Misplaced Pages

:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard: Difference between revisions - Misplaced Pages

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
< Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 17:34, 13 August 2009 editDlabtot (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users10,760 edits Reliable source for some statements, not for others← Previous edit Latest revision as of 13:24, 7 January 2025 edit undoChoucas Bleu (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users963 editsm List of pornographic performers by decade: Moving reply under comment being replied to 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|Misplaced Pages noticeboard for discussion of biographies of living people}}
{{NOINDEX}}
<noinclude>{{Pp-move-indef}}</noinclude>{{/Header}}
]
::]
]
{{User:MiszaBot/config {{User:MiszaBot/config
|archiveheader = {{archivemainpage|WP:BLPN}} | archiveheader = {{NOINDEX}} {{archivemainpage|WP:BLPN}}
|maxarchivesize = 200K | maxarchivesize = 290K
|counter = 68 | counter = 365
|minthreadsleft = 1 | minthreadsleft = 1
|minthreadstoarchive = 1 | minthreadstoarchive = 1
|algo = old(7d) | algo = old(9d)
|archive = Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard/Archive%(counter)d | archive = Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard/Archive%(counter)d
}} }}
{{Misplaced Pages:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard/Header}}
__FORCETOC__
__NEWSECTIONLINK__


== ] ==


== Problematic redirect from one BLP to another: Rabea Massaad ==
I would welcome a quick look by someone of a dispute emerging at the ] page. I do not not normally write at Bio pages but I think I started this article and have contributed to it on and off and now a dispute has emerged with another editor deleting material citing BLP SYN and OR. It seems some third editor had been adding POV and weasel words and these were used to make more sweeping changes. I have added back the main text without the problem text but now I am being told that the material breaks BLP.
{{archive top|]: Resolved and recommended for closure. ] (]) 05:15, 29 December 2024 (UTC)}}
Rob Chapman and ] do not appear to be the same person, and no redirect between them should exist without any explanation at the redirect target, ]. The ] specifies a different redirect, and through a series of ] and a double redirect removal, we're now in this mess. So after a PROD by another user has already been denied on *cough* *cough* procedural grounds, can we finally rectify this situation? The easiest way I can see is still simply deleting the ] page (without prejudice). Thank you. ] (]) 04:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


Comments welcomed.--] (]) 20:59, 14 July 2009 (UTC) :] looks like your forum. ] (]) 05:07, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::To clarify, Rob Chapman and Rabea Massaad are separate guitarists who once played together in a band called Dorje. The 2017 AfD for Massad resulted in a redirect to Dorje, and the 2023 AfD for Dorje resulted in a redirect to Chapman. Massad has a fairly robust online presence and is therefore a plausible search term. I mentioned him briefly at ] and edited the redirect to go to that section. By the way, Chapman and Massad are still close associates but the band is defunct. ] (]) 18:11, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I added a reference verifying Massaad's role in Dorje. ] (]) 18:27, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::::So now we have a section of Rob Chapman's article which serves as the main Misplaced Pages mention of the band Dorje. There is also a redirect ] which goes there. My updates the redirect ] to point directly to the section of Chapman's article that mentions the band. Hopefully this is not a controversial edit. Now that Cullen328 has improved the referencing, I don't see anything else to be done, and suggest that this thread be closed. ] (]) 18:39, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Thank you to all for fixing this and not directing me to forum shop. ] (]) 18:55, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
{{archive bottom}}


== ] ==
My issues originated with these edits by ] which seemed to me to remove material which rightly belongs in the article. They did however contain some very strong worded elements which I think have been added recently by another editor. I reverted the deletions but took out the objectional elements as I saw them. However ] has deleted again claiming breaches of BLP POV and OR.


Full of BLP and NPOV vio's, unencyclopedic language and unreliable sources. I removed a couple. &nbsp; Much of article reads like it was copied from a blog post or tabloid, and lack of proof of Native ancestry (and/or or not being enrolled in a tribe) is repeatedly conflated with lying. --] <sup>]</sup> • <sub>(])]</sub> 18:48, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:... and the two diffs above got reverted , restoring some really poor prose and sources. This is a very sensitive topic area and I don't want to ] anyone, but clearly the article needs more experienced editorial eyes and existing editors need to review ] (and hopefully realize the difference between editing an encyclopedia and human rights advocacy). --] <sup>]</sup> • <sub>(])]</sub> 11:04, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
::Unless a published '''reliable''' source specifically describes the person as a "pretendian", they should not be on that notable examples list at all. BLP is clear on this - any contentious material about a living person that is unsourced or poorly sourced should be removed immediately.]] 12:55, 30 December 2024 (UTC)


:One problem is that while the article is about people who falsely claimed Native American heritage, its title is from a pejorative slang term, which it begins by defining. Perhaps a change of title along with moving information about the term Pretendian further down would help.
] claims there is a synthesis of sources. However, in the earlier reference, Gratzer points out that Goodman had made the connection and the element which has been deleted merely traces one example of this. This is not really a criticism of Gratzer but somehow backs up what he has been saying. I personally believe that this is worthy of retention in the article and does not constitiute WP:SYN. I don't think that it really matters WHICH earlier piece by Goodman made the connection but I think it is fair to show that Gratzer was being honest when he said that Goodman had made the same connection.
:Listing any notable people who have pretended to have native heritage is a recipe for imbalance and unwieldy length. Instead, we should find sources specifically about the topic to determine which persons are significant to the topic. It's more important to understand why this happens, how frequent it is and what damage it causes than to provide a hit list of perpetrators.
:] (]) 15:20, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq|1=It's more important to understand why this happens, how frequent it is and what damage it causes than to provide a hit list of perpetrators.}} Well said! ]&nbsp;] 15:29, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:*The title strikes me as violating ]; I'm skeptical that the term is common enough to pass ] for the phenomenon. If the article is going to cover the phenomenon and not the neologism (and currently, most sources in it don't use the term), it needs to be renamed to a descriptive title. The hard part is coming up with one. --] (]) 16:19, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
A lengthy requested move discussion already occurred and nothing has changed with the term to warrant a title change in the article. https://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Pretendian#Requested_move_21_December_2021 ] <sub>]</sub> 16:36, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
*It seems fairly evident that the neologism and the phenomenon are both notable, but we shouldn't be covering the phenomenon under the neologism: I don't see evidence that "pretendian" is the dominant descriptive term even for high-profile cases of falsely claiming native ancestry. And it goes without saying that an absence of evidence of native ancestry is insufficient to list an individual on that page. ] (]) 17:25, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
::I mean, if the article is titled "Pretendian", the ''only'' sources that could justify putting someone on the page is a source using the term "Pretendian" specifically. It's a sufficiently emotive neologism that we can't really ] someone into that category - any source that doesn't use the word "Pretendian" is useless. If we want a list of BLPs who fall under the broader concept, we would need a separate article for that; we can't label people with a neologism without a specific source using the term. --] (]) 16:13, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:That discussion is three years old, but more importantly, it doesn't address the ] / ] issue. We can have an article on a neologism, absolutely; we ''cannot'' label individuals with a negative neologism unless we have a source using ''that precise word'' to refer to them. Any living person named in that article must have at least one high-quality source calling them a "Pretendian", using that exact word. Anyone who doesn't have that source backing up the fact that they have been called a "Pretendian", specifically, needs to be removed immediately until / unless that source is found - sources that use other words are useless (and ] / ] in context.) --] (]) 16:20, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::The term "pretendian" is used frequently in news sources (some Canadian news outlets have dedicated reporters on a dedicated "pretendian beat". The term is used in academia (, , to weed out the Spanish-language discussions). ''Indigenous identity fraud'' is used but not nearly as often. If you want to suggest a name change, the talk page of ] would be the place to do it. ] (]) 16:48, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:::In order for a BLP to be included in the notables examples list though, the derogatory term "pretendian" needs to be used frequently and widely published in high-quality reliable sources describing that individual as such, in order for the BLP to be included in that section per BLP and LABEL.]] 18:45, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I agree with Isaidnoway, Aquillion and others. It's one thing to have an article on the concept and under that name. That might very well be justified if there are sufficient sources referring to it. However it's another to list living persons as pretendians. That needs sufficient sources establishing it's a common enough term used to describe this person. These sources needs to clearly use the term and not simply say other things such as the person has claimed Native American ancestry but it appears to be false. Likewise in others on the person, it's fine to mention controversies over any claims, but they should not be called or categorised as pretendians without sources. ] (]) 07:54, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::It's not a matter of what the article is named; the problem is ]. For an emotive, negative term like "pretendian", we need, at the absolute bare minimum, at least one source actually describing someone as such ''using that precise word''. Going "well these sources accusing them of indigenous identity fraud are essentially the same thing" is ]; in other contexts it might not be enough to worry about but in the context of applying a highly emotive label to a living person it's unacceptable. We can have an article on the term, but we can't use it as the general list for people accused of {{tq|indigenous identity fraud}} because of that issue; all we can list there are people called "pretendian" ''specifically'', using that exact word. --] (]) 15:02, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::That's valid. Some people have been described as "pretendians" in published, secondary sources. I'd be fine with a separate list for Indigenous identity fraud since that's a more neutral descriptive term that is increasingly being used in scholarly writing. I've been slammed IRL but can find citations in the near future. ] (]) 15:27, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:This is a complicated issue (especially from a BLP perspective) and it seems like a lot of the long form sources note just how complicated an issue this is. I think that others may be right in saying that there may be multiple overlapping notable and perhaps less notable topics here which can be organized in a number of ways. ] (]) 20:34, 31 December 2024 (UTC)


== ] ==
] claims is about the use of the term "embroilded". However, the element that has been added back is that the issues below are all about his alleged misuse of statistics. But the first dispute in the article is not about a medical dispute and indeed Gratzer was not the source of the disputed statistic. The second dispute listed is again about another person's misuse of a medical statistic. Guilliani is not an expert but his people have Gratzer as the source. Gratzer did not deny this but said Goodman had made the same connection. (my previous point refers). The third dispute was about Gratzer allegedly misleading a congressional committee. For these reasons I think "embroiled" is a good word to cover all three incidents as it does not imply that Gratzer was misleading in all three disputes even though he was personally involved in all three.


I'd appreciate it if some of you BLP experts could have a look at this article. I pruned it some already and found a curious mix of promotional language and possibly overstated accusations. Note: I just blocked an edit warrior from whitewashing it. Thank you so much, ] (]) 02:11, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
] deletes the entire substance of the dispute about misleading the congress. The reason stated was "transcript of a cable news exchange is not encyclopedic". But we have the words in the video. Again, the words when orginally put in the article were substantially from the video. It seems that someone else has modified them since I orginally placed them in the article .


:I've had a small prune and clean up. ]] 10:37, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
It seems that another editor ] has been making edits which seem unhelpful such as which removes relevent material from a lead paragraph, and this one which is ostensibly about whether the article was peer reviewed. However, I had already addressed the point with which put the text in without reference to "peer review". ] again deleted the para again , now claiming WP:OR.


== Harald Walach ==


The "]" section for this guy needs more eyes, I think. The first sentence merely states that he has "advocated for revision of the concept of evidence-based medicine, promoting holistic and homeopathic alternatives in his publications." and then links to a ] source showing him writing about these topics. What's the controversy here?
A pair of neutral fresh eyes to reviiew what has been going on here would be welcomed.--] (]) 09:37, 15 July 2009 (UTC)
:I don't have time to go into detail now, but the Allegations of misuse of statistics clearly has ] problems (most obviously with the long media quotes), and the list of "selected" publications is far too long. It may be that Grazer is particularly known for this episode, but it still has to be summarised appropriately in a reasonably brief way, not ] to death. ] <sup>]</sup> 16:40, 15 July 2009 (UTC)


The last paragraph I removed because the RS link provided did not appear to say what was claimed in the paragraph (when I read the translation), but the author did insinuate a "scandal" not directly related to Walach, though. But it was reverted by @] who said I "don't know what I'm talking about" and that I'm "whitewashing" Walach. So, I'm hoping to get another opinion on this. ] (]) 23:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
I agree that the article may have lingered too long on the dispute about prostate cancer survival but because the error was pointed out by experts and Gratzer continued to defend his position it seriously calls into question his value as a source of reliable information. Similarly in the argument with Kucinich, he clearly tried to present a false picture to the congressional committee and answered questions he was not asked and failed to answer properly the questions that Kucinich put to him. As he was there as an EXPERT WITNESS it is clearly important that his testimony should enlighten and not mislead. Now ] has removed any reference to the reliability of Gratzer as an expert witness and the Kucinich accusation has been reduced to the single word "clash". IMHO that is in itself a clear distortion of what happened. And the reference to Goodman as a source for the identical source has gone altogether and the only reference to Goodman is a puff piece from his book on the people who helped him write his book. --] (]) 20:31, 17 July 2009 (UTC)


== ] ==
The changes made in the last 2 weeks have completely transformed this article, mostly for the worst. --] (]) 11:48, 24 July 2009 (UTC)


I would like to bring some attention to this BLP, as there is a particular claim that keeps getting reinstated, often with poor sourcing (including, so far, a Wordpress blog and ], which as self-published sources are ]). {{ping|FMSky}} has been adding the content with the aforementioned sources, along with, as of writing this, two sources on the current revision I am uncertain about, morecore.de () and metalzone (). I can't find discussions of either source at ], so I would like to bring this here to get consensus on the sources and the material they support, rather than continuing to remove the material per ]. Thank you. ] (]) 03:38, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
A further dispute has arisen. The article in the opinion of two editors reads more like an advertisement for the gentlemen, listing sequentially all his academic achievements (which are not notable) and his writings (again, most of which are not notable). This has effectively buried any criticism of his mis-use of statistics in the U.S. political sphere (for which he has become notable) much harder to see and even what was there has been watered down to the point that it is almost invisible. Some of the edits, quite frankly, look as though they must have been made by the subject of the article (though perhaps not the more reent ones). Frankly, the article now reads more like the man's resumé than a proper WP article about a minor bit player in U.S. politics.--] (]) 10:29, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
:Its fine, he made these comments. Nothing controversial about it. Move on --] (]) 03:39, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::Please see ]. Even if he made those comments, they need reliable sources verifying them (i.e., not ]). Simply put, Wordpress blogs and people's self-published YouTube videos cannot be used to support claims about living people. ] (]) 03:41, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Yes here are 2 https://www.morecore.de/news/finn-mckenty-the-punk-rock-mba-verlaesst-youtube-ich-habe-es-nur-wegen-des-geldes-gemacht/ & https://www.metalzone.fr/news/208728-finn-mckenty-the-punk-rock-mba-aucun-interet-musique/
:::We can also put in the video of him uttering these words as it falls under ] --] (]) 03:44, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::I think citing the video itself as a primary source would probably be the best option here. ] (]) 03:47, 2 January 2025 (UTC)


== ] ==
:This has topped the list for a while. How does one get attention here?--] (]) 23:43, 3 August 2009 (UTC)


This biography of a pseudonymic pornographic actress (primarily notable for work on OnlyFans) was created on December 29 by {{U|Meena}} and is heavily sourced to tabloids and tabloidesque websites. Some of the sources don't support what they are cited for (e.g. the two cited for her attending a particular school, and misrepresentation of sources on whether she's from Nottinghamshire or Derbyshire). The date of birth is unsourced and the real name is sourced to that cites it to the ''Daily Mirror''. I have tried an emergency initial BLP cutback; {{U|Launchballer}} has tried a more severe cutback; the original has been restored by an IP and by {{U|Tamzin Kuzmin}} with the alleging vandalism and misogyny in the edit summary. ] (]) 17:33, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
*This listing could use some attention from fresh eyes. There is a lot of POV-pushing to the detriment of a living person going on, and intervention by an uninterested third party would be helpful in reaching a stable version here, rather than the present edit war. ] (]) 19:28, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:I went through that article and yeeted everything I could find that either did not check out or was sourced to an inappropriate source. I suggest draftifying.--<span style="background:#FF0;font-family:Rockwell Extra Bold">]]]</span> 20:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::...and it's all been restored (again) by Tamzin Kuzmin. Who also happened to , replacing it with a report about an article they've never edited. Hmmm. ] (]) 20:26, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Metacomment. The reverting user was blocked. The block notice implicated ]. So I removed the ] post here, but it's available at the diff above by ] in case an editor in good standing cares to clean it up, talkpage it, and/or follow up here. Cheers. ] (]) 00:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


== Poorly sourced Russian spies/ex-spies poisoning claim of Bashar al-Assad ==
== ] ==


{{la|Bashar al-Assad}} BLP attention is needed. {{diff|Talk:Bashar al-Assad|1267015498|1266549621|On the talk page}} I have warned about the Russian spies'/ex-spies' Telegram claim of Bashar al-Assad being poisoned being too poorly sourced. Probably because of al-Assad's as a fugitive wanted for ] and as an ex-dictator, few people seem to be bothered with leaving the rumour in place, despite the low quality of the sourcing that all point to a viral rumour based on the ''General SVR'' ] channel. The ]ly "may have been" and "it was reported that" seem to be seen as sufficient to justify propagating the rumour, without attribution to ''General SVR'' as the source of the claim. After half a day, none of the more regular mainstream media sources appear to have said anything about this, including independent reliable Russian sources such as '']'' and '']''. Currently there are two sentences with the rumour (one in the lead, one in the body of the article). Diffs:
<small>Source: by ] in Mail Online, last updated at 1:17 AM on 19th July 2009</small>
* Adding the rumour:
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266808883|08:50, 2 January 2025}} by {{u|BasselHarfouch}} source = ]
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266896530|18:49, 2 January 2025}} by {{u|Bri}} source = ]
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266975208|02:04, 3 January 2025}} by {{u|Richie1509}} source = ]
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266997014|04:24, 3 January 2025}} by {{u|Geraldshields11}} source = ]
* Removing individual instances of the rumour:
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266976981|02:14, 3 January 2025}} by me (I didn't realise that other occurrences remained)
** {{diff|Bashar al-Assad|prev|1266998539|04:33, 3 January 2025}} by {{u|Nikkimaria}}
] (]) 13:32, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


:I see, thanks for letting me know about it. ] (]) 13:40, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
{{La|Bob Ainsworth}} - A defence minister in Britain's Labour government, ], has been the subject of an article in the conservative ] <s>]</s> by ], who edits here as {{userlinks|Clockback}}. The article sites an unnamed spokesperson for Ainsworth confirming that in 1982 he attended two meetings of a left current then inside the Labour party, the ]. Discussion on the Talk page concerns the relevance and balance of referring to ]'s article in the article, especially since the source is unnamed and is cited only by that article. ] is a newer contributor and, while other editors have pointed him to Misplaced Pages's policies, he feels that bias by other editors is preventing his article from being cited. He intends to add the reference to the article without winning consensus. Others' opinions are welcomed. --] (]) 15:17, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
::See also: ] from the same source. ] (]) 17:47, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
:Thank you for clearing up this point, i was not aware of it. I will be careful in the future ] (]) 07:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC)


== Joe Manchin ==
Er, not the conservative "The News of the World" actually, but the "Mail on Sunday", a regrettable but telling example of Duncan's imperfect grasp of the argument and facts I've been putting forward for some days now. Is he paying attention? What the politics of the newspaper have to do with it, others may judge. The Minister's spokesman, a government employee, is unnamed because of a normal journalistic convention governing the making of such statements. The statement has been published in a national newspaper and not denied or challenged by its subject, since it is an accurate account of what was said. I have offered to provide the spokesperson's identity on the same basis to Duncan, should he wish it. The issue is not over the citation of my article, which in any normal circumstances would be unproblematic. I would actually much prefer it if someone else rather than me would insert the fact. It is over the objections of Duncan and another editor to the inclusion of this fact about Mr Ainsworth in the article. These two editors have also agrred on the removal of other material on Mr Ainsworth, which I argued should not be removed until it could be replaced by the accurate and verifiable information I seek to include. The other editor unilaterally removed the earlier material, without any substitution, against my clear objections. I have not myself so much as touched the article. I have attempted for several days to achieve consensus and been met with an utter unwillingness to compromise, combined with various peremptory warnings. I have therefore given a fortnight's notice of my intention to include the disputed fact, and sought to involve other editors as widely as possible, believing my case to be sound. Others' opinions, as many as possible, are indeed welcomed. hence the fortnight's notice. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 17:02, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
:Thanks for the correction ]. --] (]) 17:37, 27 July 2009 (UTC)


Today we have an unnecessary edit war on BLP outgoing Sen. ] (and perhaps many other articles this morning) about the addition of infobox data which is factually incorrect at the time of insertion (], ]). Nobody is arguing the data, just the timing of the edit. While ] is one person jumping the gun, they are a longtime contributor here. Their position should be taken in good faith, IMHO. Also in my opinion, these edits are technically BLP violations because they impart incorrect information. ], such clear BLP violations {{tq|must be '''removed immediately and without waiting for discussion'''}} (bolding from the original) by ANY editor. This sort of thing might lead to an edit war in which ''everybody'' is trying to do the right thing. Note: the page was correctly edited for the change; one click would have changed it at the proper time of transition.
: The statement must be ] using a ], and I don't think rumours mentioned by columnists have the same status as news stories. If the spokesperson were named and directly quoted in a story by a national newspaper like the ]—or if the newspaper story unequivocally repeated the allegation as a fact (not as a rumour)—it would be a different matter. If their lawyers don't want to take that step, why should Misplaced Pages? - ] (]) 17:38, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
:1. Does this sort of thing happen every opening of congress?
:2. Isn't this a potential future problem for BLPN, since edit wars on this are built-in to the apparent excitement of awaiting the actual moment of transition?
:3. I'm inclined towards timed page protection, but page protection is not normally ]. literally ''under attack'' for BLP violations. If we know this is common for transitions of administration, isn't this an exception?
While this noticeboard doesn't normally discuss policy, should we be aware of such disruption in advance? Making it harder for '']'' editors like Therequiembellishere who feel... Well, I'll let them make their own affirmative position here if they wish. ] (]) 14:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


Page protections is the only way. IMHO, most editors who do these premature changes every two years, don't actually realize it's too early. They seem to assume once mid-night occurs, start updating. ] (]) 15:24, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Please pay attention, and stop trying to say this is not what it is. It's not a 'rumour mentioned by a columnist',(please try to avoid personal attacks, such as the implied slur on my competence in this expression) but a direct factual quotation obtained by me through an official statement on a government e-mail made by the taxpayer-financed spokesperson of the Secretary of State for Defence, who made it after consulting personally with that Secretary of State. By long convention, such spokespersons are not named. This has no bearing on the value of the story. Had the story been an unverified and untrue claim, it would have been denied ( as it has not been) . This is why newspaper stories (with the sole exception of this one) are used as verifiable sources on Misplaced Pages. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 20:31, 27 July 2009 (UTC)
:I raise this issue not to cause a problem today. I'm not trying to unduly embarrass any editor for taking a position I don't agree with. On the other hand, we have established BLP policy the ''hard way'' through sometimes brutal disagreements about how to carefully calibrate opposing positions based on good faith argument. I trust the BLP policy because we earned it. We don't need to re-learn these lessons. But we could discuss ''how to proceed next time''. ] (]) 15:29, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::In agreement. ] (]) 15:31, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::Under policy, it would be within the responsibility of any editor to revert these edits and report the editor to this board. But for my starting this conversation, it would be within my remit to revert the edits, fully protect the page and warn Therequiembellishere (and others). I haven't done that. I want the discussion about what to do next time. ] (]) 15:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::I understand, this is for the next time around when terms end & begin. PS - I should note, that the premature changes in the BLPs tend to have a ripple effect on related pages. ] (]) 15:41, 3 January 2025 (UTC)


I've said everything I want on this on Manchin's talk. It's just a lot of pedantry by a few editors with obsessive fealty and exactitude that doesn't meaningfully help anything or anyone, least of all a casual reader. ] (]) 16:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
: Being a columnist isn't a ''bad'' thing—], ] and ] did it pretty well—but that sort of writing doesn't get the same pre-publication scrutiny as news stories. In ], for example, ] sometimes writes as a journalist and sometimes as a columnist, ] is always a columnist and the old Peterborough column was an unashamed step or two below that. This isn't rocket science: if you can find a rock-solid verifiable reference <u>in a proper news story that has had real editorial/legal clearance</u>, then there's no risk to Misplaced Pages in repeating it. - ] (]) 21:54, 27 July 2009 (UTC)


:Verifiability is not "pedantry". Members aren't sworn in until noon EST, correct? &ndash;&nbsp;]&nbsp;(]) 16:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:: Pointillist still appears not to have read the item with any care, and is simply mistaken about the way journalism works. It is an implied personal attack to suggest that someone is retailing an unconfirmed rumour, and I suggest he withdraws this baseless suggestion. Also, I think I know more about newspapers than Pointillist, though he is welcome to cite experience if he has it.. Every word I write ( and I have been a newspaper reporter since 1973, having served the indentures then required, studied newspaper law, learned shorthand, reported trials and public bodies, been deputy political editor of a national daily newspaper) is subject to exactly the same editorial process, oversight and legal constraint as the rest of the MoS. The opinions expressed are my own. The facts I produce are facts and must be substantiated. Since (unlike many columnists ) I am a reporter by trade, I regularly obtain and research my own facts. It is perfectly true that columnists sometimes hint and insinuate, without offering facts. Hints and insinuations cannot be used as verification. At other times they can state confirmed facts, as I do in this case. It is not the vehicle that decides the nature of the contents. The contents must be judged on their merits. I repeat, this is a statement given on the record by the official spokesperson of a Cabinet Minister. I might add that none of the information on Mr Ainsworth currently given in his political biography appears to have any referenced verification at all. Yet my opponents, whose rigour appears selective to me, are not proposing to remove this material. Peter Hitchens logged in as ] (]) 07:27, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
:::"none of the information on Mr Ainsworth currently given in his political biography appears to have any referenced verification at all". Assuming you're referring to the WP entry and not something else, almost all the info is in fact referenced. ] <sup>]</sup> 11:06, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


:I can understand changes being made about 1 or 2 hrs ''before'' the actual event, when dealing with so many bios. But 12 hrs before the event, is too early. ] (]) 16:41, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
One of the problems here is that Hitchens is (apparently) both the Misplaced Pages editor wanting to add a fact, and the external source on which that fact draws as a (hopefully) ]. This wouldn't be so bad if he could firewall the two (editor/source), and ''only'' draw on the public information. But instead he is drawing on his private knowledge of how that source was produced (having produced it), to provide ''non-published'' context and detail for the published source, in order to make the source appear more credible than the published information suggests. Some of this shades, inevitably, into ] territory, and this complicates matters. For me, too, the fact that Hitchens' article seems to raise the IMG link primarily to smear Ainsworth by linking him (without, seemingly, any evidence other than attending a couple of meetings at the behest of a friend) with IMG's support for the IRA ("The Minister and the IRA fan club" subheadline!) obviously can't violate ], but it makes me uneasy, especially as no other press appears to have picked this up. Finally, there is the ] issue - it's all very well for Hitchens to make columnistic hay out of "a couple of meetings", but is that significant enough to merit inclusion in Ainsworth's encyclopedia entry? It has to be noted that Hitchens has demonstrated precisely zero ''significance'' for these meetings (indeed the only evidence is that they were ''insignificant'', merely confirming Ainsworth's view that he wanted nothing to do with the IMG. (Hitchens blog, which doesn't work in Firefox but does in ] - ). Finally - I almost forgot - another troubling aspect of this is that hitchens apparently came across the story from reading Misplaced Pages (his article and blog refer to "stories", which he's declined to identify), where a completely unsourced assertion on the subject was found until I removed it, leading to the present debate. This, again, is a troubling interaction between Misplaced Pages and a published source, this time going the other way. Words of wisdom, anyone? ] <sup>]</sup> 09:54, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
:Obvious BLP violations are not pedantry. Those edits added provably incorrect information. Can ] provide a policy-based answer why those edits do not violate BLP guidance? This is just bad acting under the cover of labelling others. Do they not see that? ] (]) 19:59, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Therequiembellishere's response here demonstrates we actually have a problem, at least with that user, whose reply here is non-responsive to the issue. BLP policy does indeed require {{tq|obsessive fealty and exactitude}}, as long experience with this board has shown. As my OP suggested, any user might justifiably have reverted Therequiembellishere right into 3RR and immediate blocking, just by merely diligently following policy. Therequiembellishere might bookmark this thead for when it happens to them two years from now. I could have done it this morning, but instead chose to create this thread and invite the user to comment. Would preemptive full protection be a reasonable solution to such flippant disruption? ] (]) 20:14, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::I oppose pre-emptive full protection. I strongly support an immediate sitewide block of any repeat offenders, with the block to expire at noon Washington, DC time on the swearing in day. ] (]) 21:51, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:I'm with Therequiembellishere on this: a prediction, especially one based on clear US law, is not a false statement or a BLP violation. Joe Manchin's term does end on January 3rd, 2025, and that was still true on January 2nd, 2025. It's, in fact, been true for over a month now. The only way it could end on a different day would be if Joe Manchin had died before then, which would obviously be a BLP violation to assume.
:(Unlike Therequiembellishere I don't even think the opposition is pedantry. Pedants are technically correct; to say that the end of Joe Manchin's term was not January 3rd before January 3rd is not even technically correct. It's just false.) ] (]) 07:43, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
::IMO the issue is not the term ending time but the claim Joe Manchin served as senator etc when he was still serving as a senator at the time. ] (]) 10:50, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
:::For further clarity. I think our readers reasonably understand our articles might be outdated. So if the article says Joe Manchin is serving and his term ended a few hours ago or even a few days ago that's fine. I mean in other cases it's reasonable to expect them to even be weeks or months out of date. But if out article says Joe Manchin served, I think they reasonable would expect he is no longer serving. As I understand it, there's no more issue. But if this reoccurs, I'm not sure Cullen328's solution is correct. I mean if some admin is volunteering to mollycoddle each repeat offender then okay I guess. But otherwise the norm is we expect editors to obey our policy and guidelines by themselves without needing handholding in the form of continual blocks everytime something comes up to stop them. Therefore I'd suggest either an admin subject them to escalating blocks quickly leading up to an indefinite if they repeat perhaps under BLP or AP2; or we do it via community bans. While I'd personally be fine with a site ban, it might be more palatable to the rest of the community if we instead do it as a topic ban on making such changes. With a clear topic ban, hopefully an admin will be more willing to subject them to escalating blocks. Even if not, I think the community would be much more willing to siteban such editors if they repeat after a community topic ban. As a final comment, I also don't see why editor feels it's something so urgent that they need to do it 12 hours in advance. This almost seems one of those lame edits we sometimes get at the ANs resulting from the apparent desire of an editor to be first or get the credit so we have editors creating "drafts" with basically zero content long before there's anything to write about then some other editor is sick of this editor doing this and so ignores the draft and makes their own. ] (]) 12:59, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Technically speaking, if you are still serving you also have served. So it's not technically speaking false, although this really ''is'' pedantry and I would not say it's the most true possible statement.
:::I'm still not convinced it's a BLP violation, though. ] (]) 04:24, 6 January 2025 (UTC)


{{ping|BusterD}} maybe a RFC or something is required, to establish how to handle future premature changes to such bios. ] (]) 22:31, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
Why not use the original reports as a source rather than Hitchens' column? If these stories are on wikipedia, then, I think they're very shady. But if they're in other news outlets then they're probably OK. DrKiernan (talk) 11:37, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


== Serious BLP vios in ] ==
: AFAIK the trail stops at the . Is that correct, ]? - ] (]) 11:49, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


This article is riddled with serious BLP vios. I tried tagging them, but there are so many I would have to carpet bomb the page with CN tags. This page needs urgent attention from any editors with experience and/or sources pertaining to organized crime. -] (]) 17:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I've read some of the talk page discussion: it strikes me that this isn't an argument over sources. Clockback wants to remove the "candidate member" bit and add that he attended a couple of IMG meetings. That's fine. The source does support that he attended a couple of meetings, whether the spokesman was named or not is irrelevant. As rightly pointed out, this is just a standard journalistic practice. The question is over whether that is notable enough for his biography: as the biography is very short and requires expansion, the answer to that question is yes. I think the sentence suggested should be added. ] (]) 11:51, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


:P.S. I've taken a look at most of the articles on North American mafia groups and almost all have serious BLP issues. I've added "Category:Possibly living people" with its BLP Edit Notice to all of the pages excepting groups that have been defunct for more than thirty years. These pages are in rough shape and a lot of material needs to be either cited or deleted. -] (]) 03:32, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
: Mmm, but the text in Hitchen's column doesn't make any statement about the relationship of the spokesperson to the subject. ''"I was interested to see stories ... so I asked a ‘spokesperson’"'' is all we get. It isn't enough, IMO. If ] is really Peter Hitchens the solution lies in his hands: publish more concrete allegations in the Mail on Sunday. - ] (]) 12:09, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


== Taylor Lorenz BLP issues and harassment of subject based on article contents ==
:: Yes, I see that you mean. It's probably unfortunate for Hitchens that he chose to put spokesperson in inverted commas. It does reduce the force of his statement. I'm coming around to your view that it is less solid than we would want. ] (]) 12:29, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


The ] article has an unusual history in the sense that the contents of the article have led to harassment of Lorenz in the past, or other issues impacting her financially.
::: I think that because the biography is short the issue of balance is important. I'm sure Ainsworth has attended several meetings of several organisations. If we select one fact, about not-notable two meetings in 1982 which are not notable to any other source, then that seems to me to be an innuendo pushes Peter Hitchen's POV that the cabinet is under the influence of revolutionary Marxists. If the statement from the "spokesperson" were in the public domain, and we had a primary source, then we could assess it. That said, there's no echo in the media or civil society from the 'revelation', and it's not notable. If Ainsworth's biography is written, there can't be more than a few sentences on it even if the work is hundreds of pages. --] (]) 13:07, 28 July 2009 (UTC)


Most recently it was regarding her date of birth and Misplaced Pages choosing to use a date range, with the allegations being that it was Lorenz choosing to keep her birthdate off of the Internet or being deceitful.
::::A standard I often apply is whether something would be mentioned in a person's (reasonable length - a page or two of a newspaper) obituary. Something only a book-length biography would mention is ] for a standard WP entry. (For very long WP entries - people about whom loads is known - a standard somewhere inbetween can be applied, but that's not the case here.) ] <sup>]</sup> 13:56, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
#
#


There have also seemingly been issues according to Lorenz with errors in the article causing her lost business opportunities
:::Oh, honestly, there we were on the verge of sense, and the fact that 'spokesperson' was placed in inverted commas is dragged in. This is not a serious point. Think a moment here. What exactly could this punctuation possibly mean, that would in fact detract from the verificational nature of the quotation? Let's not get tangled up in inverted commas. I put 'spokesperson' in inverted commas because I disapprove of 'inclusive language' and so I think it's a stupid word, and that's what I do with stupid words. As a columnist, I am able to do so. It is, however, the word the person involved specifically asked me to use when we agreed the use of the quotation. Please do resolve this. I'm off now till 9th August. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 16:54, 28 July 2009 (UTC)
{{blockquote|"This insane 100% false story is affecting my brand deals and some partnership stuff I have in the works for 2025, so I really need it corrected ASAP!!!"}}
::::I thought that's what the inverted commas meant. But there is the alternative meaning too that they're not really a spokesperson. The author of a source coming here to tell us how to interpret it is one of the problems I alluded to above. WP conversations are not normally citable sources (also, while I have no reason to doubt it, there is no external evidence I'm aware of that Clockback is ''actually'' Hitchens; that WP identities aren't verified is one of the reasons on-wiki statements can't normally be sources). ] <sup>]</sup> 06:32, 29 July 2009 (UTC)


An addition of a 'Harassment and coordinated attacks' section was in August of last year, with information being added shortly after regarding a Twitter suspension. I moved the text around recently in an at a more neutral article that was quickly reverted. A followed shortly after but there hasn't been a policy based consensus.
:::::Then assume that 'Clockback' is not Peter Hitchens and you still have a MSM reference for the info 'Clockback' seeks to include in the article. In assuming 'Clockback' is simply a third person/WP editor it removes one of your objections to his edit, namely that he is the author of the source. Simples! The other objection, that the info will be taken as this or that by a reader should, IMHO, be dismissed - we should not presume to know what a reader will make of info, we should simply provide it. Peter Hitchens was himself a member of the International Socialists if memory serves me well. He declares this and it's up to me what I make of it. Ainsworth is a prominent politician, this info should be declared, it's not like he's an ordinary person with no defence. We should state relevant facts about politicians and this is a relevant fact not that he once dated Joanna Lumley or picks his nose (I made those up). That politicians attend such a meeting more than once as an adult should be noted. That 'Spokesperson' is in quotes could be easily dealt with by Peter Hitchens mentioning the fact again in his sizeable column without quotes. But would that confirm to you that 'Clockback' is in fact Peter Hitchens and confirm an objection? I'm familiar with Peter Hitchens' work and a more fussy person with regards to words and grammar I think it would be difficult to find. So what does 'spokesperson' mean? I put 'Clockback' in quotes because it is a username not a real name. But he exists and I can quote him. It seems to me that 'spokesperson' is in quotes because the poor woman sending the email in question is probably not employed under the job title 'spokeperson' but under some other title, yet has been charged with this duty. That happens a lot. The difficulty therefore is whether WP is prepared to accept the statement by Peter Hitchens writing in the MoS. It's MSM and a creditable source. Include the info. ] <sup>(])</sup> 09:48, 29 July 2009 (UTC)
::::::] is quite right about ]'s identity: it's irrelevant for BLP RS purposes. Personally I don't like this source because it isn't specific enough. It looks like someone trying to make bricks without enough straw, and I don't think it should be repeated in the ] article. If/when the original press story is followed up in the MoS or other newspapers, we'll know whether it fails the ] test. - ] (]) 10:20, 29 July 2009 (UTC)


My question- should we have a devoted harassment section included for someone who has been harassed based on her Misplaced Pages profile previously? It seems like ] comes into play with directly focusing attention on her being a victim and could lead to further harassment by highlighting it with equal weight as her career section.
:::You drag me back from my holiday with this unending assumption of bad faith on my part, combined with pettifogging, quibbling and straining over gnats and inverted commas. Excuse me? Not merely is it barmily suggested that I would for unfathomable reasons pretend to be someone I'm not (if I were pretending to be someone, surely I'd pick a more popular person?). An immensely specific and clearly sourced piece of definite information is airily dismissed as 'not specific enough' and accurate information diligently obtained using the proper channels is described as 'bricks without straw'. What would satisfy these people? An affidavit? Probably not, is my guess. I've said it before, and I'll now say it again, so exasperating is this pettifogging becoming. If a left-wing newspaper columnist, using exactly the same wording, did so to say that a spokesperson for a member of the Conservative front bench had confirmed that this politician had attended BNP meetings in his 30s, the fact would go into his Misplaced Pages entry without question or quibble. If Pointillist says the story is not specific, then what is not specific exactly? The spokesperson of a government minister says on the record that her employer attended IMG meetings. Where's the non-specificity? In what way is the straw absent from the the bricks? The whole debate (with a couple of notable exceptions) is infused with a refusal to assume good faith on my part. Please stop this. Meanwhile, is there (please, please, oh please) anyone else out there prepared to give the matter impartial consideration? By the way, the historian Andrew Roberts says in today's (July 30th) Daily Mail that Mr Ainsworth "flirted with Marxism before becoming a city councillor in Coventry".http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1203111/It-better-boys-Defence-Secretary-Bob-Ainsworth-stayed-holiday.html ?ITO=1490 Does that satisfy my detractors' demands for a follow-up? Shouldn't think so, but thought I'd mention it. Peter Hitchens, yes,really, signed in as ] (]) 16:34, 30 July 2009 (UTC)
:::::I do not think this should be included on ground of undue weight and POV pressing. If it receives further attention then it should be included. ] (]) 15:15, 31 July 2009 (UTC)


Personally I think the material could be presented more neutrally per ] but wanted to get a wider opinion.
Here's an article in the mail which states that he was a 'candidate member' of the international marxist group. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1203382/We-failed-Armed-Forces-Iraq-Afghanistan-Defence-Secretary-Bob-Ainsworth-admits.html
To those that say that this would represent undue weight, how can you until it's actually included in the article? I think that it is significant enough to include a sentence in the 'early life' section. After all, infomation about Alistair Darling's connection with the IMG is included in his article. So is the personal political history of most politicians. ] (]) 17:54, 31 July 2009 (UTC)
:I've read it three times and still cannot see anything about it. And even if it does, why should that receive any more precedence than the many other bits of information about him in the article? ] (]) 18:02, 2 August 2009 (UTC)


There is also a discussion currently going on if we should include her year of birth .
The info at issue here has today been published in the MoS without the punctuation that caused an objection. See Peter Hitchens' latest column. The only objection that remains is one of 'balance' which I dismiss for the same reasons Tiberius Curtainsmith gives above - the personal political history of most politicians is included in their WP entry. To have a 'balanced' political history is the reposibility of the subject, not the reporter. Don't shoot the messenger. I agree this info could be included in 'early life'. ] <sup>(])</sup> 16:52, 2 August 2009 (UTC)
] (]) 20:57, 5 January 2025 (UTC)
04:50, 6 January 2025 (UTC) ''Fixed incorrect diff''


:Removing the harassment section furthers the narrative that there are no coordinated harassment campaigns against her, and acts to diminish the effect those coordinated campaigns have wrought upon her. Generally speaking, victims of harassment don't want what they've gone through to be diminished.
This ''info'' that he is supposed to have gone to a marxist meeting a quarter of a century ago (but didn't inhale) adds nothing to the article of any worth. It look like an attempt to push a marxist label onto him, he is not a marxist is he? Are there any reports of this from the 80's? What does it add to the article? He went to a marxist meeting in 1980? and what happened there, what is notable about that? (] (]) 17:10, 2 August 2009 (UTC))


I am unaware of any evidence that discussing harassment on wiki for her, or in general, leads to further harassment. If that evidence exists, I'd certainly be wiling to change my stance. ] (]) 08:19, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:] - why do you put 'info' in italics? 'Info' is short for information and this is information we are discussing here, is it not? Information about Bob Ainsworth. And 'didn't inhale'? What's that supposed to mean? I have no idea whether Bob Ainsworth is a Marxist or not, do you? It's not for us to label him but to report the facts. Let's do it. This is a relevant, confirmed fact in a politicians political history - we're not discussing his favourite colour. ] <sup>(])</sup> 19:32, 2 August 2009 (UTC)


== Discussion on the scope of ] ==
::To answer your queries, I put info in italics to draw attention to it's worthlessness and therefore lack of real info (imo), didn't inhale is a ref to Clinton saying he tried hash but didn't inhale..as in comparison to this situation where Ainsworth went to a marxist meeting but didn't become a marxist. I hope you don't mind if we disagree, I see it as undue weight to an irrelevant non event. (] (]) 20:16, 2 August 2009 (UTC))


There is a discussion at ] about the scope of ]. -- ] - <sup>]</sup>/<sub>]</sub> 02:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Then, ], you could have simply said so, nicely. But I thank you for your reply. IMHO the information about Bill Clinton and the information in discussion about Bob Ainsworth do not compare: we are not discussing drug use when a student but attending more than one specific political meeting as an adult. And I see no reason why that fact should not be included in the main article. ] <sup>(])</sup> 18:11, 3 August 2009 (UTC)


== List of pornographic performers by decade ==
Well, when I posted the article there was initially a list of facts at the bottom which mentioned Mr Ainsworth's candidate status. These have since been removed, for reasons unknown to me. This editorial in the mail http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1199283/Political-cowards-true-heroes.html?ITO=1490 also mentions that he was once a candidate member of the IMG. To Off2riorob, perhaps inclusion in the article of "Mr Ainsworth was a candidate member of the International Marxist group but never became a full member?" I'm not sure how membership of the IMG worked but I think being a candidate member is notable enough to include in the article. You haven't responded to the fact that we include information about the past for all public political figures. I would argue that being a voluntary candidate member of the IMG at 30 is more notable than the Pope being conscripted into the Hitler Youth when he was 14. The information about the Pope is included, as it should be. In the article on Alistair Darling his sympathies for the IMG are stated and sourced. To Quantpole, it should receive precedent in that Mr Ainsworth is a politician and his personal political history is important background. ] (]) 16:23, 3 August 2009 (UTC)
:Lets see that discussed in more impartial pieces than the 'debate' section of the Daily Mail, which includes quotes such as ''"Mr Ainsworth is a political lightweight who has never taken a real risk in his life, and his appointment to such a crucial ministry is an unmitigated scandal"''. To my mind that qualifies as an attack piece, and not something we should be quoting from. If this receives sufficient interest from a broader range of sources then it may well become notable. At the moment however it has received pretty much no coverage apart from a couple of attempts in the mail to disparage the subject, which cannot be viewed as reliable or notable. ] (]) 08:48, 4 August 2009 (UTC)


* {{la|List of pornographic performers by decade}}
::Um, it's not an opinion from the Daily Mail that's being proposed here, but an on-the-record supported fact in a politicians political history. And the source is the Mail on Sunday which is editorially seperate. I really don't see the difficulty and agree with ] above. ] <sup>(])</sup> 11:25, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
] is a remarkable article in that it has existed for 20 years and yet, if I were to follow ] to the letter right now, I would have to cut the article down to its first sentence, the section headings, and a single see-also. Saying "X is a pornographic performer" is, obviously, a contentious claim, and as such every entry needs its own citation; it's not enough to rely on the articles as their own ''de facto'' citations, as is the tolerated practice for noncontroversial lists like ]. This is all the more the case because the definition of "pornographic performer" is subjective. With help from Petscan, I've found the following people on the list who are not described in their articles as pornographic performers: ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ]. Many (all?) of them are sex workers of some sort, so in each case, there may be a reliable source that exists that calls them a pornographic performer, but without one, it's a flagrant BLP violation. And if it were just those, I'd remove them and be done with it, but even for the ones whose articles do call them pornographic performers, there's no guarantee of being right. I removed ] from the list after seeing that an IP had removed the mentions of porn in her article, which had indeed been sourced to a press release about a fictionalized depiction of her life. No, each of these entries needs an individual citation appearing on the list article so that the claims can be judged.


So, there are about 650 entries, and we know at least some are questionable, and we cannot assume that <em>any</em> of the rest are correct. What do we do? Again, the letter-of-BLP answer here is to remove the unsourced items, but that would leave literally nothing. The only two citations in the whole thing are to search pages on two non-RS porn databases. So at that point we might as well apply ]. Another solution would be to find sources for, I don't know, two or three people in each heading, just so it's not empty, remove everything else, and stick {{tl|incomplete list}} there. A third option is AfD. Does anyone have any ideas?
:::You see no reason why this fact shouldn't be included in the article. I see no reason why it should be included. This 'fact' is being stated in the Mail in a clear attempt to disparage the subject by associating him with IRA sympathisers. We do not know any of the context of his attendance at the meetings. We do not know his personal opinions on the IRA. It is a clear attempt at 'guilt by association' (just see the tone of the Mail piece above). If this receives some broader coverage, or there are signs of it causing a bigger furore than just a couple of opinion pieces then we should look at it again. ] (]) 11:56, 4 August 2009 (UTC)


P.S. I haven't even looked at other lists of pornographic performers. Are they all like this? <span style="font-family:courier"> -- ]</span><sup class="nowrap">&#91;]]</sup> <small>(])</small> 05:01, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Herre's another source http://www.politics.co.uk/mps/party-politics/labour/ainsworth-bob-$451964.htm. There is no talk of saying that Bob Ainsworth has any sympathies for the IRA. It is pretty clear which parts of the pieces are fact and which are opinion. There is an obvious difference between Bob Ainsworth was a candidate member of the IMG and that he is an incompetent bungler. The first is obviously a verifiable fact, and has been verified by the other article in discussion. The proposed debate is whether we should include the sentence 'At 30, Bob Ainsworth was a candidate member of the IMG, but never became a full member' The other side of the debate does not think this is notable. Will they then delete similar information from the article on Alistair Darling? Perhaps a useful contribution would be if we are able to understand how membership of the IMG worked, that would make it easier to decide if it were notable or not.] (]) 12:59, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::The politics.co.uk source has convinced me, and that's what should be used in the article, given that it presents the information without the rhetoric. ] (]) 13:43, 4 August 2009 (UTC)


:I don't have a solution to this @], but the first name I looked at was ]. Her article references her full frontal appearance and describes it as sexploitation. Sexploitation films are not pornographic films. I can't see any mention of pornographic acting in her article? This is a problem. ] (]) 05:11, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Summing Up
::Doing some spot-checking, ] is described in his article as a director of ]s but not as an actor – and it does not seem as though pink films are necessarily pornographic; ] is categorised as a porn actor but the text of the article does not seem to support this. Clearly there's a problem here. ] (]) 05:57, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:Hm, yes, per WP:BLP each LP on this list should have a decent ref (better than ], see ), and it wouldn't hurt the others either. I'm slightly reminded of a complaint I made at ]. It's not the same, but it's still sensitive. ] (]) 07:26, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:Btw, per ] and ], it seems they're not all like that, but ] lists people without WP-articles, my knee-jerk reaction is that that's not good. ] (]) 07:35, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::] most seem to be referenced using "International Adult Film Database" which is user generated. Imdb for born actors. ] (]) 07:45, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::]. ] (]) 07:51, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:I'll be honest, I thought we'd dealt with this before and it was no longer a problem. I'm sure in previous discussions we're generally agrees such lists should only contain notable individuals with articles i.e. no black links or red links (if an editor believes someone is notable they need to create the article first). I thought we'd also agreed to strictly require inline citations when adding names regardless of what the individual articles say. I couldn't find many of the previous discussions though but did find we seem to have a lot more of these lists in the past. ] (]) 09:48, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::I'm aware of a few circumstances in which pornographic actors faced serious obstacles in their lives after leaving the industry and tried hard to separate themselves from their prior career. I would hope, in these cases, we respect their wishes and just leave them off. ] (]) 12:16, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Depending on situation, we might or we might not. ] (]) 12:24, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::::My main concern is for people who have explicitly expressed that they no longer want to be public people, being honest. Those who have struggled to transition to non-pornographic acting, music, etc. is less of my concern. ] (]) 12:38, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::That's understandable but it runs into issues with ] where editors think that once someone is a public figure, it is forever.
:::::Recently there was I believe the son of a lady who had appeared in Playboy a long time ago who had asked for her article to be removed on BLPN. The specifics that I remember are vague, but essentially she had been a Playmate one year and editors had built an article for her even though she was a relatively private person other than the fact she was in Playboy in the early 80's. The family member had suggested that the article basically loomed over her head and caused harm to her reputation since it was something she did once 30+ years ago and distanced herself from almost immediately. I can't say i disagree that in cases like that, there shouldn't be an article.
:::::] (]) 15:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::I wasn't aware of that specific case but that is precisely the sort of circumstance under which I think a private person's right to privacy should be weighed more important than Misplaced Pages completionism. ] (]) 15:43, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::I'm reminded of ] per . Other end of the scale, perhaps. ] (]) 15:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
::{{u|Nil Einne}} You may be thinking of which you on.
::] (]) 16:13, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:::I don't think it was really that, although I did forget about it so thanks for reminding me. One of the issues with that list is since it was such a high profile case I felt it likely there would at least be secondary source coverage, and also as pornographic appearances go, I feel being Playmate is a lot less controversial than other stuff; so while it was bad, I didn't feel it quite as severe as most of the other stuff we're doing or have been doing. I was thinking of older discussions probably especially the RfC below. ] (]) 17:14, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
Given the lack of referencing and the entries included in error, pointed out above, then I would be in favour of removing every unreferenced entry on the list. If that leaves literally nothing, well - AFD. If somebody ''really'' wants this information, well, categories exist. ]<sup>]</sup> 14:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
:I would support this as well, and honestly would probably still vote to delete a list with only the referenced entries if it were brought at AfD. A list page doing the job of one or several category pages and nothing more has no purpose. '''''<span style="color:#503680">] ] ]</span>''''' 13:22, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
*I knew we had a lengthy RfC/Discussion about this subject matter, it just took me a while to find it though – <span class="plainlinks"></span>, and also this <span class="plainlinks"></span>. Discussions are ten years old, but I don't think anything in the lengthy close of the RfC has changed. I was one of the volunteers who helped add refs to this article → ], which if I recall correctly, was the impetus for the RfC. Good luck, sourcing these types of lists are a massive chore.]] 16:03, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:RFC closer said in 2014:
*:''Q: Should all pre-existing lists of porn performers have a reliable source supporting each entry?''
*:''A: The rough consensus below is that it's always more controversial to call someone a porn performer than to say they're engaged in most other professions. A reliable source should be added for every entry that's challenged or likely to be challenged. But as a concession to the practicalities, editors are asked not to go through the pre-existing lists making large-scale and unilateral challenges, as this will overwhelm the people who maintain these lists with work, and there is a legitimate concern that this is unfair. If you do intend to remove unsourced entries, please proceed at a reasonable, non-disruptive speed dealing with what you judge to be the highest-priority cases first. If you could easily source an entry yourself, then removing it as unsourced is rather unhelpful.'' ] (]) 16:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*::Well, removing ~650 entries after 10 years of the list's maintainers doing nothing to fix this would average out to, what, ~1.2 per week since that RfC? That seems like a reasonable, non-disruptive speed to me. Courtesy ping @]. <span style="font-family:courier"> -- ]</span><sup class="nowrap">&#91;]]</sup> <small>(])</small> 16:50, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
*:::Yes, I do vaguely remember making that close ten years ago. I agree that it's appropriate to implement its outcome in full now.—]&nbsp;<small>]/]</small> 17:58, 6 January 2025 (UTC)


== chew chin hin ==


https://www.ttsh.com.sg/About-TTSH/TTSH-News/Pages/In-Loving-Memory-Prof-Chew-Chin-Hin.aspx
I am now preparing, as promised, to add to the entry on Bob Ainsworth MP. In doing so, I will try to sum up the argument so far in its essentials. But first, to avoid all misunderstanding, these are the words ( and attached references) which I intend to add on Sunday 9th August unless a good reason is supplied for me to refrain, or unless someone else does it. I propose to place them in the ‘Early Life’ segment, after the sentence ending ‘Branch President’. I would, as I have repeatedly said, much prefer it if another editor could place it there. Arguments for doing so follow the suggested entry.


Dr Chew Chin Hin died <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 15:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
“In the early 1980s Mr Ainsworth attended ‘a couple’ of meetings of the International Marxist Group, but has declined to elaborate on this. <ref>{{http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1200583/PETER-HITCHENS-How-long-abort-old-too.html}}</ref><ref>{{http://hitchensblog.mailonsunday.co.uk/2009/07/the-defence-secretary-and-the-international-marxist-group.html}}</ref> <ref>{{http://hitchensblog.mailonsunday.co.uk/2009/08/harry-patch-didnt-go-to-war-so-plodder-bob-could-give-the-orders.html}}</ref> <ref>{{http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-1203111/It-better-boys-Defence-Secretary-Bob-Ainsworth-stayed-holiday.html}}</ref>”
:Thanks – I see you have his article. Does anything more need to be done here? There's no need to discuss the deaths of every person who has an article on this noticeboard unless there's a particular issue. ] (]) 16:11, 6 January 2025 (UTC)


== Beyoncé ==
1. What is the dispute not about? It is emphatically not about whether Misplaced Pages can say that Mr Ainsworth was a ‘candidate member’ of the International Marxist Group (IMG). The traceable source of this claim is a Misplaced Pages editor who emphatically declares that he will remain pseudonymous, and who has declined to reply to separate questions from editor Philip Cross and from me, asking him to verify the information he placed on Misplaced Pages some years ago.
2. What is it about? It is about whether the brief statement above can be included in the entry. First, is it factually correct? Yes. Mr Ainsworth’s own spokesperson at the Ministry of Defence has said on the record that Mr Ainsworth attended ‘a couple of meetings’of the IMG. The references ( two from my ‘Mail on Sunday’ column, one from my blog, one from a ‘Daily Mail’ article by the historian Andrew Roberts which says Mr Ainsworth ‘flirted’ with the IMG) have been chosen because they do not refer to the so far unverified and possibly circular claim that Mr Ainsworth was a ‘candidate member’. The ‘Daily Mail’ (editorially separate from the ‘Mail on Sunday’) and the ‘Morning Star’ (even more editorially separate from the ‘Mail on Sunday’) have published stories making this statement . Let us assume that they have their own sources, apart from Misplaced Pages, for saying so. But they do not cite them. Until they do, this doesn’t seem to me to count for verification.
3.Is the inclusion of the information in Mr Ainsworth’s entry undue? Those who say that it is argue that it is a) trivial, b) a long time ago and c) not indicative of anything about Mr Ainsworth’s current politics. I ask them to apply the following simple test, which will recur in this argument. Would they say the same if we were discussing information (confirmed on the record and published in two newspapers of the Left) that a member of a Tory Cabinet or Shadow Cabinet had attended National Front meetings in the same period? If so, then they can continue to insist that the matter is undue. If not, not. We are urged by Wikpedia rules to adopt a ‘Neutral Point of View’. I personally think this impossible, as we are all inevitably influenced in our selection and appreciation of facts by our own opinions, sometimes consciously, sometimes not. But we can choose to make a deliberate effort to set this influence aside as far as we may. I think on this occasion those who have opposed the inclusion of the information are the ones who need to make this effort of generosity and open-mindedness.
I also think some editors may, unconsciously, have allowed themselves to be influenced by the fact that the information appeared in newspapers they do not like under bylines they do not like, in a fashion they do not like. The mirror image of this would have happened had it concerned a senior Tory who had associated with the NF. It would not have made the information any less valid or worthy of inclusion.
They need to show how the nature of the source is relevant. The proposed addition contains no expression of opinion on the significance of Mr Ainsworth’s contact with the IMG. Those who check the references will find the words of Mr Ainsworth’s spokesperson, belittling the significance of the contact, cited in full. They will also find the list of the questions submitted to Mr Ainsworth about the matter, to which he chose not to reply. Readers may choose (as several editors do) to believe it does not matter if Mr Ainsworth attended these meetings.
However, Duncan’s comment (on the discussion page on 22nd July, 23.56) that “What I do know is that the reply of Ainsworth's people is accurate. You have to recall that at that time IMG meetings were normally for members only. The only basis on which one could sit in on a couple of meetings was to become a candidate” is helpful to those who wonder if it matters. It is not, repeat not, verification that Mr Ainsworth was a ‘candidate member’, but it seems to me (especially as it comes from an opponent of inclusion) to support the view that IMG meetings were not, like those of conventional political parties, open to all comers, and that attendance at them is considerably more significant than past attendance at Labour, Tory or Liberal Democrat meetings. I should add that Mr Ainsworth was a mature adult at the time. The IMG was not a current within the Labour Party, as one contributor inaccurately assumes. It was a ‘Democratic Centralist’ disciplined organisation with its own rules, programme, leadership and structure, which from time to time encouraged its members to work within the Labour Party, and from time to time maintained a wholly separate existence.
Readers may equally choose to believe that it matters a little, or a lot. That is what factual information allows us to do. Not displaying it at all, when it exists, involves a political judgment that editors of Misplaced Pages are entitled to decide on behalf of others what established facts might or might not be important to them.
Mr Ainsworth is by profession a full-time politician. He is a Member of Parliament, whose vote can alter the fate of Bills, make and unmake the law of the land, send soldiers into battle, influence the spending (or non-spending) of billions of pounds. He has been an important mid-level member of the Blair and Brown governments for some years. He is currently a Cabinet member who can influence policy at a far higher level than most of us can dream of. He is a Privy Counsellor. He is Secretary of State for Defence, a responsible and contentious office. If he were a dentist, a road engineer or a space scientist, perhaps his political actions and associations in his late twenties or early thirties would be of no interest or significance. As it is, I think it would be very hard to maintain that they are of no interest at all. Nor can I see how the reference could be any briefer or plainer than I have made it above.


Looks like Beyoncé fan club president is editing the article and ] (]) 10:48, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
The question of reliability of sources has been raised. Here is what Misplaced Pages itself says about this : “Misplaced Pages articles should rely primarily on reliable, third-party, published sources (although reliable self-published sources are allowable in some situations - see below). Reliable sources are credible published materials with a reliable publication process; their authors are generally regarded as trustworthy or authoritative in relation to the subject at hand. How reliable a source is depends on context. As a rule of thumb, the more people engaged in checking facts, analyzing legal issues, and scrutinizing the writing, the more reliable the publication. Sources should directly support the information as it is presented in an article and should be appropriate to the claims made.”
Opponents of inclusion on these grounds need to state clearly and precisely what makes the sources quoted, and their authors, unreliable. It is no good just saying you don’t like them.

The discussions, on the Ainsworth entry and in BLP/N, have attracted several different points of view. That is why I am placing this suggested text in both those places. They have been discussed elsewhere on the web, though not by me, with one Misplaced Pages editor suggesting that my interest in this is obsessive. I think a concern to ensure that accurate facts are displayed on one of the most important research resources in the world is quite reasonable, myself. If we are not allowed to take such things seriously without being called names, what kind of society do we live in? Neither side can claim overwhelming support, and some editors with borderline views may revise their position if they read my second reference to the subject.
I submit that in any enterprise devoted to knowledge, the presumption must surely be in favour of the inclusion of any fact, rather than in favour of its exclusion. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 09:15, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:You want to put “In the early 1980s Mr Ainsworth attended ‘a couple’ of meetings of the International Marxist Group, but has declined to elaborate on this." But your own blog ( - requires Internet Explorer) quotes Ainsworth's spokesperson as saying "Bob Ainsworth has never been a member of the International Marxist Group. In the early 80s he attended a couple of their meetings, at the request of a colleague, which reinforced his firm view that he did not agree with anything they had to say." Sounds pretty elaborated to me - and as something that's ] to include. ] <sup>]</sup> 09:42, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

Well, there's something. I am delighted that RD232 appears to have abandoned the attempt to argue that there is no referenced verification for the information showing that Mr Ainsworth attended these meetings, in the face of the references provided above. I have answered the claim that inclusion is allegedly undue above, at some length. If RD232 has any response to that, in facts or logic, let him make it. Mr Ainsworth's spokesperson did indeed say what RD232 quotes her as saying, and I faithfully reproduced it, in full, as was only proper. As it happens, it is quite baffling to me ( and may be to others) how anyone could go to one, let alone two, meetings of a revolutionary Marxist organisation if he did not agree with anything they had to say. Why would he? These gatherings didn't come under the definition of fun. It is also startling that he did not agree with "anything" they had to say since the policies of the IMG were in many (though not all) cases close to (if not identical to) those of the Labour Party in 1983. Is there a spot of over-protesting going on here? The quotation used by RD232 is of course supplied by me in the Mail on Sunday. Further, the questions which I submitted to his office in response to this are the point at which he declined to elaborate. Even so, to show my willingness to compromise in the pursuit of truth, I would be willing to shorten the entry to say "in the early 1980s Mr Ainsworth attended 'a couple' of meetings of the International Marxist Group'. Those interested could then follow the references and form their own view of the significance of the information, and the significance of Mr Ainsworth's unwillingness to answer questions about it. I really am seeking consensus here. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 16:21, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:Don't forget though that the truth may not always be ]. The threshold for inclusion in Misplaced Pages is verifiability, not truth.&nbsp;–&nbsp;] (]) 16:30, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::What a lot of hot air about a worthless little non event, seems a bit excessive to me, it looks like a case of mountain out of a mole hill. I say it is an irrelevant ''fact'' and adds absolutaly nothing to ainsworth's biography. ] (]) 16:34, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:::He went to not only one, but two marxist meetings, he must be a marxist. sorry...they were ''revolutionary Marxist organisation meetings.''that means he must be a revolutionary Marxist! ] (]) 16:44, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::This is the typical type of point pushing that makes it very hard to keep a political biography neutral. Editors in the political section seem unable to edit in a neutral way ] (]) 16:50, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::Resolved to be utterly Eirenic, I respond as follows: to Ukexpat that the statement is both true and verifiable, that there is no longer any question about its verifiability and suggest he looks once more at the references provided. If he thinks it is not verifiable, then could he please explain why (referring to my posting above if possible, as it is nice when people respond to opposing arguments)? To off2riorob, nobody is saying that Misplaced Pages should make any statement along the lines of 'he must be a Marxist'. Some people will take Off2riorob's view, that the information is not interesting. Others will take the view that it is interesting. Some (me included) will take the view that it is very interesting indeed. That is what facts are for, to allow people to draw their own conclusions from them. It is simply not possible to say that it adds 'absolutely nothing' to Mr Ainsworth's biography. It plainly adds something. The question is what, and how important it is. The barest, briefest mention is proposed, not some vast history. Now, it is perfectly plain that your idea of its importance could be influenced by your political opinion. But Misplaced Pages does not cater for people of only one political opinion, and in the hypothetical Tory shadow cabinet case given above I have asked opponents of the inclusion if they can honesly say they'd take the same attitude in such a case. Well? Would they? I have also provided a strong rebuttal, above, to those who say the inclusion is undue. If off2riorob, or anyone else, disagrees with what I say, then can they explain why they do so, using facts and logic as I have done. Simply asserting, with sarcasm and a belittling tone, that I am wrong does not help. How can I possibly argue rationally with that? How can I possibly be persuaded by that? Could the users of such techniques be persuaded in this way? To off2riorob's final point, surely neutrality in political biographies (if attainable at all) does not consist of leaving out parts of politicians' biographies that are controversial. It consists of presenting the whole person in such a way that a reader may form an independent judgement based upon verifiable, true and complete information. I stress the word 'complete'. Supporters or sympathisers of politicians or political parties should certainly not be allowed to patrol their entries to keep inconvenient facts from slipping in. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 18:36, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

Re ] - do you honestly think the issue would make it into a newspaper obituary of Ainsworth? ] <sup>]</sup> 18:46, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:Clockback, as we are all here to improve the article, I was wondering if you have got a free to use photo of him? ] (]) 19:41, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

In answer to RD232, all my thoughts are honest, and I really do wish you would get round to assuming good faith on my part, as it would make the necessary agreement so much easier to reach. Don't you realise the attitude implied in such formulations? No - then how would it sound to you if I rephrased my reply as "Do you seriously believe that any obituary would leave it out?". As to the question, I have no doubt at all that some, probably all obituaries of Mr Ainsworth would contain references to his political past, including this element of it. It would depend, of course, on the newspaper, how extensive and how prominent the mention would be. But as it's the most interesting thing anyone has ever found out about him, I would be amazed if it were missing. I have no idea why anyone who has read this discussion should imagine that I possess a picture of Mr Ainsworth. Perhaps Off2riorob is making a joke. If so, ha ha. Jolly funny. If not, so sorry. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 20:31, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::The "honestly" adjective was merely intended to nudge you to ''think'' substantively about the question, nothing else. It's a common expression. Sorry if you inferred something else, but that's kind of what ] is for. I keep telling you I'm assuming good faith on your part about adding these points; I just disagree. ] <sup>]</sup> 08:10, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
: No, it is not a joke. You claim to work for the daily mail, don't you? They have a lot of pictures of people, don.t they? You are an editor here at Misplaced Pages editing for the benefit of the encyclopedia, so what is so funny about me asking you a simple question?
Your ''mission'' here to insert this twaddle is getting a bit ]. And there is no obituary that would say...he went to two marxist revelutionary meetings in the 70's.. they would say he came from humble a background and rose up to hold one of the highest positions in the goverment and he was a good man.(] (]) 22:50, 6 August 2009 (UTC))

::May I once again ask for reasoned and non-abusive responses to my 'summing up' above? It is time we reached a sensible consensus. If we cannot do so, and this matter ends up in some higher dispute procedure (as seems increasingly likely) I can hardly see such behaviour helping the cause of those who resort to it. To Off2riorob, I am sorry to have misunderstood your post. I genuinely thought you must be joking. I must also ask people to stop using such expressions as "you claim to work for...". This is a basic and straightforward breach of the general Misplaced Pages plea to assume good faith, without which no progress can be made. Unlike many Misplaced Pages editors, I choose to identify myself, as I don't believe in anonymity on the web. I really don't see why my openness should be treated with suspicion, while anonymity is treated as in some way superior. I can't imagine why. Why do my opponents think it is all right repeatedly to cast doubt on my declared identity? (I work, as it happens, for the Mail on Sunday, which is editorially separate from the Daily Mail. But that does not give me any special freedom to use picture libraries). On the general question of obituaries, these are often compiled from private information which for various reasons has not been published during the subject's lifetime. Even assuming that this would not be the case with Mr Ainsworth, a comprehensive and properly researched obituary would certainly note that he "flirted with Marxism" as Andrew Roberts put it. The exact treatment which they would give to the known information and to Mr Ainsworth's explanation of it would presumably vary, according to the newspaper. I would personally prefer the Misplaced Pages entry to me more explanatory than the wording I am proposing. But I am, as I keep saying, trying to reach a consensus with opponents who argue stoutly that that the political history of a major politician is not important. It's a bit much to be chided for my own willingness to compromise. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 07:47, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:::By the way, I rebut completely the allegation that my attempt to insert this fact through consensus is "Pointy". If Off2riorob would care to tell me which of the listed offences I have allegedly committed, then I can at least defend myself in detail. But I would point out again that in several weeks of discussion I have yet to touch the entry, that I have followed dispute procedures, and I have continued to try to reach consensus through reasoned debate. I have given notice of my intention to insert the proposed wording on 9th August because I can see no other way of persuading my opponents to seek consensus instead of flatly telling me I am wrong, and ignoring my facts and logic. I do not want an edit war. I am quite happy to go to the next stage of arbitration instead, if any experienced person would care to tell me what that is. Peter Hitchens, logged in as ] (]) 07:55, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::::An ultimatum is not a way to reach ]. The next step in ] would be an ]. ] <sup>]</sup> 08:10, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::::"opponents who argue stoutly that that the political history of a major politician is not important." - mischaracterising your opponents is always helpful... your opponents are arguing that based on the available evidence this is not an important part of this person's bio - not important enough to include in his encyclopedia entry. I mean for all we know he was dragged to 2 meetings by a friend and sat in a corner reading the newspaper. There is just no evidence of significance - only evidence of ''insignificance'' (see full quote from spokesperson above). (BTW, it's irrelevant how major or minor a politician he is.) ] <sup>]</sup> 08:17, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

::: My opponents just won't debate the substantive facts and logic ( and no wonder, since they are against them) , now relying purely on their own subjective insistence that it doesn't matter that a Defence Secretary once attended the meetings of a Marxist revolutionary organisation. Mr Ainsworth is a major politician. This argument concerns the inclusion - or non-inclusion - of information about his political history. My opponents say this should not be included. I cannot see what 'mischaracterising' is involved here. On the contrary, I think it an entirely accurate description of my opponents' attitude. Speculation on Mr Ainsworth's behaviour at these meetings, and his attitude towards them is limited by our lack of knowledge of what took place. I could speculate in the opposite direction, but such factless musing would be as valueless as Rd232's speculation is in this debate. The principal source for such information declines to discuss it. The quote from the spokesperson cannot be considered in isolation from the supplementary questions which the spokesperson refused to answer. Nor is it irrelevant that Mr Ainsworth is a Cabinet Minister. He wouldn't even be in Misplaced Pages if he were a Parish Councillor. The whole reason for the entry is his importance in national life. The greater the importance, the greater the need for full knowledge. And I notice that none of my opponents is prepared to deal with the Tory Frontbencher-National Front hypothetical parallel which I repeatedly raise. Would they treat that hypothetical frontbencher's spokesperson with the the generous respect they give to Mr Ainsworth's, if that spokesperson explained his attendance in such a fashion and if the Tory himself refused to answer valid supplementary questions? Would they say it was too long ago, too unimportant, that he might have been "dragged" there (twice, forsooth. How did the alleged dragger make him do that?) or read a newspaper while present, unaware of the passion raging all round him? If so, let us hear them say it, and let us be sure to hold them to it if and when such a thing happens. If not, then let them accept that their reluctance here is motivated by political partisanship, not a desire for editorial purity. They have lost this argument, on facts, verification, importance and everything else, they refuse to assume good faith on my part, rudely cast doubt on my veracity while accusing me of all kinds of Wikipedian crimes, but remain unwilling to offer any compromise. In that case, let's go to Dispute Resolution, as soon as possible. How is it done, anyone? I'll postpone my addition until it's complete. Peter Hitchens logged in as ] (]) 11:14, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::I have now referred this for comment and postponed my planned addition of the information until there has been further time for dispute resolution. Alas, new contributors and editors have yet to notice. What ( as another contributor to this section asks ) does one have to do to get the alleged Misplaced Pages community to pay attention? An edit war? I really do not wish to get involved in such a thing. Peter Hitchens logged in as ] (]) 21:15, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
:::New contributors are unlikely to be attracted to the current restriction placed on the RFC of reading all prior discussion. Without an agreed summary, this is now an eyewateringly mammoth task.—] (]) 21:21, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

* {{La|Michael_O'Malley}} - A prominent person my my industry came to me about the lack of wiki page on myself, and offered to put it together. I agreed, edited it, and posted it. If this is not acceptable can you please let me know the right way to go about it. //

"Michael O'Malley"

== ] ==

I realize that the question of appropriate mug shot use is still being debated at Talk:BLP, but in this case a reasonable compromise was reached on the article talk page ] to move the mug shot out of the infobox and replace it with a neutral pair of photos of the two participants. One editor keeps reverting this change ,
,
claiming there is no consensus, even though he is the only one objecting to the change at this point.--] (]) 12:09, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:I've left a note. As the one seeking to add a potentially damaging image, about which there is controversy - and indeed, using a mug shot when ''the charges were dropped'' is arguably an attack article move right there - he must gain full support before even attempting that change. He does not have it. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 15:12, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
::I don't follow this argument. Mug shots generally follow arrests, add little or no derogatory information (unless the subject is in disarray, a la Nick Nolte), and serve to underscore the unnecessary humiliation involved when an inappropriate arrest is made.] (]) 16:53, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:::The issue here was whether the mugshot should be the lead photo in the article's info box. Five out of six editors in the discussion agreed it should not. Under the change which kept being reverted, the mugshot was not removed from the article, but was moved to a place later in the body.--] (]) 17:18, 4 August 2009 (UTC).
::::I agree with that -- the post I replied to seems to be discussing whether the mug shots should be used at all. ] (]) 17:19, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::My error, I phrased that poorly. I did indeed mean adding the image to the lead. I apologize for any confusion. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 04:30, 5 August 2009 (UTC).
:::After helping others to protect the article from those who went about adding all sorts of defamatory content (mostly of a racial nature), you can imagine how bowled over I was at being accused of adding it myself - especially since the "defamatory content" I was being accused of adding was the info that was pre-existing in the article!
::::As the person "warned", I'd like to point out that AGR filing this complaint pointed to a BLP discussion wherein the appropriateness of mugshot photos should be allowed in main BLP articles (this instance is in a sub-article ''specifically'' addressing the arrest). The user agr assumes that ''all'' mugshots were tendentious - a view that has little in the way of support within policy. Indeed, agr spent a great deal of time edit-warring the image substitution in, prompting a gentle nudge() by myself to slow down and build a clear consensus after this second revert in as many minutes.
:::Frankly, I do not think mugshots are inherently demeaning or NPOV, but that's an issue to be sussed out here, not by self-righteous behavior gussied up as good editing with a "consensus" built in the dead of night. Either way, ''all'' I was asking for was for agr to build a consensus - which he rather clearly didn't bother to seek as he was reverting over and over again. I even suggested he do a quick spot vote in the form of a poll which, after I signed out, he had not acted upon, and in fact called "unnecessary." A quick look at the article discussion page clearly indicates that substantial and reasoned discussion is ongoing in the article abut this so-called consensus.
:::Lastly, this also appears to be the third time that Killer Chihuahua has accused me of overwhelming wrongdoing. I would think that, after twice before jumping the gun and assuming the ''very'' worst of me. he might be mature enough to realize that he really needs to think before acting. I also think that - in light of these failed assessments of my behavior - it would be advisable that he abstain from seeking to judge me. He's shown he's not very good at it. - ] ] 20:05, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
At the time I brought this matter to the attention of this notice board, Arcayne had just reverted the move of the mugshot from the info box to the body of the article for the third time (,
,
). I came here rather than continuing a revert war. All the other editors on the talk page discussion at that point had agreed to the change. The discussion there has since continued on whether the mugshot should be used at all. So far no one has argued it belongs in the info box. Instead of addressing his info box reverts, Arcayne has attacked me repeatedly as is evidenced above. --] (]) 23:23, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
::Yes, I imagined you would characterize your having misrepresented the situation sufficiently enough to warrant a wee bit of disdain. Arnold. What I said repeatedly - which you can see in the edit summaries of each of those links you supplied - that you should find a consensus ''before'' insisting on jamming your personal beliefs down the throats of the rest of the community. And then, rather than continue to discuss the matter or poll the members (which you dismissed as "unnecessary"), you continued to edit war into your very own third revert. They aren;t personal attacks ; I am addressing your unfortunate behavior. If you don't like your behavior being addressed, adjust the behavior. - ] ] 00:08, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

I would say that there is no way the mugshot/booking photo should be in the infobox. The article is specifically about the arrest but the man is innocent of any crime so he deserves a lot of protection. As it is now it looks not too bad. There is no way that mugshot should be in the infobox, in fact if he is innocent of any charges then the mugshot shouldn't be in the article at all as the guy should not even have been arrested at all. He seems to be a decent man and has had his own page as an intelectual for 4 years, we should give this living person all the protection we can. (] (]) 23:38, 4 August 2009 (UTC))
Also the title of the article is wrong.. At least it should be.. the wrongful arrest of H L Gates. (] (]) 23:43, 4 August 2009 (UTC))
:See, I don't mind you having that opinion, Off2riorob, so long as you seek a consensus for that opinion in the article discussion. As for myself, we cannot protect the man from himself - and we should not twist the BLP to do such. If someone is stupid enough to mouth off to the police and get arrested, we aren;t going to hide that fact. Mug shots are a matter of public record, are well cited and are neutral to use in sub articles. As this is not the main article for Gates - in fact the bleeding article is called "''Arrest'' of Henry Louis Gates" - I cannot imagine a ''more'' appropriate place for the image. - ] ] 00:08, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, you argued that we should not place a picture of ] on the main page alongside the ] FA because people might mistakenly think that Ian MacDiarmid was, in fact, the leader of the Galactic Empire. I personally found your arguments to be absurdly hysterical, but how is this situation any different? Placing a mugshot may give the impression that the individual is, in fact, a criminal - however the charges have been dropped. –<font face="verdana" color="black">]</font>] 00:12, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Yes Zeno, I totally agree with you. The charges have been dropped and we should drop the wrongful booking shot. (] (]) 00:23, 5 August 2009 (UTC))
::::Just a comment. People are arrested all the time and then charges are dropped or they are proven innocence or whatever. That doesn't mean it was a wrongful arrest. I believe that you have to prove it was a wrongful arrest in a civil court, ect., otherwise it's just an arrest, nothing more nothing less. Anyways, carry on. --] ] 20:11, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
* I saw the article at first glance and my first impression was, why two images of a distinguished proffesor in handcuff, who are we trying to kid around, two images of him handcuff! Yes, lets make it clear where the black man belong, dont you dare open you mouth to a police or to an administrador or even a steward in Misplaced Pages, the control is 1984....I know Im incoherent, but two images are too much, Misplaced Pages is a place of knowledge not TMZ.com, hey did they post more picture about Michael and his drugs??? --] (]) 01:28, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I totally agree, JMundo; you're being incoherent (lol). First of all, I certainly hope that wasn;t some sort of accusation of racism, 'coz that dog won't hunt, not when I'd spent the better part of the week keeping racist trash out of the article.
:::Zeno - and everyone else for that matter - please listen ''carefully'': I don't give a sodding rat's ass if the image is in the article or not. observations of policy and guidelines aside (which most seem content to conveniently be forgetting), I want folk to observe the idea of BRD and build a consensus based on policy, not some politically correct, white apologist guilt of "it feels mean". I've tried to express this before, and the best argument I am getting is that I'm sort of racist ceep for wanting the image - and major changes in general - to be discussed. Are you at all surprised that I am a wee bit miffed at the situation? Discussion doesn't mean edit-war your preferred version in get reverted, edit it back in, leave a comment about how you are putting it back in. Rinse, repeat about three times. Do we really want an encyclopedia built on some the efforts of some hack with more endurance? - ] ] 03:39, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::::White or black, having a mugshot of a person in an article about an arrest where THE CHARGES WERE DROPPED seems ''very'' problematic to be from a BLP perspective. We should err on the side of caution in such circumstances, and the fact that the article is now protected after a <removal/reinsertion/removal/reinsertion> sequence is quite disturbing. ]] 15:25, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::I am the one who requested page protection. I had been discussing how at least half of the discussion was being cluttered by folk who seemed to have forgotten all about BRD and were edit-warring over some ill-advised edits. The protection is intended to settle folk down and force them to actually talk themselves to a consensus - something they clearly weren't doing before. - ] ] 19:49, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::Arcayne has repeatedly accused and others, in a most uncivil way, of edit-warring and somehow violating BRD. To begin with BRD is not always applicable in a BLP situation. WP:BLP says "Article improvement to a neutral high quality standard is preferred if possible, with dubious material removed if necessary until issues related to quality of sources, neutrality of presentation, and general appropriateness in the article have been discussed and resolved." Second, I have made exactly one edit to the article in question -- ever -- as the logs will show. How this can be construed as edit-warring is beyond me. If I were the only one affected, i'd keep my peace. The removal of the mugshot from the info box that I sought and that Arcayne reverted three times seems to be sticking. But I see that other editors are being driven from this discussion by the repeated mischaracterization and incivility being shown and that is not acceptable. I must insist the incivility stop.--] (]) 21:30, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

* FYI for the other admins here; Arcayne has announced his intention to disregard my warning, claiming the warning was "bogus" and implying that it was personal. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 17:12, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
**Comment as to the FYI - I am ''absolutely'' dismissing KC's biased little grudge match, as it was based on yet another instance of KC not doing his homework before accusing me of being the Big Bad Wolf - something he's done not once but twice before. His accusation is based on a fallacy - I didn't add derogatory material to that - or any - article. This continued assumption of bad faith on his part is indeed tedious, and I have informed him that any subsequent instances will have repercussions for him. I don't care if he ius useful - so am I, and I am tired of having him assume the worst and using the admin buttons to threaten me or to besmirch my editing stance. Of course, I am not now, nor have I ever, added any negative material to any BLP, and I am not about to begin now. I have asked KC to abstain from decisions where he might wish to evaluate my editors or intentions, as he is so profoundly and provably inaccurate at doing so. - ] ] 19:44, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
*::Indeed, I have warned you several times. You heeded the warnings, if I recall correctly, or at least I did not see you continue the problematic behavior, or I would have blocked you. Same here; you cannot invent a hostility I do not feel, and somehow pretend that makes your behavior inviolate or the warning moot. I have warned many people, and some of them multiple times. I have no personal axe to grind at all; merely doing my job. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 19:58, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
*:::Clarification: your warnings were all proven inaccurate and based either upon sloppy research on your part or a simple presentiment of inaccurately assuming the worst. I did not "continue the problematic behavior" because there had never been any problematic behavior to begin with. Ergo, that which never started is not something whioch cold be resumed. You can keep stating that you do not have animosity, but each time someone suggest si am doing something wrong, you always seem quick with the warnings. And not once have you apologized for jumping the gun when you were proven wrong - not just by myself, but by others. There are a great many admins in the wiki-en; maybe let them deal with me. You have proven unable (or unwilling) to accurately gauge the actual facts of the matter. I am asking you to abstain, as there will be repercussions if you cannot control yourself. Now, you might comment, as I know you like that last word and all, but until you step over the line, these are mine: you are not neutral in regards to me; please stay away and trust that some other admin is smart enough to evaluate situations where I am involved. Thanks in advance. - ] ] 20:53, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
*::::Utter nonsense. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 23:14, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
*:::::Yes, it is, but all of it unfortunately true. - ] ] 13:04, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
*::::::this is the wrong venue for this. I have taken it to Arcayne's talk page. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 20:32, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
*:::::::Good, though I think most folk had figured that out, what with the moving on of this thread regarding the substance of the issue. - ] ] 20:57, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

I am suggesting we pass or final comments ] as to whether to keep the mugshot in the article or remove it. (] (]) 19:57, 5 August 2009 (UTC))
:Sure. Sorry about the KC nonsense. Anyway, we use mugshots in many articles, including at least one FA. Mugshots are not inherently "demeaning or derogatory" - they are a method that the police identify a person placed under arrest. They are a matter of public record, are usually free-use, and help to illustrate text discussing the arrest. No one is contending that the arrest did not occur, nor that the person depicted in the free use image is anyone but Gates
:In the sub article, "Arrest of Henry Louis Gates" - note that it is not the main article for the BLP, but a sub-page specifically discussing the arrest and aftermath - there is also an image of Gates in cuffs on his porch, an image which I am somewhat sure will not survive an AfD, as its fair use rationale is pretty wonky. Free image versus fair use image - no-brainer. - ] ] 20:53, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

::''Sorry about the KC nonsense'' - I trust that you will apologise to her properly on her talk page, Arcayne. I would also suggest that you strike those portions of your comments here.
::::When I get at least three apologies from her for prior bad acts, I will consider allowing bygones to be bygones, Guettarda. Not before then. That KC issued a bogus threat to block was part of an ongoing pattern of bad faith. I consider it nonsense, and as provocative as attempting to poison the well here by stating that I intended to add "derogatory" info again. That's the last I am going to speak of my issues with her here since, as KC pointed out, this is the wrong venue. - ] ] 20:57, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

::Clearly the use of the mug shot in inappropriate, since it creates the perception that Gates is a criminal or otherwise deserving of arrest. Whether the arrest was appropriate or not is a matter of dispute. NPOV does not permit us to endorse one side over the other. Of course, our BLP policy requires that we avoid further damaging Gates' reputation, but the using the mugshot wouldn't be appropriate even if this weren't a BLP, since it fails NPOV. ] (]) 19:50, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I am unclear how it fails NPOV, Guettarda. We aren't endorsing one view or another. We using an image this is both free, indisputably of the subject of the article, in a sub-article that speaks to the specifics of the arrest and aftermath; therefore it is not only appropriate, but more connected to the subject matter than any other image save for the nonfree image of the beer summit. Misplaced Pages is full of mugshot images, most notably in Rosa Parks, As we are using a free image to note and highlight an event, I am not sure how that is a violation of NPOV. You will also recall that Misplaced Pages is not censored. - ] ] 20:25, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
*For the record, I wondered how long it would take before someone would pull out the "not censored" card, though ] is not applicable to BLP issues, where WP is ''clearly'' (in some ways) "censored". ]] 20:30, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:This is being discussed in too many different places. (Here, the talk page of the article, and ] and probably numerous user talk pages). I'd suggest settling on a common location. Incidentally, I still haven't been presented with an argument as to why the mugshot is more relevant (or relevant at all, really) than the FU image of him being led out of his house which does not present a one-sided view like the mugshot. –<font face="verdana" color="black">]</font>] 20:29, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::I thought that had been explained before. The article is is about the arrest of Henry Louis Gates (the fellow in the booking photo). the arrest is discussed somewhat in depth within the article, which is substantiated by the image. The booking image is a free image, whereas the image of Gates in handcuffs on his porch is not a free image and, if anything, displays Gates in a far more negative light than the booking photo. As that image and the beer summit photo kludged image (which seems to be facing deletion at Commons as per WP:OI) are not free, their use and availability are both limited. As many would not be able to even imagine the eminent professor being arrested in the first place, the booking photo establishes visially the fact of the arrest and that it indeed went as far as being processed at the Cambridge Police Department. - ] ]

:::I believe you are missing the word "not" between "would" and "be able to even imagine" ? –<font face="verdana" color="black">]</font>] 21:19, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::<small>Yes, I was. Thanks for pointing it out to me, Xeno. :) - ] ] 19:21, 7 August 2009 (UTC)</small>
* It seems to me like there's a consensus to not put the mugshot in the infobox itself. While it makes sense to keep the mugshot in the article, the desire to make it less prominent is understandable. Frankly, I'd be more inclined to agree with Arcayne if he could manage a bit more civility and a bit less hyperbole. ] (]) 16:11, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

This was brought up on the BLP policy talk page as well. Started with ] section and continuing with the section that follows. Discussion there was more about the appropriateness of the image in general, not just about an infobox. Consensus seems to be not to use mug shots in BLPs unless the subject is currently incarcerated, which is proposed to be added into policy. Otherwise, such images are appropriate in articles about the arrest or about the crimes wherein the arrest is discussed. Combining the points of these two discussions, I believe that much like mug shots should not be used in BLPs of subjects not currently incarcerated for their alleged crime(s), the mug shots should not be used in the infoboxes of crime/arrest articles when the subject is not currently incarcerated for their alleged crime(s). ] 19:06, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:Respectfully, that would appear to be your personal opinion; the community that has spoken on this issue still appears to be rather sharply divided on the issue. In short, you appear to be misrepresenting consensus here. Booking photos are free images - right out of the gate, that's a big plus, since most images are not. Next, the booking photo image is not int he main article for the article for Gates; it's in an article ''specifically'' discussing the arrest and fallout from it. Just as the ] article uses the arrest materials to indicate an injustice given form so do, I would argue, the images of a Harvard professor and documentarian under arrest for (allegedly) mouthing off to a cop. You say it's demeaning - that's ''your'' opinion. We have dozens of articles of folk who are not/were not incarcerated at the time their booking photo was used. Like the song goes, "everyone here is equally kind"; Misplaced Pages is not censored, and make no mistake - removing the booking photo ''would'' be censorship. No one in their right mind would contest that Gates was arrested. So long as the article describes all events equally, the image of the arrested Gates serves both sides of the argument: he was arrested, and that arrest was unjust. - ] ] 09:13, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

::In the Gates article, the mug shot is now out of the main info box, and shown in a section describing the arrest events. I think that is the appropriate treatment. (This is far from a typical arrest situation. What this arrest means; whether the arrest should have been made at all; these are topics of vigorous controversy out there. Showing the mug shot helps illustrate the controversy.) ] (]) 23:45, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
:: Arcayne is correct that there's nothing at all resembling the consensus claimed by Lara regarding what should be done with mugshots in general. However, it seems like there is at minimum a consensus not to put that photo in the infobox. ] (]) 16:18, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

=== Mug shot and arrest pictures, in or out. ===

There has been a lot of discussion over these pictures in or out, an editor has started a ''head count'' of opinions at the ] This is an important decision for the Misplaced Pages, please come there and leave your opinion. ] (]) 00:35, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

== Peter Schiff ==

{{La|Peter Schiff}}

IP(s) keep adding Jewish-American to lead sentence against MOSBIO. Any help appreciated, maybe protect? TIA --] ] 15:10, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:IP's have been warned and ] to ]. Will continue to monitor article. ]<sup>]</sup> 18:38, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
::Thank you. I have extended WAY too much assume good faith at this point :) Cheers, --] ] 18:48, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I've semi-protected the article for 3 days.--] (]) 23:32, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Thank you. The IP said on my talk page that he had 1,000s of IPs and software and other cool stuff that would make him victorious in his efforts to keep warring. Oh well, hopefully all will be quiet on the western front for a few days :) YIPPPIE! :) --] ] 23:40, 4 August 2009 (UTC)
<s>{{Resolved|]<sup>]</sup> 16:46, 6 August 2009 (UTC)}}</s>

Can we protect again? Our Russian friend has returned. Thanks, --] ] 16:52, 8 August 2009 (UTC)
:I've semi protected for 6 months, based on the threat made at ]. --] (]) 02:38, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== '''Jan Slota''' ==

Hello All. I removed a few images that linked Slota to a Neo-Nazi organization. Although he does tend to put his foot in his mouth and is not the best loved of Slovak politicians, he should not be linked to Nazism unless there is direct proof of his involvement with such a group. thanks ]

== Carl Cameron ==

{{La|Carl Cameron}}

There is a dispute about "material" being added and cited to youtube and the ] documentary. I think its best to leave it out unless main stream media have reported/covered it. Unfortuneately, the other editor made it abundantly clear on the talk page of what he thinks about the subject of the bio Thanks, --] ] 04:07, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:said material has been there for months and is located in the "criticism" section. This is simply an attempt of rightwing cleansing of Misplaced Pages articles. Cameron is amply quoted and criticized in "Outfoxed", which was promoted by a major national organization (moveon.org) and reviewed in several national (WaPo, Variety, NYT) and international (The Guardian) papers. You can not make Cameron uncontroversial by simply deleting every reference to his critics.
:Furthermore, the idea to suppress this film is especially ludicrous when you actually see Cameron there '''on tape''' openly sucking up to Bush and telling him that his wife is so actively involved in the Bush campaign. ] doesn't ''allege'' Cameron's conflict of interest - it ''shows'' it. Calling that partisan defies reality. ] (]) 04:32, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::I have not gone and looked at the article yet, but I will state that youtube is not generally a reliable source. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 04:36, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::::this is '''not'''' about some youtube clip. The documentary film quoted is a professionally released film, is available on DVD (e.g. from Amazon), has been reviewed in several national papers, listed in the IMDB, and has ], which I suggest you reading to delevop your own judgement. Furthermore, this film is not used in the article as a source of facts, but as an irtem of critcism; for which it is a primary source. ] (]) 04:42, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::::as for the article, User:] ] has now for the third time reverted my edits on that section and blanked it, so you will have to dig in the history to find it.] (]) 04:44, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::I'm well aware of the movie; you used a youtube clip of it as a source. I suggest you find a better source. You state NYT and Washington Post etc; use those. It is very problematic to use a youtube clip of a documentary as a source. The documentary would be fine; but you're linking to youtube. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 08:31, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::The youtube clip is useful because presents '''exactly''' the part of Outfoxed that deals with cameron. It is an excerpt of the film. I do not see why this is a problem - this film itself is properly quoted by its wikilink, its web site also was in the external links list, but User:] removed that one as well. It's quite frustrating that I am supposed to answer for that although I oppose it. ] (]) 15:00, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
(outdent) It is still a youtube clip, which has been historically frowned upon. I suggest you take this to the ] - be sure to state that the clip is loaded on BraveNewFilms' youtube account, NOT a copyvio from Some Random Person - and get a wider input there. Please note I have not removed the clip; I have not stated the clip is not allowable, nor have I objected to it, I have merely pointed out that Youtube is generally frowned upon here. That has been changing, but I'm not sure what consensus will be on this one. Meanwhile, if you have ''other'' sources which do not involve a youtube video, please utilize them. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 17:19, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Frowned upon, not prohibited. - ] ] 19:52, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
Indeed, I had specified that, and even gone so far as to clarify that "I have not stated the clip is not allowable, nor have I objected to it". I think this has been made clear enough. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 19:55, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
:Note that there are two key reasons why YouTube clips are frowned upon. One is that YouTube clips are prohibited if they are copyvios (as with any other links to copyvios). This doesn't appear to be the case here since from what I can tell the clip is from one of the producers. Two is that a lot of the reason of YouTube clips are random usermade stuff that isn't suitable for external links let alone sourcing. Again this doesn't apply. So the clip itself isn't a significant issue. However if it's decided the documentary is a reliable source, then the documentary should be the source in the article with the clip as a convenience link at best. However it's fairly rare we use video as a source for a variety of reasons. Using a documentary by a political action group as a source in a BLP seems highly problematic to me. Are there at least any reliable secondary sources who mention the documentaries criticism? ] (]) 20:33, 5 August 2009 (UTC)
::Nil Einne, thank you for that thoughful analysis. That pretty much sums up my position(except I dislike youtube more) and what I was asking Wefa for on the talk page as far as if other reliable sources/main stream media have covered said criticism, but I guess I wasn't as articulate. Probably because I like to guzzle beer and watch cage fighting. Anyways, --] ] 05:00, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Yes, there are. Among them , which has been on the talk page and which I plan to add once this is resolved.
::But this approach it is still ridiculous. That part of the article does not assert facts but reports criticism. It doesn't say "Cameron has a conflict of interest" but "Cameron has been criticized in ] for having conflict of interest". And the movie is really the best source for that claim.
:::as for Tom guzzling beer in a cage or so, it is my impression you do not argue straightforward. First you deleted that section because of . After I cleaned up the SYN issue, you then deleted it again for poor sourcing. Your only activities on the article have been deleting material. And you only delete material critical to Cameron, or opposed by FN people. There are other ways to improve articles. You deleted the mediamatters transcript link for being broken, but they fixed it upon request within the day. And so on. Heck, you even challenged something as benign as his birth year without presenting even a shred of evidence of it being wrong. I am somewhat at loss how else to deal with this. ] (]) 15:18, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Wefa, as pointed out by other(s), is it really "fair" or due weight to include criticism from an obviously partisan "attack" documentary. Does it rise to the level of noteworthyness where it should be included? Was it a big deal outside partisan sources? If so, provide a few citations. As far as the DOB, I explained that the article had gone back and forth listed a few different DOB, so I fact tagged it, not that huge a deal. Right now 1/2 the article and 2/3 of the citations are of a critical nature and I am just not sure if adding more would present a NPOV due weight article. Anyways, I should probably step out and let others deal with this. --] ] 19:23, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
*This seems like a blatantly unbalanced article, as the main (and perhaps only) sources for the "criticisms" are admittedly partisan, like Media Matters and Outfoxed. However, as I've had my fill of stepping on landmines the last week or so, I'll leave it to others to handle. I simply wanted my opinion on the matter noted here, for the record. ]] 19:26, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
**This..'''Frowned upon, not prohibited...''' is not something you should ever be using to aid your point of view Arcayne.I have seen you type it more than once. We should err towards caution, you are at the limit. (] (]) 20:22, 6 August 2009 (UTC))
::**Oh, I am sorry; that could have just as easily been stated as ]. And quite honestly, I don't recall ever citing IAR in defense of an argument before (yeah, not once in almost three years), or the words "frowned upon, not prohibited"; perhaps you could show me where I've said that before? And at what limit are you speaking of- ] ] 09:02, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

Can somebody who is not associated with User ] please summarize a consensus from this? The guy keeps reverting my edits even though I did everything suggested here (provided additional sources from newspaper, trimmed down weight). It was my impression that the consensus (here) was "'''don't rely on Youtube alone'''" (which I did).
Also User ] seems to threaten me with "involving others". Can anybody point me with a way how to deal with this? I don't want to get into edit warring here (the guy has already reverted my twice today), so I'd appreciate some more general advice than the (certainly helpful) debate on the finer points of youtube sources above. Thanks ] (]) 19:32, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:Wefa, I am sorry if you felt threaten, I can assure you I meant no such thing, I meant that we should have other eyes involved to mediate, reach consensus, since we disagree. I ma glad you came back here, you beat me to it :) I am still not convienced this "material" rises to the level worthy of inclusion, see ], especially for a bio of this short length and the amount of criticism already included. If a few uninvolved eyes say Iam a jackass, I will saddle up and ride off :) The only thing I am disappointed in, I will admitt, is that you made it perfectly clear on the article talk page your strong dislike for the subject of the article. This could give the impression, whether correct or not that your edits are biased. That is why it is always best not to include comments like that on the talk page. Anyways, hopefully others will chime in and made there is middle ground. Again, no threat meant cheers and good luck. --] ] 19:45, 9 August 2009 (UTC)ps, nobody here is "associated" with me :) --] ] 19:45, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
*You won't like my summary, Wefa. I think the whole "Critical reception" section (or whatever it's currently called) should go. It's little more than an excuse to post negative things about Cameron, sourced only to partisan documentaries and the self-described "progressive" Media Matters. This is beyond unacceptable in a BLP, and it needs to go. Cameron is a well-known figure, and enough sources exist about his life that a decent little article could be written about him. The article as it currently stands is certainly not that. It is quite unbalanced, and presents some very large problems regarding ]. That's my take. ]] 19:49, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::Hmm. It was my understanding that such sections were a widely used instrument to deal with Biographies of controversial figures in a NPOV fashion, and I have seen it used that way in many articles. Now you seem to argue that critical or negative information is not permissible at all. Can you point me to any place where I might find that as a policy?
::Furthermore I find your outright dismissal of mediamatters as a source a little disturbing - from my admittedly European perspective mediamatters seems to be far more reliable as a source than, say, Fox News - and Fox News is quoted here all the time.
::And lastly, if you really know '''anything''' more about Cameron than is written in the article and can be reliably sourced, please please please give me pointers/hints. I have been looking for this article for years now, and despite some intensive searching, I have bnot been able to find much beyond his nearly empty FoxNews Bio page. ] (]) 20:18, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:::The emphasis should be on ''little'' article. And for the record, your reference to Cameron as some kind of "controversial figure" is itself a ''very'' non-neutral POV. The fact that you seem to feel that Media Matters and ''Outfoxed'' are in any way reliable sources for information on Cameron also displays a POV that is biased. A BLP on a journalist like Cameron should resemble something like the BLP on ]. If any actual reliable sources can be found for errors, omissions, or biases by Cameron can be found (as there are for Stanley), they should be judiciously included. Entire sections on such things, though, are wildly inappropriate. ]] 20:26, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Huh? I was not aware that I am supposed to present a NPOV in talk page debates. IIRC, the policy applies to articles. I am supposed to be civil, polite, to assume good faith etc. But bury my own good judgement?
::::As for media matters, these guys meticulously document their research. Every tiny bit is verfiable on their web site. Why that is not reliable is completely beyond me. Republican bias?
::::As for controversiality of Cameron, he is a very promient Fox news personality. ] is essentially 78 minutes of hard evidence that FN is not a journalistic but a propaganda operation. That should suffice for "controversial" alone - heck, they are so controversial that the current president and most of his competitors refused to debate on Fox at all.
::::Lastly, your comparision with the Alessandra Stanley article is problematic. The Stanley article is hardly anything but stub quality, and it '''alreday''' has bad undue weight issues. To put it less circumspect, that article is damning, scathing, nearly destructive. Cameron's article is outright nice and far better balanced compare to this. ] (]) 21:00, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Addendum - I just checked your allegation that criticism is only sourced to Mediamatters and Outfoxed. I am afraid you are mistaken here. There are also sources to the Wall Street Journal, Salon.com and USA today. ] (]) 21:10, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::The only thing that's ''remotely'' notable (and reasonably well-sourced) in the criticism/bias/whatever-it's-currently-called section is the ''USA Today'' article on the fake Kerry quote. As for the length of the Cameron article, it should be perhaps two or three paragraphs, well-sourced, with the Kerry quotes thing mentioned in the article text, and certainly no special "sections" for negative information. ]] 23:43, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
::::::Just to clarify - can I take from that that you also do not consider ] a reliable source? ] (]) 02:00, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::Sometimes it is, and sometimes it isn't. If it's an opinion piece, entitled "Rewriting History" (as this one is), that is solely intended to "expose", and is only used to source negative information in a BLP, then no, it's not a reliable source, ''in that regard and for that purpose''. ]] 17:52, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::If you look through the WP:RS/N, you'll see that the consensus has been that MMFA, Salon, DailyKos, and other such sites do not by themselves give ] to any viewpoint beyond that of a fringe. You need ] that cover it as well. ] (]) 01:25, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::You are mixing apples with oranges. Salon.com is an online newspaper with paid fulltime journalistic staff and full editorial control. Dailykos is a group blog/community site. Mediamatters is a watchdog group. I just '''have''' reviewed all 13 mentions of Salon on ], and contrary to your assertion Salon is consistently held to be a reliable source there. If you disagree we should directly take this there. ] (]) 02:52, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::::::::And. let me add that I still have not seen anybody to summarize a kind of independent consensus here. This noticeboard apparently is so lowtraffic that is borders on dysfunctional. Remove me and tom from this debate and all you have is an avowed conservative arguing for blanking all criticism on Cameron, and Nil Einne and KillerChiuaua suggesting to tread carefully with youtube sources (wich was quite helpful, thanks guys, but not sufficient). I have basically given up on the Cameron article, but I would still appreciate to understand how the 3RR rule does not apply on BLP articles (were all my edits get immediately reverted by the same guy over and over), and I am pretty concerned that this general whitewashing of conservative topics on Misplaced Pages seems to spread to more and more articles. Granted, the Carl Cameron article is probably the wrong place to make an example of (the guy isn't *that* important), but I've seen more disturbing examples in recent days. Observing this board here (not) operate has not really advanced my peace of mind on this. ] (]) 02:52, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
For Salon: . I think what has been said over and over, is that Salon, MMFA, et al are not sufficient w/o another MSM source. As for the documentary, is it a ] view? It appears the answer is yes. ] (]) 03:10, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:sorry, that is a copout. That is the article tal page for Salon.com, and '''not''' the reliable sources noticeboard. The talk page's first paragraph notwithstanding, the place to find consensus on that is ].
:that you actually consider ] and ] fringe needs no further commentary. ] (]) 03:31, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
::Actually, they are fringe, along with WND and Free Republic from the right. They are perhaps a significant minority, but should only be present in contrast to a mainstream view. As for my "copout," considering it was referenced in the 1st RS/N case (heck right at the top in the first three lines. As for Salon itself, you need to look through, you'll find that more than a few considered it a tabloid at worst, but on par with WND and Freep at best. I think that finding a better source of MSM coverage would be appropriate. ] (]) 04:30, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] (again) ==

An on-line blog, Carpe Diem, rated Paul Krugman the second most partisan American political columnist in 2003. That ranking was then reported in an op-ed ("Face Value: Paul Krugman, one-handed economist") in ''The Economist''. Is the following statement fair to put into the Krugman article: ''According to The Economist, in 2003 Krugman was ranked as the second most partisan American political columnist, behind only Ann Coulter?'' ] (]) 22:29, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

This is under discussion at ]. ] (]) 23:20, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

:Definitely not, and I'd be embarrassed to be behind the inclusion of a six year old Op-ed mention of an obscure methodology. This is the second worst example of political POV pushing I've seen on Wiki. The number one worst example cited a bumper sticker. Take note of those pushing for the inclusion this ridiculous and obvious smear. ] (]) 00:41, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:: I'ld like to note that this is only the last of a series of dubious edits made by ] to the ] article. His edits have persistently changed the article to reflect badly on Krugman. If one considers the sum of his edits, nearly all of the edits introduce material designed to reflect negatively on Krugman, few if any are introduced to merely improve the article. I think this is problematic. ] (]) 05:57, 6 August 2009 (UTC)



:::I fail to see how it be "defamatory" to cite the Economist calling him liberal when his own blog is titled "Conscience of a Liberal" <g>. Nor do I see it, per se, as "reflecting badly on Krugman" to have such a RS cited. ] (]) 11:45, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Collect, the disputed text does not even use the term ''liberal''. The question is whether a blog about a living person becomes a reliable source if it is mentioned in an op-ed. ] (]) 17:54, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

::Agree with Scribner here, the op-ed mentioning some strange website's methodology, which from what I can tell no one else has ever referred to should go. Describing him as a liberal is probably okay although the position in the article is a valid issue of debate ] (]) 13:31, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== Heinz Nawratil ==

There is a discussion at the ] article whether Heinz Nawratil may be attributed as "extreme far-right" and "nationalistic" (i.e., since he is German, a Nazi), if there is only one source that says so. The source is a translation of a paper written by a reliable scholar, who says Nawratil "is associated with the extreme far-right". A book search showed no further sources availabel at google books say so / turn out in the search. I believe the claim is too strong to be sourced like that, another editor says that the source is good and in the same source, another scholar is cited to have a similar view of Nawratil.

Comments appreciated at ]. ] (]) 22:30, 5 August 2009 (UTC)


:The scholar who calls Nawratil "extreme nationalistic far-right" is ], who was one of the most respected German historians of the 60's, 70's and 80's. His statements are presented in an article by Ingo Haar, who is also a very much respected German historian (the only reason I'm mentioning these historians nationality is in case someone tries to make comments about a "Polish POV" or something).

:Furthermore, it appears that the person in question, Heinz Nawratil writes for the ] - "''an antisemitic "pseudo-academic body" with links to neo-Nazi organizations, and (one that) assert that its primary focus is denying key facts of Nazism and the genocide of Jews and others. It has been described as the "world's leading Holocaust denial organization."''" He apparently has written in support of "Dr. Schickle" who founded what "''has become one of the leading centers of Historical Revisionist scholarship in West Germany''"(Historical Revisionism meaning what it always does - denial of Nazi crimes and the Holocaust) - Nawratil's words. I think this is a pretty clear cut case.] (]) 22:52, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

::The problem is that there is only one source, a translation of Haar referring to Broszat, who per the source makes the association. And that the book search revealed no additional source. And the connection that "appears" to be to the institute with the links to neo-Nazis is also very much indirect. Let's wait for a comment of one of the regulars here.] (]) 23:02, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

:::What you mean the connection is "indirect"??? He's writing for the ''an antisemitic "pseudo-academic body" with links to neo-Nazi organizations, and (one that) assert that its primary focus is denying key facts of Nazism and the genocide of Jews and others.''!!!] (]) 23:12, 5 August 2009 (UTC)

In addition to how Broszat describes him and to the fact that Nawratil writes for THE major Holocaust-denial group here's a few more sources:
which calls him "nationalist" (in the context this means the same as "nationalist extreme right wing")
Here his writing is described as having "distinctly '''revisionist flavor''' (with, again, "revisionist", meaning Holocaust and Nazi crime denial)] (]) 00:33, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

::In the Journal of Historical Review Nawratil refers to the Holocaust as ''the Bundesrepublik's regnant taboo, the extermination myth'' --] (]) 12:42, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

These edits are very questionable in terms of application of ]: . BLP demands an emphasis of a neutral POV and must be very verifiable. These edits in the lead section of the article are not conform with these rules, but it seems to me an indicator for "edit warring" as it was common recently and caused the Arbitration Committee to decide in May 2009 "(C) To edit in accordance with all Misplaced Pages policies and to refrain from any form of advocacy concerning any external controversy, dispute, allegation, or proceeding", which has been put on the article's talk page . Please review. ] (]) 01:15, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:Update: Please see . ''']''' (]) 05:05, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

::??? The situation was not resolved but worsened. It would be help if a neutral and uninvolved administrator could look into the issue. There have been several questionable edits to this article in the last week. ] (]) 08:31, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Update: Please see . ''']''' (]) 21:34, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

{{Resolved|The editors have been blocked as sockpuppets. ]<sup>]</sup> 15:32, 11 August 2009 (UTC)}}

this page continues to be slandered and cannot prove anything. I am afraid of liability. Look at the talk page also. I think the page should be locked to new users. This person is involved in Gay rights and probably angers a lot of people. There is also a football player in Cincinnati named Jordan Palmer, and this person cites no credible references. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 02:08, 6 August 2009 (UTC)</span></small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:I'll work on adding some sourced content. ]<sup>]</sup> 16:52, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:I've temporarily stricken out the unsourced negative ] content in the mean time. ]<sup>]</sup> 17:04, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== Betsy McCaughey ==

{{La|Betsy McCaughey}} - Several users have been describing, in the encyclopedic voice, certain statistics promulgated by ], and other, apparently similar statistics published by ], as "false and misleading." While there is no doubt that criticisms along these lines have been leveled at these subjects, and that the statistics are hotly debated, I believe that it is inappropriate to use the encyclopedic voice to continuously reassert these claims, in some cases in multiple places in the same article. See the following pages for more on this:
*]
*]
*]
*]
// ] (]) 19:57, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:Unfortunately, DCM is attempting to frame a clear falsehood as a "debate" - which is as much a "debate" as Intelligent design is a scientific debate - a few fringe ppl do not make for a debate; it has become impossible to improve, discuss, or work on the verbiage, as DCM reverts wholesale, claiming NPOV and BLP for removing well sourced and accurate content. While I concur that the content should be framed and phrased judiciously, it should not be presented as a "debate" or as though the information, now proven to be grossly inaccurate, is "in dispute". ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 20:28, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== Dynamic IP user adding large amounts of dubious and unsourced material to actor BLPs and related film articles ==

There's a user, who apparently edits only from IP addresses geolocating to Lima, Peru, adding a ton of unsourced, dubious information to actress and actress-related articles. The information typically involves roles the actress didn't get, but supposedly auditioned for, was "considered" for, etc, etc. Some of the information is obviously wrong (the first edit that caught my attention had Kim Basinger auditioning for a film two years after its release); some is conspicuously dubious (Meryl Streep and Alyssa Milano competing for the same role); some more subtly dubious (Legally Blonde originally envisioned as a "dark" comedy vehicle fo Uma Thurman); but much of it is superficially plausible as individual items, but visibly problematic when dozens of names have been added to the article. Today the editor has inserted an unsourced and implausible claim into the Daryl Hannah article ("narrowly missing on" in the lead in Coal Miner's Daughter ). Some randomly chosen exsmples of the IP's work include this unlikely list of roles rejected by Melanie Griffith ; Molly Ringwald up for Uma Thurman's role in Pulp Fiction ; and the deeply weird suggestion that David Lynch tried to cast Cher, Meryl Streep, and Goldie Hawn in Blue Velvet before having to settle for Isabella Rossellini . Is there any way to track down these edits that's more efficient than trolling through film-related articles checking to see which IP addresses are associated with Lima? ] (]) 20:12, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:Doubtful. Some of this "crap" will probably stick and go unnoticed/challenged/ect. until some article is written about how Misplaced Pages has been bamboozled yet again. It sucks to put it mildly. This is by far the worst type of vandalism since it flys low on the radar, unlike the run of the mill dick size nonsense. Remove/tag said material and do your best to follow this where it takes you would be my advice. I am sure there are more formal ways to deal with this and hopefully better advice than mine. Good luck. --] ] 20:33, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:This is really ] territory, not ]. Please take it there, you should get better advice and help and maybe a technical solution. ] <sup>]</sup> 20:42, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
::I did that the first time I spotted the problem, with no response. . Any suggestions on a more effective way to frame the issue, or should I just cut-and-paste what's here? ] (]) 21:59, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Copy-paste - the new title and text should be more effective. Try putting your question (Is there any way...) in a new para, for readability. "Help, please!" at the end wouldn't hurt either :) ] <sup>]</sup> 22:08, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] (again) ==

We now have a user attempting to reinsert controversial material at ], after discussion both here and at the talkpage decided against it. The user has not participated in any way in these discussions, and is insisting on the material being in the article, and that we should "discuss at talk" before removing it. This controverts both ] and ]. I don't have the stomach for another BLP argument right now, so if someone else wants to step in and help this user understand, I'd appreciate it. ]] 20:53, 6 August 2009 (UTC)
:I think the "public editor's" piece in last Sunday's Times changed things drastically. I don't ever remember the Times publishing a piece like that about a journalist who hadn't committed fraud, and Hoyt's information about the way the Times handled Stanley's writing should be incorporated into the article. ] (]) 21:50, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

This article regarding Brian Quintana has a clear conflict of interest in its content. Furthermore the person in question has repeated recreated this article about himself with new accounts over and over. The most recent of which has just been blocked for sockpuppetry, see {{user|Michaeledean}}, {{user|Daphnaz}}, and {{user|Brianq}}.

This article has been deleted at least 7 times, (twice by yours truly), it has also had at least 2 AFDs .

Personally I would be in favor of deletion upon the grounds of ] and ], however I am open to the possibility that might be biased now because I have dealt with this person in the past. So I would like to welcome many more eyes to this article, so that you can judge for yourself. At the very least I hope it will greatly improve the NPOV on this article. Thanks -- ] <small>] ]</small> 22:16, 6 August 2009 (UTC)

:I'm amazed this survived the 2nd AFD. The only good source is the LAT piece "Startling claims..." which makes him sound like a fantasist, perjurer and fraudster (all of which are linked, to his claims to be a "socialite"). The others are blogs, tiny papers (LA Independent is 32,000 circulation), Thaindian News is a website for... Indians in Thailand(!) or passing references. Uncited claims need removing, and frankly I'd vote delete. ] <sup>]</sup> 10:51, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== Recent Deletion On Wiki Talk Page Josip Broz Tito ==

Dear reader just recently my thoughts on talkpage Tito have been deleted and it seems it’s going to stay that way. Since I am faced with the fact that my opinions are being suppressed and then eventually will be blocked, I’ve decided to put this out there so these events may be known to the wider wiki community.

The article in question is Josip Broz Tito (the former Dictator of Yugoslavia- East Europe). He was commander of the partisan forces during world war 2 and later a Stalinistic style dictator of the former Yugoslavia. The Wikipedic article is biased and does not mention crimes (Bleiburg massacre & foibe massacres)) against humanity that were committed under his leadership. I registered that this should be part of the article and as a result I have been deleted. One writer was very abusive and deleted my writings on talk back pages. His name is DIREKTOR. He was supported by Ruhrfisch ><>°° I would like to quote some of the Direktor’s statements regarding this article just to inform you of what we are dealing with here.

“Find yourself another one of your crappy "forums" to talk about your presumptions. Just forget about this, Luigi/Brunodam, you're not annoying anyone - you're just turning out amusing. I think I'll file a checkuser in an hour or so, you'd better believe it when I say I'll delete everything you wrote if you're a sock. --DIREKTOR (TALK) 15:49, 5 August 2009 (UTC)”

These events are not some conspiracy. They have been part of the western media since the break up of the former Yugoslavia. They have been presented as TV documentaries, on talk back shows and in general writings in England, other parts of Europe and USA, Australia and other parts of the free world. They are backed by eye witness accounts by people who were actually caught up in these events.

The Croatian government is addressing these issues with investigations and financial reimbursement is being given to the victims. These are facts and should be present in the article and not deleted when someone points them out. These actions mirror the attitude of the regime that I am trying to expose.

The Josip Broz Tito article is a dangerous biased piece of writing. It would fit perfectly in any article of the old the Yugoslavia or the old Soviet Union propaganda machine (Cult of personality). Why is it there? The only answer it seems is that Misplaced Pages has some writers of extreme views (Stalin Style) who don’t tolerate being questioned.

Regards Sir Floyd <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:21, 7 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

== ] ==

{{la|Michael Jenkins (religious leader)}} - There are two current issues:
*'''Hearsay''' - A significant number of sources quoted in the article are under discussion as gossip and BLP failures for this reason. When removed they have been reverted back into the text but as the sources are demonstrably hearsay should they be removed immediately to avoid any doubt?
*'''Pay for and restricted sites as sources''' - Several sources are problematic as they refer to sites that require payment or ] (i.e. no freely available registration) to access the articles. For this reason some of the dubious sources have been left unchallenged for a significant length of time. Should this BLP be reliant on such sources without including quotes from the source so that there is reasonable easy verification?
Note, a merge for the article has been suggested and a prior AFD was turned down on the basis of adequate sources. Having these sources removed as unreliable may be the basis of a future AFD and this may be an area of contention.—] (]) 11:09, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::I'll deal with the second part only. Online sources and/or free sources are ''not'' required; ] are, which may or not may not free or be easily available on line. In this case the paper newspapers cited would be considered reliable sources; no web link is necessary, as the paper copy could be consulted for ] purposes. I will agree that the current courtesy links are unhelpful, as they go to the Athens account log in page. If links are going to be included they would better to link directly to newspaper archives which at least gives a free abstract. eg. . If you want an easy way to check verifiability (without a health-giving walk to the library) you might want to try the folks at ].--] (]) 11:51, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Thanks, this does imply that reasonable verifiability might be limited to an abstract, which in this case may not discuss the subject of the BLP. Particularly as none of my libraries here in South London stock copies of the Houston Chronicle.—] (]) 11:59, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::::No. As I said, paper resources are fine (otherwise we wouldn't be able to use books, for example). The link would be a courtesy link only, and not even required. You may not have easy access to this newspaper, but plenty of other people do, (see my suggestion above) and they could probably email copies to you if you doubt the word of the the editor who added the information. You could also certainly ask the editor who added the citation to quote the relevant passages from the original article on the talkpage. --] (]) 12:04, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::I think that's a pretty logical consensus building approach and if sample text were quoted for discussion on the talk page, this may result in suitable quotes being added to the citations. In this case the issue is trying to give some context for biographical data. Particularly as when challenged, the text of some sources has been weaker or more tangential than one would have expected; in the long term it may require some re-phrasing of the article in order to meet ].—] (]) 12:33, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:Note that is the one who has proposed the merge, and appears to be actively arguing against reliable sources in this article. The user's first post to is regarding his own proposed move, and the actual merge proposal is his to the article. Motivation for this sort of behavior is left as an exercise for the editor to explain. ] (]) 19:14, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
::Could someone else please help out and explain what Jclemens is accusing me of here, I seem to be missing the point. I think that proposing a merge and then collaborating in tidying up the article was not against any particular policy or particularly unusual. Does anyone think I have to explain my motivation?—] (]) 21:45, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Note, I have raised ] for this last matter, as a more appropriate forum rather than discussing further here.—] (]) 07:38, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

An IP has repeatedly inserted blatant factual errors to make the subject of the article look bad. Page protection or an IP block is requested. ] <small>(])</small> 19:42, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

That is not true. They aren't blatant factual errors just because you disagree with them. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 02:02, 8 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Untrue. You repeatedly inserted that the errors that a WSJ editorial column 1) was a news article or in the news section and 2) accused the subject of the article of something that the article did not actually say. ] <small>(])</small> 03:56, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

1)It WAS an article from the news division, as opposed to the editorial division, though I was incorrect (NOT purposefully) that it was in the news pages.
2)to what are you referring? <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 10:07, 8 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:1) It was an editorial on the editorial page, period. To make anything else of it is OR designed to push your POV, as you have been doing. 2) You repeatedly in inserted the false statement saying the article said Totenberg did not disclose the reason for her firing. ] <small>(])</small> 16:18, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

1) You tried to insinuate that Hunt was complicit in what the editorial division said. Not true. 2) If you are referring to the statement that she had left an impression about firing, may I remind you that I was restoring YOUR edit, and previously, an edit made by someone else a while back. The interpretation from the Kurtz article that she left that impression is more than defensible; the interpretation from the Hunt article that she did so is clear.
Why do you have to resort to bullying tactics of trying to shut up people because they disagree with you or challenge your ability to have the last word?--] (]) 17:33, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

:1) Untrue. I added a citation from a reliable source that stated that some journalists made the connection. 2) That disagreement has nothing to do with the separate factual error you repeatedly inserted, as I clearly noted above. Don't try to play the victim here. This isn't about a disagreement, I brought it to this noticeboard because of you are playing fast and loose with the facts. ] <small>(])</small> 19:09, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

2) The wording that I restored, added by someone else a while back and deleted by you, said that HUNT charged that she had not disclosed the reason she left the National Observer.--] (]) 15:25, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

:And Hunt did NOT charge that, which makes it a factual error that YOU inserted into the article. I can't find anything in the edit history to show anyone but you inserting that factual error. ] <small>(])</small> 15:38, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

Hunt DID charge that. Sorry, but if you look at versions back at least through May 2006, you'll see the words in the article.--] (]) 16:01, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
Now don't insert factual errors into this discussion like saying that it didn't appear before I added it back.--] (]) 16:11, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

:Hunt DID NOT charge that. The old versions of the Misplaced Pages article do say that, but that doesn't make it true, nor does it make you not responsible for inserting factual errors when you have been notified that they are incorrect. Have you even read the article? ] <small>(])</small> 18:00, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

Words I added back:
"Al Hunt of the Wall Street Journal brought up ..., -->and, relatedly, of not disclosing the true reason she left the National Observer.<--"

Hunt article:

<blockquote> In a recent Washington Post profile she talked about how she herself was a victim of sexual harassment when she worked at the now-defunct National Observer (which was published by Dow Jones & Co., the publisher of this newspaper). In the article, she left the impression that the harassment was behind her firing over charges of plagiarism.

Here are the facts.

In December 1972, the Washington Post's Myra MacPherson wrote a piece about Thomas P. O'Neill, who was about to be elected House majority leader. A week later, Ms. Totenberg wrote a profile of Rep. O'Neill for the Observer.

...

Ms. MacPherson, no longer with the Post, is "bothered" that last week's profile of Ms. Totenberg left the "implication that she left because of sexual harassment when there is strong evidence this was a serious case of plagiarism or a rewrite job."

Ms. Totenberg, in an interview, insists: "What I did or didn't do almost 20 years ago isn't the issue. I believe I left the Observer because I was being sexually harassed." But Lionel Linder, who was a top editor at the Observer in 1973 and is now the editor of the Commercial Appeal of Memphis, says flatly that Ms. Totenberg was fired because "whatever extenuating circumstances, it was clear that she plagiarized."
</blockquote>
As Hunt clearly points out, Totenberg did NOT disclose the true reason that she left the Observer--plagiarism. Rather, Totenberg says she believes she left the Observer "because I was being sexually harassed."--] (]) 15:35, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

:Hunt does not point that out at all. Read what you quoted. Hunt says "impression". He never says she did not disclose it, and it is clearly disclosed in the Kurtz article Hunt is complaining about. ] <small>(])</small> 17:24, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

Need I say more? ] (]) 19:51, 7 August 2009 (UTC)
:Yes? If that is her stage name, then I don't really see how its a BLP violation. ] (]) 15:16, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== Bandar bin Sultan ==

A source (funded by the Iranian government) is reporting a Saudi opposition figure claiming ] (a senior Saudi prince, formerly the Saudi ambassador to the US) has attempted an unsuccessful coup-de-tat. I don't know how reliable a source we should regard ]; at the very least I'd appreciate it if others watchlist this article. -- ] • ] 22:10, 7 August 2009 (UTC)

:My impression is that Press TV is widely considered a propoganda arm of the Iranian state. I don't think it should count as a valid source. ] (]) 00:38, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

:: Thanks, that we becoming my suspicion too. It's been a day since the PressTV report, and the story hasn't been picked up by any reliable source. So I've removed it and insisted on WP:RS on the talk page. -- ] • ] 21:41, 8 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

Most, if not all, of the "evidence" in the Allison Quets entry is unsourced or conjecture. The biased newspaper sources are not verified, if linked at all. This article does not comply with Misplaced Pages's own policies and must be removed. If it is still standing after this complaint and my prior efforts that it be taken down, why is it still standing. It is an "orphan," it does not comply with living person's bio rules, and it is unsourced. It must come down. On top of all of that, the two children involved will grow up to see lies/conjecture/whatever. Please take this down. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 00:18, 9 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Thank you 76, for your report, and I recognize that you have been trying to express your concerns about this article for quite some time. I'm sorry that your efforts have been in vain to date. I agree that the article is very much sub-standard. I'm not yet sure whether it is really a candidate for deletion, since Quets and her story have been quite well covered in the media. I have already started work on cleaning up the article, and sourcing it appropropriatly. I encourage other interested editors to help in the process and to offer their comments on whether this is a candidate for deletion under ].--] (]) 01:08, 9 August 2009 (UTC)


Thank you. Please be sure to read all the case law and legal documents at Quets's site at that is the only source for such documents at this point. In addition, if this isn't deleted, I assume journalistic fairness will, indeed, win and Denise Needham, Kevin Needham, Michael Shorstein, and John Gurley will all have entries. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:17, 9 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

FYI: I am a research scholar who studies adoption issues, and I have read every public document on the case. There truly is no way to verify this story with reliable, ethical sources. Although it can be verified that the Needhams broke federal law by not following ICPC regulations and ignoring the laws of their home state, NC, as is required in adoption law: the laws of both states, sending and receiving, must be followed. NC has a 7 day waiting period. Quets was well within that time frame. This case should be labelled, how to legally kidnap children using a corrupt trial judge who the adoption attorney used to work for, also verifiable. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 03:27, 9 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Quets' website is down, but in any case it is very likely that the website would not be considered a ] for our purposes. Our policies require us to use ], such as newspapers, books and other media.
:We are absolutely not interested in importing your external dispute here, and cannot include your opinions about the principals or about the merits of the case; especially given that it appears that Quets has lost her case at more or less every level.
:I do still question whether this is BLP that WP needs per ] and ]. ''"If reliable sources cover the person only in the context of a particular event, and if that person otherwise remains, or is likely to remain, low profile, then a separate biography is unlikely to be warranted."'' Quets made the national and international news at the time of the kidnap. Since then, there has been coverage of the various court cases, but in local papers only. I would be interested in some other eyes and comments on this.--] (]) 12:43, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

::I've no idea what "external dispute" you are referring to. My dispute is with the lack of evidence, documentation, and ethos in this text. The text simply does not adhere to Misplaced Pages guidelines and policy. Those are the issues. I'll assume the shift in your tone, which is quite unnecessary and rather rude, is due to the late hour and exhaustion.{{unsigned2|13:10, 9 August 2009 |76.122.137.130}}

:::I think if you reread your post then you will understand what I am taking about regarding important external disputes. Your comments about a "corrupt trial judge" and "legal kidnapping", for example, show that (rightly or wrongly) this is a ]. I'm sorry if you considered my post rude, which was not my intention, but it ''was'' necessary to point that this, and some of the suggestions you made about the article, are inappropriate.
:::It's much better idea to focus on how the text does not adhere to WP policies and guidelines. My view, from a quick survey of the literature suggests that what remains in the article is eminently sourceable from reliable sources, though it needs updating, and repetition removed. It also seems pretty balanced to me.
:::My question remains as above, however, whether, we need this article at all.--] (]) 14:13, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

I've never heard of this singer, but her article is repeatedly being edited with some serious BLP violations. Could others keep an eye on it, please? ] (]) 04:00, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== David Ferguson (impresario) ==

I am editing the biography of ] to improve its overall quality and sources. However there are currently some issues that I believe need consensus in order to remove unjustified banner templates. I would appreciate comments from editors regarding ], ] or anything to add about ], etc. Thank you-- ] (]) 09:54, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
== ] ==

Mark Lester (like so many others) has just claimed (to a dubious tabloid) that he is the biological father of at least one of ]'s children. Per BLP respects to the children, who have been hurt enough over the past 7 weeks, this should probably stay out of the article until there is some form of DNA confirmation. Was hoping some admins could watch over the article. — ] ]] 11:54, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

So it appears in newspaper reports all over the world, but Misplaced Pages should conceal what he claims solely because somebody might not like it ! It is an established and referenced fact that Mark Lester has claimed it to be true. Misplaced Pages is supposed to state the facts isn't it - or is it supposed exclude what some people don't want to be true. --] (]) 12:23, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:Newspapers show little/no regard for peoples privacy or respect for human dignity, we on the other hand, ]. I'm not saying it is or is not true (I honestly don't know or care), that is not the point at all though. — ] ]] 12:39, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

The widespread censorship of established facts because they are not what somebody wants to hear really discredits Misplaced Pages. It makes Wikipdia a very biased source of information. --] (]) 12:48, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:You lost me at "censorship" which in my experience '''always''' means "I cannot get support for some fringe view or gossip I want in Misplaced Pages. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 12:51, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

It is very obvious that you do care. A quick look at your contributions shows that you have made a huge number of edits concerning Michael Jackson, all of which have either reversed anything negative concerning Michale Jackson or have added something positive concerning him. Bias and concealing unappealing facts should have no place on an encylopedia, but unfortunately there are so many people on Misplaced Pages that will make concerted efforts to distort and conceal the truth. --] (]) 12:56, 9 August 2009 (UTC)
:You two need to take your <s>bitchfest</s> content dispute ], and I remind Franklin Demenge of ], and advise he not imply anyone here is distorting or concealing anything, as that is character assassination. ]<small><sup>]</sup>]</small> 12:59, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

::I agree with KC's assesment. Please limit conversation here to BLP violation discussion rather than how Misplaced Pages does or doesn't function appropriately since that adds very little/nothing to improving correcting violations. Thank you. --] ] 15:36, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

:Since Mark Lester himself is making the claims, and the claims are being reported by multiple reliable sources, not reporting them would be burying our heads in the sand. ] (]) 23:14, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== Michael Blakey ==

{{La|Michael Blakey}}

The entry on the above is just outraegous and scandalous self promotion <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 21:32, 9 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Are you serious? He is a notable business executive and record producer.--] (]) 23:11, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

{{la|Rebecca Quick}}

The article on this CNBC anchor includes a reference to her previous marriages sourced to Page Six of the New York Post. The Page Six item refers to alleged ethical issues raised by her marriage to her executive producer. The article itself makes no reference to those supposed issues, but I wonder whether this is an appropriate source to be linked in a BLP. What say you? --] (]) 23:04, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

: If it is just being used to source a non-controversial detail (as it seems to be in this case), then that shouldn't be too much of an issue, assuming that we think t hat the Post is reliable enough. I don't think there's an inherent BLP problem, but it wouldn't hurt to replace it with a different source if we can find one. ] (]) 23:43, 9 August 2009 (UTC)

::Here's a better source:
::] (]) 13:20, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

:::I think the NY Post item just linked would be a suitable replacement. --] (]) 16:16, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

{{La|Tucker Max}}

This article has a long history of being semi-protected due to IP vandalism. It was recently protected for two weeks' time. Within days, the IP vandalism, most of which is of the BLP-violation nature, has started again. We've got things like the , removal of content that might be seen as , and the (cited) claim that Max is a ] journalist repeatedly removed. Semi-protection would probably be rejected due to not enough recent vandalism, so I'm bringing the issue up here.

One can check the article's history to see how regularly this article has to be semi-protected; I'd personally like to see it given the same indefinite semi-protection that articles like ] get. <font face="copperplate gothic bold"><font color="orange">]</font><font color="red">]</font></font><sup> <font color="black">]</font></sup> 00:35, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

{{La|Dawn Wells}}

What essentially boils down to a traffic violation is being given undue weight and by doing so seems to be presenting a case of "where there's smoke there's fire". ] has a subheader "Marijuana incidents". It begins with a comment made by ] which he later recanted about Wells being his drug supplier. Nothing is given to explain why he made the comment, why he recanted, or if Wells was even aware of it. It then goes on to explain how Wells was caught with drug paraphernalia in her car, but that a friend took responsibility and that Wells was accepted as being guilty of no wrong-doing in relation to the drug paraphernalia. Finally she is fined with reckless driving, and "no offense was put on her record." So although in the eyes of the law, nothing is recorded on her record, we are making this incident a part of her record here. I feel that although the section is partially sourced, it is presented in such a way as to make it appear that she is guilty of something. The traffic violation in itself is so minor as to be trivial, and I think this whole section should be removed. There have been several editors who have criticized this section since March 2008, and each has been overruled by one editor who seems to have adopted the role of gatekeeper for this article. If the law says that Dawn Wells is not guilty of any criminal offense, we should abide by that, in my opinion. I'm going to remove the section entirely as I feel it does not comply with our BLP guidelines and would ask that it not be added again, until/unless someone independent and unbiased looks at it, and says it's OK. ] (]) 10:13, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
*IMO, the Denver allegation shouldn't be mentioned since he refused to say it under oath. I don't think the paraphernalia incident should be mentioned since she was not found guilty of anything and mentioning this minor offense that she was exonerated of casts an negative light for no good reason (because she was exonerated). Lastly, the driving incident appears to me to be a case of ] weight. ] (]) 15:08, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
::How widely was this "material" covered by reliable sources? I remember a possibly similar case where a basketball coach, forget name had some minor DUI years before he became "notable" and it was general consensus not to include since it was so minor and not related in the slightest to his overall carreer nor related to achoholism, ect. Was the case above one shot deal or related to larger story, ie pattern, ect. Anyways, I would err on the side of non inclusion unless it was some "huge" deal/story. I don't know either way, just chimming in. Good luck. --] ] 15:32, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

* {{La|Erik Prince}} - I want to get a second opinion (or three). Recently, some reliable sources have reported that anonymous sources (John Doe's 1 and 2) have made allegations against Erik Prince in sealed affidavits. However, at this point, they are simply allegations by unknown people. There have been no charges, indictments etc. Essentially 2 unknown people making the allegations and that's it. I think this is contentious at this point and kind of flimsy to repeat allegations that Prince was involved in a conspiracy to murder people made by unknown people, even if the accusations are being reported by Keith Olberman and The Nation magazine. Of course if it becomes an actual charge or at least somethign being actioned in court, it belongs in the article. But right now, it feels like it doesn't belong at this point. Am I on the right or wrong track? // ] (]) 15:03, 10 August 2009 (UTC)
: Little as I like to say it, I think you're on the right track. If the identities are later unsealed and proven to know what they're talking about, or if court action is taken based on the sealed declarations, that will be a different story. --] (]) 21:47, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== Henrik Brockmann ==

{{user|Henrik Brockmann}} has been editing articles of groups associated with the musician of the same name (who he claims to be), saying he doesn't want his name linked with them. -- ]] 17:58, 10 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

* {{La|Megan Fox}} - Apparently Megan Fox made an offhand comment about Megatron from ''Transformers'' " out all of the white trash, hillbilly, anti-gay, super bible-beating people in Middle America". ] apparently believes that this comment deserves an entire paragraph in Megan Fox's article because the actress came under heat from some right-wing bloggers. I think it's both a case of ] and giving what is an incredibly minor event ], given that it got no real notice outside of the blogs.// ] (]) 00:00, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

First off, Megan's comments had been put in the article A LONG TIME ago, almost around the time they were made. I won't deny that i was a Megan fanboy and as such, even though I concede that they were a stupid thing to say, there was no denying that she did say them. Also, there was no "apparently", the sources are sound, verifiable- she did say it. Unlike model ], whom also made an anti-military comment, Bar went out of her way to dispute what she said, said she was taken out of context, etc. Megan has never apologized or retracted the comments, instead relying on Paramounts PR department (imho) to keep this out of the public light, which largely worked. But it does not change the fact that she did say what she said and has never clarified what she said. The sources are sound and were put in a long time ago. I would also point out there are many on the left wing that would absolutely applaud Megan's comments if they read them here on Misplaced Pages. Ultimately, we are not here to give Megan a favorable edit to her Misplaced Pages page. We are here to give her page a fair look, and if it meets Misplaced Pages standards on ], which are met, they should remain in the article.

My curious coincidence, by including them I feel there is a better argument for upgrading it now to ] status. ] (]) 02:53, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

Here is a more mainstream source from THE INSIDERS's official website....say what you will about tabloid news organizations, but they are sort of in the business of reporting on celebritys and when they can verify this story, they would. Do you think for one second that if this story were untrue, that Megan would not be suing the crap out of them. Anyway, enjoy. <ref>http://www.theinsider.com/news/2267243_Megan_Fox_Slams_Middle_America</ref>

:As I said at ], there is no doubt that she made the comments, the issue at hand is whether those comments have been ] (i.e. by some source other than a blog), and whether a whole paragraph carries ], as this is a single comment, not widely reported, held against the totality of Fox's life. I think this fails on both counts. ] (]) 03:38, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
::Thanks, Kevin. As I've been trying to say, it was never a matter of verifiability but notability. No one's doubting that she said it. It just doesn't warrant inclusion on the article.--] (]) 03:40, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:::I agree, it seems very ], and not notable in the long term. ] (]) 06:18, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:::Disagree. It is notable, the only ones really fighting to oppose this are Megan's fanboys, and I admit to being one until this weekend (when I became a Sienna Miller fanboy). It's no less worthy or unworthy of inclusion then many other things that are unfavorable to someone but meet other Wiki standards. Again- There are people on the left that will applaud Megan's comments. When you look at the ABC NEWS story, where it gives it some mention (albeit largely edited), there is no doubt Megan's PR people were doing their best to supress the story, which is unto itself another issue. The fact that you guys are trying as hard as you are to keep it out is beside the point. Anyway, the sources I put up meet the reliability standard and verification is already there. While I can respect your reasons for keeping it off to protect Megan's reputation, that is besides the point- argue about it on some other fan site, but here at wikipedia, it is notable. If Megan had retracted the statement, clarified it, said she was taken out of context, that would certainly be reasons to remove it. But she has never done that, so it stands. ] (]) 06:24, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
::::You seems to be suffering from a failure to ] on the part of those who disagree with you. So if we remove the '']'' part of your argument calling us fanboys, what we are left with is your opinion that the sources are reliable. As you have been told, the ] specifically excludes using blogs as sources. YOu recently posted a to ''The Insider'', which notes at the bottom that it was submitted by a user. These are not ]. If you can present a reliably sourced report (i.e. mainstream media reports) then it could stay, so long as it passes the hurdle of ], otherwise it must be left out. ] (]) 06:33, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:::::(EC)Agreed, Kevin. Whipple, please don't poison the well here. I'm not a "fanboy" for anything, so accept the discussion here in good faith. Right now a Google news search for Megan Fox turns up nothing on this topic on the front page. Famous people say stupid things sometimes, controversy blows up and then goes away. ] (]) 06:47, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

Uh, my more current edit has MSN, ABCNEWS and other's cited as sources. In one of the replies, someone could not even dispute them, but acted like it was not enough. Nothing wrong with me calling you "fanboys", heck I was one of you in that I was aware of what Megan said, but was willing to look past it because I genuinely liked looking at Megan. However, now that I have seen GI JOE, Sienna Miller has taken Megan's place at #1 in hotness and now am more willing to make this discussion. Anyhow, ] states that ""Keep in mind that, in determining proper weight, we consider a viewpoint's prevalence in reliable sources, not its prevalence among Misplaced Pages editors." and some other things. Bottom line though, is that the newer edits highlight the ABC and MSN parts of the article. If you want to remove the part about "her comments don't make her shine" and a few other aspects of it, then that can be substained. And a Google search on Megan Fox Middle America brings the story right back up, so don't act like this is some sort of conspiracy to bring her down. If she were to retract or clarify her statement, that would be one thing. She has not done that. ] (]) 13:12, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
:If this were truly ], why would it make a difference if she had retracted her statement? ] (]) 14:37, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
*I think it's a case of ]. Just because a reliable source reports it, doesn't mean we should include it. For example, if Obama visits a city today and delivers a run of the mill speech, the news will report it, but that doesn't mean we need to rush to his bio and insert it. ABC, MSNBC etc report the news, ]. She said something that may or may not be dumb. So what? People remember her for her role as an entertainer. I think bio's should focus on significant live events, not just things to fill space. ] (]) 14:58, 11 August 2009 (UTC)

We are also talkign about Notability here. If Obama said what Megan Fox said about how he plans to dole out health care.....if he used the exact same words and it was irrefutable what he said....your damn right it would be in the article for him to have said what Megan said. Also, remember that there are MANY on the left that would probably agree and applaud Megan for what she said, so this also cuts both ways. Anyhow, According to this......."Keep in mind that, in determining proper weight, we consider a viewpoint's prevalence in reliable sources, not its prevalence among Misplaced Pages editors.", from the NPOV area, this is less about whether it should be in or not: the standards have been met. Megan's supporters (I won't call them fanboys since they are crying foul over it even though I mean it as a term of affection). And yes, there are going to be people that justifably will be upset that may not even know this happened, as Megan's PR people have done a great job spiking this story. ] (]) 01:34, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:Exactly, we're talking notability, but your comments don't address notability at all. You're discussing how we would deal with it if the comments came from the President, and talking about the comments from an NPOV standpoint. However, this doesn't address the basic factor of notability, and undue weight. ] (]) 02:03, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
::*The comparison is flawed because Obama would be talking about something that ''actually'' effected people, unlike Fox, who is nothing more than an actress.....which is simply a citizen with an opinion. Believe it or not, actresses have no real power. ] (]) 03:58, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:Whippletheduck, everyone here has heard your arguments, and remain unconvinced. There is absolutely no consensus here to include the "Middle America" comments that Fox made. Remember, no-one here disagrees that she made the comments - it is clear that she did. The issue is that her comments have not been discussed by mainstream media except as a passing mention, which means that to include them lends ] to an issue that mainstream media have largely ignored. If you intend to continue your argument, you need to address this point, and leave out mention of left wing/right wing/fanboys/Obama. ] (]) 02:12, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

I'm not the one that brought Obaman or the Right/Left part into this discussion at all. Sandor was the one that kept complaining about how only right wing blogs and somewhere else ever reported on this as a reason not to include the article. When I called him out on it, it was someone else that brought Obama in as an example, and did not do a very good one, claiming that it would not be notable if Obama in a stump speech made the comment that Megan made----Does anyone beleive that if Obama said what Megan said that it would be the end of his presidency?

And you guys are all trying way too hard on this, threatening 3R as quickly as you are to try to spike this debate. if the Misplaced Pages standards are correct, then it is the content that needs to be addressed, not the number of editors that are involved. If you all agree that the sources are good (which I notice, none of you are criticizing anymore, which sounds like "well we can't refute those sources so lets make it an NOTABILITY ARGUMENT instead", which personally I think is rather cowardly.

I would not be surprised if a lot of the megan defenders are really affiilated with whatever agency represents Megan and are trying to spike this so it does not reflect badly on your client.

I suppose I can wait and see if she creates a history of additional ridiculous statements, she is only 23 so she has plenty time to do that, and then catalogue them. Good thing about Misplaced Pages is that edits and stuff stay in the system so it will be easy to regenerate whatever it is I need to do it. ] (]) 04:06, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:Again, you're not addressing the notability issue here at all, rather you're choosing to cast aspersions on the motives of people who disagree with you. Consensus appears pretty clear the section isn't notable, if you disagree, please address the question. ] (]) 04:15, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

::According to Kevin in his first chiming in, this is about ] (i.e. by some source other than a blog), and whether a whole paragraph carries ]. The newer sources, specifically from MSN.COM and from ABCNEWS meet what he claimed and what others also agreed with him on, meet the Reliably Reported Standard. As to Undue Weight, it says we have to judge based on the reliability of the information, not the number of editors, that is right in the UNDUE WEIGHT criteria, with a specific quote as

""Keep in mind that, in determining proper weight, we consider a viewpoint's prevalence in reliable sources, not its prevalence among Misplaced Pages editors.""

So, the question is, to both Kevin and to Sandor Clegane, you were saying one thing, both agreed, and now that the two issues you both specifically cited as making the entry are being met, you are now changing the argument to what now??? ] (]) 04:30, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:I have not changed my position at all. The blogs cited (''The Insider'' etc) are not reliable sources, and cannot be used in either the article, or in arguments about notability or undue weight. The MSN and ABC reports are reliable enough for use in a BLP, however they are barely passing mentions stating what Fox said. As such, when we look at the total reliable coverage of Fox's comments we have 2 extremely minor reports out of the hundreds of reputable mainstream media outlets. To use those reports would violate ]. ] (]) 04:43, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

::No one is denying what she said. However, for it to be notable (and not ]), it needs to received significant coverage in reliable secdonary sources. When famous people say dumb things, it's not necessarily notable. The Dixie Chicks comments about President Bush are a good example of notability, it received a ton of coverage and is still very much notable. As I said above, Googling news on Megan Fox doesn't return any major mentions of this. ] (]) 04:52, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

== Sharee Miller ==

I recieved a personal letter from Sharee who is my friend and she said she was ofically released as of July 29th and she wrote the letter to me dated 8-5-09. Someone better check facts. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 19:49, 11 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:Personal correspondence is not a ].&nbsp;–&nbsp;] (]) 20:18, 11 August 2009 (UTC)
== ] ==

{{La|Jennifer Williams}}
The subject of this biography has debatable notoriety. It appears to have been written by the subject herself or perhaps her employer, ESPN. After reviewing the revisions to this article it appears as if this biography was written for ESPN's own marketing or for the subject's self-promotion purposes.

] (]) 20:15, 11 August 2009 (UTC)


: I agree, there appear to be no sources for any of the data cited. AfD?] (]) 17:04, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] ==

My request yesterday for page protection on ] was rejected for a reason I don't understand (the reason for rejection was because the IP who was vandalizing had been blocked, but there were at least 5 different IPs vandalizing yesterday alone). But the vandalism continues, and was just reverted by the very admin who rejected my protection request yesterday. This article badly needs protection, the attacks are disgusting, but nothing is being done. ] (]) 02:17, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
:I managed to squeeze out a 24h protection. Maybe next time list it at ], where it will likely receive a much longer protection. ] (]) 22:51, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

== Nabih Berri Defamation ==

The biography article on Mr. Nabih Berri, the current Speaker of Parliament of Lebanon is ABSURD.

"It is widely believed that Berri has benefited from the large sums of money", "He, as well as Rafik Hariri and Walid Jumblatt, are viewed by many as having been puppets of the Syrian government during its 30-year military presence."

This is a clear absurd defamation that has to be corrected immediately. I understand that Misplaced Pages does not check every article, but there should be a minimum regulation.

We kindly request this complaint be taken seriously, and acted upon immediately.

Thanks in advance,
W.B. <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 15:13, 12 August 2009 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

:I've reverted to a more neutral version of the article. I don't know about the accuracy, but the sources were organisations with aims to "promote American interests in the Middle East", and what appeared to be personal websites and blogs – probably failing the ] and ] guidelines. ] (]) 16:28, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

== Reliable source for some statements, not for others ==

reads far more like an op/ed piece rather than reporting, and as we know, "ews reporting is distinct from opinion pieces. An opinion piece is reliable only as to the opinion of its author, not as a statement of fact"; "ome sources may be considered reliable for statements as to their author's opinion, but not for statements of fact." ]. In what ways can we use that source in the context of ], where we are concerned about "ontentious material ... poorly sourced" and directed to write "responsibly, conservatively, and in a neutral, encyclopedic tone"? Can we use it as a source that supports purported statements of fact about Palin, or only as a source for statements about the source's opinion of Palin?

I'll give some specifics. Fmr. Gov. ] made some remarks critical of ]; the source says that Palin is "wrong," and that "othing in the legislation would carry out such a bleak vision." Is that a reliable source for a fact claim in Palin's article that she ''is'' "wrong"? Or is it a reliable source only for a statement in the form of "the AP"--or Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, the nominal author of the source--"argues that Palin is wrong"? And either way, is it acceptable to substitute the loaded word "false" for the word "wrong" and citing the AP story? ''(Crossposted to RSN)''. <font face="palatino linotype" color="#000000">- Simon Dodd</font> <small>{ ]·]·]·] }</small> 16:29, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

:<small>not another Palindrama already</small> The piece's statement is as much a statement of the opinion of the writer as to future possibilities as is Palin's herself. Stating an opinion as fact is a rhetorical shortcut widespread among unscrupulous/lazy journalists (and politicians, for that matter). But without question they are both opinions, and should be presented as such. ]&nbsp;(]) 16:50, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

: Since she ''is'' wrong, I don't see what is contentious about the AP saying so. ] (]) 18:08, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

::If I say that you're an idiot, you will no doubt object that I'm being contentious (]). Or rather, that my claim is contentious. It is hardly an answer for me to say "since you ''are'' an idiot, I don't see what is contentious about saying so." That would be circular reasoning, and you would rightly object. I'm not saying that you are an idiot, but I am saying that your reply is an identically circular argument to the one just shredded.<font face="palatino linotype" color="#000000">- Simon Dodd</font> <small>{ ]·]·]·] }</small> 23:04, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

: Politicans often say things that aren't true, and pointing an example out isn't automatically contentious. Can you find a source half as reliable as the AP supporting Palin's claim? ] (]) 18:16, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

::See ].<font face="palatino linotype" color="#000000">- Simon Dodd</font> <small>{ ]·]·]·] }</small> 22:30, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
::: Why? ] (]) 22:38, 12 August 2009 (UTC)

::::If you have to ask, you've not understood it. The burden of evidence lies with the editor who adds or restores material, a fortiori in a BLP. It isn't incumbent on me to prove that she is right, it is incumbent on those who would add material claiming that she is right ''or'' that she is wrong to demonstrate its compliance with policy and that its inclusion is justified as a prudential matter.<font face="palatino linotype" color="#000000">- Simon Dodd</font> <small>{ ]·]·]·] }</small> 22:55, 12 August 2009 (UTC)
::::: I understand just fine. The burden HAS been met, and your assertions are nonsense. ] (]) 17:34, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

== Karl Rove ==

Being in the news again of late and a subject of some interest, I had hoped that discussion on the ] talk page would iron out some editing differences and allow for a consensus, but I'm sorry to report that ] has used the word 'libel' with reference to material written in the article, which ups the ante much higher than I care to take this matter. I request admin advice and action, if need be.

It appears to me that this is at least an example of ] if not ] (made in the talk page at the bottom, section title 'Phony Citations #38 and #39 under heading, George W. Bush Administration'.) At the very least, this appears to me to designed to cause a 'chilling effect', which is also combined with uncivil discussion.

Reading the last few chapters of talk at the bottom of the talk page will quickly show the problem. This is not about 'left' or 'right' in my view, but what is best for Misplaced Pages. Thanks for your time on this. ] (]) 00:12, 13 August 2009 (UTC)


I have been attempting to edit the Karl Rove article for neutrality. As you will clarly see when you examine my contributions, I am working hard to remove the obvious bias, but every time I do this, another person comes along and reverts back to the old text. If you carefully examine the third paragraph in the lead, and again examine what is written under the heading, George W. Bush Administration, yo will see what I mean. The total lack of credible citations should be cause enough to remove these scurrilous claims. The editors doing this never bother to make the article better, just make it more hateful. It is a terrible biography and violates Misplaced Pages's rules on Biographies of Living Persons. You cannot claim someone has alleged crimes when no evidence was found to charge that person with a crime. And the section under George W. Bush where it is claimed that Rove increased the threat level during the 2004 campaign whenver Kerry's poll numbers rose, is simply made up. The editor, Chhe, claims it is an 'oft-cited' example of Rove's influence. Oft-cited where? If it is "oft-cited," then show us where it is cited and is that reference credible? But he can't do that. The people editing this page have a negative view of this man. If you carefully examine all the references, many of them are coming from left wing POV sources, such as the book by Wayne Slater and James Moore, "The Architect."

In addition, the entire overall content of the article is focused on painting this man in an entirely negative light. ] It gives undue weight to "scandals" where the special counsel found no cause to prosecute Rove. The third paragrah in the lead gives the distinct impression that Mr. Rove is a criminal who has escaped being charged with a crime to date. Mr. Rove is most famous for getting George Bush elected Gov of Texas twice and President twice, yet none of the methodology the man used, none of his passion for politics, none of his true background is presented in this article. This page is a distortion, as is the discussion on the talk page. Please lets keep in mind that children will be reading the biographies and they need objective facts and legitimate sources, not a diatribe from those prejudiced against this man.] (]) 16:11, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

== Contentious material about living person ==]== ==

* {{La|Petro Voinovsky}} - Amongst other errors indicating carelessness and falsifications, the article contains contentious information about a “living″ person that is clearly libelous and harmful given the lack of a single reliable source. In particular, I direct you to the middle of the second paragraph. I ask for assistance in immediately removing the contentious material, so as to avoid unnecessary rounds of edits. As a new user, I am more than happy to assist in this process. Please advise. Thank you. // ] (]) 00:37, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:{{done}} It's unclear whether Voinovsky is a living person or not - it says that he "died after 2003," but we have no details. ] mandates that "ontentious material ... that is unsourced ... should be removed immediately and without waiting for discussion." I see the material you have in mind, it's certainly contentious, and it cites no sources. If he ''is'' alive, BLP applies, and the material should be removed immediately. Since we aren't sure, we should err on the side of caution, and I have accordinly removed the material. Even if Voinovsky has died, however, the clams made were unsourced and highly contentious, and removal is appropriate per ]. <font face="palatino linotype" color="#000000">- Simon Dodd</font> <small>{ ]·]·]·] }</small> 00:50, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

== ] - should this article exist? ==

I have a problem with this article's notability. It seems to be giving undue weight to an event in the lives of Barack Obama and Henry Louis Gates, and its notability appears temporary (i.e. it's not notable). Before putting up an AfD with a view to a merge to wikinews, I would like get opinions from BLPers on the nature of such articles. I raised this on the talkpage and it turned into a bit of a pointless spat. However, I genuinely don't see merit in the arguments put forward for keeping it as a separate article. I feel I must be missing something.] (]) 00:46, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:Notability just means that other reliable published sources have taken notice by writing about it. In terms of notability for Misplaced Pages purposes, this subject is way beyond any reasonable interpretation of that policy. You seem to be describing your subjective feelings about the subject(s), rather than objectively looking at the body of published work. There is no such thing as temporary notability. Published sources do not go away. ] (]) 01:27, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
: This has made headlines around the world.. its certainly notable. Had Obama not got involved then i would agree it just belongs on Gates own article, but President Obamas comment and the following "Beer summit" at the White house totally makes it worthy of an entire article. ] (]) 01:33, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:Completely and totally notable. ] (]) 01:38, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

:: You miss the point - is it notable enough to have its own article (rather than be part of the respective BLPs of Obama and Gates), and one of such length?] (]) 02:20, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
::: Its a major incident, it would be more of a problem to try and present balanced information on several peoples articles. Much better to have a single article covering the whole event. ] (]) 02:22, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
::::(EC) Yes, it was an incident that received significant national (and international) media coverage. It deserves it's own article. ] (]) 02:25, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
::::Yes, it's notable, and worthy of an article. (I support the comments by Dhaluza above on notability.) ] (]) 02:55, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
* Notable and deserving of its own article. If we tried to capture the relevant detail in a main BLP article, there would be complaints about Weight.] (]) 03:10, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

I started this section to find out people's opinions of articles like this. I only think that Britishwatcher and Mattnad actually take the question seriously and give an answer; Britishwatcher's is persuasive. However, simply having national and international sources over a short period of time cannot be enough for notability in an encyclopedia. If this were enough, we could have justifiably have articles on ], ] and ]. All of these have probably had more sustained and/or widespread international coverage than this incident will do. I worry that media coverage is taken as evidence of notability per se. It means that notability depends on erratic media interests, with the possibility that with prurience historically a thing of media fashion, we would be in the strange position of some decades having far more "notable" events than others. If you look at the talk page, a couple of users seriously put this event on the same level as the ]. That to me suggests a surrendering of one's grip on reality to the mass media.] (]) 14:24, 13 August 2009 (UTC)
:I think I understand the broader arguement and I think the only real answer is these issues are handled by the consensus of the community. We have guidelines but in the end we as a group decide how they apply to individual articles. If you took this article to AFD, or tried to propose a merge, the community would weigh the matter, and I suspect come down heavily on the side of retaining this article. As to something like ], I suspect the community would not be supportive of an article. Why the difference? Because the subjects are different. Can I point to a line in a guideline why? Not off the type of my head. But that's how the community does and should work. Using human judgement to decide exactly how to apply policies.--] (]) 16:09, 13 August 2009 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 13:24, 7 January 2025

Misplaced Pages noticeboard for discussion of biographies of living people
Noticeboards
Misplaced Pages's centralized discussion, request, and help venues. For a listing of ongoing discussions and current requests, see the dashboard. For a related set of forums which do not function as noticeboards see formal review processes.
General
Articles,
content
Page handling
User conduct
Other
Category:Misplaced Pages noticeboards
    Welcome – report issues regarding biographies of living persons here. Shortcuts

    This noticeboard is for discussing the application of the biographies of living people (BLP) policy to article content. Please seek to resolve issues on the article talk page first, and only post here if that discussion requires additional input.

    Do not copy and paste defamatory material here; instead, link to a diff showing the problem.


    Search this noticeboard & archives
    Sections older than 7 days are archived by Lowercase sigmabot III.

    Additional notes:

    Notes for volunteers
    How do I mark an incident as resolved or addressed?
    You can use {{Resolved|Your reason here ~~~~}} at the top of the section containing the report. At least leave a comment about a BLP report, if doing so might spare other editors the task of needlessly repeating some of what you have done.
    More ways to help
    Today's random unreferenced BLP
    Dr Lathashekhar (random unreferenced BLP of the day for 7 Jan 2025 - provided by User:AnomieBOT/RandomPage via WP:RANDUNREF)
    Centralized discussion




    Problematic redirect from one BLP to another: Rabea Massaad

    WP:NAC: Resolved and recommended for closure. JFHJr () 05:15, 29 December 2024 (UTC)

    The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


    Rob Chapman and Rabea Massaad do not appear to be the same person, and no redirect between them should exist without any explanation at the redirect target, Rob Chapman (guitarist). The AfD of Rabea Massaad specifies a different redirect, and through a series of deletions and a double redirect removal, we're now in this mess. So after a PROD by another user has already been denied on *cough* *cough* procedural grounds, can we finally rectify this situation? The easiest way I can see is still simply deleting the Rabea Massaad page (without prejudice). Thank you. 2A02:8071:184:4E80:0:0:0:EAC0 (talk) 04:58, 28 December 2024 (UTC)

    WP:RFD looks like your forum. JFHJr () 05:07, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
    To clarify, Rob Chapman and Rabea Massaad are separate guitarists who once played together in a band called Dorje. The 2017 AfD for Massad resulted in a redirect to Dorje, and the 2023 AfD for Dorje resulted in a redirect to Chapman. Massad has a fairly robust online presence and is therefore a plausible search term. I mentioned him briefly at Rob Chapman (guitarist)#Dorje and edited the redirect to go to that section. By the way, Chapman and Massad are still close associates but the band is defunct. Cullen328 (talk) 18:11, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
    I added a reference verifying Massaad's role in Dorje. Cullen328 (talk) 18:27, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
    So now we have a section of Rob Chapman's article which serves as the main Misplaced Pages mention of the band Dorje. There is also a redirect Dorje (band) which goes there. My recent edit updates the redirect Dorje (band) to point directly to the section of Chapman's article that mentions the band. Hopefully this is not a controversial edit. Now that Cullen328 has improved the referencing, I don't see anything else to be done, and suggest that this thread be closed. EdJohnston (talk) 18:39, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
    Thank you to all for fixing this and not directing me to forum shop. 2A02:8071:184:4E80:55C6:F066:7215:3C99 (talk) 18:55, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
    The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

    Pretendian

    Full of BLP and NPOV vio's, unencyclopedic language and unreliable sources. I removed a couple.   Much of article reads like it was copied from a blog post or tabloid, and lack of proof of Native ancestry (and/or or not being enrolled in a tribe) is repeatedly conflated with lying. --Middle 8(s)talk 18:48, 29 December 2024 (UTC)

    ... and the two diffs above got reverted , restoring some really poor prose and sources. This is a very sensitive topic area and I don't want to bite anyone, but clearly the article needs more experienced editorial eyes and existing editors need to review WP:BLP (and hopefully realize the difference between editing an encyclopedia and human rights advocacy). --Middle 8(s)talk 11:04, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
    Unless a published reliable source specifically describes the person as a "pretendian", they should not be on that notable examples list at all. BLP is clear on this - any contentious material about a living person that is unsourced or poorly sourced should be removed immediately. Isaidnoway (talk) 12:55, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
    One problem is that while the article is about people who falsely claimed Native American heritage, its title is from a pejorative slang term, which it begins by defining. Perhaps a change of title along with moving information about the term Pretendian further down would help.
    Listing any notable people who have pretended to have native heritage is a recipe for imbalance and unwieldy length. Instead, we should find sources specifically about the topic to determine which persons are significant to the topic. It's more important to understand why this happens, how frequent it is and what damage it causes than to provide a hit list of perpetrators.
    TFD (talk) 15:20, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
    It's more important to understand why this happens, how frequent it is and what damage it causes than to provide a hit list of perpetrators. Well said! Schazjmd (talk) 15:29, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
    • The title strikes me as violating WP:POVTITLE; I'm skeptical that the term is common enough to pass WP:COMMONNAME for the phenomenon. If the article is going to cover the phenomenon and not the neologism (and currently, most sources in it don't use the term), it needs to be renamed to a descriptive title. The hard part is coming up with one. --Aquillion (talk) 16:19, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

    A lengthy requested move discussion already occurred and nothing has changed with the term to warrant a title change in the article. https://en.wikipedia.org/Talk:Pretendian#Requested_move_21_December_2021  oncamera  (talk page) 16:36, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

    • It seems fairly evident that the neologism and the phenomenon are both notable, but we shouldn't be covering the phenomenon under the neologism: I don't see evidence that "pretendian" is the dominant descriptive term even for high-profile cases of falsely claiming native ancestry. And it goes without saying that an absence of evidence of native ancestry is insufficient to list an individual on that page. Vanamonde93 (talk) 17:25, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
    I mean, if the article is titled "Pretendian", the only sources that could justify putting someone on the page is a source using the term "Pretendian" specifically. It's a sufficiently emotive neologism that we can't really WP:SYNTH someone into that category - any source that doesn't use the word "Pretendian" is useless. If we want a list of BLPs who fall under the broader concept, we would need a separate article for that; we can't label people with a neologism without a specific source using the term. --Aquillion (talk) 16:13, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
    That discussion is three years old, but more importantly, it doesn't address the WP:BLP / WP:LABEL issue. We can have an article on a neologism, absolutely; we cannot label individuals with a negative neologism unless we have a source using that precise word to refer to them. Any living person named in that article must have at least one high-quality source calling them a "Pretendian", using that exact word. Anyone who doesn't have that source backing up the fact that they have been called a "Pretendian", specifically, needs to be removed immediately until / unless that source is found - sources that use other words are useless (and WP:OR / WP:SYNTH in context.) --Aquillion (talk) 16:20, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
    The term "pretendian" is used frequently in news sources (some Canadian news outlets have dedicated reporters on a dedicated "pretendian beat". The term is used in academia (Google Scholar with Indigenous, Google Scholar with Native, to weed out the Spanish-language discussions). Indigenous identity fraud is used but not nearly as often. If you want to suggest a name change, the talk page of Talk:Pretendian would be the place to do it. Yuchitown (talk) 16:48, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
    In order for a BLP to be included in the notables examples list though, the derogatory term "pretendian" needs to be used frequently and widely published in high-quality reliable sources describing that individual as such, in order for the BLP to be included in that section per BLP and LABEL. Isaidnoway (talk) 18:45, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
    I agree with Isaidnoway, Aquillion and others. It's one thing to have an article on the concept and under that name. That might very well be justified if there are sufficient sources referring to it. However it's another to list living persons as pretendians. That needs sufficient sources establishing it's a common enough term used to describe this person. These sources needs to clearly use the term and not simply say other things such as the person has claimed Native American ancestry but it appears to be false. Likewise in others on the person, it's fine to mention controversies over any claims, but they should not be called or categorised as pretendians without sources. Nil Einne (talk) 07:54, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
    It's not a matter of what the article is named; the problem is WP:LABEL. For an emotive, negative term like "pretendian", we need, at the absolute bare minimum, at least one source actually describing someone as such using that precise word. Going "well these sources accusing them of indigenous identity fraud are essentially the same thing" is WP:SYNTH; in other contexts it might not be enough to worry about but in the context of applying a highly emotive label to a living person it's unacceptable. We can have an article on the term, but we can't use it as the general list for people accused of indigenous identity fraud because of that issue; all we can list there are people called "pretendian" specifically, using that exact word. --Aquillion (talk) 15:02, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    That's valid. Some people have been described as "pretendians" in published, secondary sources. I'd be fine with a separate list for Indigenous identity fraud since that's a more neutral descriptive term that is increasingly being used in scholarly writing. I've been slammed IRL but can find citations in the near future. Yuchitown (talk) 15:27, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    This is a complicated issue (especially from a BLP perspective) and it seems like a lot of the long form sources note just how complicated an issue this is. I think that others may be right in saying that there may be multiple overlapping notable and perhaps less notable topics here which can be organized in a number of ways. Horse Eye's Back (talk) 20:34, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

    Vinod Sekhar

    I'd appreciate it if some of you BLP experts could have a look at this article. I pruned it some already and found a curious mix of promotional language and possibly overstated accusations. Note: I just blocked an edit warrior from whitewashing it. Thank you so much, Drmies (talk) 02:11, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

    I've had a small prune and clean up. GiantSnowman 10:37, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

    Harald Walach

    The "Controversy" section for this guy needs more eyes, I think. The first sentence merely states that he has "advocated for revision of the concept of evidence-based medicine, promoting holistic and homeopathic alternatives in his publications." and then links to a WP:PRIMARY source showing him writing about these topics. What's the controversy here?

    The last paragraph I removed because the RS link provided did not appear to say what was claimed in the paragraph (when I read the translation), but the author did insinuate a "scandal" not directly related to Walach, though. But it was reverted by @Hob Gadling who said I "don't know what I'm talking about" and that I'm "whitewashing" Walach. So, I'm hoping to get another opinion on this. Pyrrho the Skipper (talk) 23:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

    Finn McKenty

    I would like to bring some attention to this BLP, as there is a particular claim that keeps getting reinstated, often with poor sourcing (including, so far, a Wordpress blog and WP:THENEEDLEDROP, which as self-published sources are unsuitable for claims about living persons). @FMSky: has been adding the content with the aforementioned sources, along with, as of writing this, two sources on the current revision I am uncertain about, morecore.de () and metalzone (). I can't find discussions of either source at WP:RSN, so I would like to bring this here to get consensus on the sources and the material they support, rather than continuing to remove the material per WP:3RRBLP. Thank you. JeffSpaceman (talk) 03:38, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

    Its fine, he made these comments. Nothing controversial about it. Move on --FMSky (talk) 03:39, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    Please see WP:NOTTRUTH. Even if he made those comments, they need reliable sources verifying them (i.e., not self-published sources). Simply put, Wordpress blogs and people's self-published YouTube videos cannot be used to support claims about living people. JeffSpaceman (talk) 03:41, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    Yes here are 2 https://www.morecore.de/news/finn-mckenty-the-punk-rock-mba-verlaesst-youtube-ich-habe-es-nur-wegen-des-geldes-gemacht/ & https://www.metalzone.fr/news/208728-finn-mckenty-the-punk-rock-mba-aucun-interet-musique/
    We can also put in the video of him uttering these words as it falls under WP:ABOUTSELF --FMSky (talk) 03:44, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    I think citing the video itself as a primary source would probably be the best option here. JeffSpaceman (talk) 03:47, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

    Bonnie Blue (actress)

    This biography of a pseudonymic pornographic actress (primarily notable for work on OnlyFans) was created on December 29 by Meena and is heavily sourced to tabloids and tabloidesque websites. Some of the sources don't support what they are cited for (e.g. the two cited for her attending a particular school, and misrepresentation of sources on whether she's from Nottinghamshire or Derbyshire). The date of birth is unsourced and the real name is sourced to a National World article that cites it to the Daily Mirror. I have tried an emergency initial BLP cutback; Launchballer has tried a more severe cutback; the original has been restored by an IP and by Tamzin Kuzmin with the most recent revert alleging vandalism and misogyny in the edit summary. Yngvadottir (talk) 17:33, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

    I went through that article and yeeted everything I could find that either did not check out or was sourced to an inappropriate source. I suggest draftifying.--Launchballer 20:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    ...and it's all been restored (again) by Tamzin Kuzmin. Who also happened to remove this initial report, replacing it with a report about an article they've never edited. Hmmm. Woodroar (talk) 20:26, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
    Metacomment. The reverting user was blocked. The block notice implicated WP:SOCK. So I removed the Oli London post here, but it's available at the diff above by Woodroar in case an editor in good standing cares to clean it up, talkpage it, and/or follow up here. Cheers. JFHJr () 00:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    Poorly sourced Russian spies/ex-spies poisoning claim of Bashar al-Assad

    Bashar al-Assad (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) BLP attention is needed. On the talk page I have warned about the Russian spies'/ex-spies' Telegram claim of Bashar al-Assad being poisoned being too poorly sourced. Probably because of al-Assad's status as a fugitive wanted for war crimes and crimes against humanity and as an ex-dictator, few people seem to be bothered with leaving the rumour in place, despite the low quality of the sourcing that all point to a viral rumour based on the General SVR Telegram channel. The WP:WEASELly "may have been" and "it was reported that" seem to be seen as sufficient to justify propagating the rumour, without attribution to General SVR as the source of the claim. After half a day, none of the more regular mainstream media sources appear to have said anything about this, including independent reliable Russian sources such as Meduza and The Moscow Times. Currently there are two sentences with the rumour (one in the lead, one in the body of the article). Diffs:

    Boud (talk) 13:32, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    I see, thanks for letting me know about it. Richie1509 (talk) 13:40, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    See also: Claims of Vladimir Putin's incapacity and death#October 2023 claims of death from the same source. Boud (talk) 17:47, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    Thank you for clearing up this point, i was not aware of it. I will be careful in the future BasselHarfouch (talk) 07:24, 5 January 2025 (UTC)

    Joe Manchin

    Today we have an unnecessary edit war on BLP outgoing Sen. Joe Manchin (and perhaps many other articles this morning) about the addition of infobox data which is factually incorrect at the time of insertion (, diff]). Nobody is arguing the data, just the timing of the edit. While User:Therequiembellishere is one person jumping the gun, they are a longtime contributor here. Their position should be taken in good faith, IMHO. Also in my opinion, these edits are technically BLP violations because they impart incorrect information. Under policy, such clear BLP violations must be removed immediately and without waiting for discussion (bolding from the original) by ANY editor. This sort of thing might lead to an edit war in which everybody is trying to do the right thing. Note: the page was correctly edited for the change; one click would have changed it at the proper time of transition.

    1. Does this sort of thing happen every opening of congress?
    2. Isn't this a potential future problem for BLPN, since edit wars on this are built-in to the apparent excitement of awaiting the actual moment of transition?
    3. I'm inclined towards timed page protection, but page protection is not normally done preemptively. Here's the page today literally under attack for BLP violations. If we know this is common for transitions of administration, isn't this an exception?

    While this noticeboard doesn't normally discuss policy, should we be aware of such disruption in advance? Making it harder for sooner editors like Therequiembellishere who feel... Well, I'll let them make their own affirmative position here if they wish. BusterD (talk) 14:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    Page protections is the only way. IMHO, most editors who do these premature changes every two years, don't actually realize it's too early. They seem to assume once mid-night occurs, start updating. GoodDay (talk) 15:24, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    I raise this issue not to cause a problem today. I'm not trying to unduly embarrass any editor for taking a position I don't agree with. On the other hand, we have established BLP policy the hard way through sometimes brutal disagreements about how to carefully calibrate opposing positions based on good faith argument. I trust the BLP policy because we earned it. We don't need to re-learn these lessons. But we could discuss how to proceed next time. BusterD (talk) 15:29, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    In agreement. GoodDay (talk) 15:31, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    Under policy, it would be within the responsibility of any editor to revert these edits and report the editor to this board. But for my starting this conversation, it would be within my remit to revert the edits, fully protect the page and warn Therequiembellishere (and others). I haven't done that. I want the discussion about what to do next time. BusterD (talk) 15:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    I understand, this is for the next time around when terms end & begin. PS - I should note, that the premature changes in the BLPs tend to have a ripple effect on related pages. GoodDay (talk) 15:41, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    I've said everything I want on this on Manchin's talk. It's just a lot of pedantry by a few editors with obsessive fealty and exactitude that doesn't meaningfully help anything or anyone, least of all a casual reader. Therequiembellishere (talk) 16:33, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    Verifiability is not "pedantry". Members aren't sworn in until noon EST, correct? – Muboshgu (talk) 16:36, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    I can understand changes being made about 1 or 2 hrs before the actual event, when dealing with so many bios. But 12 hrs before the event, is too early. GoodDay (talk) 16:41, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    Obvious BLP violations are not pedantry. Those edits added provably incorrect information. Can User:Therequiembellishere provide a policy-based answer why those edits do not violate BLP guidance? This is just bad acting under the cover of labelling others. Do they not see that? BusterD (talk) 19:59, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    Therequiembellishere's response here demonstrates we actually have a problem, at least with that user, whose reply here is non-responsive to the issue. BLP policy does indeed require obsessive fealty and exactitude, as long experience with this board has shown. As my OP suggested, any user might justifiably have reverted Therequiembellishere right into 3RR and immediate blocking, just by merely diligently following policy. Therequiembellishere might bookmark this thead for when it happens to them two years from now. I could have done it this morning, but instead chose to create this thread and invite the user to comment. Would preemptive full protection be a reasonable solution to such flippant disruption? BusterD (talk) 20:14, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    I oppose pre-emptive full protection. I strongly support an immediate sitewide block of any repeat offenders, with the block to expire at noon Washington, DC time on the swearing in day. Cullen328 (talk) 21:51, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
    I'm with Therequiembellishere on this: a prediction, especially one based on clear US law, is not a false statement or a BLP violation. Joe Manchin's term does end on January 3rd, 2025, and that was still true on January 2nd, 2025. It's, in fact, been true for over a month now. The only way it could end on a different day would be if Joe Manchin had died before then, which would obviously be a BLP violation to assume.
    (Unlike Therequiembellishere I don't even think the opposition is pedantry. Pedants are technically correct; to say that the end of Joe Manchin's term was not January 3rd before January 3rd is not even technically correct. It's just false.) Loki (talk) 07:43, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    IMO the issue is not the term ending time but the claim Joe Manchin served as senator etc when he was still serving as a senator at the time. Nil Einne (talk) 10:50, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    For further clarity. I think our readers reasonably understand our articles might be outdated. So if the article says Joe Manchin is serving and his term ended a few hours ago or even a few days ago that's fine. I mean in other cases it's reasonable to expect them to even be weeks or months out of date. But if out article says Joe Manchin served, I think they reasonable would expect he is no longer serving. As I understand it, there's no more issue. But if this reoccurs, I'm not sure Cullen328's solution is correct. I mean if some admin is volunteering to mollycoddle each repeat offender then okay I guess. But otherwise the norm is we expect editors to obey our policy and guidelines by themselves without needing handholding in the form of continual blocks everytime something comes up to stop them. Therefore I'd suggest either an admin subject them to escalating blocks quickly leading up to an indefinite if they repeat perhaps under BLP or AP2; or we do it via community bans. While I'd personally be fine with a site ban, it might be more palatable to the rest of the community if we instead do it as a topic ban on making such changes. With a clear topic ban, hopefully an admin will be more willing to subject them to escalating blocks. Even if not, I think the community would be much more willing to siteban such editors if they repeat after a community topic ban. As a final comment, I also don't see why editor feels it's something so urgent that they need to do it 12 hours in advance. This almost seems one of those lame edits we sometimes get at the ANs resulting from the apparent desire of an editor to be first or get the credit so we have editors creating "drafts" with basically zero content long before there's anything to write about then some other editor is sick of this editor doing this and so ignores the draft and makes their own. Nil Einne (talk) 12:59, 4 January 2025 (UTC)
    Technically speaking, if you are still serving you also have served. So it's not technically speaking false, although this really is pedantry and I would not say it's the most true possible statement.
    I'm still not convinced it's a BLP violation, though. Loki (talk) 04:24, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    @BusterD: maybe a RFC or something is required, to establish how to handle future premature changes to such bios. GoodDay (talk) 22:31, 5 January 2025 (UTC)

    Serious BLP vios in Gambino crime family

    This article is riddled with serious BLP vios. I tried tagging them, but there are so many I would have to carpet bomb the page with CN tags. This page needs urgent attention from any editors with experience and/or sources pertaining to organized crime. -Ad Orientem (talk) 17:21, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

    P.S. I've taken a look at most of the articles on North American mafia groups and almost all have serious BLP issues. I've added "Category:Possibly living people" with its BLP Edit Notice to all of the pages excepting groups that have been defunct for more than thirty years. These pages are in rough shape and a lot of material needs to be either cited or deleted. -Ad Orientem (talk) 03:32, 5 January 2025 (UTC)

    Taylor Lorenz BLP issues and harassment of subject based on article contents

    The Taylor Lorenz article has an unusual history in the sense that the contents of the article have led to harassment of Lorenz in the past, or other issues impacting her financially.

    Most recently it was regarding her date of birth and Misplaced Pages choosing to use a date range, with the allegations being that it was Lorenz choosing to keep her birthdate off of the Internet or being deceitful.

    1. FreeBeacon
    2. TimesOfIndia
    3. Lorenz Substack
    4. SoapCentral
    5. RedState
    6. Lorenz BlueSky
    7. Twitchy
    8. FoxNews
    9. BlueSky
    10. FreeBeacon

    There have also seemingly been issues according to Lorenz with errors in the article causing her lost business opportunities See here

    "This insane 100% false story is affecting my brand deals and some partnership stuff I have in the works for 2025, so I really need it corrected ASAP!!!"

    An addition of a 'Harassment and coordinated attacks' section was added in August of last year, with additional information being added shortly after regarding a Twitter suspension. I moved the text around recently in an attempt at a more neutral article that was quickly reverted. A TalkPage discussion followed shortly after but there hasn't been a policy based consensus.

    My question- should we have a devoted harassment section included for someone who has been harassed based on her Misplaced Pages profile previously? It seems like WP:AVOIDVICTIM comes into play with directly focusing attention on her being a victim and could lead to further harassment by highlighting it with equal weight as her career section.

    Personally I think the material could be presented more neutrally per WP:STRUCTURE but wanted to get a wider opinion.

    There is also a discussion currently going on if we should include her year of birth here. Awshort (talk) 20:57, 5 January 2025 (UTC) 04:50, 6 January 2025 (UTC) Fixed incorrect diff

    Removing the harassment section furthers the narrative that there are no coordinated harassment campaigns against her, and acts to diminish the effect those coordinated campaigns have wrought upon her. Generally speaking, victims of harassment don't want what they've gone through to be diminished.

    I am unaware of any evidence that discussing harassment on wiki for her, or in general, leads to further harassment. If that evidence exists, I'd certainly be wiling to change my stance. Delectopierre (talk) 08:19, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    Discussion on the scope of WP:BLPSPS

    There is a discussion at Misplaced Pages talk:Verifiability#Self-published claims about other living persons about the scope of WP:BLPSPS. -- Patar knight - /contributions 02:22, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    List of pornographic performers by decade

    List of pornographic performers by decade is a remarkable article in that it has existed for 20 years and yet, if I were to follow WP:BLPREMOVE to the letter right now, I would have to cut the article down to its first sentence, the section headings, and a single see-also. Saying "X is a pornographic performer" is, obviously, a contentious claim, and as such every entry needs its own citation; it's not enough to rely on the articles as their own de facto citations, as is the tolerated practice for noncontroversial lists like List of guitarists. This is all the more the case because the definition of "pornographic performer" is subjective. With help from Petscan, I've found the following people on the list who are not described in their articles as pornographic performers: Fiona Richmond, Amouranth, F1NN5TER, Kei Mizutani, Uta Erickson, Isabel Sarli, Fumio Watanabe, Louis Waldon, Nang Mwe San, Piri, Megan Barton-Hanson, Aella (writer). Many (all?) of them are sex workers of some sort, so in each case, there may be a reliable source that exists that calls them a pornographic performer, but without one, it's a flagrant BLP violation. And if it were just those, I'd remove them and be done with it, but even for the ones whose articles do call them pornographic performers, there's no guarantee of being right. I removed Miriam Rivera from the list after seeing that an IP had removed the mentions of porn in her article, which had indeed been sourced to a press release about a fictionalized depiction of her life. No, each of these entries needs an individual citation appearing on the list article so that the claims can be judged.

    So, there are about 650 entries, and we know at least some are questionable, and we cannot assume that any of the rest are correct. What do we do? Again, the letter-of-BLP answer here is to remove the unsourced items, but that would leave literally nothing. The only two citations in the whole thing are to search pages on two non-RS porn databases. So at that point we might as well apply WP:BLPDELETE. Another solution would be to find sources for, I don't know, two or three people in each heading, just so it's not empty, remove everything else, and stick {{incomplete list}} there. A third option is AfD. Does anyone have any ideas?

    P.S. I haven't even looked at other lists of pornographic performers. Are they all like this? -- Tamzin (they|xe|🤷) 05:01, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    I don't have a solution to this @Tamzin, but the first name I looked at was Isabel Sarli. Her article references her full frontal appearance and describes it as sexploitation. Sexploitation films are not pornographic films. I can't see any mention of pornographic acting in her article? This is a problem. Knitsey (talk) 05:11, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Doing some spot-checking, Kōji Wakamatsu is described in his article as a director of pink films but not as an actor – and it does not seem as though pink films are necessarily pornographic; Harry S. Morgan is categorised as a porn actor but the text of the article does not seem to support this. Clearly there's a problem here. Caeciliusinhorto (talk) 05:57, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Hm, yes, per WP:BLP each LP on this list should have a decent ref (better than Internet Adult Film Database, see ), and it wouldn't hurt the others either. I'm slightly reminded of a complaint I made at Talk:Holocaust_denial/Archive_21#Notable_Holocaust_deniers. It's not the same, but it's still sensitive. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 07:26, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Btw, per List of pornographic actors who appeared in mainstream films and List of actors in gay pornographic films, it seems they're not all like that, but List of British pornographic actors lists people without WP-articles, my knee-jerk reaction is that that's not good. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 07:35, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    List of British pornographic actors most seem to be referenced using "International Adult Film Database" which is user generated. Imdb for born actors. Knitsey (talk) 07:45, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Talk:List_of_British_pornographic_actors#People_without_WP-articles. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 07:51, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I'll be honest, I thought we'd dealt with this before and it was no longer a problem. I'm sure in previous discussions we're generally agrees such lists should only contain notable individuals with articles i.e. no black links or red links (if an editor believes someone is notable they need to create the article first). I thought we'd also agreed to strictly require inline citations when adding names regardless of what the individual articles say. I couldn't find many of the previous discussions though but did find we seem to have a lot more of these lists in the past. Nil Einne (talk) 09:48, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I'm aware of a few circumstances in which pornographic actors faced serious obstacles in their lives after leaving the industry and tried hard to separate themselves from their prior career. I would hope, in these cases, we respect their wishes and just leave them off. Simonm223 (talk) 12:16, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Depending on situation, we might or we might not. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 12:24, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    My main concern is for people who have explicitly expressed that they no longer want to be public people, being honest. Those who have struggled to transition to non-pornographic acting, music, etc. is less of my concern. Simonm223 (talk) 12:38, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    That's understandable but it runs into issues with WP:PUBLICFIGURE where editors think that once someone is a public figure, it is forever.
    Recently there was I believe the son of a lady who had appeared in Playboy a long time ago who had asked for her article to be removed on BLPN. The specifics that I remember are vague, but essentially she had been a Playmate one year and editors had built an article for her even though she was a relatively private person other than the fact she was in Playboy in the early 80's. The family member had suggested that the article basically loomed over her head and caused harm to her reputation since it was something she did once 30+ years ago and distanced herself from almost immediately. I can't say i disagree that in cases like that, there shouldn't be an article.
    Awshort (talk) 15:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I wasn't aware of that specific case but that is precisely the sort of circumstance under which I think a private person's right to privacy should be weighed more important than Misplaced Pages completionism. Simonm223 (talk) 15:43, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I'm reminded of Richard Desmond per . Other end of the scale, perhaps. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 15:49, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    Nil Einne You may be thinking of this discussion which you commented on.
    Awshort (talk) 16:13, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
    I don't think it was really that, although I did forget about it so thanks for reminding me. One of the issues with that list is since it was such a high profile case I felt it likely there would at least be secondary source coverage, and also as pornographic appearances go, I feel being Playmate is a lot less controversial than other stuff; so while it was bad, I didn't feel it quite as severe as most of the other stuff we're doing or have been doing. I was thinking of older discussions probably especially the RfC below. Nil Einne (talk) 17:14, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    Given the lack of referencing and the entries included in error, pointed out above, then I would be in favour of removing every unreferenced entry on the list. If that leaves literally nothing, well - AFD. If somebody really wants this information, well, categories exist. Bastun 14:40, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    I would support this as well, and honestly would probably still vote to delete a list with only the referenced entries if it were brought at AfD. A list page doing the job of one or several category pages and nothing more has no purpose. Choucas Bleu 🐦‍⬛ 13:22, 7 January 2025 (UTC)
    • I knew we had a lengthy RfC/Discussion about this subject matter, it just took me a while to find it though – Unreferenced lists and porn stars RFC, and also this AfD as well. Discussions are ten years old, but I don't think anything in the lengthy close of the RfC has changed. I was one of the volunteers who helped add refs to this article → List of pornographic actors who appeared in mainstream films, which if I recall correctly, was the impetus for the RfC. Good luck, sourcing these types of lists are a massive chore. Isaidnoway (talk) 16:03, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
      RFC closer said in 2014:
      Q: Should all pre-existing lists of porn performers have a reliable source supporting each entry?
      A: The rough consensus below is that it's always more controversial to call someone a porn performer than to say they're engaged in most other professions. A reliable source should be added for every entry that's challenged or likely to be challenged. But as a concession to the practicalities, editors are asked not to go through the pre-existing lists making large-scale and unilateral challenges, as this will overwhelm the people who maintain these lists with work, and there is a legitimate concern that this is unfair. If you do intend to remove unsourced entries, please proceed at a reasonable, non-disruptive speed dealing with what you judge to be the highest-priority cases first. If you could easily source an entry yourself, then removing it as unsourced is rather unhelpful. Gråbergs Gråa Sång (talk) 16:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
      Well, removing ~650 entries after 10 years of the list's maintainers doing nothing to fix this would average out to, what, ~1.2 per week since that RfC? That seems like a reasonable, non-disruptive speed to me. Courtesy ping @S Marshall. -- Tamzin (they|xe|🤷) 16:50, 6 January 2025 (UTC)
      Yes, I do vaguely remember making that close ten years ago. I agree that it's appropriate to implement its outcome in full now.—S Marshall T/C 17:58, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    chew chin hin

    https://www.ttsh.com.sg/About-TTSH/TTSH-News/Pages/In-Loving-Memory-Prof-Chew-Chin-Hin.aspx

    Dr Chew Chin Hin died — Preceding unsigned comment added by Harrypttorfan (talkcontribs) 15:21, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    Thanks – I see you have already updated his article. Does anything more need to be done here? There's no need to discuss the deaths of every person who has an article on this noticeboard unless there's a particular issue. Caeciliusinhorto-public (talk) 16:11, 6 January 2025 (UTC)

    Beyoncé

    Looks like Beyoncé fan club president is editing the article and 50.100.81.254 (talk) 10:48, 7 January 2025 (UTC)

    Categories: