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{{afd-merged-from|Crimes against humanity under communist regimes|Crimes against humanity under communist regimes (2nd nomination)|28 August 2024}}
This article is not POV. A google search is showing multiple referecnes on this topic. Communism killed 100 million people which is more than Nazism. This article should stay. --] (]) 17:03, 3 August 2009 (UTC)
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== Removal of Ghodsee and Neumayer ==
:The topic and most of the contents of the article are worth of keeping, BUT certainly not in a separate article. It should be rewritten, maybe to be more compact in form, and added as a subsection to ], or some other relevant article.]</span> (]) 22:52, 5 August 2009 (UTC)


Regarding removal, we cite three sources for that paragraph, not just one; while the first one is just an essay from ], we also cite a paper published in the journal '''' by Ghodsee and '''' by Neumayer; both of these are academically published and have been extensively cited themselves (, ) so they're reasonable to cover in a brief paragraph here. We could add some of those as secondary sources if necessary and replace the Aeon cite, but I don't see how total removal makes sense; and of course the rest of that edit summary seems to mostly just be expressing disagreement with them, which doesn't have anything to do with whether we cover their opinions or not. --] (]) 19:19, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
== Original research going on ==
:IMO it's non-useful information at best. Somebody claiming that mere counting of mass killing reflects an anti-communism bias. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 23:24, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
::There's no question that part of the anti-Communist argument is how many people they killed. The Victims of Communism website for example says on its first page, "COMMUNISM KILLED OVER 100 MILLION." Why would they lead with this if it did not further their anti-Communist narrative?
::It could be that is a very good argument against Communism. But it's still an argument, which by definition reflects a bias. ] (]) 23:43, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
:::Hrm. It is possible that some important context about the objection was removed , or that we should go over the sources (and look for others) and elaborate on it a bit more. I think that it's an important and ] objection, but it is true that in its current form there's something important missing - it probably needs to be expanded at least a little bit to explain it further, not removed. --] (]) 00:11, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
::::It needs further explanation, but it seems to be the most widely accepted explanation for counting bodies, particularly for the 100 million figure. ] (]) 15:49, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
:Seems well sourced but not very important. So I would be fine with it's removal. ] (]) 00:14, 28 September 2024 (UTC)


Mere selection of which aspect to cover usually reflects a type of bias. This is a universal reality, and repeating a universal reality is not information. Trying to pretend that it is noteworthy information is itself bias. For example, if a researcher counts up the number of deaths from high-school sports, we don't put in a section that a critic says that merely counting those deaths reflects an anti-sports bias. <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 12:47, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
I have now removed twice ] and editorial comment from the article, which is not backed up by the sources provided, and . Neither source mentions anything about so-called ''communist genocide'' and to portray it as such goes against core policies such as ] and ]. If editors want to editorialise, take it to your own website/blog, there is no place for such things on WP. --] <sup>]</sup> 00:13, 6 August 2009 (UTC)


:PBS had a feature, "7 deaths linked to football raise concerns about sport’s risks for young players" The article came out after several publications noted the increasing number of high school sports deaths.
== Undiscussed deletion of sourced material by ] ==
:The number of deaths persuade people that there is a problem with high school sports and something should be done. That's because most people disapprove of unnecessary deaths. ] (]) 15:47, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
:To put it another way, if you were told that the Communists killed 100 million people, would that tend to make you feel (a) positive about Communism, (b) more negative or (c) about the same? ] (]) 17:30, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
::{{Ping|The Four Deuces}} All good points, but that is not the topic at hand. Putting the question in the context of your first example, if somebody said "Counting the number of high-school sports deaths represents an anti-high-school sports bias", should we put what they said into the article? <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 19:29, 21 October 2024 (UTC)
I noticed that the paragraph in question only ended up in its current state just four days ago. An essentially unexplained edit (one of ) removed all the information that was previously there, except for the part that said that counting victims reflects an anti-communist bias. I agree that the paragraph as it stood when this discussion began was strange and not much of a criticism (of course critics of communism have an "anti-communist bias"!), but the information that used to be there until four days ago was much more substantial. I have restored it, as well as other information removed by the same editor at the same time, with a similar lack of explanation. I do not see any difference between the removed information and the rest of the article. It was well sourced, and directly addressed the topic of communist mass killings. I do agree with one removal (the last removal, where the source was a newspaper), so I have not restored that one. - ] (]) 08:36, 29 September 2024 (UTC)


== Recent removals ==
As per , could ] explain why he/she deleted the reference. ] is reliable source. It is a non-profit research organization founded by historian ]. Please explain why you are considering this source unreliable. --] (]) 02:19, 6 August 2009 (UTC)


I am starting this thread to discuss recent content removals by DaltonCastle. I disagree with them, because the removed content was well sourced and in line with the rest of the article. Much of the article consists of reporting the views of different academics on issues such as the proper names to be used for the mass killings (terminology), the numbers of people killed and how those numbers should be estimated (estimates), causes of the killings, comparisons to other mass killings, and so on. In many cases, there is no overall consensus on these topics, there are only different sources with different perspectives. So the article reports the conclusions of author A, then those of author B, then those of author C, etc. In cases where two authors directly disagree with each other, this is also noted. I think this is a good format, and actually I cannot think of any other way to organize this information. DaltonCastle has removed certain sentences and paragraphs on the grounds that they represent the views of only one author, or only two authors, or that they are "hardly a consensus". That is true, but the same could be said about every other sentence and paragraph immediately before and after the removed ones. Of course each paragraph (or part of a paragraph, or sentence) focuses on a single author, because that is the structure being used. We describe the various sources one by one, when there is no way to combine them without doing original research (for example, when they disagree with each other). The names of the authors are given every time, and the content makes it clear that it is reporting their separate conclusions. This is what I mean when I say that I do not see any difference between the removed information and the rest of the article. - ] (]) 12:08, 4 October 2024 (UTC)
== Edit by ] ==
:The issue is not about the quality of sourcing, its that there is a ] issue to insert a point of view. When the "Estimates" section starts off with "a communist-leaning academic believes the following estimates are exaggerated" (I'm obviously simplifying), there is a concern. It is a question of 1. due weight, 2. Coatracking, 3. POV-insertion/whitewashing. The near-majority of the article should not be weighted towards the handful of academics who say the numbers are overestimated. At most it is a quick mention. ] (]) 20:28, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
::The "Estimates" section begins by quoting ], who is not remotely communist-leaning as far as I can tell. He has written a book specifically about the crimes of communist states. Also, he is not saying that the estimates are exaggerated, but that they are contentious and debated. This is true, and it is a good summary of the literature. Every author who has estimated the number of people killed by communist regimes has arrived at a different number, and the differences between the numbers are in the tens of millions. It's not a question of high numbers or low numbers, it's just that they are very different from each other. For example, the three highest estimates cited in the "Estimates" section are 94 million, 110 million and 148 million. The differences between these "high" numbers are just as big as the differences between "high" and "low" numbers. So, it is not as if most academics agree on a single number, and a handful of sources say that this number is overestimated. There is no agreement on any single number, high or low. I think it is therefore good and important to cover all the estimates and the various debates about them.
::I don't see any particular weight in the article towards some estimates or authors as opposed to others. Every author gets about the same space as every other author. On the contrary, it seems to me that removing some authors would privilege those that remain. We should not give the impression that there is academic agreement on an issue when there is no agreement, by citing a single author.
::Finally, regarding ], I don't see that here at all. In my understanding, coatracking is when an article groups together different topics that are unrelated (or only tangentially related) to the article's topic. So, coatracking here would be if the article cited sources that don't talk about communist mass killings. But all the cited sources do in fact talk about communist mass killings. They disagree with each other on things like estimates or causes, but describing sources that disagree with each other is not coatracking. That's just standard academic debate. - ] (]) 05:53, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
:::Any academic work is going to full of things that can be critiqued. Respectfully, your edit had a massive amount of such material, (plus a whataboutism argument made by someone.) I think that a high-quality paragraph (information, not talking points) covering variability and possible bias in estimates would be a good addition. But IMHO the edit that I just described was not that. Sincerely, <b style="color: #0000cc;">''North8000''</b> (]) 19:42, 21 October 2024 (UTC)


== Bad sourcing and obvious bias. ==
by ] removed a reliable source Baltic Federation in Canada. I added it back. ] (]) 03:52, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:No, please take a look at ] (questionable sources): <blockquote>"''Questionable sources are those with a poor reputation for fact-checking, or with no editorial oversight. Such sources include websites and publications expressing views that are widely acknowledged as extremist, <u>or promotional</u> in nature...''"</blockquote>


This whole page needs to be cleaned up. ] (]) 04:43, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
:The Baltic federation is "an umbrella-organization for the central socio-political organizations of the three Baltic communities in Canada."


:You're welcome to get started. Have any suggestions? ] (]) 03:31, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
:And political organizations organized around particular constituencies tend to be promotional, which makes the source questionable. Of course, if there is academic consensus that the communists committed a "genocide" in Belarus, you'll have no trouble finding a better source than a pamphlet pdf file from the Baltic Federation's web site.
*You will have to be more specific. As you can see from some of the older discussions above and in the archives, there have been a lot of discussions of possible bias from different directions, some of which have resulted in changes and some of which hasn't; without more details we can't even attempt to answer you. --] (]) 14:30, 9 December 2024 (UTC)

:Furthermore, the Soviet Union never recognized any "genocide" or "ethnocide" in Belarus, except the Nazi one{{ndash}}and neither does modern Belarus, so materials like this <blockquote>"''The effects of this genocide and ethnocide were later admitted by the communists during the perestroika ''"</blockquote> are downright misleading.

:There should be more reliable sources than a Candian political group. Looking at ] should guide you well in this respect.

:Best,
:] (]) 04:12, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

No problem, there is an entire chapter on the subject available in . Hope that it helps. --] (]) 04:46, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::Actually, as Radford University's Professor Grigory Ioffe writes, ] is a nationalist who immigrated from Soviet Belarus for Nazi Germany{{ndash}}for whom an individual who "embraces Polish or Russian identity, as has happened many times in history, he or she is not a true Russian or Pole, and attempts are justified to uncover their true Belarusian selves." Zaprudnik spent a subsequent chunk of his life working for Radio Liberty propaganda broadcasts into Eastern Europe{{ndash}}but you can even get that from Misplaced Pages. As for the quality of the cited work as a polemical piece, Ioffe writes that

::<blockquote>"The third major thread of Zaprudnik's portrayal of Belarus is blanket negativism about what happened to the country after 1944, when he left the country for Germany. In a 278-page book about Belarusian history, the immensity of what was built on the totally and completely devastated Belarusian land after the war receives 5 pages in the chapter titled "Destruction by War and Russification (1941-1985)." </blockquote>

::Consequently, Ioffe suggests that we read two books by David Marples, recommended as "devoid of Zaprudnik's extreme biases." Not a good candidate for Misplaced Pages policy on reliable sourcing for neutral-content articles.

::Lastly, consider the fact that Zaprudnik considers as his main charge of genocide Stalin's advances against the presence of the Belarusian language in certain spheres such as universities{{ndash}}when Soviet policy until the mid-1930s actively promoted the Belarusian language after centuries of repression under czarism. (Even the ] alphabet for transcribing the language was designed as part of Soviet policy in 1933.) I dare say that Russification is no more an element of communism than Anglicization is a part of it, but hey, this article is a fork for anything with "communism" and "genocide" mentioned by the same person against whatever backdrop. ] (]) 05:42, 6 August 2009 (UTC)


Who exactly is Grigory Ioffe? And how is someone who thinks that there is nothing wrong with the murderous regime of communists in the former USSR less biased than someone like ] who points out the wrongdoings? In case you like, feel free to add the viewpoints of Ioffe (in case he's notable enough) pr ]. Other than that ] was an important aspect of the cultural genocide in the USSR, thanks for reminding me that. The cultural genocide or ] by the communist regimes deserves perhaps it's own section, perhaps later entire article.--] (]) 13:43, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:Grigory Ioffe is a professor at Radford University, known for his work in Slavic studies and Eastern Europe's geography and political economy. He is not a former volunteer for the Nazi German Luftwaffe auxiliary and Waffen-SS like ] . I don't think that a topic as significant as genocide in a country should be discussed using sources from a scholar with a noted agenda for pushing an extreme point of view. That is the point being made here. ] (]) 22:30, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

one of the leaders of the Belarusian community in the United States and an honoured member of the Belarusian PEN-centre is an extremist, a noted agenda pusher? This kind of opinion is good to know, just that, please do Misplaced Pages a favor and remove your accusations from this talk page pr. ]. Thanks!--] (]) 06:25, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

== Watching the OR circus ==

I am yet again not surprised to see the familiar faces from two very polarized teams arguing at ]. Let me make a few predictions of what will happen to this synthesis of a bunch of quotes taken out of context here.
*The polarized debate will be closed with ''no consensus''.
*the war will start over adding/removing POV/OR/BIAS/SYNTH tags in this article
*a number of attempts will be made on renaming this article, e.g. into something ridiculous like ]
*eventually the interest in editing this turd of an article will go to zero
*in several months another AfD will follow citing ''no consensus'' in this AfD, no significant improvements in this article, obvious POV/OR/SYNTH issues
*there might be a number of RfCs, ANIs, AEs initiated by the same usual suspects over this article, and, considering the team tagging, the result of these debates is also predictable (for those of you who's just tuned in, I mean a complete and utter waste of time)
Looking forward to this circus. (] (]) 18:07, 6 August 2009 (UTC))

:Rather than make vague generalised claims, please identify which parts are OR. --] (]) 22:56, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

::As it has been established that the '''whole thing''' was nothing but trolling, your extremely unwise suggestion to make contributions to the trollish article amounts to asking me to give ]. (] (]) 01:32, 7 August 2009 (UTC))

== Making the point ==

For those of you who is interested in making a point, I have a few suggestions on the new articles with ]
*],
*],
*],
*],
*],
*],
*],
*],
And many more. Fire away, be creative. I would appreciate if you notify me, I will watch with much interest. (] (]) 18:45, 6 August 2009 (UTC))
:My impression, as I have said on the AfD, is that this article was created in order to advocate or perhaps to troll. It may be notable that the artice creator, ], had been indefinitely blocked for sock puppeting and cross-wiki vandalism. This really makes one wonder about his motives for creating this article. ] (]) 19:11, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
Oh and how did I forget about the ]. (] (]) 01:40, 7 August 2009 (UTC))

== Creation by a banned troll ==

This page was created by a banned user as seen here, . Could we speedy delete this under G5? Surely we don't want to keep a page made maliciously by a serial troll. ] ]</font> 20:07, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:The article has been significantly expanded by other editors in good standing, so I would oppose any attempt at speedy deletion, particularly since this article is already subject of an AfD debate. --] (]) 20:26, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::But why do we want to keep this article so much? We shouldn't let that troll troll us. ] ]</font> 20:27, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Why do you want to delete this article so much? --] (]) 20:32, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Because it's crazy, ridiculous POV. Go to some place like China and you find lots of propaganda for communism. Go to a capitalist nation and you find crazy propaganda against it. Communism is evil, the antichrist, blah blah blah. And calling communism genocide is only a part of that. We shouldn't be honoring either side of the spectrum, as an encyclopedia. ] ]</font> 20:39, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::: Communist (adjective) genocide (noun). Communism is a political system. Communist regimes employed genocide in the pursuit of their aims. No one is conflating communism <u>'''as'''</u> genocide. It's more than a stretch to accuse that such is the case here. ] ]</font> 13:30, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::: And I love your argument that it's all propaganda anyway. Can you stoop to a less scholarly means of denigrating the article or trampling on the millions of lives lost? Let's wait and see! ] ]</font> 13:33, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
Way to go, troll. A successful ] manages to strike a particularly sensitive, polarized issue, and a spark creates a fire. The "editors in good standing" jump in and start feeding the fire. Again, way to go, I am impressed. A notice to all involved: ''Experienced wikipedians should know that the most effective way to discourage a troll is usually to ignore him or her, because responding tends to encourage trolls to continue disruptive posts — hence the often-seen warning: "Please do not feed the trolls".'' (] (]) 01:48, 7 August 2009 (UTC))
::Igny, ! It is a violation of the spirit of . Please be more civil.] (]) 17:27, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
: I've already indicated the solution is to cite sources specifically discussing "communist genocide" and insure the article, regardless of how it started, fairly represents reliable sources. There are plenty of those, regardless of (baseless) claims that "communist genocide" isn't even used as a term in scholarship. ] ]</font> 13:38, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

== What seems to be the problem? ==

Sorry but I must be missing something, what are those ], ] accusations above all about? How is an article about the established fact of mass killings of about 60-100 million people by the Communist regimes around the world ]? Is the problem the title? "Communist genocide". So is anybody suggesting to rename the article or something? How about ] according to the chapter in Final solutions By Benjamin A. Valentino? And how exactly is this all WP:OR and/or Synth? Or is anybody actually saying that the killings of those 60-100 million people by the totalitarian communist governments never happened? Thanks!--] (]) 06:17, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

:Their main issue is ]. You can always tell when someone accuses of WP:SYNTH, WP:POV and WP:OR but is unable to point out what exactly is wrong, forcing them to use phrases such as "the whole thing was nothing but trolling".
:Also, I would support renaming as well - perhaps ]?
: --] 07:48, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

::Outrageous. This diff explains it nicely. ] ]</font> 15:21, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::: Except nowhere does the article use the alleged "universal doctrine" (in quotes) that I've found, so your outrage is nicely unfounded. ] ]</font> 18:38, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::: And just because, say, Italian communists have not practiced genocide does not remove the notability of the term regarding "Communist". ] ]</font> 18:40, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

::: Furthermore, the argument posited that the article covers genocides by "individual communists" is utterly specious, as the genocides were carried out by the <u>'''regimes'''</u> (leader, leadership, military, paramilitary,...), so this is not akin to "list of bank robberies by communists" as individuals, for example. ] ]</font> 18:42, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::::So say changing the article to the list ] (note plural, it is not a concept, it is a list) will be ok by you? (] (]) 18:54, 7 August 2009 (UTC))
The topic is obviously notable as the concept of "Communist Genocide" is used in scholarly sources. Additionally several countries have laws against denial of Communist Genocide - which is like notability-squared. Furthermore, the article has extensive references and inline citations. Can you point to a '''specific''' instance of SYNTH or OR in the article rather than just making general (and spurious) accusations?] (]) 17:24, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

:Again, I do not want to ] by contributing to this turd of an article. Again I point out that your contributions do nothing but feed the troll. As I also pointed out earlier a vicious cycle of edit wars has just started, and I really do not want to participate in this circus (see the ] for explanation why). I am just watching this development, which I consider to be an example of Misplaced Pages degradation, with interest from sideways. I do believe however that in time the interest of editors in this article will naturally die, as it happened to so many other trollish articles. If it survives a couple more nominations of AfD, only then I may consider contributing here. (] (]) 18:13, 7 August 2009 (UTC))

Latest revision as of 23:46, 13 December 2024

Crimes against humanity under communist regimes was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 28 August 2024 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Mass killings under communist regimes. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here.
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General Concerns and Questions Q1: Why does this article exist? A1: This article exists because so far there has been no consensus to delete it. The latest AfD (2021) said that the Misplaced Pages editing community has been unable to come to a consensus as to whether "mass killings under communist regimes" is a suitable encyclopaedic topic. Six discussions to delete this article have been held, none of them resulting in a deletion:
  • No consensus, December 2021, see discussion
  • Keep, July 2010, see discussion.
  • Keep, April 2010, see discussion
  • No consensus, November 2009, see discussion
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  • Declined by creator 17:04, 3 August 2009
  • PROD 17:02, 3 August 2009
  • Created 17:00 3 August 2009
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I'm looking for the best picture or any informations about the KAF's U-6 (Beaver). It seem that the KAF had 3 aircrafts. But in 1971, during the viet cong's sapper attack at the Pochentong Air Base,at least 1 Beaver was destroyed.In 1972 at leat 1 Beaver was refurbished with a new engine. http://www.khmerairforce.com/AAK-KAF/AVNK-AAK-KAF/Cambodia-Beaver-KAF.JPG

Thankfull for this info.
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  • no consensus, 14:22, 22 November 2021 (UTC), see discussion.
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  • no consensus, 11:06, 15 November 2009 (UTC), see discussion.
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Discussions:

Removal of Ghodsee and Neumayer

Regarding this removal, we cite three sources for that paragraph, not just one; while the first one is just an essay from Aeon, we also cite a paper published in the journal History of the Present by Ghodsee and The Criminalisation of Communism in the European Political Space after the Cold War by Neumayer; both of these are academically published and have been extensively cited themselves (, ) so they're reasonable to cover in a brief paragraph here. We could add some of those as secondary sources if necessary and replace the Aeon cite, but I don't see how total removal makes sense; and of course the rest of that edit summary seems to mostly just be expressing disagreement with them, which doesn't have anything to do with whether we cover their opinions or not. --Aquillion (talk) 19:19, 27 September 2024 (UTC)

IMO it's non-useful information at best. Somebody claiming that mere counting of mass killing reflects an anti-communism bias. North8000 (talk) 23:24, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
There's no question that part of the anti-Communist argument is how many people they killed. The Victims of Communism website for example says on its first page, "COMMUNISM KILLED OVER 100 MILLION." Why would they lead with this if it did not further their anti-Communist narrative?
It could be that is a very good argument against Communism. But it's still an argument, which by definition reflects a bias. TFD (talk) 23:43, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
Hrm. It is possible that some important context about the objection was removed here, or that we should go over the sources (and look for others) and elaborate on it a bit more. I think that it's an important and WP:DUE objection, but it is true that in its current form there's something important missing - it probably needs to be expanded at least a little bit to explain it further, not removed. --Aquillion (talk) 00:11, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
It needs further explanation, but it seems to be the most widely accepted explanation for counting bodies, particularly for the 100 million figure. TFD (talk) 15:49, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
Seems well sourced but not very important. So I would be fine with it's removal. PackMecEng (talk) 00:14, 28 September 2024 (UTC)

Mere selection of which aspect to cover usually reflects a type of bias. This is a universal reality, and repeating a universal reality is not information. Trying to pretend that it is noteworthy information is itself bias. For example, if a researcher counts up the number of deaths from high-school sports, we don't put in a section that a critic says that merely counting those deaths reflects an anti-sports bias. North8000 (talk) 12:47, 28 September 2024 (UTC)

PBS had a feature, "7 deaths linked to football raise concerns about sport’s risks for young players" The article came out after several publications noted the increasing number of high school sports deaths.
The number of deaths persuade people that there is a problem with high school sports and something should be done. That's because most people disapprove of unnecessary deaths. TFD (talk) 15:47, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
To put it another way, if you were told that the Communists killed 100 million people, would that tend to make you feel (a) positive about Communism, (b) more negative or (c) about the same? TFD (talk) 17:30, 28 September 2024 (UTC)
@The Four Deuces: All good points, but that is not the topic at hand. Putting the question in the context of your first example, if somebody said "Counting the number of high-school sports deaths represents an anti-high-school sports bias", should we put what they said into the article? North8000 (talk) 19:29, 21 October 2024 (UTC)

I noticed that the paragraph in question only ended up in its current state just four days ago. An essentially unexplained edit (one of several such edits) removed all the information that was previously there, except for the part that said that counting victims reflects an anti-communist bias. I agree that the paragraph as it stood when this discussion began was strange and not much of a criticism (of course critics of communism have an "anti-communist bias"!), but the information that used to be there until four days ago was much more substantial. I have restored it, as well as other information removed by the same editor at the same time, with a similar lack of explanation. I do not see any difference between the removed information and the rest of the article. It was well sourced, and directly addressed the topic of communist mass killings. I do agree with one removal (the last removal, where the source was a newspaper), so I have not restored that one. - Small colossal (talk) 08:36, 29 September 2024 (UTC)

Recent removals

I am starting this thread to discuss recent content removals by DaltonCastle. I disagree with them, because the removed content was well sourced and in line with the rest of the article. Much of the article consists of reporting the views of different academics on issues such as the proper names to be used for the mass killings (terminology), the numbers of people killed and how those numbers should be estimated (estimates), causes of the killings, comparisons to other mass killings, and so on. In many cases, there is no overall consensus on these topics, there are only different sources with different perspectives. So the article reports the conclusions of author A, then those of author B, then those of author C, etc. In cases where two authors directly disagree with each other, this is also noted. I think this is a good format, and actually I cannot think of any other way to organize this information. DaltonCastle has removed certain sentences and paragraphs on the grounds that they represent the views of only one author, or only two authors, or that they are "hardly a consensus". That is true, but the same could be said about every other sentence and paragraph immediately before and after the removed ones. Of course each paragraph (or part of a paragraph, or sentence) focuses on a single author, because that is the structure being used. We describe the various sources one by one, when there is no way to combine them without doing original research (for example, when they disagree with each other). The names of the authors are given every time, and the content makes it clear that it is reporting their separate conclusions. This is what I mean when I say that I do not see any difference between the removed information and the rest of the article. - Small colossal (talk) 12:08, 4 October 2024 (UTC)

The issue is not about the quality of sourcing, its that there is a WP:COATRACKING issue to insert a point of view. When the "Estimates" section starts off with "a communist-leaning academic believes the following estimates are exaggerated" (I'm obviously simplifying), there is a concern. It is a question of 1. due weight, 2. Coatracking, 3. POV-insertion/whitewashing. The near-majority of the article should not be weighted towards the handful of academics who say the numbers are overestimated. At most it is a quick mention. DaltonCastle (talk) 20:28, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
The "Estimates" section begins by quoting Klas-Göran Karlsson, who is not remotely communist-leaning as far as I can tell. He has written a book specifically about the crimes of communist states. Also, he is not saying that the estimates are exaggerated, but that they are contentious and debated. This is true, and it is a good summary of the literature. Every author who has estimated the number of people killed by communist regimes has arrived at a different number, and the differences between the numbers are in the tens of millions. It's not a question of high numbers or low numbers, it's just that they are very different from each other. For example, the three highest estimates cited in the "Estimates" section are 94 million, 110 million and 148 million. The differences between these "high" numbers are just as big as the differences between "high" and "low" numbers. So, it is not as if most academics agree on a single number, and a handful of sources say that this number is overestimated. There is no agreement on any single number, high or low. I think it is therefore good and important to cover all the estimates and the various debates about them.
I don't see any particular weight in the article towards some estimates or authors as opposed to others. Every author gets about the same space as every other author. On the contrary, it seems to me that removing some authors would privilege those that remain. We should not give the impression that there is academic agreement on an issue when there is no agreement, by citing a single author.
Finally, regarding WP:COATRACKING, I don't see that here at all. In my understanding, coatracking is when an article groups together different topics that are unrelated (or only tangentially related) to the article's topic. So, coatracking here would be if the article cited sources that don't talk about communist mass killings. But all the cited sources do in fact talk about communist mass killings. They disagree with each other on things like estimates or causes, but describing sources that disagree with each other is not coatracking. That's just standard academic debate. - Small colossal (talk) 05:53, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
Any academic work is going to full of things that can be critiqued. Respectfully, your edit had a massive amount of such material, (plus a whataboutism argument made by someone.) I think that a high-quality paragraph (information, not talking points) covering variability and possible bias in estimates would be a good addition. But IMHO the edit that I just described was not that. Sincerely, North8000 (talk) 19:42, 21 October 2024 (UTC)

Bad sourcing and obvious bias.

This whole page needs to be cleaned up. 2601:248:5181:5C70:F407:1C36:A131:1B6D (talk) 04:43, 30 November 2024 (UTC)

You're welcome to get started. Have any suggestions? MWFwiki (talk) 03:31, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
  • You will have to be more specific. As you can see from some of the older discussions above and in the archives, there have been a lot of discussions of possible bias from different directions, some of which have resulted in changes and some of which hasn't; without more details we can't even attempt to answer you. --Aquillion (talk) 14:30, 9 December 2024 (UTC)
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