Wikipedia Review counted as WP:CANVASSING? Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 22:08, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Per the evidence above, I strongly support the view that Cirt's long term bias in this area merits at least as long a BLP topic ban as DC's one violation. Violating BLP to prove a point as DC did is poor, but the point is itself not a bad one.--Scott Mac 22:45, 14 December 2010 (UTC)
Result of appeal by Delicious carbuncle, section 2Timotheus, could you leave Delicious carbuncle a note linking to Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Discretionary_topic_ban and ask them to confirm that they understand what the concerns are. Additionally, could you strike the sanction on DC logged at WP:ARBSCI, because it clearly failed to follow the prescribed process? I agree with you completely that arbitration remedies must be applied according to process. Improvisation is not allowed (unlike most situations on Wikipedia). As for Cirt, if an uninvolved administrator wants to compile evidence of problematic editing and leave a warning, that would be fine. I will specifically caution those who were canvassed by Cirt, those who've been discussing this on Wikipedia Review, and those who've been advocating for out-of-process sanctions, to please recuse from any administrative action. Any editor is welcome to file an arbitration enforcement request if they feel that an arbitration remedy has been violated. Jehochman Talk 11:57, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Please confirm actual result of appeal I note that Tim hasn't removed DC's sanction as requested by Jehochman, and Future Perfect has removed an AE filing by DC on the grounds that the sanction is still in place. Without commenting on the merits or otherwise of DCs attempted filing, can we please clarify which of three outcomes discussed above applies
Thanks --Elen of the Roads (talk) 11:46, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Thanks for that, I will strike the sanction from the record on grounds of technical non compliance with procedure. Elen of the Roads (talk) 13:10, 17 December 2010 (UTC) |
Silver seren
Communist terrorism is fully protected for a period of three months. No action against respondent. Courcelles 12:53, 17 December 2010 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below. Request concerning Silver seren
The current article makes claims not supported by any sources. Specifically it makes the claim that "organized violence used by Marxist, socialist, or similar left-wing groups is called 'Communist terrorism'". In fact, all sources refer to this type of violence as left-wing terrorism. The arguments for removing the synthesized content have been presented at length on the talk page and the deletion discussion. Despite repeated and extensive searches, no one has been able to find source that would define what "communist terrorism" is, or even to provide any sources for the concept's existence. So far in this edit war I have not made a single revert. In my first edit on December 12. I added tags indicating the disputed content. After my tags were removed by Collect I started a discussion on the talk page, indicating that I would remove the content anyway, unless sources for the content were provided. Today I removed the disputed content, only to be reverted by Silver seren four minutes later. Note that my second edit consists of two parts, done with a 5 second interval. The first part restores tags, the second part self reverts the addition. This is done so, that the article history and the diff would clearly show what was removed and why. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 03:32, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Yes, I regularly do two-step edits with tags in the first step. This is done for two reasons:
You will see, that the two-step edits are clearly marked as such in the edit summary (Step 1 of two-step edit:...) and have the same time stamp. The tags are not intended to start a discussion, unless of course that becomes the version reverted to. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 04:35, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Discussion concerning Silver serenStatement by Silver serenI'm a bit confused about why this section was opened, considering I only made a single revert. This is within the 1RR restriction on the article, which I am already fully aware of (considering it told me so in bright red letters when I edited the page). I felt that more discussion needed to be made on the talk page for these changes, since Petri has only opened a talk page discussion section, but had not responded to others yet. Thus, I reverted him, directing him to the talk page, where I also left a comment a few minutes later. As far as i'm aware, this is all within policy and our rules on the article, so i'm not sure what i've violated. SilverserenC 18:47, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by Volunteer MarekPetri Krohn: Blind revert to previous version - false, the edit was not a "blind revert", in fact it had a detailed edit summary [103] Petri Krohn: without participating in the open discussion - also false. Silver seren's edit was at 2:05, Dec 15th. He made the relevant talk page comment almost immediately explaining the edit at 2:12 [104]. This request was made by Petri at 3:32, hence he had plenty of time to check the talk page. Petri Krohn: So far in this edit war I have not made a single revert. - also false. Petri's addition of tags to the article [105] at 19:38 on Dec 12 was continued with a following revert at [106] at 2:05 Dec 15 [107]. Basically Petri's adding any tags he can think of into the article to make it look like crap, after the AfD for the article failed. This, along with this edit [108] (removing the text he tagged only seconds earlier before allowing for discussion to take place (note that this is another standard tactic of "tag/remove seconds later", [109], [110], [111], which is a clear violation of WP:DR) is part of the strategy he previously outlined here [112] which aims to purposely sabotage articles so that they can be deleted/merged/moved. This appears to be another in a recent line of frivolous AE requests and it seems some people are not getting the message. I'm getting the sense that the situation's slipping out of control here. Volunteer Marek (talk) 04:19, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Statement by BiophysThis looks like a content dispute. Why bring it here? Unlike many others, I never had content disputes with Petri during all these years. It was only once that I tried to have a meaningful content conversation with Petri. The discussion was about quoting a Russian philosopher of 19th Century, as I tried to explain [113]. But that is what Petri responded [114] [115]. Osama bin Laden? No wonder, a lot of people have problems debating content issues with Petri.
Statement by Collect (who just found himself being accused without notification)I find my name bandied sans any notice here. Petri Krohn is a long-term edit warrior in this area, and has unclean hands. The "reverts" do not violate the 1RR restrictons by a mile or so. Nor did I have an "edit war" going on. Ths whole affair is related directly to acts by Petri et al to delete by POVforking the article (Left-wing terrorism), by AfDing the article, by tagging the article (including tagging of single simple English words), and by dab-ing the article. [117] is a falkse use of a "failed verification tag" and Petri had been told that the tag has a specific use noted in the template page. [118] etc. [119] shows the type of Petri's edits clearly. And [120]. And [121]. I would like to AGF that all of these were earnest attempts to improve the article. Others might not do so. The AfD is at [122] in which Petri participated, and where discussion took place regarding all of this. In short, the person who ought to be examined here is Petri, who has an extensive history of notifications, warnings, blocks and bans concerning the topic. Collect (talk) 11:41, 15 December 2010 (UTC) Comments by others about the request concerning Silver serenComment by BorisGI think the filing party need to be sanctioned (at least with a warning) for bringing totally unfounded request to AE - BorisG (talk) 17:05, 16 December 2010 (UTC) Result concerning Silver seren
The remedy requested above is to notify Silver seren under DIGWUREN. I don't see why we would do that. The Arbcom sanction which is listed above as being violated is the 1RR rule on Communist terrorism. Silver seren made only one revert, so he didn't break that. Suggest closing with no action against Silver seren. Can something more be done to limit the warring at Communist terrorism? How about three months of full protection? Any changes that have consensus could then be made via {{editprotect}}. Its current 1RR restriction was imposed due to a complaint filed here at AE on 17 November. Two admins already supported full protection at that time. The article has just survived its third AfD, which was closed by User:Sandstein on 10 December. EdJohnston (talk) 17:56, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
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Jalapenos do exist
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.
Request concerning Jalapenos do exist
- User requesting enforcement
- Gatoclass (talk) 05:12, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
- User against whom enforcement is requested
- Jalapenos do exist (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Sanction or remedy that this user violated
- Wikipedia:ARBPIA#Discretionary_sanctions
- Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
- [123] WP:GAME - see explanation in "Additional comments" section below
- [124] WP:GAME, see below
- [125] WP:GAME, see below
- [126] WP:GAME, see below
- [127], WP:GAME, see below
- [128], WP:GAME, see below
- [129], WP:GAME, see below
- [130], WP:GAME, see below
- [131], WP:GAME, see below
- [132], WP:GAME, see below
- Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
- [133] Warning by Georgewilliamherbert (talk · contribs)
- Enforcement action requested (block, topic ban or other sanction)
- Topic ban. Preferably an extended one.
- Additional comments by editor filing complaint
Substituted short version of evidence below |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Last month, Jalapenos do exist submitted an article, Durban III, to WP:DYK for consideration for promotion to the main page. I happened to notice it in the DYK queue on December 4, about 16 hours before it was due for mainpage display, took a look at the article and decided it was POV. Rather than pulling it from the queue or requesting it be pulled however, I decided to delete the most objectionable items, and allow it to proceed despite my misgivings concerning the rest of the content. I also did some pruning of a related article, World Conference against Racism 2001, here, leaving a note at the article's talk page explaining my edits, here. When I returned to Wikipedia the following day, I noted that Jalapenos had reverted my edit to the second article with the single word Nonsense, restoring some highly tendentious material to the lead which implied that an official UN conference distributed antisemitic libels and "portraits of Adolf Hitler".[134] Jalapenos completely ignored my reasons for deletion given on the talk page in doing so. Moreover, his reversion was made less than 40 minutes before the article was due for (proxy) promotion, leaving almost no time for anybody to see it and prevent it going to the main page. Shortly thereafter, I noticed a second DYK nomination from Jalapenos at T:TDYK, Civilian casualty ratio, with a hook another user described as "agenda-driven". The article had been nominated at AfD by another user and passed, though 14 out of 22 users at the AFD either expressed concerns about or signally failed to endorse the article's content. I too had major concerns about the article, considering it to be an obvious WP:COATRACK for showcasing a handful of carefully cherry-picked, albeit dubious, sources purportedly demonstrating Israel's humanitarian concern for avoiding civilian casualties - a conclusion that I consider to be WP:FRINGE since it flies in the face of a large body of evidence compiled by NGOs criticizing the same state for excessive use of force. My initial impulse once again was simply to argue for disqualification of the article at DYK because the problems were too extensive to be remedied within DYK's short timeframe. After complaints from Jalapenos and one or two of his buddies, however, I decided, once again very much against my better judgement, to try and remedy the worst of the problems myself in an attempt to bring it up to DYK standard, in an effort to avoid Wikidrama (the entire discussion at T:TDYK can be reviewed here). I started working on the article on 5 December. As I had feared, the job turned out to be substantial, requiring a considerable amount of research, and I only finished it on December 13. Throughout, I gave reasons for my edits, both in edit summaries and at the article's talk page. Not once during the entire 9-day period I was editing the article did Jalapenos express the slightest concern about any of my edits, or make a single revert or edit himself, apart from one minor tweak to a header. When I finished, I checked with Jalapenos to ensure he had no concerns with my edits. Jalapenos' reply at my talk page was as follows: I have no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors. I think it should go to DYK.[135] I took this statement, along with his failure to raise any concerns over the previous nine days, as confirmation that he had no substantial concerns about my edits, and on that basis, I withdrew my objection to its promotion at DYK, in spite of the fact that I was still very dissatisfied with the article. The article was promoted to the queue shortly afterward. Yesterday, I returned to Wikipedia to find the article has come and gone on the mainpage. To my astonishment, I found that in a series of edits, Jalapenos with a little help from Mbz had reverted almost all my edits pertaining to Israel in the article, essentially restoring in its entirety the original version to which I (and a number of other users) had strenuously objected 9 days before. Once again, Jalapenos left his series of edits to the very last moment, only beginning them a few minutes after the article appeared on the mainpage, leaving the least possible time for those edits to be challenged. I submit that this behaviour of Jalapenos represents a transparent and egregious breach of WP:GAME, in particular example 9 of the guideline, I quote: Bad faith negotiating – Luring other editors into a compromise by making a concession, only to withhold that concession after the other side has compromised. That is precisely what Jalapenos has done in this case. He allowed me to sweat over his article for more than a week in trying to bring it up to scratch, with not a single complaint, assured me at the end of the process that he had no objections to the article in its current form - and then just made wholesale reverts the minute the article appeared on the mainpage. This series of edits by Jalapenos also represents a blatant, and indeed successful, attempt to subvert DYK's established article review process. Jalapenos knew that his version of the article was heading for rejection at T:TDYK; he allowed me to bring it to a condition in which it could be approved, only to revert to the earlier contentious version once it made it to the main page. To list just some of his reverts, all made just after midnight 14 December, a few minutes after the article appeared on the main page:
Jalapenos knew that all this content was contested, but restored it all anyway - 15 minutes after the article appeared on the main page. Finally, a look through Jalapenos' talk pages reveals that his main contribution to the encyclopedia appears to be as the author of a string of articles which have been nominated for AFD, most of them being deleted for lack of notability and many with POV concerns, as follows:
I am therefore requesting a substantial topic ban for this user. Gatoclass (talk) 05:12, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
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Short version of evidence
Since some users have complained that my evidence is too long, here's the short version:
- November 23: Jalapenos do exist self noms an article, Civilian casualty ratio, at DYK.[151]
- November 24: The article is nominated for deletion.
- December 3: The AFD is closed as keep, but 14 out of 22 users express concerns about the content of the article.
- Discussion about whether or not to promote the article to the mainpage continues at DYK. After a number of people including myself express POV concerns about the article's content, I eventually reluctantly agree to work with Jalapenos to try and fix the problems. The complete discussion at DYK can be read here.
- December 6: I start working on the article.
- December 6: I remove Dershowitz from lead as wp:undue.[152]
- December 6: I remove Dershowitz as not a reliable source.[153]
- December 6: I remove Gordon as a partisan source.[154]
- December 6: I refactor Katz.[155]
- December 6: I add some info about the Goldstone Report for balance.[156]
- December 7: Philip Baird Shearer (PBS) complains about some of the article's content under two different headers, the complete discussions can be read here and here.
- December 8: I leave a note at DYK stating that a new user is complaining about the article content.[157]
- December 8: Jalapenos responds to my note at DYK as follows: I don't see any "holdup" or a new user objecting to any content. I see PBS objecting to section headings recently added by you. I tend to agree with his assessment that your additions are WP:SYNTH, but it's only section headings, no big deal.[158] Note that he doesn't mention any of my previous deletions. He just says the dispute between me and PBS is "no big deal", and that he sees no reason for a "holdup", ie he sees no substantive disagreements that would stop the article being promoted at DYK.
- December 9: After a discussion between PBS and myself on the article's talk page, I agree that Kaldor is a dubious source, and remove her from the article lede.[159]
- December 9: After another discussion with PBS on the talk page, I agree with PBS that Oren is also a dubious source and replace him with a better and more comprehensive source.[160]
- December 9-13: I add a whole bunch more stuff about some other wars to the article.
- December 12: I notify Jalapenos that I am just about done editing the article. Since he hasn't participated in talk page discussion or challenged any of my edits over the last six days, I ask him to confirm that the content as it stands is acceptable to him.[161] He replies: I have no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors. I think it should go to DYK.[162]
- December 12: Jalapenos also leaves a note at the DYK discussion: Let's do this. After making his own changes to the article, Gatoclass has told me that he thinks it should be promoted.[163]
- December 12: Assuming from these statements, and from his lack of challenges to my edits over the last six days, that he has no problem with the content and the article is stable, I concur that the article is ready for an independent review.[164]
- December 13: EdChem approves the current version of the article for promotion.[165]
- 00:00, December 14: The DYK bot moves the next update containing the hook to Jalapenos' article to the main page.[166]
- 00:14, December 14: Jalapenos deletes some criticism of Israel from the article.[167]
- 00:19, 14 December: Jalapenos restores Dershowitz.[168]
- 00:21, December 14: Jalapenos deletes more criticism of Israel.[169]
- 00:24, December 14: Jalapenos restores Katz.[170]
- 00:24, Decmber 14: Jalapenos restores Gordon.[171]
- 00:26, December 14: Jalapenos restores Dershowitz to lead.[172]
- 00:27, December 14: Jalapenos restores Kaldor.[173]
- 00:31, December 14: Jalapenos restores Oren.[174]
So hopefully now the situation is clearer. Jalapenos nominated an article to DYK that numerous users found problematic; I worked on that article for 8 days to NPOV it so it could be promoted; J. made no attempt to challenge any of my edits for any of those 8 days, except to comment that he saw only one minor issue that was "no big deal". He confirmed at the end of that 8 days in response to my query that he had no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors; EdChem approved that same version of the article on the basis that it was NPOV and stable; and then, 15 minutes after the article was promoted to the main page, Jalapenos made wholesale changes that essentially restored his own version of the article which had been headed for rejection 8 days prior.
Jalapenos subverted the DYK quality control process by allowing me to bring the article to a state where it could be approved at DYK, only to revert back to his own heavily contested version a few minutes after the article was promoted to the main page. That constitutes an egregious violation of WP:GAME. He also clearly negotiated in bad faith for an extended period, staying silent through all my changes except to indicate at one point that outstanding disputes were "no big deal", and leading me to believe at the end of that process that he had no substantial objections to the article "in its current form" in order to gain my consent for the article's promotion, only to restore virtually all the contested content when the article went to the mainpage. Gatoclass (talk) 20:49, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Question: JDE claims that you tagged articles as under dicretionary scanctions after JDE made his edits, and then reported his violation of these sanctions here, and without warning. Is that right? Thanks. - BorisG (talk) 03:09, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Response to Tznkai
In response to your questions Tznkai - this case is not about the content of Jalapenos' edits. My references to the content were simply a means of supplying some background information about the origins of the dispute.
There are two issues at hand in this case:
- Firstly, that J. subverted DYK's established quality control processes, taking advantage of my week's worth of editing to get the article passed at DYK, only to substantially restore his rejected version when the article appeared on the mainpage;
- Secondly, that J. engaged in bad faith negotiating per WP:GAME in that he led me to believe he had no substantive issues with the edits I made to the article over a period of more than a week, even assuring me at the end of that process that he had no objections to the article in its current form, before restoring virtually all the content I had removed as the article went to the mainpage.
I consider the first issue above to be an egregious breach of process since it affects content which appears on the main page. His edits made a total mockery of DYK's quality control processes. If we were to allow this sort of thing, we might as well just ditch the DYK process altogether and allow users to promote their own articles with no scrutiny. The second in my opinion represents an unacceptable breach of faith. But both are clear breaches of GAME.
One additional clarification. J. and brewcrewer have both attempted to rebut my case by arguing that J. did not delete all my edits. But I never claimed that. What I said is that J. reverted almost all my edits pertaining to Israel. He restored almost in its entirety his version of the Israeli section of the article, which he knew had been protested at DYK by multiple users, which he knew I had deleted or refactored for NPOV reasons. The only part of that section which he did not remove, presumably because he could think of no grounds for doing so, was the subsection I added on the 1982 Lebanon War, but even there he made a deletion.[175]
However, he in fact went even further than that, restoring virtually all of the material he knew was contested - not only in the Israeli section, but also in the lead, restoring kalder and dershowitz, and in the NATO section, restoring Oren. Kalder and Oren, moreover, were disputed not only by myself but also by Philip Baird Shearer on the talk page, so that these last two edits were made not only in subversion of the DYK process and in violation of GAME as described above, but also against talk page consensus. The fact that he left some other material I added to the article is irrelevant. The point is that he restored virtually all the contested content, knowing that content had already failed to achieve consensus at DYK, doing so a few minutes after the article's appearance on the main page when he had had the opportunity to contest those edits for more than a week, and after assuring me disingenuously that he had no objections to the article in its current form. Gatoclass (talk) 07:45, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
BTW, Jalapenos' claim that the article appeared on the main page at 6:00 am 14 December is incorrect. The article appeared on the main page at 0:00 14 December,[176] and J. began his reverts 14 minutes later.[177] Gatoclass (talk) 09:33, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Suggestion
Regarding the proposed remedies, why not simply make it that he can't edit articles in the topic area at all so long as they are on the mainpage? It's hardly an onerous restriction, and it would completely prevent any further attempts at gaming. Gatoclass (talk) 23:29, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Response to EdJohnston
First of all, let me say that I'm not fussed whether Jalapenos is sanctioned for his gaming or not. My primary concern in bringing this case to AE was to send a message to Jalapenos and any other editor contemplating gaming the DYK process as he did that it is unacceptable behaviour. In that regard, I will consider the purpose of this case served if J. is warned against any repeat of this conduct.
However, I must take issue with Ed's suggestion that the case may not fall under the purview of ARBPIA. I don't know what he means by this, but Wikipedia:ARBPIA#Discretionary_sanctions clearly states amongst other things that serious breaches of any expected standards of behavior, or any normal editorial process in the topic area are actionable. J.'s edits were self-evidently related to the topic area, so that's not an issue. The question then is whether or not his conduct constituted a "serious breach" of expected standards of behaviour or normal editorial processes. Obviously not everybody is familiar with DYK's processes but I would have thought the GAMEing aspect would be clear enough to anyone who gave it a moment's thought. If an article has been through a review process that clears it for mainpage promotion, and then someone comes along and restores large slabs of contested content that had previously been removed as a result of that review while the article is on the main page, of course that is gaming. Otherwise we might as well just scrap the review process altogether and let editors promote whatever they like to the main page. Gatoclass (talk) 10:47, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- On reflection, I feel obliged to respond to some more of EdJohnston's comments, since I consider them to be quite misinformed.
- First of all, Ed asks: This article was created by Jalapenos, but I wonder how it became his duty to fix all the perceived problems before it could become a DYK. Firstly, if you author an article and submit it to DYK, the responsibility is very much on you to ensure it complies with both content policies and DYK rules. Why on earth should it be otherwise? Does anyone nominate an article for promotion at GA or FAC and expect somebody else to fix it for them? I am totally mystified by this comment of Ed's. It is even odder given that Ed himself notes that I did substantial work on this article to bring it up to DYK standard. I was under absolutely no obligation to do so, and the article would have failed without my work to it. Ed's question would more appropriately be Why should Gatoclass have to work so hard to fix somebody's else's DYK submission? I can assure you I've been asking myself precisely the same question.
- Secondly, Ed says The actual DYK hook was "... that according to a study by the International Committee of the Red Cross, the civilian casualty ratio in wars fought since the mid-20th century has been 10 civilian deaths for every soldier death?" That hook sounds innocuous and does not have an obvious POV. I very much agree. That's because the original hook submitted by Jalapenos was rejected as agenda driven, as a simple look at the DYK discussion demonstrates.[178]
- These comments of Ed's along with some others indicate to me that he hasn't been paying much attention to the evidence presented in this case. Ed, if as you suggested you don't have the "patience" to give proper consideration to this case, then I request you leave its adjudication to those who do. Regards, Gatoclass (talk) 12:02, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Discussion concerning Jalapenos do exist
Statement by Jalapenos do exist
This is my first time here, and I'm kind of taken aback, so I may be missing something. I understand that Gatoclass is accusing me of having violated WP:ARBPIA#Discretionary sanctions with one edit to World Conference against Racism 2001 and nine edits to Civilian casualty ratio, which I authored. But none of these edits were made to articles that were under ARBPIA discretionary sanctions, so how could I have violated them?
Civilian casualty ratio is about a general military history topic. Its only relevance to the Arab-Israeli conflict in particular is that one of the ratio's extreme values appears from the data and is explicitly stated by a notable observer to have been achieved within the Arab-Israeli conflict. Why should it be under ARBPIA sanctions? When I checked a few minutes ago, I did not see that anyone had ever put an ARBPIA warning tag on it or expressed in any other way the notion that it should be under these sanctions [179].
Similarly, World Conference against Racism 2001 is about a United Nations conference on racism, not about the Arab-Israeli conflict. Here, too, nobody had ever put an ARBPIA warning tag on the article or expressed in any other way the notion that it should be under ARBPIA sanctions. After I made the edit in question, someone did put an ARBPIA warning tag on the article. The person was - you guessed it - Gatoclass himself [180]. I fail to see the logic of placing the tag on this article, but that's a discussion for another time. The point is that I had no way of knowing that Gatoclass would, in the future, put the tag there, and I had no other reason to suspect that anyone would consider this article to be within the area of the Arab-Israeli conflict.
I should note that the third article mentioned in Gatoclass's accusation (in the additional comments section), Durban III, which I authored, is exactly like the second one in these regards. In no way is it evident that someone would consider it to be within the area of the Arab-Israeli conflict, its only connection being peripheral. And nobody had ever expressed the notion that the article should be under ARBPIA sanctions until Gatoclass himself placed a warning tag on it after the edits for which he accuses me of violating ARBPIA sanctions [181].
Gatoclass's various charges in the "additional comments" section are as empty as the accusation itself. I'll respond to them, too, because I want to protect my reputation.
The edit I made to WCAR 2001, supposedly "highly tendentious", was: "The conference included distribution of the antisemitic forgery The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, portraits of Adolf Hitler, and expressions of hatred for Jews." This was virtually a quote from a news article by Gloria Galloway in the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail, which said, in the voice of the writer: "The initial conference in 2001 included distribution of the Chronicles [sic] of the Elders of Zion, a fake text purporting to be a Jewish plan for global domination, portraits of Adolph [sic] Hitler, and expressions of hatred for Jews" [182]. (Interestingly, the Globe and Mail paragraph has since been changed online [183] to the point where it does not support my original edit. This may be why Gatoclass challenged it, and if that's the case he was right to do so.) The edit was improper, Gatoclass says, because it "was made less than 40 minutes before the article was due for (proxy) promotion, leaving almost no time for anybody to see it and prevent it going to the main page". Huh? WTF is "proxy promotion"? This article, several years old, was not up for promotion. A different article, Durban III was up for DYK promotion at around the same time, a fact that I was not even aware of. Am I supposed to constantly check DYK so that I can avoid making edits to any article related to an article about to be promoted there?
Next we have the suggestion that I gamed the system with my behavior regarding Civilian casualty ratio and the process of its DYK promotion. I'll ignore Gatoclass's extremely long prefatory attempt to discredit the article itself, because it's irrelevant. His point seems to be that I deceived him about my position on his series of changes to the article in order to get him to support it for DYK promotion. Here is my position, which has never changed and which is shared by other editors (who are not "one or two of my buddies", by the way): some of his edits were bad, but these bad edits were not so significant as to make the article unsuitable for DYK. I happened to have stated this position to Gatoclass, both on the DYK talk [184] and on his talk page [185] (cited, oddly, by Gatoclass). If I had wanted to deceive him about my position, I probably would have said something - anything - to him that was actually inconsistent with my position. I did not.
Gatoclass's notion that I deceived him also seems to rely on the fairly solipsistic assumption that his opinion is what decided whether the article would go to DYK. Since I don't and did not share this assumption, I had no reason to care an awful lot about his opinion, and thus no reason to try and change it through deception. In fact, seeing at the time that he was the only editor to object to the article's promotion (after I had responded to concerns by other editors), I thought that an article would not ultimately be denied DYK because of a single editor objecting. But I was frustrated that the discussion had been dragging on for so long because of it, so when Gatoclass came around, I happily reported it on the talk page. The idea that I was negotiating in bad faith by making treacherous concessions seems very odd to me, for the simple reason that we were never negotiating and so I made no concessions.
Next there are the edits that I made countering some of Gatoclass's changes to Civilian casualty ratio. There are so many falsehoods and half truths here that I'm going to have to move to bullet points.
- He allowed me to sweat over his article for more than a week in trying to bring it up to scratch, with not a single complaint... Wrong, I did complain on the DYK talk page (diff provided above), and so did others, both on the DYK talk page and on the article's talk page.
- ...assured me at the end of the process that he had "no objections to the article in its current form". This is a misleading fragment of what I said. The complete sentence was: "I have no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors." What I actually said was an accurate description of my position.
- I took this statement, along with his failure to raise any concerns over the previous nine days, as confirmation that he had no substantial concerns about my edits, Again, I did raise substantial concerns, including the specific concern that another editor was correct in characterizing some of his edits as WP:SYNTH (above diff from DYK talk). Even if I hadn't, I don't see how Gatoclass's inference would have been justified.
- and on that basis, I withdrew my objection to its promotion at DYK, in spite of the fact that I was still very dissatisfied with the article. Baffling. Why is the question of whether I had any substantial concerns over his edits a reason to withdraw his objection to DYK? If he was "still very dissatisfied with the article" he could have continued to object. What does he want from me?
- To my astonishment, I found that in a series of edits, Jalapenos with a little help from Mbz... There seems to be an insinuation here that I acted in coordination with Mbz. I did not. Mbz was simply one of the other editors who objected to Gatoclass's changes.
- ...had reverted almost all my edits pertaining to Israel in the article, essentially restoring in its entirety the original version to which I (and a number of other users) had strenuously objected 9 days before. I didn't essentially restore in its entirety the original version. Many of Gatoclass's changes were good (i.e. they added relevant, sourced material), and I left them untouched. Perhaps I reverted "almost all" of his edits pertaining to Israel. I made a lot of changes, and I wasn't interested in what country the edits pertained to; I was interested in whether they were policy compliant or not.
- Once again, Jalapenos left his series of edits to the very last moment, only beginning them a few minutes after the article appeared on the mainpage, leaving the least possible time for those edits to be challenged. Looking at the records, this appears to be false. I see that I made a series of changes slightly after midnight on 14 December, and that the article appeared on DYK at 06:00 that day (Wikipedia:Recent_additions#14_December_2010). My knowledge about the DYK process is shaky, but if my motivation were to keep the edits from being challenged before the article appeared on DYK, wouldn't it have been the worst timing to edit six hours before it went to DYK, when there would have been the most attention on it and more than sufficient time to change the edits? The reason I didn't make the edits earlier was because I carefully looked at all of Gatoclass's changes only on 12 December, after he told me that he was "pretty much all done" [186]. On 13 December I was busy and didn't edit any articles. On 14 December I sat down for a Wiki session and saw a template on my talk page that the article was going to be on DYK. I vaguely remember that when I sat down I intended to edit other articles and procrastinate on this one, and I was spurred to prioritize it by the pride of seeing the template. If my memory is correct, there was an indirect connection between the DYK timing and the timing of my edits, but I don't see anything improper about the connection.
- To list just some of his reverts... Indeed, some. The selection and the inaccurate comments about the talk page seem to be an attempt to portray the situation as if I was the only person who had a problem with his edits. Boy, was this ever not the case. Not only did other editors object to his edits, but Gatoclass was clearly aware of this because he actually tried to stall the DYK process because of another editor's objections to his edits. [187] I'm going to repeat that because it's just so unbelievable. Gatoclass unilaterally made a series of edits to the article up for DYK. Another editor immediately objected to some of the edits. Gatoclass tried to stall the DYK process by saying that the objections to his own recent edits constituted a "dispute" that had to be resolved. A few days later, he tries to portray my objections as idiosyncratic and against consensus.
- Jalapenos knew that all this content was contested But only by Gatoclass.
- but restored it all anyway, 15 minutes after the article appeared on the main page. Again, this appears to be false.
His final point is that I've authored articles that have been nominated for AfD. First, a couple of minor corrections: I am not the author of Latma TV, and I requested deletion myself for Claims of Israeli organ harvesting in Haiti. More to the point: yes, I've done a lot of things on Wikipedia, and authored many articles. Some of my articles, especially among the ones that actually are about the Arab-Israeli conflict, have been nominated for AfD. (Gatoclass didn't list them all. I don't know what criteria his selection is based on.) Those who have had shared the misfortune of editing in this area know that pretty much every article is nominated for AfD at some point. I'm proud of the fact that the community consensus on most of those articles was that they should be kept.
After reading the accusation again and again, I can't escape the feeling that Gatoclass is making it with unclean hands. He is accusing me of violating ARBIA sanctions. Why did he omit the fact that he is the (only) one who said that the relevant articles should be under ARBPIA sanctions, and that he did so after the edits for which he accuses me? This fact is, after all, clearly important to understanding the accusation, and he must have been aware of it. For that matter, why did he place the tags after I made the edits for which he's accusing me, when he was involved in both articles and was clearly aware of their nature before I made those edits ([188] [189] and see history)? Finally, why did he immediately run here without so much as telling me that he thought my edits were improper? After all, we had recently interacted in a collegial way. And since he clearly did a lot of research on me before making this complaint, he must have seen that I've received compliments and barnstars for my work from editors with diverse POVs (the barnstars are displayed on my user page). If an editor is in good standing, wouldn't it make sense to at least talk to him before filing a formal complaint?
Jeepers, that took a long time. Jalapenos do exist (talk) 01:46, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by EdChem
I was the editor who approved the DYK nomination and hook. I did so having previously expressed severe reservations about the article and its content. When I approved the hook, I checked to see that the material in the article that concerned me had been brought into compliance with policy. I congratulated Gatoclass on his work and also added a DYKmake credit for him, in recognition of the work he describes above. I would not have approved the nomination with the article changes that were subsequently made in place, and I consider the actions of Jalapenos do exist to be very poor editing behaviour. EdChem (talk) 11:03, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Follow Up, having read Jalapenos do exist's (JDE's) post, and having thought further...
- I am not sure that this is the right place for dealing with the issues raised by JDE's actions – as in, whether ARBPIA provides the most apposite framework – but I am sure his actions call for a response.
- I dispute JDE's claim that only Gatoclass raised objections. In this post at T:TDYK on the nomination of the civilian casualty ratio article, I noted that there were three dispute tags, on the page. I now know that they were added by Gatoclass, and were removed shortly after by JDE, but was not so aware when I posted my comment. However, my edit summary ("with three dispute tags (justified ones), not a chance this is going to get cleaned up in time") makes it perfectly clear that I was not just taking the presence of the tags as evidence of neutrality problems, but I had independently formed the view they were appropriate tags. As for timing, the nomination was already 13 days old at the time, hence my view that the problems would not be addressed quickly enough for DYK.
- The AfD contains plenty of comments indicating concerns about POV, separate from those expressed by Gatoclass.
- From my perspective, the article had two major flaws. The first was that it was not global in its coverage, devoting something more than half the article to Israeli / Palestinian / Middle Eastern issues. The second was that its presentation of Israeli material (especially) was not neutral. Gatoclass' changes addressed both of these problems, and the reversion / changes JDE made after the DYK nomination was approved left the new globalised content in place but reversed most of the Israeli coverage to restore the highly POV perspective.
- When I approved the hook and article I explicitly approved the neutral hook ALT1, credited for his Gatoclass contributions and I indicated that my earlier concerns had been addressed ("I am now satisfied with the article"). To be 2000% clear, I would not have approved the version with the changes JDE made subsequently, and whether or not his actions are sanctionable here they certainly warrant discussion at DYK. Nominating a POV article for DYK, allowing the neutrality to be fixed enough for the nomination to be approved, then re-adding the POV for main page exposure is unacceptable behaviour. No matter what else, JDE has seriously damaged the extent to which I will be willing to AGF on any future DYK nominations of his with POV problems. DYK has been criticised recently for material which we have allowed to reach the main page, and in some cases justifiably. Gaming the system to try to put POV material onto the main page is a serious matter and DYK has a serious issue to address irrespective of what is decided here.
- This diff compares the last version from Gatoclass with the present JDE version (nearly 24 hours and 25 edits later). I contend that it demonstrates the POV being added. Note particularly that very similar comments from Dershowitz appear in the lede and twice in the text, and his name appears 5 times in the text in JDE's version. The section Israeli air strikes in the Gaza Strip appears to entirely omit any Palestinian perspective; I have the suspicion that the Palestian view of the Israeli Defence Forces is less rosy.
- I regret that I did not say more at T:TDYK to make explicit that I agreed with Gatoclass' concerns about the article, and those expressed in the AfD, and I was awaiting the progress he was making. I did not comment when the dispute tags were removed because I thought it would just provoke disagreements, and I felt whether the tags were on the article or not, the DYK nomination would still not pass without problems being addressed.
- To address a couple of other concerns:
- No, I have not been canvassed in any way either about the DYK nomination or this AE thread.
- No, I am not anti-Israeli... one of the only other DYK noms I have !voted be disallowed was this post about the Jewish lawyer article... I considered the proposed hook / nomination to be "gratuitously offensive", and I even raised the article in a post to Jimbo.
EdChem (talk) 08:24, 16 December 2010 (UTC) copy edited EdChem (talk) 13:59, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Comments by others about the request concerning Jalapenos do exist
I was involved with the World Conference against Racism 2001 and Durban III articles and the AfD and DYK nominations of the civilian casualties articles and endorse Gatoclass' account of Jalapenos do exist's conduct in relation to these articles. My proposal to add some balance to the Durban III article by including a mention that the references quoted in the article [which were added originally by Jalapenos and were, in several instances, conservative opinion pieces rather than neutral RS] had stated that most UN members had voted in favour of the conference being held were dismissed by Jalapenos do exist as part of me "being silly": [190]. I walked away from this article as I've got no interest in being involved in the Arab-Israeli edit wars. Nick-D (talk) 11:10, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
I too have worked on articles that JDE has submitted for inclusion at DYK as well as elsewhere. I also endorse Gatoclass' report and would like to also point out this edit made to exploding animal which was extremely POV and unsourced and which they were happier to edit war over than discuss (see their talk and the article history). The changes made to the CCR article, partcularly reinserting the comments by Alan Dershowitz, whilst on the main page represent an unbelievable gaming of the system. SmartSE (talk) 11:15, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Brewcrewer
Gatoclass says: essentially restoring in its entirety the original version to which I (and a number of other users) had strenuously objected 9 days before. This does not appear to be true. JDE's final edits to the article appear to have included many of Gatoclass's substantial edits. See the difference in nine days of Gatoclass's and JDE's latest edits.[191]
Also JDE's comment "I have no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors", gave a greater indication that he was unsatisfied rather then satisfied with all of Gatoclass's changes to the article. --brewcrewer (yada, yada) 14:33, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Unomi
Collapsed responses to comments that are now removed |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
Comment regarding Mbz1I did not intend to contribute further to the AE thread than to clarify the context of the particular recommendation that Mbz1 misrepresented. But now I am compelled to respond to Mbz1's charges. I have previously had disagreements over article content with Gatoclass and Mbz1, where Gatoclass supported and collaborated with Mbz1, that discussion is here if anyone is interested, from this I got the impression that Gatoclass cares deeply about DYK in and of itself, as he was trying to avoid a unilateral retraction by Mbz1. Any editor can look at Mbz1's comments to Gatoclass on his talk page and its archives, example: "You are really doing a great job on Tub'a Abu Kariba As'ad, and I mean it! I will for sure ask for your help next time I write an article :) Thanks. --Mbz1 (talk) 15:26, 10 July 2010 (UTC)" and "Hi Gatoclass, I am glad you liked my new article. ☺Don't understand how could I have forgotten to ask you to copy edit it ☺? Glad you found it anyway ☺. I'd like to ask you a question please. If after your copy-editing something will be left out of the article ☺, would you mind, if I am to promote you as a creator in the DYK nomination for the article? Regards.--Mbz1 (talk) 17:11, 10 December 2010 (UTC)". The current vilification of Gatoclass by Mbz1 strikes me as opportunistic in the extreme and seems to serve only to run interference and avoid scrutiny of the matters brought here by Gatoclass. As for the diffs that Mbz1 present regarding Sol Hachuel, please read the article, it is not long. I think that they precisely show why Mbz1 is incapable of working on articles where there is risk of her becoming emotionally attached - The main sources are Folktales of the Jews, Volume 1 which has 2 parts on it, the first is a rendition of one version of the folk tale, and the second is a commentary on it, crucially mentioning that a. various accounts of events differ and b. that the person telling the tale to them, had variations of their own. The commentary also uses language such as legend, tale and rendition, the article that Mbz1 would have us think above critique has not the slightest mention of such concerns. Note that above Mbz1 says that she was burned alive, I have yet to find a source that doesn't claim that she was beheaded, clearly Mbz1 either confuses herself or drastically misread Moshe Ben Sa adon's text, with its reference to leviticus 1:9. The sources can't even agree on which year it was supposed to have happened in, some saying 1834, others 1831 or even 1830, likewise the age of Sol changes from 13 - 17. The most 'serious' source I could find, Sharon Vance, "Sol Ha-Saddikah: Historical figure, saint, literary heroine looks at the underlying framing of the different renditions for different audiences and narrator intent, particularly politics and stereotypes, acknowledging that none of the renditions available are 'professional histories' but are rather "historical documents for the images of Christian, Muslim and Jewish men and women that were current in their literary traditions at the time these texts were written." I have documented similar willful neglect of conveying the content of the sources at the Yolande Harmer article where she, in a 3 page source used 10 times in the article, studiously ignores what Benny Morris and Ian Black presents as: "She did, however have one notable success in this period, penetrating the US Embassy and obtaining secret cables sent by Jefferson Patterson .. to the State Department in Washington. One of them, which reached the Israeli Foreign Ministry in August, contained militarily useful information about the numbers of Tunisian and Algerian troops fighting with the Arab forces in Palestine" - one notable success and it is not mentioned anywhere in the article. I added that information when checking the sources, but I see that she later removed it with the ES of "not confirmed by other sources" the gall of which beggars belief considering the stature of Benny Morris, the apparent lack of sources contesting it and the fact that half of the article is sourced to only that particular source, yet was left untouched. Let me be blunt here, it is my impression that Mbz1 does not care one iota for the empiric quality of our articles, certainly not when they touch on matters which she seems to have a compulsion about. Rather, she abuses wikipedia and DYK to promote a narrative that she finds valuable. I understand that these are "content issues", individually, and I certainly do not expect resolution of them here, however I do believe that they show a tendentious approach to editing which show why Mbz1's contribution in this field cannot be left without scrutiny. Framing my concerns as a "personal vendetta" is convenient, but false, I would take any editor behaving in this manner to task. un☯mi 05:14, 16 December 2010 (UTC) |
Re Jalapenos and Civilian_casualty_ratio
Leadup
03 December AfD concludes, noting that there was not a strong consensus for keep.
There are a large number of editors raising concerns regarding npov specifically regarding the presentation of Israel, both at the AfD and at DYK.
According to the DYK thread:
17:39, 12 December 2010 (UTC) Jalapenos states: "Let's do this. After making his own changes to the article, Gatoclass has told me that he thinks it should be promoted[1]. So do I. Jalapenos do exist (talk) 17:39, 12 December 2010 (UTC)", at that point the article looks like this.
19:58, 12 December 2010 (UTC) Mbz1 states: "I see no problems with the article. It should be promoted.--Mbz1 (talk) 19:58, 12 December 2010 (UTC)"
- It would almost be ABF to not understand that as Mbz1 and Jalapenos considering it in a state where it can be considered stable. No tags are added, no concerns seem raised on the article talk page at or around that time.
10:45, 13 December 2010 User:EdChem accepts the article on behalf of DYK stating: "I am now satisfied with the article and with ALT1 about the international red cross. I have also added a DYKmake for Gatoclass, who has made a substantial contribution to the article. EdChem (talk) 10:45, 13 December 2010 (UTC)".
At that point the article looks like this.
The diff between the state of when Jalapenos intimated consent and EdChem granted DYK is negligible
Thoughts on Jalapenos Comments
Jalapenos seems to plead ignorance on the requirement that articles to be shown on the frontpage are relatively stable and uncontested, this seems an unlikely condition as he, at the very least, must have read "The article has three dispute tags, and the DYK rules disallow any dispute tags in articles going to the main page. EdChem (talk) 11:16, 5 December 2010 (UTC)" on the DYK thread, reinserting information that he knew was contested prior to a discussion that settled the matter would certainly achieve that.
Jalapenos writes above "Again, I did raise substantial concerns, including the specific concern that another editor was correct in characterizing some of his edits as WP:SYNTH", but submits only:
16:05, 8 December 2010 (UTC)
"I don't see any "holdup" or a new user objecting to any content. I see PBS objecting to section headings recently added by you. I tend to agree with his assessment that your additions are WP:SYNTH, but it's only section headings, no big deal. Jalapenos do exist (talk)".
Note that the synth was regarding whether to characterize some of them as conventional vs asymmetric.
At which point the article looks like this
and
17:35, 12 December 2010 (UTC) "I have no objections to the article in its current form that exceed the usual disagreements between editors. I think it should go to DYK. Jalapenos do exist (talk)", as mentioned above.
At no point in this period is "Professor Alan Dershowitz of Harward Law School" in the article, much less the lede, no additional content has been offered for discussion, none have been boldly edited in. Not a single comment regarding specific issues that Jalapenos, or Mbz1 wanted addressed seems to have been forwarded. The substantial concerns seem to have been the no big deal headings.
Yet, 8 days after the Dershowitz section was removed Jalapenos reinserts it verbatim, minutes after the article is on the frontpage[192]. Note that Jalapenos did not argue against Carwils objection to Dershowitz at the AfD, he did not contest the removal by Gatoclass nor the specific issues that spurred it. The same goes for the remaining edits that are plain to see from the recent edit history, I see no point to analyze them individually other than to say that they do in fact support Jalapenos statement of "Perhaps I reverted "almost all" of his edits pertaining to Israel." - all content related changes were to Israeli related sections, and the majority went directly against concerns raised at AfD and DYK, as well as the talk page itself. un☯mi 08:54, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Comment re proposed remedy
I find it welcome that new options for remedies are explored, I do think that it will leave the parties that felt directly wronged in this unsatisfied, I know I would ;) Nonetheless, it will be interesting to see how it ends, so how can I not support it. Welcome to the ARBPIA grind Tznkai. un☯mi 19:12, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Comment re what could be a better remedy
The proposed one. Have a look at the state of the article when it was mainspaced. Compare that to the current, which was the state that it was in when it was on the frontpage, the material relating to Israel is nearly identical, terrorists has become millitants, at least in some cases, and the lede has become slightly more fluffed, that is *all*. None of the issues raised at the AfD, were addressed, at least not long enough that it mattered for the 1.8k viewers that now might be led to believe that this is the standard to which we hold ourselves. If we really think that this is a Hanlons razor issue, we should likely issue a topic ban out of sheer WP:COMPETENCE concerns. If on the other hand we accept that the user had no intentions of letting other people influence the parts of the article that they were concerned with, and that they also did it solely for the purpose of maximizing exposure, (as he would know they would be reverted when discovered) then where are we at? un☯mi 20:47, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Comment Re EdJohnston writing
- "This article was created by Jalapenos, but I wonder how it became his duty to fix all the perceived problems before it could become a DYK."
The DYK process concerns both the hook, but also the article as it will have maximum exposure on behalf of wikipedia. It was not Jalapenos responsibility to fix them, it was not anyones responsibility, but as shown here, if the issues were not fixed then it would simply not be suitable for displaying on the main page, by consensus of the editors there as noted by Schwede66. Gatoclass took it upon himself to fix the issues, and the editors involved seemed to agree that there were no outstanding issues, including mbz1 and Jalapenos, so it was approved by EdChem. 14 minutes after the article has gained maximum exposure, Jalapenos starts editing it away from the consensus version, and after 26 minutes of being on the front page all the Israeli related contested elements are restored. un☯mi 11:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Sol
In regard to the below question of actual damages, I think the idea is that editors agreed to the removal of the POV material only to side-step administrative procedure and quickly re-inserted it after the article was put on the main page which, if that's the case, would be blatant gamesmanship. Regardless of how it happened, WP ended up featuring an article with a healthy serving of POV-pushing. Whoops. Sol (talk) 06:41, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by BorisG
When I read Gatoclass's statement, I thought it was a serious attempt to game the system, but upon reading JDE's defence, I see this is not so at all. The whole thing is very confusing (with walls of text from both sides), but it seems that Gatoclass has deliberately misquoted JDE at least on one occasion. If that happenned, then he may not be with clean hands. Not to mention that there is nothing wrong with writing articles that are later deleted upon consensus. I think there is no obvious case against JDE.
- The misquoting is now removed, but it seems that Gatoclass tagged articles as under dicretionary scanctions after JDE made his edits, and now claims violation of these sanctions, and without warning. Something is not right. - BorisG (talk) 03:06, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Cptnono
I can see how gaming could be interpreted from the actions of both editors. Not sure what (if anything) should be done about Gatoclass but this being the second time DYKs in the topic area have brought criticism of him here, Sandstein might have had the right idea if he was being a little wary.[193] Removing him from DYK or topic baning him would not be beneficial to the project but restrictions on his work (not talk page use) on DYKs in the topic areas might be something to consider. Not sure if that is even warranted but there were some concerns raised that appear to be partially valid.
In response to Tznkai's suggestion, AGF could show that JDE was not gaming the system but AGF can only go so far. You are correct that the insertion of material after multiple objections was a problem even if it wasn't gaming. Since multiple reverts can be a bad thing, as NW brings up, it could be simplest to make it a 1rr/48hr while editing DYKs in the topic area. It will be easy enough to tell if he is gaming if he pops in a minute after two days have elapsed.Cptnono (talk) 21:00, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Follow-up: And if Gatoclass is going to be an uninolved admin sometimes but not another as seen on this page[194] then there is a problem that touches on this whole gaming issue. Cptnono (talk) 21:20, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Epeefleche
First of all, this does not seem to be the correct forum for this complaint. Secondly, having parsed through this great deal of material, I don't see an actionable violation. I am also concerned with the misquoting of what J actually said, but would simply caution that editor to be more precise in the future.--Epeefleche (talk) 21:02, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
Result concerning Jalapenos do exist
- This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
Question. What exactly is the harm complained of here? I've looked at the evidence, and I'm still confused. The diffs paint the picture that Jalapenos do exist (from now on "Jalapenos") has some sort of editorial "take" on the Israel/Palestine conflict, which while moderately annoying, is a content disagreement and thus generally dealt with outside of AE until it gets too bad. The part I'm not understanding is the involvement of DYK. Is the argument basically that Jalapenos waited for the article to be linked from the main page and then started editing with his/her editorial take?--Tznkai (talk) 22:21, 15 December 2010 (UTC)
- Mbz1, in case you didn't know me, and there is no reason you should, I take a very dim view of editors who come in swinging casting wild aspersions and insults at other editors. Stick to the facts, please.
- Similarly, I don't need a blow by blow of past case history either Unomi, and if I'm interested I can review the logs myself.
- Jalepenos, "broadly interpreted", which the Area of Conflict provision is, can include articles which discuss at length the Arab-Israeli conflict. The most useful construction I've discovered is to focus on edits that focus on the Arab-Israeli conflict. In this case the edits complained about focused on your edits - additions and removals that have to do with the Arab Israeli conflict.
- Still reviewing evidence, but still waiting to see why this is within AE's jurisdiction. I'll be back to review in 13 hours, and I'd take it as a personal favor if you could keep any comments concise. (Other administrators can of course, as always, may have something to say as well).--Tznkai (talk) 05:00, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Upon careful review, the sections from Unomi and Mbz1 are both irrelevant to the topic at hand, and they should be removed. (You are, as always, free to open up a new complaint with all the risks that entails) Alternatively, if their authors insist on making me read through their bickering as I continue my due diligence, I will evaluate whether either of them should be prevented from treating Wikipedia as a battleground.--Tznkai (talk) 05:34, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
wordy statement on the role of AE and administrators |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
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- With those concerns in mind, my review of the evidence suggests that User:Jalapenos do exist has a topical focus on the Arab-Israeli conflict, specifically the portrayal of Israel, and that this topical focus, combined with admiral energy for editing, threatens to transfer emotions and difficulties from the "deep-seated and long standing real world conflicts" surrounding the Arab-Israeli conflict (broadly understood) and destabilize the editing environment. I am not here speculating on intent or motive, but making an empirical judgment on effect. There not however, enough evidence to suggest a malicious attempt to subvert the process, and the application of the assumption of good faith and Hanlon's razor and simple responsible judgment demands I do not speculate that far.
- At this very moment however, the Alan Dershowitz quote is the lead of the article, because Jalepenos do exist added it after the DYK hook was approved. Regardless to the timing relative to the DYK hook, in the DYK discussion four separate users directly brought up the quote's bias problem: Schwede66, Volunteer Marek, Nick-D, and Gatoclass. This suggests a critical failure on Jalapenos do exist's part to conform to the basic rule of a collaborative editing environment. Seek compromise instead of editing roughshod over opposition.
It is therefor my intention, as a discretionary sanction, to bar Jalapenos do exist from the repeat insertion or removal of any text concerning Israel, Palestine, or the Arab-Israeli conflict, on any article page, whether by simple reversion, or in essence, disputed by any 3 users in an on wiki forum, with the usual caveats for clear vandalism and BLP violations. Jalapenos do exist is not only allowed, but encouraged to seek compromise language on talk pages. Users abusing gaming this restriction will be blocked. Jalapenos is encouraged to seek review of this restriction every 14 days in this forum, to display successful compromise, and/or activity in other topic areas and/or other factors indicating the restriction is not needed. Any uninvolved administrator in good standing is encouraged to conduct this review.
- I encourage any and all interested editors to briefly and concisely comment.--Tznkai (talk) 18:53, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Three editors have to oppose him before he stops? It is bad practice to continue editing if even one person opposes your edits; broader consensus should be sought at that point. I'm not a huge fan of this particular sanction, though I agree that one is probably necessary. I'm not really sure what type of sanction would be best though. NW (Talk) 19:19, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Well, thats a fair point, but considering the wording of the restriction precludes Jalapenos from reverting the material for the life time of the restriction, I'm very concerned about letting a smaller group game the system. If you have even the vaguest semblance of an idea I'd love to hear it.--Tznkai (talk) 20:24, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- I'm just thinking aloud, but what about having your sanction that for normal articles and demanding that J. get an opinion on IPCOLL if he wants to make an addition to a main page article. NW (Talk) 22:10, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- That sounds workable. Jalapenos would need to offer his proposed change for discussion at WP:IPCOLL or WT:DYK at least three hours before making it, if it is a change to a DYK which is either currently on the main page or less then three hours before it is due to appear. The spirit of this rule is that he would need to express any major concerns with the wording of a DYK during the normal discussion period and not spring them at the last minute. This restriction would not apply to reverting vandalism or to minor spelling/grammar fixes. EdJohnston (talk) 23:13, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Here are the article links for one of the discussed articles:
- Having dug into the evidence, I'm no longer convinced that this enforcement request shows a violation of WP:ARBPIA. Someone with more patience than I (perhaps Tznkai?) might be able to get to the bottom of this, but the Durban III business I no longer see as persuasive. The people at WP:Articles for deletion/Civilian casualty ratio did express a lot of ideas on how the article could be improved. This article was created by Jalapenos, but I wonder how it became his duty to fix all the perceived problems before it could become a DYK. The actual DYK hook was "... that according to a study by the International Committee of the Red Cross, the civilian casualty ratio in wars fought since the mid-20th century has been 10 civilian deaths for every soldier death?" That hook sounds innocuous and does not have an obvious POV. Also the articles wasn't tagged for ARBPIA until later on in the process. It was created by Jalapenos on 23 November and it's been worked on by 22 different editors since that moment. In the history I notice the names of editors from both sides of the I/P conflict. Since Jalapenos created it, it is understandable he might want to take the article to DYK. He has made 41 edits to the article and Gatoclass has made 69. I did notice this removal by Jalapenos on 14 December of a sentence added by
Mbz1Gatoclass: "Israel's conduct of the war, particularly its bombardment of Beirut, was heavily criticized, not only by the international community but in Israel itself, where large antiwar protests took place.". Jalapenos edit summary was "General povs regarding actions are outside the purview of this article." That seems logical to me, given the topic.
- That sounds workable. Jalapenos would need to offer his proposed change for discussion at WP:IPCOLL or WT:DYK at least three hours before making it, if it is a change to a DYK which is either currently on the main page or less then three hours before it is due to appear. The spirit of this rule is that he would need to express any major concerns with the wording of a DYK during the normal discussion period and not spring them at the last minute. This restriction would not apply to reverting vandalism or to minor spelling/grammar fixes. EdJohnston (talk) 23:13, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- I'm just thinking aloud, but what about having your sanction that for normal articles and demanding that J. get an opinion on IPCOLL if he wants to make an addition to a main page article. NW (Talk) 22:10, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Well, thats a fair point, but considering the wording of the restriction precludes Jalapenos from reverting the material for the life time of the restriction, I'm very concerned about letting a smaller group game the system. If you have even the vaguest semblance of an idea I'd love to hear it.--Tznkai (talk) 20:24, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- Three editors have to oppose him before he stops? It is bad practice to continue editing if even one person opposes your edits; broader consensus should be sought at that point. I'm not a huge fan of this particular sanction, though I agree that one is probably necessary. I'm not really sure what type of sanction would be best though. NW (Talk) 19:19, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- I encourage any and all interested editors to briefly and concisely comment.--Tznkai (talk) 18:53, 16 December 2010 (UTC)
- It is not obvious to me that the data presented here by Gatoclass show misbehavior by Jalapenos that needs to be sanctioned under ARBPIA. I might change my view if somebody can capture in a very small set of diffs exactly what the misbehavior was. If there was actually a violation, it should not take many hundreds of words to explain it. EdJohnston (talk) 05:35, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- The diff you mention is a good example: here Jalapenos removes a description of criticism of Israel because "General povs regarding actions are outside the purview of this article." Twelve minutes later, he adds Dershowitz's claim to the lead. So in the space of 12 minutes, "general povs regarding actions" are suddenly not only appropriate for the article, but belong in the lead. This user's editorial rationales seem rather flexible, depending on whether the material in question reflects positively or negatively on Israel. That's as good an illustration of agenda-driven editing as any, compounded since, as Tznkai has identified, Jalapenos is a single-purpose account. Whether the ARBPIA sanctions can, or should, come into play here is a question I'll leave to my fellow admins. MastCell Talk 06:54, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
┌─────────────────────────────────┘
(od) It would have been better if Jalapenos held off on the Dershowitz quote. Still, his quote is at least germane to the topic of the article, since it talks about the civilian casualty ratio, while the general disapproval in the press of Israel's war in Lebanon is not a statement about the casualty ratio. Whether it makes sense to include the Dershowitz claim could be discussed on the article talk page, where so far it is not mentioned. The article's talk page seems fairly cooperative.
Regarding what to do next, I hope that Tznkai will make a further proposal. I note that Unomi made this suggestion on my talk page: "Ok, how would you feel about an instruction that all I/P related articles submitted to DYK, that a given editor works on, must be listed by them at WP:IPCOLL at earliest opportunity?" This is a reform that would best be left for the community to make. Somebody who feels that DYK is being abused due to controversial I/P articles could open an RfC and recommend a new policy or guideline. EdJohnston (talk) 16:49, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- I think any sanctioned targeted at protecting DYK is outside of our mandate at AE. As EdJohnston suggested above, Jalapenos's conduct may actually be outside the strictures of ARBPIA as well.
- Where I am right now is that I'm certain that Jalapenos needs to have some sort of editing restriction within the Arab-Israelli topic area because of a topical focus concern, combined with demonstrated lack of concern for certain editing norms (not reverting to your preferred version). I'm not certain that we've reached the point of an outright topic ban. The issue with DYKs I think isn't the real issue - it is just the case that brought enough eyes on the problem that we now have noticed. At this point I'm leaning towards some sort of reversion restriction, on a time limited sanction, barring someone coming up with a better idea.--Tznkai (talk) 03:12, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Cirt
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.
Request concerning Cirt
- User requesting enforcement
- Delicious carbuncle (talk) 08:12, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- User against whom enforcement is requested
- Cirt (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Sanction or remedy that this user violated
- Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Scientology#Editors instructed
8) Any current or future editor who, after this decision is announced, makes substantial edits to any Scientology-related articles or discussions on any page is directed: ...(C) To edit in accordance with all Wikipedia policies and to refrain from any form of advocacy concerning any external controversy, dispute, allegation, or proceeding;
- Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
(For the sake of brevity, I will not reproduce the evidence already presented in this ANI discussion or the discussions related to this in earlier AE requests. I have linked the most relevant sections under "Background" and assume that anyone commenting here is familiar with that evidence and not simply making judgements based on the limited evidence presented here.)
Background:
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive656#Scientology-related article fall-out (identifies BLP violations left in articles and/or created in articles by Cirt's removal of a source)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive656#More fallout: Speedyclick.com & Doug Dohring (identifies BLP violations left in articles and/or created in articles by Cirt's removal of a source)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive656#Case_study_number_one:_Michael_Doven (identifies BLP and NPOV violations in article created by Cirt)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive656#Case study number two: Jamie Sorrentini (shows correspondence in Cirt's edits to blog postings of well-known critic of the Church of Scientology)
- Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive656#Cirt's anti-Scientology articles on Wikinews (sampling of Cirt's anti-Scientology articles on Wikinews)
- Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement#Statement_by_Scott_MacDonald_re_BLP_issues (concerns raised about Cirt's neutrality)
A relatively concise and relatively recent example:
In May 2010, Cirt created the BLP of Michael Doven. Doven is a movie producer and the former assistant to actor Tom Cruise who is well-known as a Scientologist. From the very first edit, the article was riddled with BLP and POV issues. Among the sources used in this BLP:
- "New OT VI Hubbard Solo Nots Auditing Course" - CoS publication
- "Cruise control - Exclusive - Scientology insider reveals the bizarre truth about superstar's cult-like 'religion'; Interview". News of the World - Yes, Cirt used News of the World as a source in a BLP
- Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography - An "unauthorized biography" by author Andrew Morton who is not generally considered to be a reliable source. Note that the book was not published in some countries, allegedly because of the "strict libel laws" in effect. It should be no surprise that Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography was created by Cirt.
- "Tom Cruise, o fanático" - Portuguese-language article which seems on par with News of the World, used to source Doven's connection to the leader of the CoS.
- "TomKat Wedding, Part 2 On Its Way". FOX News - Fox News' "Celebrity Gossip"
In the infobox, Doven's "organisation" is listed as "Scientology". There is a rather large "Scientology" footer, and the article includes the "Scientology portal" tag. A few edits later, Cirt adds Category: American Scientologists. This is an apparent violation of WP:BLPCAT.
This article had so many gratuitous references to Scientology and Scientologists that it was almost comical. I put this article forward as an example on ANI, but no changes were made as a result. I raised it on WP:BLPN (a suggestion made on ANI). User:Bbb23 reorganized the article into two sections, one covering Doven's career and the other covering his involvement in Scientology. Cirt simply reverted. As Bbb23 said on BLPN, "no one has commented on the changes I made. Cirt, however, reverted them, so I guess that means he didn't like them". User:Maunus, Cirt, and Bbb23 made some changes but left it largely as it had begun, with all of the sourcing and most of the POV problems intact. Maunus, an admin, commented at ANI that "I agree that this article was problematic. It did have the appearance of a Coatrack. I think that it has improved drastically now, with Cirt's colaboration".
In a discussion on Jehochman's talk page, Cirt raised the article as an example of their good-faith efforts, saying "As one case study example: Delicious carbuncle raised concerns both at ANI and at BLPN about the page Michael Doven. I worked to improve the page collaboratively, and my efforts resulted in successfully addressing the concerns raised to the satisfaction of Maunus ...". When I questioned the lede included a reference to the sister of Beck (himself a Scientologist), Cirt removed the literal phrase, leaving the sister's name (unlinked, since she does not have an article here). This article is nothing but a coatrack to identify Doven as a Scientologist and to imply that his career is inextricably linked to Scientology.
A really short and pointed example:
Amy Scobee is a former member of the CoS and now a critic of that group who has published a book about her experiences with them. Cirt interviewed her for Wikinews ("Author Amy Scobee recounts abuse as Scientology executive"). In this edit Cirt identifies the genre of Scobee's writing as "destructive cults" and the subject as "Scientology".
An example of mind-boggling pettiness:
Knight and Day is a movie starring Tom Cruise. Even before its release, Cirt was already adding negative press ([195], [196], [197], [198], [199], [200]). Following the release, Cirt makes dozens of edits, adding negative reviews ([201], [202], [203], [204], [205], [206], [207], [208], [209], [210], [211], etc). All of the additions have cherry-picked quotes such as Lexi Feinberg of Big Picture Big Sound gave the film a rating of one and a half stars, and characterized it as an "asinine, action-adventure dud", with a "stupid plot".
Having not seen the movie I can only speculate about its quality, but both Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic suggest that there are about equal numbers of positive and negative reviews. I can see no reason for Wikipedia to have such a long and detailed negative article about what is a very unimportant movie. The history of the article is useful for examining Cirt's ownership tendencies.
- Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
{{{Diffs of prior warnings}}}
- Enforcement action requested (block, topic ban or other sanction)
- topic ban on editing Scientology-related BLPs, ban on use of admin tools on Scientology-related articles (widely construed), 1RR restriction on all Scientology-related articles (widely construed)
- Additional comments by editor filing complaint
- Although I may currently be under sanctions regarding Scientology-related articles, there is an appeal pending, and per Jehochman's comments I believe I am free to file this request for arbitration. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 08:12, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested
- [212]
Discussion concerning Cirt
Statement by Cirt
I would have very much liked to have discussed the substance of the individual and specific complaints about various articles raised by Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs), and I would have appreciated being given an opportunity first to work to address these issues. Unfortunately, Delicious carbuncle refused to even attempt to address any of these issues at their respective article talk pages. This problem was pointed out in replies to Delicious carbuncle at BLPN, by multiple editors including Nomoskedasticity (talk · contribs) diff and Bbb23 (talk · contribs) diff. I reached out to Delicious carbuncle multiple times, requesting that he be more specific in his complaints about certain articles, but unfortunately he refused to discuss at article talk pages, see diff and diff. Though I really would like to help cleanup the pages in question, it becomes very difficult to do so when the only time Delicious carbuncle brings issues up is when escalating them to ANI, BLPN, or AE - and repeatedly refuses to engage discussion, content talk page engagement, or prior dispute resolution of any sort - on article talk pages. -- Cirt (talk) 19:45, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Update - Good faith cleanup edits
I really would have liked to have been able to discuss these issues with Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs) on the respective article talk pages. However, as he has raised them here, I have tried to address them:
- Amy Scobee - I removed "Scientology" from the infobox. I added "Non-fiction" as genre, and "Religion" as subject. diff
- Knight and Day - I removed a significant amount of sourced material critical of the film, from the Reception sect. diff
- Michael Doven - I removed info from the article cited to sources questioned by Delicious carbuncle. I removed the Scientology portal from the See also sect. I removed the Scientology navigation template from the bottom of the article. I removed Scientology from the infobox. I removed info from the lede that was mentioned above by Delicious carbuncle. diff
- Category:American Scientologists at page, Michael Doven - I am currently supporting editor Maunus (talk · contribs) at a discussion at the article's talk page, at Talk:Michael Doven. Multiple editors wish to add this category back. Delicious carbuncle has neglected to support its removal at the article's talk page. I have. diff
I will strive in the future to be more receptive to feedback and open to pursuing forms of dispute resolution such as Third Opinion processes (I recently received a barnstar for work in this area diff) and Request for Comment - however at no point did Delicious carbuncle even attempt to pursue resolution of any of these issues through talk page discussion or content dispute resolution. -- Cirt (talk) 20:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Response to Unomi
I was motivated to report Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs) to AE, due to WP:BLP violation at page Jamie Sorrentini and then reverting against consensus from multiple editors at WP:RSN diff, diff, diff (later found to also be WP:POINT violation deliberately as an attempt to provoke me diff), and WP:FORUMSHOP issues on the same topic, and disruption on the same topic at ANI diff diff. -- Cirt (talk) 21:15, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Use of admin tools on Scientology-related articles
To my knowledge, there does not appear to be any evidence about this particular issue presented by Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs). The only instance in which I was mentioned by the Arbitration Committee in the Scientology case ruling was to state: "From careful examination of the submitted evidence, the committee concludes that, since his request for adminship in September 2008, Cirt does not appear to have deliberately misused administrative tools." I appreciate that ruling from ArbCom. Since that case, I have strived to avoid using admin tools in relation to this topic. I will continue to avoid acting as an admin in this arena. -- Cirt (talk) 21:42, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by Delicious carbuncle
I had intended to let this run its course with contributing further, but I feel the need to comment on Jehochman's attempt to unilaterally deny this arbitration request. Based on comments they made in the appeal request of my sanctions, I asked Jehochman if I would be allowed to file an arbitration request about Cirt's actions. Their answer was:
I believe you have every right to file an AE request as a matter of reformatting evidence already presented so that the controversy can be ended. Given what I have seen, the likely endpoint is for both you and Cirt to receive warnings. The sanction you received is void as far as I am concerned because it did not comply with the arbitration remedy's specific requirements. You can copy and paste evidence regarding Cirt that was already presented. There is a value in you gathering, organizing and summarizing the evidence. We need to keep these threads concise and filter out as much of the bickering as we can. A fresh start of the discussion would probably do that. Feel free to link to this comment if anybody suggests you are doing something wrong. Thank you for your understanding.
In an attempt to keep this as concise and clear as possible, I provided links to the evidence already presented at ANI, and focused on three examples which I felt were representative of the issues. This could have been an extremely lengthy filing, but I did not want to overwhelm anyone.
I find it perplexing that Jehochman would encourage me to file an arbitration request and then attempt to summarily quash it. I also question his impartiality, given the circumstances. As for his reasoning, he is incorrect. Under remedy 8 of WP:ARBSCI (which may be remedy 7 mislabelled), there is no requirement to warn editors: "Any uninvolved administrator may on his or her discretion apply the discretionary sanctions specified in Remedy 4 to any editor failing to comply with the spirit or letter of these instructions". Additionally, it says "In case of any doubt concerning application or interpretation of these restrictions, the Arbitration Committee may be consulted for guidance". I believe it is time to involve ArbCom in this matter, since we all know that is where this is heading anyway. Delicious carbuncle (talk) 20:11, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- I cannot judge your request without seeing it first. You have every right to file the request, and it is still possible that some other administrator will come along and issue a warning to Cirt. I personally don't see the case, but somebody else might. AE Sanctions are impossible at this time given the formula ArbCom specified, perhaps unwisely. Jehochman Talk 00:34, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- You seemed to know that it would be at least the evidence that I had already presented at ANI, but perhaps I misunderstood. Did you and Cirt discuss this arbitration request prior to your attempt to close it? Delicious carbuncle (talk) 02:32, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I believe you already asked me, and I already answered -- No, not at all. Jehochman Talk 02:50, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I asked, but you did not answer. So, just to be clear, you and Cirt have not communicated offwiki about this request for arbitration? Delicious carbuncle (talk) 03:25, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I cannot judge your request without seeing it first. You have every right to file the request, and it is still possible that some other administrator will come along and issue a warning to Cirt. I personally don't see the case, but somebody else might. AE Sanctions are impossible at this time given the formula ArbCom specified, perhaps unwisely. Jehochman Talk 00:34, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Question for Cirt: Cirt, I asked Jehochman this question but have received no reply as yet, so I will ask you - did you and Jehochman discuss this arbitration request prior to his attempt to close it? Delicious carbuncle (talk) 23:05, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Comments by others about the request concerning Cirt
I wish to add the following diffs to those provided by Carbuncle above for the community's consideration.
- This edit strikes me as a clear-cut BLP violation -- we don't insert self-published YouTube videos making very serious allegations against living persons into articles. Note: This diff is >1 year old. Jehochman Talk 23:16, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Kenneth Dickson was a biography of a minor politician, written by Cirt, which was widely perceived as a puff-piece (see Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Kenneth_Dickson_(2nd_nomination); the final comment was "Delete This reads like an advertisement for someone with an eye on political office", and it was deleted by John Vandenberg). It was written in the run-up to a River County election in which Dickson was a candidate, and appears to have promoted an outside agenda: Jeff Stone, the favourite in the election, had attracted the displeasure of anti-Scientology activists. What was striking about the article, which was only discovered and deleted after the election was over, was that while it used almost every flattering source available on Dickson, it failed to mention a controversy surrounding Dickson over his anti-gay views: "Dickson protects hate speech", "Student sues over ban of anti-gay T-shirt". Cirt similarly reworked the biography of Joel Anderson, the other candidate opposing Jeff Stone, prior to that election. Anderson won, and commentators were intrigued with how well Dickson had done. (Incidentally, Jeff Stone does not have a Wikipedia article.)
- These repeated insertions (and re-insertions after they were deleted) of links to self-published websites in List of Scientologists strike me as violations of WP:BLP:
- truthaboutscientology.org (this is the site Cirt argued only a few weeks later was unreliable in the dispute with Delicious Carbuncle),
- [213] (the personal website of a WP user who is topic-banned from Scientology),
- [214].
- This BLP edit was marked as a vandalism-revert. It restored unsourced material with a Citation needed tag, describing someone as a Scientologst, as well as a slew of private websites and the Scientology template.
- Here a novice user tried to remove Jada Pinkett-Smith, Will Smith's wife, from List of Scientologists. She was listed as a member, even though there are plentiful and easily sourceable denials by her [215]. Cirt reverted, marking the edit as vandalism and posting vandalism warnings to User_talk:Passomouse. Passomouse advised Cirt they had contacted Pinkett-Smith's PR office, who had confirmed she is not a Scientologist. Cirt's response was to accuse Passomouse of a violation of NOR. Pinkett-Smith was removed from the list some time later on, along with other non-Scientologists such as Gloria Gaynor and Chaka Khan, after an RfC, BLPN threads, input from Jimbo, and lots of halfway-house solutions and wrangling on the list's talk page.
- User:DGG expressed neutrality concerns over another article Cirt had written, at Talk:Scientology_(James_R._Lewis_book)/Archive_1.
I believe there is an ongoing and serious problem here, comprising both BLP violations and advocacy. Under Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Single_purpose_accounts_with_agendas,
“ | Any editor who, in the judgment of an uninvolved administrator, is (i) focused primarily on Scientology or Scientologists and (ii) clearly engaged in promoting an identifiable agenda may be topic-banned for up to one year. | ” |
The Dickson case and other evidence posted by DC establishes that there is such an agenda. It involves writing puff-pieces on perceived Scientology opponents – see e.g.
- comments by User:DGG here,
- the discussion of Jamie Sorrentini, a recent drop-out from Scientology, here,
- Jimbo's comments at the AfD for Daryl Wine Bar and Restaurant,
and it involves writing consistently unflattering portrayals of Scientologists, or scholars asserting that Scientology has religious character, per
- DC's example of Knight and Day,
- diffs in Unomo's earlier post (Bryan R. Wilson)
- the discussion initiated by DGG at Talk:Scientology_(James_R._Lewis_book)/Archive_1.
What remains is to establish that Cirt is "focused primarily on Scientology or Scientologists". This is arguably so: per their top 100, Cirt is mostly focused on Scientology and Werner Erhard/est (a Scientology offshoot), both here and in other Wikimedia projects (see e.g. [216]). Indeed, perusing Cirt's contributions history in sister projects shows a remarkable body of work that is acknowledged in the anti-Scientology community. --JN466 20:22, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
While the above-quoted ARBSCI remedy authorises a full topic ban, without warning, I am unsure if this is in the best interest of the project. There are several reasons for this. For one, it is undeniable that Cirt has authored some top-quality content in this area. While still often combative, Cirt has shown signs of being more responsive to feedback, and of having acquired an ability to write more neutrally than in former times. In my perception at least, these were the result of a good-faith effort that can't have come easy to someone with such strong views. When Cirt first arrived here, first as User:Smeelgova, then User:Smee, then User:Curt Wilhelm VonSavage, they quickly acquired block logs and within weeks were involved in an est-related arbitration case. The development since then has in many ways been a positive one. The sanctions proposed by DC above, i.e. a topic ban on editing Scientology-related BLPs, ban on use of admin tools on Scientology-related articles (widely construed), and a 1RR restriction on all Scientology-related articles (widely construed), may serve the project better. However, it would be nice to see an honest acknowledgement of the problem from Cirt. --JN466 21:30, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Jose Peralta is another flattering bio of a politician whose opponent anti-Scientologists did not like. --JN466 23:02, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- est is not Scientology. Nor is the Unification Church or Rajneesh. Cirt clearly works on a variety of topics within the broad field of new religious movements. So do you. Scientology appears often in your top 100 edits as well.[217] Unfortunately, the Arbcom did not define "focused primarily". Will Beback talk 22:28, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- 16% in my case; well over 50% in Cirt's, the top 4 being 1. Project Chanology, 2. List of Scientologists, 3. Battlefield Earth (film), and 4. A Very Merry Unauthorized Children's Scientology Pageant. --JN466 23:18, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Here Cirt and Jehochman discuss the possibility of having ARBSCI sanctions apply to Werner Erhard/Landmark Education articles, given that "Landmark Education is considered by multiple scholars to be an outgrowth of that other group". In Cirt's mind, they are clearly related, to the extent that Cirt feels ARBSCI sanctions could legitimately be applied to these articles. Even without the 5 or 6 Erhard articles, 50% of Cirt's top 100 articles are about Scientology, Scientologists, Scientology spoofs, or Scientology opponents. That is "focused primarily", and with a clear agenda. --JN466 23:34, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Abraham Lincoln told the riddle. "If you call a tail a leg, how many legs does a calf have?" Answer: "Four, because even if you call a tail a leg that doesn't make it one." (Excuse my poor paraphrasing). est is not Scientology, even if Cirt has associated them in some contexts. Will Beback talk 23:55, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- You tell riddles, while ignoring a consistent pattern of BLP violations -- despite your assertion on Scott's talk page that there are few editors who "get" BLP better than you. It would be nice if you could comment instead on the evidence that has been presented. Are you okay with puff pieces for one side, and BLP violations for the other? --JN466 00:01, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I was only addressing the narrow issue of whether Cirt "primarily" edits the Scientology topic. I think Lincoln's wisdom was on-topic, but you can ignore it and change the subject if you like. I don't have time or interest to review this complaint, and since you claim I'm involved (despite not having made any significant edits to the topic in years) my commentary wouldn't matter much anyway. Will Beback talk 00:12, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- You tell riddles, while ignoring a consistent pattern of BLP violations -- despite your assertion on Scott's talk page that there are few editors who "get" BLP better than you. It would be nice if you could comment instead on the evidence that has been presented. Are you okay with puff pieces for one side, and BLP violations for the other? --JN466 00:01, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Abraham Lincoln told the riddle. "If you call a tail a leg, how many legs does a calf have?" Answer: "Four, because even if you call a tail a leg that doesn't make it one." (Excuse my poor paraphrasing). est is not Scientology, even if Cirt has associated them in some contexts. Will Beback talk 23:55, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Cirt writes "Though I really would like to help cleanup the pages in question, it becomes very difficult to do so when the only time Delicious carbuncle brings issues up is when escalating them to ANI, BLPN, or AE" This is a somewhat curious framing as it was Cirt who escalated:
- 07:52, 8 December 2010 [218] Cirt opens ANI thread. archive
- 04:22, 13 December 2010 [219] Cirt opens AE request. archive
I would like to ask Cirt what moved him to open the AE request. un☯mi 21:05, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Comments by Shell Kinney
It's always disappointing to see reports that feel the need to include phrases like "mind-boggling pettiness" and only have ANI reports to show for attempting to resolve the dispute. Since Cirt seems to have responded to feedback in a variety of those cases, it's confusing that a ban is being asked for rather than simply addressing any concerns directly first. Shell babelfish 21:44, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- You may not have the full picture of what's transpired over the years. ++Lar: t/c 01:59, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Yep, quite possibly. If an overview of that was here somewhere, I've missed it. Shell babelfish 03:56, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Comments by Momento
Could Jehochman explain what format the "prior warning as required by WP:ARBSCI" takes.Momento (talk) 21:24, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- The exact requirements are at Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Discretionary topic ban.--SarekOfVulcan (talk) 21:51, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Single_purpose_accounts_with_agendas does not actually include this requirement. The question is whether "single-purpose" applies. It is perhaps more like "main focus" in this case. --JN466 22:17, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- The usual disputants arguing for sanctions as an extension of their editorial disagreements is not the least bit helpful. Jehochman Talk 23:14, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Jehochman, I truly appreciated your olive branch the other day. But belittling me as a "usual disputant" is not helpful either, in the face of documented evidence that you refuse to acknowledge or address – BLP violations, and consistent bias. You are a "usual litigator" in these disputes, and one selected by Cirt. --JN466 23:56, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- The olive branch was sincere. I was very surprised you turned up on this thread to advocate for sanctions. It seems difficult to collaborate, on the one hand, and request sanctions on the other, especially when the sanctions are not authorized by ArbCom in the absence of a prior warning. Rest assured that if Cirt turns up on any thread seeking to sanction you in the future, I'll be very unimpressed. Jehochman Talk 00:29, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Frankly, I had hoped to stay away from this thread. It was your attempt to close the thread as quickly as you tried to, citing "a lack of concise evidence and diffs", that made me feel there was something really wrong about this. I had meant to do something else today. And on re-reading WP:ARBSCI I noticed Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Single_purpose_accounts_with_agendas, which this could be thought to fall under, and which does not in fact require a prior warning. I am not out to "get" Cirt out of personal spite. It is just that Cirt is an immensely active and combative editor who personally controls practically the entire topic area, across multiple Wikimedia projects. That would be fine if Cirt were supremely neutral as well as knowledgeable, but they're not. I am fine with a warning here, rather than a sanction, but something has to be done. --JN466 02:14, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I don't have any comment to make about Cirt's edits on Scientology but in one case [220] when I asked him why he closed an AfD he refused to supply a reason and became aggressive. Xxanthippe (talk) 02:39, 18 December 2010 (UTC).
- Frankly, I had hoped to stay away from this thread. It was your attempt to close the thread as quickly as you tried to, citing "a lack of concise evidence and diffs", that made me feel there was something really wrong about this. I had meant to do something else today. And on re-reading WP:ARBSCI I noticed Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Single_purpose_accounts_with_agendas, which this could be thought to fall under, and which does not in fact require a prior warning. I am not out to "get" Cirt out of personal spite. It is just that Cirt is an immensely active and combative editor who personally controls practically the entire topic area, across multiple Wikimedia projects. That would be fine if Cirt were supremely neutral as well as knowledgeable, but they're not. I am fine with a warning here, rather than a sanction, but something has to be done. --JN466 02:14, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- The olive branch was sincere. I was very surprised you turned up on this thread to advocate for sanctions. It seems difficult to collaborate, on the one hand, and request sanctions on the other, especially when the sanctions are not authorized by ArbCom in the absence of a prior warning. Rest assured that if Cirt turns up on any thread seeking to sanction you in the future, I'll be very unimpressed. Jehochman Talk 00:29, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Jehochman, I truly appreciated your olive branch the other day. But belittling me as a "usual disputant" is not helpful either, in the face of documented evidence that you refuse to acknowledge or address – BLP violations, and consistent bias. You are a "usual litigator" in these disputes, and one selected by Cirt. --JN466 23:56, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- The usual disputants arguing for sanctions as an extension of their editorial disagreements is not the least bit helpful. Jehochman Talk 23:14, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Coincidently my most recent experience with Cirt was his reverting of my well sourced edit on Prem Rawat (another non-Christian BLP to be controlled) with the edit summary "contentious edits and disruptive behavior by User:Momento, should be discussed fully on the talk page." [221]. Soon after without any warning on my talk page and without making another edit I was topic banned for a year at Will Beback's request. Clearly there is one rule for admins and one for the rest of us.Momento (talk) 03:25, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Single_purpose_accounts_with_agendas does not actually include this requirement. The question is whether "single-purpose" applies. It is perhaps more like "main focus" in this case. --JN466 22:17, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Statement by The Resident Anthropologist (talk)
I am trying to avoid conflict as much as possible here and trying to stay out of this. I said much earlier a WP:RFC/U could do a lot of good here. I am not sure Arbitration Enforcment is the proper venue.The Resident Anthropologist (talk) 22:04, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Note: There have been no attempts by Delicious carbuncle (talk · contribs) to have tried to resolve the dispute with me through talk page discussion - whether that be at my user talk page, through content-based RFCs, Third Opinion-requests, or any form of dispute resolution whatsoever. -- Cirt (talk) 22:07, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Formal warning(s) given
I have given formal warnings to Cirt [222] and Delicious Carbuncle [223]. It is my sincere belief that they comply exactly with the requirements given at Wikipedia:ARBSCI#Discretionary_topic_ban but if someone wants to quibble, I'm certainly amenable to revising them to meet whatever jot and tittle requirements are advanced. ++Lar: t/c 02:03, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Result concerning Cirt
- This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
- Request for sanctions denied. (1) There is no evidence presented of a prior warning to Cirt, as required by WP:ARBSCI. (2) There is no evidence presented of general purpose warnings to Cirt from uninvolved editors. (3) There is a lack of concise evidence documented with diffs showing recent bad edits by Cirt. Some of the edits referenced are contested, and some of them might even be incorrect, but I do not see glaring WP:BLP violations as alleged. We apparently have here a run-of-the-mill content dispute, or series of content disputes, dressed up as an enforcement request. Please, try the noticeboards or mediation to resolve editorial disputes. I see nothing here that can't be resolved through our normal editorial processes. Sanctions should be a last resort when dealing with good faith editors, especially those editors who have lengthy service records replete with featured content contributions. Jehochman Talk 19:15, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Jehochman this says "uninvolved administrators", you are not. You are (using your own words) "wiki-friends" with Cirt, and have been going about threatening to block me and others for bringing up his bad behaviour here. You are in place to close this - you shouldn't even be editing it.--Scott Mac 19:24, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- I'm wikifriends with lots of people, but I'd still sanction them if needs be. That's not a disqualification. I never threatened to block you either. Jehochman Talk 19:35, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Jehochman this says "uninvolved administrators", you are not. You are (using your own words) "wiki-friends" with Cirt, and have been going about threatening to block me and others for bringing up his bad behaviour here. You are in place to close this - you shouldn't even be editing it.--Scott Mac 19:24, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Request for sanctions approved. Substantial and serious evidence of improper editing of BLPs.--Scott Mac 19:38, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Sorry, you can't do that. You're totally out of line. Cirt hasn't been given the necessary warning, and I don't see enough here to generate that warning. (Other admins are welcome to issue such warning if they see it). Scott. Cirt feels you've been in editorial conflict with him. Jehochman Talk 19:41, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Well, not nearly as far out of line as you are. You seem close enough to Cirt to speak on behalf of his "feelings". You've done nothing but act in a manner that has shown bias and an attempt to intimidate on his behalf, and now you claim impartiality? Your credibility is severely lacking here.--Scott Mac 21:35, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Sorry, you can't do that. You're totally out of line. Cirt hasn't been given the necessary warning, and I don't see enough here to generate that warning. (Other admins are welcome to issue such warning if they see it). Scott. Cirt feels you've been in editorial conflict with him. Jehochman Talk 19:41, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- No sanction is possible absent the required prior warning. I have no opinion whether Cirt should be given such a warning. T. Canens (talk) 20:07, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Any uninvolved administrator is capable of giving that warning at any time. I don't see it right now, but somebody might. Jehochman Talk 21:44, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
Well this sounds familiar. Does this happen often? If it does, there may be procedural improvements to be had to ensure people don't waste their time. If it's just this case, it does have an element of poetic justice, but it's hardly satisfactory. Could someone perhaps give both parties (Cirt and DC) the appropriate warning and tell them not to appear before the bench again? --Elen of the Roads (talk) 21:57, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- I am not sure either needs a warning. There were some editorial disagreements. These ought to be resolved with dispute resolution rather than requests for sanctions. It does seem that Cirt fired the first shot in this battle. That ought to be a lesson itself. Jehochman Talk 00:36, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- JEH: I think you need to stay out of the "uninvolved admin" section on this and related matters, going forward. Your judgment is seriously skewed and you seem (to me anyway, based on appearances) to be employing procedural skullduggery to thwart any action being taken regarding Cirt. Which is distressing. As Scott said, knowing how Cirt feels (or claiming to) suggests involvement. Disengage and leave it to other admins to determine the appropriate outcome. ++Lar: t/c 01:48, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- Lar, do you see that the section above, diffs of prior warnings, lacks the prescribed prior warning? If you have the diff, please provide it. Jehochman Talk 03:08, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- JEH: I think you need to stay out of the "uninvolved admin" section on this and related matters, going forward. Your judgment is seriously skewed and you seem (to me anyway, based on appearances) to be employing procedural skullduggery to thwart any action being taken regarding Cirt. Which is distressing. As Scott said, knowing how Cirt feels (or claiming to) suggests involvement. Disengage and leave it to other admins to determine the appropriate outcome. ++Lar: t/c 01:48, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
Gilabrand
Attention: This request may be declined without further action if insufficient or unclear information is provided in the "Request" section below.
Request concerning Gilabrand
- User requesting enforcement
- Supreme Deliciousness (talk) 16:23, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- User against whom enforcement is requested
- Gilabrand (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · logs · filter log · block user · block log)
- Sanction or remedy that this user violated
- [224]
- Diffs of edits that violate this sanction or remedy, and an explanation how these edits violate it
- [225] Gilabrand is "required to discuss any reverts they do make on the talk page, in English, within 30 minutes of the revert".
2-3 days ago a user in these edits removes: [226]
- "Under Israeli law, West Bank settlements must meet specific criteria to be legal. In 2009, there were approximately 100 small communities that did not meet these criteria and are referred to as illegal outposts."
- "Among the legal leading scholars who dispute this view is" "Schwebel, a judge of International Court of Justice and Professor of International Law at Johns Hopkins University makes three distinctions specific to the Israeli situation that show the territories were seized in self-defense and thus Israel has more title to them than the previous holders. Professor Julius Stone also writes that ”Israel's presence in all these [disputed] areas pending negotiation of new borders is entirely lawful, since Israel entered them lawfully in self-defense.”"
- "Israel maintains that a temporary use of land and buildings for various purposes is permissible under a plea of military necessity and that the settlements fulfilled security needs."
- "In 1967, Theodor Meron, legal counsel to the Israeli Foreign Ministry stated in a legal opinion to Adi Yafeh, the Political Secretary of the Prime Minister, "My conclusion is that civilian settlement in the administered territories contravenes the explicit provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention."
- "The legal opinion, forwarded to Prime Minister Levi Eshkol, was not made public at the time, and the Labor cabinet progressively sanctioned settlements anyway; this action paved the way for future settlement growth. In 2007, Meron stated that "I believe that I would have given the same opinion today.""
- "The Israeli Supreme Court has ruled that the power of the Civil Administration and the Military Commander in the occupied territories is limited by the entrenched customary rules of public international law as codified in the Hague Regulations and Geneva Convention IV."
- "International law has long recognised that there are crimes of such severity they should be considered "international crimes." Such crimes have been established in treaties such as the Genocide Convention and the Geneva Conventions. .... The following are Israel's primary issues of concern [ie with the rules of the ICC]: - The inclusion of settlement activity as a "war crime" is a cynical attempt to abuse the Court for political ends. The implication that the transfer of civilian population to occupied territories can be classified as a crime equal in gravity to attacks on civilian population centres or mass murder is preposterous and has no basis in international law."
2-3 days later after these texts have been removed from the article, Gilabrand reverts all these things and re ads them to the article:[227]. And as can been seen at the talkpage, she did not discuss her reverts within 30 minutes after the reverts as she is obligated to do, she did not discuss them at all:[228] --Supreme Deliciousness (talk) 16:23, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- Diffs of notifications or of prior warnings against the conduct objected to (if required)
She has had many topic bans and blocks:[229] So she has been warned. Her last block for violating the same thing was two weeks ago.
- Enforcement action requested (block, topic ban or other sanction)
- Admin can decide.
- Notification of the user against whom enforcement is requested
- [230]
Discussion concerning Gilabrand
Statement by Gilabrand
Comments by others about the request concerning Gilabrand
Result concerning Gilabrand
- This section is to be edited only by uninvolved administrators. Comments by others will be moved to the section above.
- Gilabrand was recently blocked for seven days for refusing to leave comments, as required. See this AE request from 3 December. It was noted there that she had declared on Nov. 4 she was refusing to follow the restriction:
This is a very clearcut case. I recommend that Gilabrand be asked to change her view on this. If not, a lengthy ban from I/P should be considered. EdJohnston (talk) 17:05, 17 December 2010 (UTC)I will NOT leave comments on talk pages unless I feel it is useful and contributes to improving the article. This is a sanction that goes against Wikipedia norms, since the person who complained about me retracted his statement. I will continue to edit as necessary, reverting tendentious edits and removing unneeded tags that are placed on articles out of some political agenda or spite. I will continue to copyedit as necessary, and add content and solid references to articles. I will NOT leave comments on talk pages unless I feel it is useful and contributes to improving the article. I will NOT take part in the ridiculous semantic debates that certain editors initiate to bring the state of the article to a standstill. I expect the above message to be struck from the page, as it has clearly been put there in error. Administrators with a chip on their shoulder should be dismissed from the project--Geewhiz (talk) 07:19, 4 November 2010 (UTC)
- Her blocks this year came almost entirely from failure to observe her earlier topic ban - last time she was topic banned she got five blocks. I doubt that placing another topic ban would be useful. I propose a one-month block, and think we should proceed straight to blocking in all future incidents involving this user, since restrictions are not useful if the user is not going to observe them. T. Canens (talk) 19:52, 17 December 2010 (UTC)
- I would favor a three month block, given the block log. Looie496 (talk) 00:31, 18 December 2010 (UTC)
- I blocked for three months, in line with Looie's suggestion. The violation here is indisputably, and this makes Gilabrand's seventh block this year for violating ArbCom sanctions (two different ones). For this sanction, she specifically said she has no intention of abiding by the restrictions placed against her. She seems to be going through with her threat, hardly going a week since her last block for violating the same restriction. I'm not sure how many second chances you think someone should get, but I certainly believe Gilabrand has received her fair share. The original restriction is set to expire on 1 May 2011 (UTC) or two months after being unblocked, whichever is earlier. -- tariqabjotu 04:17, 18 December 2010 (UTC)