Talk:Plame affair

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This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Plame affair article.

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To-do list for Plame affair:
  • Condense material at Template:Plamefull (vertical sidebox for the main article) to a much more consise Template:Plame, for use on related articles. Template:Plame may better work as a center-formatted footer box. A choice of both may also be good.
  • The article needs to be revised. Citations are needed throughout articles according to Wikipedia policy. Claims are made in this article that are neither substantiated nor documented by reliable sources. [removal of point-of-view and biased claims].
  • References are especially necessary in documenting opposing points of view.
  • Eliminate biases while striving to achieve more neutral point of view.
  • There is a separate article now on the CIA leak scandal timeline, which is cross-referenced in this article. This article and that timeline (which still needs much revision) need to be made synchronous ("brought into synch"). For help with editing chronology in this article and the timeline in the CIA leak scandal timeline, see the external links to published timelines from reliable sources in the latter article.


Contents

[edit] Where is the administrative action on the request move proposal?

Please see archiving of poll above and discussion [1]; the discussion was not finished, yet the following appears added in course of archiving prematurely: "Failed request. The proposed name did not uniquely identify the subject. Proposed name was also POV by using the word scandle.--Salix alba (talk) 19:01, 30 December 2007 (UTC)"

That comment did not show up completely in the green archived box due to two spaces added before it; I have deleted only the two spaces so that the whole comment could appear. Salix alba: Please add a direct link to administrative action on this request move proposal; it began just before Christmas, when a number of editors may have been away, and closing it and acting on the request move proposal appears to be premature; more time is needed for more editors to make comments. Acting upon it after only seven people have commented in a poll is not sufficient time for the proposal to be considered. What administrator has "failed" the request move proposal? Where are the reasons given? As I just wrote in editing comment, "scandal" is a word used for political scandals throughout Wikipedia; there is absolutely no disagreement that Plamegate, the CIA leak scandal, the CIA leak grand jury investigation, and Plame affair are all terms pertaining directly to an American political scandal; "American political scandals" is a category for this article; it is hardly "POV" to use the word Scandal in the name of this article; "affair" is both misleading and ambiguous, as per comments on this talk page and earlier archived talk pages for this article. The move proposal needs additional consideration; the most-recently archived (in green box) discussion was a "poll" not a "vote"; discussion was still ongoing. --NYScholar (talk) 07:52, 2 January 2008 (UTC) [added link for convenience, since the material referred to was archived since I wrote this comment. --NYScholar (talk) 01:32, 17 January 2008 (UTC)]
See "See also" in the article: List of scandals with "-gate" suffix ref. to Plamegate (renamed later "CIA leak scandal" and "Plame affair"); there is no doubt that the subject of this article is an American political scandal. To deny that it is such (in the naming of the article) presents a point of view on the subject. It does not appear that "affair" is more neutral and less "point of view" (biased) than "scandal"; the word "scandal" is definitive; it defines the kind of phenomenon (its class, genre) that is being discussed in the article. --NYScholar (talk) 08:03, 2 January 2008 (UTC)

The discussion was closed as it had fallen into the backlog section on WP:RM. The discussion here was not ongoing with no new comments in the four days before closure. The pole clearly showed a majority against the move. In the end of the day CIA leek scandal reads like a tabloid headline. --Salix alba (talk) 10:39, 2 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Request move proposal (renewed and continued due to holiday break interfering)

The following discussion is an archived discussion of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the proposal was not to move --Lox (t,c) 10:35, 16 January 2008 (UTC)


[Please review above archived boxes of discussions prior to commenting; reminder: this is a poll [for purposes of discussion] not a vote. It is here for purposes of further discussion by additional editors. (Updated.) --NYScholar (talk) 00:16, 3 January 2008 (UTC)] (Updated further w/ strength of support in brackets.) --NYScholar (talk) 02:40, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
After consulting previous discussion (scroll up and see archived discussions):
[Please place your brief comment in only one section: either "Support" or "Oppose" below, and please use a number sign (#) (followed by Support or Oppose) prior to your comment. (Please see the "move log" of this article for its history.) Thank you.(If the name were changed, one would revise the first sentence accordingly.) --NYScholar (talk) 23:15, 22 December 2007 (UTC)]
[In the archived (in green above) "survey", there appear to be more votes in "support" of the move than "oppose" it; but there is also contradictory information from non-archived (non-green) discussions. Please see earlier comments posted by other editors. I added a comment to the "support" (non-archived) section above the archived (green) section. --NYScholar (talk) 23:37, 22 December 2007 (UTC)]
Please also see the talk pages of related and frequently-also-renamed articles; e.g., Talk:CIA leak grand jury investigation#Periodic renaming of this and related articles, which contain many cross-references to CIA leak scandal, which are currently being redirected to Plame affair but it used to be the other way around (that "Plame affair" was redirected to "CIA leak scandal"). --NYScholar (talk) 00:13, 24 December 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Requested move

(added subheading for navigational purposes) Proposal is to change the name of this article from "Plame affair" to "CIA leak scandal". Indicate your position below.

Support
  1. Support: I [strongly] support the name change from "Plame affair" to "CIA leak scandal" due to the name changes of related articles, particularly CIA leak scandal timeline; it leads to both greater neutrality for this highly-controversial article and greater consistency with respect to related articles in Wikipedia. --NYScholar (talk) 23:40, 22 December 2007 (UTC) (Updated further w/ strength of support in brackets.) --NYScholar (talk) 02:40, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
  2. Support: I strongly support the name change. I advocated this very strongly a few months ago and accepted that there wasn't sufficient support for it then. I was heartened by the wise observation by an editor that sometimes the passage of time affects the perspective on such matters. The consistency among other related articles is one good reason. A second reason is that it would be more consistent with other similar political scandals in history. A third reason is that the focus of the article title should be on WHAT happened (a leak pertaining to the CIA) rather than on the name of the person (Plame) who happened to be the passive victim of the occurrence. Fourth reason is that - with Scooter Libby having elected to not contest his conviction - there is now no doubt that criminality took place involving a high-ranking administration official. And such criminality affecting an administration is invariably described as a scandal. That is not POV. It is a fact. This issue is most definitely more than just an "affair" - a word that connotes a "caper". Davidpatrick (talk) 00:44, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
Oppose
  1. Oppose: 34,000 versus 121,000 google hits, and 9 to 25 in google news. "Plame affair" is clearly the most common name per WP:NC. Boowah59 (talk) 19:16, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
  2. Oppose: "Plame affair" uniquely identifies this incident. This was not a leak from the CIA. There have been leaks from the CIA in the past and there no doubt will be in the future. We should pick a name that will last and "CIA leak scandal" isn't it.--agr (talk) 23:40, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
  3. Oppose: Per Reinhold; someone looking at an article title should have some notion what the article covers. Septentrionalis PMAnderson 01:45, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
  4. Oppose. I think NYScholar proposes a good reason to change the name of the CIA leak timeline article, not this one. csloat (talk) 01:57, 24 December 2007 (UTC)
  5. Oppose - The scandal is far more pertinent to Valarie Plame, the agent who was outed, than to the CIA as a whole, which didn't have a lot to do with it other than asking for an investigation and accepting Plame's resignation. If the google hits were different, I might be neutral, but even if you add "-wikipedia" to the searches, it's still 99,000 to 32,000. MilesAgain (talk) 01:26, 25 December 2007 (UTC)
  6. Oppose - The Palme affair is an adequate name which has attracted wide support over the long history of attempted moves. It has the advantage of providing a unique identifier, (hence it meets Wikipedia:Naming conventions (precision)) for the incident which is not shared by CIA Leek scandal leeks from organisations happen all the time so a CIA leek cannot be considered unique. Wikipedia:Words to avoid#Scandal, controversy, affair explicitly states: "The term 'scandal' should not be used at all in article titles on current affairs, except in historical cases where the term is widely used by reputable historical sources (e.g. Teapot Dome scandal, Sharpstown scandal)"; The caveat does not apply as the incident is too new for a definitive name to emerge. --Salix alba (talk) 09:47, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
  7. Oppose there are so many CIA leak scandals that it is exceedingly ambiguous to rename it such, and highly prejudicial to other ones. 70.51.10.115 (talk) 05:53, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
  8. Oppose per the above comments. Also support renaming of the CIA leak timeline article. R. Baley (talk) 23:39, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
  9. Oppose ....again. How many times has this come up now? Arkon (talk) 00:02, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
  10. Oppose Plame Affair uniquely identifies the topic. CSears (talk) 9:43, 14 April 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Discussion

[edit] Support

  • Reply to Salix alba's comment of January 2 (and action earlier):
This article is categorized by American political scandals; "Scandal" is its definitive name; "Plame affair" is less neutral and more ambiguous. CIA leak scandal timeline is the complementary article name. It is not "POV" either. The subject of this article is a "Scandal" as in American political scandals, wherein Plamegate is listed, with "also known as" names such as "CIA leak scandal" and "Plame affair" given; "Plamegate" (aka "CIA leak scandal" and "Plame affair") is listed as one of those Scandals. To state that "scandal" is not neutral and "tabloid" is not in keeping with WP:AGF; "CIA leak scandal" is in wide usage; if any name appears to be more "tabloid" (thus resulting in its large number of Google hits, including blogs) it is "Plame affair"; "CIA leak scandal" (leaving out Wikis, which reproduce this article) has a considerable enough number of non-tabloid hits in Google and other search engines to be recognizable for those looking for this article. An alternative name: "CIA Plame leak scandal" is sometimes used as well, but not as often. --NYScholar (talk) 00:14, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Another alternative is "CIA Plame leak scandal" or "Plame leak scandal". (Please see previous archived discussions in green; other comments about the name changes not in green, and previous discussions in archived talk pages for this and related articles. I've given links to the previous request moves from editing histories earlier on this talk page in last now-green archived discussion of people's comments. Reposted the earlier "support" and "oppose" numbered items for greater convenience of new readers.) --NYScholar (talk) 00:22, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
Using the word "Controversy" (following its usage in lead) might be another possible alternative: e.g., "Plame controversy"; "Plame leak controversy", "Valerie Plame controversy", etc. Searching some such names with "controversy" in them might turn up such more neutral and unambiguous alternatives; an ambiguity might arise in using "controversy", however: "which" controversy pertaining to Valerie Plame; so that might be too general and hence too potentially ambiguous in the future. "Scandal" is recognizable; but "Plame affair" seems misleading (espec. in the future, when it might no longer be recognizable). "Plame affair" is not necessarily the most common term among serious newpaper print and magazine journalists, though it might be most common among bloggers and online non-professional writers (whose posts get counted in Google searches, using quotation marks, and who copy Wikipedia and other wiki articles which copy Wikipedia). (One cannot use and/or cite Wikipedia as a source.) --NYScholar (talk) 01:04, 3 January 2008 (UTC)
The term "CIA leak scandal" has been used as a name for this subject in reputable international newspapers since approx. 2003 to 2005; one might want to examine the usage frequency of the various proposal name changes in terms of when they have been used. "Plame affair" was perhaps more widely used in 2005 than it is now (or "CIA leak scandal" is used more recently still than "Plame affair"; or vice versa. What is "too recent"? Over two years to three years of historical usage for "CIA leak scandal" (replacing "Plamegate", defined as an "American political scandal" in American political scandals, circa 2005 (October--after Libby's indictment--which occurred in Oct. 2005), shows that it has been used since then. Similarly, the "Plame affair" was in popular usage in 2005; if one checks the dates that show up in the "hits" one found via a Google search, one can see if there are variations in the usage of various names over time. "Recent" is highly variable and not defined. What date is "recent"? Those arguing for "Plame affair" have been citing Google search numbers of hits without making any such distinctions. If "CIA leak scandal" is too "recent," so is "Plame affair" too recent a term, in that both are used interchangeably (sometimes in the same articles yielding the "hits") as synonymous; one needs a descriptive, identifiable, and neutral name for the articles on this subject. At least "Plamegate" has a context in American political scandals to which one is able to cross-link in the "See also" section. But "Plamegate" appears to be dated (rather obsolete). In time, "Plame affair" will probably become (if it is not already) obsolete. [NPR's relatively current timeline (July 2, 2007) is named "Timeline: CIA Leak Case"; the references to "Plame affair" are older than that in CIA leak scandal timeline#External links. (Updated.) --NYScholar (talk) 02:54, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
Originally, I preferred "CIA leak scandal (2003)" when it was named that. My main complaint is, however, now inconsistency of the names for the closely-related subjects of these articles relating to the leak of Valerie Plame Wilson's CIA covert identity (this article and the "timeline" relating directly to it: see the names for the CIA leak scandal timeline#External links, as well as "See also" in CIA leak scandal timeline. and the dates that those timelines were compiled for more contextual information re: names. (Updated.) --NYScholar (talk) 02:54, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
See historical source "The CIA Leak", by Robert Novak, for "CIA leak scandal" in CIA leak scandal timeline#Robert Novak's column "The CIA Leak"--the stimulus for the entire "scandal" or "affair"; the nomenclature "CIA leak" in "CIA leak scandal" derives from that historical source. For other such usages following that precedent, see the timeline in Wikipedia article and in the external links given. All derives from Novak's initial article in July 2003 and his subsequent retrospective account in "The CIA leak". It is clearly a recognizable name; the U.S. government scandal and federal investigation and federal criminal case United States v. Libby and the civil case against several persons in or formerly in government filed by the Wilsons and still unresolved due to their ongoing appeal are described in or cross-linked via American political scandals and the Plame affair (CIA leak) investigation template. There is no doubt that the subject of this article directly concerns an American political scandal. There is no lack of historical perspective in naming it what it is; the opposite pertains: the use of the word derives from historical usage by international print journalists in sources that meet Wikipedia's policies in WP:V#Sources. --NYScholar (talk) 03:07, 5 January 2008 (UTC)

Sometimes it seems that the need for ease of recognition and the names frequently used may conflict in terms of Wikipedia's own policies pertaining to both naming of articles and neutrality; when there is conflict among Wikipedia's own policies and/or guidelines in the naming of articles, what takes precedence probably is most reliable-sourced, verifiable usage that is still easily recognized by most readers as long as the lead makes clear the derivation of the name. (added thought.) --NYScholar (talk) 03:14, 5 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Oppose

  • In further reply, the other side of the comments above: If one consults The Guardian "Timeline", one sees that it is called Timeline: the Valerie Plame affair"; like The New York Times (as mentioned in earlier-archived comments by Wiki editors), The Guardian is a respectable non-tabloid print newspaper, and it seems to use the word "affair" but it does so with "Valerie Plame" as the identifier, not just "Plame"; that full name usage has the advantage of enabling Wikipedia readers to link to the Wikipedia article "Valerie Plame". People have renamed "CIA leak scandal timeline" to "Plame affair timeline" in the past; perhaps both could have in their names "Valerie Plame" (the cover identity): e.g., "Valerie Plame affair" and "Valerie Plame affair timeline". In my view, the companion articles do need to have commensurately-identifiable titles (names) in Wikipedia for ease of cross-linking and recognition, especially for new readers (in the future). --NYScholar (talk) 01:17, 3 January 2008 (UTC) [corr. --NYScholar (talk) 01:18, 3 January 2008 (UTC)]
  • reply to #7: If there are "so many other CIA leak scandals" which might become confused with this "CIA leak scandal" beginning in 2003 to the current date of 2008, please name them, with links to the Wikipedia articles on them, and create a "disambiguation page", wherein these different "CIA leak scandals" may be listed as such. (See template on article page.) Thank you. --NYScholar (talk) 01:21, 6 January 2008 (UTC)
The first extensive page of links in a "search" in Wikipedia for "CIA leak scandal" turns up mostly articles relating to this subject: [2]. --NYScholar (talk) 01:24, 6 January 2008 (UTC)
Contrary to statements made about the NY Times's use of the phrase "Plame affair", the NY Times in Times Topics for "Joseph C. Wilson IV" indicates that "CIA leak case" and other references to "CIA leak" and the related "scandal" are prevalent in that national and international newspaper (not a "tabloid"): Please consult: Times Topics: Joseph C. Wilson and its "Times Topics" features for other principal figures. --NYScholar (talk) 02:25, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
Moreover, the hyperlinked NY Times's "timeline" (and related graphics) for the CIA leak scandal is called "Timeline of a leak" (not "timeline of an affair"). --NYScholar (talk) 02:27, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
Furthermore, a search in that Times Topics site for the "exact phrase" "Plame affair" turns up only 2 articles in that Times Topics file (of 226 articles), and those 2 articles are dated (obsolete) from 2003 and 2004: Times Topics:Joseph C. Wilson index search]. --NYScholar (talk) 02:31, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
And the same kind of search for the "exact phrase" "Plame affair" in the Times Topics file for "Valerie Plame" (of 331 articles) turned up only 6 articles, only two (2) of which are dated after 2005 and only one (1) of which is dated after 2006: Times Topics:Valerie Plame index search. --NYScholar (talk) 02:35, 8 January 2008 (UTC)
See also the use of the word scandal in the abstract for the 2006 op-ed on Plame by David Brooks (one of those 6 given): "Op-Ed: A Guide for the Perplexed". --NYScholar (talk) 02:44, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Query

Isn't this proposal closed? Why is material still being added? Boowah59 (talk) 04:27, 8 January 2008 (UTC)

This is a renewed open proposal; the section heading (scroll up) explains why [a brandnew admin. acted on it during holidays; it was "renewed and continued due to holiday break interfering"); also see this talk page heading link to Request props. page; it was reopened on January 3, 2008 (dir. link) here in Request props project page. A poll is informal; the purpose is to get additional discussion, espec. from new editors. I have been responding to people's brief poll comments in the previous sec. (also archived, but added to later) in this "Discussion" section; others can too. --NYScholar (talk) 00:33, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
I appreciate your call for discussion, but the consensus seems to be leaning heavily toward keeping the current title for this article. I hope you are not continuing with an eye toward exhausting efforts to avoid the change. Perhaps, this discussion should be closed until others pick up the campaign for change. Ursasapien (talk) 05:22, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

I think we should open a call for renaming the CIA leak scandal timeline article, instead. Boowah59 (talk) 15:23, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

I didn't think it would, but it let me rename it. Boowah59 (talk) 15:35, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
Yes, and then NYScholar just moved it back. Andrewa (talk) 04:06, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

That renaming of the other article had no consensus, was not done on its talk page following a request move proposal/discussion, and was reverted by another editor. This request move proposal is still active. --NYScholar (talk) 23:21, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

[Note: Just added the bold type font; Andrewa incorrectly states that "NYScholar just moved it back"; I did not change the name of CIA leak scandal timeline after Boowah renamed it (without first making a prior request proposal on its talk page); please see its editing history; another editor did that (we were coincidentally editing at around the same time; I was not aware of the name being restored (to "CIA leak scandal timeline") by another editor at the same time that I was working; I ran into an "edit conflict" due to the name change by that editor and had to start all over with my edit of the text of the lead. The other editor and I agree, however, that "CIA leak scandal timeline" is an appropriate name for that article (given its content, its sources, its see also section, its external links, and the categories pertaining to it). --NYScholar (talk) 23:34, 12 January 2008 (UTC)]

Please see the tagged notices on the top of this talk page, prior archived discussions on this talk page and previously-archived talk pages, and Wikipedia's policy re: consensus: WP:Consensus. Consensus takes time; the results of an informal "poll" over a few days are not necessarily an indication of the reaching of "consensus" in Wikipedia, especially with regard to the naming of controversial articles with a contentious history of name-changes: Wikipedia:Guidelines for controversial articles. The very naming of this particular article (and those related to it) has been the subject of much controversy and name changes back and forth over an extended period of time. The request move proposal discussion is an attempt to reconsider a name ("Plame affair") that now appears to be obsolete in such sources cited in the article as the New York Times (scroll up for evidence given and links). --NYScholar (talk) 23:46, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

It's only active because you have reverted the closure, for no reason I can see (other than that you disagree with the decision of course).
Yes, there's a lot been said. But there's no reason not to close this requested move. There's a rough consensus not to move, which is more than we need for closure, all we need for that is that no consensus to move is likely. Andrewa (talk) 23:58, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
As there seems to be some dispute over the closing of this request I've now mentioned it on Wikipedia talk:Requested moves#Plame affair. --Salix alba (talk) 00:02, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Relisting

I have relisted this at WP:RM. We'll see what happens in another five days... unless another admin wants to speedily close it in the meantime, which I would support. We have wasted enough time. Andrewa (talk) 01:57, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the proposal. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page. No further edits should be made to this section.

[edit] Dispute resolution

I think we need to consider Wikipedia:dispute resolution here. If NYScholar won't let us close the latest RM any other way, then sadly, eventually blocks and perhaps page protection will be needed.

In order to raise a request for comment, at least two users should have contacted NYScholar on his talk page to attempt resolution there. I'll be the first. Andrewa (talk) 00:35, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

NYScholar has moved my attempt at resolution from his talk page to below. WP:RFC reads in part Before requesting community comment, at least two editors must have contacted the user on their talk page, or the talk pages involved in the dispute, and tried but failed to resolve the problem.

It's obviously futile to comment further at User talk:NYScholar, so I'd welcome comments here to satisfy that requirement. The reason is that I'd like to remove this from WP:RM, so I and my fellow admins can get on with some useful work. I'm reluctant to leave the poll open when it's not listed on WP:RM (as when I last checked) for procedural reasons, it's just plain messy. Discussion can and no doubt will continue here, and if a consensus to move is formed, then come back to WP:RM then (and preferably (;-> not just before a public holiday).

The dispute simply concerns this edit. Andrewa (talk) 01:18, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

I've moved this comment from my talk page here: I've already explained many times:

<<

[edit] Requested move (moved from user talk)

Please give your reasons for this edit. The edit summary reads not closed by an administrator; non-consensus move of other article. In fact I am an administrator (not that I think I needed to be one to do this, but that's irrelevant, because I am one), and all that is needed to close the discussion is that no consensus to move seems likely after five days, which is I think true - in fact there's a rough consensus not to move.

This is of course the third listing on WP:RM. The first moved to this name. The second, which you initiated just recently, confirmed this decision, as does this one. Please accept it. Andrewa (talk) 00:31, 10 January 2008 (UTC) >>

I am not the only one disputing the name of this article; see the other editor who expressed position in support of this move. One needs to look at the reasons given in support and opposition and to weigh them as well as to look at numbers. There is no procedure for "votes" in a request name proposal. Consensus operates over time and takes time; the current usage of "CIA leak scandal" is more prevalent (in terms of dates of usage) than "Plame affair", which appears by now to have become obsolete. Scroll up for previous discussion. There is no attempt on my part to [rename] (move) this article [without prior discussion!]; someone else renamed another article contrary to Wikipedia policy (no request move proposal, etc.; another editor undid that change, which was not in keeping with policy and which was done by a user who has edited Wikipedia for only about a month, given log on id). I have not been "edit warring" and have not changed the name of this article; I have been discussing reasons that others have given which do not appear to me to be convincing. There is no role for "dispute resolution" here; there is no editing warring except for the person who changed the name of the other article w/o consensus in that article's talk page. The editing history comments are clear. --NYScholar (talk) 00:42, 10 January 2008 (UTC) [clarified further in brackets. --NYScholar (talk) 00:55, 10 January 2008 (UTC)]

You need to look at the full editing history (over years as well as recent months) of the move logs pertaining to this article and to the other related articles. This request move [proposal] has a longstanding context. See the links to the logs and editing history. I do not find an "administrator" identity on the user pages that I checked. When discussion is ongoing (as on this talk page), and it is simply discussion, there is no edit warring or need for "dispute resolution." No harm occurs in discussion. Harm was, however, done to CIA leak scandal timeline by the non-administrator, relatively-new user id. simply jumping in and changing that article's name, referring to this article's talk page. There is no request move proposal there (on the other article's talk page), and the lead (currently, which I revised appropriately to match its subject, which is not "Plame affair" but the whole "CIA leak" and "CIA leak scandal" matter (as major U.S. news sources refer to it most recently in their own timelines). The move to change that article to "Plame affair timeline" failed--see the log/history, for appropriate reasons. --NYScholar (talk) 00:49, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

I fully endorse NY Scholar's position about keeping the dialogue open. There is no edit war going on. And there is no harm being done by continuing the discussion. And - not to argue the merits of the actual issue in this particular comment - but I do notice that very few of the people opposing the change seem to offer reasoned refutations of the numerous specific points offered by those in favor of a change. Anyway - that's for a separate place.
The key thing is that - in the past (pre-internet) - matters like this frequently had changes in the names given to the issue by the media. The better to reflect the greater perspective that time and information brings to an occurrence. eg - for several months what later became known as the "Watergate Scandal" was initially referred to as the "DNC break-in" or the "Watergate break-in". As time went by - other related matters came to light - legal convictions and political embarrassment became part of the story - and lo and behold - it was seen as what it was. A SCANDAL. Not an "affair" or a "controversy". Once there were high-ranking political operatives resigning from the White House and being convicted in a court of law (does that ring a bell?)- it was undoubtedly a scandal. Any other word would have been considered a weasel word.
Incidentally - the specific office that was the object of the Watergate break-in was the office of the DNC Chairman Larry O'Brien. Under the peculiar logic underlying the current name of this article - we would be calling the Watergate Scandal "The O'Brien Affair". Point made... Davidpatrick (talk) 01:38, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
I have relisted the request at WP:RM. So now you two have another five days to get some arguments and support together, and then I'm afraid I think we should close it. Is that fair enough?
Closing the requested move doesn't prevent further discussion. It just gives us a baseline for further discussion, and allows us to clean up WP:RM.
But surely, you have better things to do? There's no support. Face facts. Andrewa (talk) 02:04, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
That's fine w/ me. Thanks. True that I do have "better things to do"!
Re: "There's no support. Face facts": There is, however, some support if you read the whole discussion previous to this proposal (the at-least two before on this page) and comments by the two of us posting in "Support" in the context of the previous proposal comments. If there were "no support," this proposal would not keep coming up and coming up again filed by a variety of editors over time; plus, the relevance of one name v. another does change over time as well. --NYScholar (talk) 05:00, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

It seems to me that if NYScholar really feels strongly about this, the move can be relisted. However, that doesn't mean that Andrewa's admin close should have been reverted. The expiration/closure of the RM request is a separate matter from the continuation of discussion on the general topic of renaming. The fact that there is a continuous low-level support for changing the article's name does not mean that a move request should stay open indefinitely. The current (past?) proposal is clearly not going to be successful. Dekimasuよ! 07:43, 10 January 2008 (UTC)

By way of explanation, when I removed the archiving in this edit Diffs, I did so too quickly without seeing the comment by Andrewa (just didn't see it there in the online green box version I was reading). I did not see Andrewa's reason for the green box archiving; I just was trying to enable others to add their comments to what I had intended to be an ongoing "poll" for purposes of discussion (by others, to whom I was responding at times). I did not intend to step on an administrative "closing" of the request proposal (I hadn't seen any notice about its closing on the request move page where the request move was posted on Jan. 3, 2008--now accessible in history of that page). So I apologize to Andrewa--I just hadn't seen the explanation of "closing" the request proposal. I still think that it is useful to enable people to add their # comment to "support" or "oppose" for purposes of discussion. Again, there is no edit war going on here, just a discussion of the pros and cons of the names being suggested. If someone still wants to add comments, it is currently still possible to do so, thanks to Andrewa's reposting the req. move prop. notice, but I do understand that eventually (in a few more days) it will be acted upon again. I urge people reading this page to consider the most recent references in mainstream news accounts to this subject and to see what it is named by them. A Google search is not sensitive to dates of postings and one has to look at dates of usage to see currency of usage as well. Again, sorry to Andrewa. --NYScholar (talk) 00:07, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
As of today (Jan. 10, 2008), a Google search for "CIA leak scandal" (with the phrase in quotation marks) yields 34,000 hits, many of which are recently dated post 2005-2006) items; a comparable search for the phrase "Plame affair" in quotation marks yields over 100,000 [102,000] hits, but many are to posts dated from 2003-2005 [and to Wikipedia itself and Wikis, which should not be counted], and thus suggest a name that is or has become (more) obsolete and that will now and in time be less recognizable. If one needs "(2003)" added to "CIA leak scandal" (as it had been before before an earlier renaming/move), then that resolves any problem of "ambiguity". Articles are often renamed when their earlier names become less current usage (have less "currency" of "usage"). --NYScholar (talk) 02:04, 11 January 2008 (UTC) [Addition. --NYScholar (talk) 02:05, 11 January 2008 (UTC)] [added exact figure. --NYScholar (talk) 07:02, 11 January 2008 (UTC)]
As of today (Jan. 11, 2008), a Google search for "Plamegate" (phrase w/in q. marks), which is listed in List of scandals with "-gate" suffix, yields 216,000 hits (though, as stated above, dates of entries need checking and refs. to Wikipedia articles and other Wikis, etc., based on them, need weeding out re: "current usage". --NYScholar (talk) 04:03, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
That inclusion of Plamegate in a "List of scandals...." should put to rest any argument that the "CIA leak scandal" (aka "Plamegate" and "Plame affair") is not a "scandal". Any reading of sources given throughout this and related articles makes very apparent that it is a "scandal," specifically an American political scandal, but not a sex scandal, which the word "affair" misleadingly and ambiguously implies. --NYScholar (talk) 04:08, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
On the model of "Watergate scandal" a more consistent, less ambiguous, and more neutral name for this article (instead of "Plame affair") is either "Plamegate scandal" or "CIA leak scandal (2003)." --NYScholar (talk) 04:20, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
I'm sorry, but I have to say that I find this explanation inadequate. When did you realise that you had made a mistake? Where did you get the idea that I'm not an administrator? Why didn't you bother to check? And what are you going to do about it now?
Nothing is stopping you from restoring my work. It would take you a little more time than it took me, but I would regard that as justice. Nobody is likely to revert you on the grounds that you are not an administrator; For one thing, the poll has already been closed by an admin, and for another, there is no policy preventing a non-admin from closing a poll, provided the conditions for closing it have been met (they have) and no admin powers are needed (they aren't). And if they did, welcome to the club.
I don't expect that, although I think it would be the right thing to do. But I think we at least now have an undertaking from you that you will accept the closure of this move request, and thank you for that. I would hope that this also includes not immediately raising another. It has IMO been obvious since before Christmas that no consensus to move was possible. Andrewa (talk) 17:12, 12 January 2008 (UTC)
The request has already been relisted, by me. NYScholar left it in a half-closed state, and it seemed better to relist it than to risk a revert war.
But if this behaviour were to become common, no contested move request would ever be closed. Note that before the closure was reverted, this was already the second identical move request. It was raised immediately after the closure of the first, with the (IMO false) claim that the admin who closed the first request had done so in error.
IMO no new material has been added since. There is lots of discussion, but it simply repeats the same arguments in slightly different terms. And note also that NYScholar has in several places demanded that any editor joining the discussion read all the (extensive and repetitive) archives first. Andrewa (talk) 17:12, 12 January 2008 (UTC)

These kinds of insinuations are unnecessary; what happened to WP:AGF? I already explained that I did not see Andrewa's comment in the once-green box (it was hard to see in the green online) and that I realized that when I wrote the comment above as such; There is nothing inappropriate about discussing a controversial move proposal; in fact, that is what is recommended for controversial move proposals. The move proposals for this article are recurrent and always controversial. The article itself is a controversial article. Re: administrative status: I did (as I state more than once already) look at andrewa's user page when I saw the green box added [via the user name link in editing history: I did not actually see the comment about "closing" the proposal then in the talk page then-green box, and I had not clicked on "diffs" either at that time], and did not see there [on Andrewa's user page] an "administrator" user box and thought the person not to be an administrator. [Since then and reading the ref. to "another administrator" in his/her comment later,] I have apologized in good faith, and I expect what I state to be taken as posted in good faith. The opposite is being done and that is not in keeping with Wikipedia editing policy on WP:AGF and Wikipedia:Etiquette. My main point, however, is that there has been extensive discussion of moves of this article for a very long period of time and anyone entering this debate does need to familiarize himself or herself with the previous discussions. That is what Wikipedia recommends not merely what I am suggesting. Words like "demanded" etc. are not neutral and an administrator needs to maintain neutrality. Administrators, like any other Wikipedia user/editor, are still subject to Wikipedia's own policies and guidelines. The desire to close a proposal simply because there is a backlog so as to act on them (without consulting prior discussions) is really not sensitive to those who are making such proposals in good faith. This talk page is not the place to attack editors for making proposals; editors should not be attacked personally [or] their motives impugned for good-faith edits or [for] apologies for having made a mistake. That is unacceptable behavior in Wikipedia. --NYScholar (talk) 22:49, 12 January 2008 (UTC) [tc. --NYScholar (talk) 00:39, 13 January 2008 (UTC)]

If one is interested in the naming of this article and in the many editors' positions on supporting and/or opposing various names over these many months and years, there is an extensive editing history and talk page archive of arguments to examine. Some of the reasons given in opposition do not seem both well considered and convincing and do not hold up in the context of current searches of common usage of various names. All reasons are not equal in weight; some are more convincing than others. If one is to make considered decisions, one has to consider the reasons more carefully in the context of previous discussions. Otherwise, the talk page header about improving the article (including names of articles) is being unheeded. --NYScholar (talk) 22:53, 12 January 2008 (UTC) [added some bracketed clarifications; it is hard to reconstruct when I thought what, but I do know that when I saw the green archiving, I did not see any comment about the closing of the proposal, and reacted quickly (too quickly, as I say above in my apology). It is offensive to me that what I state in my apology itself has now been called into question, in effect, calling me a liar. That is just plain wrong. --NYScholar (talk) 23:24, 12 January 2008 (UTC)]

There is no "work" to be "restored" here. In reply to Andrewa's earlier question about "when" I realized that he/she is an administrator: it is not clear to me on his/her user page that he/she is (no user box that I am familiar with says "administrator"), and I had looked at the user page after the reference he/she made to "another administrator" around January 10, 2008. I have been busy with other things (and not even at home at times or near a computer) and dealt with constructing the apology above when I had time to do so. I do not want to restore a green box archiving to the ongoing "support" and "oppose" polling area because I want to enable others to be able to add to it (using the # sign first and no skipped lines between comments) if they want to do so. There have been some opposition #'d comments added since I removed the green archiving. Green-archiving an ongoing poll was undoing what on Jan. 3 was a reopened proposal. The administrator who had previously closed the request move proposal was a brand-new administrator who had not read the prior discussions before doing so and who has taken a position him/herself in opposition to the move, saying that the "CIA leak scandal"/"Plamegate"/"Plame affair" is not a "scandal," which is absolutely incorrect and contrary to the sources cited in this article (now called "Plame affair"). There is no support in the 3rd-party published sources for the viewpoint that this subject is not a "scandal"; it is listed with the category "American political scandals" ("Plamegate", "CIA leak scandal") still--as said before too, see the "See also". Given what the newly-minted administrator had done, I objected to it, and still do. (Andrewa came along later, and I did not until he/she identified him/herself as such [via the phrase "another administrator" in a comment] know that he/she is an administrator when he greenboxed the discussion without apparently having consulted the previous green-boxed archived discussions or seen the point that it had been closed by a newly-appointed administrator over the Christmas/New Year holiday before enough others would have been able to comment on the proposal. If one scrolls up or looks at the editing history, one can see that there is nothing nefarious going on [in reopening the request move proposal], just a concern for enough editors after Christmas/New Year's holiday to consider the proposal. Another editor, who supports the move, has expressed concerns too that one be able to discuss reasons for it without being shut down. Again: See WP:AGF. --NYScholar (talk) 23:08, 12 January 2008 (UTC) [additions in brackets and ref. to AGF]. --NYScholar (talk) 23:12, 12 January 2008 (UTC)

I've not replied to your extensive comments because there is very little new to say. I have looked through the past comments to all discussions and there is no indication of consensus to move. I have looked at the title used in other media coverage and again these seem very mixed with various combinations of palm/wilson/niger - case/incident/affair/scandle/gate. Your own evidence suggest a higher raw number of google hits for Palme affair/Palmegate. I have explained why the word scandal raises problems with POV, it is not wikipedia job to make assertions especially in article titles, and there are specific guidelines against it. If there was a clear case that media coverage had settle on this term then it would be fine to use the term, however this does not seem to be the case.
This discussion now seems to be draining attention, endless reopening of the case does not seem to be taking us anywhere. WP:CON states
It is very easy to create the appearance of a changing consensus simply by asking again and hoping that a different and more sympathetic group of people will discuss the issue.
and this seems to be what is happening here, yet each time it is reopened a few more oppose votes accumulate. WP:POINT#Refusal to 'get the point' is also worth a read.
Hopefully when the next admin closes the case we can all respect their decision. Maybe it will be worth reconsidering again in a year.--Salix alba (talk) 00:49, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
You have not taken into account the dates of usage. This naming/renaming proposal relates to time of usage; whereas some names were more common usage in the past, other names are more common usage now. Your re-statement above (of points that in some cases you say that you have not read and, without reading them, judge repetitive) is inaccurate. --NYScholar (talk) 00:57, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
In turn, I refer you and others back to the WP cited above: WP:POINT#Refusal to 'get the point': That reference pertains to "bad-faith editors", which insinuates that I and David Patrick are editing or discussing "in bad faith", which is incorrect. Both of us are editing and discussing this matter in good faith. It is offensive to suggest otherwise by linking to "Refusal to 'get the point'." The "point" being made by David Patrick and me [which others appear not to be "getting"] is that people are looking at numbers of Google hits indiscriminately, without looking at the dates of the articles referred to via those hits and currency of usage; common usage also must take into account currency (what something is currently called by most people if that term is neutral and correct--a "scandal" is used throughout Wikipedia names when the names are accurate. In this case, as reading the sources for the articles will show, it is currently still common usage to refer to this subject as an "American political scandal." The point is made throughout many people's comments above (not just my more recent comments). --NYScholar (talk) 01:02, 13 January 2008 (UTC) [added clarifications in brackets. --NYScholar (talk) 01:05, 13 January 2008 (UTC)]

On January 10, 2008, Andrewa wrote (scroll up): " all that is needed to close the discussion [I think s/he means request proposal] is that no consensus to move seems likely after five days"; the five days go through January 15, 2008. It is now only January 13. I suggest that we just take a look at this situation on January 15, and allow the "five days" given to occur prior to the acting on the request move proposal. Thanks. --NYScholar (talk) 01:08, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

[We can discuss whatever we want to discuss pertaining to the "improvement" of this article; one does not close a discussion; one closes the request proposal by acting on it. Anyone is free in the future to address the issues if he or she wants to. [added brackets --NYScholar (talk) 01:15, 13 January 2008 (UTC)]

Speaking for myself, I don't have time to deal with this anymore. I have work-related deadlines to meet and they are during this five day time period. So that's it for me. I addressed the non-good-faith assumptions because they are unfair and demeaning [and should not have been made, espec. by administrators!]. Please just comment on the actual issues of the proposed name(s) of the article, not on contributors making the proposals. Thank you. WP:NPA. --NYScholar (talk) 01:12, 13 January 2008 (UTC); --NYScholar (talk) 01:16, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

I have already undertaken not to close this (third) listing until five days have expired since the relisting, and I will stick to that undertaking. I am pleased that you appear to have undertaken not to again revert a valid closing. I am hopeful that you will also wait a decent interval before listing this move once again.
I think it's worth waiting in view of that undertaking. But I'd also point out that the five days expired before Christmas, and that there have been no new proposals or arguments in favour of the move since then.
This section is headed "dispute resolution". It is not part of the move discussion, although it arises from that discussion. It is about your behaviour, and in particular seeking an outcome that does not indefinitely delay closing this move request. At the risk of repetition, I point out that this does not prevent further discussion, it just baselines the current (rough) consensus not to move.
I'm still inclined to the view that your mistakes are genuine, in accordance with assuming good faith and despite the obvious observation that they would serve as effective tactics to frustrate the process if that were your intention, and if they were unchallenged. But if you're that fallible, frankly this makes your lectures on policy and procedure pointless. It is the blind leading the sighted, or attempting to. Worse, both they and your repeated insistence that any newcomer to the debate first wade through the repetitive archives discourage both new contributors and new ideas.
And continued discussion without new ideas is also pointless. Food for thought? Andrewa (talk) 21:51, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] My reply in my talk archive 17, which was not restored via revert by admin.

I find this discussion of me, a contributor, useless. The focus is supposed to be on the proposal. If you want editors who have not encountered you before to know that you are an administrator, please add a clear(er) identification of yourself as such on your user page. Thank you. (I have not intentionally "reverted" any closing of this proposal; it was clear that I proposed it and that I intended to be taking a poll on it (from when I first proposed it); the new administrator who archived my poll while I had intended to have it be ongoing for at least several days or more did so by introducing a typographical error in the archiving process; that person added two spaces which made it impossible to read the comment he/she posted in the archiving box. I simply deleted two spaces so that I and others could read the whole comment: please see the editing history. [See Talk:Plame affair#Where is the administrative action on the request move proposal?.] Andrewa came along after that and, despite the clear statement that the holidays were intervening in the ability to gain comments, re-archived the box. I did not see Andrewa's comment about closing the proposal in the green archived box. That is the only "mistake" for which I have apologized, and it was an inadvertent error, since I did not at the time realize that (a) the proposal had been "closed"; or (b) the one who "closed" it was an "administrator"; that is why my editing history comment says that the archiving had been done by someone who appeared not to be an administrator. I had simply clicked on a user box in the name in editing history (not in the green archived box) and had not recognized anything about the person being an administrator. After realizing what had happened, I apologized. There is nothing more to it. I accepted Andrewa's (Andrewa's, I repeat) decision to allow the discussion to go on for five days. Please scroll up. Enough said about this. No "food for thought." At this point, rehashing this over and over had been a further waste of time. The focus needs to be on the merits of "support" and "oppose" reasons for the request move proposal, not on Andrewa and not on me, or on any other individual contributor/user/editor/administrator. These appear to be red herrings. Please focus on the proposal itself and the responses (reasons given). Thanks again. --NYScholar (talk) 01:52, 15 January 2008 (UTC) [added sec. link. (cont., next para.) --NYScholar (talk) 01:58, 15 January 2008 (UTC) It is entirely appropriate for me and others interested in the name of this article to expect newcomers to familiarize themselves with prior proposals and prior discussions of them on in the archived sections and archived talk pages. Generally, controversial articles refer to such prior discussions and alert people to consult them--Wikipedia:Guidelines for controversial articles; see top of this talk page for related links. --NYScholar (talk) 01:58, 15 January 2008 (UTC)]

[Note [in my talk archive 17]: I have moved material previously on my current talk page and then in Talk:Plame affair to this archive page 17. ... I was away from any computer from December 27 through December 31st, 2007; in the U.S., for many people, espec. for academics, the "Christmas and New Year holiday" begins before Christmas and goes for a few days after January 1st; many academics are on their "holiday break" from just after exam grades are due (for some before, for others after Christmas) until their second semesters or trimesters begin; for some the third week [or] end of January, for others February 2008. I will be busy with non-Wikipedia work for most [of] January and February 2008, at least. --NYScholar (talk) 02:57, 15 January 2008 (UTC)]

Please focus on the proposal and not on the contributor. Thank you. --NYScholar (talk) 03:21, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

Please follow the procedures, and then we won't need to discuss your behaviour. Continue to flout them and push them beyond reasonable limits, and I'm afraid it will happen again.
I'd suggest you think carefully, for example, about the notice on your user talk page. If people aren't encouraged to post there, then it's simply not serving its purpose. It makes it harder for everyone to follow procedures, which assume that a user's main talk page is a place to contact a user, and that they will read what is posted there. That's what it's for, and why you get a message telling you whenever it has changed. By all means have a notice there saying when you're busy, or away.
And as for archiving live discussions from article talk pages, and in your own user space rather than in the normal talk namespace, and with a couple of pages of last words from you immediately archived thus making any response inconvenient... I hope you won't do that again.
It's not my fault that you didn't realise I was an administrator. It's no secret who is and who isn't an admin, and no big deal. Assuming good faith means assuming that a person acting as an admin is an admin, unless you have evidence to the contrary. Lack of a user box is not evidence either way, see argument from silence. If you have doubts, then the first place to look is Wikipedia:administrators, which links to several reliable lists. If you act on no evidence, then expect to make mistakes.
And reverting was questionable even if I hadn't been an admin. It was not supported by any policy or procedure. The five days were up. No consensus to move was likely. No reason that the discussion can't continue, with the failed move request(s) as a starting point.
You don't seem to be very familiar with WP:RM procedures. That's OK, be bold and have a go anyway. We're happy to clean up after beginners, we have all been there. But on the other hand, if you're going to criticise and/or revert the actions of experienced hands or even new admins, then I strongly suggest you first do some research into the procedures we follow. Learn what the green boxes mean and are called, for example. Again, they are not secret. Andrewa (talk) 11:29, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Notes on the heading to this section

Heading reads My reply in my talk archive 17, which was not restored via revert by admin, and was posted by NYScholar. Just to clarify several points it makes:

1. The reply was removed from this page by NYScholar, not by me.

2. I did not request for it to be restored. I pointed out that NYScholar had apparently reserved the last word by immediately archiving their reply without waiting for comments, and left it at that.

3. I was not acting as an admin in reverting. I did use an admin-only shortcut to do it, but no admin priviledges. Anyone could have done exactly what I did, even the edit summary if they wished to, it would just have taken them a little longer.

I hope that clears any misconceptions. Andrewa (talk) 20:29, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Reverted

I have reverted edits by NYScholar in order to restore sections he had archived to his personal user space. These sections should be added to the archives of this page, not those of his user page. And it's a bit strange to archive current discussions. Agree that some of the early sections of the page need archiving!

I regret very much that work has been lost by this action, and time wasted. Perhaps had there been more meaningful edit summaries, I could have located the precise edits that I wished to undo. But my time is limited too.

NYScholar has requested on his talk page Please do not post any more comments on my talk page. I wish to respect his wishes regarding his user pages, while noting that even those belong to the project as a whole, not to him personally.

He has also replied to some of my comments, and immediately moved his replies to User talk:NYScholar/Archive 17. I'm sure he doesn't want replies added to his archive page, so I guess he gets the last word there.

But please, if you wish to archive this page, use the normal techniques. Andrewa (talk) 06:29, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

[Please use gender neutral language; not all scholars are male. Thank you. --NYScholar (talk) 03:22, 16 January 2008 (UTC)]
Agree, will do. Apologies. Andrewa (talk) 20:06, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Omitted material due to prior reversions of my comments

<<

[edit] Requested move (moved from user talk [and back afterward])

[I am moving this section back to my talk page: it will be archived there. It is taking too much attention away from this proposal. Please consult my talk page archive for this discussion, which is being archived there intact, with my comment that I added prior to moving it. That comment can be found there too. Thanks very much. ---NYScholar (talk) 02:02, 15 January 2008 (UTC)] [The previous full discussion of the question initially posted by Andrewa on my talk page is now in archive 17 of my talk page. It is linked there. --NYScholar (talk) 02:11, 15 January 2008 (UTC)][updated heading after archiving on my own talk page, where the section heading "Requested move" was posted originally by Andrewa. --NYScholar (talk) 02:23, 15 January 2008 (UTC)]

...

>>

[The above bracketed comment clearly explained what I was doing and why I was doing it. The comment posted by Andrewa had originally been posted on my talk page. It focused not on the proposal but on me; it was clearly continuing to go in that same direction. That is why I restored it to my talk page and archived it from the current talk page to archive 17. Since Andrewa reverted that, I have simply placed the material from my talk page archive 17 that he/she omitted back here above. --NYScholar (talk) 04:28, 16 January 2008 (UTC)]

It's he. I respected your decision not to have discussion on your talk page, although I think it was unwise, and a line call as to whether it's contrary to Wikipedia:dispute resolution. But subsequent posts were to this talk page. Agree your actions were explained to your satisfaction. That doesn't necessarily make them acceptable to others. Andrewa (talk) 23:06, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

[edit] Update

After January 15, 2008, if no one else wants to add material to the "support"/"oppose" comments not yet archived in green, I have no objection to the green archive-box being placed around that informal "poll" and acting upon the proposal, as Andrewa says would occur as a result of administrative action (if no administrator does so before that). --NYScholar (talk) 02:40, 15 January 2008 (UTC); restored section deleted by Andrewa in previous reversion. --NYScholar (talk) 04:24, 16 January 2008 (UTC)]

Since there was no consensus for a move, I have archived the discussion --Lox (t,c) 10:35, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
Honestly, what a God-awful mess. This talk page has become some personal battleground and I am not sure that much of the discussion actually moves us closer to improving the article. Ursasapien (talk) 11:33, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
(Sigh) agree. I'm happy to accept constructive criticism for my part in it; It takes two! What a waste of time. Perhaps my talk page, or email (andrewa @ alder dot ws) if you want it to be private. And thanks Lox for closing the RM, I didn't want to do it again, but after the treatment one admin got for closing the original request I wasn't sure anyone else would be game. Andrewa (talk) 11:42, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
No probs Andrew --Lox (t,c) 19:48, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
I'm sorry I couldn't do the reversion more selectively. The undo function might have enabled me to leave this section, had there been good clear edit summaries. But without them, it would have taken ages to sort it out. Andrewa (talk) 22:07, 16 January 2008 (UTC)