User talk:Therefore
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[edit] regent
I hope this is the correct way to leave you a reply messaage. Thank you for letting me post all of the additions and for reviewing the language. I appreciate it. Someone has been undoing everything I added instead of making a correction or reviewing ther language. I think that someone has a personal issue regarding this site. I mention this only because I don't know what should be done about that. Thanks for your help. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ttnrwtvl (talk • contribs) 18:25, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for all your help and patience as I continue to learn. -ttnrwtvl —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ttnrwtvl (talk • contribs) 13:41, 11 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] re; that darn genrerations template...
HI.. i just got your message(!) and had a quick look... hmmmm, not great... i cant find what you linked me- obviously i missed it all.. so im not too sure what to write here.. but. one thing. i still think generations needs the table/a table. If i had never seen the table, i would say the succession thing is great.! but i have and i know that (for example) the "mtv" generation is now pretty much inexcessable- by way of linking and referencing- unless you were actually looking for it of course , i guess( unless it got deleted)... soo yeah.. im random around here.. (time sucker) Cilstr 13:32, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Re: David E. Kelley -- Boston legal
Ah, sorry, I meant to do it to The Wedding Bells, but accidentally changed the wrong show in my haste. I've corrected it, and included a proper source (although that link may become broken eventually.) I'm assuming this is the proper way to message somebody on Wikipedia...if not, I'm sorry.
[edit] lifetime field in DZ infobox must be filled in re
Members stands for the total collegiate members in the sorority currently. Lifetime stands for alumnae and possibly collegiate (I'm not the one who designed the infobox so I'm not 100% sure). The catch with the infobox is that if you do not have a number in the members section then lifetime does not show up. As it is you can leave lifetime blank if you can't find it since it doesn't really look like anything is missing out of the infobox. Hope that answers your question. --ImmortalGoddezz 16:51, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] RE: 71.223.244.79 (Delta Zeta edit)
Hello. I live with three roommates and we have wireless internet. One of my roommates has a girlfriend in Delta Zeta, and she has the attitude where nothing bad ever comes from Delta Zeta, and I assume she removed that DePauw controversy section on purpose. And since we have wireless internet, I would imagine that we have similar IP addresses a lot. I generally don't log in since it takes time to do and I delete my cookies a lot, and so I got the message which was most likely intended for her. But I did not personally edit the DZ page. I will pass the message along to my roommate's girlfriend who is in DZ though, since I assume she is the one who made that change. Aaporter 87 20:05, 22 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Heather Wilson
Go for it....I got your back :-). Right behind you with a pointy spear. Shoessss 01:17, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
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- Therefore, youare driving me nuts with the word “Removal”. I understand that I can be anal at times, however the difference between “Removed” and “Moved” does imply in one, a wrongdoing and in the other a mistake, mostly likely in judgment. Figured I state that here rather than beating a dead horse regarding the Wilson article. Either way have a great evening Shoessss 02:17, 26 March 2007 (UTC)
[edit] The Ultimate Gift
I've just noticed in looking at other movies that only a couple of reviews are included if any at all, and they are usually used to summarize points. It seemed the review section under The Ulimate Gift was pretty much fighting back and forth before people quoting reviewers who either praised or total panned the movie. It was taking up a lot of space without really adding much except confusion. Leaving the summaries its easy for people viewing the page to see the trends: the reviewers generally didn't like it and the audience generally liked it a lot.
Just my thoughts. Bbagot 18:15, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
- I could see why you would want to balance the reviews if the only reviews present made it sound like a movie loved by all, but I still feel having 10 different reviews, mostly very strong one way or the other, for a movie that took in 3M at the box office is certainly overkill. I won't put up interference if you wish to reinclude the removals, but I'd advise you to edit the section in a way that it's much more concise and seems to add useful information that flows instead of reading like an ideology war. When over half the article is reviews, we've somehow missed the point.
Bbagot 18:30, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
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- Another note. Moviegoers gave the movie a 7.9 rating. IMDB gave the movie a 7.1 rating based upon their system which they won't share and where some votes count more than others. The 7.9 is the true mean average. Bbagot 18:33, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
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- I believe you are misreading that section. It says not to quote user comments from IMDB, not to exclude how movieviews rated a film. Also, I noticed an error with the Rotten Tomatoes summary. The number given is 35%, but the 18 out of 54 should be 33%. Not sure what side the error is on, but I thought I'd point this out. Bbagot 18:51, 9 April 2007 (UTC)
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I'm glad to take a look at the issue(s) in dispute. I'll try to review and provide feedback within the next 24 hours. — Jim Dunning talk : 03:00, 11 April 2007 (UTC)
I don't know if I'm doing this right...not extremely familiar with the etiquette of Wikipeida, however I can tell you that the source regarding THE ULTIMATE GIFT receiving the Truly Moving Picture Award is the organization itself: Heartland Truly Moving Pictures. Press release here: THE ULTIMATE GIFT Deemed Moving by Heartland. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ltrifone (talk • contribs) 18:17, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] DYK
--Carabinieri 11:48, 16 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] David E. Kelley
Therefore, I was amazed to see how complete the David E. Kelley article is. I know that Charlie Rose once put Aaron Sorkin in a corner, telling him that Kelley writes for 2 or 3 shows at the same time, and why couldn't he as well. It was a little ridiculous. I didn't know Kelley wrote all his scripts longhand. I'm still in the process of digesting the article, but nice job.-BillDeanCarter 22:30, 19 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Carolyn McCarthy article
I responded to your request on WP:ANI. In the future, it might be better to ask for help right away rather than reverting so much yourself. Even in a BLP article, reverting more than 3 times can be (mis)interpreted as edit warring. If you stop after 3 reverts and report the situation (either to a relevant wikiproject, if there is one, or to ANI), someone else will usually be able to help out. CMummert · talk 03:09, 22 April 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom murder
Hey ∴ Therefore talk , by the way, like the new signature. How would you like to get involved in a “Heated” debate over at Channon Christian and Christopher Newsom murder. If you are interested, it could be as much fun as the time you spent mediating the Heather Wilson article. Truthfully would like your “Independent” input on this . If you get the time, read the discussion page and let me know your thoughts. Remember, I got your back, LOL. Shoessss talk
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- To late ∴ Therefore talk . I do not know what happened, but all of a sudden, everything came together and we now have a respectable article. Shoessss talk
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[edit] David E. Kelley 2
That's fine. I was rectifying the work of a sock puppet who went through and changed "pedophile" to "child molester" or similar terms in scores of articles. While a few were corrections, many changes were arbitrary. By all means use whichever term is most accurate in the David E. Kelley article. ·:·Will Beback ·:· 18:36, 18 May 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Steve Gilliard AfD
Yeah, in retrospect, Biruitorul probably was too zealous in tagging users, and you are very right pointing out the couple that he didn't. In any case, that AfD will surely be closed without deletion, and I'm sure the article will develop greatly in the weeks to come. Cheers! Lipsticked Pig 06:43, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Terminology
Just a couple of points regarding the Gilliard AFD. First, don't write "request for comment" unless you mean a request for comment -- a very serious step in dispute resolution. Out of context, it's confusing. Second, don't cite a source such as the guide to deletion and call it policy; it is not policy. Things that have the {{policy}} template are policy and represent things to avoid breaking. Guidelines are a step below that, and something like the Guide to deletion is just a set of recommendations on how to implement policy and guidelines. Basically you were calling for a speedy keep which has its own set of rules, but you were also failing to assume good faith by asserting that the AFD was an "error". There is no evidence that Naconkantari was acting in bad faith that I can see; it was a poorly-sourced article about a person of uncertain notability and I might not have nominated it but I don't see anything wrong with an editor doing so. If you ask me, going to the administrator's noticeboard was exceptionally over the top, as if an AFD is the same thing as vandalism. Rest assured that AFD is well-read by many administrators and I saw none of them taking a special interest in this one. --Dhartung | Talk 04:22, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
- Dhartung -- thanks for the advice. You are absolutely correct that my use of the term "Request for Comment" in the AfD was inappropriate. I do stand by my decision to post a request for a speedy keep on the noticeboard. In my notice, I did not say that Naconkantari was violating policy. I said, "My concern is this does not follow wp guidelines...." However, I did say he violated policy in the AfD (twice) -- clearly wrong.
- AGF is about intentions and not actions. I never questioned his intentions. Naconkantari is clearly a valuable deleter of new pages. But that doesn't preclude me from questioning his actions and they were clearly contrary to the guidelines (which are unambiguous). I attempted twice to open dialog with Naconkantari. With none coming, and with my strongly held position that, in this particular case, an AfD template was an "emblem of insignificance" (a far cry from vandalism), requesting help from another administrator was an appropriate action. Whether the early lifting of the AfD template was a result of my ANI posting or not is indifferent to me. I'm glad it happened and so are the editors of the page of this very notable person. Thanks! ∴ Therefore talk 07:00, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
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- True, you did make that distinction at ANI. To my mind, though, it's an abuse of process to treat an AFD as an emergency requiring admin intervention. Next time, I suggest you just post a "call for speedy close" in the AFD itself; an admin will act or tell you why it's not happening in due time. Your strong feelings about the subject matter aside, no article is so important that we cannot have a discussion about a problem with it. The "badge of insignificance" is in your mind. Better to focus on improving the article so that there is no ambiguity. Five days (typical AFD duration) is plenty of time to improve an article. --Dhartung | Talk 07:09, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
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- Next time I will call for a speedy close (an unknown process) before requesting a speedy keep from ANI. I, in fact, did request a speedy keep in the AfD but Naconkantari would not respond to it (even when asked on his page). True, five days is typical. but let me remind you that Wikipedia is not a bureaucracy, and that the snowball clause, though an imperfect fit because dissent existed, is designed for this type of situation. Very true that the "badge of significance" is in my mind and not in yours -- that is the root of our contention. Your personal viewpoint, possibly, is influenced by your role as "administrator" and forget that most readers of Wikipedia do not come here with your complete knowledge of Wikipedia process. If you attempt to see that template in their eyes, you might have more sympathy for the perceptions of the everyday reader, if not for the subject matter (I had not known of Gilliard before reading about him elsewhere [no, not Dailykos] and coming to WP, as is my habit, to read more -- my strong feelings are for the quality of Wikipedia not the subject). Naconkantari deleted this page outright without making any attempt to check for notability (I make that statement on the AGF assumption -- any research would have indicated an outright deletion as improper). His first instincts were not to AfD nor the more proper notability template but to delete outright. Understandable -- he is a tireless deleter. But then, when evidence became apparent that even the AfD process was (arguably) incorrect, he made no attempt at discussion nor correction. ANI was the appropriate avenue -- in fact, lacking response in the AfD, the only avenue for a speedy keep. Naconkantari was without doubt working in good faith. But his actions were properly open to comment. But next time, I will first attempt a speedy close, which was my only interest here. Thanks. ∴ Therefore talk 17:25, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
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- "The Times displays more vision [by printing his obit] than the meanspirited hacks at Wikipedia who have been trying to get Steve’s entry deleted for alleged lack of “significance.” [1]
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- I don't agree with this sentiment, but it is exactly what I was trying to protect Wikipedia from. ∴ Therefore talk 23:16, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
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[edit] Gilliard
I went to check on Naconkantari's talk page about Steve Gilliard, which is where I saw that you were very concerned about the AfD. I'd just like you to know that my decision to close the debate had nothing to do with any announcements you posted; rather, it was wholly because of all the information that was added to the article, and because of all the (valid) claims of notability that were mentioned in the debate. DS 17:12, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
- That's good to know -- that's all I was asking for. ∴ Therefore talk 17:27, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Lee Baca
I started a little discusion at Talk:Lee Baca and would like to get your input, as you removed the link. Cheers from the great soggy NW. --Geneb1955Talk/CVU 11:36, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] AXO page
HI there. I read the page you suggested and do not think I was trying to disrupt anything to make a point. I did not think current event type things such as the DZ controversy were pertinent to wikipedia. I was corrected. That made me interested in other organizations handling of situations. That is why I included the AXO information. No disruption intended or point to be made on my part. I was simply stating some facts as I found them. Hope that clears things up. I know a bunch of AXOs, great group. Thanks.Eelmonkey 02:05, 9 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] quote marks
thanks for pointing out the style manual. i utilize the AP stylebook, or any journalism stylebook for that matter. in a cursory review, wikipedia generally follows the chicago manual of style, except in certain cases. Frankly, any manual of style in the U.S. that i am aware of puts commas and periods within the quotation marks. The rules are designed to make the material easier to read. i think wikipedia should re-consider this, but i will respect the consensus and not change others' work. Journalist1983 13:15, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
How can a stylebook say this is correct: He said, "I went to the store." And say this is correct: He said, "I went to the store", but he later changed his mind. It should be one or the other. If punctation goes inside, then it should be written like this: He said, "I went to the store.". sigh.Journalist1983 13:33, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
periods are part of quotes, right? let's continue via email, if you want.Journalist1983 13:56, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Vitter
The Canal St. allegation is repeatedly stated on the Sean Hannity show. Keep in mind that he has confessed to patronizing the Washington establishment. It has multiple references on the web. This passes muster. Dogru144 20:36, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
- I quite conscientiously reword words where possible. It is permissible to take direct quote marks. I have worked and edited at a newspaper, and I know what is proper citation protocol. Lastly, I give copious citations. Dogru144 20:40, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
- I'll concede the Cortez detail. It might impugne persons with the name. Dogru144 20:42, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for the apology. It's nice to dialogue with a courteous editor such as yourself. Cheers and happy editing. Dogru144 20:53, 12 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] re:Regent University
You are right. I was doing vandal patrol, and had only noticed 76.25.51.174's edit. Keep up the good work. Smokizzy (talk) 22:00, 15 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Vitter
I used the [citation needed] tag... for something that is fairly obvious... such as the Lousiana Governor having the right to appoint a Senate replacement... the [citation needed] tag should be acceptable at least for the short term. That is why wikipedia has it.--Dr who1975 20:27, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
- Found a source. Put it up there. I know different states have different laws but states such as Wyoming are the exception to the usual law where governor's appoint senators. Admittedly, if the media gave it the same attention they gave to previous potential senate vacancies then maybe it wouldn;t be in question at all.--Dr who1975 20:38, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
- The amendmant is probably a good idea.--Dr who1975 20:50, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] James W. Holsinger Article
The Editor's Barnstar | ||
As one of the original editors of Holsinger's page, I thank you for your fresh insight when editing and your willingness to teach new editors. I award you the Deletionists' Barnstar because "sometimes expert text removal is the most effective editing." Maryrebecca 03:10, 22 July 2007 (UTC) |
The Biography Barnstar | ||
For your tireless efforts to maintain balance and willingness to find consensus on contentious issues. --Aeschyla 18:29, 22 July 2007 (UTC) |
Thanks. I have no need for recognition. And no we have not outlawed black fences, which is unfortunate.--Maryrebecca 22:14, 22 July 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for the advise and the compliment. After I read the autobot's comment, I removed the date links in the references because those were the only ones that I saw it could be catching as incorrect. I read through the pages that he suggested to help me move the page to A-class, and I have asked an English teacher friend to read the page for grammar. Again, I really appreciate your help, I have been way to close to this page to edit it for content and way too new to editing Wikipedia to fully understand the rules. --Maryrebecca 18:28, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Dates
What I meant by that is this. Let's say you have a sentence like this: In 1776, he crossed the river. The year 1776 should not be linked. Let's say you have a sentence like this: On July 4, 1776, Americans declared their independence. The year should be linked, along with the month and day, to activate the user's date preferences. That way, a user could see the sentence like this: On 4 July 1776, Americans declared their independence. I'm not sure which part of WP:DATES you're talking about, but from my experience on Wikipedia— which isn't very much, but usually reliable—this is how it is supposed to be done. I'm glad that more than one person is getting use out of my peer reviews. If you would like me to look over your article I would be happy to. You might also like to see my userpage again, I've changed it a little. Regards, Psychless 04:12, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
- To back up my interpetation of policy, see these two articles that were recently the Featured Article of the Day: Domenico Selvo and Christopher C. Kraft, Jr.. Articles that are the FAotD usually follow policy exactly. If you still aren't convinced then feel free to keep it, it's not like anyone's going to freak out if some dates are linked :). Someone might bring it up though if you go for FA or GA on the article. Good luck, and great signature :) Psychless 04:38, 23 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Your talk page...
...is yours do with with as you wish, within reason. And that definitely includes reverting trolling messages. --Steve (Stephen) talk 00:26, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Vitter
Hey There, I was wondering if you could help me find a source that depicts a republican, any republican, callig for Vitter to step down?--Dr who1975 02:35, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
Re your NPOVD talkpage comment, I was specific. My NPOV tag remark was cut and paste from an earlier comment I left. The only thing I added was a second link that anyone with Google could've found. THF 06:15, 1 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Fosdick
Hi - thanks for your kind words about the Fundamentalist-Modernist article.
My major source for the article was The Presbyterian Controversy: Fundamentalists, Modernists, and Moderates by Bradley J. Longfield (1991), an excellent book on the topic that should be the first book that anyone interested in the topic reads. It also had a bit of material from Defending the Faith: J. Gresham Machen and the Crisis of Conservative Protestantism in Twentieth-Century America by D. G. Hart (1995) and Crossed Fingers: How the Liberals Captured the Presbyterian Church by Gary North (1996). As the title to Longfield's book indicates, he actually has a more nuanced version of the progress of the controversy than the one I present in the article. He sees the Presbyterian Church in the early 20th century as being split into 3 factions: fundamentalists, modernits, and moderates. The moderates were people who didn't really have a strong feeling either way on theological matters but who had a strong institutional loyalty to the church. He sees Machen's major mistake as a church politician was that he failed to build alliances with the moderates and instead alienated them by his conduct - and clearly, a lot of the things that Machen wanted to do were probably in violation of the church's constitution (having General Assembly adopt the 5 Fundamentals as standards for ordination, setting up an independent board for foreign missions, etc.). Longfield feels that any church (and maybe any organization) always has a strong group of moderates who will be more interested in maintaining the organization than in any particular battle - which I think is something interesting to think about. North's book is interesting, although it's clearly from the point of view of a ruthless "liberal takeover" of the church.
Anyhow, I don't actually own any of the books, and since I'm out of school now, I no longer have access to them. So, I don't really know that I have any source material from which to impprove the article on Harry Emerson Fosdick, though I agree it would be nice if someone would do so.
Adam_sk 23:54, 25 July 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry to undo your edit, but I think you'll see that if you reread my original sentence you'll see that I wasn't saying that "German nationalism and militarism were driven by a might-makes-right philosophy which flew naturally out of Darwinian suppositions" as a matter of fact; rather I was saying that the reports that Bryan was reading said that "German nationalism and militarism were driven by a might-makes-right philosophy which flew naturally out of Darwinian suppositions." Feel free to edit the page to make that more clear, but the sentence is meant to explain where Bryan got the idea from, and I think that your edit makes that less clear. Do you think that we should just include the longer explanation that I provided in the William Jennings Bryan article?
Adam_sk 03:38, 26 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Bryan, Kellogg, Neitzsche
Thanks to everybody who has been editing the Fundamentalist Modernist Controversy article on the topic of Bryan's influences.
That said, it seems to me that we're still faced with a bit of an NPOV problem:
There are 2 ways to describe the causation of Bryan's coming to an anti-Darwinian position: (1) Bryan initially hated nationalism and militarism, and only came to hate Darwinism after he became convinced that it was a root cause of nationalism and militarism; or (2) Bryan's underlying agenda was anti-Darwinian, and he used anti-German sentiment (i.e. German support of Darwinism), as a means to convince people of his anti-Darwinian agenda.
I'll admit that my personal opinion inclines to (1), and that I wrote the initial article from that perspective. As the article now sits, I think it inclines to (2). I'd appreciate suggestions as to how we can modify the article in an NPOV way so as to be neutral between (1) and (2).
Adam_sk 01:09, 30 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Article assessment - David E. Kelley
As requested I've assessed David E. Kelley. I've included a summary of my thinking here.--Opark 77 12:09, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
[edit] LFF edits
I would welcome your assistance in editing the section about LFF under David Vitter's article to ensure a neutral point of view but continuing to undo edits is not very productive. I will be off and on this afternoon if you want to work on some productive edits. Anothersliceofhistory 19:45, 6 November 2007 (UTC) (moved here from User:Therefore by Folic Acid 20:01, 6 November 2007 (UTC))
[edit] David Vitter, checkusers, and socks
Therefore - I hope I haven't come across as abrupt or anything with this whole business. You certainly have a good reason to be a bit suspicious - that's why I tried to help (belatedly) with the RFCU. Hopefully this will all resolve itself and we can resume the business of editing. Sorry for any confusion or irritation I may have caused. Respectfully Folic_Acid | talk 01:48, 7 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Barnstar
The Resilient Barnstar | ||
I, Folic_Acid, award this Barnstar of Resilience to Therefore for having the seeking the improvement of controversial articles (specifically David Vitter), for being willing to work with other editors with strong opinions, and for having the humility and good grace to admit an error and seek to correct it. Keep up the good work! Folic_Acid | talk 01:57, 9 November 2007 (UTC) |
- Nice work on the consensus writeup - it looks great. Cheers Folic_Acid | talk 14:19, 11 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Sorry…and thanks
Heya, just wanted to apologize, I really did not have the time or energy to jump into the Vitter thing, and dropped the ball. Wish I had recognized that sooner. Anyway, yeah, I actually am enjoying all the wacky weather we're having lately -- quite a day today, huh? -- and I appreciate your remembering me well from the Wilson flap. Hopefully we'll have the chance to collaborate sometime soon. From what I can see, it looks like you led a really good process at the Vitter article, so congrats on that! -Pete 21:57, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] James Holsinger
Sorry about the lack of comment! I meant to write "Deleted excessive details". I think there was (is) too much detail about developments that are now outdated. --KarlFrei (talk) 17:35, 19 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Edit warring
I read your report at the three-revert rule noticeboard. Unfortunately, it seems to me that you are also edit warring. Please don't do this anymore. I've watched the article and will block either party if they revert again. Heimstern Läufer (talk) 06:20, 20 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Biting newbies
I'm sorry if I was coming off as too harsh, but Ttnrwtvl was directed to policy again and again and again. Only when s/he had the threat of being banned leveled did s/he start paying attention to what anyone was trying to say. I'll back off... I do see improvement, after all, and I'm glad Ttnrwtvl has finally started going to the talk page, but please take a look at the user's contribution page; when I said Ttnrwtvl had never been to the Regent University talk page, I wasn't exaggerating. S/he was given lots and lots and lots of opportunities to read Wikipedia policy and discuss controversial changes with others, and didn't take anyone up on those literally until today. --GoodDamon 21:52, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
- No problem at all. I had met up with Tntwtvl's previous contributions and was equally frustrated. But I think that their contributions, with some help, may make them a decent editor. I hope, at any rate. ∴ Therefore | talk 22:19, 10 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] RFCs
Hi, I suspect that the problem was that you didn't remove the RFCxxx template, but rather deleted the text inside the template, this left the template in the discussion page with no valid parameters, and the empty template was being reported as an error by the RFC bot. DMcMPO11AAUK/Talk/Contribs 07:01, 16 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Dana Perino
Sorry took so long to reply to your note on my talk page; I added my comments to Talk:Dana_Perino#What the Cuban Missile Crisis incident has to do with her career. MKV (talk) 03:48, 23 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Vitter
Sorry if I was harsh.--Dr who1975 (talk) 15:53, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
- Not at all! Your idea was great -- it gets rid of the confusion. My only quibble was how the table of contents was formatted. ∴ Therefore | talk 15:55, 26 December 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Editor's Barnstar
The Editor's Barnstar | ||
Your cleanup of Pennsylvania Virtual Charter School was wonderful. TableMannersC·U·T 08:14, 13 January 2008 (UTC) |
[edit] Your copyedit request
On July 23, 2007, you made a request to the League of Copyeditors for a copyedit on David E. Kelley. Due to a heavy backlog and a shortage of copyeditors, we have been unable to act on your request in a timely manner, for which we aplogize. Since your request, this article has been subject to significant editing, and may no longer be a good candidate for copyediting by the League. If you still wish the League to copyedit this article, please review this article against our new criteria and follow the instructions on the Requests page. This will include your request in our new system, where it should receive more prompt attention. SlackerMom (talk) 18:00, 18 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Carolyn McCarthy
Therefore - have noted you reverting many changes to the entry Carolyn McCarthy because of their unsourced nature, even those that maintain neutrality. Please remember that not every sentence on Wikipedia must be cited - there are a number of other unsourced statements in that article that you have not reverted - only those pertaining to her appearance on Tucker Carlson's TV show. Reverting only statements pertaining to that topic - and not for example, the unsourced statement regarding her life being made into a movie - calls your neutrality into question. unsigned comment by 71.111.215.3.
[edit] Carolyn McCarthy 2
Hi. Thanks for the post. And I've seen much longer and fuller articles remain start-Class too.
Whether she is a congresswoman or a senator does not matter one bit in my eyes - I do not owe her article any more respect than I would give to a senator's piece. Status is not the point. Although everything is there as it should be regarding Wikification (lead-in, sections, referencing, infobox, categories, et al), more flesh to the bone indeed. Those sub-sections which consist of one paragraph or sentence (or indeed one paragraph in one sentence) would ideally be expanded to give a broader angle on each of her political philosophies and contributions. I think it would be difficult to combine them as you suggest, given their diversity.
Nothing is completely ancillary where biographies are concerned, very often adding much to the sum total. Are there any substantial issues or points of interest arising out of her work on Committees? That seems to me ripe for expansion, if sourceable.
Your other option is to post the article back at Assessment for re-evaluation, where I promise not to touch it. But please, whatever you do, don't fall into the "conflict of interest" trap, whereby I refer to your substantial history as a main contributor. When I do the same with "my" articles, it is impossible for me to remain truly objective, and that's obviously why self-assessment is discouraged, but also why I accept without question those ratings decided upon for my contributing articles.
Good luck with it. Thanks. Ref (chew)(do) 22:38, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
- Excellent. I spent so much time working on Oliver Golding (a minor English child actor) that in the end, in the small hours in front of the PC, he seemed (to me) the most notable person on earth, not a 15 year old kid. Well, not really that bad, but you see what I mean about care when pushing one's own stuff? Good luck, as I say. Very good article now, keep at it. Ref (chew)(do) 22:53, 6 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Images
Thank you very much for showing your support. It will be tremendously helpful if you could please, please copy paste your argument at WP:VPR#Muhammad image controversy, a proposal to revisit. I'm almost exhasted to keep on pushing this aginst such strong systematic bias. Arman (Talk) 03:11, 9 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Re: Central Catholic High School (Modesto, California)
Re your message: Yes, it appears that those alumni are correct. See Byron Storer and Chris Pritchett -- Gogo Dodo (talk) 08:21, 14 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] David Vitter
Canitbe changed to "even though he did not deny breaking the law"?--Dr who1975 (talk) 15:55, 22 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Iseman
Just some freindly advice, you have reverted content 3 times, please don't revert again, it is not worth it. Jons63 (talk) 18:29, 22 February 2008 (UTC)
- Don't worry. I've got three reverts unused, and I'll force this to AfD. BusterD (talk) 18:33, 22 February 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not sure it can be considered canvassing for me to notify you that Vicki Iseman is up again for deletion, since I've endorsed deletion myself. I consider the entire incident a good-faith lesson learned, now viewed without the relative warmth of the moment. BusterD (talk) 15:44, 22 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Rollback
Done - all set. Have fun :) - Alison ❤ 06:23, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Please see this discussion and help decide
Please take a look at Wikipedia talk:Notability (people)#Shortcut WP:BLP1E should not link here for some suggestions about how to clean up the problem with the shortcut, and add your thoughts. One of your diffs is mentioned. Thanks! Noroton (talk) 23:38, 8 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] WP:ORE calling again!
Hi Therefore, thanks for the swift linking of subcommittees on Vitter! I had meant to go back and do it myself in a couple days, but underestimated the value of the article being under your watchful eye. I'm wondering, though -- what will it take to get you to join our little party at WikiProject Oregon? We've had a real surge of activity in the last few weeks, several busy new editors, new articles, collaborations involving multiple people working together etc. I'm feeling pretty excited about the way things are going, and thought it might be about time you considered joining us. The talk page should give you a pretty good idea what we've been up to. Also, near the bottom note the reporter looking for interviews about Wikipedia and politics. I talked to the guy yesterday, might be up your alley too. Anyway, happy editing! -Pete (talk) 20:32, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] re:NRO
I had used the wrong template on Talk:David Vitter, I'll fix that. MrPrada (talk) 05:25, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
Here is the quote:
For a time, the problem was so pervasive that Wikipedia actually blocked computers with House or Senate web connections from making edits. The burnishing was bipartisan. Yet loads of entries carry an ideological slant. Leslie Graves of the Wisconsin-based Lucy Burns Institute tracks Wikipedia coverage. “Negative information about liberals is buried, but with conservatives it’s featured prominently,” she says. “Just look at the entry for Eliot Spitzer.” The New York Democrat resigned from the governorship after news reports linked him to hookers. His biographical entry on Wikipedia chronicles his career but doesn’t get around to mentioning anything about prostitution until its sixth paragraph, even though these ties are almost certainly the one thing Americans are most likely to know about him. By contrast, the entry for Republican senator David Vitter of Louisiana points out in its first paragraph that he was identified last year as the client of a Washington, D.C., escort service. Sex scandals involving Republicans Larry Craig and Mark Foley also receive much more emphasis than Spitzer’s fall from grace. (Because Wikipedia entries are constantly updated, they may change over time; the descriptions provided here are accurate as of late March.)
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- Yea, the article does make a good point. I was floored when I saw it because I wrote much of the Spitzer article and sub-articles. However I disagree that the Spitzer article buries anything, it just gives a good chronicle of his early life prior to mentioning the controversy (undue weight). The Vitter lead definitely needs work to be up to snuff with WP:LEAD in a similar manner, however I really know nothing about the guy so I'll leave that to some other intrepid editor. MrPrada (talk) 06:10, 11 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] RE
I'm all for a discussion, but I'd rather it be at Talk:Arrested Development (TV series) as that seems to have a bit more active talk page. I believe I have been acting with policy deleting things like "goofs" (see WP:EPISODE) and lots of original research, especially in the foreshadowing thingy, the callbacks/running jokes are just ridiculous, Wikipedia doesn't list every single joke for every episode, so we can either add the running jokes to a Running jokes in Arrested Development type of article or just merge useful content into the main article. Many of the articles are blatant copyright violations, both of images and the fact that the plot summaries are pretty much a transcript of Ron's narration. What is your stance on this? From your note you seem to be agreeing with my edits, yet are asking for a discussion, just curious if there's a specific part of my edits you disagree with? If you back it up with policies I'd be willing to admit if "I've made a huge mistake". The DominatorTalkEdits 05:23, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
- I left the few Cultural references only for this reason and yes it is a bit flawed reasoning: if I removed every single thing, all we'd be left with is a plot summary in violation of WP:PLOT, I think that we can make a running joke article and focus on all the fan cruft there rather than the individual articles. There's also my concern that there isn't enough useful info to sustain an article for every episode, because according to WP:N every subject has to establish its own notability, including every episode on its own, so I was thinking of making articles on Arrested Development (season 1), Arrested Development (season 2) and Arrested Development (season 3) with a short section about every episode than we could include a plot summary for each (with a redirect from the episode) and information about the reception and cancellation of the seasons, etc..
- I see it as a violation of WP:OR, WP:V for obvious reasons, but also WP:NOT#DIR, Wikipedia is not a list of indiscriminate info. WP:NPOV, because the tone was somewhat biased and the idea of having every joke listed seems to me to be POV since that's not the way episode articles are done. The running joke article was, I believe, once deleted in an AfD, but we could try, better than listing every joke in every episode. As for discussions: there was one here: Talk:Arrested Development (TV series)#Individual articles. The DominatorTalkEdits 14:01, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
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- Seems fair enough, you know, the primary reasons I've left the "cultural references" in is because one, they connect the episode to the real world, and two, it's the type of section many episode articles have. If you think about it, my edits weren't that drastic, and I'd like to break them down and see to what extent you agree with them, and we'll work from there, (oh, respond on your talk now, if we're going to have a lengthy discussion I'd rather it be on one page) so my edits:
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- Deleting "Callbacks/Running jokes" this is one I stand beyond per "NOT indiscriminate" and also because of the way AD is written, pretty much every joke in the show is a reference to something mentioned in an earlier point in the series, hence we can explain on one page all the running jokes, but not mention when they were referenced on every occasion, fair enough?
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- "Foreshadowing/Future references", I've left many of them in but cut it down to just "Foreshadowing" because any "future references" made are not notable due to my previous reason, AD is based on that, so listing all future references is bull in my opinion. I've eliminated some of the really ORish ones.
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- "Background jokes", this is in the title of the section, "jokes", personally I find it unencyclopedic to list jokes unless it's in the plot summary and is significant to the plot.
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- I've also changed the name of the section "Synopsis" to "Plot", that's just a personal preference and "Sources" to "External links", because they aren't actually sources, I've combined the really short one or two sentence paragraphs in the plot section. I've also removed redlinks to articles that shouldn't ever be created like "The Cornballer", I think that that's rather uncontroversial.
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- I left in most of the CRs but I haven't closely examined a lot of them so some may be complete OR and should be deleted. Per WP:EPISODE, we shouldn't list songs and personally I hate to do so, because it's something so very trivial. I left in the "Character cameos" because, although unsourced, it provides out-of-universe info, making the articles more likely to be kept. The major problem is obviously sourcing, and the standards I stated, that an article's subject has to be notable on its own, is actual policy, not an essay or a guideline, it's a part of WP:N, so while it does sound harsh, it might be irrelevant that each episode is part of a notable TV series, though I'd like for the articles to stay, they provide plot detail that couldn't fit on the main page, but to satisfy WP:PLOT, they need to have some out-of-universe info. Again, please respond here, I am now watching this page. The DominatorTalkEdits 21:07, 18 April 2008 (UTC)
Hi, this is about the 'Ocean Walker' page. There is no evidence to suggest that the 'Three Houses of Parliament' comment is anything other than a 'goof'. Your analysis of it is that it is intentional but that is a big 'read in' to the episode. If you have any objective proof that it is supposed to demonstrate how they are all 'stupid' then please show me that. Otherwise, I will continue to revert your edits because it is plainly wrong to state that there are 3 Houses of Parliament and this is the most obvious explaination to an ordinary person. Doktor Waterhouse (talk) 05:10, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Regent University's ABA Competition and Referencing Harvard and Yale
It seems to me that citing those two schools in mentioning Regent's victory unnecessarily ties Regent's reputation or any other school's reputation to that of Harvard and Yale. If we are going to do a comparison, which I think is a terrible idea, we should give all the facts, not just one piece of information. Even if we do want to do a comparison, why Harvard and Yale? It seems unfair to the other schools, including Regent, to make those two schools the standard to measure one's strength by. Rather than undoing your edit, I've decided to start a discussion on Regent's discussion page. I probably won't spent too much time arguing over this as it is a tiny change to me. While I think removing the reference would make the article stronger, you're free to disagree and leave it the way you edited it. Comatose51 (talk) 03:02, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks -- I responded on the discussion page. ∴ Therefore | talk 03:24, 19 April 2008 (UTC)
[edit] something for you
The Original Barnstar | ||
For fine work on the David Vitter article. MrPrada (talk) 00:10, 23 April 2008 (UTC) |
[edit] Palfrey soundbite
My understanding was that it was relavant, Sorry--Pensil (talk) 23:06, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Palfrey Death
I am not trying to undermine your balance in the edits, but it seems to me, that given the closeness to the time of the death makes the comments from the apartment manager and the mother more timely than those of the biographer. In addition, the biographer has been cited by none other than the person he did a biography of (Sirhan Sirhan) as fabricating comments that he, Sirhan Sirhan, did not make. While that does not eliminate his comments from citations, it certainly brings into question the validity of his claim.
I don't think the weight of relevance comes by how many RS you can cite, anyways. There are sufficient citations for all of the witnesses involved, and I am sure you must admit that the mother and the apartment manager's statements, having come from witnesses who had seen her considerably more recently than the biographer gives them more relevance, especially to Palfrey's state of mind. If the timing of the 1991 statement puts it on a lower relevance than the biographer, then certainly you have to agree that the same applies to the biographer's statements in relation to the mother. 70.113.119.168 (talk) 03:24, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
- I hope you don't mind but I copied your comments to the articles talk page at Talk:Deborah Jeane Palfrey#Order of paragraphs in Death section and responded there. This way the entire community can participate. Thanks!
I don't mind at all. Thank you for your timely response. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.113.119.168 (talk) 03:40, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
Thanks for fixing my link...I don't know how to do some formatting.--Pensil (talk) 01:42, 7 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Thanks
Sorry for my typo on that link, but I appreciate you fixing it. ObjectivityAlways (talk) 18:54, 17 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Jim Webb VP
I'm sorry (really). I'm not trying to be contentious. For what it's worth -- I absolutely agreed with all of your other edits that changed the boosterism to neutral language. And I added in a couple more reliable sources that support that the talk is about him being the Obama's VP. If you still disagree, I'm more than open to discussion. ∴ Therefore | talk 22:47, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
- Well I thank you for your willingness to discuss these edits and your openness to new ideas. I think the page looks much better as a result of both of our edits, and the content regarding talk about Webb being Obama's VP is much clearer. Thank you. Best, Happyme22 (talk) 23:20, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] bloggin' news
Hi there, thought you might be interested in this blog post I just wrote, which involves the Vitter article you've worked so much on. Also, maybe you'll be interested in the WikiProject Oregon blog we just started up...I keep hoping you'll come join us sometime! -Pete (talk) 03:02, 30 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Mr. F
In regards to your edit to Mr. F, please see WP:TRIV as to why such sections, like running-back jokes, could be avoided. Since there are no sources for this, the section turns into an endless list which anybody can add to and claim their own verifiability to. You may want to add a section on Arrested Development (TV series) about running-back jokes instead. IRK!Leave me a note or two 21:38, 5 June 2008 (UTC)