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== reads like a personal hitjob by Armenian Genocide campaigners ==
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== Misleading modifier concerning Hovanissian ==
Why is the opinion of a New York Times TV critic relevant to this page at all?


{{u|Santasa99}} can you provide the source that specifically refers to Hovanissian as merely an Armenian genocide historian? ] (]) 01:32, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
To keep some perspective on this, let we should remind ourselves of what PBS's own ombudsman, Michael Getler wrote:
:Nowhere is stated that he is "merely an Armenian genocide historian", and we don't require reference for statement on obvious fact, phenomenons, itd - you, know, like saying that Armenian is, hm, Armenuan.--]] 09:41, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
:Yeah, maybe now it's a matter of consensus, now that ] showed up. We can now obscure from view such en elemental background info, because it gives a little wider angle in the perspective from which one evaluate.--]] 10:01, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
::Beside consensus, there is also the question of relevance. In the same section, there are a lot of "historian X says", "historian Y says" etc. You will have to explain why it should be necessary to include a background modifier especially for this historian. The {{tq|elemental background info}} is, of course, relevant in the article about Hovannisian, but I cannot see how it is relevant here. It certainly give the impression of ]. Perhaps you would also want to give similar "elemental info" about Auron, Imber and Mazower? --] (]) 10:35, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
:::I'm curious, ], are you really convinced that the "Poisoning the Well" argument could somehow apply here - I'm curious and saying this because I remember you making some very sensible and levelheaded comments in cases where I was involved (admittedly, I may be a little bit biased here, when I say your comments were sensible because you gave them in favor of my own stance). Anyhow, the "Poisoning" argument is not a WP policy nor guideline, it's something editors use to repel attacks based on the argument that others using unscientific, fringe theories, and that their attitude has ulterior motives based on conspiracy, etc - so, in other words, facts (especially with refs), background or any other variety, cannot poison anything, only baseless accusations in an attempt to discredit fellow editor can! So, instated of article on this particular idiom used for naming strain of "informal fallacy", I would rather suggest this ]. Anyone who thinks that such '''basic facts''' about the subject, not an '''irrelevant adverse''' info, can poison an entire article and/or discredit person and his line, tells us more about editor who cry foul in the first place as well as subject and his work, than about the editor who tries to insert those facts and his intention to do so. As for the other scholars in this article, I have no obligation or need to write and add info about them. I am only interested in this particular character and the fact that his works have been widely used for referencing entire series on the Armenian Genocide. Not to mention whether this one is really fitting for use in controversial content, where he could be perceived as in conflict of interest. Entire subject of Armenian genocide will always be within the domain of scholarship and politics only; there are no judicial processes nor judicial verdicts to refer to, only research and researchers politics - with that in mind, the man is Armenian, and not only is he from a family that has survived persecution and ethnic cleansing, but he has devoted his entire career to the study of modern Armenian history and that with an emphasis on persecution and genocide. This isn't damning by itself, he could well be neutral, but it is damning that he is a political activist, that he is engaged in Armenian politics and elections as an activist, that his son is an Armenian politician who is a member of parliament and who ran for president, and whose party is conspicuously named "Heritage," which has been in coalition with ultra-nationalists for years, and whose political platform is based on the use of history and genocide for political purposes and to win votes, as well as strong anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijani rhetoric. And then my four or five words are subject of contention, even though these are literally elementary facts!?--]] 17:18, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
::::The definition of well poisoning is something like presenting irrelevant information about a person in order to discredit what that person says. When you state that you have no interest in adding similar "background information" about other historians mentioned, but are only interested in {{tq|this particular character}}, you strengthen my feeling that you want to add it in order to do exactly that, discredit or at least weaken what he says.
::::The question of interest for us here is not who he is (and certainly not who his son is), but whether his book is a reliable source. If you want to contest that, please raise your concern here or at ], but not by indirectly targeting his credibility in the article text. --] (]) 20:56, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::Your link gives a very nice and precise definition, which '''is not''' what you say it is. Your feeling about my choice is beside the point, and if four words line about the fact that he is Armenian historian with knack for writing on Armenian genocide, is discrediting for him, in any editor's view, well that's too bad for him, and anyone seeing it that way. Although it's also beside the point, I am not afraid expressing my dismay for the fact that "community" has no objection using Armenian historian whose work maybe/is probably tainted with ideology and nationalism (which tells nothing on my opinion and perspective toward the historical events - the rest is just your "feeling"), however, I have no intention of questioning his neutrality nor his reliability, and certainly I have never tried it in the first place (here too is just your feeling). However, I find interesting how standards within "community" vary from case to case on reliability, notability and consensus, in this and related topics, namely histories of Balkan conflicts and genocides, with many illuminating examples - Hovanissian, McCarthy, Malcolm are but a few.--]] 23:43, 20 January 2020 (UTC)


== Repetitive Sections ==
"It was McCarthy basically on his own facing questions from the moderator that put him on the defensive, and accused a couple of times by Balakian of having "worked for the Turkish government to help that government deny the Armenian genocide," which McCarthy said was a lie but which ate further into his time and impact."


Why are there numerous paragraphs and sections dedicated to the same narrow topic? Why not collect all academic and literary criticism into one section? It should be titles as such also. It is noteworthy that there are only a few lines on the man himself, his life and work and career but repetitive sections and paragraphs on critics It does not serve the reader or the article and gives the impression of an agenda.
Perhaps the TV critic was unaware that the book Balakian authored, and based his arguments on, has been savaged by established historians including prominent Ottoman specialist Andrew Mango:
] (]) 21:08, 18 August 2021 (UTC)


:Justin McCarthy seems to be mostly about the Armenian/Greek/Assyrian genocide. He supports the denialist view of the Turkish government. It is an interesting case since it is one of the rare cases of someone who is not a turk and supports the denialist view of the turks. It would be interesting to know how he ended up with that view. He is 76 y old now. It would be interesting to know if anything changed. I wouldn’t be surprised if his work was funded by Turkey. It is the same case with Michael Gunter. He is funded as well. There was a case where Turkey was bribing some politicians, according to one FBI informant. Well, the reality is that people need money to live comfortably. No professional historian is accusing him of that, but I will, and I’m not a historian. There must be some who are willing to exchange their morals for money. If there is anything interesting he has said, maybe on some other topic, go ahead and add a section. You are free to tell me your side of the story. I want to hear it. ] (]) 02:05, 9 September 2022 (UTC)
"The Burning Tigris fits in with the campaign waged by Armenian nationalists to persuade Western parliaments to recognize the Armenian genocide It is not a work of historical research, but an advocate's impassioned plea, relying at times on discredited evidence, such as the forged telegrams attributed to the Ottoman interior minister... Some of Balakian's assertions would make any serious Ottoman historian's hair stand on end. Like other similar books, it is replete with selective quotations from contemporary observers."
::I have actually a number of his books in my library. He is a true scholar and uses very quantitative analysis. It is very hard to argue against the facts he has quantified and presented within context. He has found a rich vein since so many scholars and institutions are so intimidated by the AG industry and this very article and the comments I had made above is the proof. As far as I know, the facts and basis of his research have never been challenged. It would be wrong to define (and defame) him simply as a AG historian and a "denier". The very adjective is used to implicate and to silence any opposing views and thus related and contradictory facts. He is the preeminent authority on Middle East and Balkan populations and movements. A historian does not need much funds as you imply in a seeming effort to de-legitimize him, all he needs is open archives and a university chair. As far as my side of the story, there is one of course, a personal one, as my grandfather was from Bitlis and had first hand experience in the events of the era, but this is not about personal histories, however relevant. Just sticking to facts is all I wish from Wiki. ] (]) 14:19, 11 November 2022 (UTC)
:::You said “so many scholars and institutions are so intimidated by the AG industry”. Is this true? How is the AG industry doing this? You said “As far as I know, the facts and basis of his research have never been challenged.” I don’t know if that is true or whether he is taken seriously by genocide scholars. I don’t know enough about that to make a comment. As far as denial goes, there is a page
:::The article on the AG says “The genocide is extensively documented in the archives of Germany, Austria, the United States, Russia, France, and the United Kingdom, as well as the Ottoman archives, despite systematic purges of incriminating documents by Turkey. There are also thousands of eyewitness accounts from Western missionaries and Armenian survivors. Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term genocide in 1944, became interested in war crimes after reading about the 1921 trial of Soghomon Tehlirian for the assassination of Talaat Pasha. Lemkin recognized the fate of the Armenians as one of the most significant genocides in the twentieth century. Almost all historians and scholars outside Turkey, and an increasing number of Turkish scholars, recognize the destruction of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.” ===But how is it that so many people, different sources, are mistaken? The AG industry payed them or threatened the missionaries? Genocide denial has its own page on wikipedia. That is what it needs to be called. The facts? That is interesting. I check out the talk pages on the AG, on greek vs turkish issues and assyrian vs turkish issues and there is a LOT of back and forth and arguing. I don’t know if Justin McCarthy took bribes. There is no evidence to support that but I was giving an example of the turkish anti-denial industry and their tactics. ] (]) 02:54, 30 June 2023 (UTC)


==Article much too negative about an academic==
The continuous use of wikipedia as a campaign vehicle for the Wikiproject Armenia diminishes the integrity of the entire publication.


We have a policy ] that says "Best practice is to incorporate positive and negative material into the same section." --] (]) 03:37, 13 November 2022 (UTC)
Setting out to destroy a mans professional credentials because one TV critic was impressed by unsubstantiated and as such rather juvenile claims of him working for the Turkish government is not what I would consider part of any encyclopaedic remit.


:I thought all did was to add some sentences to point out opposing views. I did not remove anything just to be fair. Nevertheless, the edit was quickly reverted without any explanation or justification. The user who reverted it is Firefangledfeathers. A simple click: undo. Why? Well, we don’t know. Who is Firefangledfeathers? Why is he more authoritative than I am? We don’t know. S/he just is and we are supposed to accept it.
::Yes, and "they" probably didn't bother to quote the NY Times review of the Burning Tigris anywhere on Misplaced Pages, and would scoff at doing so anywhere on Wiki, despite the fact that they readily use the Times when doing so tends to support their contentions.
:McCarthy’s main thesis is that all sides suffered, all sides can be held responsible for the atrocities, and he does not support any of them. It is that simple. He may very well be wrong but, the article is not about the Armenian question, it is about a person.
:In the article, they blatantly accuse McCarthy of being guilty of supporting Turkish atrocities. Nothing could be further from the truth. Where is the proof? They present quotes from others as if opinions constitute proofs. Nevertheless, the quotes in Misplaced Pages, regardless how questionable, serve as nice justifications to otherwise vile articles. This is the power of publication. If you publish sufficiently many articles about a non-sense it becomes a “fact”. The latest proof is the ChatGPT. It is programmed to compose things based on what is written already. It is not artificial intelligence: it is the real idiocy. I say this as someone who has done research in the area of artificial intelligence. And, yes, I conversed with ChatGPT: it is stupid!
:I attended one of the seminars he gave, in Hilton Hotel in Taksim square, Istanbul. He was tired, without much hope or conviction. But he was still trying. An aspiring and young historian asked “Would you recommend this (the supposed Armenian Genocide) as a topic to pursue academically?” He replied: “No! Not if you are leaning towards refuting it. Because, you will go nowhere. Your will not get any funding. You will be ostracized. Such is the situation even in US, the land of the free.” I am paraphrasing, of course: it was many years ago, more than a decade, and I didn’t think I would have to remember those moments.
:The user Firefangledfeathers quickly, too quickly, added the topic to the “contentious topics” category, in less than a day, as if he was acutely monitoring the topic: a supposed biography of an academician. The article wasn’t in the category for a long time. Now, when they see the danger of it being refuted, they take all possible precautions they could think of.
:The article as it stands it is not a biography, it is a piece of propaganda, as some critics in the talk expressed explicitly, to no avail. They simply don’t count. This change of category also conveniently excludes me from making any further edits to the topic. I will not try to undo it since I feel that it would simply be futile and I don’t have either the time or the stamina, or the stomach. I hope someone with “power” out there would do something.
:The situation is always similar when the topic is connected to Turks. I am waiting to see a Kurdish Genocide to appear soon. Very recently, Shah Ismail was suddenly made a Kurd. Previously he was a Turk, in the same Misplaced Pages article, that is. A false history is being written using tools such as Misplaced Pages. The focal point is the hatred towards Turks. Almost all the articles are “contentious”, yet almost always they are in favor of the anti-Turkish flavor, whatever it may be. I hear the foot steps of a new kind of cultural fascism approaching.
:I regularly read a lot of mathematics, physics, and engineering topics in Misplaced Pages. I have contributed to the scientific topics, though under different usernames. Yet, I have never come across this much controversy, bias, and non-sense in scientific topics as I did in social “sciences”. If Misplaced Pages continues this line of growing in areas of social topics, which admittedly seem to be more “important” to the masses than the scientific ones, then it runs the danger of becoming the epicenter of post-truth “contentious topics”. In the end, I think it will die a nostalgic death. ] (]) 23:51, 13 February 2023 (UTC)


== POV ==
::And what does working for the Turkish government even mean? Does he receive a salary from them? No. Did he get some honors because of his work on an issue, work which tends to support the Turkish government's position? Yes. And he deserved it -- if for no reason other than the fact that his work is done sincerely and honestly (whether or not you think he's correct), and that has become dangerous to do in a world where Bernard Lewis could be brough to criminal court in France for making statements that also support the Turkish government, in good faith.


A lot of sources which discredit him are Armenian or people who have ties to the Armenian side.
::Historical scholarship done in good faith is never a crime, and never deserves a smear, even if you disagree.


This is not a neutral article about McCarthy. It discredits an academic historian with sources which use emotions, not with proven facts.
::On the other hand, historical scholarship done in bad faith, such as scholarship that uses faked documents as evidence -- and does everything to make it look as if it's not fake (see Andonian on wiki) -- deserves a smear. Unfortunately, on wiki such scholarship is glorified, and held up as valid, because it tends to support the correct position. (They actually make it sound like Andonian did something good, even if they were faked!) Why would it be good? Because it supports the right side. But who says it's right, when the evidence is fake, weak, or part of a conflicted pool of evidence? Idiots and nationalists who wish to perpetuate old wars into new conflicts and land grabs (that will never happen).
::--] 19:14, 1 December 2007 (UTC) ] (]) 23:50, 24 November 2023 (UTC)


:Yup, and nothing will be done about it. Welcome to Misplaced Pages. ] (]) 05:37, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
== arguing ppl ==

I'm sorry, but I think it's a little inaccurate to state that:

"McCarthy is known for his controversial challenge of the view that there was an Armenian Genocide."

This makes it seem as though he is denying the actual events of 1915. If one reads his books, one will see that he is not challenging the events, but rather the interpretation. He takes care to note that he is not, in any way, questioning the massacres of 1915, their scale, or their consequences. He does, however, claim that the term "genocide" does not apply. By using the phrase "that there was," the author of the article almost makes it seems as though McCarthy is treating the events of 1915 as some kind of myth.

I think it would be more accurate to word that sentence as:

"McCarthy is known for his controversial challenge of the view that the massacres of Ottoman Armenians during the empire's decline constituted (a) genocide."

I am not including "during the empire's decline" to excuse or justify the massacres in any way, or even to put them in context. Rather, I think it's necessary to say "during the empire's decline" because it is the massacres of a specific time period that are considered to constitute genocide (while massacres of earlier days are not). Also, the date of 1915 is somewhat arbitrary since the expulsion and mass killing of Ottoman Armenians was a hundred-year process that crescendoed, instensifying exponentially in the second decade of the 20th century. April 24th, 1915 is the anniversary of the execution of a particular group of Armenian community members, and the designation of that date as the anniversary of the aforementioned process is an idea set forth by their companions. The killings had been going on before and after that date, and whether or not that date was a turning point more significant than any other turning points is up to argument.

He's a denier. Read an example of his work (with no citations) http://www.turkishweekly.net/articles.php?id=113
] 00:57, 27 May 2007 (UTC)

] 08:11, 27 January 2007 (UTC)chillinchillin

: I would say that both sentences equate to the same thing. When those who support the truth of the Armenian genocide say that somebody is denying the Armenian genocide, it usually means that they do not call the events genocide. I don't think any serious academic would argue that a large number of Armenian deaths did not occur. -- ] 14:50, 27 January 2007 (UTC)

==Clean up==

Greetings, sorry to intrude on this, but some of the info was rather off so I had to go through and correct it. The Books in "other" where all written before Dr. McCarthy was ever born, so shouldn't be there unless this article is aiming for the fiction section. Also, the rumor that his wife is Turkish is rather silly if you've ever seen her, as she's a blue eyed, red headed British American. I have to say I'm a bit disappointed in that there's so little information here, and half of it seems to be based on a PBS show that wasn't broadcast in many states and the person who added info about it hasn't seen it. Hopefully a more factually accurate article can be added here at a later time. --] 00:27, 1 March 2007 (UTC)


==Justin McCarthy's wife ==
What's the name of Justin McCarthy's wife?
--] 20:15, 11 March 2007 (UTC)


==anti Armenian and historical revisionist ??? ==
Why is that? I am going to remove them. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 18:00, 30 March 2007 (UTC)

==POV reversion==
This phrase was a major red flag: "Throughout the discussion he behaved himself in a defensive and condescending manner." Obvious, right? It was enough for me to revert the whole lot. ] <sup>] &bull; ]</sup> 23:46, 17 July 2007 (UTC)
:It would have been more appropriate if you simply removed the more directly confrontational phrases and those lacking a citation. To be sure, McCarthy does deny that genocide occured, and has been widely criticized for it by various institutions. Most Historians who engage in similar actions receive similar criticism. See ], his position as a historian is discredited in the second paragraph due to his controversial stance on a Historical event. At the very least, he deserves a section in which to describe the wide range of criticism that he has attracted. ] 00:04, 18 July 2007 (UTC)

::If referenced, NPOV content is added back, I won't revert it. ] demanded that I take immediate action, and it would have taken too long to figure out what to keep and what not to keep. My response was entirely appropriate. ] <sup>] &bull; ]</sup> 00:10, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
::: Everything I said has been quoted, vast majority by non-Armenians, some even Turks.] 02:08, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
::::OK, it looked mostly good this time, but there were still a few POV issues, and I attempted to clean them up. Thanks! ] <sup>] &bull; ]</sup> 16:54, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
:::::I checked out all the sources cited for many of the sections in the article and most of them are simply not relevant to what the article said. For instance, the source cited as calling Armenians liars was a speech he gave where the only iteration of "liar" is when he says, "They might sometimes have been mistaken, but they were never liars." The interview in which the article sited him as comparing "the Armenian genocide to an act of adultery of an unfaithful husband" was also false. He never mentions anything about adultery. I thus reverted the article to a July 17th version that was neutral rather than falsely defaming. --] 06:32, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
::::::Fair enough. I'll keep a more watchful eye in the future. I should have known all the add-ons were bunk by the re-insertion of the opinion: "Throughout the discussion he behaved himself in a defensive and condescending manner." ] <sup>] &bull; ]</sup> 13:51, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
? How is it irrelevant? Criticism of his work? His life information? Your edit is considered wholesale vandalism. Please refrain from that.] 00:18, 22 August 2007 (UTC)


:Hetoum, I advise you to loosen the horse glasses and read/listen to the refs given on the main page. What the heck. You will soon make this guy a cockroach just because he denies Armenian Genocide. Stewie, if you have time, I advise you to listen to the youtube video given as a ref on the main page . Also search for liar, on the transcript . It says " might be mistaken but they were not liars". That is the only occurrence of the word 'liar'. There is also mention of the fake telegraphs, which are fake. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 03:33, 22 August 2007 (UTC)

I am not sure what to say to you Deniz. This individual is a racist, and calls Armenians liars on more than one occasion, see the you so faithfully used - armenians are liars, they spread lies, etc ... Racists are indeed cockroaches - I don't know if it is ok for you to call Armenian people or others liars, but in most societies it is considered racism. Furthermore, the interview I cited is in 3 parts, watch all of them. Again stop providing links citing him as an expert - they guy is an old buddy of his - not neutral nor reliable. Academic reviews of his work unrelated to the Armenian genocide call him a joke. He cannot even spell place-names correctly.] 20:27, 22 August 2007 (UTC)
:Hetoum, I still cannot see where he said liars on that transcript. Are you talking about this:
::"Why rely on Ottoman archival accounts to write history? Because they are the sort of solid data that is the basis of all good history. The Ottomans did not write propaganda for today's media. The reports of Ottoman soldiers and officials were not political documents or public relations exercises. They were secret internal reports in which responsible men relayed what they believed to be true to their government. They might sometimes have been mistaken, but they were never liars. There is no record of deliberate deception in Ottoman documents. Compare this to the dismal history of Armenian Nationalist deceptions: fake statistics on population, fake statements attributed to Mustafa Kemal, fake telegrams of Talat Paşa." ?
:Same is true with the youtube videos. Please specify which parts were anti-Armenian. Also I used the ref that you used for something else. It cannot be reliable once and not reliable another time. Also, according to our argument we will have to erase a lot of things from wikipedia, declare some academics/non-academics enemy, some friend. Regarding the review, there is one review for one of his works like that. Also why do we make him non-expert for some possible typos, who are we anyway? ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 23:02, 23 August 2007 (UTC)

I do not know anything about McCarthy, and very little about recent Turkish and Armenian history. I am judging ''only'' on the texts both of you are quoting here. It seems to me that saying that somebody was guilty of "deceptions" and of "fake statistics", "fake statements" and so on is very akin to say that they are liars. Perhaps it would be more correct to say something along the lines of "He criticizes Armenian people, including calling them fakers"? Bye, ] 23:17, 23 August 2007 (UTC)
:Please see ] and especially the talkpage, ]. We may need to rephrase the sentence there, give a mention to those telegraphs (that were amazingly found to be lost when they were needed) that were suggested to be fake not just by McCarthy, but also by other historians like Lewy, Zürcher, and Mango. Anyway, as far as I can see what he says that there are Armenian nationalist deceptions. What we can derive from the statement, is that he calls a 'few' Armenian nationalists liars/deceptionists, one being Andonian. Still even one is too many, when calling someone a 'faker', if not proven. I suggest to apply this to this article as well. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 00:56, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

Also, regarding footnote 8, I have JSTOR access, and here are the what we have on pages 525-529 of ''The American Historical Review, Vol. 101, No. 2, Apr. 1996'' ():
:Reviews of
#The Landed Estates of the Esterházy Princes: Hungary during the Reforms of Maria Theresia and Joseph II.
#T. G. Masaryk: Against the Current, 1882-1914
#A History of the Russian Church to 1448
#Two Histories of Rus' in the Fifteenth Century: Early and Late, Independent and Official Chronicles of the Formation of the Muscovite State
#The Russian Far East: A History
#Government, Industry and Rearmament in Russia, 1900-1914: The Last Argument of Tsarism

None of them about a work of McCarthy. I made two searches. First is just for "Justin McCarthy". Found many results, checked the first few reviews, nothing bad about McCarthy. Then I made the search of '"Justin McCarthy" liar', found only two results. They werenot even on the same page in any of them. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 01:21, 24 August 2007 (UTC)


Oh lordy, how many times do I have to explain, his peace corps buddy is not someone to judge his expertise on history, neither is he impartial.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRGUVLMSbrw&mode=related&search=

Watch the end of his interview for his racist rhetoric – ppl lie to their wives, ppl lie to their nations.

http://homepages.cae.wisc.edu/~dwilson/Armenia/justin.html

The historian studies. The ideologue wages a political war. From the start the Armenian Question has been a political campaign. Materials that have been used to write the long-accepted and '''false history of the Armenian Question''' were written as political documents. They were written for political effect. '''Whether they were articles in the Dashnak newspaper or false documents produced by the British Propaganda Office, they were propaganda, not sources of accurate history. Historians have examined and rejected all these so-called "historical sources." Yet the same falsehoods continually appear as "proof" that there was an Armenian Genocide'''. The lies have existed for so long, the lies have been repeated so many times, that those who do not know the real history assume that the lies are true.

Too many scholars, Turks and non-Turks alike, have accepted '''the lies of groups like the Dashnak Party''' and not even looked at the internal reports of the Ottomans. Scholars have the right to make mistakes,


Typical racist rhetoric.

] 01:25, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

:Please Hetoum, please listen to the guy with a clear mind. Of course there are 'people that lie for their nation' (he means general). Many wiki editors did not want to accept, say, Turkish sources, what do you think the reason was? Were they just racist, or did they think that 'Turkish people might lie for their nation'? Are you claiming that a 'British Propaganda Office' does not exist? Did they not accept that Blue Book for Germany was just a propaganda? Don't we have a Blue Book for Ottomans as well, which is not (yet) accepted as propaganda? ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 01:45, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

JSTOR - I got wrong page, 626 and on everything else is the same. <small>—The preceding ] comment was added by ] (] • ]){{#if:01:31, August 24, 2007 (UTC)|&#32;01:31, August 24, 2007 (UTC)}}.</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:That is a letter to the editor by a Joseph A Kechichian, whoever he is!!! No wonder i could not find it with my searches. There is also a response of McCarthy afterwards, did you read it? ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 01:39, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
Yep, pointless reply of a liar.] 02:05, 24 August 2007 (UTC)
:I am about to give up on my efforts. Anyway a letter to the editor is not 'reliable', it is just like a forum/blogi writing it as if it were a journal, gives false credibility. Also we should try and not do things that we wouldn't want others to do to us. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 02:25, 24 August 2007 (UTC)

== Biased ==

This article is exceedingly biased. For example, it states that during a debate McCarthy behaved in a "defense and condescending" matter without mentioning that this is the opinion of New York Times writer Alessandra Stanley. The article frequently presents criticisms as facts when it should be specifying the critical parties. (For example, "New York Times write Alessandra Stanley described McCarthy as 'defensive and condescending.'") I wouldn't go to Joe Stalin's Misplaced Pages page, for example, and insert the following "fact": "Joe Stalin was an a--hole" just because many people felt he was one and I can find citations for this. When mentioning opinions it is important to include references to those holding them even if it's sometimes put in generic terms like "many critics felt that McCarthy behaved in a defensive and condescending manner during the debate." <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:18, 14 October 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


This whole wikipedia website is completely worthless. It is just full of childish bickering unsupported rubbish passed off as 'fact' because it links to some website of dubious authenticity. No wonder kids are growing up lacking in even the most basic knowledge. This page is a perfect example. I just opened it looking for a biography of a historian and just found a childish rant. The discussion page is nothing more than further Pro V anti Turkish-Armenian rubbish.

Worst thing about all this is some may (and I have seen it more than once) assume that what is said on this worthless website is actually as factual as what you would find in any book or University!

Sooner this worthless website is taken down and people actually start picking up books the better! <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 21:29, 25 October 2007 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:I fixed some POV issues in this article that were claiming that criticism of his work was factual, although no proof was provided. However, Armenian nationalists that edit this page continuously add more propaganda to this page in order to attack Justin McCarthy's credibility. This page should be locked. ] 22:04, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
::Arsenic99, it is very good to try fixing POV issues, but it seems that in doing so you inadvertently introduced some other POV points. I have now tried to find a middle view. Do you find that acceptable? --] 22:20, 26 October 2007 (UTC)
:::I checked your edit, and put back the changes that you made back on the page. I am trying to make sure that no POV exists in this article. Except the views of the historian. I am still unsure as to whether there needs to be a Criticism of his work section. I mean Justin McCarthy and other historians criticize Peter Balakian's work, but why doesn't Peter Balakian have a section for "criticism"? Is this even allowed by WP:BLP? ] (]) 20:50, 27 January 2008 (UTC)
::::Please notice that other editors have modified the article after me. I am not satisfied of the general tone of the article, but I am not an expert in this subject, so I tagged it for other editors to peruse it. Neither do I know anything about Peter Balakian: if you feel that the article about him is missing something, please go ahead and improve it. Happy editing, ] (]) 21:35, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

It seems to me that the whole criticism section except the first sentence is violating ]. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 17:59, 27 October 2007 (UTC)
:The chgs link is still not working. ]<sup>]</sup><sub>]</sub> 03:27, 3 November 2007 (UTC)

== McCarthy has written books about the Balkans, Balkan history, the Middle East, and Middle Eastern history ==

The only books that I have seen he has written were the ones about Turks and Ottomans. Unless somebody can present to me that he has written any other books, apart from the ones included in the article, then we have to change that sentence and write that he has written books on the ], and on the alleged ] (¿¿¿if there ever was one???)

== Nobody provided me with the information I have asked so why has my change been reverted!!! ==

The only books that I have seen he has written were the ones about Turks and Ottomans. Unless somebody can present to me that he has written any other books, apart from the ones included in the article, then we have to change that sentence and write that he has written books on the Denial of the Armenian Genocide, and on the alleged Turkish Genocide (¿¿¿if there ever was one???)

That was my original comment, and still people have not answered this question! So WHY was my change REVERTED!!! It is supported by the list of books he has written, none about Balkan history, or any of that other crap so cut out the freaking nonsense and don't put a lock on this article because you guys are afraid of de-crediting the strongest voice of anti-Armenianusm and the Denial of the Armenian Genocide.

-Youre right when you say his work is almost always about Ottomans...the Balkans, Caucasus, and Middle East were all part of the Ottoman Empire. His books often talk more about the Balkans, Caucasus, and Middle East than they do about Anatolia (present-day Turkey). So to say he writes books about those places is quite accurate. That last sentence there is also very subjective and reads like demagoguery. ] (]) 19:33, 31 January 2008 (UTC)ChillinChillin

== What does the Armenian Wikiproject have to do with Justin McCarthy? ==

Apparently, the Armenian Wikiproject has decided to "patrol" this article, by discrediting Justin McCarthy's work with their own propaganda on the Armenian genocide theory. This is unacceptable and their wikiproject should not propagandize Misplaced Pages by patrolling historians who counter some Armenians' views on history. This isn't objectivity, this is propaganda.
] (]) 23:41, 30 January 2008 (UTC)
:Justin McCarthy has voiced extremely controversial views regarding Armenians and their history, and so he has been added to the wikiproject as a significant (if revisionist and generally unsupported) Historian on Armenian history whose article may be improved in that respect. Also, you do not need to add a page to a wikiproject in order to 'patrol' it, you just have to add it to your talkpage. I have reason to believe, however, you already knew that, and are asking questions to which you already have the answer. ] (]) 03:10, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
::Controversial to Armenians like yourself you mean, but widely accepted by other historians of non-Armenian origin. My main problem with this is the fact that Armenians find themselves as the experts to fix this article which is clearly biased. When you say the article may be improved you're trying to just say how you are going to discredit him and make his views seem more controversial by creating conclusions for wikipedia readers. Just try it. ] ] 04:57, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
:::First off, may I remind you to that making ad-hominem attacks does nothing to support your case (''e.g. who told you I was an Armenian?''). Second, there is no widespread support for McCarthy within the average Historical community (unless you have a good source that says otherwise) and, in fact, I might go as far as saying McCarthy is virtually unheard of outside the Armenian (and Anti-Armenian) community. McCarthy's denial is not just a product of his historical interpretations, it is his claim to fame, probably the only reason this article is anything more than a 2-sentence stub. Also, going to any length to discredit a man who does so much to sully his own reputation would be redundant and pointless. As long as we contrast his opinions with mainstream history, this article will take care of its self. It is those with a POV that would change this article to conflict with the rest of wikipedia (and make McCarthy representative of mainstream POV). ] (]) 07:41, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
::::You are an Armenian with a nationalistic agenda of promoting the Armenian genocide in almost any article you edit. Your own userpage has many boxes such as "independence of kurdistan" "independence of palestine" "wikiproject armenia" "advanced Armenian" "history of armenia" "opposes denial of armenian genocide" "independence of nagorno karabakh" among others which clearly shows you are Armenian indeed, because only a propagandist such as yourself would go to such lengths to make Justin McCarthy look like "a nobody" or a "minority POV" as you so claim. If he is someone who is not known outside the "Armenian community", why are you and VartanM so involved in this article? Oh and speaking of Vartan, are you referring to me about the source? Because I didn't put that source just to let you know. So anyway, there is nothing in this article or anything I've added that tries to make Justin McCarthy seem like a representative of mainstream, but I think you guys need to back off from this article since you continuously try to enlarge or bloat the Criticism of Work section. Trust me it will get removed eventually since it's POV and against WP:BLP, unless you want me to go and add a similar section to 100s of Armenian self-proclaimed historians. ] ] 06:15, 3 February 2008 (UTC)

Since when did the personal webpage of computer programer became a reliable source? I removed an unsourced BLP violation and added couple of citation tags. --] (]) 18:35, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

==Justin McCarthy as a Misplaced Pages Source==

There are two articles here in which Justin A. McCarthy is used as a source for information. He doesn't seem like a reliable or unbiased source to me. My arguement is that someone who denies something as undisputable as the Armenian Genocide is no longer reliable. Maybe someone here with more knowlege about him can argue that his writings aren't suitable to be used as sole sources for controversial information.

These are the articles I have seen him referenced in:

]

] <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 10:22, 1 February 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

::I've left two references that show McCarthy's bias in regards to matters regarding Turkey. His affiliation with the Institute of Turkish Studies further lessens his credibility in matters regarding the Armenian Genocide.] (]) 19:09, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

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Misleading modifier concerning Hovanissian

Santasa99 can you provide the source that specifically refers to Hovanissian as merely an Armenian genocide historian? Étienne Dolet (talk) 01:32, 20 January 2020 (UTC)

Nowhere is stated that he is "merely an Armenian genocide historian", and we don't require reference for statement on obvious fact, phenomenons, itd - you, know, like saying that Armenian is, hm, Armenuan.--౪ Santa ౪ 09:41, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
Yeah, maybe now it's a matter of consensus, now that User:TU-nor showed up. We can now obscure from view such en elemental background info, because it gives a little wider angle in the perspective from which one evaluate.--౪ Santa ౪ 10:01, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
Beside consensus, there is also the question of relevance. In the same section, there are a lot of "historian X says", "historian Y says" etc. You will have to explain why it should be necessary to include a background modifier especially for this historian. The elemental background info is, of course, relevant in the article about Hovannisian, but I cannot see how it is relevant here. It certainly give the impression of poisoning the well. Perhaps you would also want to give similar "elemental info" about Auron, Imber and Mazower? --T*U (talk) 10:35, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
I'm curious, T*U, are you really convinced that the "Poisoning the Well" argument could somehow apply here - I'm curious and saying this because I remember you making some very sensible and levelheaded comments in cases where I was involved (admittedly, I may be a little bit biased here, when I say your comments were sensible because you gave them in favor of my own stance). Anyhow, the "Poisoning" argument is not a WP policy nor guideline, it's something editors use to repel attacks based on the argument that others using unscientific, fringe theories, and that their attitude has ulterior motives based on conspiracy, etc - so, in other words, facts (especially with refs), background or any other variety, cannot poison anything, only baseless accusations in an attempt to discredit fellow editor can! So, instated of article on this particular idiom used for naming strain of "informal fallacy", I would rather suggest this essay. Anyone who thinks that such basic facts about the subject, not an irrelevant adverse info, can poison an entire article and/or discredit person and his line, tells us more about editor who cry foul in the first place as well as subject and his work, than about the editor who tries to insert those facts and his intention to do so. As for the other scholars in this article, I have no obligation or need to write and add info about them. I am only interested in this particular character and the fact that his works have been widely used for referencing entire series on the Armenian Genocide. Not to mention whether this one is really fitting for use in controversial content, where he could be perceived as in conflict of interest. Entire subject of Armenian genocide will always be within the domain of scholarship and politics only; there are no judicial processes nor judicial verdicts to refer to, only research and researchers politics - with that in mind, the man is Armenian, and not only is he from a family that has survived persecution and ethnic cleansing, but he has devoted his entire career to the study of modern Armenian history and that with an emphasis on persecution and genocide. This isn't damning by itself, he could well be neutral, but it is damning that he is a political activist, that he is engaged in Armenian politics and elections as an activist, that his son is an Armenian politician who is a member of parliament and who ran for president, and whose party is conspicuously named "Heritage," which has been in coalition with ultra-nationalists for years, and whose political platform is based on the use of history and genocide for political purposes and to win votes, as well as strong anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijani rhetoric. And then my four or five words are subject of contention, even though these are literally elementary facts!?--౪ Santa ౪ 17:18, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
The definition of well poisoning is something like presenting irrelevant information about a person in order to discredit what that person says. When you state that you have no interest in adding similar "background information" about other historians mentioned, but are only interested in this particular character, you strengthen my feeling that you want to add it in order to do exactly that, discredit or at least weaken what he says.
The question of interest for us here is not who he is (and certainly not who his son is), but whether his book is a reliable source. If you want to contest that, please raise your concern here or at WP:RSN, but not by indirectly targeting his credibility in the article text. --T*U (talk) 20:56, 20 January 2020 (UTC)
Your link gives a very nice and precise definition, which is not what you say it is. Your feeling about my choice is beside the point, and if four words line about the fact that he is Armenian historian with knack for writing on Armenian genocide, is discrediting for him, in any editor's view, well that's too bad for him, and anyone seeing it that way. Although it's also beside the point, I am not afraid expressing my dismay for the fact that "community" has no objection using Armenian historian whose work maybe/is probably tainted with ideology and nationalism (which tells nothing on my opinion and perspective toward the historical events - the rest is just your "feeling"), however, I have no intention of questioning his neutrality nor his reliability, and certainly I have never tried it in the first place (here too is just your feeling). However, I find interesting how standards within "community" vary from case to case on reliability, notability and consensus, in this and related topics, namely histories of Balkan conflicts and genocides, with many illuminating examples - Hovanissian, McCarthy, Malcolm are but a few.--౪ Santa ౪ 23:43, 20 January 2020 (UTC)

Repetitive Sections

Why are there numerous paragraphs and sections dedicated to the same narrow topic? Why not collect all academic and literary criticism into one section? It should be titles as such also. It is noteworthy that there are only a few lines on the man himself, his life and work and career but repetitive sections and paragraphs on critics It does not serve the reader or the article and gives the impression of an agenda. Murat (talk) 21:08, 18 August 2021 (UTC)

Justin McCarthy seems to be mostly about the Armenian/Greek/Assyrian genocide. He supports the denialist view of the Turkish government. It is an interesting case since it is one of the rare cases of someone who is not a turk and supports the denialist view of the turks. It would be interesting to know how he ended up with that view. He is 76 y old now. It would be interesting to know if anything changed. I wouldn’t be surprised if his work was funded by Turkey. It is the same case with Michael Gunter. He is funded as well. There was a case where Turkey was bribing some politicians, according to one FBI informant. Well, the reality is that people need money to live comfortably. No professional historian is accusing him of that, but I will, and I’m not a historian. There must be some who are willing to exchange their morals for money. If there is anything interesting he has said, maybe on some other topic, go ahead and add a section. You are free to tell me your side of the story. I want to hear it. Vmelkon (talk) 02:05, 9 September 2022 (UTC)
I have actually a number of his books in my library. He is a true scholar and uses very quantitative analysis. It is very hard to argue against the facts he has quantified and presented within context. He has found a rich vein since so many scholars and institutions are so intimidated by the AG industry and this very article and the comments I had made above is the proof. As far as I know, the facts and basis of his research have never been challenged. It would be wrong to define (and defame) him simply as a AG historian and a "denier". The very adjective is used to implicate and to silence any opposing views and thus related and contradictory facts. He is the preeminent authority on Middle East and Balkan populations and movements. A historian does not need much funds as you imply in a seeming effort to de-legitimize him, all he needs is open archives and a university chair. As far as my side of the story, there is one of course, a personal one, as my grandfather was from Bitlis and had first hand experience in the events of the era, but this is not about personal histories, however relevant. Just sticking to facts is all I wish from Wiki. Murat (talk) 14:19, 11 November 2022 (UTC)
You said “so many scholars and institutions are so intimidated by the AG industry”. Is this true? How is the AG industry doing this? You said “As far as I know, the facts and basis of his research have never been challenged.” I don’t know if that is true or whether he is taken seriously by genocide scholars. I don’t know enough about that to make a comment. As far as denial goes, there is a page
The article on the AG says “The genocide is extensively documented in the archives of Germany, Austria, the United States, Russia, France, and the United Kingdom, as well as the Ottoman archives, despite systematic purges of incriminating documents by Turkey. There are also thousands of eyewitness accounts from Western missionaries and Armenian survivors. Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term genocide in 1944, became interested in war crimes after reading about the 1921 trial of Soghomon Tehlirian for the assassination of Talaat Pasha. Lemkin recognized the fate of the Armenians as one of the most significant genocides in the twentieth century. Almost all historians and scholars outside Turkey, and an increasing number of Turkish scholars, recognize the destruction of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as genocide.” ===But how is it that so many people, different sources, are mistaken? The AG industry payed them or threatened the missionaries? Genocide denial has its own page on wikipedia. That is what it needs to be called. The facts? That is interesting. I check out the talk pages on the AG, on greek vs turkish issues and assyrian vs turkish issues and there is a LOT of back and forth and arguing. I don’t know if Justin McCarthy took bribes. There is no evidence to support that but I was giving an example of the turkish anti-denial industry and their tactics. Vmelkon (talk) 02:54, 30 June 2023 (UTC)

Article much too negative about an academic

We have a policy Misplaced Pages:Criticism#Avoid_sections_and_articles_focusing_on_criticisms_or_controversies that says "Best practice is to incorporate positive and negative material into the same section." --Anthon.Eff (talk) 03:37, 13 November 2022 (UTC)

I thought all did was to add some sentences to point out opposing views. I did not remove anything just to be fair. Nevertheless, the edit was quickly reverted without any explanation or justification. The user who reverted it is Firefangledfeathers. A simple click: undo. Why? Well, we don’t know. Who is Firefangledfeathers? Why is he more authoritative than I am? We don’t know. S/he just is and we are supposed to accept it.
McCarthy’s main thesis is that all sides suffered, all sides can be held responsible for the atrocities, and he does not support any of them. It is that simple. He may very well be wrong but, the article is not about the Armenian question, it is about a person.
In the article, they blatantly accuse McCarthy of being guilty of supporting Turkish atrocities. Nothing could be further from the truth. Where is the proof? They present quotes from others as if opinions constitute proofs. Nevertheless, the quotes in Misplaced Pages, regardless how questionable, serve as nice justifications to otherwise vile articles. This is the power of publication. If you publish sufficiently many articles about a non-sense it becomes a “fact”. The latest proof is the ChatGPT. It is programmed to compose things based on what is written already. It is not artificial intelligence: it is the real idiocy. I say this as someone who has done research in the area of artificial intelligence. And, yes, I conversed with ChatGPT: it is stupid!
I attended one of the seminars he gave, in Hilton Hotel in Taksim square, Istanbul. He was tired, without much hope or conviction. But he was still trying. An aspiring and young historian asked “Would you recommend this (the supposed Armenian Genocide) as a topic to pursue academically?” He replied: “No! Not if you are leaning towards refuting it. Because, you will go nowhere. Your will not get any funding. You will be ostracized. Such is the situation even in US, the land of the free.” I am paraphrasing, of course: it was many years ago, more than a decade, and I didn’t think I would have to remember those moments.
The user Firefangledfeathers quickly, too quickly, added the topic to the “contentious topics” category, in less than a day, as if he was acutely monitoring the topic: a supposed biography of an academician. The article wasn’t in the category for a long time. Now, when they see the danger of it being refuted, they take all possible precautions they could think of.
The article as it stands it is not a biography, it is a piece of propaganda, as some critics in the talk expressed explicitly, to no avail. They simply don’t count. This change of category also conveniently excludes me from making any further edits to the topic. I will not try to undo it since I feel that it would simply be futile and I don’t have either the time or the stamina, or the stomach. I hope someone with “power” out there would do something.
The situation is always similar when the topic is connected to Turks. I am waiting to see a Kurdish Genocide to appear soon. Very recently, Shah Ismail was suddenly made a Kurd. Previously he was a Turk, in the same Misplaced Pages article, that is. A false history is being written using tools such as Misplaced Pages. The focal point is the hatred towards Turks. Almost all the articles are “contentious”, yet almost always they are in favor of the anti-Turkish flavor, whatever it may be. I hear the foot steps of a new kind of cultural fascism approaching.
I regularly read a lot of mathematics, physics, and engineering topics in Misplaced Pages. I have contributed to the scientific topics, though under different usernames. Yet, I have never come across this much controversy, bias, and non-sense in scientific topics as I did in social “sciences”. If Misplaced Pages continues this line of growing in areas of social topics, which admittedly seem to be more “important” to the masses than the scientific ones, then it runs the danger of becoming the epicenter of post-truth “contentious topics”. In the end, I think it will die a nostalgic death. NCiblak (talk) 23:51, 13 February 2023 (UTC)

POV

A lot of sources which discredit him are Armenian or people who have ties to the Armenian side.

This is not a neutral article about McCarthy. It discredits an academic historian with sources which use emotions, not with proven facts. CptBearguy (talk) 23:50, 24 November 2023 (UTC)

Yup, and nothing will be done about it. Welcome to Misplaced Pages. 71.247.20.96 (talk) 05:37, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
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