Talk:The Babylon Bee/Archive 1
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Archive 1 | Archive 2 |
Notability
We don't necessarily need to include every opinion of every blogger from a small institute in Florida. If either Poytner or Mr. Funke are notable for inclusion of their opinion, let's have a defense of that before addition. Squatch347 (talk) 13:03, 14 August 2019 (UTC)
- Perhaps you unaware but the Poynter Institute is not “a small institute in Florida” its one of the world's foremost journalism institutes and a leader in the study of “fake news” and fact checking. Daniel Funke is not a blogger but a full fledged journalist. He does in fact operate a blog but thats at [1] not through Poynter. Clearly satisfies WP:RS. I would also add that notability is not really whats under discussion here, please familiarize yourself with WP:WEIGHT as this is what youre supposed to be arguing about... Not WP:notability which applies to pages and not sources. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 14:48, 14 August 2019 (UTC)
- No argument that Mr. Funke is a journalist nor that Poynter is a RS. You'll notice I didn't try to remove any other usage of them in citing facts within the article. Rather, what I'm asking is why a personal opinion quote by Mr. Funke should be given such weight. Why, specifically, does his take on this deserve a prominent spot in the article? Also, do you have any evidence that Poynter has the standing you claim? I know they say that about themselves, but are there other sources indicating they are the "leader in fact checking?" Squatch347 (talk) 13:26, 15 August 2019 (UTC)
- Well theres [2] and [3]... The key would be the unit they run called the "International Fact-Checking Network” which runs the third party fact checking operations of major social media companies like Facebook. I can’t think of another organization I would give the same weight to when it comes to fact checking. Funke’s “opinion” also seems to be a very reasonable non-partisan expert's take, I noticed you kept up the opinions of the founders even though one of those statements is factually incorrect and was in fact incorrect when the statement was made (e.g. the part about Snopes not fact checking the Onion). You asked why this deserves a prominent spot in the article which is begging the question because the section never had a *prominent* place in the article. Pointer/Funke clearly are an authoritative source rather than a fringe source, so whats the argument against them? You do actually have to make one... Horse Eye Jack (talk) 19:04, 15 August 2019 (UTC)
- I'm not sure the use of this organization by two obscure online news sources really constitutes validation that Poynter is one of the "world's foremost journalism institutes." I wouldn't characterize them as "running" fact checking for major social media sites. They were added to the fact checking partnership (along with about a half dozen others) after Facebook took a lot of grief at using Snopes exclusively. At best, this makes them a fact checker among many.
- The founders' quotes were relevant because they are intimately involved in the controversy and they represent the subject's take on that issue. If the other quote was from the Snope's author or someone involved with Snope's editorial board it would make sense to include since they are the other party. But this is a single fact checker who has no particular involvement in the incident and doesn't, as far as I can tell, represent some kind of sage opinion in the field. Don't get me wrong, no disrespect to Mr. Funke, but he doesn't seem to be held as some kind of leading mind in the concept of fact checking (I could be wrong, but I don't particularly see that take from his own site or in his references by others). His specific quote doesn't really add anything to the article outside of what a quote from any news sources' opinion page might add. I think a much better use of him as a source would be to correct the factual error in the founder's quote that you mention. Squatch347 (talk) 10:42, 16 August 2019 (UTC)
- Ummmmm its a little more than that, see: "Poynter’s International Fact-Checking Network sets the standard for eligibility for Facebook’s fact-checkers.” Also theres no indication that Funke is himself one of these fact checkers, you’re making a number of claims that aren't supported by the evidence (e.g. "They were added to the fact checking partnership (along with about a half dozen others) after Facebook took a lot of grief at using Snopes exclusively.” which is just false). Are you familiar with Politifact? Because they also run that now... Again name a single fact checking organization you would consider more “sage." Horse Eye Jack (talk) 15:50, 16 August 2019 (UTC)
- Any further objections? Horse Eye Jack (talk) 15:07, 19 August 2019 (UTC)
- I had assumed that this request was overtaken by the more recent edit since that edit achieves a lot of what you mentioned you were hoping to with your suggested quote. Related to your specific comment, I would point out that Poynter is owned by the Tampa Bay Times, which started and owns Politifact as well. That makes this an equity relationship. It isn't as if a group of revered experts got together at Poynter and started Politifact, it was started as a division of the Tampa Bay Times, then moved through a company reorg to Poynter. The bottom line point is, there is no sound argument here for including Funke's quote, he isn't a party to the controversy and, as best as we can tell, not a notable figure within the fact-checking field. What is the warrant for relying on his quote? Squatch347 (talk) 11:48, 20 August 2019 (UTC)
- Once again you have gotten basic facts wrong... Poynter owns the Tampa Bay Times not the other way around. I note that on policy grounds the *entirety* of the “sound argument” that needs to be made is that the source is a WP:RS and the ideas expressed aren't WP:FRINGE, thats literally it. Can you rephrase your question "What is the warrant for relying on his quote?” to include some Wikipedia policy? Our own opinions are nice, but they don’t actually matter. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 18:20, 20 August 2019 (UTC)
- The suggested addition is an opinion piece from a non-notable source, WP:NEWSORG. If we are going to include an opinion source, the reference should be to an notable expert in the field or recognize a general consensus. Otherwise it is simply fluff. Ask yourself this, what would a reader on this subject learn from Mr. Funke's personal opinion? Is he an expert in the field? Is he widely regarded as authoritative? Is he stating a reliably source fact that we should be expressing as such? If the answer is no to these questions, the addition adds no value to the article. Squatch347 (talk) 00:04, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- Once again you have gotten basic facts wrong... Poynter owns the Tampa Bay Times not the other way around. I note that on policy grounds the *entirety* of the “sound argument” that needs to be made is that the source is a WP:RS and the ideas expressed aren't WP:FRINGE, thats literally it. Can you rephrase your question "What is the warrant for relying on his quote?” to include some Wikipedia policy? Our own opinions are nice, but they don’t actually matter. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 18:20, 20 August 2019 (UTC)
- Ummmmm its a little more than that, see: "Poynter’s International Fact-Checking Network sets the standard for eligibility for Facebook’s fact-checkers.” Also theres no indication that Funke is himself one of these fact checkers, you’re making a number of claims that aren't supported by the evidence (e.g. "They were added to the fact checking partnership (along with about a half dozen others) after Facebook took a lot of grief at using Snopes exclusively.” which is just false). Are you familiar with Politifact? Because they also run that now... Again name a single fact checking organization you would consider more “sage." Horse Eye Jack (talk) 15:50, 16 August 2019 (UTC)
- Well theres [2] and [3]... The key would be the unit they run called the "International Fact-Checking Network” which runs the third party fact checking operations of major social media companies like Facebook. I can’t think of another organization I would give the same weight to when it comes to fact checking. Funke’s “opinion” also seems to be a very reasonable non-partisan expert's take, I noticed you kept up the opinions of the founders even though one of those statements is factually incorrect and was in fact incorrect when the statement was made (e.g. the part about Snopes not fact checking the Onion). You asked why this deserves a prominent spot in the article which is begging the question because the section never had a *prominent* place in the article. Pointer/Funke clearly are an authoritative source rather than a fringe source, so whats the argument against them? You do actually have to make one... Horse Eye Jack (talk) 19:04, 15 August 2019 (UTC)
- No argument that Mr. Funke is a journalist nor that Poynter is a RS. You'll notice I didn't try to remove any other usage of them in citing facts within the article. Rather, what I'm asking is why a personal opinion quote by Mr. Funke should be given such weight. Why, specifically, does his take on this deserve a prominent spot in the article? Also, do you have any evidence that Poynter has the standing you claim? I know they say that about themselves, but are there other sources indicating they are the "leader in fact checking?" Squatch347 (talk) 13:26, 15 August 2019 (UTC)
- Perhaps you unaware but the Poynter Institute is not “a small institute in Florida” its one of the world's foremost journalism institutes and a leader in the study of “fake news” and fact checking. Daniel Funke is not a blogger but a full fledged journalist. He does in fact operate a blog but thats at [1] not through Poynter. Clearly satisfies WP:RS. I would also add that notability is not really whats under discussion here, please familiarize yourself with WP:WEIGHT as this is what youre supposed to be arguing about... Not WP:notability which applies to pages and not sources. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 14:48, 14 August 2019 (UTC)
- It is neither an opinion piece nor from a non-notable source... We’ve already done this. As you yourself said: “No argument that Mr. Funke is a journalist nor that Poynter is a RS. You'll notice I didn't try to remove any other usage of them in citing facts within the article.” Horse Eye Jack (talk) 00:55, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- There is a world of difference between meeting the standards of being a journalist and meeting the standards of being a notable expert in the field whose individual quote is germane to a summation of the topic. Until you can answer these questions, the quote is just additional fluff in the article: what would a reader on this subject learn from Mr. Funke's personal opinion? Is he an expert in the field? Is he widely regarded as authoritative? Is he stating a reliably source fact that we should be expressing as such? Squatch347 (talk) 13:35, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- You appear to have moved the goalposts again, I would point out that the source appears nowhere in the current article at all. We also appear to have established that Poynter is the leader in their field (again the floor is yours to name a single more notable organization when it comes to fact checking) and Funke is writing not as Funke (like on his personal blog) but as a Poynter employee. If you have a policy based reason not to include this source please explicitly state that policy you previously invoked WP:NEWSORG but you werent specific and it doesnt back up the point you said it did (it doesnt even include the word “notable”). Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:20, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- That is a noble attempt to shift the burden, but I think I'll decline your attempt. If you want to argue that Poytner is the leader in the field of fact checking, please offer some WP:RS that call them that. I'm not here to do your homework for you. Of course it doesn't really matter because the discussion at hand is whether Mr. Funke is a notable expert in the field. I don't think any evidence has been offered to support that. Unless we can establish either a) That Mr. Funke is a an expert or widely regarded as authoritative or b) (and this would be far better) you can detail what adding Mr. Funke's take on this brings to the article that it doesn't already contain then there really isn't much justification for the edit. It is just quote fluff. Squatch347 (talk) 13:28, 22 August 2019 (UTC)
- You appear to have moved the goalposts again, I would point out that the source appears nowhere in the current article at all. We also appear to have established that Poynter is the leader in their field (again the floor is yours to name a single more notable organization when it comes to fact checking) and Funke is writing not as Funke (like on his personal blog) but as a Poynter employee. If you have a policy based reason not to include this source please explicitly state that policy you previously invoked WP:NEWSORG but you werent specific and it doesnt back up the point you said it did (it doesnt even include the word “notable”). Horse Eye Jack (talk) 17:20, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- There is a world of difference between meeting the standards of being a journalist and meeting the standards of being a notable expert in the field whose individual quote is germane to a summation of the topic. Until you can answer these questions, the quote is just additional fluff in the article: what would a reader on this subject learn from Mr. Funke's personal opinion? Is he an expert in the field? Is he widely regarded as authoritative? Is he stating a reliably source fact that we should be expressing as such? Squatch347 (talk) 13:35, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
- It is neither an opinion piece nor from a non-notable source... We’ve already done this. As you yourself said: “No argument that Mr. Funke is a journalist nor that Poynter is a RS. You'll notice I didn't try to remove any other usage of them in citing facts within the article.” Horse Eye Jack (talk) 00:55, 21 August 2019 (UTC)
Weight
Can we all agree that this edit creates far too much content Snopes subsection? I mean, it made it so that the Snopes discussion has at least 3x more length than the rest of the article combined. Killiondude (talk) 20:55, 16 August 2019 (UTC)
- Weight is generally a quality not a quantity thing, the remedy to a quantity imbalance is adding more to other sections (as much as they can be added to anyway) instead of deleting relevant properly sourced information. Horse Eye Jack (talk) 21:05, 16 August 2019 (UTC)
- The due weight policy is something that's always bugged me. As long as everything is verifiable and portrayed accurately in terms of its reliability, I certainly wouldn't want anything arbitrarily left out. Benjamin (talk) 08:38, 17 August 2019 (UTC)
- Tend to agree with the two other editors. It adds some much needed context to the discussion, including quotes from a co-founder of Snopes, which helps to balance out the quotes from the Bee's staff. Squatch347 (talk) 13:49, 19 August 2019 (UTC)
Redundancy
The content page was edited to include the same quote that's in the introduction. Is such redundancy necessary? Also, an error was made citing the source, so now there's a big error visible on the page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 15:07, 23 August 2019 (UTC)
- The reference has been fixed. Also, it is common for information from the lead section to be repeated in the body of the article. --Spiffy sperry (talk) 15:31, 23 August 2019 (UTC)
Page structure
With more detailed history now, might it make sense to restructure the page a bit? Much of the history involves controversy and media coverage that's resulted from it. Should this be broken out into another section? Some of the details in the history section deal with events like the founding and notable hires, but those are of a different type than the other events on the timeline that deal with controversies and media coverage. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:21, 30 October 2020 (UTC)
Can this legally be considered “satire”?
Isn’t satire supposed to be humorous in some way? Or at the very least, have some sort of coherent comedic structure to it? I’ve read many Bee articles and they largely seem constitutionally unable to craft anything even resembling a joke or satirical barb. Open to others’ thoughts on this — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2601:41:4004:72E0:B96C:184B:6CF3:54FF (talk) 23:46, 4 February 2021 (UTC)
- Wikipedia reflects what is published in reliable sources, and those sources generally describe the Bee as a satire site. GorillaWarfare (talk) 17:13, 5 February 2021 (UTC)
- Agreed with GorillaWarfare. This is about what reputable sources say, not any individual editor's sense of humor Squatch347 (talk) 22:00, 5 February 2021 (UTC)
- It is most unfortunate though, because in reality the Babylon Bee is no different from any other right wing disinfo site. Fox, OAN, Newsweek, Bounding into Comics, you name it, they're all the same. The Bee simply found a way to protect themselves from liability by adding "loljk" at the end of every article. Which is perfectly in line with the usual tactics of the trump era. Every time they are caught lying they simply say it was just a joke the whole time. But as long as they avoid being fact checked, Republicans eat this nonsense up like it was candy. I'm pretty sure snopes did release an article defending their decision to fact-check the Bee. They even had statistics showing that over 40% of republicans can't tell the difference between babylon bee "satire" and actual news stories. To call this site "satire" is like calling the anti abortion movement "pro life". 46.97.170.253 (talk) 07:33, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- Have secondary reliable sources said what you are saying here? If so, it could be incorporated into the article. GorillaWarfare (talk) 18:09, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- There was a Snopes article from August 16, 2019, titled "Study: Too many people think satirical news is real", with a survey showing a very high percentage of Republicans falling for Babylon Bee "satire". I don't remember the specifics, and I'm not very good at looking this stuff up. Does Snopes not count as a secondary source? 46.97.170.253 (talk) 19:28, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- No, Snopes is fine: WP:SNOPES. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:45, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- This is the article in question Srkomodo (talk) 03:51, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- I see. This definitely doesn't support the claims that "The Bee simply found a way to protect themselves from liability by adding "loljk" at the end of every article. Which is perfectly in line with the usual tactics of the trump era", but it does seem to have some useful information to add here. I've done so: [4]. I'll note that although Snopes republished the article, it was actually originally from The Conversation. GorillaWarfare (talk) 04:54, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- There's an issue with the Snopes study. Rather than using the actual headline, they used a summary of the article. If you compare the actual headline with the Snopes summary, the issue makes itself clear:
- I see. This definitely doesn't support the claims that "The Bee simply found a way to protect themselves from liability by adding "loljk" at the end of every article. Which is perfectly in line with the usual tactics of the trump era", but it does seem to have some useful information to add here. I've done so: [4]. I'll note that although Snopes republished the article, it was actually originally from The Conversation. GorillaWarfare (talk) 04:54, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- There was a Snopes article from August 16, 2019, titled "Study: Too many people think satirical news is real", with a survey showing a very high percentage of Republicans falling for Babylon Bee "satire". I don't remember the specifics, and I'm not very good at looking this stuff up. Does Snopes not count as a secondary source? 46.97.170.253 (talk) 19:28, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- Have secondary reliable sources said what you are saying here? If so, it could be incorporated into the article. GorillaWarfare (talk) 18:09, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
- It is most unfortunate though, because in reality the Babylon Bee is no different from any other right wing disinfo site. Fox, OAN, Newsweek, Bounding into Comics, you name it, they're all the same. The Bee simply found a way to protect themselves from liability by adding "loljk" at the end of every article. Which is perfectly in line with the usual tactics of the trump era. Every time they are caught lying they simply say it was just a joke the whole time. But as long as they avoid being fact checked, Republicans eat this nonsense up like it was candy. I'm pretty sure snopes did release an article defending their decision to fact-check the Bee. They even had statistics showing that over 40% of republicans can't tell the difference between babylon bee "satire" and actual news stories. To call this site "satire" is like calling the anti abortion movement "pro life". 46.97.170.253 (talk) 07:33, 11 February 2021 (UTC)
Babylon Bee Headline | Snopes Summary |
---|---|
Nation Awaits Apology From Media That Pushed Fake News Story For Two Years | Most Americans believe that major media companies should apologize for pushing the now-debunked news story of collusion between President Trump and Russia. |
Ilhan Omar: 'If Israel Is So Innocent, Then Why do They Insist On Being Jews?' | Representative Ilhan Omar said that being Jewish is an inherently hostile act, especially among those living in Israel. |
CNN: 'God Allowed The Mueller Report To Test Our Unshakable Faith In Collusion' | CNN news anchor Anderson Cooper said his belief that Trump colluded with Russia is unshakable; it will not change regardless of statements or evidence to the contrary. |
Disney CEO: 'To Avoid Filming Among Depraved, immoral people, We Are Moving All Our Georgia Operations Back To Hollywood' | Bob Iger, CEO of Disney, said that the company will move its Georgia-based filming operations back to Hollywood in order to avoid filming among “depraved, immoral people.” |
Democrats Vow To Close Dangerous Gun-Buying Loophole Known As 'The Second Amendment' | Cory Booker is one of several prominent Democrats to describe the Second Amendment as a dangerous “loophole” that allows people to buy guns. |
- By rephrasing the articles to sound more believable, Snopes is able to inflate the amount of "definitely true" responses and exaggerate the gullibility of Americans (although people can be really, really dumb). This was a poorly-done study with numerous methodology flaws. ReasonTV Video AngryBird029 (talk) 15:58, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- @AngryBird029: I've added a sentence to the article based on this ReasonTV source. Just as a note, this study was not performed by Snopes. They published a piece that cited the research, but it was The Conversation who actually performed the study. GorillaWarfare (talk) 16:46, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- Correct, Snopes did not originate the flawed study. They just promoted it and tried to give it legitimacy. It's good that Mann's response was included. I'm sure there were articles published debunking the junk study. Perhaps one can be cited here in fairness to sites it disparages so dishonestly. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:32, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- If you find any, feel free to point us to them and we can add them. Our reliable sourcing policy is at WP:RS if you need it. GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:01, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- This piece in the Washington Examiner is critical of the study's methodology. "By rewording the headlines to remove the obvious comedy tells, the survey was predetermined to get the result it did. The researchers ought to be embarrassed, and Snopes ought to be doubly embarrassed for continuing its bizarre jihad against the Babylon Bee." One point I haven't seen anyone make is that part of the joke is the photoshopped image that accompanies the funny headlines. Many of The Onion and Babylon Bee stories rely on a combination of funny headlines paired with ridiculous photoshops. Like this, for example. If you divorce the headline from the image, you make it more believable. That would be bad enough. But to pull the headline away from the context of the image and to paraphrase it seems to just be an egregiously dishonest effort to force the study to find what they wanted it to find. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.244.158.224 (talk) 17:42, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- The Washington Examiner is yellow at RSP. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:15, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- Yellow just means "no consensus," right? That doesn't mean it's unreliable. Snopes is green on that list, which is just comical. The whole system is rigged, end to end. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.244.158.224 (talk) 22:54, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- It means there is no consensus that it is reliable (or unreliable). I usually try to avoid using them as sources. If you would like to revisit the reliability of Snopes, feel free to begin a discussion at WP:RSN, but nothing is "rigged". GorillaWarfare (talk) 17:59, 21 February 2021 (UTC)
- I came to this discussion after reading about it here: Wikipedia Editors Want to Label Babylon Bee ‘Right Wing Disinfo’. I am of the opinion that the Snopes study is not worth mentioning on this article.--Epiphyllumlover (talk) 20:56, 21 February 2021 (UTC)
- @Epiphyllumlover: Can you elaborate on why you are of that opinion? GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:07, 22 February 2021 (UTC)
- I accept AngryBird029's criticism of it as described earlier in this talk page.--Epiphyllumlover (talk) 02:04, 7 March 2021 (UTC)
- @Epiphyllumlover: Can you elaborate on why you are of that opinion? GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:07, 22 February 2021 (UTC)
- I came to this discussion after reading about it here: Wikipedia Editors Want to Label Babylon Bee ‘Right Wing Disinfo’. I am of the opinion that the Snopes study is not worth mentioning on this article.--Epiphyllumlover (talk) 20:56, 21 February 2021 (UTC)
- It means there is no consensus that it is reliable (or unreliable). I usually try to avoid using them as sources. If you would like to revisit the reliability of Snopes, feel free to begin a discussion at WP:RSN, but nothing is "rigged". GorillaWarfare (talk) 17:59, 21 February 2021 (UTC)
- Should probably also note that the Examiner piece was an OPED, not an article in the traditional sense. We should be wary of including it for that reason. I think the adding of AngryBird's Reason link does a good job highlighting the issue. Squatch347 (talk) 21:26, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
- That seems fair, but it's worth noting that opinions are not only expressed in pieces that are labeled as op-eds. For example, the Rolling Stone gave their opinion — and it is merely an opinion — that the Bee's content is explicitly hateful (misogynistic and transphobic). Including that opinion in this article was justified by one of the editors because Rolling Stone is listed as a "reliable source." But does the source from which an opinion comes magically transform it into fact? It certainly is not objectively the case that the Bee hates women. The Bee makes jokes at the expense of both women and men. It's what the site has always done. It makes fun of Christians, too, and the site is run by Christians. Most people who read the Bee think these jokes are funny and lighthearted, not hateful. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 14:20, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- This is precisely why the Rolling Stone statement is directly quoted and attributed in-text, as is directed for statements that may be "biased statements of opinion". We have done the same with other statements of opinion in the article, both positive and negative, as is appropriate. I note you don't seem to have an issue with the positive statements that are also based in opinion, such as the statement that the site "excels at poking fun at the small idiosyncrasies of believers".
The Bee makes jokes at the expense of both women and men. It's what the site has always done... Most people who read the Bee think these jokes are funny and lighthearted, not hateful.
[citation needed] for all of this if you wish it to be incorporated into the article. Your own opinions on the site's content, or how it is received, are no more useful in determining how the article ought to describe the site than mine are. GorillaWarfare (talk) 17:14, 24 February 2021 (UTC)- I'm not suggesting my opinions be included. I'm offering feedback. Anyone can look at the site and find jokes that mock men. I just performed a search for "Dad" on the site and this is the first article that popped up. The site should be accurately represented, and some of the opinions quoted on this page are more accurate than others and can be verified by visiting the site directly, or by reviewing the public statements of the founder and current leadership. I don't object to the opinion that the site excels at poking at believers because that was the stated purpose of the site at its inception, per its founder Adam Ford. As for the fact that most people who read the site's content find it funny and lighthearted, I'm not sure how you source that beyond evaluating the reaction its posts receive on social media. It's not hard to find countless people sharing the Bee's content thinking it's hysterical. That counts for nothing, unless The Rolling Stone points it out? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:39, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- As I said in the sentence immediately after where I said your opinions can't be included in the article, your opinions (nor mine) also can't be used to determine how this article ought to describe the site. You are suggesting original research when you mention visiting the site and "verifying" what reliable sources have published. If you think a reliable source's description of the site is inaccurate, only a contradiction by another reliable source is useful; your own research cannot be used. If you look at the discussion of the research in The Conversation just above in this discussion, you'll see where that has been done once already.
I don't object to the opinion that the site excels at poking at believers because that was the stated purpose of the site at its inception
Our WP:NPOV policy requires that Wikipedia articles "represent fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic." It does not suggest that we should describe subjects only as they describe themselves; otherwise this would not be an encyclopedia, it would be an advertising site.It's not hard to find countless people sharing the Bee's content thinking it's hysterical. That counts for nothing, unless The Rolling Stone points it out?
Almost correct; that counts for nothing unless a reliable source (Rolling Stone or otherwise) points it out. GorillaWarfare (talk) 20:57, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- I'm not suggesting my opinions be included. I'm offering feedback. Anyone can look at the site and find jokes that mock men. I just performed a search for "Dad" on the site and this is the first article that popped up. The site should be accurately represented, and some of the opinions quoted on this page are more accurate than others and can be verified by visiting the site directly, or by reviewing the public statements of the founder and current leadership. I don't object to the opinion that the site excels at poking at believers because that was the stated purpose of the site at its inception, per its founder Adam Ford. As for the fact that most people who read the site's content find it funny and lighthearted, I'm not sure how you source that beyond evaluating the reaction its posts receive on social media. It's not hard to find countless people sharing the Bee's content thinking it's hysterical. That counts for nothing, unless The Rolling Stone points it out? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:39, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- That seems fair, but it's worth noting that opinions are not only expressed in pieces that are labeled as op-eds. For example, the Rolling Stone gave their opinion — and it is merely an opinion — that the Bee's content is explicitly hateful (misogynistic and transphobic). Including that opinion in this article was justified by one of the editors because Rolling Stone is listed as a "reliable source." But does the source from which an opinion comes magically transform it into fact? It certainly is not objectively the case that the Bee hates women. The Bee makes jokes at the expense of both women and men. It's what the site has always done. It makes fun of Christians, too, and the site is run by Christians. Most people who read the Bee think these jokes are funny and lighthearted, not hateful. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 14:20, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- Yellow just means "no consensus," right? That doesn't mean it's unreliable. Snopes is green on that list, which is just comical. The whole system is rigged, end to end. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.244.158.224 (talk) 22:54, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- The Washington Examiner is yellow at RSP. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:15, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- This piece in the Washington Examiner is critical of the study's methodology. "By rewording the headlines to remove the obvious comedy tells, the survey was predetermined to get the result it did. The researchers ought to be embarrassed, and Snopes ought to be doubly embarrassed for continuing its bizarre jihad against the Babylon Bee." One point I haven't seen anyone make is that part of the joke is the photoshopped image that accompanies the funny headlines. Many of The Onion and Babylon Bee stories rely on a combination of funny headlines paired with ridiculous photoshops. Like this, for example. If you divorce the headline from the image, you make it more believable. That would be bad enough. But to pull the headline away from the context of the image and to paraphrase it seems to just be an egregiously dishonest effort to force the study to find what they wanted it to find. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.244.158.224 (talk) 17:42, 20 February 2021 (UTC)
- If you find any, feel free to point us to them and we can add them. Our reliable sourcing policy is at WP:RS if you need it. GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:01, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- Correct, Snopes did not originate the flawed study. They just promoted it and tried to give it legitimacy. It's good that Mann's response was included. I'm sure there were articles published debunking the junk study. Perhaps one can be cited here in fairness to sites it disparages so dishonestly. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:32, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- @AngryBird029: I have a problem with this assesment:
By rewording the headlines to remove the obvious comedy tells, the survey was predetermined to get the result it did. The researchers ought to be embarrassed, and Snopes ought to be doubly embarrassed for continuing its bizarre jihad against the Babylon Bee."
- The whole point of the study was to prove that unless the article headlines are specifically worded in a tongue and cheek fashion, an alarming number of people will take the article at face value, regardless of how ridiculous it's contents are.
Democrats Vow To Close Dangerous Gun-Buying Loophole Known As 'The Second Amendment'
is clearly a tongue and cheek satirical headline.Cory Booker is one of several prominent Democrats to describe the Second Amendment as a dangerous “loophole” that allows people to buy guns
sounds like it's meant to be taken seriously, but it's still absurd. Nevertheless, this is exactly the same kind of nonsense that republican and alt right propaganda outlets peddle to their audiences on a regular basis.- This is what I meant when I said that
Babylon Bee is no different from any other right wing disinfo site. Fox, OAN, Newsmax, Bounding into Comics, you name it, they're all the same.
The only thing that sets them apart is that the Babylon Bee tags all their articles with "LOL JK" to preemptively shield themselves from fact-checkers. 46.97.170.19 (talk) 13:58, 4 March 2021 (UTC)- If you would like to discuss the merits of the study, please do so elsewhere. This talk page is for discussing specific changes to this article, which must be based on reliable sources and not editors' opinions. Mine, yours, or AngryBird's personal opinion of the study will not affect the content of this article. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:01, 4 March 2021 (UTC)
- Well, I think there are issues with the changes to the article you made when you included Mann's "criticism" of the research. Reason TV is a youtube channel, so who they interview is not really relevant, and Mann's claim that the research is methodoogically flawed is his own opinion. One that, as I explained above, is not exactly accurate. I also believe the article should say CNN criticised the Bee for "capitalizing on confusion ..." rather than that it "drew backlash on twitter". Drawing backlash on twitter is not relevant, and Fox News, the source of these claims is not a reliable source. 46.97.170.19 (talk) 07:55, 5 March 2021 (UTC)
- ReasonTV is operated by Reason, which is green at RSP. They just host their videos on YouTube. And yes, the article says in-text that it is Mann's opinion that there were methodological issues with the study. I will remove the section about O'Sullivan, though, as you're right that it's sourced entirely to Fox. GorillaWarfare (talk) 01:57, 6 March 2021 (UTC)
- Wait, no! O'Sullivan's criticism was perfectly valid. I wasn't arguing removing it, just the FOX "news" POV. There must be reliable sources reporting on his criticism of the Bee. 46.97.170.19 (talk) 10:30, 8 March 2021 (UTC)
- I did look for other reliable sources before removing it, but there weren't really any. It was mostly covered by Fox and various even less reliable right-wing sources like The Daily Wire (WP:RSP#The Daily Wire), The Post Millenial (WP:RSP#The Post Millenial), etc. If you find any usable sources I missed, though, feel free to leave them here.
- I will note that had it actually been true that "CNN criticised the Bee for 'capitalizing on confusion...'" that might have been usable, but it's not. In reality, a reporter who works for CNN made a tweet about the Bee. GorillaWarfare (talk) 15:06, 8 March 2021 (UTC)
- Wait, no! O'Sullivan's criticism was perfectly valid. I wasn't arguing removing it, just the FOX "news" POV. There must be reliable sources reporting on his criticism of the Bee. 46.97.170.19 (talk) 10:30, 8 March 2021 (UTC)
- ReasonTV is operated by Reason, which is green at RSP. They just host their videos on YouTube. And yes, the article says in-text that it is Mann's opinion that there were methodological issues with the study. I will remove the section about O'Sullivan, though, as you're right that it's sourced entirely to Fox. GorillaWarfare (talk) 01:57, 6 March 2021 (UTC)
- Well, I think there are issues with the changes to the article you made when you included Mann's "criticism" of the research. Reason TV is a youtube channel, so who they interview is not really relevant, and Mann's claim that the research is methodoogically flawed is his own opinion. One that, as I explained above, is not exactly accurate. I also believe the article should say CNN criticised the Bee for "capitalizing on confusion ..." rather than that it "drew backlash on twitter". Drawing backlash on twitter is not relevant, and Fox News, the source of these claims is not a reliable source. 46.97.170.19 (talk) 07:55, 5 March 2021 (UTC)
- If you would like to discuss the merits of the study, please do so elsewhere. This talk page is for discussing specific changes to this article, which must be based on reliable sources and not editors' opinions. Mine, yours, or AngryBird's personal opinion of the study will not affect the content of this article. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:01, 4 March 2021 (UTC)
- @AngryBird029: I've added a sentence to the article based on this ReasonTV source. Just as a note, this study was not performed by Snopes. They published a piece that cited the research, but it was The Conversation who actually performed the study. GorillaWarfare (talk) 16:46, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- By rephrasing the articles to sound more believable, Snopes is able to inflate the amount of "definitely true" responses and exaggerate the gullibility of Americans (although people can be really, really dumb). This was a poorly-done study with numerous methodology flaws. ReasonTV Video AngryBird029 (talk) 15:58, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
Well, this really took off while I was gone. Ok, a couple of quick questions for @GorillaWarfare; first though, looking through the edits offered I support their inclusion. We might be giving a bit undue weight to this single article, it is really kind of a side story, but the current version is pretty balanced and well sourced. I was curious though, why did you remove the "Not the Bee" section? That is a parallel site of the Babylon Bee in much the same way the AV Club is for The Onion and the tie seems like a logical inclusion. Also, I'm not sure we need a secondary source for a reference on what books the site has put out, it isn't really a questionable claim. Squatch347 (talk) 20:55, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347:
We might be giving a bit undue weight to this single article, it is really kind of a side story, but the current version is pretty balanced and well sourced.
Which article do you mean? The one from The Conversation? - I removed the section on "Not the Bee" for the same reason I removed the book information: I couldn't find any secondary sourcing about it. Neither of the removals were based in verifiability concerns; the fact that I can't find any secondary sources even mentioning them makes me think they are not noteworthy enough to mention. GorillaWarfare (talk) 20:59, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
- Yes, the article from "The Conversation," not a big deal, like I said the current version is a good balance.
- I'm not sure we generally require a secondary source for a list of publications. The Onion's list, for example, is just internet archival of the video The Onion released announcing its publication. Ditto for referencing Not the Bee. As a spinoff it is akin to some of the additions on the Onion's Wiki page of sections or parallels sites that are solely referenced by that site's address. The point of insisting on secondary sources is to provide weight for things that might be challenged. That the site exists probably doesn't fall into the category of controversial. Squatch347 (talk) 21:23, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
- Fair enough, if you want to put it back in that's fine by me. I'm not too bothered either way, so long as we're not going into a ton of detail (which the previous revision was not). GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:25, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
- Just noting for other readers of this discussion that this is Done GorillaWarfare (talk) 17:21, 24 February 2021 (UTC)
- Fair enough, if you want to put it back in that's fine by me. I'm not too bothered either way, so long as we're not going into a ton of detail (which the previous revision was not). GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:25, 23 February 2021 (UTC)
Donie O'Sullivan edit
Hi GorillaWarfare I'd like to chat about the revert. The current RSP guidance is that Fox, for politics, has no consensus and editors should "use Fox News with caution to verify contentious claims."
I don't think any think listed in the edit would cross into that contentious category this is a pretty well established set of facts, but I'm open to your take on that. Can you elaborate on your concern?
Squatch347 (talk) 21:01, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Yeah, this came up briefly in the section above. I had previously removed a few sentences about O'Sullivan's comments 1) because, like now, it was sourced only to Fox, which I generally avoid as the sole source for any claims, but also 2) it seems undue to write that someone, even a CNN reporter, tweeted about the Bee unless there is pretty significant coverage. It seems to me that Fox (and to some extent the folks at the Bee, given their statements in interviews) is trying to sensationalize his comments (see the headlines: "CNN is coming after [The Bee]" etc.) into some sort of attack by all of CNN on The Bee. I suspect this is why you will see that Fox perhaps the most reliable source that has reported on the "controversy"; other sources including Newsbreak, The Post Millenial, etc. are totally unusable. And the actually reliable sources appear to have ignored it for the nothingburger it is.
- As an aside, I have this page on my watchlist and so I saw your note, but if you want pings to work, my username is "GorillaWarfare". GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:11, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Ha, sorry about that, I was typing on my phone and didn't notice the error. Thanks for elaborating, I appreciate the insight.
- I'm not sure I see Fox as the sole source as an issue unless we assume they aren't reliable, which RSP has studiously avoided. It isn't unusual to have a single source for an event on a page such as this. Perusing The Onion's page (which was rated C-Class so apparently needs more content) we will see quite a few bullet points with a single source (assuming I don't count the Onion's link as a source) and from sources like the Star, Buzzfeed, and New Nation whose reliability varies dramatically and who noteworthiness is suspect.
- I'd also note that Donie O'Sullivan is notable enough to have his own (stubby) Wiki page and his beat is specifically the intersection of politics and technology which would make him a pretty notable source for CNN's interaction. Not that Twitter is exactly the best metric, but they've 'blue check-marked' him as a notable journalistic source.
- I think given that, I'd recommend that we can probably err on the side of inclusion. Squatch347 (talk) 22:08, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- My concern is not the reliability, it's that no other reliable source has published about it. I think it's undue. I'm not really familiar with The Onion's page so I guess I can't say whether a single source is appropriate or not where they're being used there—it may well be that some of the statements there ought to be removed also. GorillaWarfare (talk) 23:49, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- Hmm, I'm not sure of any specific part of WP:UNDUE would match that criteria; we aren't really offering viewpoints on the incident, simply a factual recitation. I think what you are getting at is more about notability, which doesn't, generally, apply within an article and would be susceptible to the points I made above.
- I referenced the Onion not only because it is a very similar topic, but it is an article with a good deal of editor activity and several article quality ratings. Across numerous categories it was rated "C" which indicates that while it is substantial, more material should be added to round out themes. Several of the evaluation discussions even mentioned similar themes of interaction with legacy media; categorization as misleading; and being mistaken for legitimate news.
- Squatch347 (talk) 00:01, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- My reference to WP:UNDUE was basically to say that we are giving undue prominence to an occurrence that is not particularly noteworthy in the history of the Babylon Bee, according to prominence in RS. We absolutely do generally consider notability, or perhaps more aptly noteworthiness, within articles. As per WP:NOT, "merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia". We regularly have to make editorial decisions around what should be included in an article—I could verify that Joe Biden sneezed in October, but of course we don't include this in his article. "Someone tweeted about the Babylon Bee and Fox tried to get some clicks off it" seems a similar situation to me. GorillaWarfare (talk) 00:33, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- I think that that is a fair point. We should evaluate whether or not any specific incident rises to the standard of being noteworthy in relation to the history of the specific topic. A tweet by a noted journalist who covers the Tech/Politics intersection might not be enough in and of itself, but it did prompt responses from the company's CEO and an interview on the largest evening news talk show (not defending its reliability here, just noting its reach). It also relates directly to a topic centrally related to the site's history; its engagement with legacy media sources, the interpretation of some of their articles as "real," and the interaction with social media that affects their reach. These are important themes in this topic and this incident was an illustrative moment in that history.
- I'm not sure inferring the motives of "getting some clicks off of" is particularly helpful here, that just leads us down a rabbit hole. Rather, I think noting that the coverage of this incident reached an order of magnitude more people than the contemporary CNN and NYT articles of the period reached makes it noteworthy. Again, we can reference the Onion's page or any of a dozen examples (Dude Perfect, Portlandia, The Nation, The Daily Caller, Mother Jones, etc) to see relatively minor incidents, when compared to this in terms of reach and notability covered, sometimes in great detail. The same examples also lack widespread coverage, sometimes referencing only obscure (but relevant in the sphere the article is related to) sources, but were central to the development of the site/group/etc or central to an ongoing topic in that entry. The same is true of this and similar entries here I would argue.
- Squatch347 (talk) 14:07, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: Can you elaborate on what you mean by
the coverage of this incident reached an order of magnitude more people than the contemporary CNN and NYT articles of the period reached makes it noteworthy
? I'm not sure I'm understanding. - While I appreciate your analysis of the "reach" of this event, it is coverage in reliable sources that determines weight. And as I have argued, coverage only in questionably reliable sources (Fox) and by unreliable sources does not, in my opinion, meet that standard. If reliable sources have described it in addition to Fox, then I think it could be included. Please see WP:OTHERCONTENT for your comments about The Onion. GorillaWarfare (talk) 15:47, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- Sure, you mentioned whether the event was noteworthy in the history of the Babylon Bee as a standard. This article, and the subsequent interviews reached a much larger audience (potentially the largest audience ever) than it normally reaches. It is far larger (as O'Sullivan pointed out) than the audience reached by other contemporary news events. Certainly we wouldn't ignore an incident in the history of a topic that was watched my several million people and is covered in an approved WP:RSP source (let's remember that this topic doesn't fall under the caution issued there). And certainly we wouldn't argue that a topic that expanded the audience of a media publication by several times isn't a relevant part of their history.
- Concerning the other sources, your reference to WP:OTHERCONTENT isn't warranted here. Other covers scenarios where a case is being made solely based on a perceived rule arising from an example on another page. That isn't what is happening here. Rather, I'm pointing out that this is common practice because it is within the rules laid down within WP:RS. It is, rather, a counter example to your take that a single approved source is insufficient for inclusion. No such caveat within WP:RS exists and these examples highlight that. Not to be overly blunt, but so far the reason to not include this content (unless I've missed something) has been you uneasiness with Fox News as a source in general, which I understand, but isn't a rule based reason.
- The topic is referencing a source included within WP:RSP for the manner in which it is being used and which represents a significant event in the history of the topic article. Is there another specific policy that would warrant removal?
- Squatch347 (talk) 01:18, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- By that logic, we should include anything mentioning The Bee published somewhere with larger readership than The Bee, which we certainly don't do. You seem to be mentioning the reach of the article about Soleimani (not the ensuing tweet) which was not being discussed in this article at all, as well as the reach of the interview on Tucker Carlson Tonight, a show which is generally unreliable. Fox News for politics has no consensus for reliability and should be used with caution; as I've said above I typically use caution by avoiding using it as the sole source for claims, which I don't think is unusual. I was hoping that more people would weigh in here, since the two of us are somewhat at an impasse and don't seem to have made much progress in convincing the other. Perhaps we need to solicit outside opinions. GorillaWarfare (talk) 02:00, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- Also, a belated reply to your statement above:
I'd also note that Donie O'Sullivan is notable enough to have his own (stubby) Wiki page and his beat is specifically the intersection of politics and technology which would make him a pretty notable source for CNN's interaction.
Unless O'Sullivan has a secret past in Gaelic football and also has discovered the fountain of youth to make him look much younger than his 80-some years, I think that is a different person. GorillaWarfare (talk) 02:25, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: Can you elaborate on what you mean by
- My reference to WP:UNDUE was basically to say that we are giving undue prominence to an occurrence that is not particularly noteworthy in the history of the Babylon Bee, according to prominence in RS. We absolutely do generally consider notability, or perhaps more aptly noteworthiness, within articles. As per WP:NOT, "merely being true, or even verifiable, does not automatically make something suitable for inclusion in the encyclopedia". We regularly have to make editorial decisions around what should be included in an article—I could verify that Joe Biden sneezed in October, but of course we don't include this in his article. "Someone tweeted about the Babylon Bee and Fox tried to get some clicks off it" seems a similar situation to me. GorillaWarfare (talk) 00:33, 28 April 2021 (UTC)
- My concern is not the reliability, it's that no other reliable source has published about it. I think it's undue. I'm not really familiar with The Onion's page so I guess I can't say whether a single source is appropriate or not where they're being used there—it may well be that some of the statements there ought to be removed also. GorillaWarfare (talk) 23:49, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
- I think given that, I'd recommend that we can probably err on the side of inclusion. Squatch347 (talk) 22:08, 27 April 2021 (UTC)
RfC: O'Sullivan tweet
- The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
Should a paragraph be added to discuss Donie O'Sullivan's tweet about The Babylon Bee? GorillaWarfare (talk) 02:19, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
For example, Squatch347's suggested edit:
In January 2020, CNN reporter Donie O'Sullivan posted on Twitter suggested that the Babylon Bee attempts to circumvent Facebook's rules against disseminating misinformation by "burying" disclaimers that explain the site's content is satirical.[1] O'Sullivan expressed concern over the amount of traffic the article had received in comparison to sites like CNN and The New York Times during the same period. CEO Seth Dillon, in an interview, maintained this was part of a continued effort to get social media platforms to censor the Babylon Bee's content. [2]
References
- ^ Wulfsohn, Joseph (January 6, 2020). "CNN reporter sounds alarm over conservative satirical site, gets pummeled on Twitter". Fox News. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)- ^ Creitz, Charles (January 17, 2020). "'Babylon Bee' CEO: 'How funny is it that CNN is coming after us for spreading disinformation?'". Fox News. Retrieved April 27, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
- No. This is sourced only to Fox, which I generally avoid as the sole source for any claims on politics-related topics as there is no consensus for its reliability (RSP entry). It also seems undue to write that someone, even a CNN reporter, tweeted about the Bee unless there is pretty significant coverage. It seems to me that Fox (and to some extent the folks at the Bee, given their statements in interviews) is trying to sensationalize O'Sullivan's comments (see the headlines: "CNN is coming after [The Bee]" etc.) into some sort of attack by all of CNN on The Bee. I suspect this is why you will see that Fox perhaps the most reliable source that has reported on the "controversy"; other sources who have covered this include Breitbart (RSP entry) which I can't link due to the spam blocklist; News Break (deprecated), who appears to be just republishing Breitbart, The Post Millenial (RSP entry); and The Daily Wire (RSP entry). And the actually reliable sources appear to have ignored it for the nothingburger it was. GorillaWarfare (talk) 02:19, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- No We all need to learn to take random tweets less seriously. I do so by staying off Twitter 99.99% of the time. This is a tempest in a teapot that barely deserves the word kerfuffle, and it is basically Fox and its less reliable counterparts further to the right trying to promote the "conservative Onion" by taking cheap shots at a hapless CNN reporter. That's OK for Fox and Company to do but I see no need to enshrine a fleeting marketing gimmick in this encyclopedia. It is embarrassing when anybody takes a satirical article seriously but let's face it, this is a run-of-the-mill human failing. Cullen328 Let's discuss it 02:49, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- No A Tweet from a non-notable reporter is not due unless there's significant coverage from reliable sources. I can't find a single reliable source that covered this. Dr. Swag Lord (talk) 03:21, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
- No: per Dr. Swag Lord. No notability of reporter, and, honestly, this is minor, at best. — Javert2113 (Siarad.|¤) 12:10, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
Well, hard to argue with that consensus. I'll withdraw the edit request. Thanks for the input everyone and the discussion GorillaWarfare. Squatch347 (talk) 14:28, 29 April 2021 (UTC)
Bias
This edit introduces biased commentary from a hostile source. There have been hundreds of articles written about the Bee. It seems inexcusable to lead this section with a quote from The Rolling Stone, which maligns the Bee by describing its content—without justification—as being "explicitly misogynistic or transphobic." That description is not just uncharitable and disputed, but malicious. Shouldn't this section offer a straightforward, objective description of the site's content—or, at the very least, balanced commentary? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 47.135.99.93 (talk) 23:40, 28 November 2020 (UTC)
It's hardly a reach to call the bee transphobic. They're quite proud of that label themselves — Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.35.73.98 (talk) 12:45, 4 December 2020 (UTC)
How is there no reply from the editors on this? The description of this site's content should be written from a neutral point of view. The source cited (Rolling Stone) makes allegations that could be considered defamatory. Those allegations are not supported, here or in the Rolling Stone article. And nothing is provided here to counter-balance their biased commentary. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 73.244.158.224 (talk) 04:16, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- Rolling Stone is a reliable source (see WP:RSP#Rolling Stone), and this statement is properly attributed in-text. If you have any reliable sources that contradict Rolling Stone's statement, feel free to provide them and they could potentially be added, but there is no reason to remove the statement. GorillaWarfare (talk) 04:43, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- I'm sure people on the left consider it a reliable source because it slanders all the right people and expresses politically correct views. But that's beside the point. The fact remains that hundreds of articles have been written about The Babylon Bee over the years. Why lead with quotes from this one, in particular? Leading off the "Content" section with commentary from a site that is hostile to The Babylon Bee and its worldview just validates any claims that this page is being written and edited with bias rather than encyclopedic neutrality. If anything, the content section should be a straightforward, neutral description of the type of content the Bee writes. The addition of another section called "Criticism" would be an appropriate place for RS's critical commentary. A change like that would restore integrity to this page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 14:01, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- No, Wikipedia considers it to be a reliable source. Not all Wikipedians are leftists. Most sources have some kind of point of view, and that does not disqualify them from use on this project. Per WP:BIASEDSOURCE,
Wikipedia articles are required to present a neutral point of view. However, reliable sources are not required to be neutral, unbiased, or objective. Sometimes non-neutral sources are the best possible sources for supporting information about the different viewpoints held on a subject.
It also notes thatBias may make in-text attribution appropriate
, and we are attributing this statement from Rolling Stone in-text as is appropriate for statements like this. - The quote is included because it usefully describes the kinds of content published by the Bee, as is appropriate in a section about content. As I already said, if you have other sources that describe the Bee's content that you think ought to be used here, provide them. Simply saying "hundreds of articles have been written about The Babylon Bee over the years" is not an actionable suggestion.
- As for your suggestion that this statement be relegated to a "criticism" section, we specifically avoid doing that. Per WP:CRITS,
Likewise, the article structure must protect neutrality. Sections within an article dedicated to negative criticisms are normally also discouraged. Topical or thematic sections are frequently superior to sections devoted to criticism. Other than for articles about particular worldviews, philosophies or religious topics etc. where different considerations apply (see below), best practice is to incorporate positive and negative material into the same section.
The bolded statement is precisely what is happening here. GorillaWarfare (talk) 16:39, 18 February 2021 (UTC)- You said the quote "usefully describes the kinds of content published by the Bee." No, it describes how critics who loathe the Bee view the content. For balance, where is the commentary from sources that view the Bee's content more positively? My actionable suggestion is that such sources be included. The Bee's content is described without justification as misogynistic, transphobic, anti-left and pro-Trump. Trump is literally and demonstrably the most targeted figure on the site, and it's not even close. A source like RS may be generally reliable while still missing the mark in particular cases. Christianity Today, as a counter-example, describes the Bee as, "a Christian-themed satire website in the vein of The Onion, lampooning the faithful across denominations, political affiliations, and age groups" that captures "the perfect tone of speaking truthful harassment in love." The New York Times describes the Bee as "an upstart Christian satirical website that lampoons progressive ideas, Democrats, Christians and President Trump." Sounds pretty well-rounded there. And flatly contradicts Rolling Stone's claim that the site is "pro-Trump." A simple search of the site contradicts that claim, too. In one of the most shared article's in the site's history, for example, Trump is skewered ruthlessly for his arrogance. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 18:29, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
For balance, where is the commentary from sources that view the Bee's content more positively?
One notion I should disavail you of is the idea that in order to present something negative about a subject, we must also present something positive (or vice versa). We "represent all significant viewpoints that have been published by reliable sources, in proportion to the prominence of each viewpoint in the published, reliable sources" (WP:NPOV). This means if the majority of coverage about a subject is negative, the article reflects that; the same is true in reverse. We do not create a false balance when such a balance is not representative of RS.- Thank you providing specific sources in this comment.
- Regarding the Trump thing, Rolling Stone wrote (and this article quotes) that the site "initially started out as something of an equal opportunity offender, but over the past four years the Babylon Bee has evolved into a more explicitly anti-left, pro-Trump publication". Given that the NYT article predates the RS one, it does not seem to me to be in contradiction. Regardless of whether they contradict, it's alright for two RS to hold different views of something, and we can describe the conflicting views accordingly. I am noticing that both of these sources predate the Rolling Stone statement, and am curious if you have any other sources that you feel describe the site's content more accurately that were published around the same time or after the Rolling Stone piece? Otherwise we can't really present them as multiple views on the same topic, since RS (and others) have said the site's content evolved over time. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:02, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- Noting that I've edited the content section, and I've added both sources you've suggested. Thank you for providing them, and feel free to comment here if you find any other RS with viewpoints you think ought to be incorporated. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:39, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- I think those edits were substantial improvements. However, I still think a statement like this is just an assertion being presented as a verified fact: "the site grew less critical of Trump and became more anti-left and anti-liberal." — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:28, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- It is supported by three reliable sources (Rolling Stone and two articles in the New York Times), and I've not seen any sources that contradict it. GorillaWarfare (talk) 21:55, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- I think those edits were substantial improvements. However, I still think a statement like this is just an assertion being presented as a verified fact: "the site grew less critical of Trump and became more anti-left and anti-liberal." — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 20:28, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- Noting that I've edited the content section, and I've added both sources you've suggested. Thank you for providing them, and feel free to comment here if you find any other RS with viewpoints you think ought to be incorporated. GorillaWarfare (talk) 19:39, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- You said the quote "usefully describes the kinds of content published by the Bee." No, it describes how critics who loathe the Bee view the content. For balance, where is the commentary from sources that view the Bee's content more positively? My actionable suggestion is that such sources be included. The Bee's content is described without justification as misogynistic, transphobic, anti-left and pro-Trump. Trump is literally and demonstrably the most targeted figure on the site, and it's not even close. A source like RS may be generally reliable while still missing the mark in particular cases. Christianity Today, as a counter-example, describes the Bee as, "a Christian-themed satire website in the vein of The Onion, lampooning the faithful across denominations, political affiliations, and age groups" that captures "the perfect tone of speaking truthful harassment in love." The New York Times describes the Bee as "an upstart Christian satirical website that lampoons progressive ideas, Democrats, Christians and President Trump." Sounds pretty well-rounded there. And flatly contradicts Rolling Stone's claim that the site is "pro-Trump." A simple search of the site contradicts that claim, too. In one of the most shared article's in the site's history, for example, Trump is skewered ruthlessly for his arrogance. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 18:29, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- No, Wikipedia considers it to be a reliable source. Not all Wikipedians are leftists. Most sources have some kind of point of view, and that does not disqualify them from use on this project. Per WP:BIASEDSOURCE,
- I'm sure people on the left consider it a reliable source because it slanders all the right people and expresses politically correct views. But that's beside the point. The fact remains that hundreds of articles have been written about The Babylon Bee over the years. Why lead with quotes from this one, in particular? Leading off the "Content" section with commentary from a site that is hostile to The Babylon Bee and its worldview just validates any claims that this page is being written and edited with bias rather than encyclopedic neutrality. If anything, the content section should be a straightforward, neutral description of the type of content the Bee writes. The addition of another section called "Criticism" would be an appropriate place for RS's critical commentary. A change like that would restore integrity to this page. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 23.24.166.22 (talk) 14:01, 18 February 2021 (UTC)
- Oh please. Wikipedia has become a parody in and of itself. The one-directional "lawyering," arbitrary enforcement of "rules," and jealous guardianship against any and all entries that are not in-line with the transparently obvious heavy-handed leftist agenda; the scrubbing of even the talk page discussions (this comment of mine will likely have a shelf-life of 5 or 10 minutes); the sloppy and grossly blatant one-sided POV and partisanship; the constant disingenuousness and lack of intellectual honesty; the hiding behind the trite "but you must assume good faith" sanctimony that, again, is always one-sided; and, lastly, the list of "reliable sources" that are deemed yellow journalism at best -- and propagandist schmaltz at worst -- by all but a select few smug self-superior circles. Keep "showing your ass" as the saying goes. MacheathWasABadBadMan (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 09:31, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- Do you have any suggestions for changes to this article? This is not the place for general screeds against Wikipedia as a whole. GorillaWarfare (talk) 16:36, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- Rolling Stone was convicted of defamation in a Federal court a few years ago for their false reporting on the Duke Lacrosse Hoax. They are, factually, people who have been proven to tell lies on purpose which cause significant, tangible monetary damage to the reputation of others. We should obviously not be giving them a platform to make character judgements which are likely cause damage the reputation of others. If they're on a Wikipedia white list, and mainstream conservative sources like the Federalist are totally blacklisted, that makes the point about bias expressed above ostentatiously. 96.59.126.42 (talk)
- If you think the reliability of Rolling Stone needs to be revisited, that's a discussion that needs to happen at WP:RSN. GorillaWarfare (talk) 03:24, 21 May 2021 (UTC)
- Rolling Stone was convicted of defamation in a Federal court a few years ago for their false reporting on the Duke Lacrosse Hoax. They are, factually, people who have been proven to tell lies on purpose which cause significant, tangible monetary damage to the reputation of others. We should obviously not be giving them a platform to make character judgements which are likely cause damage the reputation of others. If they're on a Wikipedia white list, and mainstream conservative sources like the Federalist are totally blacklisted, that makes the point about bias expressed above ostentatiously. 96.59.126.42 (talk)
- Do you have any suggestions for changes to this article? This is not the place for general screeds against Wikipedia as a whole. GorillaWarfare (talk) 16:36, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
- Oh please. Wikipedia has become a parody in and of itself. The one-directional "lawyering," arbitrary enforcement of "rules," and jealous guardianship against any and all entries that are not in-line with the transparently obvious heavy-handed leftist agenda; the scrubbing of even the talk page discussions (this comment of mine will likely have a shelf-life of 5 or 10 minutes); the sloppy and grossly blatant one-sided POV and partisanship; the constant disingenuousness and lack of intellectual honesty; the hiding behind the trite "but you must assume good faith" sanctimony that, again, is always one-sided; and, lastly, the list of "reliable sources" that are deemed yellow journalism at best -- and propagandist schmaltz at worst -- by all but a select few smug self-superior circles. Keep "showing your ass" as the saying goes. MacheathWasABadBadMan (talk) — Preceding undated comment added 09:31, 19 February 2021 (UTC)
NYT descriptor
@Hemiauchenia: Regarding your edit: shouldn't we try to avoid including wording over which the Bee has threatened litigation, and which the NYT removed? I had intentionally kept it vague in the sentences I added to avoid repeating a retracted statement. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 11:19, 15 June 2021 (UTC)
- I don't see why it needs to be vague, as long as it is made clear that the comment is retracted and that it is not in wikivoice. Without the context of the comment its too vague and confusing. Hemiauchenia (talk) 11:25, 15 June 2021 (UTC)
- Hm, okay. I've made a clarifying edit, since I don't think it was sufficiently clear that the NYT removed the phrase. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 11:48, 15 June 2021 (UTC)
Mailchimp + Reason Article
Hi again @GorillaWarfare:! As you can see I made two additional edits. One references a new dispute with Mailchimp that just occurred two days ago. The intent is to add that to the list but also (critically) to show how the company is responding.
Second, I added a critical detail to the section on the Reason article. The original wording in the Wikipedia article seems to imply that Kyle Mann "said" that headlines were taken out of context but wasn't necessarily correct. The key detail added from the article indicates that he was stating a fact, not an opinion.
Hopefully I did it right this time :). I did verify both sources are considered reliable this time. Let me know if I need to make any changes!Keithgreenfan (talk) 00:53, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- I see the edits you made! Thank you for streamlining the one on the Reason article. I guess I need to learn to be brief :). On the Mailchimp one, I was hoping to at least include a brief mention of Seth's response to indicate the pushback. Is there an abbreviated way to do that? How about this:
- Seth Dillon responded that the Babylon Bee would "move to an email provider that doesn't make these 'mistakes'".
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 01:12, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- (edit conflict) Reason is fine; Fox is iffy for politics-related content (WP:RSP#Fox News (politics and science)). I have left the statement in, though, just trimmed it. If a more reliable source reports on Dillon's response, that could be added, but as it was it was a bit much.
- No real objections to your addition to the bit about the research in The Conversation—I just fixed the reference and replaced some of the direct quote with paraphrasing, which I don't think was a substantial change to meaning. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 01:17, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- Thank you again @GorillaWarfare:! Makes sense, except I find it highly unusual that Fox is considered iffy for politics-related content but MSNBC is not? Either way, they're simply quoting Dillon's twitter feed and even include a screen shot with a link directly to it, so it can be clearly determined it is him making the statement. Your edit did remove Seth's response which I thought was important to include. I'll see if I can find it on another site if needed.
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 01:27, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- Hi. Fox is not a reliable source because it leans right wing and the editors of wiki are left wing and they vote on which sources are reliable. No other reason at all. Even absolute facts cannot be posted on Wikipedia, unless they are first filtered through the left wing lens of a “reliable source” that the left wing editors approve of. You are fighting a losing battle. Seth Dillon could say “A” and a left wing blog could quote him as saying “B” and the majority of editors who troll political articles will fight to include the fake quote over the real one. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 199.241.231.199 (talk • contribs)
- If you want to discuss the reliability of either MSNBC or Fox News, that'd be a conversation for WP:RSN, not here.
- It is not the veracity of the quotes that concerns me. We are not a platform to republish everything the Bee or its executives post on Twitter, release in a statement, say in an interview, etc. If reliable sources give airtime to these things, then we might include them, but right now we have one marginal source. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 01:44, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- Totally understand on quoting tweets @GorillaWarfare:, I had just included it since it was in fact covered in the source. You noted Wikipedia’s opinion is that Fox is iffy in reliability on politics, but how is this story on the Babylon Bee politics-related?
- Thanks for the tip on the WP:RSN page. I may chime in. I’d like to know how Wikipedia justifies labeling Fox as questionable on politics!
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 02:03, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- A conservative publication claiming they're being "cancelled" is politics-related. As for Fox, if you want to know why the community came to that conclusion, I would recommend just reading the discussion rather than posting at RSN asking for someone to explain it to you. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 02:58, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
- Thank you! I will check out the link. Keithgreenfan (talk) 04:00, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Interesting article on the Fox News discussion, @GorillaWarfare:! I notice the summary doesn't say Fox shouldn't be used for science and political reporting, but rather should be "used with caution to verify contentious claims". Sometimes Fox is the only source for a story just because they are the only ones who have an "eye" on particular stories, or particular details about a story. Of course that doesn't necessarily make them inaccurate. I will probably run them past you here if I run across a situation like that, which could happen on this WP page. One interesting site that I discovered recently is Ground News, which shows left wing and right wing "blind spots" on certain news stories. It's kind of interesting and might be helpful to WP administrators in gauging fairness on certain articles.
- As an aside, I notice someone replied to me earlier in this thread but somehow merged it with one of your replies. Is there a way to fix that? Also, I notice you and other admins have been busy! Looks like a lot of disruptive editing yesterday. You and the other admins do a great job trying to keep this all afloat!
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 12:42, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Keithgreenfan: You're right that Fox is often the only source on a topic (or the only usable source; often I notice it will be Fox and then a handful of generally unreliable or deprecated sources covering a topic). However this often means that including whichever statement in the article is more weight than it ought to be given. A good example would be the tweets by a CNN reporter about The Bee, which Fox covered (as did unusable sources like The Post Millenial, News Break, The Daily Wire, etc.) but more reliable sources apparently found to be unremarkable, an incident that was omitted from this article by consensus at Talk:The Babylon Bee/Archive 1#Donie O'Sullivan edit.
- I'm not seeing an edit that was merged with my replies in the page history, but maybe I missed it. Which one? GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Thanks @GorillaWarfare:! The merge is right after my entry at 01:27, 27 June 2021. The other user’s comment starts with ‘Hi. Fox is not a reliable source because…’. Your reply to me is at the same indent level right below it. If it’s just a matter of fixing indents I don’t mind doing it, but I’d rather leave it to the expert :).
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 12:42, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I get your point on Fox, but I’d also say the issue of weight can get skewed. I think Fox is mostly alone among conservative networks (at least those considered reliable) while the other networks are mostly left-leaning, so entire topics or perspectives might be viewed as having less ‘weight’ just because Fox is the only reliable source reporting on it.
- Oh, it's alright if two comments are at the same level of indentation (so long as both are signed, so that they are not taken to be one comment from the same user)—it just means that the two comments are both in reply to the comment above. Indenting one would suggest that one is a reply to the other which is a reply to the other.
- There are plenty of other conservative sources which are reliable on Wikipedia, so I don't agree with that point. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Okay thanks! Makes sense on the indents, I’m learning. I guess I need to browse the RS list :). Thanks again! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Keithgreenfan (talk • contribs) 16:47, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Sure thing. Wikipedia's talk page style is very unusual so it often takes people a bit to get the hang of it. As for
I guess I need to browse the RS list
, it's worth keeping in mind that WP:RSP is a handy reference for whether a source has been deemed generally reliable, generally unreliable, etc. via community discussion, but it's far from a complete list, and as I think I mentioned to you earlier the omission of a source from it doesn't mean that that source is reliable or unreliable. It is a handy reference to avoid each person having to go read through all the RSN discussions on a commonly-suggested source and glean the consensus from them, but for sources not on the list that is still what has to happen. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:50, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Sure thing. Wikipedia's talk page style is very unusual so it often takes people a bit to get the hang of it. As for
- Okay thanks! Makes sense on the indents, I’m learning. I guess I need to browse the RS list :). Thanks again! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Keithgreenfan (talk • contribs) 16:47, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Yes that makes sense, and I do recall your saying that. I’ll check out the list with those caveats in mind. Thanks again!
- Keithgreenfan (talk) 18:18, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- @GorillaWarfare:, I'm not sure I would agree that anything related to being "cancelled" is "politics" related unless we are using a pretty broad definition of politics that would essentially include all human activities. This is a dispute between two private companies about a perception of bowing to social pressure. My concern here is that we are letting in a bit of scope creep that could essentially deprecate a source when there was no consensus on RSP to do so. Squatch347 (talk) 13:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- They are saying that they are being canceled by social media sites and other platforms which they believe hold a bias against conservatives. That's pretty clearly politics, but if you want to bring it to WP:RSN, be my guest. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I'm not sure it needs to brought up in WP:RSN, that is for us discussing these sources' reliability as to politics. What I'm questioning is your application of that definition. Nothing in any of the RSP discussions covered those sources' ability to cover private company's reactions to political world views, they were limited to the sources' interpretations of politics in the much more literal sense like "Fox said X about Republicans" or "National Review things Democrats' positions are Y." I might have missed it, of course, but do you have an example of the discussion covering something as broad as what you're suggesting here? Squatch347 (talk) 15:55, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- RSN is where to go if you disagree with whether a specific article published by a source is usable in an article, and want outside input. I'm not talking about doing a whole new RfC about Fox's reliability or anything like that—although those kinds of conversations are also held at RSN, many RSN discussions are pretty quick discussions of a given source. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I'm not sure it needs to brought up in WP:RSN, that is for us discussing these sources' reliability as to politics. What I'm questioning is your application of that definition. Nothing in any of the RSP discussions covered those sources' ability to cover private company's reactions to political world views, they were limited to the sources' interpretations of politics in the much more literal sense like "Fox said X about Republicans" or "National Review things Democrats' positions are Y." I might have missed it, of course, but do you have an example of the discussion covering something as broad as what you're suggesting here? Squatch347 (talk) 15:55, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- They are saying that they are being canceled by social media sites and other platforms which they believe hold a bias against conservatives. That's pretty clearly politics, but if you want to bring it to WP:RSN, be my guest. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- @GorillaWarfare:, I'm not sure I would agree that anything related to being "cancelled" is "politics" related unless we are using a pretty broad definition of politics that would essentially include all human activities. This is a dispute between two private companies about a perception of bowing to social pressure. My concern here is that we are letting in a bit of scope creep that could essentially deprecate a source when there was no consensus on RSP to do so. Squatch347 (talk) 13:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
NYT Edit
Hi GorillaWarfare, I saw your edits and I wanted to see if you were open to discussing a few of them. I've organized them by topic with my thoughts below.
1) Opening. I'm not sure this constitutes OR in the traditional sense, certainly not any more than anything else we do here. Noting the change in tone in relation to the subject is the same as noting an event happened. At one point they said X, now they say Y. It certainly isn't anything novel, Roose is saying the same thing in their article.
It is also important to help prevent this reading like a list of historical incidents rather than ongoing interactions between both subjects. That keeps this article in line with the structure of other articles like CNN, Fox_News, The Atlantic, National Review, etc where the article isn't just a bullet point list of events, but organized into a historical context with lead in paragraphs and summaries.
2) Removal of Demand letter resolution. Fully recognize that the sources are less than ideal, but the demand letter and response aren't really in dispute. Nor should we ignore how the incident ended, that seems unencyclopedic. It would be like not noting Hedy Lamarr died just because he died in obscurity.
3) Restructuring. I definitely think we need to return to the prior structuring as this format losses the point of the fact checking disputes. I agree with the previous editors lumping this into a single theme. They aren't being fact checked randomly, but because of the concepts referenced in the lead paragraphs. They serve as the contextual lead in for the following incidents.
As it stands now we have the New York Times discussed in two completely separate places even though the two incidents are actually linked.
4) Addition of text related to Trump tweet. While I agree with you that that seems most likely, the source doesn't say that and seems to go on at length to cast doubt that he didn't realize. See their quote of Mann and reference to him retweeting the Bee before. I'm ok with leaving it, but it isn't exactly in the source.
Squatch347 (talk) 23:35, 22 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: I'm always open to discussion. Replying in order:
- 1) I have no objection to including how the NYT has referred to the Bee over time, but writing that "The New York Times' reaction has been less consistent" needs a source, likely with attribution, to do that type of interpretation. It's certainly one interpretation of the NYT's actions, but someone could just as easily argue that it's because various authors at the NYT hold different views on the site, etc. "going so far as to" was also editorializing, in my view.
- 2) The current version of the article describes the dispute in its entirety while keeping coverage brief, which I think is important since we only have one particularly reliable source covering the incident. What is missing, in your view? You're saying that we are ignoring how the incident ended, but "The Times removed the descriptor, and added to their article a clarification about the labeling dispute between Snopes and The Babylon Bee" is how it ended. If the Bee follows through with a lawsuit and it gets coverage in RS that could be added, but at the moment it seems that reliable sources don't find the mere threat of a lawsuit to be worth reporting upon.
- 3) Can you clarify what context you think is being lost? You wrote that "As it stands now we have the New York Times discussed in two completely separate places even though the two incidents are actually linked." What source has linked them?
- 4) See the source I added along with that edit, which states "Mr Trump did not seem to be aware that the article was a parody". I've just tweaked the wording a bit to attempt to make it clearer that that is not the universal view: [5]. Does that satisfy this concern? GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 23:51, 22 June 2021 (UTC)
- 1) That's a fair point, good catch. Something more akin to "The NYT early fact checking attempts referenced..."?
- 2) I don't think that that is an accurate assessment. The current implies there was a simple demand letter and a scrubbing of the article. However, there were two demand letters sent. One which prompted the NYTs to edit the article, and another to scrub the BB from the article and issue the clarification at the bottom. I'm definitely open to streamlining this a bit, but the fact that there were two changes to the NYT's article seems relevant.
- 3) As the article is currently structured, the defamation claim and the Roose article are in two entirely different sections. This is disjointed given that that they are related, not only be the fact that they are both the NYTs, but because the defamation claim is about the Roose article. As it is written now, it reads almost as if the defamation claim arose from nowhere as opposed to being related to event we write about a few paragraphs earlier. I'm going to try a bold edit to see if addresses your concern and reads a bit more clearly.
- 4) Sorry, somehow I missed the addition of the source in the wikicode, that's on me. I'm ok with either language given the Independent's phrasing.
- Squatch347 (talk) 00:20, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- 2) Does this clarify things sufficiently?
- 3) The defamation claim is about the Roose article? I don't think that's true. The existing sources only mention the article by Mike Isaac. As far as I can tell the Bee has not objected to the Roose article, which is why I think it should be treated separately as unrelated to the recent dispute. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 01:22, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- I think that is perfect, thanks.
- I realized this morning that in all the changes I dropped a section somewhere covering the Hirono/FB incident and the reference in the Senate. I added that this morning if you have some time to review. Squatch347 (talk) 13:45, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: Couple of questions and concerns relating to the new section:
- Where does Reuters use the quote "obviously satirical"?
to "far-right misinformation" in others
we should not be quoted retracted statements like this.On several occasions, social media sites including Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram have limited the site's reach, removed articles, or banned their account citing these media sources
None of the three cited sources suggest that the social media platforms' actions were based on media coverage of the Bee.- Regarding cite #29 (the one by Brittany Bernstein, in case the number changes before you see this): MSN syndicates content from many news sources but is rarely (if ever?) the original publisher. It's important to cite the original story so that the reliability of the source can be noted at a glance. In this case, MSN is republishing National Review (original), a no consensus source at RSP (RSP entry), where attribution is recommended and it is suggested that extra care must be taken to avoid undue weight.
- Do you have additional sources to support the sentence beginning with "This had led to fears..." The sources there are all pretty marginal (with perhaps the exception of the Salt Lake Tribune, but that is only mentioning the Bee in a quote by Mike Lee). I mentioned the issue with National Review above; similar concerns have been raised about Christian Post in RSN discussions. Norfolk Daily News appears to be hyper-local, and furthermore is an opinion piece. Without some properly reliable sources, this seems like undue weight to me.
- Going back to my previous comment, can you answer my question #3? GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:06, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- You're right on the first question, I think in my note app that I wrote this, it inserted quoting marks. I meant that as a paraphrase of the Reuters source based on their phrase: "clearly identifies itself as a satire site." Open to rephrasing to better fit the tone, but it seems like the Reuters Fact Checker found it pretty obvious that they were satire.
- I really appreciate your reviews, I've been spending a couple of weeks reviewing sources and sometimes my brain shortcuts. In this case, the articles are trying to cover a wide variety of activities. We know from these sources and a few others [6], [7], [8], [9] that Facebook and Twitter limit the reach of articles that have run afoul of their fact checkers and we know that these BB articles triggered those fact checkers. I get why, reading this fresh, the links wouldn't quite click with that though. Would it be better to cite the articles related to FB and Twitter's policies on reduced distribution?
- Interesting. I was under the impression that since MSN describes it as "syndication" that it involved their purchasing the articles from the original publishers and it would therefore also be MSN's content (since that is how it is seen both legally and in liability questions). And, if I read WP:RSP correctly, we can assume the credibility of the syndicated source unless there is a RSP finding otherwise. I'll keep that point in mind though as I'm going through these.
- I included five sources in three sections (since they implied fears from different parties). The National Review one is an interview with the Bee's CEO and so I thought important to include since he is directly involved. The National Catholic Register might not be a huge source, but in this case covered the discussion well from a variety of parties including Prof. Garnett from Notre Dame, the NY Posts Ahmari and Sen. Hawley. The Christian Post was a good source for the combination of the Philadelphia Statement and the Bee rather than a broader reference to the statement. The last two sources are primarily referencing the concern from conservative groups and Senate Republicans. There are, of course, a host of articles about the former's concerns, but I thought that might be beating a dead horse.
- RE:3) They definitely have taken issue with the Roose article (see:[10]) whose headline used similar language to the article that prompted the demand letter. That is why I think keeping all of the NYTs (just as we kept Snopes) together makes more sense, it gives context to the dispute.
- Squatch347 (talk) 17:12, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- re 2), what's the reason for not quoting a retracted statement? I could understand that we should avoid using a quote of "The sky is blue" from the New York Times to support the claim that the sky is blue if the they later retracted the statement. But it seems fine to cite such a quote to support the claim that the NYT had stated that the sky was blue. (Though it might be worth mentioning that it was retracted in order to provide further context). Colin M (talk) 17:26, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: Re: Reuters: Got it. I agree that Reuters' conclusion was that the site is obviously satire; the quote marks just implied they stated it in exactly those words, which is not supported. Easily enough resolved by just removing the quotations.
- Re: social media sanctions: We need to remove the causative link between the media reports and the decisions to remove content or suspend accounts belonging to the Bee. In the Fox News case, we could just say that the post was removed because of Facebook's policies. However I think the sentence itself very much overstates the sources we're using: one describes an incident in which a post was removed, but the other two are describing a time that the Bee's Twitter account was briefly caught in a spam filter by Twitter before being reinstated. It may be that the Bee's content has been repeatedly removed or the site has been suspended intentionally, but it's not supported by the current sourcing.
- Re: MSN: When a publication like MSN republishes content by another organization like the National Review, it is the original publisher's reliability that is used to determine the usability of the source. That is why it is best to just cite the original source rather than MSN.
- Re: the "This had led to fears" sentence—I am not particularly concerned with reliability here, I am concerned with WEIGHT. We seem to be scraping the bottom of the barrel here to try to find sufficient sourcing to justify including a statement about this; it seems there aren't any WP:GREL sources that have published on this; only marginally reliable and hyperlocal ones.
- Re: NYT and Roose: Okay, but the fact remains that the dispute is over the Isaac article, not the Roose one. If the Bee demands a retraction or threatens or files a lawsuit in relation to that article, and it's covered by a RS, I could see combining the two paragraphs in the later section, but for now it is not appropriate. I maintain that it is original research to suggest there has been some sort of pattern shift in the NYT's coverage over time. It also misstates the timing between reports ("early ... attempts" appears to refer to an October 2020 article; one of the two articles referenced in "more recently" was published practically at the same time).
- @Colin M: I don't really object to mentioning the "far-right misinformation" descriptor when we're discussing the retracted statement, but I don't think a now-retracted statement should be used to summarize how the Bee is described in RS. I think a better option would just be to swap the retracted statement for one made in the Roose piece.
- I'm going to make some changes based on this conversation, but I will leave alone any bits we're still discussing. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 17:42, 23 June 2021 (UTC)
- Philosophical question, are we reporting this as an account of what happened in the past, or a more dynamic version of what their current position is? I think it reads more clearly as a chronological account of their position, and it would seem a little odd to whitewash it because they later changed their position rather than noting (as it is structured now) that they changed their position and why.
- @Squatch347: Couple of questions and concerns relating to the new section:
- Re: social media sanctions. It might be helpful to break this into the constituent parts for clarity. The first sentence should be about the impact developing fact checking systems by platforms has had on limiting reach. The second sentence is about articles and the page being suspended as Twitter and Facebook have been implementing algorithms and teams to review content following the rise of fake news. This second should cite the Roose article, as it was his main point.
- Re: weight. I understand the weight concept as a balance to ensure that we don't make Steve's opinion sound like it is as widely held as the opinion of 85% of Americans or something. But that isn't what is really going on in this sentence imo. It doesn't imply anything about the size of the group, only that these specific groups have these fears.
- Re: NYT and Roose: The reason to keep all the NYTs points in the same section is not based on any connection between the articles specifically. It is done for the exact same reason the Snopes section is grouped. We are grouping them because they are categorically the same, reactions by the NYT to BB's content. Breaking them up means we'd also need to do the same to the Snopes section and the article ends up degenerating into a bullet list of media mentions rather than an encyclopedic article.
Re: NYT: What is this about whitewashing? I have no objections to factually stating what the NYT has said about the Babylon Bee and when. It is the WP:OR about a shift in their coverage over time that needs to be removed, as it is a) not supported by secondary sourcing, and b) not accurate to the timing of when the articles were published.
Re: social media: Again, this needs more sourcing. Right now we have one singular source that actually describes the Bee's content being removed. I have no objection to including Roose's points there as well, and will make that edit after I finish this reply.
Re: weight: My concern is not that the concern is being overstated (although it probably is). My concern is that we represent views in proportion to their coverage in reliable sources. That means we generally do not include views that are only represented in marginal sources. I assume you recall the Donie O'Sullivan tweet RfC, which concluded that we should not include coverage of O'Sullivan's tweets because they were sourced only to a WP:MREL source (Fox).
The Snopes section is grouped in the way that it is because all of the content in that section refers specifically to disputes with Snopes over their fact-checking. But there is no dispute with the NYT over the Roose article, and including it in that subsection suggests that there is, which is why it needs to be moved. Like I said, if a dispute emerges and is covered by RS, it can be moved back. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:38, 24 June 2021 (UTC)
- Re:NYT As I mention a little bit below, the break up of their interactions with the NYT creates an impression that Dillon's demand letter comes out of nowhere rather than this being an ongoing dispute between the two parties. We have good sources on the NYT's interactions and I think there are plenty of sources about the Bee's reaction to the NYTs (where we disagree is on whether those sources meet WP:RSP standards, my position is that since they are reporting an interview that aligns with public statements and since we aren't inserting the site's opinion, we are good). Right now, our article reads as if there are two completely isolated incidents, one of which is a public legal fight seemingly out of nowhere rather than as part of a series of articles and perceived characterizations. As I mentioned below, I'm going to take another stab and structuring to present this more in line both with the Snopes section and, as I mentioned above, almost all of our other pages on media companies.
- Re:Social Media, I'm not sure that is quite accurate for sourcing. I offered four additional sources above, three of which directly reference the Bee and its reach, the other discusses policies. I think also importantly, we reference this in the Snopes section as well, so it seems odd that we are a bit hesitant to reference here when we clearly felt it was ok to do so earlier.
- Re:Weight. So, I'm not clear one what other opinion we are balancing this against. I agree that RSP is relevant here, but so far, none of the sources I referenced for this section are covered in RSP. Especially the reference inside a Senate hearing, I'm not sure the justification for that being removed.
- Can you please try to be more careful when you're making edits to this article? I've tried to take a light hand with reverting changes here, as it's not the end of the world if there are statements in there that aren't quite perfect, but we do need to make sure that everything is at least properly sourced. In your recent edits, you re-introduced the sourcing issue I mentioned below. I've reverted for that reason. Ideally we could come to an agreement on changes here before updating the article, which will also avoid inaccuracies or unsourced content being introduced, as I have concerns with some of your changes for that reason.
- Re: NYT: You want to represent this as "an ongoing dispute between the two parties", but the sourcing does not support that there was any dispute between the Bee and the NYT prior to the recent interactions with the Times relating to the March article by Mike Isaac. The closest thing to that is the June Not the Bee piece that mentions the Roose article while describing the dispute over the Isaac article, but there is no indication in there that the Bee has actually disputed the Roose article with the Times in any way (requesting retraction, threat of legal action, whatever). If you can find RS to support that they have, I have no objections to the article being included in that section, but so far it doesn't exist.
- Re: social media: I think we can probably clarify this with more detail; my biggest concern was that we're overstating the actions that were taken against the site, because a number of them were in error. Let me know if The Babylon Bee#Actions by social media platforms looks okay to you -- I've tried to add more detail to clarify exactly what happened in the incidents mentioned by the sourcing. Your edit mentioned Instagram taking action against The Bee — which source was that from? I'm not seeing mention of any incident with them.
- Re weight: WP:WEIGHT describes how we should balance conflicting views in reliable sources, but it also describes how we should consider whether to exclude positions represented in marginal sources. I'm referring to the latter, not the former.
I agree that RSP is relevant here, but so far, none of the sources I referenced for this section are covered in RSP.
That's not true: WP:RSP#National Review is listed at RSP. RSN discussions on the Catholic Post were no consensus on reliability (Wikipedia:New_page_patrol_source_guide#Religion). National Catholic Register has had no significant RSN discussion. Even if the sources were higher quality, you are very much overstating them when you write that the actions against the Bee's social media accounts has "fueled efforts to address perceived social media censorship from conservative groups and Republican legislators to address a perceived imbalance in deplatforming efforts which they see as overly focused on right-leaning content". The existing citations support that one legislator mentioned social media sites taking action against the Bee. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:06, 25 June 2021 (UTC)- Grr, Wiki ate my last edit. Let's see if I can rewrite it.
- RE:NYT. I'm not sure how the NTB article wouldn't qualify, it specifically references the CEO of the company's position that uses the same defamatory claim. To whit, "[Roose] wrote a defamatory piece that claimed we "capitalize on confusion"" Given that source we know this is an ongoing back and forth between the two groups, similar to the Snopes section, and should be grouped in the same manner it would seem. We also have interviews with the Bee's staff in the Washington Times [11], Washington Examiner [12], and Daily Wire [13]. To address RSP concerns, we are only limiting these source's use to verification that the Bee took issue with Roose's article, rather than anything material about the nature of the article or the NYT's intent or anything.
- RE:Social Media. I think this is a good edit, I made a few small changes, mostly related to wiki voice (since we aren't saying it was a mistake, they are). I made a slightly more substantive change with the FB section, noting that their position reversal followed social media pressure (from the Poynter article). I think it would be warranted to point out that this was initially an automatic action that was reviewed and upheld manually before being changed following pressure.
how we should consider whether to exclude positions represented in marginal sources.
I'm not sure anything in WP:WEIGHT implies the kind of application you are using here. It is one thing to say "we shouldn't have four sentences to describe the position of 10% of people and only 1 for the other 90%." It is quite another to say we should wholesale ignore positions by a US Senator and other groups, especially when we are including quotes from relatively minor groups that are critical of the Bee elsewhere in the article.- I'm open to rewording it of course, I'm just not sure we can remove those groups' concerns and keep this balanced. Would something more like this work for you? "been referenced in the wider effort by conservative groups and Republican legislators to address a perceived imbalance in deplatforming efforts which they see as overly focused on right-leaning content."
- Sorry for the confusion on the RSP reference, you are correct that National Review is mentioned. What I was implying was that there is nothing in RSP that limited how we were using these sources in the article, IE as fact verification rather than broader commentary.
- Squatch347 (talk) 13:37, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Re: NYT: Seth Dillon not liking something the NYT wrote is not really a "dispute", though. In my view, it becomes a dispute if there is reliably sourced coverage of their objection to that source, or as in the other incidents in those sections if they demand (and/or receive) a retraction, threaten or file a lawsuit, etc. If we included every statement by Dillon or other Bee executives as a "dispute", the section would be enormously bloated. Your first two provided sources are referencing the dispute over the March 2021 NYT article, and I have no objection to that incident being included in the "Dispute with The New York Times" section (though we should stick to the more reliable sources that are available and already being used, rather than an opinion piece). The executives interviewed by The Daily Wire mention the October article, but again this only confirms that they disagreed with it, and furthermore as I've already mentioned The Daily Wire is not a usable source (RSP entry).
- Re: social media:
noting that their position reversal followed social media pressure (from the Poynter article).
The Poynter article says "After The Babylon Bee complained about Snopes’ debunk, the Facebook flag was removed." I'm not seeing anything about "social media pressure". Did you maybe mean the Washington Post source? That does mention that "Ford in publicizing Facebook’s alert on Twitter whipped up public interest, which preceded the response from the company", which is closer, though it also doesn't specify social media. Generally speaking I have no objection to including additional context around the removal, so long as it can be sourced. - Does this edit work for you, with respect to the Mike Lee statement etc.? Like I said the sourcing really doesn't support the broader claim, but we can say what Mike Lee said at least. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:50, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- RE:NYT. I'm not sure I would classify that as "not liking it." He specifically used the same language as in the demand letter, defamed. I would agree with you if this was the only source on the subject, Dillon's tweet certainly doesn't make it notable for that. But we already have this incident included in the article and the question is solely on where it goes. It would make sense that we wouldn't need the same full level of sourcing to validate.
- I also think this misses some of the point. We don't necessarily associate every single incident within the Snopes as being fundamentally related in the manner you are asking for here. They are associated because it was an ongoing interactions between the two groups. I see the two sections as very parallels in both that and in the level of 'dispute' for some of these incidents. Not every snopes article prompted a legal filing, some were social media pressures, but they were social media pressures between the two parties, just like we have here.
- RE:Social Media. I'm reading the nature of that complaint as being via social media. It doesn't reference another venue (and I'm not sure anything else was pursued). Open to modifying that language a bit, something more like the Post's language of "after increased public interest" or something?
- RE:Mike Lee. Yeah, I think that works. It is still missing the references to the Bee in other groups' discussions about deplatforming, but I think this works for now. Thanks.
- Squatch347 (talk) 16:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Re: NYT: Feel free to mentally replace my usage of the word "dislikes" with "disagrees with" or "thinks is defamatory". My point remains.
But we already have this incident included in the article and the question is solely on where it goes.
This is not true. We include the Roose NYT article as a source, and we discuss the dispute over the Isaac NYT article. You are suggesting introducing the Roose article as "dispute", which is not currently in the article, and which I think should continue to not be in the article. Re: Snopes, which of the incidents in the section does not meet one of the criteria I outlined above ("reliably sourced coverage of their objection to that source, or as in the other incidents in those sections if they demand (and/or receive) a retraction, threaten or file a lawsuit")? If there is indeed one, then I would also agree it should be removed. - I'm guessing you're right about the Post, that they are referring to social media pressure. I'm just wary of introducing statements based on inference. I'll tweak the language a bit just for caution's sake. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:31, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Re: NYT: Feel free to mentally replace my usage of the word "dislikes" with "disagrees with" or "thinks is defamatory". My point remains.
Feel free to mentally replace my usage of the word "dislikes" with "disagrees with" or "thinks is defamatory".
Well, if that is the case, then the case for inclusion is solid. If you see 'dislikes' as the same as 'thinks is defamatory' then why would we not include it? If this section is truly about disputes, then clearly there is one because the CEO of the Bee has called both pieces by the same adjective. We can mental replace it either way, both articles are either 'defamatory' (in his opinion) or he 'dislikes' them. But we can't draw a distinction if the same language is used in both sources.
- To be accurate, I didn't want to call that section disputes. I, and another editor, called it "Media Reaction and Fact Checking" which I think is a far better title given that the NYTs section isn't even fact checking, it is commentary on the site. If I recall correctly (and I might be wrong) I believe it was you who changed the language to dispute. I would recommend a return to the previous title which fits the content of the section better since only some of it is related to fact checking. That or we seem to break up this section and parse out some of Snopes' commentary as well which seems like a far more ad hoc article structure.
- Squatch347 (talk) 12:32, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
- The case for inclusion would be solid if the Bee actually filed litigation against the NYT or demanded a retraction. But at the moment we are just talking about the Bee executives' opinions on the piece, which is not a "dispute". Can you explain why you feel putting the Roose article under the header "Media reaction and fact checking" would be more accurate than "Mistaken for factual reporting", when the Roose article stems entirely for the incident in which Trump tweeted out the Bee article about Twitter shutting down? There is still a "fact checking" header and the Roose article could go there (outside of any "dispute" subheading), but it seems more appropriate under the other header to me. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 13:38, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
But at the moment we are just talking about the Bee executives' opinions on the piece, which is not a "dispute".
Perhaps you are using that term a bit more rigorously than I am. A dispute is a disagreement between two parties in the colloquial usage. That would seem to what we have here, two parties with different positions on the claims in the article.- It isn't so much about 'inclusion' as it is about placement, we agree that it should be covered, the question is where. It makes a much cleaner read to include it in the media reaction because the article, while prompted by Trump's tweet, is also about how the Bee fits into the larger narrative of fake news. That reads, to me, like a part of a larger trend that we are discussing in the Media Reaction section. We also don't need it for the Mistaken for Factual reporting reference, there are literally hundreds of sources for Trump's tweeting about the Bee, with more detail on the incident than the NYT article.
- Squatch347 (talk) 14:26, 30 June 2021 (UTC)
- I feel like I'm repeating myself here. As I said above,
If we included every statement by Dillon or other Bee executives [in which they object to reporting on their site] as a "dispute", the section would be enormously bloated.
If and when there is significant coverage of the meta-conversation about the Bee's opinions on the Roose article, it can be added to the dispute section; until then, it should just be used for the claims made in the article rather than any higher level conversation about the article itself. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 14:48, 30 June 2021 (UTC)- I appreciate the desire to not include every bit of text, but I'm not really adding any text, I'm suggesting we simply move it to a section where it flows more logically. I don't think we'll reach a consensus here, so I'll drop it. Would it be more acceptable if we altered the title from "Mistaken for factual reporting" to "Media Reaction?" The quoted Roose article is about more than just some people thinking the Bee's articles are factual. All of the cited articles, in fact, while mentioning the confusion are also referencing a larger questions about how to handle satire and fake news. I think the current title undersells that a bit and that is why it reads so oddly to me. Squatch347 (talk) 13:58, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- The cited articles might also discuss other topics, but the section in this article is all about instances where the Bee's content was mistaken for factual. I'm hesitant to rename the section "Media reaction" because that would suggest it is a comprehensive reporting of media reaction to the site in general, whereas right now it's only describing reactions to incidents where the site was mistaken for factual reporting. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:21, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- I appreciate the desire to not include every bit of text, but I'm not really adding any text, I'm suggesting we simply move it to a section where it flows more logically. I don't think we'll reach a consensus here, so I'll drop it. Would it be more acceptable if we altered the title from "Mistaken for factual reporting" to "Media Reaction?" The quoted Roose article is about more than just some people thinking the Bee's articles are factual. All of the cited articles, in fact, while mentioning the confusion are also referencing a larger questions about how to handle satire and fake news. I think the current title undersells that a bit and that is why it reads so oddly to me. Squatch347 (talk) 13:58, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- I feel like I'm repeating myself here. As I said above,
- The case for inclusion would be solid if the Bee actually filed litigation against the NYT or demanded a retraction. But at the moment we are just talking about the Bee executives' opinions on the piece, which is not a "dispute". Can you explain why you feel putting the Roose article under the header "Media reaction and fact checking" would be more accurate than "Mistaken for factual reporting", when the Roose article stems entirely for the incident in which Trump tweeted out the Bee article about Twitter shutting down? There is still a "fact checking" header and the Roose article could go there (outside of any "dispute" subheading), but it seems more appropriate under the other header to me. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 13:38, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
Issues with the first sentence of the NYT sectionSplitting out a new section so conversation above can continue without distraction. However I went to go make some tweaks to the article and am finding some pretty serious issues with the first sentence of the "Disputes over fact checking > The New York Times" subsection.
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References
- ^ Goldberg, Emma (October 11, 2020). "What 'The Babylon Bee' Thinks Is So Funny About Liberals". New York Tmes. Archived from the original on January 6, 2021. Retrieved June 22, 2021.
Slate Article, Facebook Policy, and "Punching Down"
Hi @GorillaWarfare:, nice to meet you :). I noticed you undid my edit earlier tonight. I'm sure I did something wrong, as I've only edited a handful of Wikipedia pages over the years, and not in a long time. Was curious what I did wrong that led to the removal so I can hopefully improve on what I wrote.
As I noted in my revision comments, my intent was to add context to the Slate article by noting the exact same wording in the Facebook policy days earlier, and how several news sites and the Babylon Bee CEO have commented on this juxtaposition. What can I do to reword this or position it differently in the article to make it 'fit' better? Thank you in advance for any help you can offer! — Preceding unsigned comment added by Keithgreenfan (talk • contribs) 02:17, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Keithgreenfan: Hello and welcome! Daily Wire is considered to be generally unreliable as a source (see WP:RSP#The Daily Wire), and so should not be used to support this statement. Which news sources have commented on this? If there is a secondary source that is reliable it could potentially be added. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 02:20, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
- @GorillaWarfare:Thank you! I see that now, thank you for helping me out! I can just use the article by PJMedia instead in that case. It isn't on Wikipedia's list, however as seen on PJMedia's "About Us" page [1] they are "part of the Townhall family" which IS on the reliable sources list, although with a few caveats. Hopefully it qualifies!
- To answer your question, both PJMedia and Daily Wire referred to the juxtaposition of Slate's article + Facebook's policy. It was also referenced in several other sites that I assume wouldn't be "citable", such as several blog posts and Seth Dillon's twitter.
- Here's the PJMedia article I plan to link to. Sound fair?
- https://pjmedia.com/news-and-politics/tyler-o-neil/2021/06/23/facebooks-new-announcement-on-satire-doesnt-bode-well-for-the-babylon-bee-n1456651
- Just for context, here are some of the blog entries I mentioned:
- https://reclaimthenet.org/predators-circle-the-babylon-bee/
- https://www.christopherfountain.com/blog/2021/6/24/facebook-is-moving-to-de-moneterizing-the-babylon-bee-as-hate
- @Keithgreenfan: WP:RSP is a handy list for sources that come up regularly, but the absence of a source in that list doesn't mean it is automatically reliable (or unreliable). For sources not listed at RSP, the best option is to review past discussions at WP:RSN: [18]. You can see from those that PJ Media is also not usable. As an aside, I'm not sure where you're seeing that Townhall is reliable; that is not what the list says (RSP entry).
- You're correct that blog posts are not usable; Reclaim The Net is also not a reliable source. I think your best bet here may be to wait to see if reliable sources report on this. It looks like Dillon only just recently made this allegation; often the unreliable sources will publish first, then be followed by the reliable ones, so it may just be a matter of waiting a few days. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 02:52, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
- Thank you @GorillaWarfare:, I’ll watch for that! I appreciate the help with explaining how this works. I have an additional edit I’m looking to make in the coming days, but will be sure to check those links beforehand! By the way, my Townhall comment is referring to the comment in the box that some types of content on their site is considered reliable. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Keithgreenfan (talk • contribs) 03:06, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
- Generally reliable sources on that list are marked in green. Sounds good, happy editing. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 03:13, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
I'd like to raise a separate issue on this article. We are including quotes from the article which seems a bit much. This is an article by a PhD student who has exactly one story (this one) in his bio. I don't think he meets the standards for a relevant source. Granted Slate decided to publish it, so I think it is clearly a WP:RSP, but are we really going to attribute quoted criticism to a guy with a single written article who is still a student? Especially given that we quote him twice in the article? Maybe I'm missing some context as to Mr. Bach's relevance in the field. Squatch347 (talk) 13:25, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Slate is a generally reliable source, and part of a PhD is more qualifications than many journalists have. I'm not sure what the issue here is. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:19, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I could be wrong, but I'm under the impression that the author is a PhD candidate, not a PhD. It is a concern because this piece, which is the only article this author has written is quoted in multiple places in the article which gives the impression that Bach is a significant industry thinker rather than a student with a single article to their name. Squatch347 (talk) 15:50, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- That's why I said "part of a PhD"—that is, working towards earning a PhD. Again, we quote several sources multiple times, most of which are by journalists who are not in academia. I could see your argument if someone was arguing this was WP:EXPERTSOURCE situation (that is, that we should allow a self-published source because it is published by an expert in the field), but it isn't—it's an article published in a reputable publication that is being given approximately the same weight as several other non-expert sources. We could reduce the amount of quoting and paraphrase some of it, if you think that's better, but I don't really think any of it ought to be removed. You seem to be concerned because it is criticism, but I don't think that's entirely accurate—some of it is critical, but Bach is also taking the position that the Bee is not misinformation (which is certainly a position the Bee themselves take). GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:02, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Do we know if this person completed those portions of their PhD? Our referencing of other sources are usually to journalists with multiple articles published. I'd be wary of calling this author an academic by Wiki standards, he doesn't seem to have published a single journal article that I can find on either Google Scholar or Microsoft Academic. It would make a lot more sense if we were specifically relating a dispute or coverage by Slate as a topic (like we do with NYT and Snopes), but we aren't. We are taking this author's position and inserting it into content in several places as a broader commentary. That is WP:UNDUE to treat this as if it had large impact when, so far, it has had very little and the source itself doesn't meet WP:EXPERTSOURCE as you note. Squatch347 (talk) 16:32, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- What? I'm going off of what you're saying here, which is that he hasn't completed his PhD. I'm not sure why you're interpreting my comment to mean that he has a PhD, or is an accomplished academic, or what have you. But I think someone who is working towards a PhD can be comfortably said on a talk page to be "in academia"—I am not suggesting this ought to be introduced into the article or anything like that. I am pointing out that your objection to the author appears to be that he is working on a PhD (rather than the other journalists, who are presumably not, but I don't see how that makes him less qualified here) and that he has one published article with Slate. WP:RSP#Slate says nothing like "Slate is a reliable source except when the author has one article published with them", nor am I aware of any policy that suggests a media source is less usable if the author is not widely published. If your concern is that the attribution is making his name more prominent in this article than it ought to be, I'm amenable to paraphrasing some of the quotes. But if your concern is that the article is not sufficiently reliable to use for any of these statements or weighted in this way, I think you'll need broader agreement at RSN, because your objections are not based in any policy that I know of. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:38, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- To clarify, you said that his work as a PhD made him more qualified than many journalists. I was asking, given that he is a candidate what you were basing the assumption that he has completed that work on? Given that he hasn't produced a single academic paper, and has one article to his name in Slate, I'm not sure where the topic credibility comes from to give him four separate quote mentions in the article. He is referenced more than any other source in the article except Emma Goldberg who has dozens of articles to her name and is published in multiple outlets. That doesn't strike you as odd? That we are quoting a student with no other published history as much as a well known New York Times' author?Squatch347 (talk) 12:33, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
- What? I'm going off of what you're saying here, which is that he hasn't completed his PhD. I'm not sure why you're interpreting my comment to mean that he has a PhD, or is an accomplished academic, or what have you. But I think someone who is working towards a PhD can be comfortably said on a talk page to be "in academia"—I am not suggesting this ought to be introduced into the article or anything like that. I am pointing out that your objection to the author appears to be that he is working on a PhD (rather than the other journalists, who are presumably not, but I don't see how that makes him less qualified here) and that he has one published article with Slate. WP:RSP#Slate says nothing like "Slate is a reliable source except when the author has one article published with them", nor am I aware of any policy that suggests a media source is less usable if the author is not widely published. If your concern is that the attribution is making his name more prominent in this article than it ought to be, I'm amenable to paraphrasing some of the quotes. But if your concern is that the article is not sufficiently reliable to use for any of these statements or weighted in this way, I think you'll need broader agreement at RSN, because your objections are not based in any policy that I know of. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:38, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- Do we know if this person completed those portions of their PhD? Our referencing of other sources are usually to journalists with multiple articles published. I'd be wary of calling this author an academic by Wiki standards, he doesn't seem to have published a single journal article that I can find on either Google Scholar or Microsoft Academic. It would make a lot more sense if we were specifically relating a dispute or coverage by Slate as a topic (like we do with NYT and Snopes), but we aren't. We are taking this author's position and inserting it into content in several places as a broader commentary. That is WP:UNDUE to treat this as if it had large impact when, so far, it has had very little and the source itself doesn't meet WP:EXPERTSOURCE as you note. Squatch347 (talk) 16:32, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- That's why I said "part of a PhD"—that is, working towards earning a PhD. Again, we quote several sources multiple times, most of which are by journalists who are not in academia. I could see your argument if someone was arguing this was WP:EXPERTSOURCE situation (that is, that we should allow a self-published source because it is published by an expert in the field), but it isn't—it's an article published in a reputable publication that is being given approximately the same weight as several other non-expert sources. We could reduce the amount of quoting and paraphrase some of it, if you think that's better, but I don't really think any of it ought to be removed. You seem to be concerned because it is criticism, but I don't think that's entirely accurate—some of it is critical, but Bach is also taking the position that the Bee is not misinformation (which is certainly a position the Bee themselves take). GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 16:02, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I could be wrong, but I'm under the impression that the author is a PhD candidate, not a PhD. It is a concern because this piece, which is the only article this author has written is quoted in multiple places in the article which gives the impression that Bach is a significant industry thinker rather than a student with a single article to their name. Squatch347 (talk) 15:50, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I've undone your edit because I think something must've gone wrong with it. Your edit summary describes removing a Rolling Stone quote, but that is not what happened. If you actually intended to remove the Slate "riffs on riffs" sentence I'm happy to discuss that too, though if that wasn't what you intended I won't take us off on a tangent. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 17:09, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
- I hope, following the subsequent edits my reason was a bit clearer. The original sentence was quoting the Slate article, but citing the Rolling Stone article. Given that we are quoting the source four separate times it seemed reasonable to remove the misattributed quote to align with my comments above. Squatch347 (talk) 12:33, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
- Oh, it wasn't clear to me there was a citation error. The citation is repaired now, though I'm still happy to work towards consensus about whether any of the quotes ought to be removed or paraphrased. WP:WEIGHT requires us to "represent all significant viewpoints that have been published by reliable sources, in proportion to the prominence of each viewpoint in the published, reliable sources". To me the "riffs on riffs" quote is not so much a "viewpoint" (as compared to the quotes about targeting women and trans people with their jokes, or their thoughts on the site being misinformation or not) but rather a fairly straightforward description of the site's content. Do you disagree there? I'm not opposed to removing it necessarily, but it seems like we'd be removing detail about the site for the sake of reducing quotes to the Slate article, without meaningfully changing the number of opinionated statements sourced to that article. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 13:47, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
Oh, it wasn't clear to me there was a citation error.
Self-development aside, I need to invest more time in edit summaries. I think I've gotten too used to consensus talk edits rather than really explaining what I'm doing in the summary.o me the "riffs on riffs" quote is not so much a "viewpoint" (as compared to the quotes about targeting women and trans people with their jokes, or their thoughts on the site being misinformation or not) but rather a fairly straightforward description of the site's content. Do you disagree there?
That is a very interesting take. I had read it as clearly (in my mind) commentary, so I'm curious as to your viewpoint. It would seem to me to be, at least, his interpretation of events. The way I read the riffs on riffs phrase, given the context, is that he is saying the the Bee isn't so much reacting to news as it is reacting to a conservative mythos about reality. That seems to be the thrust of his article and I think our coverage is a bit repetitive. We cover his take on riffs on riffs, then separately mention his restatement that the Bee "reinforces misinformation" and seperately again that they "conspiratorially report." Those to me all seem to be the same point, but referenced in three different areas. I tried to combine those three in my most recent edit, its a bit hard without being repetitive or long winded. Let me know what you think.- I didn't touch the other quote, which does seem to be related to a separate subject. I also wanted to pick your brain on it since you are more widely versed on policies than me. My concern is that it is referencing a very loaded term (punching-down) given FB's policy. Combine that with my concerns about Mr. Bach's prominence (as described much earlier), I'm just a bit concerned about our position. I'm not sure what Wiki's policy is on that (and maybe I'm thinking too much like my day job that involves corporate risk). Let me know if I'm unclear here, I can email you on that if you open to it. Squatch347 (talk) 14:27, 30 June 2021 (UTC)
- @Squatch347: No objections to your most recent edit combining two of the Slate quotes, that seems reasonable to me.
- "Punching down" is a pretty common term in conversations about jokes about marginalized groups, so I was a little surprised to see all of these suggestions that somehow Slate and Facebook were acting in concert by each using the term around the same time (suggestions that were made mostly off-wiki, though someone did try to add a Daily Wire article about the topic a little while ago). I don't share the concerns, but if those who do would sleep better at night if we paraphrased "punch down" with something like "make jokes that target marginalized groups", that's fine by me. It actually might be an improvement in that it defines the term rather than requiring people who are unfamiliar with it visit the wikilink. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 14:44, 30 June 2021 (UTC)
- I altered it to match your suggestion. Feel free to wordsmith it if I missed an aspect. If you feel comfortable with that wording, I think we are good here. Thanks again! Squatch347 (talk) 13:58, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- Looks good to me. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:22, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- I altered it to match your suggestion. Feel free to wordsmith it if I missed an aspect. If you feel comfortable with that wording, I think we are good here. Thanks again! Squatch347 (talk) 13:58, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
- Oh, it wasn't clear to me there was a citation error. The citation is repaired now, though I'm still happy to work towards consensus about whether any of the quotes ought to be removed or paraphrased. WP:WEIGHT requires us to "represent all significant viewpoints that have been published by reliable sources, in proportion to the prominence of each viewpoint in the published, reliable sources". To me the "riffs on riffs" quote is not so much a "viewpoint" (as compared to the quotes about targeting women and trans people with their jokes, or their thoughts on the site being misinformation or not) but rather a fairly straightforward description of the site's content. Do you disagree there? I'm not opposed to removing it necessarily, but it seems like we'd be removing detail about the site for the sake of reducing quotes to the Slate article, without meaningfully changing the number of opinionated statements sourced to that article. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 13:47, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
- I hope, following the subsequent edits my reason was a bit clearer. The original sentence was quoting the Slate article, but citing the Rolling Stone article. Given that we are quoting the source four separate times it seemed reasonable to remove the misattributed quote to align with my comments above. Squatch347 (talk) 12:33, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
- I've undone your edit because I think something must've gone wrong with it. Your edit summary describes removing a Rolling Stone quote, but that is not what happened. If you actually intended to remove the Slate "riffs on riffs" sentence I'm happy to discuss that too, though if that wasn't what you intended I won't take us off on a tangent. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 17:09, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
References
This wikipedia article is not neutral.
Hello,
When I read the article, I feel that this is not neutral.
There are a lot of negative point but none positive.
I think the article need a rewrite or a rework, at least a banner at the head of the page to warn reader about that.
Thank you. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2A01:E0A:1D5:E860:D5F0:CE59:BE27:BD6A (talk) 10:02, 9 June 2021 (UTC)
- The Wikipedia policy on neutral point of view requires that we
represent fairly, proportionately, and, as far as possible, without editorial bias, all the significant views that have been published by reliable sources on a topic.
Can you please explain whether a) you feel that there are other significant views published by reliable sources that present a different viewpoint that needs to be represented in this page, or b) the article does not represent the current sources that are being used? If a), please provide links to the reliable sources that you have found, ensuring they meet the policy on reliable sourcing. If you are unsure, WP:RSP contains a long list of commonly-suggested sources along with the general consensus among the Wikipedia editing community on whether or not they are considered reliable. If b), can you please be specific as to which statements do not represent the sourcing? Thanks, GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 10:38, 9 June 2021 (UTC)
An example of an editorial bias would be 'conservative Christian news satire website' - a website cannot have a political or religious view, it's a website. The website itself makes no representations to be conservative or of any theological belief system. It'd be as strange as commenting about The Onion being a ... idk, budhist communist news satire website. It'd be clear that the additional information was added in an attempt to smear. I never knew that any of the writers for Babylon Bee were Christian if any are, and whilst I know the media smear it hard and call it "conservative" or "far right" all the time I've never seen anything overtly dog whistly. But I get that the establishment media has it's guns drawn for Babylon Bee - I just hoped that Wikipedia would at least pretend to be neutral. 124.190.192.20 (talk) 07:54, 25 July 2021 (UTC)
- Please review the sources, which overwhelmingly describe the site in this way. We regularly describe websites by their political or religious characteristics if they are noteworthy; see Category:American conservative websites, Category:Christian websites, etc. for other examples. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 18:09, 25 July 2021 (UTC)
Why does satire website has such a large fact-checking section?
I never saw a wiki article on satire site have such a large fact-checking section.87.70.92.37 (talk)
- Because the fact-checking of The Babylon Bee has been much of what has received significant coverage in reliable, independent sources. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 20:50, 27 July 2021 (UTC)
- There is an effort to ban the site from social media for a litany of offences; from "punching down" to "mis-information". The narrative creates articles in sources deemed reliable, & builds a case in Wikipedia using those reliable articles. Once there is enough in the body, it is imported into the lead and becomes the first thing google and apple users see about the Babylon Bee. Eventually, this becomes a "fact" about the Bee & they will be purged from the polite society internet because they are purveyors of misinformation. --TuffStuffMcG (talk) 10:06, 28 July 2021 (UTC)
- [citation needed] That is an extremely bad-faith "explanation" of editors' work here, and I think you should retract it. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 15:30, 28 July 2021 (UTC)
- There is an effort to ban the site from social media for a litany of offences; from "punching down" to "mis-information". The narrative creates articles in sources deemed reliable, & builds a case in Wikipedia using those reliable articles. Once there is enough in the body, it is imported into the lead and becomes the first thing google and apple users see about the Babylon Bee. Eventually, this becomes a "fact" about the Bee & they will be purged from the polite society internet because they are purveyors of misinformation. --TuffStuffMcG (talk) 10:06, 28 July 2021 (UTC)
- I don't have an opinion on the moral character of this particular editor, but I think they have a valid point about WP:UNDUE coverage. This article is 2,463 words long; 1,577 are devoted to e-drama, and 1,001 words are devoted to e-drama with specific websites (of which 647 detail one specific argument with the Snopes guy). Whether or not it's sourced, it seems strange to me that there is so much attention devoted to accusations that were later taken back. jp×g 02:22, 29 July 2021 (UTC)
- I agree that the structure of the article does read as oddly focused on the 'fact-checking' aspect. I had proposed to rename that section 'media reaction' and more broadly cover the media interaction with the Babylon Bee as part of the wider trend we discuss in fake news. That makes this section more about the media's attempt to understand and react the site, which fits encyclopedic structure better, imo. It also makes more sense given the content, which isn't just about fact checking, but the reasons the fact checkers felt it necessary to review and the impacts of their actions on the Babylon Bee. Squatch347 (talk) 13:30, 29 July 2021 (UTC)
- You might be interested to read the discussion above (#NYT edit), where I agreed about being more conservative about not including every spat between the Bee and their perceived opponents, and also gave my opinions on Squatch's suggestion for restructuring. I could see trimming the "Fact-checking" section further, though I do think the sourcing is there to support the longer section. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 14:28, 29 July 2021 (UTC)
- Some sources, so that my above post isn't pure commentary
https://www.foxnews.com/media/wikipedia-co-founder-larry-sanger-propaganda
https://www.nationalreview.com/2021/07/how-the-babylon-bee-is-fighting-back/
https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/wikipedia-conforms-to-wokeness/
TuffStuffMcG (talk) 10:03, 29 July 2021 (UTC)
Opinion pieces used for statements of fact.
Per WP:RSOPINION, nothing published as (or within) an opinion piece can be used as a source to support statements of fact in the article voice; they are not, normally, subject to fact-checking or accuracy by their publisher and are therefore not reputable for statements of fact. Even if the author of an opinion piece expresses their feelings about what they believe happened with absolute, strident certainty, publication as an opinion piece means every part of an opinion piece is merely their opinions and thoughts and personal beliefs; none of it, under any circumstances, can be used to cite things without attribution that makes it clear that this is merely one person's opinions. If they are making an argument based on what they claim to be facts, we must use non-opinion WP:RSes to establish the facts they claimed, and cannot cite the opinion piece itself to support them. --Aquillion (talk) 23:16, 30 July 2021 (UTC)
- But this isn't just some letter to the editor. It is a published piece (in the opinion section) by a Wapo staffer responsible for media. Articles published by staff are subject to normal editorial policies even in the opinion section. https://www.washingtonpost.com/policies-and-standards/ Squatch347 (talk) 11:47, 31 July 2021 (UTC)
- Not seeing anything there that says that. It says that
The separation of news columns from the editorial pages is solemn and complete. This separation is intended to serve the reader, who is entitled to the facts in the news columns and to opinions on the editorial and “op-ed” pages. But nothing in this separation of functions is intended to eliminate from the news columns honest, in-depth reporting, or analysis or commentary when plainly labeled.
Emphasis mine. This is not a news column; their policies specifically state that you should not expect facts from there. When the author of an opinion piece stridently expresses the author's feelings and opinions about what they believe happened as evidence for the argument they're making, it often confuses some readers (as you are confused here) into thinking that that is reputable reporting, but it is not and they are careful to say that it is not - it expresses merely the author's personal gut feelings and nothing else. That is why they are so careful to rigidly separate the two, so readers can avoid the mistake you are making here where a particularly strident argument presented in an opinion piece makes a reader think that the author's feelings must have some concrete basis. In any case WP:RSOPINION is completely clear. If it's published as opinion it cannot be cited to support facts, fullstop. If you disagree, we can take this to WP:RSN, but I guarantee that that is a waste of time - the fact that opinion pieces cannot be used to cite statements of fact is a well-established and uncontroversial part of policy. ---Aquillion (talk) 22:45, 31 July 2021 (UTC) - No text was even removed from the article in Aquillion's edits; it seems everything that was sourced to those op-eds is verified in other sources. GorillaWarfare (she/her • talk) 22:58, 31 July 2021 (UTC)
- From the "Verification and fact-checking standards" it lists the responsibility to fact check on editors and reports and makes not distinction on article type, simply listing stories which it uses elsewhere to cover both News Columns and Opinion articles. I'm concerned with precedent here for two reasons, the first (more below) is because it is, in my opinion, an incorrect assessment of policy and the second because it lead to stripping X-Editor's content, even though the WSJ maintains review of all opinions published for accuracy: https://opinion.wsj.com/ WSJ literally describes its opinion page as "fact-based opinion" a claim that directly contradicts the assertion we are removing them under.
- Nor is that how WP:RSOPINION reads I think. It states that some sources may not be reliable for statements of asserted fact. Nothing in that section gives a blanket removal of Opinion articles, especially by employed staff under the general company's ethics policy, as unreliable. Rather, it states that when using opinion sources we need to
clearly attribute the opinions in the text...
. We aren't discussing an opinion in a text, but a factual event, clearly stated as such. Further, WP:RSOPINION goes on to sayOtherwise reliable news sources—for example, the website of a major news organization—that publish in a blog-style format for some or all of their content may be as reliable as if published in standard news article format.
That isn't a statement of a blanket ban, it is the statement of a encouragement to review. Both WAPO and WSJ maintain specific ethical guidelines for their reporters and employ editors to review opinion submissions for accuracy. - Squatch347 (talk) 16:01, 1 August 2021 (UTC)
- Not seeing anything there that says that. It says that