Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard/Archive 51
This is an archive of past discussions on Wikipedia:Dispute resolution noticeboard. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current main page. |
Archive 45 | ← | Archive 49 | Archive 50 | Archive 51 | Archive 52 | Archive 53 | → | Archive 55 |
Contents
- 1 Is there compromise?
- 2 Rough consensus for current prose
- 3 Single-payer/healthcare polls
- 4 Template talk:Christianity#.22Eastern_Catholic.22_is_not_a_denomination
- 5 Talk:Sigmund Freud#Science_section
- 6 Talk:Lionel Messi
- 7 Jessica Biel
- 8 Men's Rights
- 8.1 Opening comments by Memotype
- 8.2 Opening comments by Memills
- 8.3 Opening comments by Perpetualization
- 8.4 Opening comments by Cailil
- 8.5 Opening comments by Slp1
- 8.6 Opening comments by Binksternet
- 8.7 Opening comments by Kaldari
- 8.8 Opening comments by Kevin Gorman
- 8.9 Men's Rights discussion 1
- 8.10 Men's Rights discussion 2
- 8.11 Men's Rights discussion 3
- 8.12 Men's Rights discussion 4
- 8.13 Men's Rights discussion 5
- 9 Frank L. VanderSloot
Is there compromise?
Have we been able to all agree on prose that everyone can live with?--Amadscientist (talk) 05:47, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- My understanding is that there is still a significant difference between views; since myself and showmebeef have been basing the discussion around your first draft, whilst Sport & Politics and 88 seem to be basing the discussion around your second draft which is very different. I also think that that the discussion has been diverted along the issue of home advantage, which is just a straw man debating issue, which is not provable one way or the other, is not essential to the controversy, and could run on indefinitely.
- I'm not trying to be unhelpful here but just attempting to avoid the article to drift to a version which doesn't seem to address the key facts. For me, there is a fundamental difference between Chris Boardman's statement when asked
- if the British teams high-tech warfare will put some countries at a disadvantage, he replied, "Well, I'd like to think so, we haven't done our job if they're not."
- and the UCI rules which are explicitly referenced in the media
- "Bicycles shall comply with the spirit and principle of cycling as a sport. The spirit presupposes that cyclists will compete in competitions on an equal footing. The principle asserts the primacy of man over machine".
- unless these can be prominently displayed (and I have seen no reason why they can't) I doubt if a compromise can be made since this goes to the heart of why this is a controversy.--Andromedean (talk) 06:44, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Frankly, you have put your finger right on the problem with this statement: "For me, there is a fundamental difference between Chris Boardman's statement when asked and the UCI rules which are explicitly referenced in the media." (emphasis mine) What it is for you is wholly irrelevant. As we have stated repeatedly we cannot compare and contrast the rule with statement when no secondary sources have done so. Instead we mention the the French views, the British views (hence home advantage) and one independent (the cycling magazine) view on the matter. That you cannot agree to this version in principle, if not in wording, is borderline incredulous. I have unilaterally changed the version in the article(per WP:BOLD, WP:CONSENSUS and WP:COMMONSENSE). You cannot argue that the version that has been removed has ever been close to consensus. The version proposed which I have added is the one I deem closest to achieving consensus (bearing in mind that Showmebeef as accepted some form of mention of home advantage and that consensus doesn't have to be unanimous). I hope we can continue the discussion here, and that you will be more eager to compromise when you are not perfectly happy with the version in the article.
Regarding the volunteer question: Apparantly not, though it really should be acceptable to all. The arguments set out by Andromedean against it are extraordinarily week. On the other hand WP:CONSENSUS doesn't require unanimity, so you could argue that there is a 3 to 1 consensus on the proposed version's content, even if there are some disagreements about the wording. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 07:53, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Frankly, you have put your finger right on the problem with this statement: "For me, there is a fundamental difference between Chris Boardman's statement when asked and the UCI rules which are explicitly referenced in the media." (emphasis mine) What it is for you is wholly irrelevant. As we have stated repeatedly we cannot compare and contrast the rule with statement when no secondary sources have done so. Instead we mention the the French views, the British views (hence home advantage) and one independent (the cycling magazine) view on the matter. That you cannot agree to this version in principle, if not in wording, is borderline incredulous. I have unilaterally changed the version in the article(per WP:BOLD, WP:CONSENSUS and WP:COMMONSENSE). You cannot argue that the version that has been removed has ever been close to consensus. The version proposed which I have added is the one I deem closest to achieving consensus (bearing in mind that Showmebeef as accepted some form of mention of home advantage and that consensus doesn't have to be unanimous). I hope we can continue the discussion here, and that you will be more eager to compromise when you are not perfectly happy with the version in the article.
Discussion of the unilateral change
Before I am lambasted for this action I would present the following defence:
Really, there is not much to say. The version in that was in the article has never been close to consensus, and it makes a power disbalance in this discussion. Imagine how you would feel if the version in the article during the discussion introduced the French views in one sentence ("In France there were claims that the use of technology was cheating"), and then used the rest of the section to argue against them. (note: I would not support such a version based on current knowledge, if I have supported something like this in the past it is because at the time I felt that only the comments themselves had been demonstrated as controversial.) For me the version I removed is as totally unacceptable as the one I described presumably is for you, and it didn't have a snowball's chance in hell of becoming the consensus version as a result of this discussion. I hope discussion of this action can be kept to a minimum, and that we return to the business of finding the best version to install in the article "permanently". 88.88.167.157 (talk) 08:20, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- I support you in your bold action, something had to be done to remove the wholly out of date version with Zero consensus and as you have pointed out we are here for consensus not unanimity. If Andromodean is the only hold I think its not time to ignore this person as they are just being plainly obstructive. The three of us have made sensible compromises and Andormodean has made wild statements and nonsense "straw-man" claim simply to attempt to demonstrate their POV and OR as the one which must be accepted. If Andromodean cannot compromise in anyway like the other three involved editors have then they are being obstructive and are disrupting Wikiepdia. I can agree to the version placed boldly in the article with no hesitation. Amadsceintist has pointed out their first draft was not taking BLP in to account fully and had unweighed criticism which skewed the piece. All the information now in the section has a reliable source which is accurately quoted and not deliberately selectively misquoted as was done by Andromodean. The whole section is balanced and give fairness to both sides unlike Andromodeans version which were skewed to further their POV of GB being the most unethical technology users and biggest dopers since Lance Armstrong and Marco Pantani. Its time to draw this to a close. A version which has fairly good acceptance by most is now in the article and has been discussed thoroughly. Its time to move on or this will end up in mediation. Sport and politics (talk) 09:21, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- My preference would be for the version to remain until we have reached a decision. However, if you must change it I would suggest changing it to a version at least intermediate between our views such as Madscientists original for now. Perhaps we could leave him to decide on which temporary version is intermediate?
- With regard to your points. I have already conceeded a brief mention of home advantage, what I am concerned about is the discussion being directed solely on that, since it may be a ploy to distract from the main issues which should be more straightforward. The Bicycling magazine text provides a reputable primary source for the UCI and IOC rules. That they didn't spell it out word per word is not relevant. I don't think it is necessary to insert it in bold, just that it is clear how it contrasts with Chris Broadman's statement.
- But both the IOC, and the UCI, also have a philosophy that the athlete should not only be paramount, but that technology should influence sports as little as possible. The UCI’s noble ideal behind its rules is to keep the sport accessible to all, limiting the role of money and technology in creating a performance advantage.--Andromedean (talk) 09:29, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- The Bicycling magazine opinion piece is in included, but per WP:NEWSBLOG (check the URL) it must be attributed to the writer. With your acceptance of some mention of home advantage, it seems we have an agreement on the proposed version as far as content is concerned. We can now move on to wording issues. I know Showmebeef wants to remove the quote from Laura Trott. I can agree to change this to paraphrasing what she said (which is the current treatment of French cyclist Gregory Bauge), but I don't think it should be reduced to merely mentioning it. Discussion on this can be found above, but perhaps it is better to start afresh below. (The choice of temporary version is not important, and can be done by the volunteer. The version that was removed had to go as in addition to the what I have mentioned it misrepresented the views of one of the French cyclists and had some potential BLP issues.) 88.88.167.157 (talk) 09:44, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- But both the IOC, and the UCI, also have a philosophy that the athlete should not only be paramount, but that technology should influence sports as little as possible. The UCI’s noble ideal behind its rules is to keep the sport accessible to all, limiting the role of money and technology in creating a performance advantage.--Andromedean (talk) 09:29, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- I am not quite sure where to begin here. Amadscientist has stated their "intermediate" version was potentially a BLP violation. Which makes it red hot and should not be used. I have no idea what you are attempting to imply with this very bad faith sounding statement "it may be a ploy to distract from the main issues". When dealing with primary sources please read WP:PRIMARYSOURCE before you make claims as you have done. The Boardman opinion statement is already providing a clear contrast. Adding more is not ready as there are already "contrasts" bought up through the views of the French cyclists, and the current wording adequately "contrasts". As for your final paragraph drop the stick and stop trying to flog this dead horse. This is sod all to do with the 2012 Olympics its a wider cycling and Olympics statement.I t also your own synthesised Original research and It is not relevant to an article focused solely on Controversies at the 2012 Olympics". It is not an article on "Problems within the Olympics and cycling as believed by Andromedean". Sport and politics (talk) 09:50, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- When we get right down to the very basics of consensus on situations like this we can ignore some guidelines in order to improve the article. As long as there are no blatant copyright and BLP violations the prose with contested wording can stand if there still remain some POV, Balance etc. issues. The reason for this, is so that disussion can continue while the text remains published in the article space, and so that some level of acceptance can be appropriate. I am trying to remember what I might have been concerned about regarding BLP. I don't see any issues at the moment. What I do see is a good solid consensus for the prose to stand at the moment. That does have some significance. It means that the dispute has been reduced to a point that it can actually be kicked back to the article to donitnue collaborating further. Althought I would suggest allowing a good solid week of stepping back for all parties. Not as a cooling down period, as all parties have remoaned extremely civil, but to clear the mind and come back to the issue with a fresh look.--Amadscientist (talk) 21:15, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Sport and Politics was probably referring to an earlier version.
Anyway, I support closing this as resolved and that discussion the issues of the minutiæ of wording is suitable for the article talk page (in a week). The exact wording is in any case of limited importance for me. (Presumably archiving the more than 200 000 characters would improve the performance of this page.) 88.88.167.157 (talk) 21:48, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Sport and Politics was probably referring to an earlier version.
- When we get right down to the very basics of consensus on situations like this we can ignore some guidelines in order to improve the article. As long as there are no blatant copyright and BLP violations the prose with contested wording can stand if there still remain some POV, Balance etc. issues. The reason for this, is so that disussion can continue while the text remains published in the article space, and so that some level of acceptance can be appropriate. I am trying to remember what I might have been concerned about regarding BLP. I don't see any issues at the moment. What I do see is a good solid consensus for the prose to stand at the moment. That does have some significance. It means that the dispute has been reduced to a point that it can actually be kicked back to the article to donitnue collaborating further. Althought I would suggest allowing a good solid week of stepping back for all parties. Not as a cooling down period, as all parties have remoaned extremely civil, but to clear the mind and come back to the issue with a fresh look.--Amadscientist (talk) 21:15, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- I am not quite sure where to begin here. Amadscientist has stated their "intermediate" version was potentially a BLP violation. Which makes it red hot and should not be used. I have no idea what you are attempting to imply with this very bad faith sounding statement "it may be a ploy to distract from the main issues". When dealing with primary sources please read WP:PRIMARYSOURCE before you make claims as you have done. The Boardman opinion statement is already providing a clear contrast. Adding more is not ready as there are already "contrasts" bought up through the views of the French cyclists, and the current wording adequately "contrasts". As for your final paragraph drop the stick and stop trying to flog this dead horse. This is sod all to do with the 2012 Olympics its a wider cycling and Olympics statement.I t also your own synthesised Original research and It is not relevant to an article focused solely on Controversies at the 2012 Olympics". It is not an article on "Problems within the Olympics and cycling as believed by Andromedean". Sport and politics (talk) 09:50, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
Issues about wording (including quote vs. paraphrase)
I think that more explicit advice from Amadscientist would be helpful in this phase, if he is willing to provide it. By this I mean that as he is more experienced than us he can point out when policies and guidelines means that one of the suggested wordings is clearly preferable. I would also value his opinions even if based on a personal preference. Please indicate your agreement by adding your signature to this statement. 88.88.167.157 (talk), ...—Preceding comment added by 88.88.167.157 (talk), 10:12, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- A lot of editors assume that we paraphrase in articles. I see it a lot and it can work at times I guess, but Jimbo Wales is very clear that we do not actually paraphrase, but use our own original wording. Paraphrasing can so easily be done in too close a manner to the original copy. Many times editors will turn to quoting as a direct manner of getting the point of the subject across however, when to do that is not always clear. For a small section like this, with no direct subjects involved, it can be undue weight to quote central figures. It can give the impression of more involvement or context than is appropriate. When using an opinion piece attribution is always needed as we are not referencing facts but the opinion of one individual and they must always be mentioned. When mentioning one person, if some others are not...the one opinion is given undue weight. It really is about brevity. If prose can summarize the statement with more brevity then it should be used. Quoting the exact wording of the figure is not required if the reference being used is from RS and done properly and in the same context as the reference. If a figure is being used in the reference to demonstrate how on person felt about "Home advantage" in an unambiguous manner, then it can be written in prose. In this size section any quote needs to be be brief. Entire statements are unnecessary. Just provide the pertinent claim or words. Use brevity as much as possible.--Amadscientist (talk) 21:33, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Good points. Hope they'll be considered in a week. Semantics: Doesn't paraphrase mean to restate the meaning of something in your own words, i.e. using our own original wording, i.e what Jimbo Wales advices. I agree it is occasionally executed poorly. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 22:06, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
Wording of the mention of Home advantage
The Source directly quotes Trott so it should be included as a direct quote. The Bauge source does not quote Bauge It paraphrases Bauge so the wording should be paraphrased. We must stick to what the sources actually say and portray. In this case one directly quotes and the other paraphrases. We must do the same to the same or we are misrepresenting the sources. Sport and politics (talk) 10:08, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- Paraphrasing is not misrepresenting; I see no problem with paraphrasing the Trott quote (and no real problem with keeping as a quote, but I generally prefer paraphrasing). I do however see a problem with removing her opinion altogether when the opinions of French cyclists are included. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 15:30, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- I think the 'home advantage' theory is a distraction from the key issue - the spirit of the rules, and this vital rule being brushed over merely as an opinion is completely unwarranted. Moreover, there is little or no evidence that 'home advantage' was significant as can be seen from the nearly identical results between the 2008 UCI world championships at the home of British cycling in Manchester (9/18G) and the 2008 Beijing Oympics (8/18G), in fact they got a greater proportion of total medals in Beijing! The reason for the advantage in London was simple, new bikes and optimisation of equipment. Both the British and French agree. The contrast in the 2012 UCI results (6/19G) 32% and London (7/10G) 70% merely confirm this. It would probably have been 9/10G 90% if it wasn't for disqualifications! The only races were the British were well beaten were the races with large Pelton's such as the road race and Omnium were tactics become paramount and the advantage of any one bikes aerodynamics are minimised.--Andromedean (talk) 17:49, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- The wording surrounding the spirit of the rules is discussed actively in the section below started by you. The wording of the part where we mention home advantage is discussed in this section. We are able to discuss the wording of these to parts simultaneously in the two sections made for this purpose, therefore there is no real distraction. The wording currently in the proposal does not imply that the home advantage effect is real or significant, and no one is arguing that it should imply this (it shouldn't) . British cyclists have brought it up as an explanation of the results which led to controversy, from this it neccessarily follows that some mention is due, as this is part of "the official defence". In any case, you have agreed to some form of mention of home advantage as a compromise. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 18:43, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
Lindsays piece is not opinion it is fact
Unfortunately Lindsay is not stating an opinion but the actual rules, it is permissible to clarify this stating that these really are the rules and NOT an interpretation. There is no Point of view or Synthesis involved.
There is however a large dose of synthesis and POVs in assuming that home support was significant, then quoting and mentioning this. It is a compromise I have made, please don't take advantage --Andromedean (talk) 12:05, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- "(...)in assuming that home support was significant": But we don't, in fact, we explicitly do not. We mention it as a possible explanation, which we also attribute to one side. There is nothing stopping the reader from thinking "well, they would say that, wouldn't they". Based on your comment one would think we had written something like "contrary to the French claim the true explanation was home advantage".
- Re the subject of this section: Lindsay has written an opinion piece, hence the "blog" in the URL. However I see no problem with including that she defines or interprets the spirit as "to keep the sport accessible to all, limiting the role of money and technology in creating a performance advantage", preferably paraphrased. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 15:23, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
Is this source missing in the proposed version? Shouldn't it be source 4?Fixed it in the version in the article. 88.88.167.157 (talk) 15:37, 17 October 2012 (UTC)&22:09, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
Rough consensus for current prose
It appears we have a rough consensus for a bold edit that placed the volunteer's proposed text into the article Controversies at the 2012 Summer Olympics. The prose has a limited amount of support from all parties in some form in the above discussions. While some wording concerns still exist, these discussions can take place on the article talkpage to continue further content collaboation. It is the suggestion of this volunteer that all involved parties take between 48 hours to one week (depending on how long each would care to take) away from the article to allow a fresher look upon return. This is just a volunteers suggestion and need not be heeded in any way, but is a good idea. Therefore, I am closing this DR/N as resolved. Parties should seriously be commended by the community for keeping the discussion civil and professional even while getting heated and serious at times.--Amadscientist (talk) 22:15, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
- The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the dispute resolution noticeboard's talk page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
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Single-payer/healthcare polls
Ongoing discussion on another noticeboard. There is also a general consensus among the participants against opening a DRN case at this time. SGCM (talk) 01:23, 18 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute
Users involved
Dispute overview There are two main issues: first, whether the polls in the public opinion sections are "single-payer" polls (as opposed to polls of "various levels of government involvement in healthcare") and second, whether or not to use the table for the polls. (Here's the table in question.) I'm of the opinion that they are single-payer polls as illustrated by six different sources (among them The Washington Post and NPR) that say as much, and I think a chart would be the best layout for the polls. We went to DRN previously and there is a NPOV dispute currently that's related but about a different issue. Have you tried to resolve this previously? Talk page. Previous discussion. How do you think we can help? By deciding whether: (1) These are single-payer polls (2) A chart should be used for the section(s). Opening comments by Thargor OrlandoThis is premature as it's already at the NPOV noticeboard awaiting comment. Forum shopping is what it is. Thargor Orlando (talk) 15:53, 16 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by North8000I have not even gone to (much less edited or discussed at or been in a dispute at) 2 of the 3 listed articles. The "opinion on" article has severe POV problems (doesn't even have poll data on the main law concerning this) but my total involvement in this "dispute" has been one edit, changing format from table back to prose. But it has been a case of extremely bad behavior. This has included someone (because of my one edit) launching a found-100% baseless (and beyond-ridiculous) sock puppet accusation against me. North8000 (talk) 12:24, 17 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by ScjesseyI do not see a need for dispute resolution at this point. I think WP:3O and WP:RFC are earlier steps we have yet to pass through. -- Scjessey (talk) 19:02, 16 October 2012 (UTC) Public opinion on health care reform in the United States, United States National Health Care Act discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
Per related issue discussed in NPOV noticeboard that was moved: We have an issue of factual inaccuracy here, as User:Scjessey insists on calling a reputable poll a "push poll" and giving an incorrect portrayal of said poll in article ([1] [2]) as well as mischaracterizing the nature of certain polls with User:CartoonDiablo ([3]). Upon request for evidence of Scjessey's claims, he instead claims the factual assertions are "fantasy land comments" ([4]) and will not provide even basic documentation for his claim. CartoonDiablo, also, insists on keeping certain sections as a table ([5]), creating a strange situation where the POV of certain ideologies gets undue weight, and is questionable for MOS issues considering the way the articles are structured. Some assistance on this would be worthwhile. Thargor Orlando (talk) 14:29, 15 October 2012 (UTC)
Hello! Thank you for submitting a DRN request. I'm a uninvolved editor that volunteers on the noticeboard. No comment yet on the actual dispute, but as a reminder, the discussion should occur either on DRN or on NPOV/N, not both. One of the two discussions should be closed.--SGCM (talk) 23:27, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
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Template talk:Christianity#.22Eastern_Catholic.22_is_not_a_denomination
Discussion was not extensive. See DR/N guidelines for participants and FAQ. Amadscientist (talk) 03:13, 19 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute
Users involved Dispute overview Yes. In the template's section "Denominations" I deleted something that is not, in fact (or so I believe I demonstrated) a denomination, causing several exchanges on the Talk page. I posted a verbose explanation to justify my view and finally, after waiting three days and seeing no reply, reverted to my version with this explanation on the Talk page, "Seeing no reply in three days to my above comment, I'm reverting to my edit and, should that cause dysphoria, I'll seek outside conflict resolution." At that point, a third party reverted my change and posted on the Talk page something that I honestly don't understand the logic of; therefore, I replied on the Talk page but I have *not* yet reverted my edit, fearing escalation to an editing war. Have you tried to resolve this previously? None. How do you think we can help? Provide an outsiders' opinion of the logic in the exchanges on the Talk page and, if at all possible, make a final decision on the matter. I thank you. Opening comments by Elizium23It is not sufficient to pretend that the whole communion of Catholic Churches are served by one entry in under the "Western" division in this template. The Western part of the Catholic Church, the Latin Church, is well-known for its Roman Rite. The 22 Eastern Catholic Churches are not well known, often confused with the Eastern Orthodox Church, and tend to be smaller than their Orthodox counterparts; put together, they are yet smaller than the single Latin Church. These Churches are each members of one of five major Eastern rites, and while they have a oneness of belief with the Catholic Church, all have a unique approach to theology that is often marked by the use of Greek terms rather than Latin words. These Churches are equal in dignity to the Latin Church, as well as equal to the Orthodox Churches, are all sui iuris and an entry is needed to represent them in the Eastern division of this template. Elizium23 (talk) 00:56, 19 October 2012 (UTC)
Opening comments by tahcPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Template talk:Christianity#.22Eastern_Catholic.22_is_not_a_denomination discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
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Talk:Sigmund Freud#Science_section
The dispute cannot be resolved without the participation of one of the main involved users. Because participation is not mandatory, there's not much that can be done on DRN at this point. I recommend notifying WP:NPOV/N, WP:FT/N, the Psychology Wikiproject, or starting a WP:RFC if the dispute continues.SGCM (talk) 18:51, 19 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute Users involved
Dispute overview Two editors, namely me [Esterson] and Polisher of Cobwebs, believe the Freud page is already over-extensive [some 13,000 words, compared with, e.g., Einstein 8000 words], and PoC has proposed that the lengthy "Legacy" section (mostly posted by himself in the past) should be reduced in size (at the moment the debate has concentrated on the Science section). In contrast Almanacer argues for the article/Science section to be "improved" (begging the question of what constitutes improvement), and over recent weeks has posted or proposed some extra items, all conducive to his own strongly-held viewpoint on Freud. When I pointed out that for every item he has posted/proposed I can reference a viewpoint contrary to the one he is keen to promote (and indeed could do the same in relation to some items already on the Freud page), he has responded by saying there is no objection to my doing that. My view is that this process can only lead to an already overlong page increasing almost indefinitely, and that the increased posting of contrary views in this way only cancel each other out. This dispute has been going on for many weeks as the Science section on the Freud Talk page indicates (now separated into five subsections to keep it manageable!). The latest stage can be found here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Sigmund_Freud#Science_section - though I strongly advise any editor who wants to gen up on the dispute while remaining sane to skip entirely the first four sections, and skim over section 5 down to the last half a dozen or so postings.
None other than weeks of exchanges on the Freud Talk page. How do you think we can help? By getting the views of other editors Opening comments by AlmanacerPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Opening comments by Polisher of CobwebsPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Although, as Esterson says, the Freud article's Legacy section is largely my work, I believe myself that it is too long. At present there is no agreement on whether or how the legacy section should be cut back. This, although frustrating, is not a surprising or a very unusual situation. I am not sure that it is going to be resolved soon, and I am not sure either that this discussion is going to be much help, frankly. Polisher of Cobwebs (talk) 22:23, 13 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by Bus stopPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
There is not a big issue here. It doesn't matter if Freud's work was "scientific" or not. The reader deserves to know the variety of positions on that question. This isn't primarily an NPOV issue. If the article is getting lengthy it should be trimmed back in places where editorial objection is not encountered and where your own inclinations lead you to believe that less text would not overly harm the article. I would rather see a lively and jostling exchange from prominent commentators on this question than to read a supposedly "neutral" view. I don't think there is a final answer to the question this dispute supposedly revolves around. I am not sure if there is a dominant opinion. I think it makes for more interesting reading to see the arguments put forth by those who address this question. These are not simple yes or no answers. The individuals addressing this question support their conclusions with reasoning and that is potentially of interest to the reader. Bus stop (talk) 22:05, 10 October 2012 (UTC) Esterson responses(I hope it is appropriate to have a separate section to respond to the above, rather than mix such comments in with the general discussion below.) Response to Bus stop: I am not objecting to there being a variety of positions given on the question of Freud's "scientific" credentials. In order to accommodate Almanacer's concerns I myself contributed three sentences referencing three pro-Freud authors arguing that psychoanalysis is a science. But as I have pointed out several times now, one should not expect there to be anything like equal representation for positions on this specific issue, as there have been far more anti-Freud authors writing on this than pro-Freud. On the one hand anti-Freud authors (with major exceptions, such as Grunbaum) tend to place great emphasis on arguing that psychoanalysis is not scientific, whereas this is far less of an issue with pro-Freud authors, many of whom either do not believe psychoanalysis is, in essence, a scientific discipline (and is none the worse for that) or do not regard the issue as of any great importance. Some major supporters of Freud/psychoanalysis have argued that it is wrong to regard psychoanalysis as a science. One such is Louis Breger, professor of psychoanalytic studies at CalTech and founding President of the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis. Notable academics such as Habermas and Ricoeur have argued that psychoanalysis should be regarded as within the field of hermeneutics, i.e., it is an explanatory discourse, not a scientific discipline. The prominent psychoanalytic authors George Klein, Roy Schafer, and Donald Spence have taken an essentially similar approach, arguing that psychoanalysis seeks not "historical truth" but "narrative truth", and they urge the abandonment of claims that psychoanalysis offers objective explanations of human behaviour – rather that its goals are interpretative. Esterson (talk) 07:07, 11 October 2012 (UTC)
Talk:Sigmund Freud#Science_section discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
@Bus stop. Welcome to DRN. The amount of coverage given to each position in an article is a NPOV issue. There may be a variety of opinions on a topic, but that doesn't necessarily mean that they should all be represented.--SGCM (talk) 13:38, 11 October 2012 (UTC) I believe that the Science subsection of legacy is the one that needs the most cuts. It is roughly twice as long as it should be. Much of the material is about Adolf Grünbaum, and in my view ought to be transferred to the Grunbaum article. I have proposed adding the relevant material to the Grünbaum article on its talk page (which can be found here, but have had no responses so far. Polisher of Cobwebs (talk) 22:49, 13 October 2012 (UTC)
P.S. I only just noticed SGCM's suggestions above, and I shall investigate following them up. Esterson (talk) 09:51, 15 October 2012 (UTC)
This DRN case is currently at the eight day mark. As Almanacer has declined to participate, there's not much that can be done on DRN at this point. The request will be closed within 24 hours, and I recommend notifying WP:NPOV/N, WP:FT/N, the Psychology Wikiproject, or starting a WP:RFC if the dispute continues.--SGCM (talk) 19:27, 18 October 2012 (UTC)
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Talk:Lionel Messi
No participation, wrong venue. It is suggested that this case be referred to Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard. Amadscientist (talk) 21:00, 19 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute
Users involved Dispute overview few people is messi's page fit some people own opinion and idea something big as that needs people own impression over that . because wikipedia is a collective work.. so its one source for many references not just an own idea of the editors if needed or not . there is a section at messi career and statistics a guy called Mattythewhite tried to remove additional infos before the removal has been over turned by Ftj1357 and had discussion at messi's page and the issue resolved.. but Mattythewhite decided to discuss it away from talk page without mentioning it or inviting people to discuss it, and decided with other 5 people its not needed and decided in next section to change the whole table shape entries (which has been edited by millions as that not just now) which means they are accepting it this way and need this kind of information ... but 5 people voted over it and decided its not suitable without even inviting other people or discussing it in somewhere so people can give their impression and opinion over it . Have you tried to resolve this previously? i contacted wikipedia customer service & chatted with them and they advised me to go into it here . How do you think we can help? leave the referenced tables or make other people vote for it and not like for 1 day give the sometime to over turn and give their opinion at it . Opening comments by MattythewhitePlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Opening comments by Ftj1357Please limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Talk:Lionel Messi discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
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Jessica Biel
No extensive discussion. Wrong venue. Filing editor may be in violation of WP:ICANTHEARYOU. Recommend RFC/U for conduct issues and Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons/Noticeboard for content. Amadscientist (talk) 04:11, 20 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute Users involved Dispute overview I want to put (2012-present) under Justin Timberlakes name in the infobox for 'spouse'. It has been reverted several times to have just (m. 2012) there instead. When I quote the Template:Infobox_person about following format for spouses, it was ignored Have you tried to resolve this previously? Talking about it via the article talk page and our user talk pages How do you think we can help? Which format is the proper one to use Opening comments by ZacPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Are you f**king serious? Zac (talk · contribs) 03:38, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
Jessica Biel discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
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Men's Rights
This subject is highly partisan. It is unlikely that this will ever be resolved between the involved parties. While I would like to suggest more discussion on the tlakpage, it is this volunteers opinion that this should be discussed through formal mediation. Amadscientist (talk) 00:26, 21 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute Users involved
Dispute overview An impasse has been reached at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Men's_rights_movement#Allegations_of_Rape_2 as to whether the statement,(which atm is), "Some men's rights activists assert that marital rape should not be considered a crime". The argument is over whether this statement is reliably sourced and/or of undue weight. The section being http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Men%27s_rights_movement#Rape. Discussion has been lengthy and has clearly reached an impasse. There is a need for some impartial eyes. If anyone could help it would be appreciated. This page is under probation and deals with a controversial topic. Have you tried to resolve this previously? Apart from very lengthy debate, nothing else. This is the first appeal for help. How do you think we can help? Atm I feel an experienced neural editor could aid the discussion in reaching a consensus. Opening comments by MemotypePlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Opening comments by MemillsInclusion of the statement that men's right groups support marital rape is clearly WP:UNDUE. By analogy it is as if statement by one feminist that "All men are rapists, and that is all that they are" should be included in the article on the feminist movement because it represents an important platform of the movement. In both cases, these are outlier statements that fall under WP:Fringe and WP:UNDUE Memills (talk) 20:23, 5 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by PerpetualizationIn my mind the issue is simple. The statement is: "Some men's rights activists assert that marital rape should not be considered a crime." WP:UNDUE gives us three scenarios:
WP:UNDUE therefore calls for us to remove the statement. If another editor wished to add the statement again, with specific "prominent adherents" named, as required by WP:UNDUE, I would not object to that. Without named adherents, the statement is certainly given undue weight. Editing/Extending: I will add that it appears that the statement may be true outside of the United States. Still, the use of the word "some" is necessarily prejudicial and the article is generally US focused (and reads as such). Perhaps naming countries where the viewpoint is mainstream, noting that it is not mainstream within the United States, and providing prominent adherents from the minority within the United States. I also vigorously object to dated sources in the discussion. The Mens Rights movement in the United States is leaps and bounds from where it was 20-30 years ago. A history section noting view that were formerly mainstream would be a welcome addition to the article, but the article would be prejudicial to conflate current advocacy with advocacy of the late 80s and early 90s (as Cailil has done). Lastly, I note that there are several variations on this viewpoint, not all of which are identical and which are easily misstated from sources:
If the sources indicate that different men's rights groups hold varied opinions on marital rape, then we can state that, and provide a brief summary of the prominent adherents and their viewpoints. It seems slanderous to cover such a wide range of viewpoints for such different rationales with "some men's rights groups oppose marital rape laws" Perpetualization (talk) 16:21, 3 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by CaililPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
Very simply, sources state that there have been (and are) attempts by Men's Rights groups to campaign against Marital Rape legislation. I listed the academic peer-reviewed sources and the relevant text from them (with page numbers) on the talk page[8]. Kaldari listed the material about current action by groups in India[9] related to this. Opening comments by Slp1CSDarrow and Perpetualization appear to have a fundamental misunderstanding of various V, NPOV and RS policies. The same arguments keep getting repeated, and then the goalposts moved.
Opening comments by BinksternetI have not been arguing this point. Binksternet (talk) 15:15, 5 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by KaldariFirst, I would like to respond to a misleading argument above by Perpetualization:
The statement under contention has met every criteria that has been offered. First of all, there are numerous reliable 3rd party academic sources that back up the claim (can't include quotations due to 2000 char limit):
Despite this, some editors have insisted that WP:UNDUE requires that prominent adherents be named. Here are some prominent adherents (in their own words):
I'm open to revising the wording to address concerns, but I don't think there's adequate reason to remove the statement entirely. Opening comments by Kevin GormanPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
I've been, unfortunately, too busy irl lately to involve myself in this article as much as I would like. I view this as a relatively minor issue compared to those the article as a whole suffers from. I have not studied this dispute in depth; I've reviewed the posted on-wiki sources and most of people's on-wiki posts, though. From what I've seen no one has made, so far, a convincing argument as to why this information shouldn't be included. Slp and Kaldari have found a pretty significant number of RS'es that contain this information. Some of them I would describe as high quality, some of them have recently been published, and most of them have been published recently enough that their age shouldn't cast doubt on their accuracy. Kevin Gorman (talk) 06:54, 4 October 2012 (UTC) Men's Rights discussion 1Please do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
Hello. I am a dispute resolution volunteer here at the Wikipedia Dispute Resolution Noticeboard. This does not imply that I have any special authority or that my opinions should carry any extra weight; it just means that I have not been previously involved in this dispute and that I have some experience helping other people to resolve their disputes. Right now I am waiting for more of the comment sections above to be filled in. In the meantime, I would encourage everyone involved to read the "Guide for participants" at the top of this page. Thanks! --Guy Macon (talk) 16:34, 3 October 2012 (UTC)
Regarding waiting for opening statements, Binksternet has been actively editing other pages but has not responded here, Memills last edited Wikipedia on 30 September, and Memotype last edited Wikipedia on 14 September. How long should we wait? I want everyone involved to weigh in, but i also don't want to frustrate people with undue delays. Opinions? --Guy Macon (talk) 16:14, 4 October 2012 (UTC)
Comment - [from uninvolved editor] I looked at the sources that are listed above to support inclusion of the material. They look satisfactory to me. The Segal source in particular, p 276, is conclusive (describing a campaign against laws which define marital rape). That source is published by the University of California. So, the essence of the sentence should be included. Can it be wordsmithed? Sure ... in situations like this it is always better if the specific advocates are named in the sentence. But WP:UNDUE does not exclude this sentence. --Noleander (talk) 19:33, 4 October 2012 (UTC)
Comment: Without commenting on the issue, some of the editors seems to not be aware of WP:PAYWALL. Unfortunately, not all sources are available for free. Indeed, many high-quality sources are only available either by buying a book or article, or using an academic library. Wikipedia explicitly endorses the use of such sources. If you have trouble getting them, WP:REX can often help. --Stephan Schulz (talk) 20:55, 4 October 2012 (UTC)
As a dispute resolution volunteer, I choose which cases to help with based upon the basic principle of having no opinion one way or the other about the topic of the dispute. And indeed, the actual question of what some men's group did or did not say bores me. I am just here to help you to resolve your dispute. Attacking one of the volunteers who is working on your case accomplishes nothing (it doesn't hurt you either, BTW; we are all committed to be fair and impartial despite such behavior.) Please write about article content, not about user conduct. If you have s serious accusation concerning a volunteer's competence or impartiality, bring it up at Wikipedia talk:Dispute resolution noticeboard, not here in the middle of a dispute. I have inferred nothing, and if anyone thinks that I have they need to go back and read the guide for participants at the top of this page again. All I am doing is confirming that the sources say what we say they say. I fully expect that they will, but I am still going to check. I have to start somewhere, but be assured that I will verify any claims made any party to this dispute. In the following, I may seem to be challenging one side of the dispute and not the other, but rest assured that this is just an artifact of my having to start somewhere. I will look at the claims of the other side of the dispute very soon. Also note that I have purposely avoided checking to see who wrote the text and added the citations I am examining. I don't want that to affect my evaluation. I have not "dismissed" any sources' reliability. I have every intention of questioning every sources' reliability, which is not the same thing. In particular, in the above I am asking which of the following claims the citation to Straight Sex: Rethinking the Politics of Pleasure supports:
or
When I see a source that says
I am reluctant to accept that source as being reliable on the topic of the positions of those same men's rights groups. If you want Wikipedia to report that this source made that claim, the source is reliable for that. If you want us to use Wikipedia's voice to present that claim as an established fact, you need a reliable source for that, and this simply isn't one. I am also concerned by the overall nature of that string of citations. Normally, we want to find a reliable source and report what the source says. When I see citation to a book criticizing a 1994 event in Kansas City followed by a 2010 news report from India, it makes me suspect that the conclusion came first and then someone started looking for citations to support it. Again, I have every intention of giving any claims made by the other parties in this dispute the same level of scrutiny. This is just where I happened to start. --Guy Macon (talk) 11:31, 5 October 2012 (UTC)
Men's Rights discussion 2Comment - Firstly I would like to thank all those participating in this discussion, in particular the volunteers for the giving of their time. My arguments are based on WP:UNDUE and WP:VERIFY . Sorry if this is a bit long, I have tried to be succinct. (1) Undue Weight My argument that the statement
is undue-weight is based Jimbo Wales' paraphrased statement from WP:UNDUE, I see nothing overriding this statement.
In essence if a minority hold the view than you should be able to easily name prominent adherents, and imo the spirit of the statement is that there is an expectation to do so. With the possible exception of someone in India, no one can find any adherents of this view let alone prominent adherents. Despite not being able to demonstrate a significant minority holds this view, Cailil & Spl1 make the argument that the first statement applies and as such the second statement is now moot, (I am trying not to Strawman here). They absolve themselves of considering the 'significant minority' case by saying it requires original research even though it is patently not satisfied. If a minority do not hold a view I fail to see how a majority can hold it. Their stance imo is not in the spirit of WP:UNDUE. The first rule of Wikipedia is that there are no rules, a statement designed precisely for this sort case and for common sense to prevail. In short if a majority or even a significant minority supposedly hold this view and hardly anyone can be found with this view, then a common sense test has been failed. Furthermore claiming a group or individual campaigns for the decriminalization of marital rape, ie. impunity from the law for raping one's spouse, is a significant claim. Before any group is impugned with this view on Wikipedia, the burden of proof that the claim satisfies wp:Undue, wp:Reliable and wp:Verifiability should also be significant. Wikipedia also has a moral and legal obligation not to libel any individual or group. Atm all we have supporting this statement is the unsupported opinions of some who think Men Right's groups hold this view. This is entirely inadequate. (2) Reliability of the Sources. The claim is made here that because a source is 'Scholarly', 'Academic' or 'Peer Reviewed' that its reliability is beyond reproach, even if it fails any common sense test. There are many media through which academics publish their work such as:-
There is nothing wrong with opinionated work and limited peer review. Diversity of opinions are essential to debate and the life blood of new ideas. With the exception of sometimes the hard sciences, academics are not automatons deterministically sifting through evidence and logically coming to conclusions like Data from Star Trek. They play with ideas; try and say seeming absurd things; sometimes have strong ideological bases and are sometimes deliberately provocactive. Fully rigorous peer review is very time consuming and requires a lot of resources, having other less rigorous outlets of publication allows work to enter the melting pot of ideas that is Academia, Ultimately it is from this melting pot that we get :-
Which in general can be accepted as reliable without reservation. Other forms of academic publication require more scrutiny. A glaring example of scholarship gone awry being the Sokol affair. In short just because a work is 'Scholarly', 'Academic' or 'Peer Reviewed' does not necessarily make it a reliable source. This very point is addressed in WP:SCHOLARSHIP.
The notion that if the adjectives 'Scholarly' or 'Academic' or 'Peer Reviewed' can be attached to a piece of work then the source is reliable, is prevalent in certain parts of Wikipedia and is causing enormous damage imo. The notion is based on a lack of understanding of the way Academic publishing works. The sources cited here are not reliable and are the unsupported opinions of those the authors are at ideological odds with. Guy Macon has summarized my thoughts on these works succinctly. Ultimately the reliability of these sources, or not, is largely an argument of opinion. If we can not reach consensus then I feel the matter should go to experts at RSN to adjudicate, the result of which I think will have a profound effect on Wikipedia. This is a serious precedent setting matter. Thanks again CSDarrow (talk) 13:23, 5 October 2012 (UTC)
Men's Rights discussion 3It certainly seems like the pro-statement side have a number of citations with specific names on their side. Dismissing them because they come the world's largest English-speaking nation (which should have some importance to the English WP) hardly seems fair; and the whole Anti-dowry laws section is all about SIFF, so mentioning them in respect to martial rape laws doesn't seem unreasonable. Nor does it seem that the same standard is being held to other cites; Politics of Masculinities: Men in Movements is 12 years old, and used it many, many times in the article. In the section "Military Conscription", it's the newest cite; the next most recent is Redeeming men: religion and masculinities from 1996.--Prosfilaes (talk) 11:47, 6 October 2012 (UTC)
Comment To my mind the discussion is becoming exhausted and losing focus. The stance is now being taken by some that the statement, (and it variants), is not infering that men should have impunity from the law for raping their wives. I feel the statement at hand, ie
in the absence of clarifying comments or context, would leave the majority of readers with the impression that the Men's Right movement supports impunity from the law for raping one's wife. This is not the case apart from possibly a very extreme fringe. Variants such as "..have campaigned against marital rape legislation" are also not sufficiently clear imo. If others feel the Mens Rights Movement has campaigned for the removal of "Marital Rape Legislation ", with marital rape covered by existing laws, it is for them to present an entirely unambiguous statement supported by reliable sources that does not violate undue-weight. The "Scholarly/Academic" sources presented here are entirely inadequate by any measure, they are shocking examples of "Scholarship" that if need be should go to RSN. My sense is that the Mens Rights Movement has had little to say on the issue. My stance is still that the statement should simply be removed. CSDarrow (talk) 14:03, 10 October 2012 (UTC)
Hello, I'm yet another DRN volunteer and I would like to probe for disputants' opinions on the following statements:
May we assume that these statements are supported by all disputants? — Dmitrij D. Czarkoff (talk•track) 00:09, 11 October 2012 (UTC)
Men's Rights discussion 4
The above is a prime example of what I am talking about. I asked you where in the cite you saw what you say is in the cite, and you ignored my request, provided a link, and claimed the page at the other end of the link says something that it does not say. Your claim: "[The cite] explains exactly what marital rape laws are; they're laws that protect women from rape by their spouses" What the page actually says: "redefining rape by including sexual assault in any form in its definition [...] the proposed new law, besides terming sexual relationship of a man with a wife under the age of 18 as rape, also specifies ... that if a man commits sexual assault even on his wife, who is above 18 years of age, shall be punished with imprisonment" Somewhat related, but not the same thing. Your cite doesn't say what you claimed it says. Given the fact that we know that at times you claim that a citation says something that it does not say, I am going to have to insist that, from now on, when someone asks you "where in the cite does it say that?" that you respond by quoting the exact wording where you believe the cite says what you claim it says. This is not an unreasonable request. --Guy Macon (talk) 16:59, 15 October 2012 (UTC)
Comment I do not think Slp1 should be editing, as we speak, the phrase in Men's rights that's under consideration here. CSDarrow (talk) 15:18, 12 October 2012 (UTC)
Comment:- This discussion has been going on for over a week. To mind it is going round in circles, losing focus and has become unproductive. It has become a discussion about the subject as opposed to the resolution of the conflict that was brought here. Spl1 has to stop changing the statement in Men's Rights so then we can decide the following:-
To mind in all its incarnations the statement fails all of the above. Unless we can move forward I feel the sources should be taken to wp:RSN for evaluation. CSDarrow (talk) 19:44, 13 October 2012 (UTC)
Men's Rights discussion 5Source Check I was checking some sources and had a question about source 88, which references the south china morning post quoting the "All India Harassed Husbands Association." I copied the name of the organization from the news article to attribute it to a specific group. However, I realized that I can't find the All India Harassed Husbands Association with a simple google search. I didn't look very thoroughly but does this organization actually exist? Perpetualization (talk) 19:19, 14 October 2012 (UTC)
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Frank L. VanderSloot
The case has gone on for ten days and should be closed by now, as partially resolved. There is a rough consensus not to include the paragraph on the 1997 warning letter, which was the original issue that was brought to DRN. The Rolling Stone and Slate articles don't explicitly mention the 1997 letter, but do refer to the controversy over Melaleuca's supplements. Inclusion of a more general statement describing the controversy will have to be discussed on the article's talk page, as DRN is not a substitute for talk page discussion.SGCM (talk) 18:12, 20 October 2012 (UTC) |
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Yes, I have discussed this issue on a talk page already. Location of dispute Users involved
Dispute overview A paragraph in the Frank L. VanderSloot article stated:
This paragraph was separated out into a subsection marked as WP:Undue at 23:33, 5 October 2012. The separation, subheader and Undue note were reverted at 16:10, 6 October 2012. A Discussion was begun on the Talk Page. The crux of the debate is: Should the paragraph be deleted or not? One editor believes: "There is only one Source given for this item, in a trade website. (The other Source is the letter itself, which is not good enough in Wikipedia's eyes to use as a Source alone.) This factoid about Melaleuca was never the object of scrutiny in any other Reliable Source, nor reported on elsewhere. It is therefore de minimis. It is, given the thousands of products made by Melaleuca, just not worth trifling about. Nor, given the fact that this article is about a Living Person and not a company, does it warrant even a mention in the biography of this man. A second editor has responded: "I disagree that it is unduly weighted. It has been mentioned by secondary sources and is described succinctly in the article and only in as much detail as is necessary to convey the gist. Suggesting that FDA warnings are analogous to a speeding ticket is nothing more than a personal opinion (c.f. WP:OR) and it demonstrates a lack of understating of their significance. It's especially relevant given that VS had a serious run-in with the FDA for similar issues while running Oil of Melaleuca. . . . FDA warning letters are indeed significant and highly notable." A third editor has said: "FDA has a 21 page manual explaining what warning letters are and I stand by what I said about it being too wonky to be able to describe without either making it sound worse than it was or giving the section undue weight. As far as I can tell, FDA has never taken an administrative action against the company. Even the letter they sent 15 years ago did not apply to the company writ large. . . . I certainly agree that it should be removed." A fourth editor has said: "The letter is just talking about wording on a product label. Doesn't seem notable." Have you tried to resolve this previously? We have discussed this on the Talk Page. How do you think we can help? One of the editors suggested taking this to Dispute Resolution before going any farther. You can suggest a next step for us to follow. Opening comments by Rhode Island RedPlease limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
VanderSloot is the CEO and owner of a multilevel marketing company called Melaleuca. The FDA sent a warning letter to FrankVanderSloot regarding illegal marketing of his company’s nutritional products – i.e. making claims that the products can treat, prevent or cure diseases, which positions them as drugs in violation of DSHEA. Such infractions are considered a very serious matter, and warning letters are used as the FDA Office of Regulatory Affairs’ first line of defense; the next step being heavy fines and/or closure. When it comes to such warnings, the FDA has final authority (i.e. the warning letter is not a mere suggestion nor is it open to debate – it is a final opinion). The statement in the article is backed up by two WP:RS and there is ample precedence for both the importance of such warning letters and their inclusion in WP articles. The objections to inclusion of this information raised by the disputant are vague and without merit, and collusion/vote-stacking is an additional concern. I have addressed the issue in detail under the discussion section. Rhode Island Red (talk) 16:10, 10 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by Andrewman327Please limit to 2000 characters - longer statements may be deleted in their entirety or asked to be shortened. This is so a volunteer can review the dispute in a timely manner. Thanks.
My position is that there is no way to include this letter without either using original research or giving it undue weight due to the complex nature of administrative rulemaking. First off, warning letters are common. FDA has issued 11,224 warning letters since the letter in question (admittedly original research from here). That works out to an average of roughly 3.5 of them per business day over 15 years. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) was passed in 1994 and applied to the company after it went into effect. In 1997, FDA sent the company a letter stating that it should change the wording used on the packaging of three of its products because they contained health claims that had not been approved by FDA. I can’t find any response, either from the company or FDA, but it appears that the company subsequently changed the wording on its packaging. In 2001, Pearson v. Thompson found that FDA overstepped its constitutional authority in regulating health claims of dietary supplements. Although DSHEA is still in effect, the nature of FDA’s enforcement has grown less strict and it is difficult to say how the company’s claims would be treated in the modern regulatory environment. What is clear is that the company was never the target of any official action by FDA. The letter itself states that it was not a reflection of the company writ large. Even the FDA guide to sending warning letters states that they are a tool for voluntary compliance, "not a regulatory action" (PDF).. Opening comments by Collect
I believe the ongoing discussions on the article talk page and consensus arrived thereat render DRN usage moot. Collect (talk) 23:46, 10 October 2012 (UTC) Opening comments by HtownCatMy position is that one FDA warning letter issued 15 years ago to a company that has since marketed hundreds (possibly thousands) of products since is not notable, especially on a BLP. The warning letter was for a claim on the label, which the company changed, and there aren't any sources saying that they've had problems with the FDA since. Also, I'm not a member of the Conservatism Project, if that matters at all.HtownCat (talk) 14:44, 15 October 2012 (UTC) Frank L. VanderSloot discussionPlease do not use this for discussing the dispute prior to a volunteer opening the thread for comments - continue discussing the issues on the article talk page if necessary.
Hello, I'm a DRN volunteer and I would like to ask Collect to replace his statement with his position on the dispute. Not only comments on others' conduct are discouraged on DRN, but the filing editor asserts the conflict between local and global consensus, so the case may have a potential per WP:LOCALCONSENSUS. P.S.: please, disregard the template stating that the case is opened and comments may be made in this section – we are still waiting for other parties' comments and won't proceed unless anybody from another side of the dispute would indicate their readiness to participate. — Dmitrij D. Czarkoff (talk•track) 14:47, 10 October 2012 (UTC)
Response to Andrewman
I don’t see how that position can be defended. The current text describing the letter uses no original research. It cites a reliable secondary source and a reliable primary source, and the event described is unambiguous. The statement about the “complex nature of administrative rulemaking” is so vague and nebulous that I don’t see any way to apply it here. It’s that assertion that sounds like WP:OR to me. It’s a red herring to suggest that the text should be deleted because the entire matter of FDA warning letters is simply too complex; it’s simply not true. As for the frequency of FDA warning letters, they do issue them for various types of violations, but not that many letters are issued to supplement manufacturers for violative advertising claims (and even less often after having conducted a facilities inspection). I’ve already supplied sufficient evidence that the letters are noteworthy in general, as indicated by the significant coverage they have received in the past. That notwithstanding, the argument about frequency is weak. It matters not whether the FDA sent out 10 or 100. The fact remains that VanderSloot was the subject of regulatory action for misleading advertising claims suggesting that his products have curative properties (i.e., illegally positioning them as drugs), and this followed similar FDA action against VanderSloot for similarly illegal claims made about his “Oil of Melaleuca” products (claims which at least in part responsible for the company being shut down).
It wasn't the “packaging”, it was product “promotional materials” – the terms are not synonymous. Furthermore, when the FDA refers to “product labeling” it applies to any and all claims used in product marketing and promotion, whether it appears on the product label, a brochure, or a website. Additionally, I don’t see why it would matter whether this editor was able to find the company’s response. The secondary source says that VanderSloot complied with the warning (stopped illegally marketing those products as drugs).
What is clear to me is (a) your statement is incorrect, and (b) you seem overly eager to use incorrect assertions in order to have this detail whitewashed from the article. The FDA’s position was unambiguous and Meleleuca was in fact the target of an “official regulatory action” by the FDA. The FDA asserts that such letters are significant and are issues only in the case of clear-cut violations of legal statutes:[59] “The agency position is that Warning Letters are issued only for violations of regulatory significance. Significant violations are those violations that may lead to enforcement action if not promptly and adequately corrected." A Warning Letter is the agency's principal means of achieving prompt voluntary compliance with the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the Act). The Warning Letter was developed to correct violations of the statutes or regulations. Also available to the agency are enforcement strategies which are based on the particular set of circumstances at hand and may include sequential or concurrent FDA enforcement actions such as recall, seizure, injunction, administrative detention, civil money penalties and/or prosecution to achieve correction. Despite the significance of the violations, there are some circumstances that may preclude the agency from taking any further enforcement action following the issuance of a Warning Letter. For example, the violation may be serious enough to warrant a Warning Letter and subsequent seizure; however, if the seizable quantity fails to meet the agency's threshold value for seizures, the agency may choose not to pursue a seizure. In this instance, the Warning Letter would document prior warning if adequate corrections are not made and enforcement action is warranted at a later time.” Rhode Island Red (talk) 16:49, 11 October 2012 (UTC)
Just wondering if we have a dispute resolution volunteer ???? Is Dmitrij our volunteer of record? Or is it TransporterMan? This is the first step in a dispute resolution process, so it would be nice if we could have a recommendation as to what to do with this paragraph, or anyway what to do to forward the process. Thanks very much. GeorgeLouis (talk) 22:41, 14 October 2012 (UTC)
Response to HTownCat
Reply: The date has no bearing on notability. The article currently mentions many details that happened 15 years ago. Had it been a more recent entry, then presumably this editor would have argued about WP:RECENT or WP:NOTNEWS. There is no WP policy or guideline concerning notability that excludes information merely because it's 15 years old. In addition, the number of products the company has is irrelevant (and obviously they aren't going to get FDA warnings for misleading health claims about laundry detergent, toothpaste, etc).
Reply: First, it is disingenuous to repeat arguments that have been discounted. It was not the product label that carried the violative claims; it was the product marketing materials.[60] Secondly, where the claims were made (label or other promotional materials) has no bearing on the notability of the information or the seriousness of the violation. Third, it matters not whether the company continued to violate the law; the entry in the WP article makes no allegations about ongoing illegal claims, and in fact it accurately discloses that the company complied with the order (had they not, they would have likely been heavily fined or shut down, as these are the next steps in the FDAs process). Lastly, the fact that the company complied with the order doesn't make the initial infraction or the FDAs warning any less significant. Rhode Island Red (talk) 17:19, 15 October 2012 (UTC) The argument with the most consensus at this point is to not include the paragraph on the grounds of Wikipedia's WP:BLP policy. If there are no further objections, this case should be closed as resolved. @Rhode Island Red. While I understand your concerns, bringing in more editors to a talk page is not something that DRN can always accomplish. Consider notifying a WikiProject or using Wikipedia:Request for comment. A word of caution, disputes between American conservatives and liberals on Wikipedia have been ongoing since the site was founded and are especially heated during the election season (just take a look at Wikipedia:General sanctions/2012 Presidential Campaign/Log and this discussion on ANI). @GeorgeLouis. The dispute resolution noticeboard is informal, there are no assigned volunteers. It's a venue for establishing consensus with the input of uninvolved editors. Cases can be closed when a consensus has been reached. --SGCM (talk) 19:48, 15 October 2012 (UTC)
The argument for removal now rests solely on the charge that the information about the FDA is given undue weight; i.e.:
That cursory Google search attempt (i.e., restricted to articles from 1997-2000 and not including the term “FDA”) does not prove absence of evidence, and furthermore, absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. The underlying argument, however, is easily addressed. There are in fact several additional reliable sources that refer to VanderSloot’s run-ins with the FDA, so the charge about undue weight and lack of multiple sources does not hold up. The following reliable sources all referred to VanderSloot’s run-in with the FDA during the Melaleuca Inc-era (and note that these were not general articles about his company but were about VanderSloot specifically).
In addition, as I mentioned before, the details about VanderSloot’s run-ins with the FDA over misleading advertising during the Melaleuca, Inc. era are especially significant given that this is exactly the same thing that led to the closure of VanderSloot’s previous company Oil of Melaleuca, Inc. Immediately following the closure, the company was reincarnated as Melaleuca, Inc., and VanderSloot again had the same problems with the FDA over illegal/misleading advertising. The following are relevant quotes from WP:RS:
VanderSloot’s FDA run-ins with Oil of Melaleuca are also described in detail in this puff-piece autobiography (heavily skewed POV mind you).[68][69] It also bears repeating that the key phrase about VanderSloot’s FDA run-in mentioned in the WP bio is not “contentious” in any way – it is an indisputable fact, as indicated by the primary source (the FDAs warning itself) and a rock-solid secondary source (The Tan Sheet). The documentation provided above easily satisfies WP policy on public figures (WP:WELLKNOWN), which states:
The FDA issues are just the tip of the iceberg too. There are also numerous reliable sources that have provided in-depth coverage questioning the legitimacy of VanderSloot's business practices in other areas, charging that it is essentially a pyramid scheme. We can save that discussion for another day, but just be advised that there are several other significant controversies about VanderSloot's business practices that have been covered by multiple sources and would therefore also satisfy WP:WELLKNOWN. Rhode Island Red (talk) 22:04, 16 October 2012 (UTC)
[70] is typical - the FDA sends out far more than 500 "warning letters" each year. The Melaleuca letter falls into the lowest class as it is specifically about "labeling" of products. [71] and absolutely no further action occurred. In short - a routine FDA letter about labelling, and of zero import to VanderSloot personally at all. Cheers. Collect (talk) 12:43, 17 October 2012 (UTC)
@SGCM can we close out the topic now that we have consensus? This feels like it's gone on forever. Andrewman327 (talk) 18:55, 18 October 2012 (UTC)
The case has gone on for ten days and should be closed by now, as partially resolved. There is a rough consensus not to include the paragraph on the 1997 warning letter, which was the original issue that was brought to DRN. The Rolling Stone and Slate articles don't explicitly mention the 1997 letter, but do refer to the controversy over Melaleuca's supplements. Inclusion of a more general statement describing the controversy will have to be discussed on the article's talk page, as DRN is not a substitute for talk page discussion. I have no opinion on its inclusion, other than that it must be presented impartially and in adherence with WP:BLP.--SGCM (talk) 18:07, 20 October 2012 (UTC)
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