Talk:Timeline of the Donald Trump presidency (2017 Q3)


Brevity

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Looking for a little clarity on consensus, since I find myself not only shortening contributions but even re-shortening following reverts to these edits, yet don't want to keep feeling like I'm taking matters into my own hands. This article is a timeline, and it is my understanding that entries ought to be kept absolutely as brief as possible (especially with a busy subject such as this one). Am I right in assuming that others agree that extraneous details, tautologies and repeated phrases ought to be excluded from such a timeline, and that the length of all entries be kept to a bare minimum? Good to hear some thoughts... Cpaaoi (talk) 12:19, 7 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • This is not possible if you don't provide context to the entries in the timeline. Don't cut the entries to an extent that half the information is gone. Encyclopedias need to be informative to the point that people understand what they are reading and what is going on. You don't just post for example, Person ABC visited the museum. You need to provide context to why the visit took place. Another problem with cutting so much information you don't know who else attended the meeting. This is not WP:NEWS that we add everything in the article, but being too brief is not beneficial for readers to know what context the entries are about. This is also nothing to do with fake news which you are ascertaining. F2Milk (talk) 15:24, 7 July 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • There is certainly a balance to find between keeping things brief and losing too much context. "Stick to facts" has worked well as a criterion to exclude repetitive prose, commentary, motives, speculation, und so weiter. — JFG talk 16:10, 7 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Ok fair enough; I'll stop cutting it back! Probably I have placed too much importance on this page; perhaps I'll go over and work on the Nixon timeline: the poor guy has no more than five entries for all of 1970 and 1971! Cpaaoi (talk) 16:30, 8 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Trump police brutality comments 28th July

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It would be much appreciated if you would not accuse me of pushing a particular point of view. A careful look through all three pages of the Trump timeline will show edits by myself describing the man giving successful speeches and rallies, handing out medals, making good appointments, abiding by Congressional norms, and so forth, as well as removing critical entries such as the one concerning the 'March for Science', which had little to do with Trump directly, even though he was of principal interest to the marchers. However, I am not shy to include entries about his habit of failing to pass legislation and of making disgusting remarks (in which case I think there has been much restraint on my part - consider the tweet about Mika Brzezinski and facelift wounds, etc, ad nauseam). By contrast, to describe Trump's speech at Suffolk County as a matter simply of talking cozily about security and crime, and to give no suggestion of the unprecedented reaction by the nation's police forces from coast to coast to Trump's comments about a well-recognized technique of police brutality (later said by Sarah Sanders to be what she "believed" to be a "joke"), could easily give the impression of pushing a particular point of view. The clause containing reference to the revulsion at the top of all police departments refers specifically to comments made in the speech, and is just as relevant to his presidency (if not in some ways more relevant) as the reaction of world leaders to Trump's decision to remove the US from the Paris Agreement, or North Korea's reaction to his talk of nuclear war, which have been unquestioningly included in the timeline.

I do not wish this to sound confrontational, because I believe that you have contributed much of value to the timeline, such as a wealth of information about Trump's conversations with world leaders and businesspeople which I am sure will be useful to people in the future. But regardless of anyone's personal political leanings, the timeline simply cannot be permitted to read like an extended White House press release. All the best. Cpaaoi (talk) 02:18, 11 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Cpaaoi, let me address some of the points you made regarding the timeline of Trump's presidency. There have been made additions in the past 7 months to the timeline that doesn't deal with the presidency itself. There have been additions to the Russian investigation (this already has its own timeline - Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections ) and other controversies (This has been addressed in other articles about Trump's presidency). There have been a lot of duplication in that timeline. For individual or group reactions to Trump's speeches or actions, there should be a place to put them. It should not be in a timeline as this deals with presidential issues/events. If we wanted to add everyone's reaction/revulsion/opposition/praise/adoration we would have a whole load of entries which would not add any substance to the timeline. So regarding the police's reaction to Trump's speech, wouldn't it be better to put that entry in Presidency of Donald Trump, maybe under Criminal justice section. Sure I agree with you regarding the statement that the timeline doesn't have to read like a White House Press release. But in the end it doesn't have to have just people's negative outside the presidency's statements. Otherwise I would have to include everyone's positive reaction in response to the negative reaction. That would be POV pushing.
Listen, I am not here to bash or criticize. Everyone wants improve the articles in Wikipedia. F2Milk (talk) 04:05, 11 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Well, let me then deal with your points, F2Milk:
  • 1a) I am aware that there is a timeline for the Russia investigation. Members of the administration have been co-operating with the Russia investigation: entries may therefore be relevant to the presidential timeline also.
  • 1b) If you have complaints about any specific entry, then do make them known.
  • 2) Duplication is not anathema. The presidential timeline and the Russia investigation timeline are not silos requiring no cross-contamination of information. General developments in the Russia investigation may appear in that timeline; important developments, such as the submission of thousands of documents, may apply in both. A future reader ought not to be expected to switch between timelines in order to see the overall development of either timeline.
  • 3) You are quite right to say we would be wrong to include all criticism of the Trump presidency. But that is not what is being proposed.
  • 4) You are quite right to say that the timeline does not have to include only negative criticism. But that is not what is being proposed.
  • 5) You would be wrong to include everyone's positive reaction, because no-one is suggesting including everyone's negative reactions. That would be a long list indeed, and I myself have removed many such entries, such as Al Green's impeachment speech.
I see that you have reverted the entry on the 28th of July, which now once again reads as if Trump delivered an unremarkable and uncontroversial speech in the manner of a great American patriot. I am not going be drawn into an edit war over this, so I have included Sarah Sanders' comments from a few days later alleging that Trump was 'joking' about police brutality. I hope that this is a satisfactory compromise. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:47, 11 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, I like you to take note that Trump's comments will illicit all kinds of responses whether negative or positive. If we just add all the negative responses, then it would be better to add the positive ones as well. Then the timeline would just be about Trump's events, Tweets and everyone's reaction and response to his tweets. But this is not what the timeline should be in any case. But there are other articles that these reactions or responses should go to. Eg. Presidency of Donald Trump, Social policy of Donald Trump, Economic policy of Donald Trump, Environmental policy of the Donald Trump administration, Immigration policy of Donald Trump, Foreign policy of the Donald Trump administration. Please take your pick where you would like to put the condemnations or praise of Trump's tweets, statements or actions.F2Milk (talk) 03:53, 12 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
F2Milk:
1) Once again, no-one has suggested including *all* the negative responses. This is your invention.
2) If you have complaints about specific entries, it would be better to identify those complaints here, and:
*a) not to make unwarranted and generalized claims about that which may or may not be pertinent to this timeline
*b) not to keep making edits without edit summaries which makes it harder for other editors to see what you are doing on this page. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:21, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, let me again try to address some of your points:
1) There being the case that the edits or entries so need balance, whether negative or positive. But putting a spin or comment by other parties should be removed and placed in other articles's subsections such as Criticism.
2) Entries which include the Russian investigation should go to the other timeline and this is to avoid duplication. To place an entry about a meeting that took place before the administration took place, is just extraneous info.
a) Unwarranted claims like stating other editors are painting Trump like a statesman?
b) Well regarding the summaries, if you do the same to 100% of your edits, then you will set a good example to all other editors. Otherwise its a 50/50 situation.F2Milk (talk) 15:56, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thanks again for your efforts, F2Milk
1) Please see the notes below on duplication. I hope this is the last time we have to hear about the demerits of duplication.
2) Please see the notes below on duplication. I hope this is the last time we have to hear about the demerits of duplication.
a) I am terribly sorry, but I can't engage with a leading rhetorical question since I don't know in which direction you are pointing. If you have a point to make, please do make it directly.
b) I'm not sure what point you are making here: edit summaries are not always required when altering articles. It depends on the context. However as general rule, I prefer to give edit summaries when making isolated significant changes, or concerning contentious matters. It is quite clear looking at your edit history that you prefer not to give edit summaries, or to make multiple changes to the work of other editors in a single edit without specifying those changes in the summary; a practice which is not encouraged by the Wikipedia guidelines. Cpaaoi (talk) 16:21, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

I think it's definitely appropriate (on occasion, and with care) to mention major reactions to Trump/his administrations words and actions. And as I wrote below, duplication is no concern. Ethanbas (talk) 17:26, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Ethanbas, if that is the case we need to find all the positive reactions to balance out the negative reactions. Are you alright with that or just agreeing for the sake of agreeing?F2Milk (talk) 01:40, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
I think reactions to Trump's statements should only be mentioned when exceptionally prominent, and we should wait a few days until a clear picture of the volume and tone of reactions emerges. For example, reactions to his stance on North Korea were initially panicky, then turned bland as Kim Jong-Un backed off his threat to Guam → no need to mention them. Reactions to his dismissal of James Comey have turned into their own political affair, so they must be included, whereas reactions to the dismissal of Sally Yates fizzled out to nothing. For reactions to Charlottesville, commenters are currently in full drama mode, so it's to soon to make sober edits. — JFG talk 05:58, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
I disagree with including the reactions to Trump's statements. There is a proper place to put them and they should go to the Criticism sections of the said articles or the main Presidency article. To include all reactions whether prominent or not will just have bias or WP:POV unless we include all reactions whether positive or negative to his statements. There is plenty of reaction posts to the following articles such as Dismissal of James Comey or Dismissal of Sally Yates.F2Milk (talk) 08:17, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Russian investigation

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To avoid lots of duplication on the Russian interference and hacking and the following special counsel investigation, all information to that regard should be moved to the following articles. Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections, Special Counsel investigation (2017–present). Any erroneous news reports about meetings or events take took place before the presidency should not be added to the presidency timeline.F2Milk (talk) 07:32, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

1) I spy a logical fallacy, F2Milk. "To avoid lots", "all" information should be excluded? No-one is talking about "lots". The inclusion of some does not have to mean "lots". This is your invention.
2) The Russian investigation is not off-limits for this timeline. A federal investigation of an administration and that administration's activity in regard of that investigation may be pertinent to an article about that administration.
3) You are quite right to say that erroneous information ought to be excluded. That goes for any page on Wikipedia, and does not need saying here. But if we are to talk about basic procedure, it is as well to recall that omission may amount to falsification.
4) Let me also add that although I am always willing to assume good faith of any editor, I want to register my concern over the long-term pattern of your edits on this timeline. There has been repeated verifiable misrepresentation of sources and events, and a process of constant adjustment of other editors' contributions to *reduce* and *blur* any events that cast President Trump in anything other than a positive light - in striking contrast to a tendency toward *excessive* and *precise* detail about Trump's daily roundtable discussions and telephone calls.
There have also been repeated claims from yourself that certain information does not belong in this article, with no arguments yet detailing the specific irrelevancies. Moreover, these only ever seem to concern matters which make President Trump appear to be anything less than a great statesman. I don't see this activity from other editors, and I am not going to accuse anybody of anything today - but there is a noticeable pattern.
I have no particular desire to quote guidelines at other editors and I don't make a habit of it, but, particularly in light of your latest unwarranted adjustment to my edit concerning the resignation of six business leaders over Trump's refusal to condemn the KKK and neo-Nazis as immediately and completely as he condemns other people without evidence - turning it into a vague and weasel-word entry - I feel I must draw your attention to the WP:NOT guidelines. All the best. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:40, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Let address your points bit by bit:
1) If you have any issue with pronouns such as "lots", maybe I can change it to fit something which you are comfortable with such as an "increasing amount of edits" or "great deal of information". This is not sarcasm, no pun intended. No one is inventing things as you are imagining.
2) The Russian investigation deals with what is happening during the election process and the current investigation. That information is better served to be placed in the Timeline of Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections, Special Counsel investigation (2017–present). The edit which you posted is a report from a newspaper or media organisation(NYT) on an event which took place before the presidency started. So that bit of information should go to the those articles which I stated before, mentioning duplication being the reason.
3) Erroneous bits of information like I mentioned should not be included in this timeline. In no way is there any falsification as you suggested or assumed. There are plenty of resources or references from different news media which entries of this timeline are backed. To assumed otherwise is pushing WP:POV argument when there is none.
4) Any misrepresentation of sources is what you make of it. I can also say there has been a noticeable pattern by yourself to add information focusing on the negative whereby the rules states that this is not WP:SOAP. I am just adjusting some of wordings in the WP:NPOV way. There is a pattern by the media to take what Trump says literally and then make assumptions and create their own narrative or opinion pieces. I repeat again I am not painting Trump as a great statesman which you are assuming. The man has his own faults and this has been reported in his own article. There have been plenty of edits which I have included such as events that have been attended or officiated by other members of the Trump administration and these are things that happen during the presidency.
Hope that addresses some of the issues which you mentioned.F2Milk (talk) 14:16, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Many thanks for the reply:
1) As I am sure you understand, here I was making no point about your choice of vocabulary. I was, and am, demonstrating the falsity of your claim that there are unnamed editors who are either requesting that the timeline be filled with criticism of Trump, or have filled the timeline with such.
2a) The New York Times entry you mention legitimately describes a notable event in the Trump presidency. All such meetings were denied by all members of the administration prior to that point. Remarkably, Trump has continued to deny that he and his people met with Russians, despite Trump Jr himself demonstrating that this was, in fact, the case. Moreover, the statement issued characterizing this meeting (quickly shown to be misleading) was dictated by the President himself, aboard Air Force One, despite his denials of all knowledge of this meeting or having attended this meeting. This remains perfectly legimitate material for this article.
2b) You claim to have a noble objection to "duplication" of information. This must not become a case of 'whataboutism', but it is clear that you are keen to include lots of information about:
* Trump's domestic trips (for which there exists a specific page),
* Trump's international trips (for which there exists a specific page)
* Trump's appointments (for which there exists a specific page)
* Trump's executive actions (for which there exists a specific page)
* Trump's foreign policy (for which there exists a specific page)
You will need to demonstrate what it is that makes all criticism of Trump by his seniors, his peers and his appointees eligible only for a dedicated page, and ineligible for any mention in a general timeline of his presidency. It is my belief that this is fatal to your argument about duplication.
3) Once again, you have accused me of pushing a particular point of view, when it is quite clear that this is not the case. I am not going to accuse you likewise, but I will take a most recent example of your activity here:
On the 16th of August, I wrote:
"The CEOs of Merck, Intel and Under Armour resign from the American Manufacturing Council in protest at President Trump's response to the Charlottesville rally."
A few hours later, with no edit summary indicating the change, you turned this to:
"The CEOs of Merck, Intel and Under Armour resign from the American Manufacturing Council in protest at President Trump's remarks regarding the violence at the Charlottesville rally."
This was a clear falsification of the facts. Nobody resigned from the president's council over his condemnation of violence; that would be an absurdity. They resigned specifically because of his failure to condemn outright the Nazis carrying swastikas and rifles in the streets, shouting "Hail Trump", and talking about "Jews" and "gassing" (all captured on film, photograph and testimony). Hence the advisable use of the word 'response', and not the word 'remarks', for it is clear that the protest was not about what he said, but about how he said what he said, and what he refused to say. I am not convinced by your repeated accusations about the pushing of particular points of view. The reasons given for the resignations were not reasons given by me; they were included by me on this timeline since they were given by (previous) members of Trump's team, and as such are wholly notable and legitimate for inclusion in this timeline.
4) I disagree with the relativist position you are taking. There has been no attempt by myself to include only negative information. A careful observation of the edit history of the three pages of the timeline will demonstrate this. There has admittedly been less of the positive developments added by myself lately, since you have taken it upon yourself to do this in recent months. You will notice that I took a hiatus from making any significant edits to this timeline for the weeks following Trump's visit to Paris. I was interested to see, following a number of contentious edits, exactly how F2Milk wants the timeline to appear. Indeed, my hypothesis was proven correct: there was a very definite slant towards long descriptions of Trump's mostly meaningless talking-shops and phonecalls, with no mention of his undisclosed meeting with Putin at the G20, no detail on the Scaramucci episode, no mention of his 'hilarious' joke about police brutality (can one imagine Reagan making such remarks? - no, and this is why it is relevant for this timeline, because it is directly informative about the specific and unique nature of this administration), no mention of the formal apology for his speech to the Scouts, no mention at all of the dramatic failure in the Senate of his central policy concerning the Affordable Care Act - and no mention at all of the single piece of major legislation which Trump has yet signed: a Congressional bill preventing him from doing a personal deal with Putin on sanctions, which Trump hated and signed behind closed doors (when he otherwise rolls out the cameras even for the signing of memos and the re-naming of libraries, etc) with a delay of about a week (when he had even tweeted that he was sitting with 'pen in hand' in the Oval Office ready for Mitch McConnell's ACA bill). All of this: highly remarkable and significant, regardless of whether a person is a crazy Bernie fan or a Charlottesville Nazi, or anywhere in between.
I want nothing other than a timeline which takes in the general and overall drift of this presidency, good and bad, important and less-important. I remain waiting for specific arguments in justification a) for your chosen approach to this timeline and b) for your repeated antipathy towards mine. Cpaaoi (talk) 16:07, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

I think I am with Cpaaoi here. The information he's included on the timeline is appropriate IMO, and it's definitely allowed to put major Russia investigation events in the presidential timeline. Ethanbas (talk) 17:23, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Cpaaoi, like I said before there is duplication in the information pertaining to the Russian investigation entries. I have also pointed out that many of your edits are responses to Trump's tweets, speeches and actions. I have stated again if we were to include all the negative reactions, we should include the positive ones as well. So removing these individual responses is the best solution.
Regarding editing your entries, a few tweaks is not going to destroy or falsify the messaging or entry. Like the assertion that Trump's failure to condemn the Nazis or the alt-right is a media narrative. That statement is false and is putting a false narrative. The reaction and resignations of members of the American Manufacturing Council is due to his condemnation of both sides of the rally, and in no uncertain terms the not so strong condemnation of the right or Nazis or KKK whichever way you look at it.
"The CEOs of Merck, Intel and Under Armour resign from the American Manufacturing Council in protest at President Trump's remarks regarding the violence at the Charlottesville rally." - Since when did Trump not remark on the violence at the Charlottesville rally? He made those remarks and the CEOs resign in protest. Your making assumptions on their resignations here.
You are a major contributor to both the Russian investigation timelines and the current Presidential timeline. No one told you to leave for a week. I don't take no issue of your edits exact towards the duplication of the entries for both timelines which I have mentioned. The only issue is that you continually delete and leave a lot of posts without context, sometimes to fit with a certain narrative.
You mean that all those talking shops and phonecalls were meaninigless? These are events that took place during the presidency. Aren't they more deserving of being put in this timeline than a entry about the Russian investigation (which is a duplication from the Russian investigation timeline) That really reveals your bias.
List of international presidential trips made by Donald Trump - I would rather move all the international trips here, but what about Mike Pence or Rex Tillerson's trips? Plus there is no context on what the international trips are about? List of presidential trips made by Donald Trump - or the local trips. Many entries without context or the speeches he made during the local trips.
That being said I wish this timeline to have a proper balance. F2Milk (talk) 23:12, 16 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

For what it's worth, I see no problem in duplicating information. This timeline serves as a daily chronicle of the presidency, and events should not be excluded arbitrarily, because readers can't guess that they should read the "trips" page to learn about a speech made during a trip. But whatever we list here, let's keep it short: just the facts, no speculation, judgment, inferences or commentary. — JFG talk 06:01, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

That's fine regarding the Russian investigation. As long as we remove all the responses by individuals or organizations to the White House's events, Trump's tweets and speeches. Those should go to the articles under the Criticism sections of those articles.F2Milk (talk) 08:10, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Most articles should not include a WP:CRITICISM section; best practice is to embed reactions, positive and negative, in context. — JFG talk 09:37, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
F2Milk:
1) I disagree with your claim that a few "tweaks" may not falsify a statement.
2) I disagree with your claim that the protests from the AMC were due to Trump condemning violence. As previously stated, that would be an absurdity.
3) No-one has claimed that Trump did not mention the violence at Charlottesville.
4) I did not claim that anyone told me to leave for a week.
5) I did not say that all of the phonecalls and discussions were meaningless: only that they were mostly meaningless, which is thus far verifiably true: none have yet led to any important legislation or agreement.
6) I have never claimed that the phonecalls and discussions ought not to be included in the timeline.
7) The matter of duplication has now been dealt with, and I cannot recognize further points about this, unless a new argument emerges.
8) I would disagree with any suggestion to remove Trump's international trips from this general timeline in favor of a specific page.
9) I do not agree with your suggestion to "remove all the responses by individuals or organizations to the White House's events". The White House does not exist in a bubble and while the timeline should not be overburdened with reviews of Trump's actions, good or bad, we cannot labor under the delusion that reaction from any quarter can never be an event in the lifetime of a presidency. Without wanting to get into hypotheticals: if Trump were to be censured by Congress, that would be an opinion on his presidency, yet deserving of inclusion here. If Trump were to solve the North Korean crisis and were to receive a twenty-minute standing ovation at the United Nations, that would also be an opinion on his presidency, yet deserving of mention here. To remove ourselves from hypotheticals: no president in history has given a speech to the Boy Scouts followed by a formal apology from the Scout executive. To pretend that this is not noteworthy in the land of Lincoln and JFK is insupportable. As one last note; I am afraid that I cannot keep pointing out that no-one has suggested including "all the negative reactions". That is the last time I will recognize this specific claim of yours. Many thanks Cpaaoi (talk) 10:13, 17 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
1) I disagree with the view that we should included responses by individuals or organizations to any of the White House events. These individuals or organizations are not part of the administration and as such their responses or actions are extraneous information. Any personal opinions by individuals are just their own opinions. We can look at the latest news for the media the last couple of months. There is so many editorials out there and news reports or interviews trying to get people's opinions on the actions of the administration or Trump's views/actions. This is why I will not include any standing ovations to any of Trump's speeches or praise of any of his actions. That can be put in the Reactions page of the main article. The same can happen with the negative reactions which should be transferred to the Criticism page or the main article.
2) Regarding the phone calls, many of them are to world leaders and deals with international diplomacy. If you want information that deals with important legislation or agreements I can look for phone calls by Trump to congressmen and Senators. Perhaps then we can have a proper balance.
3) Regarding the Russian investigation, posts should only include times when Congress subpoenas individuals in the administration to testify before Congress.
4) Trump did condemn the violence on both sides in the Charlottesville rally. The Alt-right and Alt-left to be exact. The resignation of the individuals in the American Manufacturing Council is he did not condemn the Alt-right more harshly. Pointing out in your assertion that a few tweaks are able to falsifying the statement, that is not true.
5) Most individual articles of World leaders includes a Criticism section. For Trump or some of these world leaders these sections are worded differently such as his Legal Affairs and Bankruptcies or Campaign Rhetoric.F2Milk (talk) 08:05, 18 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
1) This has already been dealt with. Sorry about that.
2) If you can find information on major legislation or international deals, then by all means - include it! Sadly, I think you may struggle, since there has been no major legislation or deals - except for the Russian sanctions bill which Trump did not want. We are all still waiting on the Mexico wall funding bill; the infrastructure plan; Dodd-Frank reform; Affordable Care Act repeal; its replacement with something "better" and "cheaper"; a special investigator into Hillary Clinton's affairs; peace in the Middle East; peace in Korea; improved relations with Moscow; any significant trade deal beyond specific commodities; tax reform; etc; etc; etc; etc; etc; etc; etc; etc.
3) I am not aware of any guidelines or consensus which could support this approach. By your rationale, if Mueller were to instruct the FBI to conduct an armed dawn raid at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue tomorrow, it would ineligible for mention here. Et cetera. Et cetera.
4)
a) I have never claimed Trump did not condemn the violence; I have even demonstrated this on the timeline. The 'alt-left' is a neologistic slur used by Trump, and has as yet no accepted definition. Moreover, it does not apply here. It is quite clear that the protestors against the Nazis in Charlottesville were not all anarchists and communists: they were clearly a range of people seated upon a wide spectrum all to the left of the fascists on display; many of whom may have moderate and even conservative views.
b) Once again, I deny your indefensible claim that 'tweaks' may not falsify a statement. See the old riddle: "Charles the First walked and talked half an hour after he was beheaded." The omission of a semi-colon (;) following "talked" changes the meaning of the sentence entirely; and this example is not even a question of vocabulary. I could be more specific, but it is hard in the face of generalized and non-specific complaints.
5) I don't know what point you are making here. It looks something like another repetition of your dismissed point about duplication (irony of ironies!), so I won't say more.
I rather feel as I am being taken round in circles here; I have seen no consensus or guidelines which support your unique demands, so in fact I will leave this discussion at this point. If and when you add anything below, based on what I have seen so far I think it is safe for me here merely to recommend that you re-read all of the above as many times as may be required.
As a final note, hopefully pointing in a more productive direction - I do wonder if there may be some misunderstanding on your part. It seems that you are really only interested in the actions and statements of the President and his immediate official associates, and their unique perspective on events. However, this timeline is a general timeline about the significant events occurring during Trump's presidency, with a special focus on the deeds specifically of Trump and his people, which either relate to Trump's presidency or which instruct the reader of its general character and perception in America and the world. If you really do think that a list of presidential actions and statements warrants special treatment, then might I suggest setting up a page for this? May I suggest Timeline of the official actions and statements of President Donald Trump? It clearly does not exist yet - but then there may be a reason for that. Good luck! Cpaaoi (talk) 16:39, 18 August 2017 (UTC)Reply
Let me try to clear some of the points which you mentioned.
1) Regarding the legislation part, we can include posts of Trump calling senators or congressman asking for their support on major legislation eg the repeal and replace of the Affordable Care Act. Regarding the funding of the Mexico border wall, Congress has already allocated funds for part of that wall. Let's wait on other pieces of legislation that he has promised that will come later this year or next. Are you in a hurry?
2) I am really sorry that you think Trump invented the term the Alt-left. If you believe the mainstream media and their narrative, you think all the counter protestors were Antifa or BLM. But there were a broad group of people on both sides who were protesting and counter-protesting. That is why Trump condemn the violence from both sides. Not everyone was causing the violence and that was what I meant regarding the condemnation of the violence on both sides.
3) Again you are being silly regarding the tweaking to falsify statements. See this statement: Mr A died due to cancer. Tweak: Mr A passed away due to cancer. Your complain here is not based on facts.
4) Let me put to rest the duplications argument. Some editors would like to put the Russian investigation timeline posts over her in the Presidency timeline. I have no problem with that. I only have an issue with events that happened before presidency timeline. The NYT article about the meeting should be moved to the Russian investigation timeline or Russian investigation article.
5) I am not in favour of introducing another timeline like you suggested. There are just too many timelines out there. We already have the election campaign timeline and the presidency timeline. That should be sufficient. The timeline should include more actions/events by the administration, not only about Trump's tweets like in the beginning of the timeline in Q1 and Q2. F2Milk (talk) 18:03, 18 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

I didn't say Trump invented the word. I said it is a neologistic slur with no accepted definition. We see much evidence of persons describing themselves as 'alt-right', along with a wealth of RS on the subject. We do not see the same for 'alt-left'. Please don't call me silly; that is a violation of the very WP:CIVIL guidelines which you yourself repeatedly cite. Your 'cancer' example well demonstrates that a 'tweak' may have a minor effect. But that is not the issue; the issue is that a 'tweak' may also have a minor effect or it may have a major effect. Mr A died due to cancer. Mr B died due to cancer. - A small 'tweak' (smaller even than your 'tweak'!), with a comprehensively transformative effect. The NYT entry is about the report, not the event. I am glad you are not going to create another timeline, but I fail to see how this timeline could be any more filled with "actions/events by the administration", when we have reams of information about such, even down to every inconsequential telephone conversation enjoyed by President Trump. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 22:04, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Any news outlet can report on a things. The main issue is that they reported on something or an event that happened outside the Q3 timeline. That is grounds for the report to be removed from the timeline and placed in a proper section - Russian interference (main article) or the timeline of the Russian interference. This has nothing to do with the current administration, this has more to do with the election. The actions / events organised by the administration has higher standing in a timeline of that the presidency then a report of a meeting that happened during the election. Diplomacy with world leaders is part of the presidency - so those phone conversations is just that. Any news outlet can say Trump did something in a past date (eg. 2001 or 2002) doesn't mean it should be included in this timeline.F2Milk (talk) 09:26, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Charlottesville

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I hope this is the correct place for this comment. The timeline events for Charlottesville and subsequent events seem to promote an affirmation of the President's view. A reference is linked to a Fox News editorial praising his equivocations, which were otherwise widely denounced. (Will there be an in-depth article on the Donald Trump page which shows the criticisms from both political parties, as well as journalists from both liberal and conservative publications?) My concern for now is just the link reference used in the Q3 timeline section, which may be misleading. Thank you. Criddic (talk) 07:10, 21 August 2017 (UTC)Reply

Repeated misleading edits

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The entry for September 5th concerning DACA has been the subject of repeated misleading reversions by F2Milk. I have noticed a strong pattern in this editor's contributions whereby statements are falsely placed in the mouths of subjects (see recent edits by F2Milk concerning conversations between Trump and the leaders of China and Kazakhstan, for example), or in which language is altered (usually under the given definition of a "tweak") - giving a false impression of events. F2Milk's version seems to prefer a) vagueness, when we have specific information the occupies scarcely more space and b) suggests that Sessions made comments at a briefing which he did not make. In short, F2Milk's version of events simply does not appear in the given sources, so this ought to be a simple matter. However, F2Milk appears intent on digging into a disruptive and indefensible position, so I am just starting the procedure here to get some clarification on what other editors think, before taking the matter through the arbitration process. Many thanks Cpaaoi (talk) 16:51, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • The DACA statements are correct as stated in the sources. I have shorten the edit while Cpaaoi continues to change it to his version. He changed it in the first place and continually reverts it to his version after I have changed it. He also states he can do this the whole day(reverting). Is that a habitual disruptor? F2Milk (talk) 17:05, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sorry; rhetorical questions are not a justification. The edit is not supported by the given sources. One source does not mention Jeff Session at all, and the other attributes to Sessions only some comments about the executive branch, employment and the rule of law. The sources do not say a) that Sessions confirms a 6-month amnesty, or that Sessions is placing an obligation on Congress. I don't know why F2Milk is trying to misrepresent the events in this way, or to make the statement more vague by removing specific dates, when we are treated elsewhere to masses of detail about Trump's endless telephone chit-chats, for example. Cpaaoi (talk) 17:20, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • It was stated that the DACA was rescinded. It was stated that new applications are suspended. It was stated that this was a six month period. It was stated that the the obligation was placed on Congress to fix or replace the program. The sources back this. I know you Cpaaoi love just putting up details about the Russian investigation which is your forte. But try to give a little here and there. I have not removed any of Cpaaoi's so called posts wholesale. F2Milk (talk) 17:26, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, F2Milk, but we cannot allow ourselves to become sidetracked by secondary issues. The edit in question is not backed by the sources. Include a source that supports your edit, and I will consent! All the best Cpaaoi (talk) 17:29, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I see that the edit has been reverted back once again by F2Milk. I am certain that this particular entry is not supported by the given sources - but I won't revert again right now; I'll wait to see what other think. Many thanks again Cpaaoi (talk) 17:37, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply


The edits are all supported by the sources. If you are adamant on the point about the issue of the executive branch taking the lead, I will just changed it to President Trump instructs the Jeff Sessions and Homeland Security. That is what I can give you The other parts are still correct.F2Milk (talk)
Sorry, but I am not here to negotiate on facts. Your version attributes statements to people which do not appear in the sources, and introduces vagueness where there are hard, short, simple facts. Cpaaoi (talk) 17:44, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I have already made the changes needed, including a new source to back it up. There is no vagueness as your are asserting. There changes are validated by the facts stated in the sources. F2Milk (talk) 17:49, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I still disagree - your third source mentions Sessions only a single time, and only to point out that Trump delegated him to announce the ending of the program. It makes no mention of Sessions talking about the six-month amnesty. It makes no mention of Sessions making any comment about Congress. And, overall, it does not support a policy of removing the specific date we have (5th March 2018) in favor of a mealy-mouthed "six month" period. But, as I say, I am not going to keep reverting it, I am going to be patient and see what other editors like Ethanbas think. All best Cpaaoi (talk) 17:56, 6 September 2017 (UTC)'Reply
Dept of Homeland Security gave a 6 month timeline or 'delay for current recipients'. The specific date is also for the same period. F2Milk (talk) 18:10, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Okay, F2Milk; let's start from the bottom and work from there. 1) Please quote here a line from your given sources that state that Jeff Sessions mentioned anything about Congress. (There is no need for commentary, a simple direct quotation will do.) Many thanks again Cpaaoi (talk) 21:35, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I notice you have placed a fourth reference on this entry now, F2Milk. I notice that this reference likewise does not contain information about Jeff Sessions saying anything about Congress in his briefing. I remaining waiting on a source which supports your version of events. A simple quotation will suffice. Many thanks! Cpaaoi (talk) 11:27, 7 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Have removed half of the citations for this entry, per WP:CITEKILL. None of them truly support your version of events in any case, and are thus doubly superfluous. As I say, a quotation from a single reliable source that Sessions said anything at all about Congress will satisfy me. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 11:38, 7 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, the citations were needed since you continually seems to believe your own assertions of what you believe to be true or not. The changes are fine as they are. Why you challenging or changing the posts or the timeline continually, is very confusing. 6 months is reported in most articles or sources, the specific date fits that timeline period. The sources report the onus is on Congress to come up with legislation to fix the problem. The sources say the program is to be rescinded, meaning no new applications will be accepted. F2Milk (talk) 14:38, 7 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
My dear F2Milk; at the risk of repeating myself: let's start from the bottom: please supply a single quotation from any of your given sources that Jeff Sessions mentioned anything about Congress. Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:59, 8 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am still waiting, F2Milk, for an indication of the passage(s) in your sources which demonstrate that Jeff Sessions made any mention of Congress at his briefing. Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:29, 9 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I see that no quotation is as yet forthcoming from you, F2Milk. I suspect this is because the source material does not support your characterization of the event. I shall put the question of Sessions mentioning Congress in a box to be re-opened later on. In the meantime, are you able to point to any specific passages in your given sources that Jeff Sessions confirmed at his briefing that existing DACA recipients would be unaffected for the following six months? As before, a simple quotation will satisfy me! Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 17:24, 10 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, you removed 2 references which stated to that effect. DACA recipients will be unaffected in the next 6 months - this is already confirmed by Homeland Security.F2Milk (talk) 09:14, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No commentary is required, F2Milk: a simple quotation from, or direction to a specific passage, in any reliable source showing that Sessions mentioned anything about DACA recipients being unaffected for 6 months in his briefing will prevent this matter being taken for arbitration. I suspect that I wait in vain! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:26, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Dispute will now be passed over for a third opinion. I remain unsatisfied that the given sources support F2Milk's characterization that Sessions said at his briefing of Sept 5th anything about Congress, or anything about the 6-month amnesty. My preferred version remains: "Attorney General Sessions announces at a special briefing that, at President Trump's order, the Department of Homeland Security will immediately cease to accept applications to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. It is confirmed that current DACA recipients will be unaffected until 5 March 2018. Trump later places the responsibility with Congress to fix or replace the program." Cpaaoi (talk) 19:40, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Re-open request for comment with specificity (Repeated misleading edits)

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Should it be stated in the entry for Sept 5th that Jeff Sessions at his briefing placed "responsibility with Congress to fix or replace the [DACA] program", when this is not stated in the given sources? Cpaaoi (talk) 02:19, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • Oppose inclusion - Unless a source can be provided which clearly and directly supports the statement. NickCT (talk) 10:09, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Exclude. Even with a reliable source stating this, it probably wouldn't be worthy of inclusion since this is a timeline article that should keep its bullet points extremely brief, in line with WP:SS. (I am not watching this page, so please ping me if you want my attention.) --Dr. Fleischman (talk) 20:38, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Oppose For the sake of clarity I'll reiterate here my position that given sources must explicitly support an edit. I consider that none of the sources provided by F2Milk at any time support their entry, and that F2Milk has not taken any of many opportunities to highlight specific passages which they allege do support their version of events. Cpaaoi (talk) 19:41, 20 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Include I have already put in a couple of references which were removed by Cpaaoi that back up the points or changes made. That is reason enough to keep the current changes.F2Milk (talk) 11:59, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I think you mean Include, F2Milk. Exclude would mean you agree with everyone above. The other sources you mention no more supported your edit than the currently existing ones; they were added by you subsequently in an attempt to obscure this fact, and were removed per WP:OVERCITE. You have been asked repeatedly to cite the specific passages in any source which support your version, and you have failed to do so once again. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:35, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I have amended it to Include. My reasons still are the same to include the information as they are.F2Milk (talk) 06:26, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
...and have missed yet another opportunity to cite the specific passage(s) which support your version. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:41, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Oppose The brevity of a Timeline article is imperative in order to prevent this very thing. That the sources do not state what is claimed is secondary. ―Buster7  14:02, 21 September 2017 (UTC).Reply
  • Include - it's in the lead title for both cites, so need to say it, and it is in the USAToday cite and prominently reported but not as from Sessions initial announcement. So -- the line shown is misstating, fix it to be short and clear that Sessions announced the ending of DACA, and end the sentence. The 'responsibility' and 'six months' parts are a different sentence and different sources. That should not indicate Sessions as others also said it -- Sessions is just the initial announcement. Markbassett (talk) 03:27, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I agree that the Sessions announcement of the ending of DACA ought to be maintained. The issue is that the existing entry pretends that 1) Sessions went on to say anything about the 6-month amnesty, which is not given in the sources (it was later confirmed by the administration), and 2) that Sessions said anything about Congress, which is also not in the given sources (since that was said by Trump himself). Cpaaoi (talk) 15:40, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The entry should stay the same. There were other sources or references which were removed which stated to the effect.F2Milk (talk) 02:14, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
To repeat: the identification here of a specific passage from a source which supports your version will close this RfC. Consider how little is required! Many thanks (again)! Cpaaoi (talk) 03:33, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
For the sake of clarity, here are the two existing sources provided by F2Milk:

And here are the two sources (which F2Milk refers to above) which were deleted under WP:OVERKILL following their addition by F2Milk when it was pointed out that their version of events misrepresented the source material:

If anyone can point to any specific passage in these sources (or any RS!) which details Jeff Sessions mentioning anything about Congress at his briefing, I would be much obliged. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 17:33, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Any passage at all, F2Milk. Many thanks. Cpaaoi (talk) 02:05, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Or if you have a different source which is not listed above which shows it, F2Milk? Thank again! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:13, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2017/09/05/trump-administration-ends-daca-with-6-month-delay.html - The headline which you gave stated 6 month period. F2Milk (talk) 17:36, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
That headline reads: "Trump administration ends DACA, with 6-month delay". It says nothing about Jeff Sessions or Congress. To repeat myself, any passage which specifies that Jeff Sessions said anything about Congress at his briefing will suffice. Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 18:50, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
You have mentioned the 6 month delay in the past. That follows the timeline given by the administration and Jeff Sessions to Congress. Congress has to enact legislation to address the the issue.F2Milk (talk) 10:32, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No commentary is necessary; just a simple quotation showing that Jeff Sessions mentioned anything about Congress at his briefing will do! Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:30, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The reports stated - 'President delegated the announcement about ending the program to Attorney General Jeff Sessions' and '6-month delay'. That is pretty much self explanatory. F2Milk (talk) 13:28, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Which 'reports' are you referring to? Cpaaoi (talk) 13:46, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The only source given above which mentions anything about "delegation" is the Washington Times. It states: "But in a possible sign of his conflicted views on the matter, the president delegated the announcement about ending the program to Attorney General Jeff Sessions". It doesn't say anything about Jeff Sessions mentioning Congress. As I say; any passage in a reliable source will do! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:23, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Then let's put in extra reference sources and break the timeline entry into 2 sentences. One entry for Jeff Sessions with two reference sources and one entry as a followup with the administration with two reference sources. Is that a fair compromise? The points raised such as - The 6 month delay is still applicable and the DACA program is rescinded.F2Milk (talk) 12:12, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am not looking for compromise, I am looking for the truth. Please show me a specific passage in a reliable source which shows that Jeff Sessions mentioned Congress at his briefing. No discussion is required on this point; a quotation will do. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:32, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
A compromise is a fair assessment of the situation. We can put the first sentence reporting on the rescinding of the DACA program by Sessions and the 6 month delay, with two references. The second sentence will talk about the onus to Congress to come up with legislation to deal with DACA by the administration in the next 6 months.F2Milk (talk) 09:18, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Looking at the above, I believe the real reason that still no source has been provided for Jeff Sessions mentioning anything about Congress is because he did not do so. For lo! - it was Mr Trump who made the suggestion that DACA might have a future, to the horror of his political base. And this has been a transparent attempt to whitewash that fact. Cpaaoi (talk) 23:52, 19 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Unreliable sources

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I said nothing about the Daily Mail, and that is not pertinent.

The Straits Times is listed as a potentially unreliable source by Wikipedia, along with Sputnik and other sources you rely upon. Wikipedia:Potentially unreliable sources Many thanks Cpaaoi (talk) 16:56, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply


moved from my page:

== Straits Times ==
To assert that the Straits Times is a potential unreliable source, without much evidence is being disingenuous. Anyone can call them a propaganda piece. Its a wonder that many of the news outlets you quote regarding the Russian investigation aren't call potential unreliable sources as well. There are many news outlets that are unreliable too and it cuts both ways. I will include these references, unless they are blacklisted. F2Milk (talk) 17:01, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am not saying anything. It is Wikipedia which has these sources listed as unreliable. I you have an issue with any given source, please do make your case with Wikipedia and get it added to the unreliability list. Good luck! Cpaaoi (talk) 17:09, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
There is always 2 sides of the coin. Anyone can edit and list these news outlets as unreliable sources. It is always suspect with listing something as 'potentially unreliable'. Many of the sources which you reference in regards to the Russian investigation depend on unnamed sources too. Until there is a consensus to blacklist that news outlet, these references will stay for the time being.F2Milk (talk) 17:44, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am not talking about blacklists, and there is not always two sides. I have asked you if you are aware that some of the sources you use are regarded by Wikipedia as suspect. As with all our charming prior conversations, if you have any specific complaints, please do make them explicitly, and not in the form of generalized cryptic statements. Many thanks again Cpaaoi (talk) 17:50, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The issue about blacklists are pertinent here. Only if there is a general consensus for news sources to be blacklisted(eg. Daily Mail), then they should be removed. Otherwise these sources which you listed should stay.F2Milk (talk) 17:54, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I have not raised the issue of blacklists, nor of removing any of these references. I am talking about Wikipedia's list of unreliable sources. I have noticed only that you sometimes rely on these for this Trump timeline, and wanted to ensure that you are aware that although many of these sources may be used, the Wikipedia community treats them as suspect. Cpaaoi (talk) 18:00, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Irregardless of whether you think these sources are suspect, they haven't been blacklisted. It is also the same if you reference new sources which quote unnamed sources. So these references / sources stay where they are until there is a consensus to remove them.F2Milk (talk) 18:04, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Once again, we have a pattern of ignoring what has been said, and repetitively making the same point over and over, as if by virtue of repetition it becomes true. It is not a matter of what I think is suspect: it is a list of unreliable sources produced by Wikipedia. Once again, no-one has mentioned 'blacklisting' - if you could direct me to a Wikipedia page of blacklisted sources, I would be much obliged. I have not suggested removing any of these sources; I only wanted to ensure that you are aware that Wikipedia (not I) looks on such sources with suspicion. My principal issue has been the repeated misrepresentation of sources both good and bad, for example: putting words into the mouths of people who did not say them, including myself. Cpaaoi (talk) 21:42, 6 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
For one thing, no one is ignoring what you have said. You believe what you want to believe. You just ignore the other side's point of view and come up with your own point of view. The list is suspect according to their own assertions. You might think it is not suspect. So there is your argument. Now regarding the blacklisting, you already know the situation with Daily Mail. That media source got blacklisted and anyone who adds Daily Mail to references has them removed asap. You can quote any list you want, but there is always an element of suspicion to fit your own narrative. There is right and wrong, good and bad, there is always two sides of the coin. To quote that an unreliable sources list, to back up your narrative and attack events that are reported by those sources is one of them.F2Milk (talk) 14:30, 7 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Referring to an official unreliable sources list is absolutely legitimate. I have no idea what you are trying to say here; sorry! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:02, 8 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, it is within reason why you brought up the issue of potential unreliable sources to fit with your narrative that some of the posts in the timeline should not be included. I brought up the issue with the blacklist to tell you why those sources irregardless of them being in an 'official' list should stay. TQ. F2Milk (talk) 09:41, 9 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
F2Milk, this is not my narrative; it is Wikipedia's narrative; please stop suggesting otherwise. Some sources are deemed reliable by Wikipedia, others are not. It is reasonable to point this out to people who are using sources deemed potentially unreliable by Wikipedia. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:28, 9 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, this is your narrative that these are unreliable sources. Anyone can add to these lists. In spite of what the list says these sources are also reporting the same reports as other news sources or regurgitating what others have said previously. So I am right to say that you can add these sources here until there is a consensus to completely blacklist them. People in the past have reported on sources such as the NYT and CNN, yet these are not on the unreliable sources list. Yet people still put these sources up for references.F2Milk (talk) 15:37, 10 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
F2Milk; this is not my narrative; it is Wikipedia's. The unreliable sources page may indeed be edited by anyone; and as such represents the consensus of the Wikipedia community, otherwise it would be a contentious page and much-altered. It would be an interesting experiment if you were to place CNN and the NYT on that list, in order to see how quickly they would be removed by the community; you are welcome to have a go. In the meantime, I shall keep using those sources for this page, and avoiding sources like the Straits Times and Sputnik until they are removed from that list. As I have repeatedly stated: not my narrative; but Wikipedia's. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 17:16, 10 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, anyway you explain it, it will always be your narrative. The unreliable sources page can be edited by anyone as you say. There are always 2 sides of the coin when it comes to consensus. There must be a agreement by all to have those sources listed in the reliable sources list. Nowadays its not consensus but by majority votes in most Wikipedia discussions. You see its always funny when you say it represents the consensus by the Wikipedia community, where consensus is sadly lacking. No one is going to remove the sources such as Straits Times and Sputnik, because that's debatable. Those sources are reporting on events, so there is no issue and will stay where they are. Do you also really believe your NYT article about the Trump JR meeting is 100% accurate? You see I still am going to challenge you on the JulyCpaaoi (talk) 14:22, 11 September 2017 (UTC) 9, 2016 meeting which you posted. That happened last year and did not happened in Q3 2017. So why is it there? Shouldn't that be removed?F2Milk (talk) 09:11, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Oh no, F2Milk - wrong, wrong and thrice wrong again! Wikipedia does not proceed by vote: please see WP:DEMOCRACY. And no; consensus derives from demonstrating that one side is lacking in substance; there may be two sides but it is wrong to assume thereby that both carry equal weight (unlike your well-used coin metaphor). NYT articles do not have to be 100% reliable in order to prove that sources like Sputnik are unreliable. As for July 9th; I think you mean July 8. And, no, the event listed did happen on the date specified - i.e. the date of the report's release, concerning a prior event. Until then, no-one had known about the Veselnitskaya meeting, and all hypotheses about such meetings had been repeatedly denied by President Trump and his campaign team as a conspiracy theory. So, the date is correct, and it remains a significant moment in the Trump presidential timeline, absolutely regardless of any questions about the man's innocence or guilt. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:22, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

-By the way, are you aware it emerged over the weekend that Sputnik is now under FBI investigation, allegedly due to being a propaganda arm of the Kremlin? Not, then, only Wikipedia's "narrative", but also possibly part of a US intelligence services "narrative". Two sides to every coin, indeed! All the best, as ever, F2Milk! Cpaaoi (talk) 17:48, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Cpaaoi, I understand you are defending Wikipedia but that is the current situation Wikipedia is in. Wikipedia is not a democracy, but most admins succumb after seeing the number of votes on issues and let the majority YES people have their way and that's how it is. To assume that the list in the unreliable sources list is final or the end all is not the case. It can be changed and list is fluid. You can also assume that most of the media organizations in the US like CNN and NYT are in the cahoots with the DNC during the election, yet we still quote them. So that narrative that Sputnik is suspect because of an FBI investigation is just that. Nearly every foreign news organisation is suspect, just is like very main stream media organisation. In the end we shouldn't care much about their bias or politics unless they are reporting their own opinions. But they aren't, they are just reporting on current events, thus that is it should be fine. So the current consensus on blacklisting the Daily Mail is fitting example. Until there is a consensus to blacklist Sputnik, then I don't see a problem. Now regarding the NYT report on the meeting is just that - an event that happened before the Trump presidency, which should go to your Russian interference timeline. We are just reporting on events that happened during the presidency. The NYT report in the meeting is part of the interference narrative or current investigation.F2Milk (talk) 10:29, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I agree with very little of what you say, and it clearly shows conspiracy theory tendencies, for which I cannot provide a cure, I am afraid. As matters of detail, however; you keep saying that the Daily Mail is blacklisted - that's not true either; it may be used to demonstrate the opinion of its contributors, for example. Nope, the NYT report emerged during the presidency, on the given date. That it referred to an earlier event is immaterial: the report was the one of the more significant moments at which it began to become confirmed that the Trump campaign had been lying about having nothing to do with Russians (and continue to lie: even on the very day of Manafort's testimony to the Senate about the Veselnitskaya meeting, Trump stated that none of his people (quote) "saw anybody from Russia"!) So, no - the NYT's July 2017 revelation of repeated, proven, high-profile lying by the occupant of the White House and his folks remains a significant event for the Trump Presidency. This is not a partisan issue, it's just a fact of political history now. Sorry about that. Based on the foregoing, I have to assume that you will keep asking me to dismantle the same weak point over and over, so I shan't keep repeating myself. Cpaaoi (talk) 03:24, 13 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes we can have disagreements. There is no conspiracy tendencies like you say. Its always the case of Wikipedia admins siding with the majority in most cases. The Daily Mail has been blacklisted, I have noticed in many articles which has the Daily Mail as a source get the reference removed. Though I might disagree with that, even though the Daily Mail is just repeating what other news organisations are reporting. Now in regards to the NYT article post, events that happened before the presidency begins should be placed in the a different timeline. That Russian interference timeline encompasses the many months before the presidency starts. So your NYT article post about the meeting should go there. This is just a reporting by a news organisation on what may or may not have happened. So this argument stating that the event is pertinent to the timeline is not only wrong but POV pushing. I mentioned duplication in the beginning to get the post removed. I am partially correct in that regard. Also now this meeting happened in a different time period, which gives me a bit more ammunition in my argument to get it remove. F2Milk (talk) 05:25, 14 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Nope, the Mail is not "blacklisted"; we just don't use it as an authority. Nope again; vaguely accusing people of being "in cahoots" (without evidence) is by definition conspiratorial thinking. And nope, the NYT entry is not about the event; it is about the report. And it is anti-POV. And it stays. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 12:49, 15 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Since when is the Daily Mail not blacklisted? Many editors have removed the posts which are sourced from the Daily Mail reference. Isn't that a blacklisting? The NYT article should be removed because of the reasons I mentioned. One, its a duplication of the Russian interference timeline. Two, its about an event that happened during before the presidency. Three, its pushing a POV narrative. The lawyer in the report denied denied working for the Russian authorities or offering any incriminating information to the Trump campaign. That is all the more reason to relocate the information to the Russian interference timeline.F2Milk (talk) 17:24, 16 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No, the Mail is not blacklisted; we just don't use it as an authority. Please stop repeating this. In any case, the original point was about your use of the Straits Times and Sputnik (which is under FBI investigation as a propaganda unit).
The issue of duplication has already been settled in previous discussions with other editors. Almost everything on the entire timeline is duplicated on other pages. Please stop repeating this.
Again, the NYT entry is not about the event, it is about the report. And again, it is not POV; it is a fact of political history. Please stop repeating this. Furthermore, the entry says nothing about the authorities or incriminating information.
If you are really that concerned, F2Milk, about alien material leaching into the timeline, why have you made a special and dedicated effort to retrospectively include Robert Mueller's (lack of) comment on the 12th of September? Not only is it not an action of the presidency, but it was not even an action at all! If we are going to include entries about things that are not said, then would you say that we should make more of an issue on this timeline about the things that Trump does not do and say also? Like, for example, his delay in condemning Nazis and the Klan after Charlottesville because he 'needed to get all the facts' (despite being quickly onto Twitter whenever there is trouble he believes to be instigated by a non-white person - viz recent terror attacks in Europe). No? I thought not, F2Milk. The fact of the Trump administration handing over documents here is an official act of the presidency and certainly belongs here. Mueller's (lack of) response surely belongs on Mueller's page (if anywhere)? And you don't have an issue, F2Milk, with your own entry about Nazarbayev promoting Kremlin interests on the 1st of September? Surely this belongs on the Nazarbayev page, F2Milk? And what of the North Korean statement on the 8th of August, F2Milk? Surely you should be pressing for that to be moved to the North Korea page? Of course I do not necessarily support moving or deleting any of these items (which I did not write). But it is intriguing that F2Milk has not taken issue with any of these (and more) in his/her noble quest to clean up Wikipedia! What could be the reason for this double standard? What reason, indeed! Any thoughts, F2Milk? If you really wish to continue (and continue and continue) to make accusations about what you call 'POV-pushing', perhaps we could take a closer look at F2Milk's edit history. What do you say, F2Milk? Might there be anything to be learned there?
* I suppose what I am really asking is: why are other editors required to conform to rules invented by F2Milk - rules which F2Milk themself does not follow? Cpaaoi (talk) 19:47, 17 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Cpaaoi, sorry but the Daily Mail is blacklisted no matter how you describe it. Editors have remove references to it and replaced it with other sources. The usage of the Straits Times and Sputnik so far do not hold any extra scrutiny compared to the Daily Mail. They are just reporting on events and that is why they can be included in the timeline as reference sources. They are not reporting opinion pieces and thus giving the reason of the FBI investigation of Sputnik as a propaganda unit is not a valid argument. Other countries like in the Middle East and Singapore have called CNN, The Economists as American propaganda units. So that doesn't hold any water in your argument here.
The duplication argument is part and parcel why you should remove the alleged Russian interference bit regarding that NYT meeting. They should be move since you say that it is a part of political history. It should be moved to an election article or the timeline about the Russian interference. This is an event that happened way before the presidency began. If on a particular date on December, 2017 the Washington Post or some other media outlet reports that Trump said some crass things in 2016, do we include that in the timeline?
Mueller is conducting his own investigation into the allege Russian interference, and that by itself has its own Wiki article. That information is also pretty much covered in the Russian interference timeline which you are diligently updating every other day. Have you also included the Russian lawyer's version of events and her explanation? Or are you just reporting what only the NYT is reporting?
The report on the phone call between Kazakh President and Trump is just that and other conversations with world leaders are events that happened during the timeline of the presidency. To equate these conversations to an event(apartment meeting) that happened outside this timeline is laughable.
No one is cleaning up Wikipedia as you are insinuating. The issue is that you keep nitpicking on the events such as phone calls with world leaders while giving extra weight to the Russian interference storyline. So Cpaaoi, I didn't invent any new rules here. F2Milk (talk) 18:46, 18 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Show me the blacklist.
By all means, keep reading Sputnik and the Straits Times. And by all means, keep using them here. Just remember to describe their contents carefully next time, and don't put Nazarbayev's press statement into the mouth of Donald Trump, like you did. (Similarly to your curious placing of a Trump tweet into the mouth of Jeff Sessions at a formal briefing - please don't think that the reason I have refused to be drawn into an edit war about it means that I have forgotten; it will be corrected eventually!)
Your duplication "argument" has been dismissed - by consensus.
Veselnitskaya's claims are not relevant. The report demonstrating Trump's dishonesty is relevant.
The NYT entry is not about the event, but about the report.
Nazarbayev is not part of the Trump administration.
You do have your own invented rules. Your rule on duplication is an invention. Which you have just repeated.
The word Russia appears in no more than ten entries on the Q3 timeline page, and Mueller appears only once. Most of these entries refer to trips, actions and statements made by Trump and his people. For a matter which is featured on the Trump presidency sidebar, the content on the multiple ongoing investigations into Trump's team seems remarkably thin here. On the contrary, I believe that the multitude of entries along the lines of "Trump phones dictator, calls for free marshmallows for everyone" is much more of a concern, being in violation of Wikipedia's guidelines on triviality, giving undue weight to events which are mostly of no consequence. See WP:NOTNEWS if you are unsure.
And you haven't answered the question why something not said by someone not in the administration has been worthy of inclusion here by you, F2Milk (viz Mueller's non-reaction on 12 Sept)? Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 20:52, 18 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The blacklist - Wikipedia bans Daily Mail as 'unreliable' source - Link
Your putting up the whole speech of Trump at the UN, instead of making it concise or brief or trying to decipher Trump's tweets, what does that say?
Since you admitted that the NYT is a report, it should be a report. There is nothing to back that report, because its what the report says and what the individuals say. You are just making up something out nothing, putting credence to the report when there isn't any. Plus that report is stating that this event happened outside Q3 2017 timeline, which makes it all the more reason to remove it and place in the Russian interference timeline which is longer and takes place longer.
The lawyer's claims is relevant is you need to put her claims to rebut, as this would have 2 sides of the story and make this NPOV. (Did you put her claims in your Russian interference timeline?)
I have already mentioned about the duplication argument. Other editors have said they have no issue with duplication about entries in different articles. I will listen to their wisdom on this. This is not my rule, but common sense. Sometimes common sense gets thrown out of the window.
No one said Nazarbayev is part of the Trump administration. The phone call took place between the 2 leaders and that was what reported.
If we were to include everyone's comments about what the administration said, I would have to include everyone. Not only the negative comments but the positive. There are places to put these comments - Donald Trump's disclosures of classified information, Presidency of Donald TrumpF2Milk (talk) 11:57, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The source you cite (The Guardian) proves you wrong! The opening sentence says Wikipedia has banned "the Daily Mail as a source for the website in all but exceptional circumstances". Doesn't sound much like "blacklisting" to me, F2Milk! The article says it is "generally prohibited", which precisely fits my version, given above; and not yours, given above! To repeat myself *again*, I don't even know why we are talking about the Mail; it was you who brought it up. I don't read the Mail and I almost always avoid citing it on Wikipedia - it's just not an issue here. The issue was your use of publications which are similarly viewed with suspicion and, in the case of Sputnik, under FBI investigation as potential Russian propaganda outlets.
I did not put up the whole UN speech; yet another absolutist misrepresentation from F2Milk. Only the more remarkable points were included, such as the schoolyard name-calling, the dismantling of America's ability to broker future international deals by reneging on current deals, continued threats of a military intervention in Venezuela, and the continued drive for nuclear war in south-east Asia, along with Trump's accustomed humbug about "coming together".
I am not making something of nothing. Trump has made denials of any connection to Russia a feature of his presidency. The NYT report was the first hard indication that he and his people were provably lying. Whether the man is innocent or not, it will remain a landmark of his presidency. And, to repeat myself *yet again*, the entry is not about the date of the previously-denied Veselnitskaya meeting; it is about the date of the report, when Trump's mendacity was exposed.
But how are there two sides? Everyone has agreed (and testified) that the meeting occurred. I suppose some coins only have one side, F2Milk? Unless it could be that matters of fact are not multi-sided, like your favorite coin metaphor?
I am glad that you have decided to pack away your duplication "argument". I cannot, however, say that I will be much surprised if you bring it out again in the future, whatever the outcome of the ongoing RfC directly below. And as an aside, I don't accept that you have partaken of much of the "common sense" of others which you seem to attempting to co-opt for yourself with a commonplace statement like "sometimes common sense gets thrown out of the window". It is you who have been conducting the defenestrations.
I cannot deny that there were two people on the Trump-Nazarbayev call. I just found it intriguing that Nazarbayev's perspective was left alone as an isolated sentence here, instead of on his own page, while you continued to plead "irrelevance" and "duplication" about anything that might make President Trump look anything less than the very image of George Washington himself.
And I have no idea what you mean by your final line. My question was, why should something not said by someone not in the administration (Mueller 12th Sept) be included here by F2Milk who has long protested anything other than White House press-release material being included here? Are we to take it that F2Milk would be content to see included on the timeline Trump's refusal to say anything naughty about Russia assisting North Korea, when he is more than eager to repeatedly describe the leaders of the Chinese government 'failures' in this respect? All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 14:27, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It was reported its banned. The other word in the English language is blacklisted. So in any case many editors have removed edits which include Daily Mail as the reference source. Everyone looks at different news media sources with suspicion, including Sputnik, NYT and CNN. Other foreign governments looks at US organisations with suspicion and investigate them too. There needs to be a balance that not only US news sources or references are preeminent all news articles. So that FBI argument is not relevant here.
In regards to the UN speech, you included the descriptions of the North Korean leader, the Iranian government, the nuclear deal when a simple condemnation of all 3 should be sufficient. Just like you like to keep reiterating the topic of including trivia to the timeline.
I brought out the duplication argument in the beginning. That was already discussed at length with a couple of editors. I still have misgivings but will let that be. The other reasons I gave are important to remove the entry about the NYT reported meeting.
The date of the meeting which the report wrote about important. The report came out about an event that took place outside Q3 2017 in the Presidential timeline. Also you are implying something nefarious took place in the meeting, which the lawyer and Trump's team have denied to that effect. There are two sides to the meeting. Has there been an conclusion in the investigatin to this effect?
Yes, the call took place between the President and Nazabayez. To put Trump in the same pedestal as George Washington is silly. The entry is just reporting what was said during the phone conversation. Nothing else to that effect. You can look for other sources which will imply that the phone conversation took place and what was said.
The timeline is about the actions, speeches made by the administration in the Q1, Q2 and Q3. To include events outside the scope of the timeline just invites us to include things that happened many years back or decades back. We might as well include Trump's business dealing in the Middle East, Asia, etc and Trump University.
To make up assertions about information to include the Russia assisting North Korea and the Chinese government failures is detracting for the main argument here. The detractors or criticism of the administration is being reported many of the articles - Presidency of Donald Trump, the immigration executive orders, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals. To include every detractor, we must balance it with people supporting the administration's actions. That will leave the timeline 75% of people commenting on the administration's actions because every single person has his or her own opinion. F2Milk (talk) 06:54, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Okay - in order of (re)appearance: It wasn't. It isn't. I've already said this to you. They don't. What investigations? They aren't. It is. It isn't. I don't. You haven't. They're not. It isn't. The entry doesn't. I know. It isn't. It doesn't. Why? It isn't. So what? We mustn't. It won't. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 20:07, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I already pointed out this point before. Do these reports have confirmation by the administration or the investigative team or the Congressional team? Did they confirm that the documents were handed over to the investigative team? Or was it an unnamed source? Was that source reliable? This is paramount in order to make things as much accurate as possible.F2Milk (talk) 02:18, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Where is your authority for such requirements? And the meeting has been confirmed anyway. Cpaaoi (talk) 02:58, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Where is your information that something nefarious took place during the meeting that fit with the Russian interference narrative? Is the source reliable? So do you see that the posts is stating that the administration had something to hide? That this took place outside the current Q3 timeline? That this is not an action taken by the current administration?F2Milk (talk) 10:29, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The entry says nothing about 'nefariousness'. The NYT is regarded by the Wikipedia community as a reliable source. The event took place in summer 2017, during the Q3 timeline. Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:29, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes it is considered a reliable source by some of the Wikipedia community but not by all. The event reported during the Q3 timeline took place outside the Q3 timeline. Then it should be removed. I have mentioned a couple of points regarding this in the past.F2Milk (talk) 23:04, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Full agreement is not required, nor is it sought on Wikipedia; rather, we proceed by consensus. And the consensus is that the New York Times is a reliable source. It is not a profound insight that one or more contrarian(s) may always be found on a given subject. Sputnik, however, has been flagged on Wikipedia as an unreliable source in a way that The New York Times has not been. And the event happened in the summer of 2017, which places it within the timeline of the presidency. Thanks as always! Cpaaoi (talk) 00:30, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Please try to understand I am not putting down the NYT as a reliable source. But you seem to want to parade the NYT as an impeccable news media source. Please show me the consensus discussion that the New York Times is a reliable source and how that was derived. All news sources are suspect in most cases. If news outlets report on events happening then by all means include them in the timeline. There have been issues with retractions and that is why we look at things with a grain of salt. The event (NYT reported meeting) happened during the campaign, and that year is 2016. This is 2017 not 2016. This is Q3 2017. Unless you can state otherwise that entry should be removed. F2Milk (talk) 12:18, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The NYT is not infallible; it is reliable. The NYT has not been added to WP:PUS All news sources are not equally suspect. What retractions? The report was on 8 July 2017. Please see WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:30, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
To say the NYT is reliable, when not the case. Just remember they ran a couple of polls during the election which was suspect and they do write a lot of opinion pieces to run their own narrative. Just like many papers or media outlets in different countries. Reliability is sometimes in short supply in all news outlets. How many disclaimers do you think the NYT puts out in its history when they are found out to be wrong on a certain topic or issue they have reported on? F2Milk (talk) 09:15, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Re-open request for comment with specificity (Unreliable sources)

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Must the entry for July 8th concerning the initial New York Times report on the Veselnitskaya/Trump Tower meeting be removed for the reason that it also appears on other pages? Or may it stay? Cpaaoi (talk) 02:22, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • Stay - Not aware of any provisions which say relevant content can't appear on two different articles. NickCT (talk) 10:12, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Stay (qualified). There is no policy or guideline basis for removing content just because it appears on another page. However the content in question may be removed for other reasons, such as it being out of scope. (I am not watching this page, so please ping me if you want my attention.) --[[User:|Dr. Fleischman]] (talk) 20:31, 19 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Stay For the sake of clarity, I'll reiterate my position that material cannot be excluded from a wikipage for the reason (repeatedly offered by F2Milk over many months) that the material appears on one or more other page(s). Cpaaoi (talk) 19:44, 20 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Strong Delete I have already stated that I have no issue with entries that entries that appear in two different timelines or duplication. That is just conflating the issue and making this to be another excuse to push some POV entries. The NYT article should be removed because the event took place outside the Q3 2017 of the Trump Presidency timeline or out of the scope (as mentioned by DrFleischman). The news article also brings up issue of accusations or things that might have happen or might not have happen. The woman in question has made denials working for the Russian authorities or offering any incriminating information to the Trump campaign. This is back up by the people who attended the meeting. Cpaaoi seems to always tries to include the Russian interference narrative throughout entire Q1, Q2 and Q3 timelines.F2Milk (talk) 11:42, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
(Let me add here, F2Milk, that Dr Fleischmann has not here advised to remove on grounds of irrelevancy (as you insinuate); only that the question of irrelevancy must be considered also. And it is being considered in another RfC on this page. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:54, 25 September 2017 (UTC))Reply
No, you keep repeating your issue with 'duplication', which is the issue brought up by this RfC. This is an RfC about your 'duplication' claim (made as recently as 18th Sept - see above). If you want to discuss relevance, that is another matter for another discussion. Please do not conflate the two. (I note that you have indeed now retracted your "duplication" point - but let it be recorded that F2Milk's retraction came days *after* this RfC was set up; F2Milk's characterization here clearly attempts to make it sound as if this RfC was unwarranted, despite months of "duplication" argumentation.)
I have also just gone through all three pages of the Trump timeline, F2Milk. Each 90-day period contains approximately a dozen or so mentions of the Russia issue, almost all of them actions or statements by the administration. And not all were added by me. If you have any problem with any specific entry, then be specific - and stop constantly repeating these vague and false accusations about foul play. Cpaaoi (talk) 23:19, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The issue with duplication is just a red herring. That was one of my original arguments to remove the entry about the NYT reported meeting. The other arguments is this is not part of the Presidential timeline, and happened before the presidency took place. Also this is pushing a POV narrative that something happened when the investigation to the Russian interference has not been concluded. There are numerous articles which are just opinion pieces which are also not statements or actions by the administration. Please don't lump all the entries about the Russian interference as gospel truth.F2Milk (talk) 06:24, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Your argument about duplication has been made by you repeatedly right up until the creation of this RfC, whereafter you immediately recanted. It is not a red herring, it is a matter which needs to be dealt with conclusively, because I am not satisfied that this will be the last we see of this hitherto unknown "rule". The issue of relevance is being dealt with in a separate RfC. Once again, the entry concerns the date of the report, not the event referred to. I don't know what you are referring to when you mention "numerous articles", "opinion pieces" and "gospel truth"; if you have specific problems, please do be specific. Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:48, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It may be that it appears in numerous articles, but I see no guidelines that indicate that the content of other pages may determine the content of a page in question WP:OSE. Many thanks! Cpaaoi (talk) 15:55, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Markbassett, thank you for setting the point straight. Apparently this duplication argument was discussed previously. Decided to let things remain untouched. But the other arguments to their removal holds sway.F2Milk (talk) 02:29, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No point has 'been set straight'. This RfC remains open. Cpaaoi (talk) 03:00, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Stay. Obviously it can be covered on multiple pages. If it seems to go into too much depth, then other pages can link to the main page to the topic; but it seems worth a mention. A timeline in particular is absolutely expected to briefly cover things that will also be on their own separate pages - that's part of the point of having one in the first place, since it organizes topics that may be covered elsewhere in one central timeline. --Aquillion (talk) 01:17, 25 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
All the more reason to remove the entry and put it in the main article. The duplication argument has been set straight. The argument here is about the timeline scope of the entry and that it happened before the presidency began.F2Milk (talk) 13:11, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Nothing has yet been "set straight". This RfC remains open. And this RfC is not about "scope"; it is about your duplication argument, which you claim to have dropped but which still leaves its shadow over the posts you have just added below.WP:OFFTOPIC. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:24, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
We currently have another Rfc talking about this issue (the NYT apartment meeting entry) This is why we should try to come up with just a list of points in one topic area.F2Milk (talk) 10:21, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The WP:RFC#Statement should be neutral and brief guidelines clearly indicate that RfCs should be kept to single, brief questions. Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:26, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sorry opening up multiple Rfcs on the same topic negates that argument. We should just close this section and move the discussion to the other Rfc. This is why you should have only 1 or 2 Rfcs with a list of points you wish to raise to avoid multiple and duplicate Rfcs. This is common sense.F2Milk (talk) 13:25, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
These RfCs deal with separate subjects. I propose we keep them open. You are right; one should have only 1 or 2 RfCs - but only if there are 1 or 2 issues to address! Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:45, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
There are 2 Rfcs talking about the NYT reported meeting. Just close 1 of them and continue the discussion in the other. All the more reason to use common sense to list down the issues in one topic area.F2Milk (talk) 23:04, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, but Wikipedia does not proceed by editors commanding other editors to do things; rather, it proceeds by consensus and guidelines. Commanding an editor to close an RfC would come clearly under WP:IDONTLIKEIT. There remain several issues at stake, and there will remain several RfCs until they have been discussed and resolved in full. It is true there are two RfCs mentioning the Veselnitskaya meeting; but they deal with two separate issues, one of which has now been resolved. The RfCs will remain open for the time being, according to standard Wikipedia guidelines. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 00:26, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am not commanding you or ordering you about. You seem very defensive. I have suggested we close one of the Rfcs and discuss this further in the other Rfc. This is why you should instead of trying to sound righteous, look at things with a bit more common sense. We can talk about the issues in one of the Rfcs. I have already recommended previously we should at least try to collate the issues and list them in one section. Not many people have the stamina like you to post many discussion topics one after another.F2Milk (talk) 12:04, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
You have no authority here to 'recommend' anything. You are here to make your argument; and your argument falls squarely under WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:34, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Since when can you command people not to recommend anything. I find this laughable when you think you have lost an argument and tell people they have no authority. So you only have the authority. That's great. Tell that to everyone else on this planet.F2Milk (talk) 09:11, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Problematic presentation of administration statements as fact

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The given source says "Trump has vowed to make infrastructure a priority". This is not the same thing as saying that infrastructure *is* a priority of the administration, hence my use of the word "avowed". F2Milk, you say there is no difference between what is said, and what is the case. But there is a difference. It is misleading to state that infrastructure simply *is* a priority for the administration simply because Trump and the White House *say* it is. Once again, your version is not supported by the given source. I have little doubt that you will revert the change (please see WP:EDITWAR), so I will, as with the issue above, leave it and ask instead for direction to the specific passage in a reliable source which states categorically that infrastructure is a priority for this administration, and not, for example, Muslim and Mexican immigration, drug abuse, transgender rights, ACA repeal or Russia (all of which have either been preoccupations of President Trump's tweets and speeches or have seen attempted action by his administration). The only voluntary movement in terms of infrastructure I can recall from this White House has been the cancellation of flood-risk regulations a couple of days prior to Hurricane Harvey. Incidentally, looking back through the edit history of the timeline, this approach of yours appears to be long-standing pattern, and I think we need some clarification here that statements by the administration are not facts by virtue of having been *said*. Cpaaoi (talk) 19:01, 11 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Yes. Trump said he has vowed to make infrastructure a priority. You can state its a priority. Its the same meaning. There is no need to put it as a top priority or an avowed priority. Priority by itself is a the same meaning. There is no need to fully describe what that priority is about. You already have that information the Trump Presidency page. There are always issues with you and the wordings in most of the timeline history. You seem to want to nitpick on everyone's post, when just a simple description would suffice. Isn't that POV pushing in most cases. F2Milk (talk) 20:43, 12 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It is not the case that what is said is equal to what is the case. And you are right that I have many, many issues with the phrasing of many, many of your contributions. And, no; that's not POV; it's a matter of removing POV. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 03:16, 13 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Disagree with you there. There you go again with the defending the removal of POV - what does that mean? How does adding avowed or promised priority add to the removal of POV? F2Milk (talk) 05:14, 14 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Defending the removal of POV means standing in defense of POV removal. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 12:43, 15 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
So how is removing an extra word in from of another denoting that word as POV? Does that make sense? F2Milk (talk) 17:20, 16 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It makes sense if that word is POV. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 16:54, 17 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thank you.F2Milk (talk) 13:23, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No; thank you! Cpaaoi (talk) 13:44, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Well, thank you anyway.F2Milk (talk) 23:00, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The gratitude is all mine. Cpaaoi (talk) 00:22, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Your gratitude is flattering.F2Milk (talk) 12:01, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Veselnitskaya/Trump Tower-New York Times report

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The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The result was keep. Primefac (talk) 17:06, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

Must the 8th July 2017 New York Times report on the Veselnitska/Trump Tower meeting be removed because it refers to events from prior to the Trump inauguration? Cpaaoi (talk) 15:33, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

  • Keep Though referring to a 2016 campaign event, this entry is about the moment at which the meeting was revealed (July 2017, during the administration) and which has led to widespread public debate and to administration testimony, during the administration. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:37, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Keep The July meeting has evolved into an important incident that effects the presidency. While it predates the inaugaration, it only came to light during this administration and is relevant to explain future developements. ―Buster7  17:09, 21 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Remove -- WP:OFFTOPIC as the line is about an article by a reporter, not about something done in the Presidency. Sort of like the article does not have a line for Harvey, just for the Presidential actions. Markbassett (talk) 03:02, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It is not at all "sort of like" Hurricane Harvey. A denied meeting with Russians in Trump Tower is not a natural phenomenon that derives from forces beyond the power of an administration. It is not clear why WP:OFFTOPIC has been cited: the report emerged during the Presidency; it concerns members of the current administration; denials were made by the President both before and after it had been confirmed, and it has led to formal testimony. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:45, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Strong Remove - This is an off topic entry in a article and is not part of the Q3 Presidency timeline. I have already mentioned I have no issue with duplication of entries with different timeline articles, but this entry goes beyond the scope of timeline. The event happened before the Presidency began. The woman in question has made denials working for the Russian authorities or offering any incriminating information to the Trump campaign. This entry should just be placed in the other Wiki articles which are reporting the Russian interference.F2Milk (talk) 06:17, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Again; unclear why this is 'off topic', when it directly concerns members of the Trump administration at a time when they are in power. The event did not happen prior to this Presidency; it happened in the summer of 2017. The question of whom Veselnitskaya works for is WP:OFFTOPIC. To say that "this entry should just be placed [elsewhere]" is not an argument or an appeal to guidelines. Please see WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:49, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Maintain They are two separate issues. Issue 1: should it be removed on grounds of duplication? Issue 2: should it be removed on grounds of relevance? Both shaky arguments have been made repeatedly by F2Milk on this entry and numerous other entries. Since all discussion has gone nowhere, I am looking for clarity on what the community thinks. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:33, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Abort - This is just an abuse of the Rfc process. The Rfcs that deals with the Russian interference or investigation should just be merged and Cpaaoi should understand that his arguments of including the Russian investigation entries are not correct and they should be moved to the main article: one- the dates are outside the scope of the timeline , two - they are not confirmed by the other parties that are mentioned in the reports. Furthermore I would like to add that Cpaaoi of not being WP:CIVIL and doing a disservice to me by accusing me of an ulterior motive of using a single purpose accounts when I have already edited different timelines in the past. This is not right.F2Milk (talk) 02:12, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am within my rights to highlight F2Milk as a single-purpose account, for it is a single-purpose account. If other accounts exist - then those are other accounts! This is not an abuse of the RfC process. One RfC deals with your "duplication" argument - which you have now agreed to drop, which means that that RfC may shortly be closed anyway. And this RfC deals with exclusion on the basis of alleged anachronism. << duplication != anachronism = 2 RfCs >> And again we see more non-specific allegations of incivility; if you have a specific complaint to make, then please do be specific! But let's not change the subject (again). Many thanks! Cpaaoi (talk) 02:54, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I repeat that this is an abuse of the Rfc process. Just introduce 1 or 2 Rfcs will suffice. Just state the points you wish to raise in one area and then let everyone comment. If that is the case, if Cpaaoi wish to highlight me as a single purpose account, then I wish to highlight Cpaaoi as a WP:POV pusher on the Russian conspiracy. There are plenty of arguments here state that as a fact. Then we don't need to follow the WP:CIVIL rules here then, if that is the case. The NYT meeting post should be remove in its entirety. It should be covered in the other articles which I have mentioned in the past. F2Milk (talk) 13:08, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Repetition will not make an argument correct. 1 or 2 RfCs would suffice if there were 1 or 2 issues to clarify. WP:OFFTOPIC If you want to "highlight" me as a "POV-pusher" (O, immortal phrase!), you can do that, but please do that elsewhere, and please do cite your evidence (because you still haven't provided any despite many long centuries of asking). WP:OFFTOPIC And we do need to observe civility. WP:OFFTOPIC. The NYT report is already covered in other pages. That has no bearing on the content of this page. WP:OFFTOPIC Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 13:29, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
You see this event is not really significant. It just reporting on a meeting that happened before the presidency. There is a current investigation ongoing which so far has not revealed any thing that happened during the meeting. This special investigation is just that. So far this meeting is outside the scope of the timeline, outside the scope of the presidency. Should be removed. F2Milk (talk) 17:33, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Any potential outcome of any investigation is WP:OFFTOPIC. And it is not about the meeting WP:OFFTOPIC; it is about the report. Many thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 18:47, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
This is not off topic to discuss the investigation, because you are also butting into WP:BLP as some of these are reports on people involved in the investigation. The other parties mentioned in the article have denied some of the accusations brought up in the report. The entry is also outside the current article timeline. It is also outside the scope of the Presidential timeline. Not to mentioned the duplication argument. (if you wish to resurrect this again) F2Milk (talk) 10:18, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It is WP:OFFTOPIC, because the entry says nothing about any investigation. It is not in violation of WP:BLP: the persons at the meeting have all confirmed it. In fact, Donald Jr volunteered information about it. The entry is not outside the presidential timeline; it happened in summer 2017. And I am confused: I thought you had explicitly abandoned the argument about "duplication"? Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:25, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Your inferring something happened during that meeting that ties with the ongoing Russian interference storyline. So this is a violation of WP:BLP. Has the parties confirmed any nefarious happening during the meeting? Does the meeting have to deal with the presidency or the election timeline? This happened before the presidency began, even though the article reported on it during this timeline. So it is correct to say that this event happened outside the presidency timeline and should be removed to that main article. Also this has nothing to do with the presidency. Is Donald Jr part of the president's team or administration? I have already abandoned the duplication argument, so that is over. But if you keep bringing it up again or resurrecting it, then please be my guest.F2Milk (talk) 13:21, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Which specific BLP guideline do consider to have been contravened? The entry says nothing about nefariousness. Yes it does have to do with the timeline. It happened in summer 2017, during the presidency. Jared Kushner was at the meeting, and he is part of the administration. I would be more than happy not to keep responding to your duplication argument. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 13:43, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • F2Milk - shall we agree here never again to mention your "duplication" argument, in light of the facts you have now dropped it, I don't like talking about it, and it has found no support in these RfCs or Wikipedia guidelines? Cpaaoi (talk) 14:00, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I agree wholeheartedly on the duplication argument. This was discussed in the past to drop it, so we should drop it. Now in regards to the meeting, this was dealing with the election and not with the current administration. The meeting happened outside the timeline during the election. Yes, it was reported that the group wanted to find out things to help with their election advantage over the other party or candidate. They stated they did not get the information they wanted. This is more do deal with the election. How is that entry anything to do with the Presidential timeline? Jared Kushner is an advisor to the President. His position is to advise the president. Do you see how this entry is out of place and scope?F2Milk (talk) 22:59, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Well, that is fantastic news! I am glad we will no longer mention "duplication". I will not henceforth mention it (please ignore the comment about it below in reply, which was added before this note). If the issue of duplication is raised again, I will simply direct that part of the argument to this place on this page, where (and I shall put it in bold, so that it is easy to see) we here agree never to mention the duplication point again.
As for the NYT entry; I still don't understand what you mean by it happening outside the timeline: it happened in summer 2017; and the inauguration was 20 January 2017, so it happened during the presidency. The entry says nothing about any "information they wanted". And you are correct; Jared Kushner is an advisor to the President. Cpaaoi (talk) 00:20, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
We have dropped the duplication argument and that's it. The meeting purpose was to dig information about the opposition during the election campaign. This by itself disqualifies the entry from being included in the current presidential timeline. Also the NYT times entry headline states - Trump Team Met With Lawyer Linked to Kremlin During Campaign. Now the key words here is During the Campaign. This is entry is more suited for an election timeline or the Russian interference article. It is just a meeting and doesn't infer that anything happened that ties with the Russian interference narrative. The event didn't happen during the summer of 2017, it happened in 2016. So I don't understand your confusion about this being outside the timeline scope and also this being outside the presidential timeline event scope.F2Milk (talk) 12:00, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The report was on the 8th of July 2017. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:24, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The event in the report took placed outside this timeline, not on the 8th of July. That is pertinent to the argument for its removal.F2Milk (talk) 09:09, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Request for comment on Trump timeline listing practices

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The following discussion is an archived record of a request for comment. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion. A summary of the conclusions reached follows.
The result was a mix between "remove" and "remove but create a footnote". Either way, the text should not be kept as a list in the body of the article. Primefac (talk) 17:08, 29 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

Trump timeline: should we condense this list of names on 19th Sept 2017 to something like "world leaders"? Cpaaoi (talk) 16:43, 22 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Comments

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  • Quotation of passage in question (entry for 19th Sept 2017):

"President Trump has a state and power luncheon meeting hosted by UN Secretary General António Guterres, seating on the same table with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe, Swiss President Doris Leuthard, Ecuadorian President Lenín Moreno, South Korean President Moon Jae-in, King Abdullah II of Jordan, Liberian President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaitė and Guinean President Alpha Conde." - quoted edit by F2Milk

  • Remove Unhelpful and distracting trivia. I hold the same opinion for many other similar entries by F2Milk, such as the needless specification of the names of Jewish holidays on September 15th, or press-release-style mission statements such as that appended to the White House Historical Association on September 14th. (I won't keep making these RfCs forever; I am currently looking for clarity about the community's opinion on F2Milk's overall approach to editing.) Cpaaoi (talk) 16:49, 22 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The UN speech would come under WP:OSE, if you are trying to tie the two directly together. If you want to raise that as a separate issue, then please do so. (But if I may add a note here: are you seriously suggesting that Trump's first speech to the UN deserves equal billing with a list of lunch-hall diners?) In the meantime; it does not need pointing out that the entry shows who attended the meeting - that is why this RfC was opened. It needs to be explained why it is not trivial. Many thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:30, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am fine with the edit or removal of the leaders's names in order to make the entry post concise. The Trump UN speech entry post can also be made more concise at the same time. TQ. F2Milk (talk) 02:27, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am glad to hear that some agreement may be beginning to be reached here on the removal/condensation of trivia. The next task, I suppose, will be determining whether things such as Trump's maiden speech to the United Nations count as trivia. Cpaaoi (talk) 03:02, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The details in the Trump maiden speech can be condense. Don't need to add the minor details of describing the North Korean leader as 'rocket man', etc. This is just an idea. F2Milk (talk) 13:01, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Let's stick to the question of the condensation and removal of trivial details about the lunch, F2Milk. WP:OFFTOPIC Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 13:31, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The lunch entry has already been condensed. I don't understand why Cpaaoi is bringing it up again. I suggest the speech should be condensed a bit - like putting a line like 'condemning the North Korean regime or leader' That is simple enough.F2Milk (talk) 17:29, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
It has not been condensed; it remains a list of lunch-hall diners and this RfC remains open. The UN speech is WP:OFFTOPIC. Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 18:44, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Really? I don't supposed the names of the leaders have been removed out of thin air all of a sudden? This is why this Rfc is null and void, whereas the issue of condensing the UN speech should be brought up instead. F2Milk (talk) 10:14, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The entry remains the same. And this RfC remains open. By all means bring up the matter of the UN speech; but for this RfC it is WP:OFFTOPIC. Thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:20, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No, it is the same issue. You bring up the leader's names and it ties in with the condensation of the UN speech. All the more reason the Rfcs should be merged and a list compiled on the issues being raised. That's common sense. Thank you.F2Milk (talk) 13:31, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
This is an RfC about a list of diners. Trump's speech to the UN remains WP:OFFTOPIC. I think it is preferable to follow Wikipedia guidelines than 'common sense'. Many thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:41, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The list of diners has already been amended. The Trump speech is part of parcel of the discussion. I repeat again it is better to have common sense than follow the dogma of Wikipedia guidelines. Quoting Wikipedia guidelines every time can be tiresome. You should use common sense more often, as it will give you a better lead in life.F2Milk (talk) 22:52, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The list of diners has not been amended. Please stop repeating this untruth. (I think you may be looking incorrectly at the lunch list for the 20th of September. We are talking about the lunch list on the 19th of September. However, the question of whether it has been changed or not since this RfC was opened is WP:OFFTOPIC, since we are looking for a consensus about how it ought to look (not how it may look at any given hour). Were we not to reach a consensus here, an editor might feel free to change it to an even longer list (I am sure there are waiters and fork-polishers who were annoyed at being left out!), or to change it to whatever they personally feel it should be, such as, for example, just deleting the leaders' names and instead leaving a distracting and meaningless list of countries instead. I don't see that what you call "common sense" trumps Wikipedia guidelines. Please see WP:IDONTLIKEIT, where it is clearly stated that "Content on Wikipedia is judged based on its compliance with guidelines". Any person is free to quote guidelines in pursuit of an improved Wikipedia page; that is what the guidelines are there for, to stop debates proceeding along purely idiosyncratic lines. What you call 'common sense' may or may not give a person "a better lead in life"(?), but on Wikipedia, it is better to adhere to guidelines - then we know where we all stand. Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 00:45, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Keep If they're sourced there's no reason not to list attendees of important meetings. If it's a meeting where it's expected that a large group of leaders will be present it is not so necessary. If it's a smaller meeting where the purpose may not be readily apparent, info should include attendees and a brief summary of the agenda/purpose/outcomes of the meeting. Edaham (talk) 04:32, 11 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Condense & footnote: (Summoned by bot) On the one hand it could be seen as trivia, on the other hand, whom Trump sat with at the luncheon could be of interest to some readers. I propose that it gets condensed to "secretary general and 9 world leaders" as per Markbassett, and a footnote is provided with the full list. See: WP:REFGROUP for implementation details. AdA&D 13:54, 17 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Move to a footnote: change the wording to 'world leaders' and then place a footnote tag next to it. It interrupts the flow of the piece as it is. Sb2001 01:35, 19 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Trump timeline content exclusions

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The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Should a presidential timeline be limited solely to actions and statements specifically of the administration? Cpaaoi (talk) 16:12, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Comments

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  • Not limited Persistent claims that the timeline may only comprise actions and statements of the Trump administration are absurd. Such a point of view suggests that no mention could be made here, for example, of Trump being impeached by Congress or having damaging information released on him by the Kremlin, or of him being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize or being made an honorary Ph.D. It will be seen that we already have numerous elements in the timeline of actions and statements made by people and bodies outside the administration, but there is a notable set of demands which focuses only on the removal of mention of the TrumpRussia issue, along with bogus claims that the timeline has been utterly filled with such material. I consider that to remove such (few) entries would be highly misleading, regardless of any politician's innocence or guilt. (And to repeat myself, I will not persist in creating these RfCs, but I believe that they are necessary to establish consensus, given the excess of inconclusive discussion since Jan 2017.) Cpaaoi (talk) 16:12, 23 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Limited - Firstly this is a timeline about events (actions and statements) that happening with the Administration. The Trump/Russia narrative is amply address in the Russian interference timeline and its main article. If we were to fill the timeline with the things that deal with the Russian investigation, we need to have at least confirmed it by the administration that these things happened as stated in the reports. That deals with the administration handing over documents to the investigative team, or purported events or meetings that happened, etc. Also this is with the knowledge the investigation is ongoing, while the press is making loads of speculation on what is happening especially on events, etc. If the administration or the Congressional hearing or the investigative team haven't confirm these things, then these statements or reports should be moved to the other main article - Russian interference in the 2016 United States elections. These Rfcs are just unnecessary as they are just overlapping over each other. Just one or two Rfcs with several points listed is just find or this is just an abuse of the Rfc process. — Preceding unsigned comment added by F2Milk (talkcontribs) F2Milk (talkcontribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
No-one has suggested to "fill the timeline" with Russia. And no-one has done this. That is your (repeated) invention. The administration has confirmed many of these reports. And there is no justification for citing such confirmations as a central criterion for inclusion/exclusion. These RfCs are related, but they do not overlap (except where people change the subject). They are an attempt to separate and clarify the confusions you have introduced to the discussions on these talk pages. These RfCs deal respectively with the separate matters of: 1) your verifiable distortion of sources; 2) your argument about exclusion on the basis of "duplication"; 3) your arguments about exclusion on the basis of alleged anachronism; 4) your habit of including a wealth of trivial information; and 5) your arguments about exclusion on the basis of alleged irrelevancy. I have not been satisfied by any of the long discussions I have had with you, my dear F2Milk, since the subjects of discussions have been repeatedly derailed (as you have done here once again) and I have read and re-read the same statements made repeatedly without clear rationale, or consensus, or an appeal to Wikipedia guidelines. The number of outstanding RfCs here does not represent an abuse of the process, it is an indication of the large number of problems that I contend afflict your general editing tendencies. I shall be content with the consensus reached by the community on these matters, since it is not up to me to stand in official judgment of your activity here. Cpaaoi (talk) 02:29, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am sorry but you have did the opposite of what you are saying. You did fill many parts of the timeline with the Russian interference entries. These haven't been confirmed by the administration, the parties or individuals or the investigative team or special counsel. There is plenty of overlap when it comes to these Russian interference entries - the entries are outside the timeline, the sources are unnamed or unverified or not confirmed by the administration. I repeat again, that this is an abuse of the Rfc process. Opening many Rfcs when 1 or 2 will suffice, with just listing the specific points is enough. While you can accuse me of my editing tendencies, your editing tendencies are also up for debate and we will see what consensus comes out of the discussions. F2Milk (talk) 02:38, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
1 or 2 RfCs would indeed suffice - if there were but 1 or 2 issues at stake, F2Milk. And, as I always say to you, if you have specific issues with any specific entry, then please do be specific! And I would wholeheartedly welcome you opening an RfC, in order to bring yet more light to this previously confused and dim talk page! Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 02:44, 24 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes, I agree. 1 or 2 Rfcs would suffice in this situation. You can just merge them, because the points raised overlap each other. Also one thing I would like to raise is that this is not a canvassing for votes or getting people to side with your point of view. There is no need to always reply to every person's post in the Rfcs. Let them have their say and they we can evaluate their ideas or opinions.F2Milk (talk) 12:59, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
No, you don't agree, F2Milk. 1or 2 RfCs would suffice if there were 1 or 2 issues. But there are more than 1 or 2 issues, so therefore there are more than 1 or 2 RfCs. And it would make no sense to merge them, since they deal with discrete issues. Have you just invented another rule about limitations on replying to posts? I would be interested to hear where that rule has come from and why it does not apply to F2Milk's postings. But that can be dealt with elsewhere: this is an RfC about inclusions and exclusions from this timeline. WP:OFFTOPIC Many thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 13:35, 26 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
  • Comment - The introduction to this RfC seems to omit information necessary to put forward a vote. Presumably it was started because the editor who started it had some kind of inclusion or exclusion in mind. The RfC should summarize this without making it necessary for me to read the entire talk page to find out about the issue at hand. That being said, given the nature of the article and the kind of things I can imagine people inserting or removing from this article, I support whatever position discourages POV or partisan editing. Not having been given a specific item or edit on which to vote, my advice regarding the opening summary of the RfC is this: Items on this timeline (as loosely defined on the article about the 1st quarter) should contain information related to the administration and its effects on a reasonably large national scale. This means items on the administrative agenda, notable attendees, cancellations etc. Events which affected the agenda, announcements of milestone targets, effects of decisions on the economy and so on. Trump's twitter feed should only be included if it is related to administrative policy or scheduling, ie. Saturday, February 25: Trump announces via Twitter that he will not be attending the White House Correspondents' Dinner scheduled for the spring." His rants about who ever he hates or whatever should not be included on this list no matter how notable. The parent article should have a better defined summary or list in its lede (agreed on by consensus) of what constitutes an inclusion to make it easier for both persons reading the list to understand the scope of what it contains - and editors wishing to make appropriate or remove inappropriate inclusions. Edaham (talk) 05:31, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Thanks for the comments. I am aware that it is preferred that RfCs are made about specific entries. The issue at stake has been going on for many months about a number of entries, and it seemed counter-productive to raise an RfC about each of them. It has been a repeated position by F2Milk that only actions and statements of the administration may be included, although it will be noted that F2Milk tends to apply their 'rule' only on matters which might make Trump look powerless, ineffective or suspect. If we can't get clarity on this general point, I'll start working through RfCs on individual entries in order to build up a consensus that way. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:36, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
well there's no deadline at stake so you are under no pressure to rapidly improve the article, however it might be better to consider collaborating with your fellow editors working on the article to determine a consensus as to what defines a list entry. You can then add this definition to a lede summary in the parent article of this list. Once that's up it might be easier to prune current inclusions, which fall outside of the definition and to vet future inclusions. I understand I'm oversimplifying a tad, but such a summary is conspicuously absent from the parent article and the lists which deal with each quarter. As a previously uninvolved editor I found it difficult to grasp the scope of the list having given the entries a cursory skim. Edaham (talk) 14:14, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
You make a good point about producing a lede definition; I would very much like to see something like this. I have tried communicating with other editors via the talk pages with an eye to precisely this outcome, but the number of editors on the timeline is small and there tend to be fewer still on the talk page. The only other editor who consistently engages on the talk page is F2Milk, but unfortunately they routinely resort to a declamatory and repetitive statement-based style of "debate", cite regulations which don't exist, distort material, derail discussions and engage in accusations for which they never cite evidence, to say nothing of trivial and hypocritical edits. The "debates" rarely go anywhere, and if any kind of resolution is reached or a fallacy exposed, then F2Milk can always be relied upon to resurrect the same claim shortly afterwards, as if it had never been discussed/agreed/dismissed. (This latter behavior may even be observed in these very RfCs; F2Milk claimed to have dropped their phony argument about "duplication" after several RfC editors debunked it; following which F2Milk proceeded to argue along the same lines further down the page.) Since F2Milk has latterly turned towards overt edit-warring tactics on the main page, I have largely removed myself from editing there (for the time being) and have turned to these RfCs to clarify the community's position on F2Milk's methods, in the absence of other working remedies to date. So far I have been satisfied that this process is working, since other editors not previously seen here have been engaging and are beginning to clarify what exactly the Wikipedia community thinks of the editing strategies seen on this page thus far. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:05, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Ah. The plot thickens. Edaham (talk) 15:52, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Ah the duplication argument here by Cpaaoi is getting stale. Here he likes to distort the whole situation and make it seem like he is the victim here. I already said I have dropped the duplication argument even though there is merit to that argument. There were a couple of editors who were alright with having duplicated entries from different timelines in past discussions. But regarding the Rfc process so far, we just list the points in one Rfc instead of creating numerous Rfcs. That way editors can just skim through the points list down and give their opinions. Cpaaoi here likes to create fires out of nothing all the time.F2Milk (talk) 17:25, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Refutations of the duplication claim will remain fresh for as long as it continues to be made. I am not the victim; the victim is the Wikipedia page. If you could show me the guideline which states that multiple issues must be dealt with in a single RfC, that would be most helpful. But make that point elsewhere, please, because it is WP:OFFTOPIC All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 18:41, 28 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Sure if you like to bring up the duplication argument again or resurrect it, please be do that. I am not forbidding you from doing that. You seem to be try to put the Wikipedia page as the victim, but so far most of your arguments here are putting yourself as the victim here. Simple common sense will put it that you can list down the issues in one topic, rather than post numerous Rfcs. But that being the case, if you still refuse to listen to common sense then you can continue with opening up hundreds of Rfcs which you like to do. F2Milk (talk) 10:11, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I am not raising the duplication argument; I am raising an objection when it is raised (as it has been once again today, in one of the sections above), and am asking the community what they think of it. No-one has opened 'hundreds' of RfCs, and no-one has suggested doing so. Common sense dictates the following of Wikipedia guidelines, which state that RfCs should be kept short and simple, and they mention only a single statement. Many thanks. WP:RFC#Statement should be neutral and brief. Cpaaoi (talk) 12:16, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Then don't bring the duplication argument up again. I didn't bring it up. You did again. I said I am done with the duplication argument, but if you keep bring it up, then be my guest. This is getting to be a stale argument. The hundreds of Rfcs is just sarcasm if you catch my drift or meaning. Common sense is the best guideline in life. Just list the issues you raise in one section and we are deal with them. Keeping it short and simple as per your list of issues. That is what should be done. Already a couple of Rfcs are repeating each other.F2Milk (talk) 22:48, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

To quote Neville Chamberlain, that is not a true statement! If you never mention "duplication" ever again, I will never mention it to you by way of dismantling it again! Do we have an agreement here, never to mention it again, F2Milk? That would suit me well. What you call 'common sense' may or may not be the "best guideline in life". But on Wikipedia, Wikipedia guidelines are the best guidelines! To base a point of view upon something like "That is what should be done" is not a reasoned argument or an appeal to guidelines, and it is a type of statement which Wikipedia explicitly discourages. Please see WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Many thanks! Cpaaoi (talk) 00:13, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

That's fine by me. The duplication argument was brought up the in beginning. We have decided to put it to the side and not talk about it anymore. Sorry but your comments in regards to the Wikipedia guidelines are just that - guidelines. The Wikipedia guidelines are not the best guidelines. There are many inconsistencies when people quote Wiki guidelines to suit their ends or win an argument. People can use their common sense when it comes to discussions and editing articles. Guidelines does not rule your life or what you post. I have more respect for people who can come down and talk without quoting or pushing 101 guidelines to my face.F2Milk (talk) 11:52, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
"The Wikipedia guidelines are not the best guidelines." - F2Milk, 30th September 2017. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:14, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
And you don't agree because it doesn't bolster your case when it comes to some of the issues raised in the some of the discussion topics.F2Milk (talk) 09:08, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Just a simple list of issues in one section instead of numerous Rfcs and topic subsections

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Some people have a hard time trying to keep track of the many different issues or sub topics raise in the past couple of weeks. It is common sense to list the issues in one area.F2Milk (talk) 10:35, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

It would be common sense if there were a single issue at stake. RfC guideline: "Keep the RfC statement short and simple." WP:RFC#Statement should be neutral and brief An RfC is expected to be a single, short statement, not multiple statements. Thanks again! Cpaaoi (talk) 12:05, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes, common sense in listing down the points and keeping it short and simple. This is not multiple statements, but a list of points. Thanks. F2Milk (talk) 13:13, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
I think following Wikipedia guidelines is preferable to 'common sense'. Many thanks again. Cpaaoi (talk) 13:39, 29 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Common sense is the best guideline in life. Don't follow the dogma of Wikipedia guidelines or quoting them willy-nilly. You will lead a better life. Thank you.F2Milk (talk)
What you call 'common sense' may or may not be the best guide in life. But on Wikipedia, Wikipedia guidelines are the best guidelines. All the best! Cpaaoi (talk) 00:07, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Maybe you two should suspend your double act for the time being and ask an less involved editor to boldly write a summary of what defines a list inclusion then include in the article space somewhere. this talk page is a prime example of what happens when the unstoppable wp:bludgeon meets the immovable wp:IDHT Edaham (talk) 06:31, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Not really, I think it is best to discuss it out. Common sense says we should collate the points raised and have them listed in on topic area. There is nothing too dramatic about that, Edaham. I have always said people should have cooler heads when it comes to these situations. Not to quote every Wiki guideline just because it suits them in winning an argument. F2Milk (talk) 11:47, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
OK, and how's that been working out for you both? your discussion took a turn for the "meta" when you started a discussion on how to discuss the topic. Now you are discussing how to discuss discussions. Perhaps before we reach Dante's Ninth Circle of Meta-debate I'll just make the lede summary I was talking about in the hope that both of you will take to editing that rather than either continuing to lambaste this cowering talk page or possibly reverting it entirely. Edaham (talk) 12:35, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Frankly, Edaham, it has not been working out well at all! (Although in fact we have actually come to an agreement in the last twenty-four hours on an important point above, so there has been some progress.) I am only glad that these RfCs have attracted a sensible person to help with the decision-making process. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:11, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
And thanks for pointing out WP:BLUDGEON; I'd not seen that before! Perhaps I'll cut back on my repetitive counter-arguments. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:50, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes, cut backs would not be a bad idea - especially in the case of an RfC; the point of which is to let the discussion benefit from the presence of editors new to the subject who may be able to contribute new ideas if presented with an impartial summary of the topic. Edaham (talk) 16:26, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The sensible thing with a bit of common sense would just be listing out all the points in a concise and brief manner. I agree there were too many Rfcs opened in the first place. Didn't you come here in the first place, because a Bot sent you a couple of notices in your TALK page(isn't that BLUDGEON enough)? I welcome new editors to come here and discuss the many issues raised.F2Milk (talk) 09:07, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

List categories.

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I think the problem here is that your issue doesn't require discussion, it requires work. I have therefore

  • created this list of categories I compiled based on skimming the first quarter. Feel free to edit
  • added this list to my sandbox. Feel free to edit it there but don't use the talk page there. I will delete everything from that talk page without replying or moving it to the correct place, which is here. I don't have time.
  • Highlighted potentially contentious items, or areas where the list page could easily begin forking or overlapping with other articles if it overloads with items of that category.

List follows below:

summary of categories - go to list

Intent

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This list non-exhaustive list attempts to summarize the categories of inclusions in the list articles found at The time line of the presidency of Donald Trump. The purpose of this list is to ad an RfC which in part is dealing with what does and does not belong on the list. The final aim is to create a summary which will be added to the lede of the above linked article. Each category includes several sub categories and comments on their suitability as list items. These can be edited by any editors who wish to be involved in the RfCs on the article's talk page

List Categories

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Things listed in black should almost certainly be included. Things listed in red are also potentially OK for inclusion, but potentially open the article to forks, miscellany and other things which could weaken or confuse the subject of the list. A summary of what this list includes should loosely define what entails a list item, without overt restrictions, whilst clarifying what constitutes a potential entry.

  • STAFFING
    • staff changes hiring firing and resignation and white house staffing issues Jan 20 – James Mattis becomes Sec of D.
    • Proclamations (commemorative occasions) Jan 20 - National Day of Patriotic Devotion
  • POLICY
    • Alterations of policy, signing or enacting of bills, Sanctions, executive orders, budget announcements bans and appeals against aforementioned by other countries Jan 20 – Military retirement policy
    • Formal requests by whitehouse staff – Jan 20 Priebus calls for freeze on new Regs
    • Comments made in or by the Whitehouse in internal meetings or phone calls Jan 23 President Trump says 3–5 million illegal votes cost him the popular vote
    • Looks very very much like opportunity for clutter and coat racking
  • LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
    • Inauguration and related oaths etc Jan 20 – inauguration
    • Lawsuits and accusations either as plaintiff or defendant – Jan 23 A federal-court lawsuit is filed accusing President Trump of violating the Constitution's Foreign Emoluments Clause.
    • Court/legal intervention or interaction – Jan 29 Federal judges in the states of Massachusetts, Virginia, and Washington sign orders halting implementation of parts of Executive Order 13769
  • PUBLIC RELATIONS
    • Press Briefings – (If notable) Friday, February 24 The New York Times is barred from the White House press briefing along with the BBC, CNN, Politico, The Huffington Post, The Los Angeles Times and BuzzFeed News, prompting criticism from the White House Correspondents' Association.
    • Public speaking and presidential visitations Jan 21 – Trump Pence speak at CIA HQ
    • Protests and strikes : deserve scrutiny because
      • 1)They're outside of cabinet control
      • 2)It only matters to the list if the protests or stikes led to some kind of administrative effect
    • They should be here if
      • 1)The protests can be included in an item about the administration – for example, the poll tax riots occurring as a result of the passing of a taxation law by the conservative party led by Margret Thatcher. this is a good example because the protests led in part to the resignation of the Prime Minister Jan21 woman's day march is probably not a correct inclusion as it was not spurned by a specific action of the administration. Nor did it really have any effect on it
    • (Public announcements by either the president or staff. These deserve scrutiny
      • 1)how far down the ladder do we go?
      • 2)Should we rate according to long term effects of the announcement?
      • 3)An example is Jan 21 Sean Spicer's announcement. It is a very notable event, but it's implications and effects on the white house administration are debatable and vague.
    • Criticisms from notable figures – very definitely debatable Feb 27 - Former President George W. Bush offers implicit criticism of the Trump administration's handling the free press and religious freedom on the TODAY show. Notability guidelines beyond those normally prescribed apply here – what are they?
    • Notable public petitions (National or International) to or about the administration Jan 30 - A petition, launched Sunday to cancel President Trump's state visit to the United Kingdom in October
    • Tweets - March 20 President Trump issues a tweet rejecting allegations of collusion with Russia as "fake news"
    • Press reports - e.g. The NYT report on the undisclosed Veselnitskaya meeting.
  • DIPLOMACY
    • Notable Diplomatic correspondences or meetings with national representatives or bodies outside of the administration (can be info regarding schedule attendance or cancellation) – Jan 22 President Trump speaks to Governor of Georgia Nathan Deal
    • Actions of other countries political administrations which are a direct result of U.S administrative decisions or actions – (Jan 22, Israel settlement approval)
    • Allegations and Denials and apologies - March 17 GCHQ denies all involvement in the alleged wiretapping of Trump Tower,[283][284] prompting the Trump administration to issue a formal apology to the United Kingdom with assurances that the allegation will not be repeated.
  • THE MILITARY
    • Military actions – Jan 21 Drone Strikes
Again debatable: This list could potentially fill up very quick if interested parties came along and started noting every military action which had to be passed by the white house as part of a default chain of command involving the commander in chief

It is my intention to:

  • Allow sufficient time for editors to edit and discuss the categories on the list
  • Add links to relevant policies and guidelines to the list
  • After this time, I'm going to say 30 days, to write a short summary and definition of list items based on the results and include it at the top of the parent article and the articles for each quarter
  • Review current and future inclusions to the list based on a consensus as to what defines a list item.

Edaham (talk) 14:28, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

Well, that's very helpful - this has been needed from the start, really. I've added press reports to the list; it's been placed in red for now, pending an outcome from the RfC above. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:22, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The main issue to remove non-administration comments on actions by the administration in the Q1 or Q2 timeline sections. That way it would just report on events and not on non-partisan comments by individuals, organisations, political parties, etc. Then that would be a proper timeline. Contentious issues such as the Russian interference creep in the last few months is notable, while duplication argument has been dropped, the other argument stating that the entries are not in the article scope is there to see.F2Milk (talk) 09:03, 2 October 2017 (UTC)Reply

Price resignation

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This [1] edit is a clear example of protective editing. No need to reply since I have no further interest here. ―Buster7  14:30, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply

  agreed, the inclusion is warranted but the wording is wrong. It shouldn't say due to it should say after Edaham (talk) 14:35, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Many thanks, Edaham. Without wanting to lay it on too thick, may I add that this is exactly the type of protective editing which prompted the RfCs on this page, and it has been going on for some time. Cpaaoi (talk) 15:07, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
Yes, Edaham, I see that your simple change makes it more acceptable, TY. ―Buster7  19:33, 30 September 2017 (UTC)Reply
The simple change is acceptable. The first edit was not correct. Cpaaoi should know he is not the victim here and shouldn't make this about himself.F2Milk (talk) 16:53, 1 October 2017 (UTC)Reply