User talk:Monochrome Monitor: Difference between revisions

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==Your views==
==Your views==
Would you please comments on my updating the page [[Shahrbanu]] here or at the talk page of the article. [[User:Nannadeem|Nannadeem]] ([[User talk:Nannadeem|talk]]) 17:24, 1 July 2016 (UTC)
Would you please comments on my updating the page [[Shahrbanu]] here or at the talk page of the article. [[User:Nannadeem|Nannadeem]] ([[User talk:Nannadeem|talk]]) 17:24, 1 July 2016 (UTC)

== AE ==

[[Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement#Monochrome_Monitor]] <small style="border: 1px solid;padding:1px 3px;white-space:nowrap">'''[[User talk:Nableezy|<font color="#C11B17">nableezy</font>]]''' - 22:50, 2 July 2016 (UTC)</small>

Revision as of 22:50, 2 July 2016

Editing sex differences in intelligence NOVEMBER 25 NEW POST

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_differences_in_intelligence

Some of the sources on this page are from the 90s which seems pretty outdated. The latest sources seem to be from early 2000s even though newer studies have been published since then. I want your permission if I can cite a 2008 study on sex differences in intelligence with a sample size of 7000....and I am asking this because I don't want my edit undone.This is the study I want to cite and edit with:

http://www.researchgate.net/publication/222660770_Sex_differences_in_latent_cognitive_abilities_ages_6_to_59_Evidence_from_the_WoodcockJohnson_III_tests_of_cognitive_abilities


I also want to delete the sources from 1999 and 1998 because they are too old and update them with other newer sources that I have. What's your take?

User:Doe1994



Monochrome Monitor/ Talk

HELLO!

A barnstar for you!

The Minor barnstar
Thanks for the extra towns in Turkey! Any contribution is greatly appreciated. Pbfreespace3 (talk) 03:11, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks man. :) --Monochrome_Monitor 03:32, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]



Editing sex differences in intelligence

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sex_differences_in_intelligence

Some of the sources on this page are from the 90s which seems pretty outdated. The latest sources seem to be from early 2000s even though newer studies have been published since then. I want your permission if I can cite a 2008 study on sex differences in intelligence with a sample size of 7000....and I am asking this because I don't want my edit undone.This is the study I want to cite and edit with:

http://www.researchgate.net/publication/222660770_Sex_differences_in_latent_cognitive_abilities_ages_6_to_59_Evidence_from_the_WoodcockJohnson_III_tests_of_cognitive_abilities


I also want to delete the sources from 1999 and 1998 because they are too old and update them with other newer sources that I have. What's your take?

User:Doe1994

A barnstar for you!

The Tireless Contributor Barnstar
WOW! You have really helped he Turkish map forward. However, there are a couple of things to remember. Firstly, you should source all edits about Kurdish control, by including the source link in the edit description. Secondly, if there is ever fighting going on in a city, you should use this icon: 80x80-lime-yellow-anim.gif This icon will change soon, because we are introducing new colors for Turkey and possibly Kurds soon. Please source edits. Pbfreespace3 (talk) 16:22, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Welldone. I haven't tracked you, so these compliments attesting to your continued presence here and the excellence of your contributions is refreshing news. Keep up the good work.Nishidani (talk) 16:44, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks. I was terrified of being caught as a sockpuppet and felt terrible. I just didn't want people to know my IP address when I accidentally used it. I did so recently on the turkish talk page and had to delete my comment. Ugh it spiraled downhill so I didn't edit WP for a few months, even "anonymously" (it is true that my account is a shared IP, but others barely use it). Anyway, I've tried to avoid I&P edits, I hate the conflict even though I'm still fairly passionate about it. More moderated than most though. I accept there's truth to the "other narrative" and there's truth to my narrative, but neither are the "truth". I do think Jews have more rights in Israel than WP (and the international community) recognizes, but it's no for me to be a justice warrior. I'm just a little ticked off about the Palestine 1948 war. Someone reverted my cited troop figures because they prefer their uncited version. Annoying. Anyway, I'm ranting. Yeah, the Turkey thing is pretty interesting. I hope Kurds get their freedom without a bloody Civil War. Ergodan is a dickhead.--Monochrome_Monitor 23:54, 23 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I do think Jews have more rights in Israel than WP (and the international community) recognizes,

You surely don't mean that, young woman? For the sentence says that Jews in Israel have more rights than non-Jews. This may be so, but generally WP articles on Israel don't argue this, and the international community doesn't fuss over discriminations there. Your error was to use Israel as a synonym for Land of Israel, and affirm that in your view settlers have more rights in the West Bank than WP and the International Community are willing to allow. This is certainly true, but again it is probably not what you intended to say (=Jews have more rights to the land than do Palestinians). Be careful, and, of course, take care in the more normal sense of the idiom.Nishidani (talk) 19:59, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I meant "more rights to Israel". Semantics. You know what I meant. I didn't mean more rights than Palestinian Arabs, but more rights than some Christian Swedish guy? Hell yes. Anyway, I'm majoring in Physics, not English. --Monochrome_Monitor 20:02, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, you changed your edit. Cause even with the words "in Israel" it didn't mean what you wrote originally. Regardless, thanks for the Barnstar! --Monochrome_Monitor 20:03, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Words mean more than what we think they mean when we write them at first draft. I've read pretty widely here. Of course there are Israel-deniers, a lunatic fringe, but as Norman Finkelstein says, deny Israel and you are denying 'international law' and lose all credibility. No person in his right (or left)mind denies Israel, because to deny an historical, perfectly legal national reality is an indication of mental problems. Neither the international community nor Wikipedia articles deny 'Israel'. This whole absurd ruckus is what Israel does outside Israel, that is where 99% of the contention arises. As to majoring in physics, not English, a suggestion. Read Edgar Allan Poe's Eureka and list how many startling anticipations he makes of modern physics! Cheers Nishidani (talk) 21:00, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I hate his disgusting book about how Jews exploit the Holocaust for money, but I appreciate his relative moderation. Will read. I love Poe. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:03, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The Eureka-Modern physics connection is mentioned in an article in the New York Review of Books recently. Finkelstein doesn't talk of 'Jews' exploiting the Holocaust: the book analyses small groups using the Holocaust for polemical leverage or to extract huge sums which never went back to Holocaust survivors (the situation in Israel is a disgrace, even if the figures in this report are rubbery. Finkelstein's numbers are far lower), It's a personal and legitimate grievance. His mother got a lousy $3,000 dollars from the Swiss Bank money, whereas his father, for technical reasons, got a regular generous pension as recompense for his identical sufferings, because it was disbursed directly by the German government, without professional intermediaries interfering. His complaint is that monies due to aged survivors were put in escrow, huge retainer fees collected, and little of what was due to them was disbursed. Anyway, let's not talk of that. I hope the Eureka read stimulates your studies. Regards Nishidani (talk) 21:21, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
You got it. I don't know about the actual book, just how it was exploited by neo-nazis... And the many reviews which called it nazi-esque. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:30, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

But I'm done talking now. Thanks again!

A barnstar for you!

The Tireless Contributor Barnstar
Your work on the Turkish map really is tireless. I had expected I would be one of the only people working on the map, as it is a truly underreported conflict at the moment, but here you are making the map great. Thank you, and keep up the good work. Pbfreespace3 (talk) 22:18, 24 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks! That makes me feel fantastic. Sorry about all the edits, It sucks that there's no "preview" function, so I have to use trial and error. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:20, 24 August 2015 (UTC) I think I'll add border crossings.[reply]

Turkish Map General Statements

First, the border crossings need to be placed under the dots of control of the border crossings. This is the visual style implemented on all other maps. To do this, simply place the border crossing icon before the control icon on the module, and it will appear correctly.

Second, the carte interactive de Kurdistan cannot be used. In general, we can't use other maps to edit this map, as it is unencyclopedic.

Third, the lime color was chosen to avoid confusion with the Syrian and Iraqi governments. Sunni government groups should, in general, be shown as green. André437 is making darker green icons for our use on this map, and they should be ready soon.

Fourth, cities and towns should be size-marked based on an average of 2 factors: geographical size and population density. On the Syria map, I typically mark a village with 100 houses bigger than a 40 house village of the same geographic size. So both population and size are factors.

Fifth, we're going to use the yellow color for both PKK azd "declared autonomy". In most cases, these are actually pretty close to the same thing, just a difference of branding. This may change in the future, if more groups appear/infighting occurs.

So far you have done an excellent job on the map. Keep going, and just post on my talk page if you have any questions; that's how I'll get the message quickest. Pbfreespace3 (talk) 20:42, 25 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Sure thing. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:01, 25 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and thanks again for the barnstar. Comes with rotating action!--Monochrome_Monitor 07:30, 26 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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October 2015

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October 2015

Information icon Welcome to Wikipedia. We welcome and appreciate your contributions, including your edits to Rope (film), but we cannot accept original research. Original research refers to material—such as facts, allegations, and ideas—for which no reliable, published sources exist; it also encompasses combining published sources in a way to imply something that none of them explicitly say. Please be prepared to cite a reliable source for all of your contributions. Thank you. DonIago (talk) 14:40, 16 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Criticism of the Israeli government

Hello, the removal of two entire sections in that article is unacceptable.--Makeandtoss (talk) 20:40, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

One section I removed was criticism of criticism. It was horribly redundant and eclipsed the rest of the article. The other section on Nazism was perfectly justified, as it is both a WP:FRINGE and a highly racist view. You aren't exactly a nuetral arbiter of what is acceptable, considering your edit history on the article. --Monochrome_Monitor 20:44, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I only add referenced content, I am not making anything up. You could have rewritten it into a less 'racist' view, I see no use in removing it. And no its not WP:FRINGE, it has been broadly mentioned in several sources. Also I fail to see how my edit history is relevant, that content was already there, I just extended it. --Makeandtoss (talk) 20:50, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The section is just unprecedented. Just because you have quotes saying it doesn't mean it's worth wikipedia coverage. There are quotes saying all sorts of ridiculous things, but they aren't reliable. The Nazi-Israel analogy is considered antisemitic by The State Department and the EU, not just one Jewish group. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:04, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
So? Even if the EU and USA consider it antisemitism, how does that make any difference? The US Department list contains several other examples, why don't I see you removing their content on their respective wikipedia articles?--Makeandtoss (talk) 21:17, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That's a fallacy. I would remove it if it were truly egregious, and this is. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:28, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Its not a fallacy. Discussing antisemitism is not antisemitism.--Makeandtoss (talk) 21:35, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Obviously it isn't. But the section isn't discussing it, it's presenting it as a legitimate view rather than one considered by many as racist. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:42, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
My point was that you should have rearranged it into a legitimate view instead of erasing it.--Makeandtoss (talk) 21:47, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I don't want conflict. It's really quite simple. The article should be about criticism of Israel, not libels considered to be antisemitic. It undermines the actual criticism on the rest of the page. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:09, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
It is simple. This is about criticism of Israel, scholars have criticized Israel's policy through the several resemblances to Nazi Germany. There is no WP:ANTISEMETIC. I too, don't want to engage on this. I am sorry but I will be re-adding that content shortly, its not your decision to make.--Makeandtoss (talk) 22:18, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
No, scholars haven't. Pundits have. Please find me one reliable source which has made the comparison. And by reliable I mean a source by a historian familiar with Nazi Germany. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:33, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't delete it because it's antisemitic. I deleted it because It's fringe, and given undue prominence. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:34, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
A quick internet search on Norman Finkelstein a prominent Jewish scholar (so that you don't give me that antisemitic nonsense, I hope you don't say he's is a self-hating Jew) here here here here. I am sorry, I will no longer answer here.--Makeandtoss (talk) 23:30, 17 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

He's not a prominent Jewish scholar. His work is highly controversial and was described in a new york times review as anti-semitic. Also, his field of expertise is not Nazism. --Monochrome_Monitor 00:03, 18 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

ARGH he is a goddamned Jew, how on earth can he be anti-semetic? oh lala New York times, all hail the New York Bible. I am so done here, I have an allergy to BS.--Makeandtoss (talk) 00:06, 18 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
They called the book antisemitic, not him. Look, I'll restore the section. --Monochrome_Monitor 00:07, 18 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, great you already restored it. Isn't that fantastic. Now the integrity of the entire page is compromised..--Monochrome_Monitor 00:09, 18 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Reminder: This article is under WP:1RR. I've fully protected it for a period to avoid blocking you both. Makeandtoss has also been warned on my talk page. --NeilN talk to me 21:46, 9 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you! --Monochrome_Monitor 21:53, 9 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Notification

Nishidani has continued the debate at Talk:Jews#Cite_grouping at another forum, namely Wikipedia:No_original_research/Noticeboard#Definition_of_Jews._Gross_original_research.2FWP:SYNTH_violation, the WP:NOR noticeboard. Since you have commented at the first discussion, but not (yet) at the second, I thought I'd bring this to your attention, in case you would like to comment there as well. Debresser (talk) 20:42, 25 October 2015 (UTC) Ugh. I hate conflict! --Monochrome_Monitor 00:42, 26 October 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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You tube...

...is not a reliable source, especially where it concerns uploads which are likely copyright violations. Reasd WP:YOUTUBE for clarification. Please do not edit war. BMK (talk) 08:38, 2 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

That's not what it means.

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This isn't a self-published source. It's a link to a record of a primary source. Such a thing is very common. --Monochrome_Monitor 08:40, 2 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Olivier

Please stop removing cited material from the article. If you think such material should not be there, the best course of action is to go to the talk page to discuss it. - SchroCat (talk) 08:45, 5 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I agree with you on that, but I still don't understand why you wouldn't respond to me on your talk page. --Monochrome_Monitor 12:14, 5 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Please also be mindful of the current consensus on the Olivier talk page regarding the use of an infobox. As it stands, the consensus is against one. As such, your addition of one has been reverted. If you have somerhing to say on the matter please discuss it there. Thanks. CassiantoTalk 16:08, 5 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Alright then. --Monochrome_Monitor 16:10, 5 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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The Scarlet Letter (1926 film)

Hi. You can't use IMDB's trivia section as a source, please see WP:CITEIMDB. Thanks. Lugnuts Dick Laurent is dead 15:27, 13 November 2015 (UTC) Oh, that makes sense. Thanks. --Monochrome_Monitor 15:41, 13 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia. I noticed that you removed some content from Criticism of the Israeli government without explaining why. In the future, it would be helpful to others if you described your changes to Wikipedia with an accurate edit summary. If this was a mistake, don't worry; I restored the removed content. If you would like to experiment, please use the sandbox. If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, you can leave me a message on my talk page. Thank you! Materialscientist (talk) 03:32, 14 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

It's a long-running thing. Check the talk page. I removed it because it's WP:FRINGE and WP:BLATANTLY RACIST. --Monochrome_Monitor 03:49, 14 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Block

Hello there @NeilN:. I understand why I was blocked but your "sentence" seems heavy-handed. I mean, I can't edit talkpages. Also, 99% of my edits are not Arab-Israeli whatever. Can you just block me from Arab-Israeli for a week and not every article? --Monochrome_Monitor 19:52, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Unfortunately not. Blocks are designed to stop you from editing any page on Wikipedia except your own talk page. --NeilN talk to me 21:45, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That's ridiculous. Most of my edits have nothing to do with the subject. Just look at my contribution history. As of late it's mostly been stuff about silent film and pre-war Broadway. It would make more sense to ban me from ARBPIA for a fortnight than everything for a week. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:46, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The fact you are advising on areas where you should be blocked, indicates your acknowledgement that perhaps a block is for the best. Sit it out and learn from it. CassiantoTalk 23:01, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
All right, two week topic ban on ARBPIA-related subjects. Note this covers all areas of Wikipedia including talk pages and noticeboards. Please don't make me look like an idiot for assuming good faith and believing you will edit productively in other areas. --NeilN talk to me 23:14, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I wont my friend. Thank you! --Monochrome_Monitor 23:17, 15 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitration reminder

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— Preceding unsigned comment added by RolandR (talkcontribs) 01:15, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Your activity on the article for "Jews"

I think you contribute valuable and balanced insight on the topic at hand. Thank you for the hard work on such a volatile subject.

Jasphetamine (talk) 01:56, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Oh dear I appreciate that immensely but I have absolutely no idea what you are referring to. --Monochrome_Monitor 02:09, 16 November 2015 (UTC) @Jasphetamine: Ding! --Monochrome_Monitor 03:02, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Oh. Your input on the Jews article about stuff like the population estimate and the relentless pursuit of ditching Portman for Bernhardt. I like Natalie, she went to day school near my hometown. She's no SB though. Jasphetamine (talk) 03:17, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, thanks! The population thing was absurd. In what universe are "non-Jewish family members" Jews? And with Bernhardt and Portman it's like comparing Shakespeare to.... um... not Shakespeare. --Monochrome_Monitor 03:23, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Haha, I think that non-Jewish family members being Jewish is my favorite example of Wikipedia's penchant for creating Orwellian 2+2=5 type declarations. It is alarming that it went uncontested in the first place. Jasphetamine (talk) 03:52, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I contested it before but it went nowhere, then finally I had it and was like "ARE YOU PEOPLE SANE?!!?!?" ARE YOU READING THIS?!?! I still don't understand the argument of the guy why defended it. It was something like "a range is better". And someone quipped "then why not just write 0-7 billion?" --Monochrome_Monitor 04:00, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Dammit some jerk changed the population again. It was good before!!!! --Monochrome_Monitor 04:01, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Maybe the solution is to just write "Yes" in the population field. Jasphetamine (talk) 04:38, 16 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That's brilliant! A sense of humor will get you far on wikipedia. I never take myself seriously. I've been here for two years but still manage to act like a newbie. --Monochrome_Monitor 04:46, 16 November 2015 (UTC) Hell, I got blocked today. (For deleting a truly odious section on criticism of israel comparing it to nazi germany, an analogy which is considered antisemitic)[reply]
I have bestowed upon the Jews talk page the solution for the Great SB vs NP Infobox Schism of 2015. I would avoid fiddling around with the controversial stuff for a while if you got wiki-trouble from it. I don't want you to go and get some excessively long block you're the first person in this place that doesn't seem crazy. seems to be exactly the right kind of crazy for me to get along with. Well I'm off to copyedit until I forget my woes. Jasphetamine (talk) 06:52, 8 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I might suggest a vacation from editing the Jews page; I see a bad moon rising. Jasphetamine (talk) 06:26, 5 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Suggest away! I thought so too... Hahaha I can be impulsive. Typical wikidragon! I'm going to start calling it that. "the schism" @Jasphetamine:--Monochrome_Monitor 09:06, 5 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
"If I was a religion then my church... would surely have a schism. There'd be Rejewish and Rejuslam and Rejatheists but they'd all be friends, all right!"[1] Jasphetamine (talk) 20:29, 5 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
You were right all along. You're a badass. Jasphetamine (talk) 02:55, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Was I? You're so sweet! How did you do the calculations? --Monochrome_Monitor 03:09, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I dug up percentages from a few governments, looked at mean distribution between a few places. Everything lined up right for the lower numbers. Then I used the CIA factbook as a singular source of data, which can be cited, stating 7 billion people, .2% of which are Jewish, and poof that works out. 14 million. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jasphetamine (talkcontribs) 05:10, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Brilliant! You crunched the numbers, I love it! --Monochrome_Monitor 05:14, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Nothing fancy but enough to confidently say we don't need to include a 25% "you tell me" margin in the info box numbers and can say 14 mil and back that up with sources. I doubt it'll ever get done though, that kid who can't deal with the idea of a median or significant digits will never quit. I kept up with him because I hate not knowing things. Now I know roughly how many Jewish people are out there and I'm done. I'm gonna go get a bunch of challah, red wine, and watch the Sopranos for a while. I wonder what infobox population on wiki i'd get put in. Heh. Jasphetamine (talk) 05:25, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Hahaha sounds magnificent. I think you'd get put in Homo sapiens, but just in case that's too insular (it excludes Neanderthals after all and many people have neanderthal descent!) I'd put you in Homo :P --Monochrome_Monitor 05:31, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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13/11 listed at Redirects for discussion

An editor has asked for a discussion to address the redirect 13/11. Since you had some involvement with the 13/11 redirect, you might want to participate in the redirect discussion if you have not already done so. Legacypac (talk) 21:37, 21 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

When you contribute vague citations such as the one to The Queer Encyclopedia of Film & Television missing a passing comment is hardly surprising. Moreover when you add "cites" that are naked URLs, particularly when the same sources have already been cited properly earlier in the article, you make extra work for others. Please reuse repeated citations properly, and supply full metadata for newly cited sources. Note also that in general 'Criticism' sections, like 'Controversy' sections, are discouraged, although they are sometimes appropriate. DES (talk) 21:43, 22 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I'm the first to admit my cites are often poorly formatted. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:46, 22 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Olivier edits (yet again)

You have been asked to discuss this matter on the talk page, but you appear to prefer to engage in a slow-burn edit war. This is disruptive and not a constructive course of action. The consensus of the two community processes this article has gone through was that the text should remain. Unless you can change that consensus on the article's talk page, I strongly suggest you do not delete it again. If you continue to remove the text, the matter will be raised in an appropriate forum. - SchroCat (talk) 12:59, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I didn't intend a slow-burn edit war. Rather I just edit impulsively, sometimes returning to old haunts. Though I do try to space it out, my sense of timing is not particularly keen. But thanks for taking it here. It's not that I'm trying to be disruptive, I just don't like confrontation. --Monochrome_Monitor 13:08, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
There wouldn't be confrontation Monochrome Monitor if you had initiated a talk page discussion; that's what the talk page is for. The way to introduce hostility and confrontation is to stick two fingers up to everyone who disagrees with you. By refusing to discuss and implementing your preferred version is, ironically, doing the very thing you didn't wish to achieve. CassiantoTalk 13:51, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I would call that unfortunate, not ironic. But I'll initiate a discussion in a bit.--Monochrome_Monitor 14:17, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Note: something else is going on here. FWiW Bzuk (talk) 14:24, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Pardon? --Monochrome_Monitor 14:26, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
See your email. FWiW Bzuk (talk) 16:48, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Damn

Just realized the man who graced me with rotating barnstars has been blocked indefinitely. RIP Pbfreespace. --Monochrome_Monitor 15:01, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

The Tireless Contributor Barnstar
Your work on the Turkish map really is tireless. I had expected I would be one of the only people working on the map, as it is a truly underreported conflict at the moment, but here you are making the map great. Thank you, and keep up the good work. Nishidani (talk) 15:05, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I hope that relieves the annoyance (at least until I get banned:) Nishidani (talk) 15:05, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hooray! Thank you! Unfortunately the news coverage of PKK-Turkey is awfully spotty what with Syria and the like. --Monochrome_Monitor 15:09, 23 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I would love some freePBJ right now. Space. --Monochrome_Monitor 18:46, 23 November 2015 (UTC) @Nishidani:[reply]

Hi,
You appear to be eligible to vote in the current Arbitration Committee election. The Arbitration Committee is the panel of editors responsible for conducting the Wikipedia arbitration process. It has the authority to enact binding solutions for disputes between editors, primarily related to serious behavioural issues that the community has been unable to resolve. This includes the ability to impose site bans, topic bans, editing restrictions, and other measures needed to maintain our editing environment. The arbitration policy describes the Committee's roles and responsibilities in greater detail. If you wish to participate, you are welcome to review the candidates' statements and submit your choices on the voting page. For the Election committee, MediaWiki message delivery (talk) 17:02, 24 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I voted! Is there an "I voted" template of some sort? --Monochrome_Monitor 20:33, 25 November 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Criticism of the Israeli Govt edits

Hi MM. I notice you have been sanctioned in the Criticism article. You made another edit blanking the whole Comparisons to Nazis section which I agree was designed as heap of POV crap. However criticisms of the view are being added to the section. Its better to make the section look stupid with good counter sources than to blank the whole thing. Please take this advice on board and dont make Neil escalate any block. Again, leave it for now, and when you return to it, just counter it with sources ridiculing it. As it is, in my opinion mostly grotesque. However, we debunk, we do not delete! Simon Irondome (talk) 00:50, 13 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I know, it was silly and impulsive. Love you Simon! --Monochrome_Monitor 09:06, 13 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Turkish Insurgency Detailed Map

Hello, you can add Hınıs, Karayazı, Karaçoban and Tekman districts of Erzurum Province to map? Some districts of the Erzurum Province has declared autonomy. Bruskom (talk) 04:27, 16 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I would love to! --Monochrome_Monitor 11:56, 16 December 2015 (UTC) In a bit.[reply]
In your scarce leisure you may like to dally with a few hours reading John Buchan's Greenmantle, which has an extensive description of Erzurum. It also is a fantasy that anticipates modern fantasies about the ME.Nishidani (talk) 21:31, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Fun. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:38, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hey Nish, today I realized I am a victim of the cot-caught merger. I thought I didn't have a boston accent! Phonetics is amazing, but I prefer phonemics. Any advice on how to trill? I can't do alveolar or uvular. :( --Monochrome_Monitor 21:44, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

I pronounce cot/caught like the lady in the example ogg. To me she doesn't sound like she has an accent! --Monochrome_Monitor 21:46, 25 December 2015 (UTC) @Nishidani: --Monochrome_Monitor 21:53, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

'Does the cot/caught merger, for example, arise from a movement of the cot vowel up into the space of the caught vowel or from the movement of the caught cowel down into the cot vowel’s territory?' Matthew J. Gordon, Labov: A Guide for the Perplexed, Bloomsbury 2013 p.180
Ahem!, a New Year's Sonnet of Consolation and Encouragement for MM.
Nomadic vowels, dear M! They’re apt to trot
Out of the high ridge close where they were taught
To graze their accents, and, in solemn sort,
Mosey in the open fields of a lower spot.
Or –as transhumants go both ways- the lot
Up stakes, (unless they end up steaks), and sport
Back to the palate’s field of narrow talk
And season their sounds up in that lofty plot.
There’s no good reason to be overwrought
By the shift.What you’re saddled with is not
A carceral corral. A little practice ought
To get both tongue and uvula to trill
In alternate harmonies: there’s naught that’s got
A right to dictate speech. So speak, dear, as you will!
And now, back to hosing up the pond so that the goldfish can nip at the lush moss on its brink.Nishidani (talk) 10:47, 26 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That was magnificent, thank you! --Monochrome_Monitor 17:27, 26 December 2015 (UTC) I'm framing that on my user page![reply]
I, undeserving, am honoured by my doggeral's new home! I hate to think that its propaedeutic function, getting you to distinguish those vowels in recitation, might cause time-wasting woe. No need to do that, of course. One should be proud of any accent one has. Best Nishidani (talk) 18:38, 26 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
I want say something clever with the words "doggeral", "dogma", "doggedly", "doggery" and the like but you get the point. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:31, 26 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Hello an Turkey location map created. I'm trying to change the map on template but It does not change. Are you can change the map on template ? Map.... Bruskom talk to me 04:11, 10 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, that map was where I was going, but I have no idea how to change it. I recommend asking the people on Wikipedia:Lua --Monochrome_Monitor 07:22, 10 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

@Bruskom:--Monochrome_Monitor 07:23, 10 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Season's Greetings

File:Xmas Ornament.jpg

To You and Yours!

FWiW Bzuk (talk) 17:04, 19 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, thanks! I'm sorry... do I know you? I'm terrible with usernames. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:10, 19 December 2015 (UTC) @Bzuk:[reply]
We edit in some of the same neighbourhoods, especially film articles. FWiW Bzuk (talk) 21:54, 24 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
Fun. Anything article in particular? --Monochrome_Monitor 01:56, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Your work and mine seems to intersect in many articles; I recall doing some "touch-up" on Charles Lindbergh and Marlon Brando, and seeing your contributions. As an aside, some of that time, when we "dared" to make alterations to the holy script, we both also invoked the wrath of other editors that had more than a passing interest in some of those touchstone articles. FWiW Bzuk (talk) 13:20, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, I remember! Like Laurence Olivier! Yeah it's hard being a wiki Dragon. --Monochrome_Monitor 18:12, 25 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Some baklava for you!

Bruskom talk to me 19:19, 22 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you! I LOVE BAKLAVA! How did you know? Sorry for lashing out on the talk page. :) I'm pro Kurdish independence and unification, but I don't want anyone to think my bias and others' is affecting the neutrality of the page. --Monochrome_Monitor 19:20, 22 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]


How do we judge how actor articles should be rated?

Since you will be aware of Talk:Angelina Jolie#How do we judge how actor articles should be rated? by the WP:Ping, I'm posting this section on your talk page for those who might want answers after seeing your edits. A WP:Permalink for it is here. Flyer22 Reborn (talk) 04:41, 24 December 2015 (UTC) @Flyer22 Reborn: I totally agree with you, it should be high. --Monochrome_Monitor 05:56, 24 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

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Is going forwards from the event while retrograde is before the event. Best Doc James (talk · contribs · email) 03:04, 30 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Holy shit you're right! Oops! --Monochrome_Monitor 03:07, 30 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]

Disambiguation link notification for January 1

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Fuck you, DPL bot. And your mother. --Monochrome_Monitor 09:29, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Arabic numerals

Please seek consensus for your proposed changes to Arabic numerals on the talk page of that artice before making them again. Edit warring is not the way forward, you may be blocked if you continue to insist on your changes without a talk page consensus. Thanks, Paul August 10:56, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not edit warring. I'm familiar with policy. You on the other hand are exhibiting ownership behavior from your edit history on this page, and have given no valid reasons for reverting my edits aside from invalid arguments such as "no consensus" and "BRD", both which I thoroughly debunked. If you want to take it to arbitration, be my guest, I have not done anything wrong. Give me a valid reason for reversion and I'll gladly drop it.--Monochrome_Monitor 11:00, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
(ec) Of, course you are edit warring, from WP:EW: "An edit war occurs when editors who disagree about the content of a page repeatedly override each other's contributions." The page has a long consensus for preferring to call these numerals "Arabic numerals" (hence the current name of the article). This certainly can (and perhaps should) be changed, but the way to achieve this is to start a discussion on the talk page, seeking a consensus for such a change, not to repeatedly insist on your changes, by editing against consensus. Paul August 11:16, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Well, except for violating 3RR. Damn. Whatever, I know you don't want to get into the same trouble yourself but I'll stop reverting it if you do. --Monochrome_Monitor 11:03, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I not going to revert again, no matter what you do. Paul August 11:22, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, nevermind, of course it was already reverted. Ah, sorry for yelling at you. I have not slept at all "tonight" (I'm in a UTC -5 time zone). --Monochrome_Monitor 11:04, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for saying you're sorry. It's not a problem. Please enjoy a good night's sleep, everything always seems better in the morning. I'm happy to discuss any proposed changes in the article later. Regards, Paul August 11:22, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
CATCH A NAP. That's an order!Nishidani (talk) 11:11, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Just did! Oy, there are discretionary sanctions for everything! --Monochrome_Monitor 17:14, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, was the problem that I was calling it Hindu-Arabic numerals? I can easily change that. My edits were mostly meant to clarify the distinction of numerals vs numeral system. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:17, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Your thoughts? [2] @Paul August:--Monochrome_Monitor 17:29, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
@Nishidani: I was thinking Nish, we should collaborate on an I/P article! It could be a true meeting of the minds, in the spirit of wikipedia and whatnot. Of course we can't abuse the middle ground fallacy, but I should think our opinions are not binary opposites.--Monochrome_Monitor 17:48, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I would much rather see you spend more time on your University studies that on writing things like the life of Manuel Musallam, a Catholic priest and Palestinian nationalist! Nishidani (talk) 21:02, 2 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I meant articles that we both acknowledge are lacking. :P --Monochrome_Monitor 21:06, 2 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Albert Antébi and Gertrud Kolmar were lacking until I did them (and many others). It's good training to try and enter into another culture and another historical person's milieu and identity and, without anxiety, make a fair assessment of her place in the world. Musallem has long fascinated me, and I'll eventually do his bio. As I said, don't waste too much time on wiki work. Even Terence Tao screwed up his exams at 17 by cramming at the last moment, trusting in his powers and wits to get through, when the less talented managed, by working sedulously over the year through the whole programme systematically, to do better than him. Nishidani (talk) 21:27, 2 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Well that's not a problem, I never study for anything. Never heard of that guy before. It's weird that he's 40 but looks like 19. And are you calling me "less talented"? :P --Monochrome_Monitor 06:16, 3 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

@Nishidani: Ugh. He hasn't given me any valid reason for the reversion of my edits... I hate the prevailing wikipedia attitude which is resistant to change and insists on discussions for the tiniest things which no one actually discusses. I hate being a wikidragon, it's exhausting. --Monochrome_Monitor 03:15, 9 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Biographies of filmmakers

Hello! Just a reminder, the Film project does not cover biography articles. Therefore, please do not add the {{WikiProject Film}} banner to articles about actors, directors and filmmakers. Those articles are covered by adding |filmbio-work-group=yes to {{WikiProject Biography}} instead. Thanks! Fortdj33 (talk) 18:57, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks! That does clear things up, I was confused because several biographies were listed in the project --Monochrome_Monitor 19:01, 1 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Sources removed

Hi. Comparing the last few edits at Jews, I noticed that two sources were removed.[3] Why? Debresser (talk) 09:23, 18 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

They were irrelevant. They didn't cite what they said they were citing. --Monochrome_Monitor 01:01, 19 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Do you perhaps have other sources? I think we need some sources there. Debresser (talk) 12:01, 19 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, yes we do. I'll add some in a bit. :) --Monochrome_Monitor 12:11, 19 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Also, only one source was removed, the usury one. The maimonaides one (also not ideal) was just moved, not removed. Hah, that's funny. --Monochrome_Monitor 12:12, 19 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Monochrome Monitor, few people go to a category page to read a description of the category (which doesn't exist on most category pages) and I doubt that the average editor who is categorizing an article will do so before deciding whether to categorizing an individual as Jewish or People of Jewish descent.
You have no authority to write a statement like "If this category is used without Category:Jews there should be some evidence they rejected identifying as Jewish in its sense of a peoplehood" and tell people what they should or should not do. The only guideline that currently exists is Wikipedia:Categorization/Ethnicity, gender, religion and sexuality and you can not unilaterally impose additional restrictions on editors beyond those that are contained in this guideline especially because these qualifications didn't arise out of a discussion on Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Judaism and seem to be of your own design. Liz Read! Talk! 16:53, 24 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

It arose out of the fact that the category is consistently misused. I thought it was better to go de facto by how it is used. They are not used, on thousands of articles, mutually-exclusively. For instance, Irving Berlin is listed under both categories. Unlike many on wikipedia I do not like to preserve maladaptive status quos, and I go and change things.--Monochrome_Monitor 16:56, 24 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Liza, see my comment at Category_talk:People_of_Jewish_descent#Ugh. Debresser (talk) 19:50, 24 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

APSAC

Hi,

I noticed you added some links to Attachment therapy including an APSAC report. I just thought I'd mention that a while back the article about APSAC was deleted. I noticed and requested a copy of it in my userspace to see if I could salvage it. Unfortunately I haven't had the time to give it a good shot and it's still there, in rough shape. If you're digging into relevant resources as it is, maybe you could dump any you find that are about APSAC in some way, on that talk page (or have at it directly, in which case you could move it into your userspace if you wanted).

It's here: User:Rhododendrites/American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children.

Thanks — Rhododendrites talk \\ 02:25, 30 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

No problem! I'll look into it right now. --Monochrome_Monitor 02:38, 30 January 2016 (UTC)[reply]

How

How did you make your userpage name to appear in green? Debresser (talk) 16:39, 6 February 2016 (UTC) CLick edit on my page to view to source :D @Debresser:--Monochrome_Monitor 17:05, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Ah. I did check the code of this talkpage, but didn't think to check the userpage itself. Thanks. Debresser (talk) 22:53, 6 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
No problem :D --Monochrome_Monitor 01:26, 7 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I need your assistance!

Hello Monochrome Monitor! I was looking to your job with the Turkish Insurgency template for a time, and I saw that you are the major responsible for the editions and updates of this war, or proto-war, whatever... Well, I am making a video for Youtube, one animated map with the Syrian and Iraqi Civil Wars and the subsequent Lebanese, and why not, Turkish spillovers. Will be a everyday video, and it is consuming my free time in this week. Now I am already in 2014 in the map, and I see that I need some assistance with a better speacialist about Turkey than me (my only exp with Turkey regions was in Europa Universalis IV when I tried to recover Byzantium lol haha). More specifically, the evolution of the insurgency since the PKK rebellion until today, only a some data. Which and when each city fell. Can you help me? Leonardo Cebin (disse e fiz) 04:20, 7 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Oh shit, I wish I could help you. It sounds like a great idea! I'm not a specialist in Turkey, although you're right that I've done 99% of that page's edits :P Maybe ask @Bruskom:? He speaks kurdmanji. --Monochrome_Monitor 04:24, 7 February 2016 (UTC) @Léo Cebin:[reply]
Seems that @Bruskom: receive a block lol. Well, first, I was wondering today one thing... Why we don't build a map like the Syrian one using the template that you make? While it is only a template, the common public, the readers, don't have acess to this. It's "exclusive" to us, editors. With one map, we can upload in the PKK rebellion article for commons viewers too see. After this, will be necessary only make a upload if changes happen. And will be more easy to see where the action is happening. Um simples Wikipedista (talk) 05:21, 8 February 2016 (UTC) [It's me, I changed my nick][reply]
Of course, that's exactly what I've been hoping. But the thing is it's not an actual war yet... just unrest. It shows clashes. So if the map were to be of anything it would be of "places where kurds declared autonomy" --Monochrome_Monitor 12:09, 8 February 2016 (UTC) @Léo Cebin:[reply]

I understand. Also, I was searching and seems that the 90s rebellion was much more worse than these, so probably this rebellion will not end with something big, only guerrillas and atacks to police forces. Well, I had some problem with the Hezbollah lines in my videomap, so I was stucked in 2014, but finally I reach now July 24, 2015, so the hour to paint a color in Turkey has come. I learnt much with the related Wiki articles and some things more, and think I can walk alone in this, but it has a hole that can not find sources. I need dates. What sources have you used to verify which cities have proclaimed autonomy? All the changes occur in August/September, and since October cease-fire, none changes have been reported? And in addition to Cizre, another city was conquered by the Turks? If you can help me, thank you!

More one thing. I found a source of news that I think that you will like: [4] A simple Wikipedian (said and did) 06:52, 21 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Oh, thanks that's great! Here's a great source --Monochrome_Monitor 12:59, 21 February 2016 (UTC) @Um simples Wikipedista:][reply]

Finklestein

I think that the Finklestein para should be restored. I didn't put it up originally: I remember that there was a lot of discussion when it was put in. I just edited it to respond to the flag that it needed more explanation. I tried to clarify briefly what his book says. It was an important book which documents its points well. It initiated a lot of discussion re: the uniqueness issue, and I believe that it forced historians to re-examine the claims to uniqueness. For that reason, I think that it is more than a fringe contribution. At the same time partly because of the Holocaust Industry, but mainly because of his continual support for the Palestinians he has earned the wrath of many supporters of Israel. Over the years, I have read a number of attempts to refute his research and writing and have yet to be convinced that he is unreliable.Joel Mc (talk) 16:44, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

The book did NOT force historians to re-examine uniqueness. There has been no such earth-shaking shift. I find scholarship takes a middle road of acknowledging the unique parts of the holocaust (ie, death camps) while also acknowledging it in the context of other genocides. It's not a question of unique vs universal, which is a false dichotomy. It's a question of which side specific scholarship leans towards. Elements of specificism and universalism are found in every book on the subject I have read, with many erring towards one side. This is not an issue about Israel. If this article was about I/P it would be reasonable to mention finklestein (albeit with disclaimers). But it's not, it's about the Holocaust. His theory that Jews in America "invented" the holocaust and are using it to extort europe and defend Israel is patent, and dangerous, nonsense. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:07, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Um, did you read any books reviews in the mainstream press? His research (about distribution of restitution funds) is one thing, and he was right in debunking Joan Peter's book as baseless. But his polemics are another thing. He does not have merit in saying, for example, that the Holocaust only came into the public eye in the 70s as part of an American Jewish plot to increase sympathy for Israel following the 6 day war. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:15, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Does it not surprise you at all that the book was praised by Storm Front, David Duke, and David Irving? That's not anti-Israel, it's anti-jewish.--Monochrome_Monitor 17:17, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
And aren't you at all bothered by him saying that reparations are extortion and blackmail? --Monochrome_Monitor 17:20, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

His theory that Jews in America "invented" the holocaust and are using it to extort europe and defend Israel is patent, and dangerous, nonsense.

This statement means you have never read the book, nor followed Finkelstein's work except in cursory reviews from quarter baked hostile critics. I have had to restore it, as illegitimately censored. It is a minor, but significant point of view.Nishidani (talk) 17:23, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Aw, Nish! Since when is the new york times quarter baked? --Monochrome_Monitor 17:45, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I don't mean he denies it. I mean he distinguishes between the holocaust and "the holocaust", ie, its public perception. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:46, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Since when is the NYTs taken seriously in serious quarters. It took me 2 and a half decades to persuade an American cousin of mine not to read it. He's a high-flyer, and has finally begun to entertain doubts. I cut my teeth on Raul Hilberg's masterpiece - it constituted one of the key moments in my long reading life- and I've never seen anything that suggests Hilberg's judgement on these things is askew. His position was generally close to Finkelstein's, meaning NF's position has extremely strong credentials of informed endorsement. NF is one of 40 academics I can name, mostly Jewish, whose careers ran into a wall when they disagreed with the majority on things like this. No argument, just strongarm tactics of 'fire the bum' and make his or her career collapse. Thuggery. His dad got a good pension directly from the German government because of their responsibility for his trials in the death camps. His mother went through official Jewish channels, and got a one-time handout that was a disgraceful pittance.Nishidani (talk) 17:57, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not talking about the distribution of funds. I'm talking about him maintaining this was done because of Israel. --Monochrome_Monitor 18:06, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I'd venture, against NF, that the lessons of the holocaust have been more deeply absorbed in parts of the diaspora like the U.S. and Great Britain (outside the incestuously self-referential lobbying bodies that presume to speak up for 'everyone in the community') than it has in Israel. 1967 changed a lot of things, unfortunately. I just get twitchy when I see a consensus or a 'public' attitude. 'Truth' is always a partial, fragmentary perception, twigged by individuals, and lost in the crowd.Nishidani (talk) 18:21, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I love the Great.--Monochrome_Monitor 18:31, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
We Irish never forget!Nishidani (talk) 18:43, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I forgot, you're Irish. I remember you saying something about that. Do you live in Britain or (Northern) Ireland? --Monochrome_Monitor 18:45, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Neither. To be precise, I live in my library, and in my gardens.Nishidani (talk) 18:50, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Gardens? --Monochrome_Monitor 18:54, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I think having '4' warrants the plural.Nishidani (talk) 19:18, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh my. Do you have one for each genus? --Monochrome_Monitor 19:20, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
No. I have four for one genius! Whoops, lapsus.:) One's for vegetables, one's for social ambiance, shadily overseen by a sprawling magnolia, and hedged with the stupidly named mock orange, which in Italian is more precisely defined, given its scent, as angel's breasts. The third and fourth are hanging gardens, tiered, for fruit trees,-figs, kiwis, apples, quinces, cherries,plums, with strawberry beds- furnished with nooks for solitude, and a goldfish pool. There are a lot of snakes there, but all friendly.Nishidani (talk) 19:29, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
By that do you mean non-venomous, or non-aggressive? --Monochrome_Monitor 19:34, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Mostly non-venomous. Snakes generally aren't aggressive, and the only one I ever killed, much to my lifelong grief, I killed because relatives were panic-stricken at its innocuous presence near their car. I've never quite forgiven myself, and make a point of picking them up, when asked by locals to do so, and relocating them in bushland close by. In my gardens they can just slither about till they find what they're looking for. That memory, now that I've evoked it, will ruin dinner, and serves me right: a small snake, reared up against a wall, its eye fixed with terror, as I thwacked it, all because folks were worrying they were late for an appointment.Nishidani (talk) 19:42, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Oh that's terrible. I have never forgiven myself for accidentally killing a tadpole by putting it in water which was too warm. Hopefully you'll get plenty opportunity to redeem yourself in the eyes of the snake gods. --Monochrome_Monitor 19:46, 17 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Snakes?? The Irish?? not sure where this discussion is going. But seriously I find that some of the discussion seems to join those who continually question Finkelstein’s scholarship. Reacting to this, Chicago Professor John Mersheimer’s comments are relevant: "Finkelstein makes compelling arguments in almost all of his writings, and thus he has played a key role in shaping both the academic and public discourse on a host of important subjects. In my opinion, that is the highest accolade one can accord a scholar.”(see: http://mearsheimer.uchicago.edu/pdfs/T0003.pdf) Finally, a (the?) dean of Holocaust scholars, Raul Hilberg, has said: “...I am by no means the only one who, in the coming months or years, will totally agree with Finkelstein's breakthrough." Joel Mc (talk) 12:35, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Well, we already mentioned Hilberg. Of course he likes him, he's his "hero", they are likeminded. So he's not exactly representative of a neutral majority... --Monochrome_Monitor 13:21, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

'Neutrality' and 'majority' are question-begging, and 'neutral majority' is a dangerous coalescence of words. Scholarship is obliged to strive for neutrality (Hilberg's upset a lot of people, he didn't use adjectives), but cannot avoid a perspectival framework that makes every approach to the empirical 'angular'. One must simply work with and against it, consciously. It is extremely rare to find critics of either Hilberg or Finkelstein questioning the exactness of their sourcing and data, something which is wildly askew in the polemics of Finkelstein's critics. Anytime there is a consensus in scholarship, the best scholars will start to think around its edges, or test the foundations. A majority view is a formula for complacency, thrown around in lieu of specific argument. A long time ago, people read Karl Popper and Thomas Kuhn. Nishidani (talk) 14:38, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
You can't deny there's a conflict of interest. Finklestein wrote the book and and said his inspiration was hilberg, and hilberg praised it. Of course. They are like minded. Saying Hilberg is a neutral arbiter is disingenuous. --Monochrome_Monitor 14:44, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
There's no conflict of interest. You are using an abstract assumption that may have some heuristic value at times, but contradicts everything we know about Hilberg. Scholars of his moral and intellectual caliber don't do favours. He wasn't even a 'friend' of NF's. They met only once. And they don't make calculations of personal advantage in their work. Finkelstein was ostracized by pro-Palestinian militants for many of his positions, which weren't 'politically correct'. Had he or Finkelstein made different , 'canny' choices, they would have enjoyed more prestigious careers than those awarded them, the sort of sinecures loud-mouthed smarmy louts in the commentariat enjoy.Amicus Plato, sed magis amica veritas.Nishidani (talk) 16:05, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
And I don't know where you got the idea that Hilberg is the "dean" of holocaust scholars. --Monochrome_Monitor 15:02, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I always used words like those with a citation in mind. See here, here, herehere, here and here, for example. Some like to qualify this with 'American', perhaps in deference to his great Israeli contemporary Yehuda Bauer, but Hilberg pioneered the field, and did so at great risk to his academic future, in isolation.Nishidani (talk) 16:05, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I like Bauer. Hilberg is too functionalist for me. Bauer is pretty rational and even-handed. --Monochrome_Monitor 16:11, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
But I'm not arguing more about finklestein.. I'm not going to remove it, I would want a consensus for that and you two seem to feel strongly about it. --Monochrome_Monitor 16:16, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Nothing to do with 'feeling strongly'. Everything to do with evaluating carefully wiki criteria on sourcing in the face of a huge hall of heckling fools in the commentariat. I'm doing a review of the Hamas article and have read a lot by Matthew Levitt, seconded by Dennis Ross . I regard the latter as a walking disaster and thoroughly disreputable. Levitt is highly prejudiced, identifiably connected to an official Israeli position, and yet knows his subject well. So, whatever my personal views, I use him frequently. It's as simple as that. Nishidani (talk) 16:24, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Oy! However you word it. I'm trying to defuse the confrontation.--Monochrome_Monitor 16:29, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

What confrontation? Simon delegated to me an adversarial advisory role. I'd never engage in a 'confrontation' with you:I'm too old, and you're too nice. I will however, to honour Simon's confidence, 'confront' you with reasoned views that you might find distasteful. Cheers, dear.Nishidani (talk) 18:46, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
An interesting exchange about Bauer and Hilberg. I read the following years ago and was able to find it again. I doubt that Raul Hilberg had any heroes.http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/a-human-being-without-fault-1.230016 Joel Mc (talk) 17:50, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Awwwww you're sweet Nish. It was fine when I was just er, playfully sparring with you, but it got less fun when another joined in, it started to feel like a quarrel (in which I was outnumbered 2:1). --Monochrome_Monitor 19:46, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Um, . . just on a point of form, I barged in on a conversation Joel Mc sought with you. It was I who 'joined in', not Joel, and therefore I must bear any blame you might apportion. As time goes on, I think you'll see the other side to being 'outnumbered' - it is the heroic role. There's no honour in the brute force of numbers, and to stand one's ground (Gloucester in King Lear has it:'I am tied to th' stake, and I must stand the course.') has the merit of dignity, the honour of sincerity and, as often as not, the witness of fidelity to truth. There, I'm being pompous . .it's time to catch my nightly film. Cheers Nishidani (talk) 19:56, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Enjoy the film! I hope it's something good. --Monochrome_Monitor 20:00, 19 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

My absence

Hi MM. I got your off-Wiki communication. I have taken a prolonged wikibreak due to the anniversary of my mothers death coming up. I nursed her in her final 3 months at home. 3 years now but the memories are more vivid. Not easy watching your only immediate relative slipping away. So I have not felt much like editing. Feeling a bit better, and I would like to sincerely apologise. I was not intentionally ignoring you. Call it a retreat from the world. It goes after the 19th March. Till the next year.. Greetings Nishidani also! I hope all is well with you and yours, as always. Your friend (both of you) Simon Irondome (talk) 02:11, 23 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Simon! Do whatever you need for your own wellbeing during your yartzeit. No need to apologize, you've been a wikiblessing for me. --Monochrome_Monitor 02:32, 23 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
This is uncanny. I got worried two months ago at not seeing any edits from Simon, and all those Bugle posts dumped mechanically on the talk page. On the one hand, this place can be stressful, and a quiet break might have been just the thing, so I held off from an intrusive query as to whether or not all was well. After 2 months while remonstrating obnoxiously with our young MM, I thought, since she had your email, of asking her to use that channel to send on my best regards, and a request you not reply if all was well. And I didn't do that, because, again, it would look nosey. I'm delighted on the one hand to hear you are well, and, on the other, moved by your period of commemorative mourning, something I share, since I don't celebrate my birthday, it being the anniversity of my mother's death to the hour, and attentive relatives never fuss over it, intuiting that the day cannot be festive, however much I feel thankful for her bearing me (until I became obnoxious in early youth, causing her endless embarrassment by refusing to knuckle under the rules of the prestigious school she sent me to, a fucking concentration camp of bright kids and reactionary politics). Best wishes and my thoughts to you and your mother this coming month.Nishidani (talk) 17:57, 23 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Since Umberto Eco was commemorated today, at his funeral Moni Ovadia told us one of Eco's Yiddish jokes, far more colourfully than in the flat version you get at Jewish humour. It ran like this.
One day early in the morning, the rabbi of Chelm had a visit, announced, as extremely urgent, from one of his local community, Yankel. Yankel persisted in badgering his keep to be allowed to see the busy rabbi, and at last the latter relented.
'Rabbi, you must help me. Something dreadful happened today, and I need your advice.'
'Good grief! What happened? I'll see what I can do.'
'I was having breakfast this morning and. . .
'Oh come now, man, get to the matter, don't beat about the bush!'
'Right. I was having breakfast and took a slice of bread. . . '
'Now, now, I have no interest whatsoever in what you had for breakfast. Cut to the chase, my good man...
'As I buttered the slice of bread . . .'
'Goodness me, get out. I've no time to waste on . .
'The bread slipped out of my hand, and fell on the floor.'
'So?'
'It fell on the floor on the buttered side up..'
'Nonsense. That's impossible. You mustn't have looked closely.'
'No, rabbi. It fell with the buttered side up.'
'This is not a religious problem. It's simple physics that every piece of buttered bread that falls on the floor must fall with the buttered side down.'
'But, rabbi, I have excellent sight, and I swear on the Torah it fell as I said it did.'
The rabbi fixed Yankel in a severe gaze, scanning his face for the telltale signs of sincerity, and quickly convinced himself Yankel had told the truth.
'Well, son, this is an extraordinary business. I've never heard the likes of it, and it will take some time for me to examine all of my books to find out an answer for that situation. At that, agreeing that Yankel would be called when a solution was found, the Rabbi retired to his extensive library, and began reading.
No solution was forthcoming over the following week, and the rabbi started to send letters out to all of the surpassing masters of the Kabbalistic tradition, the eruditi of the Zohar, and eminent sages, from Baghdad to the forsaken nooks of Jerusalem, to the yeshivot in New York. No one could come up with a text that would cut the Gordian knot in this case and throw light on the miracle. An intense round-robin of correspondence ensued through all the global quarters of far-flung Talmudic study centres. Finally, after 3 years, Yankel was summoned.
'The problem has been clarified, Yankel. All is clear. The problem was that you buttered the wrong side of the bread.' Best Nishidani (talk) 17:57, 23 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
(I'm sure at least one hostile reader of my contributions will take my mentioning this, to both of you no doubt, familiar joke, in an obscurely negative light. But as told by Ovadia, one of the great exponents of the Bulgarian Yiddish tradition, it drew a lovely knowing chuckle through the crowd for the way Ovadia cited it in the context of his memories of his friend).Nishidani (talk) 18:02, 23 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Hey, I wrote some of that article! :P --Monochrome_Monitor 21:29, 23 February 2016 (UTC) well, not the jokes part.[reply]
I'm sorry about your mother Nish. :( I'm not that young! I feel old. Can you believe in a few months I'll be 19? Ughhhhh. Simon remembers when I was sixteen! --Monochrome_Monitor 00:58, 24 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Don't feel sorry. She died almost instantly, managing to put a smile on her face just in time, as a last message. A lesson absorbed by my father when his turn came.The genius of that specific joke lies in the delay. It's very deep, and one could say that Eco's second novel Foucault's Pendulum is an extended 509 page (in Italian) gloss on an otherwise culturally specific anecdote, teasing out from it the generic lessons for reading. In other words the 'Jewish' joke's amorously self-mocking ironies conceal a piece of acute wisdom that, mutatis mutandis applies to the most advanced forms of human hermeutic intelligence. So it can't be taken as a satire on a closed community, or religious hair-splitting precisely because we all tend to massively overread, and in doing so, conjure up either self-confirming conspiracies (politically) or deliciously foible-ridden conceptual machines in semiotics (academically), that annul the 'obvious', which however is never obvious (in classical Latin, the 'obvious' is what gets in one's habitual way, something therefore like St.Paul's 'skandalon'/'scandal' to dulled reason).Nishidani (talk) 10:32, 24 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
MM. You might consider adding to the Jewish Humour version this link, which is far more pregnantly lyrically than my quick recall of his speech.Nishidani (talk) 11:10, 24 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Nish can remember a time before I existed MM! At least in this incarnation. Grab every second and love it, use it and grow within it love. Nish, I appreciate the kind words more than I can say. And the joke. I suspect it is based entirely on a real incident. The loss of Umberto Eco is a great blow. His works are a treasure. There is an excellent short interview that was featured in The Forward that I shall send to you, discussing his final work. Yours with a roll up! Simon Irondome (talk) 01:18, 24 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, the joke was hilarious Nish. It reflects something about human nature. Dogma is the convenient foundation of virtually all knowledge. Having nominal axioms to fall back on makes us feel secure epistemologically. The joke section of the article wasn't my work, it's very... vanilla. I did a few sentences in the lead.--Monochrome_Monitor 12:01, 24 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Well, if you care to add this, here is the version recounted at the funeral, literally translated. If not, fine.

'In a Jewish hamlet in the vast Tsarist empire, there's a community of ultra-orthodox Jews of impressive distinction. Their rabbi was an outstanding authority on the kabbalah. One day, the rabbi sees one of the members of his congregation arrive at his home pallid and panting, his brow beaded with cold sweat, who says: 'Rabbi, hear me out!' Worried by his appearance, the Rabbi says:'Yankele, sit down. What on earth have you seen, Satan himself?' 'No, it's worse than that.' 'Oh dear, good grief. Well, tell me all about it.' 'Well, Rabbi. I was making breakfast, with a hunk of black bread, plenty of butter, and I was spreading the butter on the bread, with a cup of hot sugared tea and. .' The Rabbi breaks in.'Goodness me, Yankele. You ae being silly, aren't you? You come here and all you have to tell me is about your breakfast?' 'Hang on, Rabbi, just let me finish, please! Well then, I was smacking my lips, looking forward to the bounty when, out of the blue,, my cat leapt up onto the table and caused the slice of bread to fall onto the floor. Now, you go tell me what side of the bread hit the floor?' 'Don't be a moron, Yankele. It's a simple matter of physics. It fell on the buttered side.' 'No, rabbi! It fell on the unbuttered side.'At this point, the rabbi himself also was astonished, and the blood left his face. He said: 'Are you pulling my leg? Look, this is a serious matter, it's a mystical thing.' 'Rabbi, I swear to you that's what happened. And I have witnesses'. 'Go home, Yankele. This is something I have to look more deeply into.' So the Rabbi began to undertake his research, took down books on the Kabbalah, and began to write letters to all of the kabbalists the world over, to those who dwell in the most reclusive depths of Jerusalem, to those of the splendid Jewish community of Prague, to Petersburg and New York, everywhere. Letters were exchanged, responsa give, all pulling apart various conclusions arrived at, so everything had to be re-examined all over again. Three years, for three years, this intense activity by the great rabbis continued. Then at last, one day, Yankele got word that he had been summoned by his Rabbi. He arrives, red in the face, overcome with emotion, and the Rabbi says to him: 'Yankele, take a seat. Listen to me. We've managed it at last. For three full years we have worked for you. The whole world of the Kabbalah has worked on your behalf alone. And finally we have come to a unanimous conclusion- the one and only possible conclusion. My dear Yankele, to explain what happened in your case there is only one answer, one alone. Yankele, you buttered the wrong side of the bread.[1]

  1. ^ As told by Moni Ovadia:In una cittaduzza ebraica del vasto imperio tzarista c’è una comunità di ebrei ultra-ortodossi di grande vaglia. Il loro rabbino è un esimio kabbalista. Un giorno questo rabbino si vede arrivare a casa uno dei suoi congreganti, trafelato, pallido in volto ,con la fronte imperlato di sudore gelato,che dice ‘Rabbino, ascoltami.’ Il rabbino preoccupato dice ’Yankele. Siediti. Cos’hai visto, Satana?’ ‘No, peggio!’ ‘Mamma mia, allora racconta.’ ‘Rabbino, Io stavo facendo la mia colazione con una fetta di pane nero, burro abbondante, stavo imburrando il pane,e tè zuccherato bollente. . ‘ E Il rabbino dice, ‘Ma sei scemo Yankele? Sei venuto qui per raccontarmi la tua colazione?’ ‘Aspetta, rabbino, lasciami finire. Allora io stavo pregustando la bontà, quando, all’improvviso, il mio gatto è saltato sul tavolo e ha fatto cadere la fetta di pane. Dimmi rabbino, da che parte è caduta la fetta di pane?’ ‘Non fare il cretino, Yankele: è fisica. Dal lato del burro.’ ‘No rabbino . È caduta dal lato senza burro.’ Il rabbino anche lui trasecola, diventa anche lui bianco. E dice: ‘Mi stai prendendo in giro? Guarda questo è molto grave, è un fatto mistico.’ ‘ Rabbino, ti giuro - ce l’ho testimoni.’ ‘Vai a casa. Devo studiare.’ E il rabbino comincia lo studio , estrae libri dalla kabbalah e cominica scrivere lettere a tutti i kabbelistic del mondo, a quelli che abitano negli anfratti più reconditi di Gerusalemme, a quelli della splendida Praga ebraica, Petersburgo, New York, dovunque, scambio di lettere, responsa, smontano quello a cui sono arrivati. Ricominciano. Tre anni,per tre anni questo lavorio dei grandi mistici. Finché un giorno il congregante si sente convocato dal suo rabbino. Arriva rosso e emozionato, e il rabbino gli dice. ‘Yankele, siediti. Ascoltami. Ce l’abbiamo fatta. Tre anni abbiamo lavorato per te. Tutto il mondo della kabbalah ha lavorato solo per te. Finalmente siamo arrivati all’unanimita-a una, e una sola conclusione. Caro Yankele a quello che ti è capitato c’e una e sola una risposta. Yankele, hai imburrato la fetta del pane dal lato sbagliato.’

Tired of edit war

Notice of Edit warring noticeboard discussion

Information icon Hello. This message is being sent to inform you that there is currently a discussion involving you at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Edit warring regarding a possible violation of Wikipedia's policy on edit warring. Thank you. --Rabenkind (talk) 18:49, 25 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Your edit to Jewish history

I reverted your edit to Jewish history because it copied and pasted text from another Wikipedia article. Doing that violates Wikipedia's licenses, which require attribution to all users who created and altered the content of a page.

As I wrote more than a week ago at Talk:Jews#Culture dump, in order to satisfy relevant copyright and attribution requirements, please comply with WP:Copying within Wikipedia. Thank you. — Malik Shabazz Talk/Stalk 06:24, 27 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]

The difference in this case is that I wrote much of that paragraph. But, whatever. --Monochrome_Monitor 06:27, 27 February 2016 (UTC)[reply]


Semi-protection for Turkish Insurgency

This module is always vandalized by Turks. So you can add an Semi-protection ? Kordestani (talk) 02:45, 2 March 2016 (UTC) I don't have the permissions for that, but I can ask. I agree, lots of people blank the page, it's really bad. --Monochrome_Monitor 01:54, 2 March 2016 (UTC) Thanks for reverting that shit. What a pain. --Monochrome_Monitor 01:59, 2 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Requested! :D --Monochrome_Monitor 02:17, 2 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I did not understand that what is an town is in Bingöl province as conflict. So there is no conflict in Bingöl province and you can remove that ?. Kordestani (talk) 17:43, 3 March 2016 (UTC) I have seen it before. It drives me craaaaaaazy and I can't figure out how to get rid of it. 17:27, 3 March 2016 (UTC) Working on it. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:57, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I found it Haccilar before than you, but you first edited map :) Kordestani (talk) 19:26, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Muahaha --Monochrome_Monitor 18:27, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Do you know anything about PKK-held positions in the mountains? They should be marked as "rural areas" @Kordestani:. --Monochrome_Monitor 19:05, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, but PKK now not direct part of this conflict. The PKK is waiting for spring and summer. Also PKK now didn't totally controls any mountain in Turkey. But PKK can control mountains in Turkey in the future. PKK fights in rural areas and mountains and PKK's urban branch known as YDG-H and YPS is fights in cities. Kordestani (talk) 20:17, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Aren't they in mountains of the Kurdish region in Iraq? By the way, mind if I ask, are you a northern/southern/western/eastern Kurd? And which Kurdish languages do you speak?--Monochrome_Monitor 19:23, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Yes PKK's main headquarters in Qandil Mountains of the Kurdish region in Iraq. But PKK is very organized in Iran, Syria, Iraq and Turkey. PKK has different branches in Iran, Syria, Iraq and Turkey. PJAK is the Iranian Kurdistan branch of PKK. YPG is Syrian Kurdistan branch of PKK. YDG-H and YPS is Turkish Kurdistan branch of PKK. I'm from northern Kurdistan(Turkey). I'm an Kurmanji Kurd.. Kurmanji is an branch of Kurdish nation. Kordestani (talk) 20:35, 3 March 2016 (UTC
Well best of luck to you! I hope you get independence. But shhhh I'm supposed to be nuetral. ;)--Monochrome_Monitor 19:55, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Alacakaya is an district of Elazığ Province but this town located in Diyarbakır Province on this map.. Location of Alacakaya is wrong and should be corrected. Kordestani (talk) 19:20, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You're right it's in elazig, but I got the coordinates right, so it must be a problem with the image used in the template. [5]--Monochrome_Monitor 18:26, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I said I removed Sapata in the edit summary but I didn't... weird. Thanks for catching that! --Monochrome_Monitor 18:30, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, you are right.. There isn't a place called Şapata. Şapata named place is doesn't exist. Kordestani (talk) 19:37, 3 March 2016 (UTC
It's a place in Romania. But not turkey. --Monochrome_Monitor 18:41, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Monochrome Monitor, You can slide it up a the coordinates of these district ? Or put as located in Elazığ province ?.. Or we will remove this Alacakaya district. Kordestani (talk) 23:06, 6 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The coordinates are right, I don't want to change them. The problem is the map. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:40, 7 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Canaanites

Re this Canaanites 'The Canaanites themselves inhabited the region since the 8th millennium BCE.' That appears to be sourced, but is utter nonsense. A little reflection would tell you it is meaningless, since we cannot use an ethnonym like that to speak of the deep past. It is technically impossible to identify a specific people that far back.

(2) the identification of Israel on the Merneptah stele with Canaanites whoever Canaanites were is theory, not a fact.
(3)and are archeologically attested as early as the mid-third millennium BCE.'(Aubet The Phoenicians and the West p.9. read it. It says no such thing. Second even had this source said that, it would only contradict the earlier 'since the 8th millennium BCE' nonsense.
(4)generally this is all very sneaky. Israel on the Merneptah stele =Canaanite. The Canaanites were materially indistinguishable from the Israelites, the Canaanites were there since the 8th millennium, hence the ancestors of the Jews were in Israel since the 8th millennium BCE. The problem in this snippety approach is, by the same token one can patch up a statement saying, the Phoenicians defined themselves as kan'ani (Canaanites), the Canaanites were interchangeable with the Israel of the Merneptah stele, the Canaanites were there since the the 8millenium BCE, hence the Phoenicians were there since the 8th m illenium BCE. Hilarious. Think about it.Nishidani (talk) 21:12, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Since when is wikipedia not allowed to mention prehistory? I'm not trying to be sneaky Nish, I was just reading the article on Israelites and saw the reference and thought it was relevant. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:16, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Not your fault that the article is stupid. My presence is disliked there, but the article is rife with incoherencies. The point is, no one knows what ethno-cultural' group inhabited prehistoric anywhere. You have only a definition of people in terms of the cultural style, not of ethnic groups. It is epistemologically impossible to ascertain let alone affirm what the article is saying, which means it has been tampered with for an ideological end.Nishidani (talk) 21:23, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I think your syllogism is an oversimplification. You can say that about tons of other pages, like about the Basques. But I'll revert it. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:34, 3 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
If you say, but what about other pages, I'm likely to think (but not say):'So, if they get away with it on other pages, why can't our page get away with it'). I'm sure you don't think that way, but it is what that kind of argument implies. The syllogism/analogy is correct. The page regarding ancient history is a patchwork stitched up to produce an impression. Really, the history of the Jews, once you start from the ancient diversity, rather than try to mimic a superficially Biblical image of unity, is far, far more interesting that this (suffice it to read the Tanakh closely, with the relevant scholarship at hand). Of one of any number of examples of why those who have reedited back the page to its former shape, just changing a few words, take this:
'Yahweh,[50][51][52][53] one of the Ancient Canaanite national gods.' Well, again, whoever wrote that is just pasting in an ill-read snippet, and knows nothing of the subject. Yahweh in the northern theory may have emerged as an epithet for a Canaanite God, but he is not in that pantheon in that name form. To the contrary, the textual evidence, both Biblical and Egyptian points to an even more interesting association with the extra-Canaanite, Transjordan region of Edom, specifically Se'ir. The early Israelites in all probability (esp if you make them out to be Canaanites), as the -el in Israel indicates, did not worship a Yahweh. That is in Noll's book mentioned in close proximity to this, but Noll is clipped for this, some other author for that, when the whole period cannor be factually told, but only described per hypotheses ordered according to the scholarly consensuses they gain.
By the above, I am not suggesting you try and fix this. My interest here is only to make a methodological point. There is no method in the patchwork - it's a mosaic of nice bits to fit a theory, not a summation that harmonizes the know or probable facts. Anyway, I must catch my nightly movie, esp. since I've run out of beer.Nishidani (talk) 21:17, 4 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Enjoy! --Monochrome_Monitor 21:46, 4 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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Suspicion

A certain user seems to be reverting your edits on Sikh-related articles, adding back in the "genocide" category. Any idea who the master (if there is one) might be? Thanks, GABHello! 20:10, 19 March 2016 (UTC) Some guy named alpha mp. It's silly how wikipedians with povs always add stuff about their favored group into genocide categories. Like, there's been some absolute bullshit stuff in there. Wikipedia needs to seriously have a decision about whether to follow the mainstream and legal definition of genocide (intentional destruction of a people in whole or in part) or to cave to everyone's special interests. It's ridiculous how in this topic people don't use mainstream definitions because they are "too exclusive". And I'm not being super picky and only including genocides recognized by multiple states or authorities. It's the same with the holocaust too. In our WP:CATEGORYies we offer the conflicting syllogism of: The holocaust is a genocide. Not a genocide atrocity (ie killing of jehovah's witnesses, siege of stalingrad) is part of the holocaust. Therefore not a genocide is a genocide. Actually only jews and roma faced genocide according to the definition. Well, counting the utashe (I would consider them different genocides but some group them together) Serbs too.--Monochrome_Monitor 21:15, 19 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Woah, I just realized they just made an account and all their edits are reversions of my edits. That IS suspicious.--Monochrome_Monitor 21:26, 19 March 2016 (UTC) @GeneralizationsAreBad:[reply]
Yeah, I just didn't know who the master was, and I thought you might know. GABHello! 21:32, 19 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, you mean you think it's a sock? --Monochrome_Monitor 21:58, 19 March 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Consider a move proposal

Hello MM. It looks like you are trying to move Semitic people. Just now you created Talk:Semitic peoples by cut-and-paste. This isn't usually done and may need to be fixed by an admin. It would be better for you to make a proposal for what you want to do, at least at WP:RMTR. Thank you, EdJohnston (talk) 02:44, 3 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

It was discussed on the talk page so I figured it was fine, but if there's a proper way to do it I apologize for the impropriety. --Monochrome_Monitor 02:47, 3 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

NOT being facetious --Monochrome_Monitor 02:48, 3 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Where was it discussed? I have looked everywhere but cannot see any evidence of consensus for what you did. Oncenawhile (talk) 16:48, 3 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
"Comment - This is going to be an WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS argument, but I only bring it up to rebut the argument that "We don't have an "Indo European people" article either. There is no such "people"." While it may be true that we don't have an Indo European people article (yet), these "Foo peoples"-type articles, where "Foo" is a language group are quite common on WP. We have: Indo-Aryan peoples, Tai peoples, Austronesian peoples, Polynesian peoples, Uralic peoples, Pearic peoples, Finno-Ugric peoples, Samoyedic peoples, Celtic peoples, need I go on? I'm not saying this article, as currently written, is particularly good, but "Semitic peoples" is a valid concept. It just needs to be rewritten with a different focus.--William Thweatt TalkContribs 21:12, 15 December 2015 (UTC)

The trick is in the plural -s. It might indeed be possible to write an article about the many different Semitic peoples and their history. ·maunus · snunɐɯ· 21:34, 15 December 2015 (UTC)"

"Ah, yes, the plural -s. I'd just assumed this was already at "Semitic peoples". I would have sworn I saw an "s" up there. Funny the way the brain works (or doesn't) sometimes. In any case, it doesn't invalidate the point, it just means the article should be moved to Semitic peoples."--William Thweatt TalkContribs 22:24, 15 December 2015 (UTC)
  • "If it is unclear, my point and initial proposal is exactly the same as that put forward by Maunus. As for there not being an Indo-European cultures article either, good, there shouldn't be. But there is an article about Proto-Indo-Europeans. FunkMonk (talk) 04:35, 16 December 2015 (UTC)"

--Monochrome_Monitor 16:57, 3 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Removing CFD tag during discussion

Welcome to Wikipedia. Please do not remove Categories for discussion notices from category pages, or remove other people's comments in Categories for discussion debates, as you did with Semitic peoples. Otherwise, it may be difficult to create consensus. If you oppose the deletion, merger, or renaming of a category, please comment at the respective page instead.

It is particularly disturbing that you were warned once,[6] and still did this again.[7]

If you had not participated in the discussion at Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2016_January_26#Category:Semitic_peoples, you could have done a WP:Non-admin closure on it, but having disagreed with the proposal, you should have left it to run its course. As it is, removing the CFD tag from the page looks as if you were seeking to avoid drawing attention to the discussion. – Fayenatic London 12:06, 5 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

No, I wasn't trying to avoid discussion. I thought it was silly that the complaint of one user can deface a page like that. Anyway, I don't even remember when I deleted it :/ --Monochrome_Monitor 12:21, 5 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

OCE

If you see the intro at WP:AADD, it makes it clear that the reasoning in it generally applies to deletion-of-content not just deletion of page discussions, and see the first link referred to, a section at WP:AADP, which is written more generally; it's the exact same "this has to be kept because I saw it somewhere else on here" reasoning. I appreciate the self-revert, but really this should probably just be WP:RFCed, since having or not having flag icons at one article isn't going to address the use or non-use of them at the rest. I also have no desire to squabble about it, it's just a community review that needs to be made. I think MOS:ICONS is pretty clear, and there are good reasons to not use flag icons in a case like this, but WP:MILHIST regulars might feel differently; I can't read their minds. :-)  — SMcCandlish ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ʌ≼  20:21, 5 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

PS: Sorry, I'm confusing myself; I was thinking of a similar discussion around same time that referred to be AADD and AADP sections at same time. What I meant in this case was AADP's section WP:OTHERCONTENT.  — SMcCandlish ¢ ≽ʌⱷ҅ʌ≼  20:31, 5 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for explaining and being very nice about this. I love your signature :) --Monochrome_Monitor 04:17, 6 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I think you have a consensus! Nice precedent setting. Myself I never minded the flags but didn't care for them either. :/ It is difficult how some are flags of the perpetrating force and others of the place where the atrocity occurred. That's very problematic. --Monochrome_Monitor 05:40, 6 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

WP:AE

Please see Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement in a few minutes regarding your recent edits. Oncenawhile (talk) 20:18, 15 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I knew you would do this, so typical. Enforcement isn't even the right page for it... --Monochrome_Monitor 20:21, 15 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Fa goodness sake, MM. Why on earth did you, a bright-as-button young woman majoring in physics, make an edit summary calling the professor Emeritus of Linguistics at TAU 'not a reliable linguist'? You really deserve to be served coffee brewed by a Tierra del Fuegan, or spaghetti cooked in diesel fuel. No something worse, a big mac at MacTrumps for that, i.e. something far more indigestible that an AE/AI penalty. Look over your edits, and if some even are as bad as that one, apologize for the lapse.Nishidani (talk) 21:18, 15 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
You're sweet in a weird, ambivalent way Nish :P

Don't appeal to authority! I don't think he's reliable because his views are so fringe. I suppose that's not synonymous with being an unreliable source... but god, his theories are outlandish. He thinks Sephardic Jews are descended from Berbers, how bizarre. Anyway, it's not about him, it's about the article being a soapbox for minority views, which is mentioned on the talk page. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:27, 15 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]


@Nishidani: Let's take the discussion here, eh? Apparently I can't reply in your section and I'm all out of words. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:54, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Anyway, Wexler's views come from a very bizarre need to deny that jews exist. "‘I deny the existence of the Jewish people. Ninety-five percent of the Jews are of Iranian origin.’" Thinking that's bullshit isn't a "zionist ideological need". It's anti historical revisionism. His views themselves come from an anti-jewish ideological need.--Monochrome_Monitor 22:07, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Also, he freaking praised his own book and bashed everyone elses under a false name and then lied about it and continues to lie about it. That doesn't reflect positively on his integrity. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:10, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
MM, have you been editing John Wayne again? I told you it was to be Dr.Strangelove. I shall send you a new one time code. The password is "Wexler". Keeping you in the project has been my only major achievement here. I am proud to have given you a measure of guidance, when things did seem critical. But you are still here and developing intellectually and emotionally and doing good work for the encyclopedia. Your honesty and directness will see you through. Irondome (talk) 22:28, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks Simon, that's very kind of you :) You've been a huge blessing to me. I'll get to Dr. Strangelove when you've finished copyediting Shakshouka! --Monochrome_Monitor 22:49, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Mentorship

Hi MM,

Thanks for your willingess to help with mentorship. I saw your comment at Cullen328 (talk · contribs). I am 100% ready to work with you and I promise not to disappoint you.

Thank you. Wikigyt@lk to M£ 17:27, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I said I would try to help you and advocate for you, not be a mentor. :P I do think they are blowing this out of proportion, my advice is, come clean. Tell them why you made the page about yourself and made the sockpuppet account. I don't think it was malicious. If you're honest I do think they'll give you a break. @Wikicology:--Monochrome_Monitor 17:42, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you so much MM. I appreciate your help. I'm currently compiling my statement and I will put it on the evidence page any moment from now. Warm regards. Wikigyt@lk to M£ 18:45, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks! ping me so I remember. --Monochrome_Monitor 20:02, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I will ping you. Warm regards. Wikigyt@lk to M£ 20:11, 18 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

A bird sent me to ask you about Mentorship.

Welp, I was offered mentorship for three months and avioiding ARBPIA for a while. But what Mentorship is exactly? I found WP:MENTOR to be lacking a lot of important details and I also not sure who will be the mentor (although IronDome offered himself). I stopped violating 1RR rule long ago (long ago means September) and I don't remember an incident when I actually violated a consensus while knowing it exists.. I am starting to think that Mentorship is maybe useless, and people offered it only because of a heated debate between a mute person (me) and deaf people (some of the rest). So what is really mentorship?--Bolter21 (talk to me) 15:30, 20 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Bolter21. Check this link Wp:Mentorship. It gives a very broad overview, although individual arrangements can be tailored to requirements and mutual agreements. Simon. Irondome (talk) 15:35, 20 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Simon is stalking my talkpage, like a good WP:MENTOR. :P --Monochrome_Monitor 15:48, 20 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Went through the entire essay again, still not sure how it will affect me.--Bolter21 (talk to me) 16:46, 20 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Khazars

Your editing behavior has become disturbingly puerile on this topic. I jhave absolutely no ideological interest in this argument and I know it thoroughly. The page before, later, now and after will have structural problems, things to weed out or improve, but you get nowhere simply reverting blankly. Use the talk page before you jump the gun, like Galassi.Nishidani (talk) 07:06, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks for being patient with me and coming here, I'll explain my thoughts. The largest study of Ashkenazi Jewish genes found no evidence of any Khazar origin. The entire theory is specious at best. For one, the evidence that the Khazars converted in mass is non-existent. For two, we know next to nothing about their civilization, we barely even know the language, yet we assume these people somehow became jews and their history, language, culture vanished without a trace? I do like to keep an open mind about things, but not to entertain thoroughly disproved theories. There have literally been two genetic studies that lended any shred of credence to the theory. One by the thoroughly biased "Jews don't exist" Elhaik, whose methods were completely deceptive and whose findings were rejected by the scientific community, and another on Levites whose results were contradicted in later studies. That's it. Hell, even David Duke, who used to espouse the theory like many jew haters, stopped believing it do to the overwhelming evidence against it. So, yes, part of my loathing of the "theory" is it being inimical to decent scientific methodology.
Another is, you have to understand how offensive it is. And I know wikipedia is an encyclopedia, but I am a squishy meatbag and I have feelings. It's like with the article holocaust denial. Some people wanted it to not be point blank called "antisemitic", and called me biased for saying it was terribly offensive NOT to call it that. No, in both cases I advocate for what I feel evidence strongly supports as truth, but also in both false things have particularly harmful consequences. This isn't some silly I/P article. Wikipedia affects how many people see the world. It shouldn't pussyfoot around about holocaust denial or about the legitimacy of Jews as a people. And yes, it IS similar. Not just because the theory is beloved by jew-haters. Do you understand what I mean? Shver Tzu Zein A Yid, European Jews were burned alive and gassed for being Jews, but survived against all the odds. This bullshit theory negates their suffering by saying European Jews aren't Jews. It's absolutely disgusting and its proponents know that. Even though showing human emotions harms my credibility on wikipedia, I'm telling you this because I trust you. Hell, it's not even about me. Half of my lithuanian forebears are originally from portugal, so I'd only be half khazar according to the theory :P It's really about human dignity and not feeding the racists. --Monochrome_Monitor 07:58, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
'The largest study of Ashkenazi Jewish genes found no evidence of any Khazar origin.' Elhaik's paper is no longer Khazar-focused. Genetically, it actually overlaps with the consensus perspective on Middle Eastern origins of the Ashkenazi founding lines, which is what rush readers are missing. I expect the intelligent thing to do is to acknowledge and differentiate the two papers, explain them briefly, air serious criticisms of the former and, when specialists comment on his second paper, outline their reactions, which means waiting several months. It's methodologically incorrect to confuse the two positions, and ethically improper to jump to conclusions about the 2016 paper in terms of what a few critics said re the paper written 4 years earlier. To rush and crush simply flags one's nervousness about a topic. Serious critics win arguments because they write and review with an informed but detached serenity, something most newspaper spinning of this hi-falutin work can't manage because it is all written to a deadline, and invariably in a sensationalist climate to win readers over. Neutrality means giving a fair exposition of what is being said, in a way that readers can make up their minds. We do not make their minds up for them. If we do, we play politics. Nishidani (talk) 20:30, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
MM, I understand your feelings. Your feelings are important. But I don't share your view that citing reliable sources in a WP article 'negates their [the Jews] suffering,' simply because nothing can ever negate, or even reduce, their suffering. And I share your concerns regarding racists and anti-semites and other shit-heads like that, but please see WP: Wikipedia is not censored. WP does not censor itself just because we (including you and I) may be worried about what some fucking racists and/or anti-semites might think. Fuck all the racists and all the anti-semites in the world, and may they all rot in hell. The best way to fight back against racists and anti-semites is to dis-empower them. Let's not empower racists or anti-semites by giving them the power to censor the encyclopedia.
The racists and anti-semites shield/censor themselves from the truth (e.g. holocaust denial, etc). This weakens their positions. In contrast, WP editors (including Jewish editors such as yourself and myself) don't censor. This empowers us and strengthens our positions in the long run. Ijon Tichy (talk) 16:04, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh I'm totally anti-censorship myself. I like the approach of the nizkor project, the best way to fight hate is to educate people, not to censor dissenting voices. That's why I'm not saying we shouldn't include the one or two studies purporting to support the theory, as long as we include the counter-studies. My issue is not with the details but with how its summarized in the lead. Saying "some support it and others don't" is just nonsense. It's giving people the idea that's it's not as fringe as it actually is. I think it should be summarized in a way that makes it clear that it's not given a thought in scholarship except in passing when researchers say "oh, of course this also shows no evidence of khazar origin". That's my problem. Not the content, but the way it's reflected in the lead. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:32, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I've guests for some days, and can't handle this adequately, but I will note this. The Khazar mother page was an absolute mess, identical to the sheer chaos of the Shakespeare Authorship Question. It took Tom Reedy and myself, along with more than a little help from wiki friends, two years out of our lives to (a) battle the idiot clique that had taken over the page to push a crazy fringe POV with no academic endorsement (b) rewrite it from top to bottom (c) drive it to FA level. I played a secondary role:Tom is the expert of that, but the hard labour was eased by knowing several editors with different perspectives could work on trust to improve it, and get the details right, because every source was scrutinized by all, evaluated and then edited according to stringent wiki protocols. I found the Khazar page in a hopeless mess, dominated by nutters,wholly out of whack with contemporary scholarship. I had to fight my way into it, which I dislike and then gradually managed to give it a top to bottom review by gathering in all of the best contemporary scholarship on the subject. Several editors could see that this attempt to 'fix' it was a positive improvement over the bickered POV battled versions that preceded, and watched over it to keep out the niggling messers and reverters. What was interesting to me there(apart from a semi-professional interest in the anthropology of ancient central Asian tribes) was the way anti-Semitism, on one hand, or Israel-legitimacy panic merchants on the other, tussled and pushed articles into the public purview to spin the complex history of the Khazars and the more complex history of the how that history was interpreted, predominantly among Jewish scholars. Politics was everywhere in the public domain for some decades in discussing the subject, there was scarce attention to what Turkology, Slavic historiography and Byzantine scholarship was actually doing. Politics, fucking politics, everwhere. It's the great sop to minds that desire clear cut ideological answers, that do not exist for a subject as abstruse as this. Well the politics is pretty straight forward: you either get anti-Semitic scumbags using it to attack Jews, or you get ultrapatriots dismissing what was an honourable belief or reasoned theory in Jewish scholarship because since 1967, an atmosphere of reading everything in terms of 'does it legitimate or delegitimate Jews =Israel"? predominates among controversialists. I wanted to get rid of that, unplug the endless bitching over POVs by simply giving a fair synthesis of what scholarship in the relevant fields has said over the last century or so and esp. recently. I couldn't give a fuck how either side, the anti-Semites, like David 'Dook' or the panic-stirring constituency of 'pro-Israeli' controversialists, spin things. I have no certainly about anything regarding details on the Khazars, it's all as if, perhaps, likely, less probable, etc. Nearly everyone who jumps into this page, or has tried to split it, return it to its old state, mess with it without closely parsing all of the scholarly sources, has a strong belief that I find absurd, and appears to entertain a private conviction that I am a very devious editor pushing either an anti-Semitic cause under cover of scholarship, or using this to help the Palestinians. I take the first suspicion as something not worth answering: as to the second, well, it's obvious I wish Israel to decide whether it will become a crowning honour of a millennial Jewish dream to have a state where one is amongst one's own, hypermodern, a showcase and light to the failed states around it for what will, vision and hard work can do to forge a democratic bi-ethnic if fundamentally Hebrew-cultured state, or whether it persists in playing the ambiguous game of colonialism for an extra few kilometres of real estate carpetbagging driven by nationalism, religious fundamentalism,ethnic enmity, pure mythological prevarication, and Americanoid dreams of superpower exceptionalism. But while a partisan for the Tibetans, I did the Epic of King Gesar rewrite because I've always loved that epic, not to prove something against the Chinese occupation, and likewise, while a partisan for the Palestinian cause, I did the Khazar article because I've been reading the ethnography of the central Eurasian tribal worlds for half a century, and the scholarship on them had by the time I wrote been so intense that it enabled me to do what one cannot yet do with a dozen other large tribes in that configuration (and it had the sexy attraction of being a real historical whodunit, full of obscure tantalizingly obscure mysteries that cannot probably be resolved. You don't have to believe this: but I'd sacrifice any preconception or belief in a strong probability, if evidence came out contradicting it. To the contrary, such controversion of a likely hypothesis always makes my blood tingle. I live in books, and regard the political side as sheer toxic waste, and I pity the upcoming generation when it fails to feel the thrill of hermeneutic complexities. Politics is stupid because it's a confession that you cannot hold in your mind several conflicting hypoitheses with equanimity, skepticism, doubt, or allow the surprises of alternative ways of thinking to titillate that curiosity which, if it withers, means you're effectively dead to the world. By all means, at your age, espouse some politics, but keep in mind that political minds suffer intellectual burnout because they dwell on simplifications, certainties and electoral group think. When both you and Galassi, without reading all the sources kept reverting back to a statement that said this has been definitively refuted you were simply inserting an outright POV lie. There is only one inferior kibitzer reviewer who uses that term, and it belies the scholarship. Must run, but all I am saying is that the habit of reverting on this underworked page is otiose and lazy. It needs to be substantially developed by close examination of sources, and through fair discussion on the talk page to overcome disagreements. Regards Nishidani (talk) 19:51, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Your assertion that "it was a valid opinion in jewish scholarship before israel" is off-target. It has little to do with Israel. It's about European Jews and the Haskalah, and the stream of Jews fresh out of the ghettoes who did away with Yiddishkeit for socialism as soon as it was convenient. The Khazar nonsense was only entertained by a few intelligentsia as part of the extreme end of the stream of Jewish thought which sought to solve the jewish question by redefining what it means to be Jewish completely. Case in point, the reform movement in Germany and America declaring that Jews are not a people, but merely a religion. From its onset it was used to deny Jewish peoplehood, its no coincidence its supporters (wexler, elhaik) today do the same. Koessler himself said he advocated the theory as a way to make antisemitism obsolete. Of course, the alternative solution to antisemitism was to defend the jewish people by restoring the jewish state in zion. But it's not a question of pre-israel vs post-israel, it is a matter of being loved as a gentile or hated as a jew. That ultimatum precedes modern Zionism by milennia. In the glory days of the Labor Bund a significant number of quixotic jews preferred the former, but today most Jews prefer the latter, and the few who don't are rightfully deemed wicked sons.--Monochrome_Monitor 20:53, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I had my first genuine health scare last week. Blood pressure and potential ticker issues. However it would appear to be stress related, as, if I cut down smoking and take my full dose of tranquilisers, I find the buzzing in my ears stops. So I have been taming a magpie and a large black beast I take to be a raven. Fat magpie and the dinosaur-like black thing are bitter rivals for the cheese and inferior quality chicken roll I put out for them. Consequently my balcony has become a small battleground. I am teaching them to co-exist by timesharing the space and giving them an insight into the complex idea of different times for their feeding. I sit on a beanbag so the beasts are at eye level when they feed on the balcony ledge. The full -length French windows give me an excellent view. Viz:

My flat is the top floor of the mansion block immediately facing the viewer, to the extreme right. You will notice the small balcony. You can see the sunlight reflecting off one of my French windows. The picture appears to have been taken at about 8 - 9pm on a summer evening judging by the shadows. The clothing appears to date it to approx 1908 - 1912. The play of light on the windows is still the same today. Seeing it in the commons gave me goosebumps. The Khazar's thing. It is a delightful aspect of Jewish history. I like the legend that the Khazars received delegations from the Christian, Islamic and Jewish faiths. Islam was rejected because the Khazars liked a drink. They were unimpressed by Christianity so chose Judiasm. My nan's family were Khazars. I get my colouring from my grandads' lot. In a hot summer I make the late Faud of Saudi Arabia look like a Norwegian ski instructor, whereas my nans lot had the colouring of Kirk Douglas. So what? After 15-1700 years we are all Jews now. These interminable arguments are a sign of insecurity MM. The politics do not help either in trying to find an academic way forward in a complex article. I have seen assurances from colleagues above that they would fight to keep nutters and anti-semites away. Wexler I believe to be wrong and his viewpoints sometimes odd, but the Jewish people will still be around in the morning, and so will Israel. Neither are going anywhere. Relax MM, and tame some example of your local wildlife. Love from Irondome (talk) 22:22, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You're just the master of understatements, aren't you? ;) YOU SMOKE?!!?! I'm going to get you to quit, this is an intervention. I'm happy you're feeling better now.:) --Monochrome_Monitor 22:42, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
No time to answer, I'm still a tour guide for friends for some days, aand with Simon's note, I feel that if helping Wikipedia is related to stress I'd rather drop editing here, than be, even marginally, associated with his health worries. I can't see anything you wrote above about this being a key issue related to the whole historical crux of the persecution of Jews. The Khazar theory had long roots in a certain vein of Jewish thinking because it showed it was possible to have a Jewish state, which banned sectarianism, the underlying message of the Kuzari book being -if history allows us to establish a state, we will not persecute Christians or Muslims as they have us, either by pogroms or dhimmitude. We will teach them tolerance among the children of Abraham.
I'll set you a bit of productive homework (I must be off) inspired by your mention of Lithuanian forebears. The Karaites of Lithuania escaped the Holocaust because that communities convinced the Nazi racist world that they were descended from Turkish royalty, and therefore did not have what the Nazis thought of as the taint of 'Jewish' blood. They survived, and then went to Israel. Koestler for one knew that, and it affected his rather shaky book (Koestler supported the use of terrorism, and was an Irgun man). The development of the theory section of the article should mention this curious twist in the Nazi use of the Khazar theory. The anti-Semites use it to call Jews racially inferior: the Karaites turned it against the anti-Semites to step round their genocidal plans. Read Steven Bayme Understanding Jewish History: Texts and Commentaries,

KTAV Publishing House, Inc., 1997 pp.147-148. It should be in the article. Must rush (cheers Simon) Nishidani (talk) 07:23, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

And please read Simon's post in its deeper, if you like 'psychoanalytical' drift. On that level he is gently nudging us to appreciate that a 'right' argument can be flawed by the wrong motivation, and a 'wrong' argument inspired by genuinely good motives, not that I think he is judging the merits of who of us, magpie and raven, is in the right or wrong. The dialectic of argument clarifies both the argument's status, while acting as a corrective to each interlocutors private self-understanding, which tends to disrupt intuitions of truths, formal and personal. Acute.Nishidani (talk) 07:36, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh my Litvak forebears were not Karaites :P They were lucky fuckers though. They were well-to-do enough to have their house raided by the Bolshevics (and my great grandmother's sister and grandmother shot in broad daylight while they were at the market) and so they got the fuck out of there in the 20s. Thank God, if they had stayed there's a 95% I wouldn't exist. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:26, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
That's mom's family. Dad's were out of vilna by the 90s-10s to escape the pogroms of czarist Russia. They are the ones who were originally porteguese. My great great grandfather was out because he deserted from the Russian army! Hahahaha.--Monochrome_Monitor 17:32, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Of course, I never thought they were Karaites. The Lithuanian connection reminded me of that curious irony of what happened to the Karaites, and that is an angle the page should include. I think my first encounter with anti-Semitism was on being invited to a Lithuanian schoolmate's home, and overhearing a quip from his grandparents. The second was when a teacher, noting my radical politics at 15, tried to swing them the other way, and passed me on an American book explaining the New Deal as a Jewish conspiracy. I returned it, not personally, but placing it on his desk, after forcing myself to at least read to the end of the first chapter.Nishidani (talk) 21:01, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I knew you didn't actually think they were Karaites, I was kidding. Hence the ":P" As for a lithuanian schoolmate, yeah, lithuania is a very jewhatey country. This article describes it quite well. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:15, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Oh and Simon, where exactly are your folks from? --Monochrome_Monitor 21:23, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I said from Khazarland and my nan was from Kirk Douglas. Now give it a rest MM. Sod lithu bloody ania and stop visualising a top ten of jewhatey places. It will make you ill. I am serious. Irondome (talk) 21:30, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Jacob Pavlovich Adler, Stella Adler and Luther Adler are distant relations. My grandmothers family were country people, from outside Lodz. My nan's brother, Conrad (Con) was a successful professional lightweight boxer in London before he volunteered for the Eighth Army and was gone 6 years. He drove lorries resupplying tanks with fuel and ammo. He ended up a sergeant. Did all of North Africa and Italy. He was the finest Black cab driver in London and drove till he was 80 something when he was forced to retire in the early 1980's. He had a green badge and was a musher. They were called Rosselovski (?) but anglicized their name to Lewis. Probably because they got off the ship at Cardiff. We are the dumb English Adlers who got off the boat early also. There is also a Viennese chunk of family that I am trying to research. Stop winding yourself up Georgia. Reflecting on the bad sides of our experience can be corrosive for the soul. Celebrate the positive, the huge achievements, the spiritual beauty. There is actually far more positive than negative. Focus on the light, G. Please. Simon Irondome (talk) 21:47, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Ooh, I have edited Stella's wikipage before! I am a proud relative of the guy who ruled that Coca Cola is kosher. Because of him the world's Halakhic Jews can enjoy the beverage. --Monochrome_Monitor 23:57, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Nothing to be proud of this, this last one. My brother or best mate, as you will, raised his children (of part Jewish descent) telling them from the cradle Cola Cola was actually cat's piss and they believed it (I think it a fairly reasonable hypothesis from an experienced pub crawler's perspective) until they were old enough to sip the sort of stuff Simon and myself regard as a proper drop, starting with a shandy which was ritually consumed just after taking a religious vow at 13 never to touch alcohol until 18. Till that age, they were slaked on lemonade pressed from home-grown lemons :) Nishidani (talk) 17:21, 29 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I was a Tizer man myself. Goes very well with fish and chips. Or it used to. Probably changed the formula now. But that was before I graduated to the top shelf. The rest, as they say on the charge sheets, is history. Irondome (talk) 17:53, 29 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Re: Evidence Comment

MM, I'm very sorry that you had an unpleasant experience earlier. Taken alone, the sock-puppeting and the COI autobiography issue might have been resolved without any serious action. Even the legal threat that he made could have been smoothed over. However, when editors began looking at his contributions, the true damage to the project became apparent. As someone said, that was "the line in the sand". The falsified medical articles were just the beginning.There are @ 500-plus articles to be read and corrected, plus references that he has added to other articles.This situation is really sad, for everyone. I suggest you read this section for an overview. First article I read: here. Random from today- click on the citations and compare them to the sentences: Nigerian Academy of Science, Isa Marte Hussaini. Then read this,and I think you will understand why people are so angry. Your good heart does you credit. It's much better to err on the side of kindness, than the side of cruelty, and I would send you a kitten, (if I knew how!) Love the "monotone monitor". (The first computer I used was a year or two older) Best wishes, Tribe of Tiger (talk) 19:24, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks, you're amazing. Yeah, the evidence is pretty damning, it was probably silly of me to gloss it over. HAhaha, "monotone monitor" :P Chrome! Monotone is cute though. Would be a good joke account. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:00, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Ouch, that article. Yes there's a lot of stuff that needs combing through. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:01, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you!

Thank you for the replies on the "Workshop" page. They're greatly appreciated :) Claudia 20201 (talk) 22:02, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Thank YOU for your reply on my talk page. This must be my lucky day, everyone is being so nice to me. :) --Monochrome_Monitor 22:11, 27 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]
You're most welcome! Monochrome Monitor You deserve it :) Claudia 20201 (talk) 01:31, 28 April 2016 (UTC)[reply]


Hi! Сan I invite you here: Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2016_April_28#Category:Indo-European-speaking_peoples ? Cathry

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Undiscussed deletions

The most objectionable component of your editing style is your tendency to make large and undiscussed deletions. The related edit comments invariably include emotive and subjective language explaining why you personally believe that such information is not good.

WP:UNDUE is an important but nuanced policy. You will never succeed in proving an argument of UNDUE in an edit comment. It requires thoughtful analysis, and usually a healthy discussion.

Separately, in case you think hiding information from readers is a good thing, I suggest you read Censorship#Criticism_of_censorship: removing information hinders discussion and progress in society.

Oncenawhile (talk) 21:43, 3 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Removing block quotes of fringe opinions which dominate an article, thereby putting the representation of those viewpoints in proportion is not "censorship" and calling it such is not only ridiculous, but revealing of an unhelpful, polemical approach to editing. Drsmoo (talk) 23:01, 3 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]
My point is more subtle. There is always a middle ground in debates around UNDUE. Full censorship of sources is rarely necessary - what may be reasonable is a reduced weighting of text in the article itself, but retention of the underlying sources. Why hinder readers who may be using wikipedia to do some research by removing high quality sources describing well known scholarly debates. If you think it's overweight, then reduce the weighting but keep the sources. Hiding the existance of dissenting opinions by deleting everything is censorship in its most basic form. Oncenawhile (talk) 07:57, 4 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The most objectionable component of your editing style is your tendency to pull stunts like this after this and then to hypocritically patronize me like a self-righteous prick. But yes, my edit summaries are atrocious. --Monochrome_Monitor 04:50, 4 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Keep it WP:CIVIL MM, please. I really don't want you going backwards. Irondome (talk) 14:22, 4 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Edit warring on Modern Hebrew

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Your recent editing history shows that you are currently engaged in an edit war. To resolve the content dispute, please do not revert or change the edits of others when you are reverted. Instead of reverting, please use the article's talk page to work toward making a version that represents consensus among editors. The best practice at this stage is to discuss, not edit-war. See BRD for how this is done. If discussions reach an impasse, you can then post a request for help at a relevant noticeboard or seek dispute resolution. In some cases, you may wish to request temporary page protection.

Being involved in an edit war can result in your being blocked from editing—especially if you violate the three-revert rule, which states that an editor must not perform more than three reverts on a single page within a 24-hour period. Undoing another editor's work—whether in whole or in part, whether involving the same or different material each time—counts as a revert. Also keep in mind that while violating the three-revert rule often leads to a block, you can still be blocked for edit warring—even if you don't violate the three-revert rule—should your behavior indicate that you intend to continue reverting repeatedly. Jeppiz (talk) 21:59, 3 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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Bad editing again

For the last time, meddling and frigging about with text in defiance of evidence (which may be partial or wrong, but can be correct) given on the talk page is tantamount to edit-warring. Go there before tampering with the text. Both Entine and Yanover are shit sources, but, unlike edit warriors, I haven't removed them. I try to get the nonsense they are pushing correctly paraphrased. But there are a whole bunch of issues there, even in paraphrase. Go to that page, but before you do, read Nadia Abu El-Haj,The Genealogical Science: The Search for Jewish Origins and the Politics of Epistemology, University of Chicago Press, 2012 pp,.120-3 (at least. And don't tell me she's of Palestinian origin and therefore suspect, since the same would apply to many of the 'Jewish' newspaper hacks used on that page, and at least she underwent peer-review in an academic publishing house noted for its severity about quality) I've been using that source for years, but no one reads it. They, like yourself, prefer self-grooming promotional snippets from newspapers. Don't reply here, please.Nishidani (talk) 16:42, 18 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

First person, singular

Maybe I too belong to Category:Wikipedians with way too much time on their hands, but I thought I'd point out that, on your user page, you change from third person to first person, not from plural to singular.

All the best: Rich Farmbrough, 11:30, 25 May 2016 (UTC).[reply]

Wow, thanks! Haha I didn't notice that. --Monochrome_Monitor 11:40, 25 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Shuafat is not Jerusalem

Mimi dear, this is a first! Let's raise one to it: you removed one of my more substantial edits, and I reversed it back, of course. And this while I'm hardly editing anymore :-)
Some smart newspaper guy - or municipality PR smart... donkey - made up the line "Jerusalem's age pushed back: now 7000 years old". BS. Shuafat has only been "included" (pro forma, administratively) into J'lem after 1967. Not 7k, 6k, 5k, 4k, 3k, 2k, 1k, 500 years ago, or 100 years ago - no, hardly 50. Finding Chalcolithic or other prehistoric traces in Shuafat and basing a new "birthday" for J'lem on that is... it starts with "bull" and ends beneath his tail. Take a better look at it and I hope we can leave it at this. I'm off & back to real life, cheers! ArmindenArminden (talk) 18:34, 27 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Um.... kay. I think you're talking about the article Jerusalem? Maybe clarify? :) And I've never heard someone I apparently reverted be so gracious! --Monochrome_Monitor 05:50, 28 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Yes, Jerusalem. I have separated "Shuafat" and its prehistoric findings from "City of David & J'lem proper" and its own prehistory. Now Debresser has re-reverted... Once you get a ball rolling in the wrong direction, you can't stop it that easily anymore.
We do go back quite a while, so the tone between us "goes without saying". OK, now don't push me :-) ArmindenArminden (talk) 18:57, 28 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

If it's not technically part of jerusalem proper we should put it in the article on shuafat. --Monochrome_Monitor 22:03, 28 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Boooo I wanted to discuss it in email but you don't accept it! --Monochrome_Monitor 00:01, 29 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You have my email??? / The discussion is ongoing on the talk page. Sorry, I have a "real life" backlog from here till Timbuktou :-) ArmindenArminden (talk) 09:39, 29 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

tada!--Monochrome_Monitor 14:15, 29 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

How does that work? I mean, being sure it doesn't go into the public domain? I'm kinda shy (or not, but that's the thing: Arminden can say anything, the other guy with an email... not so much). ArmindenArminden (talk) 17:36, 29 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

What, the emails? The email adresses of users are stored in wikipedia's private servers. They don't have any access to the emails you send.--Monochrome_Monitor 17:39, 29 May 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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June 2016

Copyright problem icon Your addition to Madagascar Plan has been removed, as it appears to have added copyrighted material to Wikipedia without permission from the copyright holder. If you are the copyright holder, please read Wikipedia:Donating copyrighted materials for more information on uploading your material to Wikipedia. For legal reasons, Wikipedia cannot accept copyrighted material, including text or images from print publications or from other websites, without an appropriate and verifiable license. All such contributions will be deleted. You may use external websites or publications as a source of information, but not as a source of content, such as sentences or images—you must write using your own words. Wikipedia takes copyright violations very seriously and persistent violators will be blocked from editing. — Diannaa (talk) 19:37, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

That's absolutely ridiculous. I used one sentence with the source's wording, which I sourced.--Monochrome_Monitor 20:03, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Adding the same copy vio with a different citation is still a copyright violation. Please refer to the policy page WP:copyrights for more information on this topic. — Diannaa (talk) 21:41, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I didn't add the same violation. I used wording completely different from the source paraphrasing text in the article's body per LEAD. If whoever put that cite in wasn't chastised for it, why am I?--Monochrome_Monitor 21:44, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
So sorry, I made a mistake. The wording of the second edit was not the same as the source webpage at all. — Diannaa (talk) 21:54, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks :) --Monochrome_Monitor 21:59, 6 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Decimate implies total destruction

It makes no difference whether one has 'decimate' or 'devastate', but the edit summary was incorrect. 'Decimate' etymologically means reduced by one tenth, and is still used in literate circles to mean the substantial reduction of a community or population, never its entire destruction. Nishidani (talk) 20:50, 8 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Yes I know where decimate comes from. The roman army, yada yada. But it sounds like near-total destruction... To me, at least. Anyway, thanks for the heads up. Either way I was the one who put in "decimate" originally :P--Monochrome_Monitor 21:03, 8 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Irony of ironies, Debresser, who can't stand the sight of me apparently, reverted your edit. The only problem was the edit summary, but 'devastate' is probably more vivid, and less clinical than decimate, and your sense that a better term might be used was (this time round!) sure-footed.Nishidani (talk) 21:07, 8 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Hahaha, you are united in opposition to me! Debresser seems to have a problem with me too. Check out this clusterfuck.[8]--Monochrome_Monitor 21:10, 8 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Goodbye

You'd wear down the patience of Job. And half of your edits require wasting hours fixing them, when they are not irreparable. You are profoundly superficial and careless in your editing.

here

Christian commentators have long been concerned with the fate of the ten lost tribes. Prester John placed them somewhere in Inner Asia. Matthew Paris speculated that the Tartars could be from the ten lost tribes. However, Christian commentators and polemicists described the Khazars as a people without a known faith

There is no mention of the Khazar-Ashkenazi on those pages, and therefore it was to be removed, as I did, as WP:OR. You didn't even check it, because anyone who checks it would have added the proper attribution, not to those editors but to Adam Knobler, 'Crusading for the Messiah;Jews as Instruments of Christian Anti-Islamic Holy War,' on pp.83-91 of that book.
  • 2. You challenge the use of scholars like James Parkes and Michael Prior on Palestinians, and yet restored in lead sourcing what nondescript cub journalists like Cnaan Lipshiz and Yori Yanover say about subjects they have zero training in, Khazar studies and genetics. That means you don’t apply the same criterion for WP:RS to all articles, but lower the bar for comments you like, and raise it against scholars you dislike.
  • 3 You erased, while reintroducing Lipshiz and Cnaan, the references to the views of 2 qualified scholars Alexander Beider and Bernard Spolsky. They state points of view that disconcert your self-assured beliefs in the truth, therefore, you cancel them from the page, even though they are infinitely more acceptable as sources than the crap you drag in.
  • 4 Like Galassi, the evidence is that you did not look at the nature of what you were doing. You made a blind, blanket revert, even if it meant re- introducing that prester John original research.
  • Above all, since I’ve taken considerable trouble for some months to write boringly long talk page analyses to try and at least make you see the world of scholarship is not simple, that magisterial thinkers and historians can disagree, and that it is not our privilege, as anonymous editors to adjudicate who is right and who is wrong, and –it’s almost a year now – you have shown no signs of budging an inch from your pertinacious desire to have your way. I’ve given up. This is the last comment I’ll exchange with you. In the future, if this kind of behaviour recurs, consider yourself to be just assisting me with compiling further evidence that you are of no use to some areas of this encyclopedia.Nishidani (talk) 19:19, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Prester jon is a mythical figure, you were right to delete that. I'm working on it.--Monochrome_Monitor 19:40, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
YOU restored things said by entine that I deleted. "most dismiss it as a fantasy". I added new sources.--Monochrome_Monitor 19:41, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
MM the “Khazar hypothesis of Ashkenazi ancestry” seems to be a relatively good article to me. I am not sure that it can be improved further. I think a lot of good work was done but now it is probably best if it is only improved on the margins.Jonney2000 (talk) 20:22, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I agree its pretty good right now but I think my edits are an improvement. You?[9]--Monochrome_Monitor 20:31, 11 June 2016 (UTC)@Jonney2000:[reply]
Honestly I cannot tell a significant different between the two version. So in the interest of stability it is probably best to leave it alone.Jonney2000 (talk) 20:40, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Did you look at the difs....? I added a whole new paragraph. @Jonney2000:--Monochrome_Monitor 20:49, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I think the current version is fine. If you don't think so can you explain why?Jonney2000 (talk) 21:06, 11 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think the current version is bad but there's always room for improvement. My edit removed weird tone things like "intriguingly", it gives a new paragraph about the history of the khazar theory. It replaces the unsourced "most dismiss it as a fantasy" with sourced parts. It's minor overall but it's an improvement. --Monochrome_Monitor 21:26, 11 June 2016 (UTC) @Jonney2000:[reply]

@Jonney2000: tell me what you think about the version I just put out. The intro keeps the current one's basic structure with the exception of deleting a quote I think gives a false balance.--Monochrome_Monitor 00:44, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Canaanite and Phenocian

Hello. In this edit summery you wrote that "Canaanite" and "Phenocian" are the same thing. You might know this and you might not, but,

The city states on the coast of Lebanon and modern-day northern Israel coast were called "Phenocian" by the Greeks and the Romans. All of those spoke (dialects of) the "Phenocian" langauge and they were sometimes federated and sometimes dominated by one city state (if I am not wrong it was for the most part Sidon). Those people called themselves "Cannanites" and they indeed lived in (parts of) Canaan. The problem is the Romans and Greeks have ruined historical etymologoy. They created the "Palestine" thing and renamed Aram as "Syria" which I mourn until this day. It's a sad thing that people say "Judea is a name that refers to hill region in southern Palestine".

So don't assume that because logically you are right, that Phenocians are technically Cannanites, but historiography is annoying and we have to work according to it.

Someone told me recently that I am patronizing, so if you feel that way, it wasn't intended.--Bolter21 (talk to me) 12:42, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

My point was that saying "or" is bad, considering phoenicians are canaanites. You're right they aren't synonymous. I agree that the greeks fucked things up. You're not patronizing, you're sweet. :)--Monochrome_Monitor 16:46, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
But for some reason there's a Phenocia and (the rest of) Canaan. If the Phenocians heard that they would roll in their graves, but so will the Arameans and Israelites. The Philistines will be touched to say they were revived in the 20th century.--Bolter21 (talk to me) 20:41, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Hahaha, YES. The פלשtim, eh? ;) --Monochrome_Monitor 20:51, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Notice of Edit warring noticeboard discussion

Information icon Hello. This message is being sent to inform you that there is currently a discussion involving you at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Edit warring regarding a possible violation of Wikipedia's policy on edit warring. Thank you. Makeandtoss (talk) 20:35, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Cute.--Monochrome_Monitor 20:37, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Notification

Notice of Edit warring noticeboard discussion

Information icon Hello. This message is being sent to inform you that there is currently a discussion involving you at Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Edit warring regarding a possible violation of Wikipedia's policy on edit warring. Thank you.Nishidani (talk) 20:58, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I know there is. No need to rub it in.--Monochrome_Monitor 21:01, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I was referring to my report, I didn't know of the other one. Nishidani (talk) 21:21, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I really really would request that you take a 7 day break from editing MM. I think it is affecting your nerves. You want to get ill over what is effectively a hobby? This stuff can spill into real life interactions MM. Just state you are experiencing some wikistress and are taking time out to recover your spirits. Make the announcement on your userpage. You badly need a break here. Simon Irondome (talk) 21:41, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia calms me down simon. It makes me feel like I have some control over the chaotic world I live in. My life is a mess right now. I can't figure out how to get fucking housing for college. It's my life that spills into wikipedia, not the other way round.--Monochrome_Monitor 22:00, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Stop

Stop tag-teaming me with your Zionist friend. No sooner do I edit an article on Zionism than I get irritating messages on my talk page. Do not post there again. --BowlAndSpoon (talk) 23:34, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I'm not tag-teaming with anyone, those are persecutory delusions. I wasn't going to comment on your talk page or about Sand. What bothered me was you using the word "zio", that's it. And you still haven't apologized either.--Monochrome_Monitor 23:35, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Apologise for what? The fact you are stalking my talk page (with perfectly innocent intentions, of course) in the wake of some Zionist editor and kicking up a fuss over nothing? If you don't like the edit summaries I give when removing rubbish from my talk page, don't troll it. This is my last message to you. --BowlAndSpoon (talk) 23:40, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I was stalking drsmoo, not you. It's just not a nice word. It's a very mean thing to say.--Monochrome_Monitor 23:41, 12 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Notice that you are now subject to an arbitration enforcement sanction

The following sanction now applies to you:

You are indefinitely banned from the topic of the Khazars on all pages of Wikipedia

You have been sanctioned per the discussion at WP:AN3

This sanction is imposed in my capacity as an uninvolved administrator under the authority of the Arbitration Committee's decision at Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Eastern Europe#Final decision and, if applicable, the procedure described at Wikipedia:Arbitration Committee/Discretionary sanctions. This sanction has been recorded in the log of sanctions. If the sanction includes a ban, please read the banning policy to ensure you understand what this means. If you do not comply with this sanction, you may be blocked for an extended period, by way of enforcement of this sanction—and you may also be made subject to further sanctions.

You may appeal this sanction using the process described here. I recommend that you use the arbitration enforcement appeals template if you wish to submit an appeal to the arbitration enforcement noticeboard. You may also appeal directly to me (on my talk page), before or instead of appealing to the noticeboard. Even if you appeal this sanction, you remain bound by it until you are notified by an uninvolved administrator that the appeal has been successful. You are also free to contact me on my talk page if anything of the above is unclear to you. EdJohnston (talk) 13:37, 13 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

This ban may be appealed in six months. EdJohnston (talk) 13:37, 13 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

πάθει μάθος

The measure adopted is one that will cause you some grief, and, probably anger against myself. The latter is neither here nor there. It's far more severe than what I expected. Wiki however is like reality itself: things never play out as one anticipates. If it is any consolation, I was permabanned for 9 reverts over several articles in 49 days. I took it on the chin, as Foreman did in Zaire, and only got back because, unknown to me, two editors from either 'side' (Ravpapa/Nableezy) thought that after some time spent in the cooler, I should be invited back unconditionally. Oddly, their proposal was accepted. I say 'oddly' because normally one was expected to make a personal plea. I didn't. I was raised never to whinge, let alone 'grease' one's way back into someone's good graces. I think you should reflect on the psychodynamics of what happened: all it needed from you, once Simon put in his avuncular suggestion, was a sign of contrite regret ('Sorry' is enough) and some imagination ('I accept Simon's offer, but will extend the voluntary wiki break for a month,'etc) to convince the board you recognized you'd gone beyond the limit. When I came back from my permaban, I imposed on myself a discipline of self-suspension, for a month each time, whenever I made an infraction, even if no one reported me. I was off Wikipedia on several occasions. The aim is, whatever the group dynamics and power plays out there, ignore them: make the battleground one's own impatience, intolerance, self-conceit, or whatever the focus, and expect of oneself higher standards than the community requires. At a certain age, one gets slack, and I found this a corrective spur to fend off the complaisance of being 'grown up'. If you parse what Simon said, it was the opposite of throwing you under the bus: he went out on a limb, allowing you to see the stress this incident caused, while nonetheless making a last minute bid to stave off a sanction which, I suspect, he might have thought deep down, to be due, but which his empathy and avuncular care obliged him to ward off. You missed that, by expressing disappointment at what struck you as a failure to back you to the hilt. All nurture begins with indulgence, but the hardest thing in parenting is to apply the rod, those forms of angry reproval or punitive actions (I would be locked as a child in the laundry if I didn't eat my greens, or don an animal costume) that send us the message that indulgence has its limits. The limitation is only on two article, esp. the Khazar hypothesis which I am not now rushing to 'fix' unilaterally by undoing your work. If I edit it, it will be after collegial agreements with Jonney and anyone else, on the talk page. By all means revert this if you think it condescending.Nishidani (talk) 15:21, 13 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

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Your recent edit to Palestinians

The sources you cited in your recent edit to Palestinians were mostly garbage. What makes www.nusseibeh.org, a family website, a reliable source? America.pink, another of your sources, is a Wikipedia mirror and thus not a reliable source. You cited a book by "Joudah", but neglected to provide any meaningful information that might help an interested reader find it. (See WP:CITEHOW.) And you cited a dead link on the website of Al Riyadh. Please fix the citation problems. Thank you. — MShabazz Talk/Stalk 02:17, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

1. I fixed the deadlink. 2. I literally copied and pasted cites from the clans respective pages. I didn't know about pink, I'll delete that and add a tag.--Monochrome_Monitor 02:19, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you. I didn't know where the sources came from. — Malik Shabazz Talk/Stalk 04:31, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see how the family website is problematic. If they were claiming something ridiculous maybe, but they're the one to know. Who better to know the origins of their family than them?--Monochrome_Monitor 02:22, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
In the case of the Nusseibeh family, you would be on more solid ground if you wrote that they "claim" such origin, though it's relevance to the article is debatable. The Al-Riyadh article is obviously way below the line (do you honest believe everything that is written there?). This edit] is also unacceptable; Tsvi Misinai's fringe theories are not accepted by scholars. Zerotalk 04:24, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) It's a self-published source with no obvious fact-checking. I can create a website that says I am descended from Solomon and Sheba, but that wouldn't make it a reliable source for that fact. (Let's assume for the moment that I was notable enough to qualify for a Wikipedia article.) I'm not saying the claim is wrong, just that the family website isn't a good source for it. — Malik Shabazz Talk/Stalk 04:31, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, but it's the source used on that clan's page. Also, why'd you delete the samaritan part? That's actually a very mainstream observation, as opposed to say, nationalist claims of descent from jebusites.--Monochrome_Monitor 04:35, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You do have a wikipedia page :P --Monochrome_Monitor 04:38, 18 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Please stop. Your edit is nonsensical ("Black Hebrew Israelitism are groups") and poorly sourced. Please read and follow WP:LEAD and WP:UNDUE. In what world is a tabloid-style news article about a murder given more weight than multiple academic sources? The SPLC report is mentioned in the article already -- and given appropriate weight. If you have concerns about the article, please start a talk page discussion. Thank you. — MShabazz Talk/Stalk 19:00, 22 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You don't like it. Fine. I'm just trying to make it comparable with the british israelites article, its a double standard otherwise. --Monochrome_Monitor 19:04, 22 June 2016 (UTC) You're also misusing the term "vandalism". Reverting an edit and addressing its complaints is not[reply]

vandalism. --Monochrome_Monitor 19:07, 22 June 2016 (UTC) And please clarify what "academic sources" contradict my edits. None of them do.--Monochrome_Monitor 19:11, 22 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

(1) There is no "British Israelites" article. You're comparing British Israelism, an article about a philosophy, and Black Hebrew Israelites, an article about people. Apples and oranges.
(2) What "complaints" are you addressing?
(3) I don't have Black Zion at hand, but I don't believe it describes Black Hebrews as Afrocentric. Nor does it say -- as you wrote, attributing it to the book -- that the movement is rooted in the Pentecostal Holiness movement. — MShabazz Talk/Stalk 19:40, 22 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]
That's exactly the point. There is no Black Hebrew Israelism page. That is like having a page on Christians but not Christianity. A page about the movement should be the priority over a page about the movement's adherents. Right now page fails to mention much of their ideology and their arguments. The complaint I refer to was the use of apologetics index. As for its roots in the holiness movement [10]. As for its afrocentrism [11] it's been termed as such by some scholars, but this is complicated by the fact that black hebrews hate africans and think they're from israel, not africa. Sp I can understand your objection to such a characterization.--Monochrome_Monitor 20:06, 22 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I didn't use black zion as a cite, I left it uncited, but that could be easily fixed.--Monochrome_Monitor 20:08, 22 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Reference errors on 28 June

Hello, I'm ReferenceBot. I have automatically detected that an edit performed by you may have introduced errors in referencing. It is as follows:

Please check this page and fix the errors highlighted. If you think this is a false positive, you can report it to my operator. Thanks, ReferenceBot (talk) 00:19, 29 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Here

I have no interest in editing the Palestinians article.

Since you seem to you should read page 122

https://books.google.com/books?id=D7ntCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA122&dq=arab+palestinian+ethnicity&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjQ5a-hgszNAhVE2B4KHWW-AzgQ6AEILjAD#v=onepage&q=arab%20palestinian%20ethnicity&f=false


Jonney2000 (talk) 01:40, 29 June 2016 (UTC) Thanks jonney, you're always awesome.--Monochrome_Monitor 02:46, 29 June 2016 (UTC)[reply]

This article is under WP:1RR due to ARBPIA. It my be in your interest to undo your last edit. Thank you, EdJohnston (talk) 02:17, 1 July 2016 (UTC) Thank you for telling me but the date says it's a new day. :) --Monochrome_Monitor 02:54, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

The definition of a WP:1RR violation is two reverts within a 24-hour period. It doesn't matter whether the reverts are on the same day. EdJohnston (talk) 03:05, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks then!--Monochrome_Monitor 03:15, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Looks like I already undid it ooops.Jonney2000 (talk) 03:17, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

1RR violation

At Dahiya doctrine. Please self-revert and instead of imposing your will through reverts attempt to gain a consensus at the talk page. nableezy - 03:30, 1 July 2016 (UTC) There's nothing to talk about. Reverts should not be used wantonly- as you reverted me. It's obvious that the term is a politically motivated label not supported by the content of the page. Namely it accuses israel of "state terrorism", a fringe concept, and in the case of Israel riddled with anti-semitic motifs. It's a ridiculous characterization.--Monochrome_Monitor 03:45, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

So your position is that whoever reverts you does it wantonly (it clearly wasnt, I gave the justification for the revert in the edit-summary), whereas your reverts are what exactly? Righting the great wrongs of the world? As far as the term is a politically motivated label, well, that really isnt all that relevant, whats relevant is do reliable sources call it this? If you want to say "state terrorism" is a "fringe concept" you can, but thats laughable on Wikipedia because WP:FRINGE has a very specific meaning here, and that clearly doesnt apply to this topic. As far as in the case of Israel riddled with anti-semitic motifs well Im just gonna go ahead and call bullshit there, what anti-semitic motif could possibly be there? To accuse Israel of terrorism is by default anti-semitic? You want people to take you seriously when thats the argument you fall back on? I dont really care what you think about it, just dont continue reverting or you may be reported. Im of a mind to report you anyway for some of the personal attacks Ive seen in your revert's edit-summaries, but in the hopes that you calm down with the reverts Ill wait on that. nableezy - 03:52, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Ohohohoh that's rich. You call bullshit. No connection at all between calling israel a terrorist state and antisemitic motifs, huh? Here's some: American officials are bought off by AIPAC, Jews stage "false flag" terrorist attacks for their political gain, (hilariously that site is called "Zionism: The Poison Apple of the World", yet it claims to be "anti-zionist" and not "antisemitic") The Holocaust never happened and in fact Jews wanted to commit genocide against Germans, Israel did 9/11 (remove asterisk in link). and in case you think this mysterious correlation only reflects the views of loonies on the internet... it also applies to real-life loonies! Like this fellow, and everyone knows this guy loves the Jews, oh look it's David Duke!--Monochrome_Monitor 08:05, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

And what personal attacks are you referring to exactly? Me saying "stop POV pushing"? --Monochrome_Monitor 08:09, 1 July 2016 (UTC) I am sorry for my tone, it sounds hostile but unfortunately that's way I debate things.--Monochrome_Monitor 08:14, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

So you believe that if an antisemite makes an argument or comparison that renders the argument itself antisemitic? And anybody, say a Jewish international law professor educated at Penn, Yale and Harvard and UN Special Rapporteur who makes such an argument, they are engaging in antisemitism? Also, you need to re-write some of the above. We have a policy on what can be written about living people, and Im pretty sure calling the president of Turkey a loonie falls under that policy. nableezy - 08:41, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You are talking about causation. I am talking about correlation. Richard Falk has anti-semitic views[1], he only proves my point. He is jewish by ethnicity but that doesn't mean anything. Gilad Atzmon is an admitted antisemite[2], and falk endorsed him. If a black man is president of the KKK, does that mean he's not a racist? (that's a reference to the chapelle show) Hated minorites can internalize their hatred and direct it at their in-group, it's not just a jewish thing. Nor does it matter where he was educated. He's a 9/11 "truther"[1] who posted a blatantly antisemitic cartoon. As for Erdogan, you are talking about biographies of living persons- meaning I can't call him a loony on his article. That's fair. It doesn't mean I can't engage in free speech on my own talk page. --Monochrome_Monitor 17:28, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

No, BLP applies to every page on Wikipedia (see WP:BLPTALK). It applies to calling somebody a "rabid antisemite" or a "loonie" on your own talk page. Please remove those comments, otherwise I may ask that they be removed by an administrator and you be sanctioned. There is no free speech here, sorry to be the one to break that to you. I for one will not continue to discuss this until that is complete. nableezy - 18:26, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
User:Monochrome Monitor Please do not argue with this gentleman.Jonney2000 (talk) 19:01, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
You going to redact any of the above? nableezy - 04:13, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Nableezy, from close inspection of the at least one of above individual's record, including intense criticism of his utterances by pro-Palestinian groups, It would probably not be wise to push this. Ample evidence of R/S published claims as to his apparent anti-Semitic attitudes are noted in the individual's article. As to Erdogan, I have no opinion as to his sanity. Irondome (talk) 04:26, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Here I have to disagree, Simon. I've broken WP:BLP more than a few times on a talk page, and if another editor objects, I have no temperamental problem in striking it out. As to the merits of the issue, MM is showing that she is relying on any casual source to label a living person a loonie or anti-Semite merely on the strength of absurdly dumb secondary sources, or blogosphere gossip, which thrives on loose citation and guilt by association. I've checked one item, and here are the results (without wanting to get into an argument over Atzmon).
this, by Yair Rosenberg, a freelance journo, is cited as proof Atzmon is a Holocaust denier. Yair cites Alan Dershowitz, a man with a distinguished record for his . . . . . . Dershowitz in turn cites Atzmon’s own words in the following way:

He declares himself a “proud, self-hating Jew” (54).

Well, any competent lawyer would shoot down this eminence grise for systematic distortion of the primary source material on numerous topics like this. What Atzmon wrote was:

I was what some call an ‘independent critical thinker’. I may also be what some Jews regard as a ‘proud, self-hating Jew.’

Atzmon is using a rhetorical ploy, conceding tactically in an argument that what his adversaries say of him might be the case. He doesn't assert that definition itself, he adopts the words used by some critics, and says perhaps they have a point. Distortion based on a refusal to appreciate the value of nuance in an argument.
And what allows Atzmon to hate himself? He goes on to say:

'I came across an interesting insight into the subject of anti-Semitism. It goes like this: ‘While in the past an “anti-Semite” was someone who hates Jews, nowadays it is the other way around, an anti-Semite is someone the Jews hate’.

Atzmon at least here aappears to be saying he hates that part of his Jewishness which defines itself, in a recent tradition, exclusively as hatred for antisemites, whose ‘Jewish’ identity is nothing other than a trend, he argues, to single out some ‘other’ and define them by hatred. This is a extremely touchy issue, but the debt to Jean-Paul Sartre’s classic analysis of the antisemite, Réflexions sur la question juive, (1946) is obvious to anyone trained to read controversies with skeptical ears pricked for allusions.
The antisemite, Sartre argues defines himself by hate (Puisque l’antisémite a choisi la haine, nous sommes obligés de conclure que c’est l’état passionné qu’il aime p.20/’Cette phrase;’Je hais les Juifs’ , est de celles qu’on prononce en groupe; en la prononçant on se rattache à une tradition et à une communauté’p.25 (Gallimard 1954). In short, an antisemite uses ‘Jews’ as a pretext to define an otherwise feeble identitry. I hate Jews therefore I exist. Unless you have Sartre’s text (or comments on it) in mind, you will completely misread Atzmon here.
As to the holocaust denial, Yair, then Dershowitz, and numerous other airy bloggers pick up to get at John Mearsheimer,R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science and the Co-Director of the Program on International Security Policy at the University of Chicago and American Academy of Arts and Sciences fellow, Stephen Walt, holder of the Robert and Renee Belfer Professorship in International Affairs in the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, Richard Falk,American professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University and for several years United Nations Special Rapporteur and many distinguished scholars, what bloggers of this kind never mention is that Atzmon wrote in that same book:
Atzmon writes that as a youngster:

’In the 1970s Holocaust survivors were part of our social landscape. They were our neighbours, we met them in our family gatherings, in the classroom, in politics, in the corner shop. They were a part of our lives. The dark numbers tattooed on their white arms never faded away. It always had a chilling effect. Yet I must mention that I can hardly recall a single Holocaust survivor who ever attempted to manipulate me emotionally. Recently I spoke to a Scottish friend who volunteered in a Kibbutz in the 1970s. This Kibbutz was known for its high percentage of Holocaust survivors. My Scottish friend pointed out to me that he really enjoyed his time there working and talking with these survivors. They were largely very quiet and polite, they never used their past as a claim for fame. It was the young Israelis who he couldn’t stand. My experience was very similar – as far as my personal experience is concerned, it is always the alleged sons, daughters and grandchildren of survivors who exploit the Holocaust as a political argument, or a claim for some form of exceptionalism.’

That rings true to me, since I have friends whose relatives, some of them, survived the holocaust. There are a great many people in that community who like Norman Finkelstein, get pissed off at what they take to be the obscenity of endlessly using this argument to get at critics of Israel's policies in the Palestine territories. And if Atzmon or Finkelstein, from within that world, gets annoyed, shouting 'antisemite' only feeds the beast.
Jonney gave as usual and eminently sensible piece of advice. The request was innocent enough. Learn policy compliance, and strike those words out.Nishidani (talk) 12:44, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I'm glad you two can find things to agree on.[12] (I'm actually horrified)--Monochrome_Monitor 12:56, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Nice to see that it took you just 12 minutes to read the above, and, ignoring it except for what looks like a point of agreement, repeating your error. An anti-Semite hates Jews period: Atzmon hates, there, what is 'Jewish' in himself, and in some other who may be 'Jewish' which he then defines as the desire everywhere and on every topic to stake one's claim to be exceptional, beyond normal history and universal rules and principles. The entailed obverse of his statement would be : 'I love you in so far as you are a fellow human being/I love myself in so far as I lose my narcissistic self-identification with one ethnic group, and its religious exclusiveness'. That's his problem. It is not, on that evidence, 'antisemitism'. This is pointless. Just strike out what you wrote, and drop it.Nishidani (talk) 13:12, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not striking it out. This is ridiculous. --Monochrome_Monitor 13:31, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Well Nish, we disagree on nuances here. My advice was by the way a request not to escalate this, in the scheme of things, rather minor issue. I have slept (a medicated one alas) on my comments above, and I feel A-S to be too crude and simplistic in this particular case. However I can only use one tool of comparison as a gauge for this individual's utterances if taken in their entirety over years. The very recent Chakrabarti Inquiry. [Full report here]. If the individual concerned was a member of the British Labour Party, they would appear to be on the road to disciplinary action, if the report is to be implemented. What this individual is, is difficult to "classify". I suspect certain inner contradictions which go beyond political analysis and enters the realm of Psychology may be an aspect. I would suggest the term "antisemitic" be struck as it highly problematic. Self-hating Jew would sadly, appear less problematic, including to this individual, who tacitly and tactically, concedes aspects of this as you show above. Now all have vented, I suggest this be hatted, the entire section. Off to a choral recital now Nish, to lower the BP. The readings have not been good lately, to say the least. Simon Irondome (talk) 14:58, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
That's interesting, but I never take any official political judgement seriously. Drama like this, Jonney caught it on the wing, only happens because a sensible request has the person digging his/her heels in. It's lamentable. This may be piddling, but MM has, I've continued to note, been consistently reverted (and not only by me or Nableey, the usual suspects, i.e. by User:MShabazz and by User:NPguy (see here. From what I understand NPguy is an expert on these issues), and won't learn to just ease up. I see Richard Falk is still up there, u struck out, as someone with antisemitic viewes. Wikipedia is not a place for missionary work, - at it's best, when collegial, it is actually fun and creative. I've dropped these notes here because, as in the past, she can't take a premonitory hint. She digs her heels in for trench warfare.
I have no idea where the truth lies. That Atzmon has it in for one of our most authoritative voices in the I/P area, the deeply anti-Zionist editor User:RolandR, who has also been the target of massive and persistent anti-Semitic attacks, would suggest to me Atzmon cannot make the distinctions anyone should in this minefield. At the same time, I looked at the standard claims made by Yair Rosenberg and Alan Dershowitz regarding Atzmon's putative anti-Semitism and found that virtually all of their quotations are distortions that appear to be sourceable back to Yaniv Halily, 'The protocols of Gilad Atzmon,' Ynet 14 November 2011, which MM also cited as proof that the accusation Atzmon is an anti-Semite is not a claim, but a truth/fact and therefore can be stated objectively without infringing WP:BLP. That article is an appalling comedy of decontextualized dyscitation, and MM fell for it.
I'll defend anyone who is the subject of collective antipathy, even if he or she's a cunt, if there is the slightest evidence of hysterical smearing that ignores the evidence, or regards rumour as proof, without source control. Whenever, in the massive flood of meme circulation which we are deluged with, I sit down to ferret out what was actually said by this or that person, I find that 95% of the time there is a complete skewing of what was said or written, ripped from context, to be spun for some political end. This has been diagnosed as one of the major threats to democracy - universal access to an internet that does not exercise, as we try in our wiki culture to do, acute control over the reliability of information. That's my only point.
I've read Otto Weininger, and Israel Shahak, and, in reading what little I googled from Atzmon, I can pick up a range of allusions to the extremely intricate, sometimes decidedly neurotic world, a byblow of anti-Semitism, from which he comes. The greatest trump card in the hands of anti-Semites, esp. on the internet, is that the word, like the Holocaust, has been so insistently abused that people generally no longer pay attention any more, and that, dear friend, is what I object to. It's the old Greek moral in The Boy Who Cried Wolf. People like Rosenberg, Dershowitz, Halily, and by the same token MM who gets her info from such poor sources, are lowering our guard, while thinking they are keeping the world on its nervous toes.Nishidani (talk) 15:52, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Hahaha poor sources. Being reverted does not mean you are wrong. I am right about terrorism vs war crimes. --Monochrome_Monitor 16:00, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, another 8 minutes without thinking over advice. You fell hook line and sinker, taking at their word frankly libelous distortions, because you don't study in depth, you google around for smear stuff. I.e.
To buttress what I said about the other two using an irresponsible smear source to make their charges against Atzmon, example the following:
  • Eventually, he writes, a nuclear war will erupt between Iran and Israel, which will lead to the killing of tens of millions of people. "Some brave people will say that Hitler was right after all." (Yaniv Halily, 'The protocols of Gilad Atzmon,' Ynet 14 November 2011)
You found this horrifying. Yeah, but it turns out to be a total, probably libellous distortion of Atzmon: The original text has:

‘Ethics, as reflected in Kant’s categorical imperative, is also bound up with temporality: ‘act only according to that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it should become a universal law.’ Kant reviews the moral act in respect to its temporal perspective. The universal law is looked upon from the perspective of the future and the past. Ethics and temporality can be seen as an endless dialogue between ‘yesterday ‘ and ‘tomorrow’. The present should be understood as a creative dynamic mode where past premeditates its future. But far more crucially, it is also where the imaginary future can rewrite its past. I will try to elucidate the idea through a simple and hypothetical yet horrifying war scenario. We, for instance, can envisage an horrific situation in which an Israeli so-called ‘pre-emptive’ nuclear attack on Iran escalates into a disastrous nuclear war, in which tens of millions of people perish. I guess that among the survivors of such a nightmare scenario, some may be bold enough to argue that ‘Hitler might have been right after all. The above is obviously a fictional scenario, and by no means a wishful one, yet such a vision of a ‘possible’ horrific development should restrain Israeli or Zionist aggression towards Iran. As we know, Israeli officials threaten to flatten Iran rather too often. In practice, pre-TSS Israelis make this devastating scenario into a possible reality. Seemingly, Israeli and Zionist politicians fail to see their own actions in the light of history. They fail to look at their actions in terms of their consequences. From an ethical perspective, the above ‘imaginary’ scenario is there to prevent Israel from attacking Iran. Yet, as we all know, Israel and its lobbies are desperate to dismantle the so-called ‘Iranian threat.’

That is a perfectly normal example of philosophical illustration of a keynote in Kantian ethics. No where can you find a basis for what Atzmon is reported as saying, i.e. "Some brave people (distorting some may be bold enough) will say that Hitler was right after all."Nishidani (talk) 16:10, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not going to report you for this, someone else may, and would have solid grounds for doing so. But you've learnt nothing, and if you persist in not taking a hint, it's gunna happen.Nishidani (talk) 16:11, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I never mentioned iran.

We must begin to take the accusation that the Jewish people are trying to control the world very seriously.... American Jewry makes any debate on whether the 'Protocols of the elder of Zion' are an authentic document or rather a forgery irrelevant. American Jews do try to control the world, by proxy. So far they are doing pretty well for themselves at least.

[13]

The Protocols is widely considered a forgery. It is a manual for a prospective new member of the “Elders”, describing how they will run the world through control of the media and finance, replacing the traditional social order with one based on mass manipulation. Though the book is considered a hoax by most experts and regarded as a vile anti-Semitic text, it is impossible to ignore its prophetic qualities and its capacity to describe both the century unfolding and the political reality in which we live.

[14]

You may wonder at this stage whether I regard the credit crunch as a Zionist plot. In fact it is the opposite. It is actually a Zionist accident. The patient didn’t make it to the end. This Zionist accident is a glimpse into Political Zionism’s sinister agenda. This Zionist accident provides us with an opportunity to see that as far as misery is concerned, we are together with the Palestinians, the Iraqis and the Afghans. We share one enemy.

[15]

It is rather obvious that some Jews are rather unhappy with Charles Dickens’ Fagin and Shakespeare’s Shylock who they regard as ‘anti Semitic’. I get the impression that the prominent Zionist enthusiast and London Barrister Anthony Julius would like to see these cultural iconic characters diminished from popular discourse... It doesn’t take a genius to gather why Julius and others are concerned with Fagin or Shylock. Fagin is the ultimate plunderer, a child exploiter and usurer. Shylock is the blood-thirsty merchant. With Fagin and Shylock in mind Israeli barbarism and organ trafficking seem to be just other events in an endless hellish continuum....As much as Julius and others would like to remove some crucial stereotypes from our collective cultural discourse, they can actually expect the complete opposite. Fagin and Shylock are now more popular than ever before. Devastatingly enough, it is Fagin and Shylock who shed light over the Jewish state and its lobbies around the world. Fagin is neither alone nor is he an isolated fictional episode.

[16]


65 years after the liberation of Auschwitz we should reclaim our history and ask why? Why were the Jews hated? Why did European people stand up against their next door neighbours? Why are the Jews hated in the Middle East, surely they had a chance to open a new page in their troubled history? If they genuinely planned to do so, as the early Zionists claimed, why did they fail? Why did America tighten its immigration laws amid the growing danger to European Jews?

[17]

If there is one Jew I fully admire, it must be Paul Eisen

[18]

--Monochrome_Monitor 18:15, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

You are retroactively attempting to justify your taking on trust two reports about Atzmon each of which, on examination, was shown to utterly distort his views. I'm not going to take the bait and flatter you by taking each of these and examining them. Looking at Atzmon's wiki page I see if is full of source distortion, that has to be fixed, and then there's a more important issue than debating your impressionistic opinions, the Uefa cup.Nishidani (talk) 18:24, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

I don't agree that the quotes were deceptive. When he says "some might call me a proud self hater", he is embracing it. [19] Here he explicitly calls himself a "profound self-hater". Similarly, omitting the clause "some might be bold enough to say" (with bold having a positive connotation) does not make it less heinous. Some might say you are an apologist for racism that even he who once said "zionism is the continuation of nazism in spirit", condemns. Your fastidious verification of quotes is also hypocritical, which I will get to later. --Monochrome_Monitor 18:56, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Your views

Would you please comments on my updating the page Shahrbanu here or at the talk page of the article. Nannadeem (talk) 17:24, 1 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]

AE

Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement#Monochrome_Monitor nableezy - 22:50, 2 July 2016 (UTC)[reply]