This article is only about U.S. law. I think the intro currently makes that clear, by referring to the Supreme Court of the United States and by using the template for this series of articles on "History of U.S. federal criminal law" (which is so titled, in bold). Further, the party name "United States v. Rogers" should be a dead givewaway. All of that notwithstanding, I would be open to other reasonable, additional ways to make this clear. But, the two ways proposed by User:Pigsonthewing so far are not acceptable. First, an opening sentence of "The Taney Court (1836–1864) heard thirty United States criminal law cases" (with "United States criminal law" being a single bluelink) is downright misleading. It suggests that the Court heard 30 U.S. criminal law cases, and some other number concerning non-U.S. law (perhaps 20 concerning the criminal law of Canada). Second, the {{Globalize}} template is plainly not indicated (and, in fact, I view its use as a clear violation of WP:POINT). This template would apply only if substantial content concerning the laws of other countries should be added to this article. Plainly, it should not. Savidan 22:06, 6 June 2012 (UTC)Reply
- Perhaps, rather then simply resisting every effort to improve the article in this regard, in the service of our readers, you could suggest an improvemnt that does meet your standards? Andy Mabbett (Pigsonthewing); Talk to Andy; Andy's edits 14:38, 7 June 2012 (UTC)Reply
- In my view, the current intro is fine. As for "every effort," so far the only two efforts have been: (1) clearly misleading (see above); and (2) the insertion of a template which you should have known to be unwarranted when you inserted it. Savidan 17:01, 7 June 2012 (UTC)Reply