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A fact from India: The Modi Question appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 15 February 2023 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Please note that this talk page is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject - only for discussing how to improve the article. That said, I'll assume that you want to watch the documentary in order to improve the article, which is quite reasonable.
I'm sure there are various methods, but it would be inappropriate to recommend torrents or piracy websites on Wikipedia, since we have a strict policy on copyright. The content is legally distributed on BBC's iPlayer, but only available if your IP address is in the UK. I'm not sure what the legalities are of using a VPN to access it - you might look into that. CharredShorthand.talk;09:33, 28 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
There is currently no legal means to access the series in India, besides from using a VPN to watch it on services such as BBC's iPlayer. However, several screenings are taking place in major Indian cities, which one can attend. There are torrents or pirated versions available on shadow-library websites, although this is not appropriate to list here. In addition, a PIL has been filed in the Indian Supreme Court, which may make the series legally accessible in India if ruled in favour of the appealing parties. MaleficentChimera (talk) 10:49, 30 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 1 year ago8 comments3 people in discussion
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
Comment: I nominate this with some trepidation, as this is a contentious topic that may yet see a major edit-war; however, it has been stable thus far. It was created in mainspace on the 19th, moved to draftspace, moved back to mainspace on the 23rd, and 5x expanded since then; so it should be eligible even if not meeting the creation date cutoff. Further hook suggestions welcome.
"Let people see the fascist face ... the coming days." : Citation needed at the end of the quote.
Characterization of the BJP as "Hindu-nationalist" needs a couple sources. The cited NYT article doesn't call it as such. Washington Post article does however and can be cited here
"Commentators argued that the ban had drawn more attention ... known as the Streisand effect." The source mentions only one such commentator
" Trinamool Congress leaders Derek O'Brien and Mahua Moitra ... criticized the move as censorship.[5]" [5] doesn't say anything of the sort
The Guardian states that the documentary was criticized by "former judges, bureaucrats and prominent figures". Any reason it is not mentioned? This is important for NPOV and balanced presentation. AhmadLX-(Wikiposta)20:55, 29 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
@AhmadLX: Thanks for the review. Refs sometimes get lost in rapid-fire editing, so I appreciate the spot-check (or did you perhaps check all references?) I believe I have fixed the issues you mentioned. I'm most hesitant about the "300 judges" statement, as not even sources which cover it in more detail make reference to the contents of the documentary; they appear to be criticizing the principle of the thing. However, absent other sources challenging the statement, I've stuck it in the reception section for the moment, with a dedicated source. Vanamonde (Talk)02:40, 30 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
Overall: Hook not so "hooky" ;) Do you have other ideas @Vanamonde93:? I would have suggested a couple myself but then won't be able to approve one (at least that is what I understood from the policy). But I think Twitter/Youtube blocking the videos OR student arrests OR simply mentioning the ban with elaborating the content in a short sentence would make some interesting hooks.AhmadLX-(Wikiposta)19:04, 30 January 2023 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 1 year ago13 comments5 people in discussion
This article is written in a tone that reflects the personal opinion or political biasness. Majorly rely sources like BBC, New York Times and Washington posts, most of these are government funded, yes they are reliable but not in political disputes and should not be used in so. i think more variety of sources be used to give both sides their due weight according to WP:DUE. RamaKrishnaHare (talk) 20:15, 9 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sources are either reliable or they are not. These sources are reliable, and therefore I have removed the NPOV tag since no good reason has been given for it. Black Kite (talk)20:29, 9 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
Isn't the line "most of them were muslims" misleading, because "most" have no true mathematical value. anyone can interpret "most" in different ways and it provides to general figure to rely on. whole section seem to povpush a certain thought that muslims are the victims or suppressed in India. like the lines "muslims are blamed to initiate fire in godhra trains", "most of them who died were muslims", "violence in gujarat showed all the hallmarks of ethnic cleansing" and many more. this isn't just a problem ofone page, many wikipedia pages seem to support the same ideology when it comes to hindu-muslim conflicts. for example in both the cases of 2002 Gujarat riots and Exodus of Kashmiri Hindus the number of displaced are about 150,000 (controversial but let's take for now). and the gujarat riots are genocide"as these events had met the "legal definition of genocide," or referred to them as state terrorism or ethnic cleansing. and saying kashmir exodus a genocide is a propaganda by Hindu Nationalists"The descriptions of the violence as "genocide" or "ethnic cleansing" in some Hindu nationalist publications or among suspicions voiced by some exiled Pandits are widely considered inaccurate and aggressive by scholars.". I am asking why??? Why this selective sympathy for one community and hate for the other when seemingly both have suffered upto an extent? Similarly The documentary made on Kashmir Genocide The Kashmir Files"presents a fictional storyline" , "the events leading up to it as a genocide, a notion that is widely considered inaccurate by scholars", "the storyline attracting criticism for attempting to recast established history and propagating Islamophobia." and "Theatres across India have witnessed hate speech against Muslims, including incitement to violence due to the movie. (i have marked all the as it is references from Wikipedia's articles in green text)
and i have only started. Is this the neutrality of Wikipedia? Is this WP:NPOV? i think certainly not. i think such articles need a huge rework.
Have you actually read the policy you cite? NPOV on Wikipedia is determined by summarizing what reliable sources say. I don't see you offering any sources contradicting the information in the article. Vanamonde (Talk)00:53, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
The "argument" that the New York Times and the Washington Post are "government funded" would need some very good references, something in the range of the news that Fox News anchors privately despise DT, yet support him publicly for commercial reasons. What's more, even if the WP and the NYT were "government funded," would that imply they're pro-muslim and anti-Hindu, and that the USA-goverment is promoting this narrative. Which is quite unlikely; the whole "argument" says more about the worldview of the proposer than about reality. Joshua Jonathan -Let's talk!06:26, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
@Joshua Jonathan Can you link to the discussion or consensus of Wikipedia where it was proven that Fox News anchors privately despise Donald Trump, yet support him publicly for commercial reasons. so i can learn what some very good sources are to prove such things. RamaKrishnaHare (talk) 10:43, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
why would WP, NYT expose themselves? I want to know what publications wikipedia prefer when it comes to controversial topics, leaving big government supported publications like WP, NYT, Al-Jazeera, BBC, CNN. like here is an example of anti-hindu stand by CNN [1][2][3].
and here is my argument for why BBC is Government funded is on this basis [4]
The government controls it through a board that they appoint in the same way that shareholders would appoint a board of governors to manage their Company. The BBC is funded by a compulsory tax on televisions. Nobody is allowed to watch any television program in Britain unless they pay to fund the BBC. So in that sense the government own it. Whether they watch it or not. did you see the connection.
Please guide me:
1) if these arguments are enough.
2) i have to do research and put more sources supporting my claim.
Following option 3 would be the best advice; without discounting your personal opinions and values, Wikipedia follows certain procedures, which give little room for your preferred take on these matters. This may seem unfair to you, but further insistence on your pov will, in all likelihood, be met with scelsis and, eventually, sanctions. So, you better find another area of interest to edit, or even leave Wikipedia completely aside, and find other avenues to share your worldviews. Regards, Joshua Jonathan -Let's talk!20:25, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
i think that's bitter but truth tbh.
and two last questions, than i am leaving this talk,
are the sanctions applicable even if one discusses the topic on talk page without disrupting the original article? and comment if the sources i mentioned for CNN are enough to prove it anti-hindu and the argument i put forward in the case of BBC enough? because you didn't said anything about them. Thanks for your valuable suggestions. RamaKrishnaHare (talk) 21:03, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply
Disagreeing with others carries no sanctions. But if one starts changing article content unilaterally when there is content dispute and consensus has not been reached, then it will most likely bring sanctions/blocks. The links you cite are not good enough to support your claim that WP, NYT, BBC are anti-Hindu. I'm not saying that these sources themselves are not good. But the articles that you link. They merely say that some Indians in the US think these newspapers are anti-Hindu (it wouldn't matter if they said that all Indians in the US think so too). That doesn't mean they are actually anti-Hindu. Calling some reputed publisher anti-something is a very big claim and big claims require big evidence. In this case, it would be a near-consensus or majority opinion in 3rd party reliable sources, including academic ones, that these websites are anti-Hindu. Hope that clarifies Wikipedia's positions towards sourcing. AhmadLX-(Wikiposta)21:48, 10 March 2023 (UTC)Reply