Talk:Gibraltar

(Redirected from Talk:Gilbraltar)
Latest comment: 14 days ago by 2A00:23C8:A72F:4A01:5DCA:1695:E41C:6691 in topic Ethnic Groups
Former good article nomineeGibraltar was a Geography and places good articles nominee, but did not meet the good article criteria at the time. There may be suggestions below for improving the article. Once these issues have been addressed, the article can be renominated. Editors may also seek a reassessment of the decision if they believe there was a mistake.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
July 18, 2010Good article nomineeNot listed
On this day...Facts from this article were featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "On this day..." column on August 4, 2004, April 30, 2005, April 30, 2006, April 30, 2007, August 4, 2007, September 10, 2007, September 10, 2008, August 4, 2009, September 10, 2009, and August 4, 2010.


Lead overload?

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@Imalbornoz:, it may be fair to say that Wee Curry Monster was a bit heavy-handed with their deletion but they certainly do have a point to this extent: WP:LEAD says that the lead should contain a "brief summary of the main points of the article". The material you added is valid but it is not a "brief summary". You need to look at it again with a view to reducing it to no more than two or three lines.

Even as it stands, the lead is too long. It should not normally be longer than four succinct paragraphs. So if you were so minded, a general spring clean of the lead would be welcome. 𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 20:38, 18 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

OK, thank you for your comment.
I have indeed tried to write a brief summary, but you have to take into account that Gibraltar sits at one of the main points of the Mediterranean and it has a long history with a relevant role in quite a few of the Mediterranean civilizations. Therefore, the History section of the article is not short: it has almost 11,000 words. The lead paragraph about history is 269 words long. So it has a scale of 1 to 40, which I would say is a reasonably brief summary.
On the other hand, in order to have a vision of what is a reasonable length of a lead section, I have taken a look at the leads of a sample of equivalent countries or territories: the current length of the Gibraltar lead is 481 words vs Bermuda 531 words, Faroe Islands 618 words, Jersey 482 words, Marshall Islands 591 words, Monaco 772 words, Northern Mariana Islands 742 words, Tuvalu 669 words... Therefore, I don't think we can say that the current lede of 481 words is unreasonably long.
But of course I am ready to try and abbreviate the historical part of the lead a bit further. Let me take a look at it.
Thanks. --Imalbornoz (talk) 10:18, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
That we have been unable to write the history section with appropriate WP:summary style is not a reason to make the lead section excessive as well. The expanded paragraph is 15 lines, almost doubling the length. I'm not seeing how much of the addition is particularly due either, the lead doesn't need to generally cover the history of the Iberian peninsula. CMD (talk) 10:36, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
I've reduced the size of the lead paragraph. Now the lead is 420 words (much much shorter than Jersey, Faroe Islands, Monaco, Tuvalu, etc.) --Imalbornoz (talk) 11:11, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
The lead, but specifically the history para, is certainly better now. I removed one line (about 711 beach-head for Arab invasion) since the body text says that the location is unknown but was probably not Gibraltar. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 11:51, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
OK, thanks. I thought it was important because some sources say it has to do with the name Gibraltar, but it's ok with me to remove that if it is not a historical fact supported by most sources. I have left another point that is relevant to the history of the population of Gibraltar.--Imalbornoz (talk) 12:06, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
WP:BRD Bold Edit, when Reverted, Discuss
I add emphasis, because frustratingly, it seems Imalbornoz still feels it appropriate to revert to his preferred edit and insist other editors justify removing it. What was added was not a material improvement to the lede and I don't think my revert was in the least heavy-handed. I thank other editors for recognising my concerns and explaining and amplifying them. I have further summarised the text but I have to note I don't see a need to change the pre-existing lede. WCMemail 17:04, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
Wee Curry Monster, there are important things that happened in the history of Gibraltar that you have reverted for the second time. The things you have reverted affected (i) the most single issue that Gibraltar was known for in Ancient times for several centuries (Pillars of Hercules) and (ii) the destiny of almost all the population of Gibraltar of 1704 (1,200 households according to most British and Spanish sources). The lead is still much shorter than the ones about similar countries or territories, so there should be no need to further summarize it.
As a side comment, I don't think that a second revert is a very appropriate use of WP:BRD in an article that has seen quite a few topic bans (especially, some attempts to remove the destiny of those 1,200 indigenous families from the history section were something that caused lots of discussion and topic bans). Please, do not revert again and discuss. I am very eager to read your opinions and exchange sources and ideas in the talk page. Thank you very much.--Imalbornoz (talk) 18:56, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
I have no desire to waste my time going over the events of a decade ago, I strongly suggest you let it go. Please take my reply as a WP:3RR warning that you should stop edit warring and discuss content in a calm and rational manner. I disagree that this belongs in the lede, the aftermath of the capture is but a footnote in history, it is in the article; it doesn't need to be in the lede.
I request that you apologise for the accusation I am suppressing material, its been going on for over a decade and I cannot discuss content with an editor who is doing so on the basis of this bad faith accusation. WCMemail 19:34, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
You are correct that your repeated reversions are not an appropriate use of WP:BRD. Having realised this, one would have thought that you would stop reverting, but apparently not?
The lead is already unbalanced toward history compared with the rest of the article. I don't think unbalancing it further will help anything. This is an article on all aspects of Gibraltar, not just history. Kahastok talk 19:42, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

FWIW, I found the original edit to put too much detail in the lede - dates and people, for example. But I agree important parts of the history were not summarized before. I find the current version to be a great distillation of material that was missing before. I like it. If it were to be trimmed anymore, I would take out the details of the Strait's military significance at the end.

As for the metadiscussion, I did find the original reversion to be heavy handed in that it wiped out with a single click a significant effort to improve the article; a lighter hand would have tried to find some value in that edit and maybe keep at least part of it. Sweeping reversions evince the attitude that the reverter is in charge and supplicants must find something exactly to his liking for it to be considered. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 20:36, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Bryan I really resent the inference of that comment, it is most unhelpful. WCMemail 23:38, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thank you, Bryan.--Imalbornoz (talk) 00:18, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
The discussion and the edits seem to be more constructive now, so thank you everybody for that.
Regarding the point we were discussing, I think that the destiny of the civilian inhabitants would be relevant for the lead: they turned from around 5,000 or 6,000 (1,200 households) to almost zero in 1704, and grew during the next two centuries resulting in the current unique mix of British, Spanish, Italian, Maltese, other Mediterranean (Sephardic Jews among them), and Asian origin.[1]. A brief reference to that could be fit in the lead. What would be the opinions of other users on the matter?--Imalbornoz (talk) 00:40, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
I think you have been trying to push this point into the article by any possible means for well over a decade, irrespective of WP:WEIGHT and WP:NPOV, arguing at times that it should be given more weight than the Treaty of Utrecht. The point is sufficiently explained by the article. Putting it in the lead as well would demonstrate only lead fixation. Kahastok talk 08:20, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
I think there are far more important topics that could be covered in the lede:
  1. Neanderthals in Gibraltar noting the significance of Gibraltar in their study.
  2. Impact of desalination plants - Gibraltar long had a problem obtaining enough fresh water, which was a major brake on population growth.
  3. Great Siege of Gibraltar, which is the longest siege in British Army history
  4. Gibraltar Parliament and the self-governing nature of Gibraltar
  5. Elections in Gibraltar
  6. Constitution of Gibraltar
  7. British Forces Gibraltar
  8. Military history of Gibraltar during World War II and the far more recent Evacuation of the Gibraltarian civilian population during World War II
  9. History of the Jews in Gibraltar and the expulsion of the Jews under Spanish rule. I don't think we should discuss the Spanish claim of the violation of the Treaty of Utrecht by allowing members of the Jewish faith to live in Gibraltar, which might be misconstrued.
  10. Communications in Gibraltar
  11. The closure of the border
  12. Royal Gibraltar Regiment
  13. University of Gibraltar
  14. Gibraltar Squadron
  15. Moorish Castle
  16. Gibraltar Anthem
  17. Gibraltarian cuisine
  18. Gibraltar Anthem
  19. Little bit of trivia, Rock Hudson derived his stage name from the Rock of Gibraltar
  20. The significant role of Gibraltar in defeating Napoleon and the Battle of Trafalgar
I don't see it as particularly helpful to relitigate endlessly the same discussion, punctuated with bad faith accusations to raise tension. Because this is already going down the route of past discussion eg Talk:Gibraltar/Archive 26#Historical documents of the village of Gibraltar including the same threats of seeking topic bans and arbcom sanctions. Editing is supposed to be collaborative, it isn't supposed to be about winning by imposition of your content choices.
Having made some content suggestions I intend to step back and allow others to comment, I suggest Imalbornoz does the same. WCMemail 10:52, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
Regarding WCMonster's list: Usually, leads of countries or territories talk about the most outstanding facts about their geography, population, history, government/politics/diplomacy and economy. Therefore, I would include things among the topics that you mention like the Neanderthals, the Great Siege, the Moorish Castle... as long as you also include a mention about the history of the inhabitants of Gibraltar as a whole (which should really be the main characters in this article). both before AND after it became a British territory. That is why I proposed to mention the 5-6,000 inhabitants pre-1704 and the successive waves of migrants from Britain, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Malta, Sephardite Jews, etc., mainly in the XIX century. I understand from your proposal, WCMonster, that you think that there is not a lead overload.
The importance of Gibraltar's Military History is already mentioned in the lead.
I don't really think that Rock Hudson's name should be included in the lead, or the cuisine, etc. (maybe in a Popular Culture section)
In fact, it would be very interesting to understand WCMonster's criteria to include Rock Hudson in the lead and exclude the almost total outward migration in 1704 and inward migration in the XIX century. Can you explain your criteria to include Rock Hudson and exclude the migration of the practical totality of Gibraltarian population from the lead?--Imalbornoz (talk) 19:24, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
There is a difference between these are topics that would go in the lead before your proposal and these are topics that should go in the lead.
Those of us who have been around for a while will know your POV. They will know your history of pushing this point as though it were literally the most important thing that could ever be said about Gibraltar. However, Wikipedia's job isn't to show off individual editors' hobby horses, including yours. The lead should be aiming to introduce and summarise the article. We already have too much history there, we don't need more. Kahastok talk 13:52, 21 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
For the record, I don't think this is the most important thing that could ever be said about Gibraltar, at all. What I do think is that the historical fact that almost all inhabitants of Gibraltar left the town in 1704 and settled nearby, while most of the current population is a very diverse group that migrated to Gibraltar during the following 3 centuries is very relevant, but some other editors think that it isn't, thus the discussion.
I understand the difference between "would go in the lead before" and "should go in the lead". That's why I asked @Wee Curry Monster: why he thinks Rock Hudson's name would in the lead "before" the exodus of all the population of Gibraltar. Him explaining the underlying criteria would help to understand his position and understanding is important for consensus. Thanks.--Imalbornoz (talk) 12:25, 22 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Semi-protected edit request on 18 January 2024

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Please remove the duplicate paragraph in the intro section:

Since Brexit, Gibraltar is not a member of the European Union but negotiations are under way to have it participate in the Schengen Agreement to facilitate border movements between Gibraltar and Spain.[20] As of March 2023, talks seem deadlocked.[21]

Since Brexit, Gibraltar is not a member of the European Union but negotiations are under way to have it participate in the Schengen Agreement to facilitate border movements between Gibraltar and Spain.[20] As of March 2023, talks seem deadlocked.[21] Dxks10080 (talk) 23:22, 18 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

  Done Cannolis (talk) 23:29, 18 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Lede Fixation

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I note that the lede has come in for a lot of attention; particularly around the economy. May I remind editors the lede is supposed to reflect the article and provides a summary of what is in the article. Whilst the edits have introduced a new source, which is helpful, the lede no longer reflects what the economy section of the article says. WCMemail 11:54, 20 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

My objection to the text previously in the lead was twofold:
  1. While four sources were presented, the only one that seemed to contain any information on the subject was a Spanish government piece written in 2010, specifically to support its sovereignty claims.
  2. When the source was replaced (with the CIA World Factbook), it was clear that the original claim (Gibraltar's economy is based largely on tourism, online gambling, financial services, and bunkering did not match the source.
The quote from the CIA is this:
The financial sector, tourism (over 11 million visitors in 2012), gaming revenues, shipping services fees, and duties on consumer goods also generate revenue. The financial sector, tourism, and the shipping sector contribute 30%, 30%, and 25%, respectively, of GDP. Telecommunications, e-commerce, and e-gaming account for the remaining 15%.
So, we have 85% shared between financial services (30%), tourism (30%), and shipping (25%), with three other industries - including online gaming (which is larger than gambling) - accounting for the rest (15%).
Based on these numbers, I still think calling out gaming over telecoms and e-commerce probably overstates the significance of e-gaming. However, based on the source that Asqueladd added, I am happy that the current description is backed by an appropriate source.
However, this then raises a problem with the first sentence of the Economy section, which is based on a 2012 Foreign Office description (and also appears to overstate the significance of online gambling compared with the source). We should be changing this in the same way IMO. Kahastok talk 18:42, 21 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Ancient history in lead

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Asqueladd, do you think that even Gibraltar being one of the pillars of Heracles is not lead material? פעמי-עליון (pʿmy-ʿlywn) - talk 18:28, 24 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Certainly not masked as part of the urban history. It can be useful in the introduction of the article of the Rock of Gibraltar, and perhaps in the introduction of this article (when the rock—the geographical feature—is mentioned).--Asqueladd (talk) 18:37, 24 January 2024 (UTC)Reply
Fine, even though I don't agree I won't argue about that. פעמי-עליון (pʿmy-ʿlywn) - talk 18:41, 24 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Semi-protected edit request on 5 April 2024

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national_representation1 = Nus Ghani The Minister of State for Europe has changed. ParliamentarianCA (talk) 11:53, 5 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

  Done Liu1126 (talk) 12:56, 5 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

Ethnic Groups

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We have an editor - one who has long been obsessed with the events of 1704 to the point of appearing as an WP:SPA - insisting that we go on about the events of 1704 in the section about modern ethnic groups. Said editor insists that the text has consensus despite its having been removed by three separate editors, all noting that events that occurred 300 years ago are not relevant to the modern situation.

Note that 300-year-old population movements are not normally discussed when discussing modern ethnic groups in other contexts on Wikipedia, particularly when these details are already discussed repeatedly elsewhere ib the same article.

It is worth mentioning straight up why 1704 gets pushed here as though it were literally the most important event in all of history. There is an argument among modern Spanish ultra-nationalists that the fact that the population left in 1704 means that the modern population of Gibraltar have no civil rights - which is convenient for them because it means they don't get a say in what happens to Gibraltar. Curiously, they do not apply this logic to other population displacements elsewhere, even those that occurred more recently such as in Spanish-speaking America. In this case, for example, I note that said editor does not propose that we also go on about the other historic population changes that will have affected Gibraltar such as the Expulsion of the Moriscos.

Editor has been curiously shy about discussing this point on the talk page, instead choosing to edit war against multiple editors in attempt to push this POV. Kahastok talk 10:36, 28 April 2024 (UTC)Reply

The text has indeed had consensus for 15 years: The subsections was created in 2009[[2] with the brief historical reference. For 15 years many users have edited and added (and removed) information to the section, and no one thought it was redundant. This information has been there for 15 years without interruption. And this, in an article that touches very sensitive points for British and Spanish nationalisms. I would say that passing the 15 years test is proof of consensus.
That is, until Wee Curry Monster and Kahastok decided a month ago (after 15 years!) that the text was redundant. As a context, neither Wee Curry Monster nor Kahastok wanted to explain the the flight of the native population even in the History section. In fact, both of them were topic banned (together with me and another user) during the discussion about the History section 13 years ago.
Everyone can see that this article can generate very heated discussions, make editors waste lots of time and, in the meanwhile, offer suboptimal content in the article. Please, let's leave the consensus content and not edit war.
If you have relevant sources about the Expulsion of the Moriscos and its impact in the ethnic groups of Gibraltar, please do contribute to the section!!!
Regarding the content now included in the section: you have deleted all reference to ethnic groups and only left information about nationalities (which are different things). The section is about ethnic groups. If you want, I encourage you to add another section about nationalities.
I have not been shy about discussing it in the talk page. In fact, I have encouraged you guys to discuss in the talk page instead of edit warring, and I am now gladly answering.
To sum it up: (i) Please don't delete sensitive information that has endured a 15 year consensus in an article this complicated; (ii) If you want to add information about nationalities (which is not the same as ethnic groups) please do so, without deleting other information; (iii) let's try to avoid repeating errors of the past and not waste our and other people's time in endless discussions with a nationalist background. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 17:56, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
As I wrote to you on your my talk page, the section describes the current demographic profile of Gibraltar. Events of over 200 years ago are not relevant to that question in this article and have never been wp:DUE. OTOH, they are entirely relevant to the History of Gibraltar article but not this one. Otherwise where does it stop? Expulsion of the Moors? Genocide of the Neanderthals? For comparison, Northern Ireland#Demographics says nothing about the Plantation of Ulster. It changes nothing about the legitimacy or otherwise of Spain's claim.
It is legitimate to boldly delete irrelevant content. Yes, we can have a WP:BRD debate if you wish but the conclusion is already obvious: you are the only one arguing for reinstatement. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 19:06, 29 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
This section is called "Ethnic groups", not "Nationalities". Deleting any reference to historical facts related with the native and migrant population, Kahastok has also eliminated all references to ethnicity of the current Gibraltarian population. In fact, the source he mentions is the section "Nationalities" in the 2012 Census. I suppose we are all aware that nationality is not the same as ethnicity; e.g. Gibraltarians, as described by the census, are one nationality, but they also are a diverse multiplicity of ethnical groups.
I guess you could say that Kahastok's version is nationalistic, in the sense that, even in a section titled "Ethnic groups" he only talks about nationalities, and eliminates any mentions to the ethnical diversity of the Gibraltarian population. Even worse, from a wikipedian point of view, taking into account that the section is about ethnic groups and not nationalities, the content in Kahastok's version (only about nationalities) is obviously less informative for a reader than the previous one. Don't you think?
Is it really OK to eliminate all reference to ethnicities in a section called "Ethnical groups"? -- Imalbornoz (talk) 08:27, 30 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
It is regrettable that you choose to undermine confidence in your good faith by making false accusations like neither Wee Curry Monster nor Kahastok wanted to explain the the flight of the native population even in the History section. Regrettable, but not surprising. You've done it far too many times in the past for it to be surprising.
I did change the section here so that it focusses primarily on nationality, and I did that because that's what we have sources on. The census in 2012 - the last one for which we have data - does not appear to have asked about ethnicity directly, and there seems to be little other data on ethnicity out there. The CIA, for example, uses the same approach as my new text.
The text I removed was an unsourced paragraph of platitudes and padding that told the reader nothing useful, followed by the results of analysis on surname origins published in a book in 2006. Surname origins are clearly no better than nationality as a proxy for ethnicity - but unlike the census there's no reason to believe book in question is getting updated.
The suggestion that this is somehow "nationalistic" is patently absurd. Kahastok talk 16:52, 30 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
So now we have three questions: The first one about whether 1704 should be mentioned in the ethnic groups section, another about whether the historical explanation of Gibraltar's ethnic mix should be mentioned at all, and one about whether the ethnic mix implied by surnames should be mentioned.
On the first question, both versions of the first paragraph of the ethnic groups section are about history: The demographics of Gibraltar reflect the many ... migrants who have moved into the Rock over the course of the last 300 years vs the same thing with after almost all of the Spanish population [or the native population] left in 1704 added. The only difference is that the first version cuts off the history abruptly just after a major event that influenced the current demographics. To me, it's clearly better to make the cutoff before 1704. When people read about past immigration affecting current ethnicity, they are naturally going to think of immigrants merging into an original population, which explains the ethnic diversity of most places. Saying the population started over in 1704 greatly clarifies this statement.
As for whether any of this history should be mentioned, since there's no source for it and it's disputed, I think it should be left out. As a general rule, I give very little weight to how long something has existed in an article.
Finally, I don't see anything wrong with reporting the ethnicity of surnames in 2006. That is modern enough that readers might well take useful information from it. At least it would be an additional hint about ethnicity when adjacent to 2012 nationality statistics in an "Ethnic groups" section. On the other hand, if the section contains nothing but nationality information, the section name should really be changed. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 18:58, 30 April 2024 (UTC)Reply
Thank you for you comment. I have a couple of questions: Would you then propose to include the ethnicity of surnames, that the demographics of Gibraltar reflect the migration of 300 years, and that the original population left in 1704? Which part do you have in mind when you say there is no source and it's disputed? -- Imalbornoz (talk) 16:59, 1 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
The part that is unsourced (there's no footnote there) and disputed (at least one editor wants it removed) is the statement that the demographics of Gibraltar reflect 300 years of migration, i.e. the whole first paragraph as of few months ago, with or without recent amendments. This fact may seem obvious, but it's still an editorial conclusion if there isn't a reliable source saying that is why Gibraltar's demographics are what they are. So I propose to leave that out.
I do propose to include the ethnicity of surnames. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 00:37, 2 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Regarding sources for the statement about migration, there are many. There was one that was used in the previous version (both for the first and second paragraphs, but as I look at the previous version, it was only footnoted in the second paragraph, which may have given the impression that it didn't affect the first one). It is "Gibraltar, Identity and Empire", by Edward G. Archer, Psychology Press, 2006.
You can check the summary here [3] and preview some of the content in Routledge[4]. Some excerpts:

As regards the ethnic component, Gibraltar's past reveals a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa. (pg 2, Introduction)

Of course, Gibraltar existed physically long before the British arrived, although the Gibraltarians tend not to claim the more distant past as theirs: for them the beginning was 4 August 1704 when, after conquest of the British, all the residents left, making way for the creation of a new people. Before that, there had been 242 years when the population had been Spanish, from a far from unified Spain. Preceding that, there had been over seven centuries of Islamic control, begun in 711 with the defeat of the Christian Visigoths. The modern Gibraltarian sense of identity incorporates none of the earlier years and events. (pg 10, Changing contexts, values and norms)

Some Gibraltarians argue that Gibraltar is not a colony in the normal sense; they are not conquered people in a country colonized by the British. When the Anglo-Dutch fleet under Admiral Sir George Rooke occupied the Rock for England in 1704, the Spanish population, with a few exceptions, left Gibraltar and moved to San Roque, some miles inside Spain. What was taken in 1704 was virtually empty territory. Those people who eventually became native Gibraltarian were in-comers of one type or another or, more precisely, the children of in-comers.(...) If there is a Gibraltarian nation today, it is the result of the assimilation of these immigrant groups over a long period of time.(pg 35, Ethnic factors)

For the record, I don't agree with some of the more political points of view Archer reflects in this book (calling the territory "abandoned", with no mention of the rapes, murders and plunder that happened during the capture just before the native population "left" the town; the way it makes a difference between the Spanish and Muslim native population -as if they were all not ethnically Spanish; the fact that there is a Gibraltarian nation... and many other things), but precisely for that reason I think it can be a good undisputed source for many editors with a different point of view.
In any case, the ethnic origins of the current Gibraltar population are clearly sourced, in this academic book and in many others. I hope this helps. Imalbornoz (talk) 08:08, 2 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
And that is an excellent illustration why the present-day demographics section of an article about the present-day city should limit itself to what exists today (or the most recent census) – exactly as the equivalent section in every other NPOV article about a settlement does. In this article, it is WP:UNDUE. On the other hand, how it got to be that way is entirely WP:DUE in an article about the history of the city, where it indeed appropriate to cover the "ethnic cleansings" of 1704, 1609, 711, 407, 206 BCE, c. 700 BCE and so on ad infinitum. It is not the place to have a proxy war over its political status: that is adequately covered elsewhere in the article. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 11:23, 2 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
You're right; I thought the footnote was for the paragraph, not the whole section. That is an excellent source for the summary in the article of why Gibraltar's ethnicity is what it is, and the article condensed the information from the source well.
I think most people find it easier to comprehend and remember a fact if they know why it's true, so I think a few historical words of explanation, in particular what was there for years, fit nicely in the Ethnic Groups section. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 19:02, 3 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Nothing about the events of 1704 - more than 300 years ago - tells us anything useful about either the ethnicity of Gibraltarians in a modern context. The user is not in this section for a discussion on history, they want to know about the modern position.
If we're going to discuss 1704, we should also be discussing everything that happened before 1704 and everything that happened since, because all of the earlier and later events - from the Roman conquest to Brexit - will have a similarly significant effect on the modern ethnicity of Gibraltarians. If we are to understand the background to Gibraltar's ethnic mix in the sense that you describe, we basically need to repeat the entire history section in the ethnic groups section.
I am increasingly inclined to take the view that this section should be binned entirely unless and until we can find an actual source that directly describes the mix of ethnicity modern Gibraltar. It is clear from the views expressed above that the section is only really here to serve as a WP:COATRACK for arguments about history. Kahastok talk 08:36, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Historical facts about ethnic groups should be mentioned in the ethnic groups section if they are considered relevant in sources and are interesting enough to explain the current situation. For example, the Ethnicity section in the United Kingdom article[5]

Historically, indigenous British people were thought to be descended from the various ethnic groups that settled there before the 12th century: the Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Norse and the Normans. Welsh people could be the oldest ethnic group in the UK. The UK has a history of non-white immigration with Liverpool having the oldest Black population in the country dating back to at least the 1730s during the period of the African slave trade. During this period it is estimated the Afro-Caribbean population of Great Britain was 10,000 to 15,000 which later declined due to the abolition of slavery. The UK also has the oldest Chinese community in Europe, dating to the arrival of Chinese seamen in the 19th century. In 2011, 87.2 per cent of the UK population identified themselves as white, meaning 12.8 per cent of the UK population identify themselves as of one of an ethnic minority group.

The article goes, not 300, but 900 years back!
It is the same in Demographics section of the Australia article[6]:

Between 1788 and the Second World War, the vast majority of settlers and immigrants came from the British Isles (principally England, Ireland and Scotland), although there was significant immigration from China and Germany during the 19th century. Following Federation in 1901, a strengthening of the white Australia policy restricted further migration from these areas. However, in the decades immediately following the Second World War, Australia received a large wave of immigration from across Europe, with many more immigrants arriving from Southern and Eastern Europe than in previous decades. All overt racial discrimination ended in 1973, with multiculturalism becoming official policy. Subsequently, there has been a large and continuing wave of immigration from across the world, with Asia being the largest source of immigrants in the 21st century.

And also in many other countries and territories that have had an interesting history impacting their demographics (take a look at Taiwan, Cuba...): they do mention historical facts in their Demographics section.
Would you rather delete any historical facts form the Demographics section in the UK article (as well as Australia, Cuba, Taiwan, ...) because it is "about now, not about 900 years ago" and then start a discussion in the talk page, or accept that mentions of these facts can be included in the Demographics section Gibraltar article?
The source proposed is about modern day Gibraltar, please take a look at it, I have linked it above.
Also don't worry about WP:COATRACKs, you should only worry about relevant information and reliable sources.-- Imalbornoz (talk) 16:11, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
We have no relevant information or reliable sources about ethnic groups in Gibraltar. We've got nationality statistics, and we've got an 18-year-old interpretation of surnames. That's it.
And yes, given that your argument is that this section should basically be a repeat of the history section (or rather, the part of the history section that seems to have obsessed you to an unhealthy degree), I think we do have to worry about WP:COATRACKS. This is not a section about history. This is a section about ethnicity. We have no information about ethnicity. So why have a section? Surely it is not there solely so that we can recount the events of 1704 over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over - as you propose. Kahastok talk 16:40, 4 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Another way of looking at it is repeating only the parts of the history section that explain ethnic distribution. You seem to be biased by your expectation that anything Imalbornaz advocates must be for the purpose of pushing the idea that Gibraltar should be Spanish so that you're not seeing all the other value the edits might have. I think you have to look pretty hard to find a nationalist viewpoint in stating that the population started over in 1704. You have said that if we include the events of 1704 then we should include events before 1704 too, but the way I see it, the whole point of mentioning that one event in 1704 (people left) is that it makes everything before 1704 irrelevant to the current ethnic makeup. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 22:48, 5 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Oh, did you think 1704 was the last time the civilian population left Gibraltar? No, it wasn't. That was 1940.
This section is discussing a topic that we have no information on. The answer to that is to remove the section, not to try and fill it with information tangentially related to the topic in the hope that nobody notices.
Even if you're proposing that we only regurgitate that part of the history section covering events after 1704 in the ethnic groups section - instead of discussing the actual ethnic mix in Gibraltar - that's still a WP:COATRACK and it's still unacceptable. Kahastok talk 07:51, 6 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Excuse me, Kahastok, the way you mention that evacuation could be misleading: it was temporary and had no impact in the demographics of Gibraltar (which is what the section we are discussing is about), as they all returned between 1946 and 1951 (as the article you link says: "The last of the evacuees did not see The Rock again until 1951.[1]")
That is quite different from the fact of practically a whole town (5,000 persons except for 70 that remained) with more or less a homogeneous ethnicity leaving and never coming back, and then the size of the population not recovering until 100 years later with ethnicities from very different origins (which kept immigrating to the town until more less 1900). That indeed had a direct impact on the ethnic groups of Gibraltar -as most relevant sources say- and can be briefly explained in this section the way the United Kingdom or the Australia Demographics sections do, as @Giraffedata proposes. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 11:16, 6 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
What United Kingdom and Australia do is describe where the current ethnic groups came from, and generally only in fairly brief terms. Australia#Ancestry and immigration does not mention the Aboriginal population except in a modern context, and mentions no specific historical event (other than solely by date) before the twentieth century. United Kingdom#Ethnicity makes no mention of Picts or Gaels, nor any specific historical event at all.
Based on those, you could make an argument for, The demographics of Gibraltar reflect the many European and other economic migrants who have moved into the Rock over the course of the last 300 years., i.e. this version. There is no precedent in these articles that would suggest that we should give any detail on what happened in 1704, other than possibly the date.
I note that you imply that the mix basically hasn't changed since 1900 - that the Spanish Civil War, World War 2, Franco, the closure of the border and EU freedom of movement basically made no difference at all. I doubt this very much.
But the fact remains that we don't know what the current ethnic mix is because we don't have sources that tell us. No amount of banging on about history changes this. All putting more history in does is make the WP:COATRACK worse. 12:19, 6 May 2024 (UTC)
I took a look at how those and Wikipedia articles about other places treat ethnic makeup and see that they do not offer any explanation of why the makeup is what it is. But that appears to be because they all are replete with hard facts about what the ethnic makeup actually is. We have the opposite problem -- no hard facts. But that doesn't mean we don't have any information. The author of "Gibraltar, Identity, and Empire" faced the same situation when trying to describe the ethnic makeup of Gibraltar and rather than just throw up his hands, gave at least two pieces of information that a reader trying to get some clue as to the ethnicity of Gibraltar could consider informative on that issue: 1) the fact that it's a result of migration in the past 300 years (and no more) from several places around the Mediterranean; and 2) the surname data. We should do the same. I'll bet a Wikipedia reader would consider this to be an indicator of Gibraltar's demographics even 18 years later. We additionally have the nationality stats -- again not a full answer to the question, but not entirely useless to a reader either.
So I don't see anything to be gained by not reporting all three things that sources tell us, however little, about Gibraltar's ethnicity.
On the subsidiary issue of whether the fact that the previous population left is relevant, it still seems to me that saying the current population is descended from migrants from the past 300 years leaves an open question in a reader's mind: What about the people who arrived before that? Aren't they represented too? Was Gibraltar first discovered by humans 300 years ago? Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 22:19, 9 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
LOL and where did the population go? That's right, to the Spanish mainland and settled with ease. There is no "indigenous" population waiting in the wings to settle Gib once the "colonisers" are kicked out. Spanish nationalist fantasies and a culture of grievance born out of the fact Britain surpassed their Empire & then lost it under less traumatic circumstances. BooHoo, The Canary Islands and those two African enclaves would like a word!!! 2A00:23C8:A72F:4A01:5DCA:1695:E41C:6691 (talk) 10:28, 11 November 2024 (UTC)Reply

Mr Henderson, if we have no hard facts, then that is an argument for removing a section not for expanding it with unrelated facts. If you want to know what happened 300 years ago, its covered in the history section, there is no need to constantly repeat the same information in every section. Otherwise this article does become somewhat of a WP:COATRACK when it constantly repeats the same narrative. Your comment above that this was removed because You seem to be biased by your expectation that anything Imalbornaz advocates is simply a presumption of bad faith. Three other editors have removed it in good faith and explained why, in response he asserts it was done in bad faith, the usual refrain being anyone British is embarrassed by what happened 300 years ago. Its something constantly repeated and I long since tired of having to deal with an editor who makes such asinine accusations. Perhaps if that editor entered discussion in good faith and did not constantly edit war for his preferred edit it would be better received but don't criticise editors who've put up with this crap for decades. If this continues to be a trading of bad faith accusations and a dialogue of the deaf I'd advocate the removal of this section as not being worth the hassle. Its not like it adds much to the article. WCMemail 15:17, 10 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

I agree [with removing the section] and suggest [also] that it is past time that Imalbornoz is referred to WP:ANI for constant wp:EDITWARring and WP:POVPUSHING. By no stretch of the imagination whatever was this edit remotely consistent with the clear and unambiguous consensus of the talk page, and their edit note claiming that it did is egregiously wp:disruptive. This debate has gone on long enough. There is a limit to the time that fellow editors must spend trying to get through to someone who is adamant that they are right and everyone else is wrong. Time's up. --𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 16:34, 10 May 2024 (UTC) Revised to add words in [ ] for clarity. -𝕁𝕄𝔽 (talk) 16:37, 10 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Please, Wee Curry Monster, Kahastok, JMF: It can be offensive to use words such as "disruptive", "regurgitate", "this crap", "presumption of bad faith" (at the same time accusing other editors of "bad faith"!), "asinine accusations", "dialogue of the deaf", ... Come on, let us try to discuss constructively without bad faith accusations and loaded words.
I suppose all of us are trying to have a good article with consistent criteria. That is what I am trying to do: if I see an inconsistency or a misunderstanding, I just point it out and we can discuss it. No hard feelings.
You guys said that explaining the origins of ethnic groups did not fit in an ethnic groups section in Wikipedia, because they mentioned things happening 300 years ago. Then I showed you the examples of the ethnicity and immigration sections from the articles about UK (a country two of you must be very familiar with!) and Australia which do mention facts from 900 years ago (UK) and the 18th century (Australia). So, mentioning those facts is consistent with the criteria of other Wikipedia articles, and the fact that they are historical is no reason to delete those facts more than to delete them from the UK, Australia, Cuba, Taiwan... articles.
Then some said that they thought there were no sources for the assertions being made in the article. I showed that there are, as you can see above (I just cited one but there are plenty of them).
After that, Giraffedata said that he supported including the ethnicity reflected in surnames and the repopulation of the town, I thought it was solved and changed the text.
Now some say I should be referred to WP:ANI for constant wp:EDITWARring and WP:POVPUSHING. Oh my gosh...
Seriously:
(i) Do you still think historical events should be deleted from the Demographics section in Gibraltar because it is about "now"? Do you say the same about those sections in the UK, Australia, Taiwan, Cuba, ... articles (please do read them)? Or is it only in Gibraltar?
(ii) Do you still think that there are no reliable sources mentioning those facts in and ethnicity context?
And please, try to be more well mannered. Thank you. --Imalbornoz (talk) 19:39, 10 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
I did read them. I told you I read them before. Are you reading the responses you get or are you just ignoring them?
As I said before, what those articles do is not what you want this article to do. Those articles discuss the origins of the current populations of those places. The text at issue here is not about the origins of the current population of Gibraltar, it's about a different group of people.
And then there's a question of what we actually want to put in the article. Fact is, you have not provided us with a source that actually gives us data about the actual ethnicity of people in Gibraltar. What we've got is an analysis of surnames, which requires so many caveats as to be useless, nationality statistics, which are something but not great, and a load of platitudes about how diverse Gibraltar is. We have nothing at all about how people in Gibraltar would actually describe their ethnicity.
And practically the first thing you did in this discussion is accuse me of nationalist editing. It is not an accusation to point out that well over half your edits to Wikipedia in the last 15 years have been on the narrow topic of how this article should deal with the people who left Gibraltar in 1704, always pushing for as much detail as humanly possible. It is not an accusation to point out that you have consistently pushed strongly pro-Spanish talking points both in talk and on the article, including in this discussion. It is not an accusation to point out that your edit today - your sixth revert on this point in recent weeks - completely ignored this discussion, claiming consensus for something that clearly didn't have it. These are facts that anyone can see. If you don't like these facts, that isn't anyone else's problem. Kahastok talk 20:44, 10 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
I could say that I have not pushed "strongly pro-Spanish talking points" (really, mentioning the very diverse ethnic origins of Gibraltarians in an Ethnic Origins section -which you say "should be binned entirely altogether"- is pro-Spanish????), but I won't because I think it is not relevant. We should not argue in favor or against edits based on whether they are pro or against some nationalistic narrative, but whether they are relevant and based on reliable sources.
"Those articles discuss the origins of the current populations of those places". Exactly, that's what we are proposing here and so does -I think- Giraffedata. The origins of the current population, according to sources, are: "a complex ethnic mix reflecting the many British, Mediterranean and other economic migrants who have moved into the Rock over the course of the last 300 years after the native population left in 1704. The mix is of of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, North African and other origins".
"What we've got is an analysis of surnames, which requires so many caveats as to be useless". I could defend the analysis by the source, but it is not up to you or me to discuss that. The source is reliable or it isn't according to Wikipedia's criteria (not Kahastok's), and in this case, it is:
  • It is written by an academic: "E. G. Archer has been successively teacher, head teacher and university lecturer at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He served as the Secretary of the Hispanic Society of Scotland for over thirteen years. A frequent visitor to Gibraltar, he co-authored Education in Gibraltar 1704-2004, and a book on the village of Catalan Bay.".
  • It is published by Routledge, the largest global academic publisher within humanities and social sciences.
  • It is cited in many academic papers and not critized by one that I have seen.
Which criticism of this analysis have you seen made by academics (not, mind you, Wikipedia editors?). If you have a list of academic citations of this source using the analysis will you accept the edit?
Many other sources say the same thing. Do you really want to go over them? If you see more sources saying that, will you accept the edit?-- Imalbornoz (talk) 23:14, 10 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
The text after the native population left in 1704 is not about the current population of Gibraltar, though, is it? Not a single one of those articles you name says anything like that about historical events. They discuss --exceedingly sparingly - the origins of the current populations. They don't discuss other populations or other groups at all.
I also note the phrase native population. The concept of a "native population" in Europe is at best troubling because even in the easiest cases it is very difficult to define who is "native" and who is not. Given the series of previous population movements in the area - including the expulsion of the Moriscos, it is not credible or neutral to imply that the population immediately prior to 1704 were somehow more "native" to Gibraltar than the current population.
You go on and on about the credentials of the source for your surname analysis, but you ignore what the source actually says. I said, the text requires so many caveats as to be useless. You reject this. Yet the source provides nine caveats straight off the bat, none of which are in your version of the article. Your text implies that surnames are a valid means of determining the ethnicity of the current population of Gibraltar. The source does not make actually make this connection at all, rather using the surnames to identify broad groups of incomers whose origins might be further discussed.
This is not a question of whether the source is reliable - that's a straw man. Even the most reliable source isn't useful for things it doesn't say or connections it doesn't make.
The only source we have that even suggests it gives us data on ethnic groups in Gibraltar is the CIA, and they just repeat the nationality statistics from the census. You rejected using the CIA because it's nationality not ethnicity - and yet you insist on an analysis that isn't even claimed to reflect ethnicity. If we have no data on the current ethnicity of people in Gibraltar - and you have not provided any - then it makes no sense at all to have section on the current ethnicity of people in Gibraltar. Kahastok talk 07:50, 11 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Ok, so we agree that the source is reliable. That is a good start.
You say that it is important also to know what the source actually says. In the introduction, where the main thesis of the book is explained, it literally says:

As regards the ethnic component, Gibraltar's past reveals a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa. (pg 2, Introduction)

Also:

Of course, Gibraltar existed physically long before the British arrived, although the Gibraltarians tend not to claim the more distant past as theirs: for them the beginning was 4 August 1704 when, after conquest of the British, all the residents left, making way for the creation of a new people. Before that, there had been 242 years when the population had been Spanish, from a far from unified Spain. Preceding that, there had been over seven centuries of Islamic control, begun in 711 with the defeat of the Christian Visigoths. The modern Gibraltarian sense of identity incorporates none of the earlier years and events. (pg 10, Changing contexts, values and norms)

Some Gibraltarians argue that Gibraltar is not a colony in the normal sense; they are not conquered people in a country colonized by the British. When the Anglo-Dutch fleet under Admiral Sir George Rooke occupied the Rock for England in 1704, the Spanish population, with a few exceptions, left Gibraltar and moved to San Roque, some miles inside Spain. What was taken in 1704 was virtually empty territory. Those people who eventually became native Gibraltarian were in-comers of one type or another or, more precisely, the children of in-comers.(...) If there is a Gibraltarian nation today, it is the result of the assimilation of these immigrant groups over a long period of time.(pg 35, Ethnic factors)

That is what one of the most cited works about ethnicity in Gibraltar says: it mentions the abandoned territory in 1704 (a very relevant episode that the source mentions repeatedly because, according to him, it explains why the whole town of Gibraltar started anew with immigration from different parts of Europe and the Mediterranean resulting in the current mix), the complex ethnical mix as a result of immigration, and mentions the most significant ethnicities in Gibraltar. The only difference between the proposed edit and this summary in the introduction of the book are the %s corresponding to the last names, which you consider questionable. I would be happy to include the expulsion of the Moriscos if the source considered it very relevant, but it is 1704 that it mentions prominently not the Moriscos (probably for the reason giraffedata mentioned: the flight of the townspeople made anything happening before 1704 irrelevant from a demographics point of view, it is the flight of 1704 that is relevant).
Would you then accept the text without the %s? I would rather include the percentages, explaining it is an approximation via surnames, which I think they are informative for the Wikipedia reader; but, for the sake of consensus, I will accept not including them if you don't want to. That way, including the summary of the introduction, I suppose we will not have any discrepancy about the interpretation of what the source actually says. Also, if you find the term "native" too loaded, we can find some other word that satisfies you. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 12:02, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply


I ask, pretty much knowing the answer, do you have the book or are you relying for your quotes on the limited preview from Google Books? [7] I mention this in passing, because other editors may not be aware of your track record of quoting sources you don't have access to, relying on google snippets to try and justify your a priori presumptions. If thats the case you're only able to see less than half the material on ethnicity. Ethnicity forms only one chapter in the book focusing as it does on the identity of the people of Gibraltar from multiple aspects.
The principle theme of this book is that the people of Gibraltar are a separate and distinct people despite Spanish claims to the contrary.
Given this is the central theme of the book, one has to wonder why you fasten on to the snippets of it referring to the events of 1704. If we're going to use this source, we should be saying loud and proud that the people of Gibraltar are a separate and distinctive people in their own right, conferring as that does the right to self-determination as outlined in the pre-amble of the Gibraltar Constitution Order.
Because based on what this author is arguing, the central message we would derive is that the events of history under the British have led to the evolution of the Gibraltarian identity. It has been the continuous presence of the British not the events of 1704 that have led to this situation, which is mentioned in passing to establish the beginning of the British period. And in terms of ethnicity the people of Gibraltar have their own separate and disctinctive identity. If we're going with what the sources says, that is the clear message of the book, which you acknowledge as one of the most cited works on Gibraltar ethnicity. I think that would be very informative for the Wikipedia reader. Or we could stick with the uncontroversial but slightly boring census results. WCMemail 14:03, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Exactly. This book's thesis is that the inhabitants of Gibraltar have developed their own distinct identity in the last 300 years (especially in the last 75 years or so). I think we all agree with that. I think that is why those facts (in two sentences) were able to survive for 15 years in an article that generates a lot of nationalist controversy.
My goal is not to impose a nationalist pro-Spanish POV, but to reflect relevant facts that are informative to the Wikipedia reader and which, by the way, are accepted by all the parts: the unique ethnic mix of Gibraltar is the result of the immigration from Britain, the Mediterranean (Spain, Italy, Portugal, Malta and North of Africa), and other origins over the 300 years since the previous inhabitants left in 1704.
Those are the relevant facts summarized by (British and Spanish) reliable sources, irrespective of whether some people want to use them for their (British or Spanish) political agenda or not. Wouldn't you agree to include them? -- Imalbornoz (talk) 16:50, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
So that will be a "no" then, you don't have access to the source.
You say you want to reflect the source, but that's not what your text does. What your text says is that Gibraltarians are not a people, that they are instead a mix of different ethnic groups and that the real ("native") Gibraltarians all left in 1704. Your text says nothing about Gibraltarians having a "distinct identity" - the opposite, it implies that there are a number of different groups from different parts of Europe, each with a distinct identity, separate from the others.
And this idea that Gibraltarians are just a random mix rather than a distinctive people with a distinctive identity is pro-Spanish POV, whether you like it or not. Kahastok talk 17:17, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
There has been longevity of a number of wikipedia hoaxes, so the persistence of a text doesn't reflect merit. As you didn't answer the question, I'll presume based on past experience that as I thought you don't have access. The book definitely has a POV and takes an advocates position, it also says a lot more than just identity - it asserts they are a separate and distinct people:
It also states their identity as a separate people is not because a small population left in 1704 but because of the status as a British fortress, then later as a British Overseas Territory enabling the development of self-government and evolution of a people who assert the right to self-determination. The existence of that desire for self-government stemming from their exile in 1940.
So if you're proposing to change the text to better reflect the source, by all means suggest an edit about their emergence as a separate and distinct people. But if we're going to have WP:WEASEL wording they're a mongrel mix and not really a people, reflecting a rather unpleasant nationalist narrative well that's a no from me. I'd prefer the current edit. TTFN WCMemail 17:49, 13 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Kahastok: Sorry, I didn't answer your question: Yes, I do have access to the source. Does it change anything? Do you want to find consensus in order to provide Wikipedia users some information about Gibraltar's distinct ethnic situation?-- Imalbornoz (talk) 09:14, 14 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Wee Curry Monster: Would you then want to include something in the lines of: "Gibraltar's population shows a distinct and unique ethnic mix" and then go on to explain the rest of it along the lines of Archer "reflecting immigration from various European and Mediterranean sources, notably from Britain, Genoa and other parts of Italy, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa, over the 300 hundred years since the previous inhabitants left in 1704". Imalbornoz (talk) 09:20, 14 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
That's substantially identical to your previous proposal. It still fails to tell the reader what ethnic groups there are in Gibraltar, which is the most basic requirement of this section. It still bangs on about 1704, and while you've tried to justify this using other articles, none of those articles do what you want to do. So, no. Kahastok talk 17:11, 16 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Can you tell me how this fails to tell the reader what ethnic groups there are in Gibraltar: "from various European and Mediterranean sources, notably from Britain, Genoa and other parts of Italy, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa"? -- Imalbornoz (talk) 19:34, 16 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Based solely on that description, what proportion of the population of Gibraltar would describe their ethnicity as North African? How many as Sub-Saharan African or Afro-Caribbean? How many would describe their ethnicity as Minorcan or Genoese? How many as Spanish or as British or as Gibraltarian? We don't know. This at best gives us vague information about ancestries of modern Gibraltarians, but says nothing their ethnicity.
Remember that ethnicity is fundamentally a social construct, and that ethnicities can merge and can split. Chances are most people in Gibraltar, just like most people in Britain, just like most people in Spain, just like most people in France, in the US, in just about anywhere else, have ancestors from more than one place, and those ancestors might be quite disparately spread. This is why self-reporting is so important. If there are no modern Gibraltarians who would consider themselves ethnically Genoese, then there are no ethnically Genoese Gibraltarians.
And if you feel that that phrase does give the information we need, then there is no value in adding the rest of your proposal, the part that achieves nothing other than indulging your obsession with 1704. Kahastok talk 21:07, 16 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
You are too much of an experienced Wikipedia editor for you to need me to explain what WP:OR is, so out of respect I won't.
I will just point out that, on the one hand, we have a wide consensus of academic sources (Archer is just one of them) literally saying those are the ethnic groups of Gibraltar; and on the other hand, there is Kahastok saying that they are not.
According to Wikipedia's criteria the article should reflect what the reliable sources say, not an editor's (not your, not my) opinion. So, will you tell me a reason, different from your own opinion, why those are not the ethnic groups that create Gibraltar's ethnical identity? Any reliable sources? -- Imalbornoz (talk) 23:06, 16 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
I certainly know what OR is. That means I know when people are claiming OR incorrectly. I also know about concept of cherry picking sources. I do not see anywhere in your source, for example, where Archer describes these as current ethnic groups in Gibraltar. On the contrary, he describes original ethnic groups, but makes it clear that "the various ethnic ingredients merged and the notion of being Gibraltarian became dominant".
So insofar as you present this as me vs Archer, it's only because you misrepresent Archer in a way that anyone who has dealt with you will know is entirely predictable. Your source does not back your content, and repeating yourself over and over again will not make it back your content. Kahastok talk 17:19, 17 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
Please analyse what the source says:

It is not the intention to write anything approaching a history of the peoples of Gibraltar. (...) The objective is to confirm the presence and significance of each group, and to discuss the salient issues arising.

Note the words "presence" and "significance".
In the introduction, regarding the determinants of Gibraltarian identity, a set of them are called, according to Archer, citing Ernest Barker, the “material factors”. Among them, the first one he mentions are the “ethnic ingredients of the population” or “ethnic component” of Gibraltar. Then he says what they are, literally: “immigration” “from various Mediterranean sources” “into an abandoned territory” and explains those sources. He does not say that they remain exactly the same as when they arrived, but that they have evolved into what Gibraltar is nowadays, which is -according to his thesis- one Gibraltarian identity with several characteristics, one of which is the ethnic mix.
In the “Ethnic factors” chapter, he not only counts last names (that is only one of the 17 pages of the chapter), he also analyses each of the groups and explains, for each of them: who they were; why, how and when they came to Gibraltar; what their contribution has been to society; how fully integrated they are nowadays; and how they are perceived in terms of Gibraltarian identity. The groups he analyses are (by order of arrival): Genoese/Italians, Jews, British, Portuguese, Minorcans, Spanish, Maltese, Indians, Moroccans, and Others. Be aware that the author talks about these groups in present tense. The case is pretty similar in each of them: they retain some of their characteristics (some religion, some language, there is an anecdote with present day Gibraltarian Jews attending a cricket game vs Israel waving Israeli flags, some Portuguese who like to trace their roots…), but they have merged into a Gibraltarian identity.
It is quite similar to the ethnic groups that the United Kingdom article describes in the Demographics section (see above): it traces a historical origin that explains the present, even though most of the ethnic groups have evolved into a more or less homogeneous British identity.
Reading the source (not just snippets) it is evident that the author (in an academic publication with numerous cites in other papers) states that the ethnical environment of Gibraltar can best be explained as several ethnic groups from the Mediterranean and Britain that immigrated to Gibraltar after the previous population left and have evolved to create a Gibraltarian identity (which is what his sentence from the introduction means both as stand alone and put into context).

As regards the ethnic component, Gibraltar's past reveals a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa.

There are many (really a lot) other sources explaining that these are the ethnic groups of Gibraltar (the same ones that Archer explains), it is not something that any reliable source denies. Really, this feels like discussing with someone about whether a source says that the earth is round or that the book of Genesis has or doen't have scientific support.
Do you have any reliable sources saying that those are not the ethnic groups in Gibraltar? Otherwise, please do accept the edit or let us start a discussion with external editors. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 19:28, 17 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

This is a classic example of an editor cherry picking from a source to support an a priori notion, creating a classic example of original research that fails to represent a neutral point of view. The source presented does not support the view that there are ethnic groups in Gibraltar such as Genoese/Italians, Jews, British, Portuguese, Minorcans, Spanish, Maltese, Indians, Moroccans, and Other, instead it explored the ancestry of the people who now identify as Gibraltarian. You have avoided mentioning the conclusion of the author that Gibraltarians are a separate and distinct people, instead alluding to weasel words such as identity and ethnic mix. You're right this discussion does have a feeling of a discussion with a flat earther, going round in circles with repetition of the same tired point; except you're projecting your own problems onto others. Personally I wouldn't tend to use Archer as a source, he definitely has his own views and he strongly supports the rights of the people of Gibraltar. It is very much a biased source; biased towards recognition of Gibraltarians as a separate and distinct people. Its bizarre in that context to try and use this source to argue the Spanish position in Wikipedia's voice that Gibraltarians aren't a people but a mongrel mix of immigrants. So the question, which I fully expect you to dodge, do you accept based on the conclusions of this source that Gibraltarians are a separate and distinct people? WCMemail 14:23, 18 May 2024 (UTC)Reply

(i) Please comment on the following sentence: "It is not the intention to write anything approaching a history of the peoples of Gibraltar. (...) The objective is to confirm the presence and significance of each group, and to discuss the salient issues arising." How is that sentence compatible with the author thinking that there are no ethnic groups? Do you have any sentence in the book that supports the idea that those are not the main ethnic groups in Gibraltar?
(ii) You don't read my comments: of course I don't avoid mentioning the conclusion of the author that Gibraltarians are a a separate and distinct people. Please read my comments above, for example: "Exactly. This book's thesis is that the inhabitants of Gibraltar have developed their own distinct identity in the last 300 years." And that is not incompatible with there being ethnic groups in Gibraltar, like there are in the United Kingdom or Australia (see the Demographics sections in those articles), and those countries also undeniably have their own distinct national identity (which includes some level of diversity).
(iii) How do you explain that the Government of Gibraltar(!) as member of the UKOT association says that "It has a population of approximately 30,000 Gibraltarians, representing an international mix of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, German and North African, with 75% of the population being Roman Catholic."
(iv) Can you explain how you think that what applies in the Ethnicity section of the United Kingdom article does not apply here?-- Imalbornoz (talk) 19:02, 19 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
You claim to mention the author's conclusion that Gibraltarians are a a separate and distinct people. But the text you want to put in the article implies the precise opposite conclusion, dismissing them in favour of the group who left in 1704.
The text on United Kingdom is actually a good example of what a good text should do, but your text doesn't do. Its focus is on modern-day ethnic groups based on self-description. It does briefly discusses the history of those groups, but only in terms of the modern groups currently living in the UK, without any mention of any group not currently living in the UK. Your text, by contrast, doesn't even mention modern ethnic groups based on self-description, instead focussing entirely on history, including going off on a tangent about groups no longer present.
Where United Kingdom treats ethnicity correctly as a social construct, allowing people to belong to more than one group and allowing generalisations where needed, your text treats ethnicity as immutable and unchanging, assigning each person exactly one ethnicity inherited solely down the paternal line.
The idea that your text is just doing what United Kingdom does is risible. Kahastok talk 16:39, 24 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
I say it does describe modern-day ethnic groups and you say it doesn't, but that doesn't matter at all. What matters is what reliable sources say (not one source, many of them, and so far you have not cited one that says otherwise). According to reliable sources:
  • Gibraltar’s ethnic factors reflect "a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa." (Archer)
  • Gibraltar’s population is "an international mix of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, German and North African" (UKOTA)
  • "It would be correct to say that the fusion of races which has made the Gibraltarian of to-day, includes apart from Jews, Genoese, men of Savoy, Spaniards, men of the United Kingdom, Portuguese, Minorcans, Sardinians, Sicilians, Maltese, French, Austrians, and Italians..." (Henry William Howes, The Gibraltarian: The Origin and Development of the Population of Gibraltar from 1704)
  • "When the Anglo-Dutch fleet under Admiral Sir George Rooke occupied the Rock for England in 1704, the Spanish population, with a few exceptions, left Gibraltar and moved to San Roque, some miles inside Spain. What was taken in 1704 was virtually empty territory. Those people who eventually became native Gibraltarian were in-comers of one type or another or, more precisely, the children of in-comers." (Archer)
  • ” On the Rock the incorporation of immigrants has played an important role in the creation of a shared national identity, as was the case with some other former British colonies such as Singapore – sometimes known as the ‘Gibraltar of the East’.” (‘An Example to the World!’: Multiculturalism in the Creation of a Gibraltarian Identity, by Luis Martínez, Andrew Canessa and Giacomo Orsini)
  • Interviews selected by the authors of ‘An Example to the World’ to prove their point:
    • ”And the point is that we do not have a native language because we are not natives to the Rock or rather we are not indigenes to the Rock. So, therefore, we don’t have a language of our own. And you think of the cocktail of people that were here: Greeks, Maltese, Jewish, Italians . . . Everybody was sort of thrown into one melting pot and most of these people were single.”
    • “We are very rich in a sense, culturally speaking because we have many different types of people with many different types of cultures. And Gibraltar has become like a melting pot. So, we actually know a lot about many cultures and that has been very enriching for the Gibraltarian mentality. And it’s shown in our cooking. Many Gibraltarians have come over from Morocco to live here, other from Italian people, from Spanish, from Maltese, so that has enriched our culture.”
It doesn't matter if you think that this advances a Spanish nationalist POV (I think it doesn't, but it doesn't matter either). A wide spectrum of sources support that text that you want deleted.-- Imalbornoz (talk) 16:27, 27 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
You claim to be reflecting the sources, but we've already established that the text you want to put in the article reaches the precise opposite conclusion to your most-frequently cited source. You claim to be talking about groups existing in the present, but even your cherrypicked quotes treat them as historic. You claim to want this section to talk about the present, but you in fact seem desperate for it to talk about the past - to the point where a surprising degree of prominence is given to people who left 300 years ago. No. I'm going for that. Of course I'm not going for that. I actually think if we are describing ethnic groups in Gibraltar, we should be describing the present, not trying to convert the ethnicity section into a second history section. Kahastok talk 21:03, 30 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
"We've established"? Who? You, Wee Curry Monster and JMF? Giraffedata, myself and (most importantly) many reliable sources do not. The sources, when talking about ethnic groups, (i) mention "Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, North African and other origins", (ii) they say that these groups originated as a result of immigration in the last 300 years, and (iii) the immigration came into a territory that had been previously abandoned by the original Spanish population.
Another source:

Who are the Gibraltarians? A touch improbably for a community inhabiting such a small space, the people of Gibraltar are descended from a rich mixed salad of immigrant genes: Italian, Spanish, Sephardic-Jewish, Maltese, Portuguese, English, Scottish, and Irish, among many others. (The surnames in my own extended family attest to this polyglot medley: Alvarez, Romero, Olivero, Caetano, Chiarvetto, Ballantine, Vinet.) Unlike other colonized peoples who can look back to pre-colonial precursors in their efforts to nurture a sense of their distinctiveness, the Gibraltarians carne into being after the original Spanish population had fled in its entirety.

Alvarez, David (2000) "Colonial Relic: Gibraltar in the Age of Decolonization," Grand Valley Review: Vol. 21: Iss. 1, Article 4. Available at: https://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/gvr/vol21/iss1/4
Please notice the present tense in "Who are the Gibraltarians."
I can go on and on and on posting reliable sources that mention those 3 points (list of main groups, immigration and exile of original population) when talking about Gibraltar's current ethnic groups. Take into account that, for the sake of consensus, I have only used British sources in order to avoid the accusation of using an anti-British POV. There are reliable sources from many other origins (especially Spanish, but also from other places) that also state the same three points. Should we include those sources as well?
Let us try to see what we have established in this discussion, fact-checking some of the comments in this discussion:
  • "300-year-old population movements are not normally discussed when discussing modern ethnic groups in other contexts on Wikipedia" "The text at issue here is not about the origins of the current population of Gibraltar, it's about a different group of people.": FALSE
    • The UK article mentions origins in the Ethnicities section: the original population from 900 years ago, the arrival of black population in the 1700s and Chinese population in the 1800s
    • Australia's Demographics section does the same: talks about British arrivals since 1788, German and Chinese immigration in the 19th century, and English/Scottish/German/Greek/etc. ancestries
    • The same with Cuba, Taiwan, and many other articles
  • "We have no relevant information or reliable sources about ethnic groups in Gibraltar" "We have no information about ethnicity." "This section is discussing a topic that we have no information on.": FALSE
    • We have a very large amount of sources mentioning Gibraltar's ethnic groups: Archer, Howes, UKOTA, Gibraltar's board of Tourism, Luis Martínez, Andrew Canessa and Giacomo Orsini, David Alvarez, ... (and there are many, many more)
  • "Your text says nothing about Gibraltarians having a "distinct identity": FALSE
    • I have proposed: ""Gibraltar's population shows a distinct and unique ethnic mix" and then go on to explain the rest of it along the lines of Archer"
    • I have said about Archer that "This book's thesis is that the inhabitants of Gibraltar have developed their own distinct identity in the last 300 years"
    • I have said that "they [the ethnic groups] retain some of their characteristics (...), but they have merged into a Gibraltarian identity." and "the previous population left and have evolved to create a Gibraltarian identity"
    • In case there is any doubt I will say it clearly: I think that the text should reflect (as it does in the Culture section among others) that there is a current day Gibraltarian identity. I will add that practically all sources say that a very relevant factor of this identity is the diversity as a result of immigration and there not being a "native" population after they left in 1704.
  • "a surprising degree of prominence is given to people who left 300 years ago." FALSE
    • That prominence is not surprising, if we judge by the many sources mentioning that fact when they explain Gibraltar's current Demographics situation, and why it is the way it is now: Archer, Luis Martínez, Andrew Canessa and Giacomo Orsini, David Alvarez... (and, besides those British sources, a great number of Spanish sources as well).
I hope you admit now that (i) we have sources mentioning the ethnic groups, (ii) historic population movements are mentioned in this context (Demographics sections of country articles), (iii) I am in favor of saying that Gibraltarians have a distinc identity, and (iv) the fact that the current demographics of Gibraltar originated after the original population left is well sourced.
Please go over 4 those points and tell me if we now have some common ground.--Imalbornoz (talk) 09:19, 31 May 2024 (UTC)Reply
And I still see no sources describing current ethnic groups, only historic groups. Since you're clearly having trouble with the distinction, words like "descended from" are generally a good hint. We could argue we know the ethnicities of the current Gibraltarians' great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandparents, but that's not the same thing as the ethnicities of current Gibraltarians.
I note that you claim that you are in favour of saying that Gibraltarians have a distinct identity, but your text not only doesn't say this, it actually implies the precise opposite, that they are a random mix of different groups that just happen to live near each other. Saying one thing on the talk page is worthless if you say the opposite on the article.
As to 1704 you repeatedly point out these four articles, that you believe make your case best. But you've still failed to mention anywhere where any one of them gives the history of a group that has been absent for 300 years.
The closest parallel is probably Cuba. There are differences between the situations. The pre-1704 Gibraltarians left as refugees during war, whereas the Spanish enslaved and killed all of the Taino. And, the Taino have a far more claim to being a distinctive ethnic group than the pre-1704 Gibraltarians, and also far more claim to being "native" to Cuba than the pre-1704 Gibraltarians have to being "native" to Gibraltar.
The case made on this page would apply far more strongly to the Taino there than to the pre-1704 Gibraltarians here. And yet the section at Cuba says nothing at all about what happened to the Taino. And, to be clear, none of the others give any more detail than Cuba does about groups not currently present.
When it comes down to it, it doesn't matter how many times you post walls of text insisting that grass is orange, grass is not suddenly going to become orange. Your aim seems to be to filibuster the discussion by posting walls of text, and nobody should be surprised by that because it's a tactic that you've been using for decades. Kahastok talk 21:07, 5 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
So, to be clear:
(i) You don't agree that the ethnic groups section should mention ethnicities according to whom they descended from?
(ii) And, forgetting for a moment about the phrase to be included in the ethnic groups section, and focussing on facts that we agree on, please confirm whhether at least you agree that relevant sources support that:
  • The current Gibraltarians are descended from people of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, North African and other origins?
  • Those people migrated into what was a practically empty town after the takeover of 1704?
  • Gibraltarians have developed their own distinct identity in the last 300 years?
Thank you. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 09:43, 6 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
You're still asking questions about history. And this is still not a history section. Kahastok talk 14:13, 9 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I agree: this is not a history section, it is a demographics section; but some parts of demographics sections in other countries' articles do mention historical facts (UK, Australia, etc.) Given that we are not of the same opinion about the content that should go in this section, it's better we clarify what we agree and what we don't agree on; that is what I am trying to do.
From the previous discussion I have understood that:
(i) You don't agree that the ethnic groups section should mention ethnicities according to whom they descended from.
(ii) You agree that relevant sources support the following facts, but you don't think they should go into the demographics section:
  • The current Gibraltarians are descended from people of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, North African and other origins.
  • Those people migrated into what was a practically empty town after the takeover of 1704.
  • Gibraltarians have developed their own distinct identity in the last 300 years.
Can you please confirm that I have understood you correctly on each of those points? Thank you very much. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 14:38, 9 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
The other articles mention history only to give context to current data. None mentions history in any other context. You are focussing in on history to the exclusion of all else. You insist on history and only history, and this is still not a history section. Kahastok talk 16:27, 9 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Yes, I understand you say that this section is not about history, neither in this article nor in the UK, Australia, etc. But I am not asking about that.
What I am asking is (i) Can you confirm that you say that the ethnicities section should not mention who descended from whom? (ii) You think that the points above should not be mentioned in the demographics section, but do you at least agree that relevant sources support they are historical fact? Please, for consensus sake, answer these questions. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 07:27, 10 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
And I am saying that discussion of historical details for their own sake is not relevant to this section, which - and you seem to acknowledge but then immediately disregard this key point - is not a history section and has not become a history section during the course of this discussion. Given that they are not relevant to the section in discussion, I see no purpose in discussing the historical details further.
This is supposed to be a section discussing ethnic groups in Gibraltar in the present day. The only source we have seen that discusses this point in present day terms is the CIA, which gives the nationality statistics from the census. Kahastok talk 18:31, 13 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I see you don't disagree about those being historical facts. What you are saying is that historical facts such as descent or ancestry do not belong in an Ethnicity section: "And I still see no sources describing current ethnic groups, only historic groups. Since you're clearly having trouble with the distinction, words like "descended from" are generally a good hint. We could argue we know the ethnicities of the current Gibraltarians' great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandparents, but that's not the same thing as the ethnicities of current Gibraltarians."
The thing is that ethnicity is defined, at least, as a result of descent from past generations:

This book defines ethnic identities as a subset of categories in which descent-based attributes are necessary for membership (…) The notion that descent matters in defining ethnic identity is hardly surprising. Virtually all social science definitions of an ethnic identity emphasize the role of descent in some way.” (Chandra, Kanchan (2012). Constructivist theories of ethnic politics. Oxford University Press. pp. 9-10)

Therefore, in a section about ethnicities, you need to at least mention who they are descended from (and who they are not descended from). Btw, the last cite is not random, it is one of the references cited in the first paragraph of the wikipedia Ethnicity article. This is not a "modern Spanish ultra-nationalist" argument. It is the essential nature of ethnicity. I suppose this settles the discussion. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 10:59, 14 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
I note that your quote actually explicitly describes that ethnicity as principally a social construct. I also find it very interesting that you added and then removed a quote that defines ethnicity as a social category of people based on perceptions of shared social experience or one's ancestors' experiences.
Your historically-based text for this article treats ancestry and descent as the only possible way by which ethnicity may be defined, forcing labels on people based on their surnames despite no evidence those people would accept those labels. In doing so it directly contradicts the quotes you provide, that hold that ethnicity is a social construct.
In doing this, your text does push a Spanish nationalist POV in that it denies even the possibility that ethnic groups may change over time. It denies even the possibility that, for some if not most of the Gibraltar population, the "shared social experience" of actually living in Gibraltar for centuries may be more important than some distant ancestors' experience of islands or historic city-states hundreds of miles away.
It also pushes that POV because - we go back to where this discussion starts - it insists on the relevance of people who left over 300 years ago in a discussion of modern ethnicity of Gibraltarians. This being a core tenet of the modern Spanish ultra-nationalist belief that the descendents of people who left over 300 years ago somehow have more political rights over modern Gibraltar than the current population of Gibraltar. Kahastok talk 18:36, 14 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
The concept of ethnicity in general: As you can see, all definitions of ethnicity include the concept of descent and ancestors, and (yes, indeed) sometimes other factors. But the concept of descent is central, to the point of one source saying that "Virtually all social science definitions of an ethnic identity emphasize the role of descent in some way".
Ethnicity in the specific case of Gibraltar: Do sources discard ancestry and focus in other factors? Or do they mention the ancestors? As you can see, all the sources talk, not surprisingly, about the ancestors of today's Gibraltarians; say that they immigrated from Britain, Italy, Malta, Morocco, Jewish families; that they populated an empty territory after the native population left in 1704; and created a unique mix that is one of the characteristics of Gibraltar's identity.
That clearly contradicts your previous points that we have no sources, that sources do not mention the immigration into the abandoned territory as part of the explanation of Gibraltar's ethnicity, or that past descent or ancestry has nothing to do with modern ethinicities.
The text does not stand against the posibility of ethnicities changing over time. In fact, it says that Gibraltar's identity is the result (á la melting pot) of the evolution of a diverse mix of several ethnic origins, and I stress the word "evolution" (which means change).
You say that the text supports that the descendants that left have more political rights than modern Gibraltarians. That is absurd, taking into account that all sources are British and Gibraltarian. In any case, you have piqued my curiosity: Can you please tell where does the text say anything about political rights?
Finally, the possibility that the facts reflected in the text supposedly support some cabal or conspiracy with pro-Spanish, pro-British or pro-whatever political points of view should not matter at all. The important thing in Wikipedia is to reflect the facts that reliable sources mention. -- Imalbornoz (talk) 17:55, 16 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
There is something I'm just not seeing in part of this dispute. One of the fundamental points of disagreement is whether the words "after the original population left in 1704" should be in the ethnicity section. Kahastok has said multiple times that this suggests that peoples who lived in Gibraltar before 1704 are relevant to the current ethnicity of Gibraltar ("it insists on the relevance of people who left over 300 years ago in a discussion of modern ethnicity of Gibraltarians"), but I see exactly the opposite -- it says those peoples are not relevant -- and that is why it's a helpful addition to the section. Can someone reconcile this?
This and much of this whole discussion is irrelevant, by the way, because it is not our job to describe the ethnicity of Gibraltar here. It is our encylopedic job to summarize what reliable sources say about the ethnicity of Gibraltar. If we can find sources that say surnames, historical immigration, and the events of 1704 don't tell us anything about the ethnicity of Gibraltar, we should report that alongside the facts from the other sources saying they do. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 17:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Except, we don't have sources that say that.
We have, at best, sources that describe the describe the history of the people in Gibraltar. We don't have any sources at all that say that this corresponds to their current ethnicity. The sources quoted above go to great effort not to say that this corresponds to current ethnicity.. As WCM pointed out, the conclusion that Imalbornoz proposes that the article reach is the precise opposite of the conclusion reached by his preferred source.
If people want to know history, we have a history section. If that isn't enough, we have an entire article on the subject. Perhaps you could explain to me why you feel that we need a second full-blown history section in the Demographics section? Kahastok talk 17:45, 17 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
@Bryan has a very important point: Gibraltar starts its unique ethnical mix 300 years ago from scratch, and this is a very singular and noteworthy fact for a territory in Europe (where a larger share of people who can trace back their ancestry from millenia ago in the same place share their territories with some people who came from far away recently or just a few generations ago). Gibraltar is a noteworthy example of a diverse ethnicity started in the modern age, similar to some places in the new world.
Regarding sources, actually we do have many:

As regards the ethnic component, Gibraltar's past reveals a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa.

"Gibraltar, Identity and Empire", by Edward G. Archer, Psychology Press, 2006; pg 2, Introduction

Some Gibraltarians argue that Gibraltar is not a colony in the normal sense; they are not conquered people in a country colonized by the British. When the Anglo-Dutch fleet under Admiral Sir George Rooke occupied the Rock for England in 1704, the Spanish population, with a few exceptions, left Gibraltar and moved to San Roque, some miles inside Spain. What was taken in 1704 was virtually empty territory. Those people who eventually became native Gibraltarian were in-comers of one type or another or, more precisely, the children of in-comers.(...) If there is a Gibraltarian nation today, it is the result of the assimilation of these immigrant groups over a long period of time.

"Gibraltar, Identity and Empire", by Edward G. Archer, Psychology Press, 2006, pg 35, Ethnic factors

"And the point is that we do not have a native language because we are not natives to the Rock or rather we are not indigenes to the Rock. So, therefore, we don’t have a language of our own. And you think of the cocktail of people that were here: Greeks, Maltese, Jewish, Italians . . . Everybody was sort of thrown into one melting pot and most of these people were single.”

‘An Example to the World!’: Multiculturalism in the Creation of a Gibraltarian Identity, by Luis Martínez, Andrew Canessa and Giacomo Orsini (fragment of interview selected by authors to showcase the point of view of the population)

It has a population of approximately 30,000 Gibraltarians, representing an international mix of Spanish, Italian, English, Maltese, Portuguese, German and North African, with 75% of the population being Roman Catholic.

United Kingdom Overseas Territories Association (the Government of Gibraltar is a member)

Who are the Gibraltarians? A touch improbably for a community inhabiting such a small space, the people of Gibraltar are descended from a rich mixed salad of immigrant genes: Italian, Spanish, Sephardic-Jewish, Maltese, Portuguese, English, Scottish, and Irish, among many others. (The surnames in my own extended family attest to this polyglot medley: Alvarez, Romero, Olivero, Caetano, Chiarvetto, Ballantine, Vinet.) Unlike other colonized peoples who can look back to pre-colonial precursors in their efforts to nurture a sense of their distinctiveness, the Gibraltarians came into being after the original Spanish population had fled in its entirety.

Alvarez, David (2000) "Colonial Relic: Gibraltar in the Age of Decolonization," Grand Valley Review: Vol. 21: Iss. 1, Article 4.
There are many more sources along these lines, which the article should summarize. Their volume is massive, but ok, if there are also a significant number of sources saying that immigration in the last 300 years from the places cited above is not the source of practically all Gibraltarian ethnicity, Kahastok, please tell us and we will cite them as well. Could you please do that? --- Imalbornoz (talk) 18:12, 18 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Perhaps you could explain to me why you feel that we need a second full-blown history section in the Demographics section?
I don't feel that we need that. At most, I feel that the article would be improved by including one or two historical facts in the demographics section that reliable sources say inform us about the ethnic makeup of Gibraltar.
Do you want to comment on the issue of whether the words "after the original population left in 1704" says the pre-1704 population is or is not relevant to the ethnicity of Gibraltar? Because I still think I'm missing the point of some of your objections. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 18:54, 19 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

The relevant historical facts that have led to the evolution of a unique Gibraltar identity are: A) its role as a British military outpost for the RN, which in many ways retarded the development of self-government and B) demands by the people of Gibraltar for a role in how they were governed and the conflict between the two. In many ways it parallels the situation in many of the smaller British possessions where in the past the needs of local people were ignored by civil servants who thought they knew best. I say this as someone who has read extensively on the subject and formed a view based on the prevailing view in the literature. The problem with the proposal, is the demand to mention the Spanish exodus and then looking for sources to justify mentioning it. Its putting the cart before the horse but symptomatic of an editor whose been doing it for well over a decade. The second problem is you Bryan because more than once you've assumed bad faith in people suggesting this was inappropriate. If you were talking of historical facts relevant to a social construct like ethnicity, such as the ones I suggested, that may be appropriate. What modern relevance is people who left in 1704, when we don't mention the arabs who left, the conversos or anyone of a number of past groups who are no longer relevant to the ethnic make up of the modern Gibrltarians? WCMemail 08:58, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

Addendum: Bryan as I was about to log off when I noticed I answered the same question of yours on the 10 May. Did you expect a different answer by repeating the question? This proposal is clearly going nowhere, someone should close this pointless discussion. WCMemail 09:03, 20 June 2024 (UTC)Reply

There was no answer on May 10, just as now, unless it is to say the question is moot because there's some other reason the words "after the original population left in 1704" should not be included. But when Kahastok said at least twice more that the words should not be included because they mean the population that left in 1704 is relevant to the ethnic groups in Gibraltar, I had to assume he didn't think the question is moot and the question just got lost on May 10.
I have not assumed bad faith. I have suspected bias. Bad faith is editing in a way you believe hurts Wikipedia or at least breaks its rules. Bad faith is arguing something you don't really believe. Acting with a bias is not acting in bad faith.
This discussion has been half about article content and half about editor conduct from the beginning. (It actually begins with "We have an editor ...", and is sprinkled with ad hominem throughout). I am just not interested in the editor conduct issue, but you switch to that when you say the problem with the mention of the 1704 exodus is the thought process of the person who put it there. It doesn't address my question about how a reader would interpret this phrase. Bryan Henderson (giraffedata) (talk) 21:46, 21 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
But why would the section mention history at all, other than incidentally? The question that this section is supposed to be answering is "what ethnic groups are there in Gibraltar?". There's no reason to mention history in answering that question. Let alone the history of groups that aren't even present in Gibraltar.
The problem here is fundamentally that we don't have much information to answer that question in a modern context. The best we've got is the CIA. I suppose you could argue for this (which argues explicitly that a common Gibraltarian ethnic group exists and was written by some of the authors that Imalbornoz claims argue the opposite). But I don't because it's answering the wrong question. Just like most of the other sources listed here.
Because the question "what ethnic groups are there in Gibraltar?" is not the same as the question "what is the history of ethnic groups in Gibraltar?". An answer to the second question does not work as an answer to the first, unless you deny the possibility that ethnic groups can emerge and can disappear. And if you do deny that possibility - as Imalbornoz implicitly does above - you are forced into some very odd conclusions. By this logic, there are no Irish people in Ireland, no Spanish people in Spain and no German people in Germany, because all of those ethnic groups - along with all other ethnic groups on the planet - emerged from disparate predecessor groups.
The fact that Imalbornoz is not trying to find an answer even to the question "what is the history of ethnic groups in Gibraltar?" (but rather trying to source an answer he already had based on his own prejudices, sometimes to the point of cherrypicking quotes to try and make authors reach a conclusion diametrically opposed to the conclusion they actually reach) is almost irrelevant, because it's the wrong question. Ultimately, you cannot say what ethnic groups there currently are in Gibraltar or any other place based solely on history.
To write this section properly - to answer the question of what ethnic groups there are in Gibraltar - we need to discuss modern statistics based on modern surveys like censuses. The only source we have on this is the CIA, which repeats the census nationality data. There is no law saying we have to have a section at all. Spain does not have one. But the worst thing we can do is try to hide the lack of data through off-topic waffle and irrelevances. Kahastok talk 11:53, 22 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Kahastok: You say that in order to answer the question "What ethnic groups are there in Gibraltar?" "There's no reason to mention history in answering that question." The wikipedians who have contributed to the Ethnicity section in the United Kingdom article (for example) think otherwise. Their answer in the case of the ethnicity of the UK is:

Historically, indigenous British people were thought to be descended from the various ethnic groups that settled there before the 12th century: the Celts, Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Norse and the Normans. Welsh people could be the oldest ethnic group in the UK. The UK has a history of non-white immigration with Liverpool having the oldest Black population in the country dating back to at least the 1730s during the period of the African slave trade. During this period it is estimated the Afro-Caribbean population of Great Britain was 10,000 to 15,000 which later declined due to the abolition of slavery. The UK also has the oldest Chinese community in Europe, dating to the arrival of Chinese seamen in the 19th century. In 2011, 87.2 per cent of the UK population identified themselves as white, meaning 12.8 per cent of the UK population identify themselves as of one of an ethnic minority group.

It clearly mentions historical dates: before the 12th century, 1730s, 19th century. That is only logical, taking into account that almost all sources about ethnicity take historical ancestry as the most important factor, or at least one of the most important ones.
In any case, the criteria should be "How do reliable sources answer the question of what ethnic groups are there in Gibraltar?". Then we take a look at Archer's book, and the answer is very similar to the UK ethnicity section:

As regards the ethnic component, Gibraltar's past reveals a complex racial mix reflecting immigration into an abandoned territory from various Mediterranean sources, notably from Genoa and other parts of Italy, from Minorca, Portugal, Malta and Spain, as well as from North Africa.

You don't have to interpret that. It is literally right there: a diversity of ethnical groups that immigrated into abandoned territory in the last 300 years. With regards to Gibraltar's identity (which includes additional things to ethnicity, like culture, general beliefs, etc.) Archer says what you're saying: Gibraltar has its own identity which has evolved along the years, and one of the key factors is indeed its multiethnical mix. But "national identity" is not "ethnicity". The UK ethnicity section does not deal with national identities or whether the ethnic groups it mentions have evolved into one ethnicity; it just mentions them and gives some historical context. Although, if you want the article to also talk about Gibraltar's national identity, go ahead, I will not be against it.
Then we have the other British and Gibraltarian sources as well: Alvarez, Luis Martínez, Andrew Canessa and Giacomo Orsini, UKOTA,... And there are also several Spanish sources, which I have not brought here in order to avoid a discussion about Spanish POVs.
There you have it: (i) it makes sense (of course!) to mention some historical facts when talking about ethnicity; (ii) most sources do mention the ethnic groups that you deleted; and (iii) many of them mention the fact that they immigrated into an abandoned territory.
Do you think that the Gibraltar article should be different from the UK article? Can you cite other sources that discard the facts that you deleted in the Gibraltar article? Are they better sources with regards to the content of an ethnic groups section?-- Imalbornoz (talk) 00:18, 23 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
Their answer in the case of the ethnicity of the UK is... - no, it isn't. Their answer is a large table giving the number of people in each ethnic group. Everything else in that section is just there to give context to the table.
I note that you again explicitly claim that the authors of this support your position, even though they in fact reach the opposite conclusion. As does Archer.
In the case of Spain they decided not to have any section at all. Again, this doesn't match your approach. Your approach would have said that the ethnic groups of Spain are Celts, Tartessians, Lusitanians, Vascones, Phoenicians, Carthaginians, Romans, Visigoths, Vandals, Arabs and Berbers. But no Spanish people, obviously. Because Spanish people are a modern group, not a historic group.
Not having a section is an option here as well, if we feel that the CIA and the census results - our only relevant source - isn't good enough to tell us what ethnic groups there currently are in Gibraltar. But your approach - to waffle about a different topic to try and hide the fact that we have little good data - is not going to become acceptable just because you decided to repeat the same argument 300 times. Kahastok talk 20:58, 23 June 2024 (UTC)Reply
  1. ^ Bond 2003, p. 100.