- Spells in Harry Potter (edit|talk|history|links|watch|logs) (restore|cache|AfD|AfD2)
- Note This deletion review addresses the Snowball keep, non admin closure of AfD #1, which was open for ten hours. -- Jreferee (Talk) 01:38, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
This article has been put to AfD twice this month (the second debate was closed as it was judged that not enough time had passed since the first debate). The first AfD resulted in a snowball decidion, during the second there was an ongoing debate before closure. The admin closing the second debate suggested that it could be taken to Deletion review. Basicly my feeling is that the article goes against several policies and guidelines and essays that are important to Wikipedia in the following ways:
- WP:NN - No secondary sources discussing the subject.
- WP:FICT - No real world material
- WP:V - Can't verify the content as there are no secondary sources
- WP:RS - As there are no secondary sources obviously none are reliable
- WP:OR - If something has no sources it is almost by definition origonal research, the etymologies are really just a case of
editors matching up the names of spells with words in a Latin dictionary
- WP:NOT#INFO - Collection of non-notable information
- WP:NOT#GUIDE - This page and pages like these effectively are a guide to the HArry Potter Universe - not encyclopaedia articles and may be better suited to a Harry Potter wiki or a fansite.
- WP:NOTINHERITED - Harry Potter is notable - this hould not by definition mean that the spells in the Harry Potter books are :notable - they should meet the relavent notability criteria.
- WP:FAN - Could definately be considered as fancruft (in my opinion)
It might also be noted that the AfD for a page on non-canonical spells - with much the same content but refering to the games and movies rather than the books - was deleted using much the same reasoning.
Looking at the first AfD most of the arguements used boiled down to WP:USEFUL or WP:INTERESTING or other rationale such as:
- "it's well written" and
- "it's a good guide" and
- "Oh no you didnt! This page is great!" and
- "I know it's useful, because I just used it to check the spelling of a hex that I just shouted at my friend"
were also given as arguements for keep, I do not these opinions did much to address the issues at hand. I think that there is definately a case to be made for deletion. The first nomination ended in WP:SNOW but I do not think that should preducjice against opening up a new AfD considering that there was considerable discussion in prehaps a more policy minded way. Guest9999 15:49, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse deletion per the laundry list of policy violations cited by Guest9999 above; the matching up of names of spells with Latin words clearly runs afoul of WP:OR, and I can't imagine an article appropriate for our project existing under this title. Both AfD closures were appropriate and within acceptable admin discretion. Heather 16:12, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Um... what deletion? You realise the AfDs were closed as keep, right? David Mestel(Talk) 22:21, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure (that means either let the AFD run its course or delete it) Will (talk) 16:37, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure AFD should have ran it's course, many of the keep votes are like Keep/Merge. Although I am an avid editor of the page, it isn't encyclopedic. The information is very informative and useful, and should be kept in my opinion. At the very least, it should be merged with Magic (Harry Potter) even though Spells in Harry Potter is larger than that page. which is easily discounted in any AFD. Jaranda wat's sup 17:37, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure Original snowball keep seems to have been dubious, let the AfD run its course, and if I were a gambler I'd bet on it getting deleted. It's not a speedy candidate, though, AFAICT. SamBC(talk) 18:19, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- EndorseA reasonable close, even for a non-admin. Besides the nominator, there was only one voice for delete, an active WPedian who changed his vote to keep during the discussion, giving reasons, and convincing even the nominator that there was no reason to delete. When the nom. withdraws, and there is no other delete. Considering that the prev. discussion had also had a SNOW keep, that the nom withdraw, and that there was no other dissent, the conditions for a non admin SNOW keep were certainly fulfilled. admin would have closed. I am not happy with the request for review: the Appellant claims there was debate, but neglects to mention that the debate ended in convincing the lone voice for delete and the nom as well.
But the debate ran for only 1 night in the US = 1 morning in Europe, and obviously not everyone was heard from. Personally, considering recent AfDs in general, I would have expected that there was more to come, and would have continued the debate. But I do not say relist, because nothing said now is likely to settle the matter: even if it is relisted and ends in a keep, there will be another series of attempts to delete possibly continuing once monthly until by chance it gets deleted, and if it ends in delete at any time there will be another request for review, etc. We have no mechanism for a final determination, which is a disgrace to any pretense at well-considered process.
As for the underlying merits, the spells are collectively a very major plot element, they run through the books, there is already substantial criticism to be added, and it was cited in the debate.--and there is a certainty of more to come. Ilikeit, though a factor, is balanced by idontlike thistypeofcontent. There is no ruling anyway that this sort of material counts as trivia, and not likely to be any consensus on that. There were abundant policy arguments raised for keeping. the possibility of merge remain, as a editing decision--one doesn't need AfD for merge. And, as I said in the discussion of another Potter-related article, this series is important enough to people generally and to wikipedians that any flexibility in interpretation should amount to a keep. deletion review is not AfD round 3. DGG (talk) 18:21, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure. While I am absolutely in favour of keeping the page, and will continue arguing that, I believe it was wrong and unnecessary to close the debate while active discussion was underway. There is nothing wrong with letting a nomination run its course, even though it was probably not really smart to start a new AfD just days after the previous one ended. Melsaran 18:33, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Overturn closure Endorse closure The first AfD was withdrawn by the nominator, not closed, so that's not anyone's fault. I too am in favor of keeping the page, and will also continue to argue its case. The AfD should be allowed to run its course. The second AfD was rather hasty, there should have been a longer waiting period. GlassCobra 18:39, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure - This is not a speedy, but Guest has it right. This one partitially or fully violates those policies, and I suggest this to be partially merged with the Harry Potter article, or continue with the Afd. --Hirohisat Talk 18:41, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure. While I understand the closing admins rationale for closing the second AfD, if your going to do close an AfD under such circumstances, close it when the AfD is still new, as in less than a day old. This AfD had been open for about 2.5 days, i.e, half the time period for an AfD. Kind of silly at that point to close it. And as far as I know, there is no minimum time period for a person to renominate an article, assuming good faith. And on top of that, there was about 18 days since the closure of the first AfD, and the opening of the second AfD. Also, considering the first AfD didn't even run it's full course, I see no reason to not let this one do so. Pepsidrinka 18:41, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure—the first AfD was Snowballed, but the second AfD introduced much more discussion on both sides; an early closure prevented the newly found discussion from continuing. — Deckiller 19:00, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure - the decision to renominate the article for deletion in the first place was out of process, and considering DRV is a place to discuss process (not whether or not the article deserves deletion), the AFD should never have been created in the first place. Specifically - an AFD was closed on 3 August 2007, with the verdict being "snowball keep". Anyone who disagreed with that decision should have put it on DRV, or waited a significant amount of time (I believe the guideline is 1 month but then again I don't visit AFD on a daily basis so maybe that has changed too!) before renominating. But instead, the article was renominated within 2 weeks. I see nothing wrong with the original decision to close as a "snowball keep", and therefore there is nothing wrong with the 2nd decision to close early. Incidentally, I would vote strong keep for this article, so please don't speedy delete it because then I will have to re-nominate it for DRV and it becomes quite a mess ;-) ugen64 19:11, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Enough of the rules lawyering already. What you seem to be saying is that we should close this DRV as endorse, to allow a new DRV to overturn the snowball close, and only then re-open the AfD. Needless waste of time. David Mestel(Talk) 22:21, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure - AfDs of the same article shouldn't occur within weeks of each other, especially when an article doesn't have WP:NPOV, WP:BLP or WP:CP issues. Consensus needs to count for something. Wait at least a month. ichor}mosquito{ 19:25, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- If you look at the page for the the "snow ball clause" it says that:
"If an issue is "snowballed", and somebody later raises a reasonable objection, then it probably wasn't a good candidate for the snowball clause."
The fact that someone later brought up a reasonable objection (in the second AfD) suggests that the use of WP:SNOW was not neccessarily an appropriate way to end the origonal debate. [[Guest9999 19:50, 18 August 2007 (UTC)]]
- Overturn closure- the use of WP:SNOW in the second AfD was uncalled for and unnecessary. The admin should have waited at least more than a day to allow discussion. However, the nomination of the article twice in such a short period of time wasn't so good, either. --Boricuaeddie 20:13, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure and relist, I hate WP:SNOW sometimes. It cannot seriously be invoked if someone does present a valid reason to delete the article, which is what happened here. It should be noted that the first AFD was also snowballed. This one shouldn't have been, plain and simple. --Coredesat 20:36, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
but the two objections were withdrawn, weren't they? DGG (talk) 21:24, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure: the second AfD was entirely justified. Why should the previous one being withdrawn by the nom, who changed his mind, mean that a real AfD is not allowed to take place for an arbitrary period? In his opening comment here, User:Guest9999 has this article's failings spot on, not that many people are interested in a little thing like that in the AfD anyway. Miremare 20:43, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn: the suggestion that a withdrawn AfD precludes another one is absurd. David Mestel(Talk) 22:21, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure of both 1st and 2nd AfD. The first AfD was snowballed, along with nom withdrawal is very much a valid speedy keep via WP:SK#Applicability #1. The 2nd AfD was again rightfully speedy closed as not a reasonable amount of time has passed, which is the last bullet point of Wikipedia:Deletion_policy#Deletion_discussion. Having noted that I think both closure was correctly applied, I am happy for the article to be relisted if there's a consensus here. KTC 22:32, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- This is incorrect. A withdrawn AfD does not count as a completed or consensus finding AfD. Note, that if even a single person had supported delete in the first AfD, then it could not be withdrawn, but it had been before anyone had the opportunity to do so. I would hate to see people start to do this intently, to game the system and keep articles by nominating them, then quickly withdrawing to avoid another AfD. A withdrawn nomination is totally different from an AfD that ran it's full course, and is not the kind of situation that WP:DP is talking about, at all. -- Ned Scott 20:12, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn and relist The first AFD was far too short and most of the keep comments were WP:ILIKEITs and the second AFD should have ran its course. --Farix (Talk) 23:28, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse Closure The second AFD was finshing up very rapidly with copious amounts of Keeps anyway. Therequiembellishere 00:13, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn and Relist. I swear, overeager admins stir up more needless drama than the actual trolls combined. Just follow process already. 160.39.202.22 02:28, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Not to be rude, but this appears to be your first contribution. Do you have a username? Because right now, you seem like a complete newcomer adding a comment for a process you don't know about. Again, if you just failed to login, I apologise. Therequiembellishere 02:52, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- I apologize; I have my login set to "remember me," but evidently, it did not. Evouga 07:48, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure and relist. The first discussion seemed to be lacking in much policy discussion, but the second seems to be generating useful discussion (rather than fan-based keeps that cite no policy). I'd like to see this relisted as it was, so that the good arguments don't go to waste.
- Overturn and reopen/relist. Needless parliamentary red tape. We should not have to have a debate about whether we're allowed to debate the deletion of an article! - A Man In Bl♟ck (conspire | past ops) 03:00, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse the first AfD closure, overturn the second The first AfD was closed quite properly, with the nomination withdrawn and overwhelming consensus to keep, it was perfectly fine to snowball and keep the article. As for the second AfD, since new arguments in favour of deletion have come up, the AfD should not have been closed early. Thus, reopen and let it go the whole five days so as to get a sturdier result. PeaceNT 03:15, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn closure and relist second AfD The reasons for the first AfD closure was because of a withdrawn nomination, and different issues were raised for the second AfD. -- Ned Scott 03:59, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Relist in AfD. I personally think this article should not be deleted, the nominator thinks it should be. Let and AfD finish and we'll (hopefully) have a better consensus. Useight 04:20, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Strong endorse per overwhelming consensus. Let's go through all of Guest9999's points:
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- WP:NN - WP:N really isn't meant to apply to lists in the same way it applies to, say, terms of art. I can find an article on tall bridges, and I can find a list of the tallest bridges, but I'm not going to find an article that discusses the subject of lists of bridges. That's just the reality of the written world. And yet, we have a list of bridges article, and it would be rather absurd to even consider deleting it. The same applies here. There are articles about spells in Harry Potter (**hint**Google**end-hint**), and there are lists of spells from Harry Potter (external links), but there are (probably) no articles which discuss lists of spells in Harry Potter. In this case, following WP:N, we do not treat lists of spells in Harry Potter as the topic, but rather Spells in Harry Potter, or more generally Magic in Harry Potter. It may make sense to hold these lists to a higher notability standard than their non-list topics, but per common Wikipedia practice we don't require that lists present reliable sources on the topic of "Lists of X." If we did, there would be precious few lists!
- WP:FICT - This guideline just says that an article's notability and the merits of bits of information inside the article are to be judged from a real-world perspective, not a fictional one. The merits of this article are derived from its weight in culture, so it passes.
- WP:V - Eh? What about all the links in the article? Sites like this one which are clearly linked to? It is a secondary source insofar as it's not affiliated with the producers of the story.
- WP:RS - What exactly is wrong with the sources provided? If you don't have any objection to the sources specifically in this article, then please don't throw the policy violations around as generics.
- WP:OR - The material corresponds to the links in the article. (See WP:V.)
- WP:NOT#INFO - Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate source of information, but that does not mean that Wikipedia cannot contain information. This isn't really a reason for deletion; it's a response to "X should be kept because it is true information." You are citing a refutation to an argument which, as far as I know, was never made in the AfD, and is almost never made anywhere on Wikipedia for that matter.
- WP:NOT#GUIDE - The article does not tell the reader how to do anything, so it is not a guide. If your interpretation of "guide" was universalized, then we would have to delete World of Warcraft as a guide to WoW, John Locke as a guide to John Locke, and so on.
- WP:NOTINHERITED - This article receives spillover notability in the same way that J. K. Rowling receives spillover notability, only to a lesser degree.
- WP:FAN - Again, this is a response to an argument ("keep b/c I'm a fan of Harry Potter") which the article is not contingent on. The Harry Potter article could also be considered "fancruft."
- — xDanielx T/C 07:50, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
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- Reply J.K. Rowling has had many, many secondary sources write about her - her article is not based on Harry Potter "spillover". The Bridges in list of tallest Bridges show evidence of being notable - they have their own articles - the spells do not. I'm pretty sure that fansites like Mugglenet - which you linked to and the Harry Potter Lexicon do not count as reliable secondary sources. WP:FICT does not say real world perspective - it says "contain substantial real-world content". I felt WP:NOT#GUIDE was relevant as if real world places do not merit having every aspect of them explained I do not think that the Harry Potter Universe deserves this treatment. WP:NOT#INFO - applies to putting in information which is not notable for the sake of it - if the arguements above are to be considered then by default it would seem it is a relavent policy. [[Guest9999 20:34, 19 August 2007 (UTC)]]
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- True, the list of bridges links to other articles, but notability guidelines do not directly limit article content. So listed items being individually notable and having topics might be a reason for keeping a list (assuming that the items are meaningfully connected), but the opposite is not a reason for deleting a list, since WP:N does not apply to bits of information within articles and thus does not apply to individual list items.
- I agree that Mugglenet is probably not the ideal source, but just as exceptional claims require exceptional sources, mediocre sources can suffice for claims which are trivially true, such as "the summoning charm is a spell in the Harry Potter story." There are also multiple sources listed which can be cross-referenced with one another (see the two external links), so the sourcing is more than sufficient in my opinion.
- I think WP:FICT should not be applied here for a couple reasons. First, the article in question is essentially a supplement to Harry Potter and other related articles. If we were to merge all the Harry Potter-based articles together, the result would be too massive, hence the split. We could just repeat the cultural details in Harry Potter to make the article in question a "proper" article by conventional standards, but that would be redundant since readers who are seeking such details of the story don't need such a general overview. Regardless, though, exceptions can and should be made for books which sell 325+ million copies.
- Your comment on WP:NOT#GUIDE, as I understand it, is that the article goes into too much detail on the subject of Harry Potter. Reading the text, I don't think this is how WP:NOT#GUIDE is meant to be applied. More importantly though, more notable subjects justify more detail, and Harry Potter is something of a king of notability. So I don't think WP:NOT#GUIDE applies here, but if it did, it should be unhesitantly ignored.
- — xDanielx T/C 00:18, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
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- It seems odd to say WP:FICT doesn't apply to an article on fiction. [[Guest9999 00:27, 20 August 2007 (UTC)]]
- Especially since WP:FICT is geared toward fiction subarticles instead of their main works. We must establish balanced, academic articles on fiction—not lengthy subarticles that retell every aspect of a fictional universe (that is not the role of an encyclopedia, obviously). — Deckiller 00:42, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- It's a notability guideline, not a rule. Fictional stories which sell 325+ million books may merit an exception. And I don't understand why you assert that WP:FICT is geared toward sub-articles; it seems completely general there as far as I can see. — xDanielx T/C 05:31, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Guest9999, I said that WP:FICT should not be applied, not that we shouldn't consider it in relation to the article in question. — xDanielx T/C 05:31, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
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- Sorry if I misinterpretted you. I would like to restate my point in a more appropriate way. It seems odd to say WP:FICT shouldn't be applied to an article on fiction. [[Guest9999 22:15, 20 August 2007 (UTC)]]
- I think this is only a pseudo-disagreement resulting from a minor ambiguity in my earlier assertion. When I said WP:FICT "should not be applied," I meant that it shouldn't be used to delete the article in question. I take it that you interpret "applied" to mean something along the lines of considered as a reason for deletion (otherwise you would be arguing that WP:FICT mandates deleting all fiction articles). I agree that the article in question falls inside the general scope of WP:FICT, that is, fiction articles, and based on this I agree that we should consider the conditions for inclusion/deletion which WP:FICT explains. Where we disagree is on the question of whether this article meets those more specific conditions (adequate context, etc.) and whether, if it fails that condition, the condition should be strictly followed or ignored as a loose and non-binding guideline. I argue that those conditions should not be applied as reasons to delete the article in question because of the questioned article's supplemental nature, and because the article is closely connected to an extremely notable subject such that it warrants an exception. Hope that clears things up. — xDanielx T/C 22:40, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- WP:FICT deals with "topics within a fictional universe"; in other words, the subarticles for the work they appear in. WP:FICT also encourages merging and transwiki over deletion; I'd prefer to see this merged and/or transwikied before deletion (I started a merge discussion, which met stiff resistance, and transwiki to the Harry Potter Wiki is certainly an option if enough people agreed to it). — Deckiller 22:50, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure per above comments. The article does not go against any of the policies that Guest9999 mentions. Also, with the constant nominations and the number of keep votes, the result of the debate would be the same. --musicpvm 08:31, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- I was the one who closed the nomination, based on the fact that the nominator had withdrawn the nomination (Guest9999), the one call to delete was withdrawn following discussion by an editor whose opinion I have come to respect in AFD discussions (TenPoundHammer), and the closure of the AFD was suggested by the nominater, the withdrawn delete, and aonther editor (FrozenPurpleCube) whose contributions to AFD I also respect. I was probably wrong in snowballing it, so do what has to be done to make sure all is proper. -- saberwyn 10:04, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse Closure Nominating the same article over and over is a waste of everyone's time. nut-meg 14:47, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Not when the second AfD is unrelated to the first, and brings up issues not discussed before. If you think it's a waste of time then don't participate. -- Ned Scott 20:05, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- The second is related to the first, and uses the same arguments for deletion. There are no real new issues. Nominating the same article every two weeks is a waste of time. I participate because I don't want to see useful articles deleted. I suggest to you that if you wanted it deleted, you should go back and read the first AfD and figure out why it wasn't. There could be better citations, but plenty of reasonable sources are attached to the article. Aside from that, the arguments for deletion boil down to "I don't ilke it", and that rationale just doesn't cut it. nut-meg 00:43, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse retention There are certainly secondary sources available. I bought my nephew a non-fiction book largely devoted to this subject. Carina22 16:16, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This is not the AfD discussion. The discussion at hand is if the AfD was properly closed or not. -- Ned Scott 20:05, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse retention All that the page needs are more references, and sources to the outside world. It's just a wikification that's needed. •Malinaccier• T/C 16:51, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Relist. Although a case could be made, in the abstract, for closing the second AfD as being too soon, I think this was not the appropriate thing to do here. Unlike the first AfD, this one had substantial arguments in favour of either outcome, and letting it run this time may well prevent AfD no. 3 one month hence. Sandstein 17:54, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn and relist. I'm rarely a fan of process for it's own sake, but it seems like lately there's been more and more dubious use of the WP:SNOW clause. When it is contested, a relisting is more than appropriate. Speedy closing a new AfD because the last had been snowed is counterproductive. ɑʀкʏɑɴ 01:55, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Comment As I said in the deletion discussion, there isn't much point to an AFD. There's little chance of a consensus to delete, thus I suggest any concerns about the nature of the article be taken to talk pages in order to attempt to resolve the actual issues with the page. I'm not sure I think that the early closure was the best idea, but let's really ask ourselves, is another round through AFD the best idea? FrozenPurpleCube 02:28, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse per WP:SNOW. From the debate in this DRV, it is obvious that a new AFD will not result in a consensus to delete. >Radiant< 08:30, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Not sure what page it was, but there was some guideline that said that you shouldn't speedy close AfDs when there is substantial discussion going on. Discussion is healthy. Melsaran (talk) 11:35, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Depends. Pointless or redundant discussion is not healthy, and virulent or aggressive discussion is definitely unhealthy. If the outcome is clear (as it is here) and debate is creating more heat than light (as it does here), speedy closing is the way to minimize drama. And no, the guideline you mention does not exist, although there are a few essays that argue that way. >Radiant< 12:56, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- These discussions tend to shape our guidelines and policies. Discussion is healthy and should not be avoided just to avoid an argument. A conflict, a debate, is exactly why we have the AfD debate in the first place. -- Ned Scott 19:58, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse and retain No consensus to delete. Arguments for deletion incorrect, as the subject is notable and can be sourced to independent publications. Mowsbury 13:13, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- There is no consensus to keep, as both AfD discussions were stopped before a consensus could be formed. As pointed out by another editor supporting keep, the AfD would help to strengthen keeping the article. It is simply incorrect to say that you have consensus to keep the article when both AfDs were stopped before people could make their statements. -- Ned Scott 20:19, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Overturn Closure - everyone keeps saying it was snow'd and that it still is notable, but the second AfD made clear the issues and falacies associated with it. This DRV, like the second AfD, is now being swamped by 'keep' votes again... David Fuchs (talk) 14:47, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Comment If the article is kept, which is looking likely, something has to be done to fix everything that's wrong with it. Its shortcomings have been picked apart both here and in AfD 2, but I wonder if anyone is going to (or can) fix it? Or is is going to repeat the "AfD - Keep, AfD - Keep, AfD - Keep" cycle forever? Other such articles (RuneScape gods anyone?) have succumbed to exactly this, still resulting in absolutely no improvement to the article. This seems like a "we like it so it's staying - indefinitely" from the many keepers, none of whom appear to be able to provide any valid reasons as to why it should stay. Miremare 15:31, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I'll do everything I can to keep it, you can count on that. Therequiembellishere 16:19, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Same here. The article needs to be improved, not deleted, but certain people seem loathe to take up this burden and would rather delete it. As for valid reasons, did you not read XDanielx's list just above this? GlassCobra 17:31, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- As an answer to your first point, many people are not au fait enough with the intricacies of Harry Potter to contribute to this article, and that almost certainly counts just as much for the keepers as the deleters. I would gladly take up the burden of editing the article into shape, but I think many people would not appreciate the results! Also, yes, I did read XDanielx's list, but I don't agree with most of the points he made, and still side with Guest9999's original list. Miremare 18:24, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure. I can't argue, even if I would, with xDanielx's point about a series that sells several hundred million (and is the literary event of several decades) being a good candidate for an exception. Our rules are explicitly tools, not ends, and were fundamentally constructed for that purpose. This has unfortunately-if-inevitably received less attention as the place ages, but here we have what's almost a textbook example with a highly important (quite integral, much unlike, say, items in Metroid), high-priority article - one with no plot summary or risk of growing past its present confines, which are pet peeves in this sort of thing.
Besides the above argument (not the least because it tends to drive a few editors to screaming blue murder), I naturally agree with the need to avoid the cycle - AfDs seldom fix things. Luckily, we've picked up some sworn editors and secondary sources. This is more and more a matter of wikification now, not the Unblinking Eye of Deletion. I'll add the article to my to-do list as well. To my vast and horrible to-do list. As for etymologies in particular, note that the bulk appears to be in intelligible Latin, and editor-made translations together with the original is acceptable form for references. --Kizor 23:04, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
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- Reply So your saying once a something reaches a certain degree of notability every small detail about it warrants an article despite not complying with WP:NN and that the information contained in said articles be things like "editor-made translations" of fictional words despite not complying with WP:OR. I would have to say I disagree. Also WP:NOTINHERITED is not WP:NOTINHERITED-UNLESS IT IS RELATED TO HARRY POTTER. [[Guest9999 23:18, 20 August 2007 (UTC)]]
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- Clearly marked comment left after DRV closure. Hi. Much as I dislike doing this, I can even less stomach having the massively erroneus comment above, made as I slept, being the only word on the matter for guaranteed future viewers. I still have no intention whatsoever of starting a debate here, so to be brief: No, I'm not, and I specifically said that these are not small details, and that I was talking about real Latin instead of fictional languages, and that the translations are in line with policy (WP:OR included). That isn't what I said at all. --Kizor 05:08, 21 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endorse closure - Even notwithstanding the technicality argument that the second AfD was too soon after the first, I think it's still persuasive that the second AfD was once again on its way to snowballing to keep. Overturning the closure and reopening the AfD or relisting it for a third time would seem to be monumental wastes of time -- it doesn't look as though there'd be any real chance of a consensus to delete, so why spin our wheels going through those motions yet again when that effort could instead be applied to simply improving the article? The proper course here would be for the objectors to the article to work with the proponents thereof and just improve it, in my opinion, rather than wasting everyone's time with a perpetual cycle of AfD nominations. Ashdog137 18:09, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I have seen many discussions and debates where, in the first day, things are looking to go one way, and then go somewhere else. I've seen RfAs that start out with 100% support from 40 people on their first days, only to fail at the end. That first day, when you see a page without a single oppose, and 40 people supporting the person, it would be easy to come to the conclusion of a snowball keep. But important points were brought to discussion, and the outcome changed in the end. One day's worth of discussion is in no way, whatsoever, a reasonable measure of consensus. -- Ned Scott 19:53, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
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- Comment WP:SNOW is not meant to apply when there is any reasonable dissenting arguement - which there cearly is in this case. [[Guest9999 22:15, 20 August 2007 (UTC)]]
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