Italiavivi (talk | contribs) →Interim tally: Someone didn't read this survey when it started. |
Italiavivi (talk | contribs) →Interim tally: Re-linked WP:NOT#DEMOCRACY which Endroit seems unfamiliar with. |
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::::::::::::I have never cited WP:IAR, ever, in any discussion on Wikipedia. If you can't address my actual arguments due to the weakness of yours, don't address them at all. Again, Wikipedia is not a democracy; your constant fixation on "votes" and tallies from those you recruited from your message at WikiProject Japan makes your confusion about Wikipedia and democracy clear. [[User:Italiavivi|Italiavivi]] 23:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
::::::::::::I have never cited WP:IAR, ever, in any discussion on Wikipedia. If you can't address my actual arguments due to the weakness of yours, don't address them at all. Again, Wikipedia is not a democracy; your constant fixation on "votes" and tallies from those you recruited from your message at WikiProject Japan makes your confusion about Wikipedia and democracy clear. [[User:Italiavivi|Italiavivi]] 23:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
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:::::::::::::You have suggested invalidating this [[WP:RM]] request due to your belief that it has been "flooded" by [[WP:JA]] editors. In other words, you are requesting this [[WP:RM]] process to be ignored, am I not right?--[[User:Endroit|Endroit]] 23:46, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
:::::::::::::You have suggested invalidating this [[WP:RM]] request due to your belief that it has been "flooded" by [[WP:JA]] editors. In other words, you are requesting this [[WP:RM]] process to be ignored, am I not right?--[[User:Endroit|Endroit]] 23:46, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::::You again show your confusion. This particular survey was disclaimed as non-binding from its start, and I am simply affirming its non-binding nature in light of your canvassing at WikiProject Japan (and the subsequent bloc voting). There is no invalidating a survey which was identified as non-binding from the beginning. [[User:Italiavivi|Italiavivi]] 23:53, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
::::::::::::::You again show your confusion. This particular survey was disclaimed as non-binding from its start, and I am simply affirming its non-binding nature in light of your canvassing at WikiProject Japan (and the subsequent bloc voting). There is no invalidating a survey which was identified as non-binding from the beginning, and voting-fixated/vote-canvassing persons like yourself are precisely why [[WP:NOT#DEMOCRACY|Wikipedia is not a democracy]]. [[User:Italiavivi|Italiavivi]] 23:53, 20 August 2007 (UTC) |
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== moves and reversions == |
== moves and reversions == |
Revision as of 23:55, 20 August 2007
Redirect Obama to Barack Obama?
Using his full name is unnecessary for a disambig page. Use the name he is most often referred to as. Italiavivi 00:44, 18 February 2007 (UTC)
- Use the disambiguation. Redirecting Obama to Mr. Obama article is wrong because Mr. Obama is not a known person outside of the U.S.A. Wikipedia also says this is wrong. See here "Disambiguation in Wikipedia is the process of resolving conflicts in article titles that occur when a single term can be associated with more than one topic" The Obama city article was started a year BEFORE the Mr. Obama article. I have redirected Obama to Obama disambiguation.
- When you look for Clinton, it is not redirected to Mr. Clinton or Mrs. Clinton. It is directed to Clinton (disambiguation) where you can see listings for many small towns called Clinton. Obama, Japan in Fukui is a big city.SRMach5B 02:51, 17 June 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, come on. I will bet you that 99% of people who type in Obama are looking for Barack Obama, and not some village in Japan (32,000 is not a "big city"). There are hundreds of wiki links that link to the Barack Obama article, and only a handful (and mostly obscure ones) that link to Obama in Fukui. And while it is true that Obama, Japan existed before Barack Obama, that does not make it more important or give it precedence on Wikipedia. The reason that the towns called Clinton pop up is not because they are just as important as Bill and Hillary, but because it is not clear which of those two is more important. And to suggest that Mr. Obama is unknown outside the US is nonsense, especially in comparison to how well known Obama, Japan is outside of Japan, or outside of Fukui, for that matter --Ivan 01:34, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Note the above user's approval of the Obama (DAB) format. Italiavivi 23:55, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Oh, come on. I will bet you that 99% of people who type in Obama are looking for Barack Obama, and not some village in Japan (32,000 is not a "big city"). There are hundreds of wiki links that link to the Barack Obama article, and only a handful (and mostly obscure ones) that link to Obama in Fukui. And while it is true that Obama, Japan existed before Barack Obama, that does not make it more important or give it precedence on Wikipedia. The reason that the towns called Clinton pop up is not because they are just as important as Bill and Hillary, but because it is not clear which of those two is more important. And to suggest that Mr. Obama is unknown outside the US is nonsense, especially in comparison to how well known Obama, Japan is outside of Japan, or outside of Fukui, for that matter --Ivan 01:34, 20 July 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. Wikipedia policy favors redirection when one usage is overwhelmingly more common. Ivan has already explained above why this situation differs from the Clinton example. Redirect done, and the Template:Redirect template added to Barack Obama page so that users can easily find the disambiguation page. —Lowellian (reply) 09:57, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note the above user's approval of the Obama (DAB) format. Italiavivi 23:55, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Agreed. Wikipedia policy favors redirection when one usage is overwhelmingly more common. Ivan has already explained above why this situation differs from the Clinton example. Redirect done, and the Template:Redirect template added to Barack Obama page so that users can easily find the disambiguation page. —Lowellian (reply) 09:57, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- Also agree. Wikicharts lists the Barack Obama article among the 300 most viewed Wikipedia articles for 6 of the past 7 months. In February 2007, it was ranked number 16, getting an estimated 21,429 views per day. There is no other "Obama" article listed among the top 1000 articles tracked by Wikicharts. If we are primarily interested in making Wikipedia more accessible to its users, the sensible answer seems clear. --HailFire 12:38, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note the above user's approval of the Obama (DAB) format. Italiavivi 23:55, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Also agree. Wikicharts lists the Barack Obama article among the 300 most viewed Wikipedia articles for 6 of the past 7 months. In February 2007, it was ranked number 16, getting an estimated 21,429 views per day. There is no other "Obama" article listed among the top 1000 articles tracked by Wikicharts. If we are primarily interested in making Wikipedia more accessible to its users, the sensible answer seems clear. --HailFire 12:38, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
Mr. Barack Obama is a minor politician who is little known except in the USA. Wikipedia is an international website, not a tool of the USA. A neutral administrator has already reached a concensus that Obama would be a disambiguation page. This happened in June 2007. Wikipedia policy demands neutrality and disambiguation in case of disputes. SNPBrown 06:35, 7 August 2007 (UTC)
- "A neutral administrator has already reached a concensus [sic] that Obama would be a disambiguation page." Where is this supposed consensus? Show us a link to the discussion where this consensus was established. Certainly, no such consensus exists on this talk page. —Lowellian (reply) 20:21, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- Barack Obama is not a minor politician - he is one of the front runners for the Presidency, and I suspect he's rather more well-known than any of the other Obamas listed on the dab page, and is the one who is most likely being searched for when someone types in Obama. Save your criticism of the USA - if someone types in Chirac or Yeltsin, they are likely looking for Jacques or Boris. Neither one is a tool of the USA, and both go directly to these individuals' pages with the disambiguation page listed on top for other uses of the name. I don't see where consensus was reached on this page about this change - I favor going back to the same approach as Chirac. Tvoz |talk 06:13, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note the above user's approval of the Obama (DAB) format. Italiavivi 23:55, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yeltsin and Chirac are both former heads of state. The Obama disambiguation is similar to Perot, and Nader in that respect; although, I would also not oppose a move of Chirac to a DAB page. Also, the DABs of Yeltsin are all related to him, so it is not the same issue as we have here (a sitting prime minister, a historic clan and a city, and a potential nominee for president) by any stretch of the imagination. Quite a mixed bag. Neier 09:13, 10 August 2007 (UTC)
- All we need to consider here is whether one particular usage of "Obama" is overwhelmingly more used than other usages. And one particular usage is. Obama, Japan, is a small, small city, and all other people named Obama are far less well-known than Barack. —Lowellian (reply) 20:21, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- Couldn't agree more, Lowellian. Let's not kid ourselves with false analogies and shoddy comparisons, either. Comparing the name "Edwards" with the name "Obama" is decidedly apples to oranges. "Obama (disambig)" is perfectly adequate and appropriate, with "Obama" piping straight to Barack Obama. Italiavivi 23:22, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note the above user's approval of the Obama (DAB) format. Italiavivi 23:55, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- To move Obama to Obama (disambiguation) should go through the normal WP:RM procedure. The original content of Obama was the disambiguation. The wider audience would help reach a concensus as to whether or not a particular usage deserves the redirect in Wikipedia. Neier 00:40, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
- Couldn't agree more, Lowellian. Let's not kid ourselves with false analogies and shoddy comparisons, either. Comparing the name "Edwards" with the name "Obama" is decidedly apples to oranges. "Obama (disambig)" is perfectly adequate and appropriate, with "Obama" piping straight to Barack Obama. Italiavivi 23:22, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- All we need to consider here is whether one particular usage of "Obama" is overwhelmingly more used than other usages. And one particular usage is. Obama, Japan, is a small, small city, and all other people named Obama are far less well-known than Barack. —Lowellian (reply) 20:21, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
I came here to find out about Prime Minister Mangue Obama. I was curious to see what kind of discussion someone would find in the disambiguation page. For the sake of comparison, look at Edwards (disambiguation). John Edwards is certainly the most famous Edwards that I see in the disambiguation but he is just a fad and a politician known in his home country, the United States. There are less famous Edwards people and many cities of Edwards listed in the disambiguation page. If Edwards leads to disambiguation, so should Obama. Someone mentioned wikipedia policy is for disambiguation if there is a dispute. The question of what to do is straightforward in this case.
By the way, Mangue Obama is the Prime Minister. That is more senior than senator. (I'm not saying Obama should be directed to Mangue Obama but he currently has a higher priority than Senator Obama) Also note that Equatorial Guinea is no longer a dictatorship but a democracy. US Secretary of State Rice recently met with that government.Midemer 22:39, 11 August 2007 (UTC)
- That article is an itty bitty stub. What are you trying to pull here? Oh wait, here is the entire article.
Ricardo Mangue Obama Nfubea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search
Ricardo Mangue Obama Nfubea (born c.1961) has been Prime Minister of Equatorial Guinea since 14 August 2006, the first ethnic Fang to serve in the post [1]. He is a lawyer by profession and a member of the Democratic Party of Equatorial Guinea (PDGE). Mangue Obama was second deputy prime minister in the previous government of Miguel Abia Biteo Boricó, and also previously held the labor and education portfolios. Preceded by Miguel Abia Biteo Boricó Prime Minister of Equatorial Guinea 2006–present Succeeded by Incumbent This article about a politician of the Equatorial Guinea is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ricardo_Mangue_Obama_Nfubea"
Categories: Equatoguinean politicians | Living people | Central African politician stubs | Equatorial Guinea stubs Turtlescrubber 04:29, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- It would also appear that Prime Minister Nfubea is not commonly known as "Prime Minister Obama," contrary to portrayals here. As I said before, there are some disingenuous arguments taking place here. Italiavivi 22:27, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
AN/I
I've posted this on one of the Admin noticeboards, asking for some intervention here. If I read the history correctly (and that's not so easy) - it appears that since December 2006 "Obama" has redirected to Barack Obama, the most common usage of the word. That page has a pointer to the dab page, and Neier's repeated reversion despite being asked to wait until this is settled has rendered that incorrect - so I hope we'll get some resolution here quickly. Tvoz |talk 23:39, 13 August 2007 (UTC)
- As I have said above, the "wait" should default to the previous condition (before the 12/2006 move; or, even at the time of the WP:RM request being filed). I have replied on the ANI, and hope to see some rational conversation there. Neier 03:04, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- The admin noticeboards are the wrong place to post this as it is indeed a content dispute (albeit a weird one). WP:DR or WP:RFC might be better places to seek help. This is my last post here for the next long while. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 04:39, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- I don't see the logic of going back to where it was in December, when there were six months of Obama redirecting to Barack Obama since then. Yours is the change from the status quo, Neier, if one looks at the facts which I just laid out on AN/I. Ultimately maybe the status quo has to change, but not before there is full discussion and consensus is reached. You and Nihonjoe acted as if you had consensus for your change and you did not. And that's why I've asked for administrative input. RFC is fine for real content disputes, but this is process. Tvoz |talk 06:38, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Except, there were not six months. See below. Neier 13:36, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Then I suggest you start the "full discussion", because it's clear you and others weren't happy with the above survey. Start your own then you can't complain it's "biased", etc. John Smith's 07:36, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Based on the above, and also based on comments at ANI, I think you should realize that just because the Barack Obama article said that Obama was redirecting back to it, it generally was not the case. You can check the history of this page and correct any mistakes below:
- I don't see the logic of going back to where it was in December, when there were six months of Obama redirecting to Barack Obama since then. Yours is the change from the status quo, Neier, if one looks at the facts which I just laid out on AN/I. Ultimately maybe the status quo has to change, but not before there is full discussion and consensus is reached. You and Nihonjoe acted as if you had consensus for your change and you did not. And that's why I've asked for administrative input. RFC is fine for real content disputes, but this is process. Tvoz |talk 06:38, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- August 12, 2004: Obama was redirected to Obama, Fukui
- March 26, 2005: Obama became a disambiguation page
- December 1, 2006: Obama was edited to redirect to Barack Obama
- for 47 days
- January 17: Obama was changed to a disambig page
- for 6 days
- January 23: Obama was changed to a redirect to Barack
- for 6 days
- January 29: Obama was changed to a disambig page
- for 5 days
- February 3: Obama was changed to a redirect to Barack
- for 9 days
- February 12: Obama was change to a disambig, and changed to a redirect to Barack
- for 2 days
- February 14: Obama was changed to a disambig
- for 55 days
- April 10: Obama was changed to a redirect to Obama, Fukui; then changed to a redirect to Barack
- for 29 days
- May 9: Obama was changed to a disambig page
- for 49 days
- June 17: Obama was redirected to Obama (disambiguation), and later the same day, Obama (disambiguation) was merged back to Obama
- for 50 days
- August 6: Obama was moved to Obama (disambiguation) and a redirect created from Obama to Barack Obama
- August 7: Obama was changed to a redirect to Obama (disambiguation)
- August 10: Obama (disambiguation) was moved to Obama
- At this point, changes erupted so fast that there is not much sense in documenting them.
- Being gracious, and only going back to 12/1/2006, it is still a fact that Obama spent more time as a disambig page than as a redirect to Barack. Most recently, from May 9 until August 6, Obama was a disambig page. Since so many people have edited the article both ways, it is obviously something which should be discussed before taking any actions. Neier 13:36, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- How about some diffs, Neier. I can't find where you're seeing this, for example the February 14 change. And where is the RM for that change, or were the people who wanted the dab redirect content to just sneak it in? It was the responsibility of whoever made changes to disambiguation to correct the pages that refer to it - I know that anytime the text was changed on Barack Obama, I checked the link before changing the text back. There is no history for Obama before August - what I am saying is that the status quo appeared to be that Obama redirected to Barack Obama. Had any change to Obama (disambiguation) been done properly, I believe editors at Barack would have objected to it, as our understanding was that Obama was redirecting to Barack, which it was any time I checked it. Tvoz |talk
- They are all in the history page of Obama (disambiguation). Keep in mind that the dates are probably showing up for me as Japan time, so, they could be off by a day in your time zone. The link to the February 14 edit is here. – Neier 14:14, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Ah yes, with a misleading edit summary "Full name" that no one would know meant that the editor, Getaway (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log) (who appears to edit with a POV if you look at his pages), was changing a redirect to a disambiguation, without discussion, consensus, RM, or bothering to even follow through on the affected article page. Nice work. Maybe you'll see, then, that the status quo as you see it is not at all the status quo as others see it. So we need to start all over, I think, and not rely on this somewhat bogus change. Tvoz |talk 14:25, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- And, perhaps more importantly, the status quo as we think we see it is not necessarily the status quo. I understand how tempers can flare in debates; but, this bit of leg-work a couple of days ago by any of us would have saved many mis-statements and ill feelings. We should continue discussing this with facts now, and not rhetoric.
- Yes, Getaway's edit summary was bad. I also find it amusing that rvv was also used by people making changes in both directions. Alas, the perfection of Wikipedia. At any rate, I think that if the appropriate change had been made to Barack Obama each time then nothing much would be different – we would only have arrived at this point a few weeks or months sooner. Neier 14:53, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- And this one, Neier, on May 9 , with the illuminating edit summary "+1" was done by you - was that supposed to alert the community that you had changed a redirect to a dab page? And did you follow through with the page that had been the redirect to correct it? No. So any status quo you detect was a result of misleading summaries and stealth changes to the redirects, which is hardly the way things should be done. Tvoz |talk
- I looked through my other contributions on May 9, and I have absolutely no idea why I even stumbled on this page to begin with. As best as I can tell, I either had Obama open in a tab for quite awhile (it can happen), or had bookmarked a bunch of tabs and caught an old revision somehow. I do not remember specifically changing a redirect to the DAB at that time. The +1 was relating to the +1more link I had added to the March 19 version. It may have been the Obama Domain article that brought me back to the DAB page... I do not know. Neier 14:53, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Fine - I don't expect anyone to have total recall about their edits. But can you then see that the "status quo" was not really that? If you changed the redirect to a dab without an accurate edit summary and without following through on it, then objections to it wouldn't appear, and the rest of us would assume that nothing had changed, and edit accordingly. These redirect changes are major ones, with implications, and they were done sub rosa. I don't see that they should be the ones that are sustained. Tvoz |talk 15:00, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Of course I see that. Don't you also think that we would have just gone through this discussion in February, or May, or whenever, had the edit summaries been different? And, this should not impact any real discussion about whether to redirect Obama to Barack Obama or not. The length of time that the article pointed to Fukui Prefecture, or whatever, should be nearly irrelevant in that debate. The main points that we need to concern ourselves with have never changed:
- A disambig page existed
- The disambig page was changed to a default redirect
- The redirect was changed to a disambig
- Controversy is established, so, it should (have gone) go to WP:RM
- In all honesty, I care much less about the content of the page than I do about the procedure that gets us there. I will restate the same thing I wrote in my support vote above in any WP:RM. Even then, the article has a very good chance at ending up as a redirect to Barack's page. But, the main point is that procedure wasn't short-circuited along the way. Neier 15:14, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- The procedure was short-circuited by you, though, and you've invoked the length of time your change was in effect as reason for it being the one that's standing. So let's at least be clear on that. I care about the process too - that;s why I brought it to AN/I. You had and still have every opportunity to bring it to RM . Tvoz |talk 15:25, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- Actually, I only invoked the original status of the page as the reason for it being the one that should be standing (there is nothing on this page before the timetable above by me about length of time as one version or another). After claims like it appears that since December 2006 "Obama" has redirected to Barack Obama, and the detailed list of edit histories to Barack Obama that was posted at AN/I, I decided to take a closer look into the matter to make sure that what I remembered about Obama as a disambig was true. Procedure was short-circuited three times each way before I even touched the article in May. The first change and reversion were well within policy. After that, it should have gone to WP:RM, but Tblack2458 (talk · contribs · deleted contribs · page moves · block user · block log) (with two edits total!) redirected it again, followed by the laundry list above. There are many people (me included) who did things wrong in the history of this article. My presumption is still that the people wanting to move the page are the ones who need to make the WP:RM, not the people who want to keep the page where it had been. User:Nil Einne seems to agree with that on the AN/I page, and it seems to be a fairly well-worn principle on Wikipedia for edits in general. The originaloriginal status quo was established between March 2005 and December 2006; and while 47 and 55 days are each somewhat respectable here, it should be obvious now that we need a coherent discussion about just the merits of one DAB style versus the other, and not about the history of the pages or the length of time it said blah, or who blocked who from editing, or whatever. That's what Nihonjoe tried to start, but, it unfortunately quickly degraded into something else. Are we ready for another attempt? Neier 22:28, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
- You have a crazy (as in incredibly silly) argument that the status quo is how the article was last year. The status quo should be whatever the article has been in the last few months. Turtlescrubber 00:29, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I can't say for sure what Neier is trying to say but I think you've misunderstood the point. After looking at the detailed history above, it's quite clear that there has been no status quo in the past few months because everyone has been to busy fighting rather then discussing. Therefore, we have to go further back and from there we see that the status quo is Obama as a disambig. If there has been a period of several months where Obama was a redirect then I would agree the status quo could be said to be Obama as a redirect but there was never such a time. The simple fact is, controversial moves and renames are supposed to be discussed before being implemented. The fact was, that moving Obama to Obama (disambig) and redirecting Obama to Barack Obama was clearly controversial & never discussed to the point of consensus and therefore, we should discuss this matter and try to reach consensus rather then arguing over a matter which hopefully won't matter in the end. While it may be through that those who have reversed the move have failed to properly indicate what they were doing and have not done it properly, it still remains a fact that there was no true status quo since December. Nil Einne 06:58, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- You have a crazy (as in incredibly silly) argument that the status quo is how the article was last year. The status quo should be whatever the article has been in the last few months. Turtlescrubber 00:29, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I looked through my other contributions on May 9, and I have absolutely no idea why I even stumbled on this page to begin with. As best as I can tell, I either had Obama open in a tab for quite awhile (it can happen), or had bookmarked a bunch of tabs and caught an old revision somehow. I do not remember specifically changing a redirect to the DAB at that time. The +1 was relating to the +1more link I had added to the March 19 version. It may have been the Obama Domain article that brought me back to the DAB page... I do not know. Neier 14:53, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
History doesn't matter; only what is correct according to Wikipedia policy now
There's a large amount of discussion above on the past history of the page and whether for a longer period of time it redirected to Obama or for a longer period of time it was a disambiguation page. None of that matters! If something wrong has been done for a long time, that doesn't make it right just because it has been done for a long time. If the article about "teddy bears" had been at the article name "tedy bear" (note the deliberate misspelling) for a year, that doesn't mean it's right for the article to continue to be at "tedy bear"; the misspelling should be corrected.
Similarly, in this case, it doesn't matter what the previous status of "Obama/Obama (disambiguation)" was. What matters is that it should be correct now. Barack Obama's notability has risen from a few years ago so that he is now by far the most common usage of "Obama." Wikipedia policy says that when one usage of a name is overwhelmingly more common than any other usage, the page should redirect to that usage. That's what is relevant now, and something supported by a majority of editors on this page. —Lowellian (reply) 01:12, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- A calm, rational and correct interpretation. I agree. Turtlescrubber 02:23, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- You seem to be missing the point. If there is a consensus that we should change things then it doesn't matter what it was historically. (This is what would almost definitely happen with tedy bears which is likely to be a uncontroversial move and indeed the move policy specifically lists spelling errors as an example of an uncontroversial move.) If someone tries to argue that we should not change because of history then I would agree that's a silly argument and should be ignored in achieving consensus. However I don't know anyone who has tried to argue that in this case. What many people have pointed out is that in the absense of consensus, when there is a disagreement we preserve the status quo until consensus is reached. This is the way things work on wikipedia because everything else is a recipe for a disaster as we see here.
Unfortunately, those who support Obama as a redirect to Barack Obama are too busy ignoring policy and trying to force a change without discussion rather then discussing the matter with those of us who feel discussion is needed before a change and therefore consensus is unlikely to be reached. If an when those who support a change will just calm down and work collectively rather then disruptively, there is a fair chance this whole issue may be resolved.Unfortunately, both sides appeared to have just gotten into a revert war rather then properly iniating a discussion until Neier's rather belated attempt above Nil Einne 06:49, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- First of all, supported by a majority of editors on this page appears to be using a definition of the word majority with which I am unfamiliar. I see six in favor (in order of appearance: Italiavivi, Ivan, Lowellian, HailFire, Tvoz, and Turtlescrubber), and eight against (SRMach5B, SNPBrown, Neier, Midemer, Nihonjoe, Chrishomingtang, Endroit, and John Smith's). Dekimasu and Nil Einne are both neutral for the time being.
- Secondly, Wikipedia policy also states that If there is extended discussion about which article truly is the primary topic, that may be a sign that there is in fact no primary topic, and that the disambiguation page should be located at the plain title with no "(disambiguation)". [1]. It doesn't say that it must be located at the plain title, but, that it is a clear indicator to consider. On this page, and in the edit summaries, we have people who have tried to link to Obama, Fukui and Barack Obama as a primary topic. We also have someone who claims to have typed Obama looking for the prime minister of Equatorial Guniea. I can't read those comments and think that a redirect from Obama to Barack Obama is uncontroversial. Hopefully, we can eventually debate the content of Obama, if there is ever a real WP:RM proposed (straw polls and previous discussions notwithstanding).
- Finally, it looks like Nil Einne basically understands my viewpoints, and his/her comments are probably easier to read and understand than mine (which tend to ramble). Thank you for trying to help. Neier 08:30, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
Straw poll
This is a non-binding straw poll. Feel free to vote. Certainly, polls are not a substitute for discussion. This is why this is a non-binding poll. Further discussion to work toward consensus is encouraged to continue above (in the various discussion sections, to avoid cluttering up this straw poll). Since I know some people will request it, I have also included a third choice, public abstention from the poll. —Lowellian (reply) 01:26, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- A caution to avoid interpreting these polling results by simple head counts. Barack Obama has been heavily visited by sockpuppetry, and there is no reason to assume that this talk page is immune. When in doubt, check the user contribution histories. Also, kindly include brief rationales with your polling answers so we can also use this exercise as a summary of views.--HailFire 08:25, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
Choice A: "Obama" should redirect to "Barack Obama", with a redirect template ("'Obama' redirects here. For other uses, see 'Obama (disambiguation)'.") to "Obama (disambiguation)" at the top of the "Barack Obama" page.
- —Lowellian (reply) 01:26, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- —Turtlescrubber 02:21, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- — I do not like polls, but this choice reflects the position I've stated repeatedly. Tvoz |talk 05:05, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- My reasons are per Lowellian regarding notability and Wikipedia practice of using the most common use of the name, and most likely search result sought and per HailFire's pointer to Wikichart statistics which show that Barack Obama has been among the most viewed pages in the encyclopedia in recent months. The situation has drastically changed since December 2006, making the redirect to Barack Obama more logical in order to increase efficiency for readers - one step instead of two - as per common practice. If the situation changes in the future, of course this can be revisited. But the other entries on the disambiguation page are either without articles at all, or much less likely to be what is searched for at present. Barack Obama should continue to have a pointer to the dab page, of course. Tvoz |talk 02:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- — It's a useful aid to user navigation on a frequently visited article, per my previous comment citing Wikicharts statistics. --HailFire 08:25, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- — By notability, frequency of visits (per HailFire), and the fact that the Prime Minister of Equatorial Guinea is referred to as "Prime Minister Nfubea," not "Obama." Italiavivi 21:42, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- — I think the vast (super?) majority of people are looking for the potential democratic presidential candidate (of the USA, I know -it's not American bias, it has worldwide significance) rather than anything else. I think worldwide, people are way more likely to interested in the candidate. But on the off chance they are trying to find the city, or another person, the link to the DAB page at the top of the article will get them to their topic of interest with little trouble. R. Baley 22:03, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Choice B: "Obama" should be a disambiguation page.
- — The current arrangement seems to work just fine. DAJF 08:41, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note: This is not, and was not since December 2006, the "current" arrangement. Italiavivi 22:50, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- The "current arrangement" is the situation that exists right now (i.e. currently). I don't see what is difficult to understand about the concept. DAJF 23:36, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note: This is not, and was not since December 2006, the "current" arrangement. Italiavivi 22:50, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- — Obama, Fukui has always been notable. Barack Obama is just a recent phenomenom (for a limited time only) soon to be forgotten, much like Michael Dukakis has. They are equally notable, and so it is best to disambiguate Obama.--Endroit 15:38, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Endroit, your user page makes it clear that you have a particular point of view in support of Presidents Reagan and Bush and that's certainly your right and you're free to comment here, but I think your political assessment of whether or not Barack Obama is soon to be forgotten is misplaced here. I don't think anyone has predicted the outcome of the election here, and I don't think it's appropriate for this discussion. Tvoz |talk 02:20, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- — I also think the current arrangement is best. Certainly I think it's wrong for one guy to take precedence - he's not even the Democrat candidate, let alone President. John Smith's 22:10, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Note: This is not, and was not since December 2006, the "current" arrangement. Italiavivi 22:50, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with Endroit. Obama may be today only a tiny city, but several centuries ago it was a rather major port. I may be in the minority, but I would be looking for things about the city more often than the politician. Besides, looking at the current status of the disambig page, there are far more items listed here than just the politician and the city. Two Obama cities, the castle, the station, the surnames, the train line, the samurai clan, are all notable topics in their own ways, along with Barak Obama and the other individuals listed here. LordAmeth 23:48, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Most of the items on the disambiguation page apparently are not even notable enough to warrant articles - it would be curious if they drew more search requests than Barack Obama. And of course the dab pointer has been correctly on Barack Obama, and would continue to be, in case someone was in fact looking for the train atation and typed in Obama. Tvoz |talk 02:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- I agree with Endroit and LordAmeth. I don't really have anything else to add to what they've already said. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 01:10, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- Keep the disamb. Barack Obama is only of local interest to Americans. Kill the systemic bias. Kyaa the Catlord 07:42, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- Keep the dab page to avoid recentism and American bias. But if Barrack Obama becomes the designated candidate or the president, this should change. — AjaxSmack 05:06, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Accusations of "American bias" and "systemic bias" seem to be speaking more about the bias of the commenters than the logic of the redirect. No one in support of the redirect to Barack Obama has suggested that because he is American he is more important. The simple fact that no one in this column has addressed is that Barack Obama receives far and away the most hits of all of the other Obama pages, probably all of them combined, by a large margin. In August so far it ranks as the 316th most viewed page on Wikipedia. It is reasonable to assume that most people who come here now to search on "Obama" because they too do not know how to spell his first name (it's "Barack"), will be looking for the candidate. Either he will get the nomination or he won't: if he does, interest in him will likely skyrocket; if he does not, and if he is not the Vice Presidential nominee, likely interest in him will decrease - but no one here can say by how much. So I think we should now be looking at the situation as it now is - this has nothing to do with recentism, and that's actually not what recentism means - it is a fact that his page gets thousands of hits and the others do not; it is a fact that if his popularity significantly drops, making his page comparable to the page about the city in Japan, etc, then we can change the redirect. We are supposed to make it easier for readers and searchers - that's all we're trying to do. Not promote him because he is American. AGF, friends. And try responding to the points raised, as Neier did below. Tvoz |talk 05:53, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Since this keeps being brought up, is there any way to determine how many people are searching for "Obama" only, rather than "Barack Obama"? Just because Barack Obama receives more page views doesn't necessarily mean that people got there by searching first for "Obama". ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 08:04, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Don't know, Joe - it's just a logical extrapolation, especially since it's an unfamiliar name to many, and spelling may be an issue - Obama may be easier to remember on its own. And of course the press often refers to a person by surname alone. Tvoz |talk 08:37, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Putting on my devil's advocate hat, I'm actually more curious as to why the redirect could theoretically be reinstated without an American bias just because he won a nomination? At any rate, I've already backpedalled on my bias claim above (below) given the ambiguity of the Prime Minister's name. But, the bias issue may still be being perceived in this case, because Obama articles encompass both Asia and Africa. So far as I've seen, the counterexamples on this page (Chirac, Yeltsin, Trudeau, Reagan, and Beckham) all point to one white guy, and the DAB pages list other white guys or places in said white guy's home country. Trudeau and Beckham are slightly different, since there are articles ref'd in Canada, England, and the US; but, WP does not have much trouble with bias between those countries. Neier 06:48, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Don't know, Joe - it's just a logical extrapolation, especially since it's an unfamiliar name to many, and spelling may be an issue - Obama may be easier to remember on its own. And of course the press often refers to a person by surname alone. Tvoz |talk 08:37, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Since this keeps being brought up, is there any way to determine how many people are searching for "Obama" only, rather than "Barack Obama"? Just because Barack Obama receives more page views doesn't necessarily mean that people got there by searching first for "Obama". ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 08:04, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Bias etc. aside... there are two answers as far as I can see. Either "Obama" goes to a DAB page with everything listed OR it goes to "Barack Obama" and that "Barack Obama" page has a DAB link at the top to the Obama DAB. My preference is that "Obama" goes to the DAB with Barack and Michelle listed prominently rather than Barack Obama's page getting a DAB link at the top. Its not really a matter of Americanism or anything of that nature. It is simply what makes most sense for random wikipedians. If you are looking for a non Barack page with Obama you have to have a link to the DAB somewhere. To me it makes more sense to have "Obama" link there (to the DAB) rather than a link on the "Barack Obama" page. Does that make sense... or am I just whistling Dixie? --Rtrev 07:00, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Rev, I don't think anyone is saying it is illogical or wrong to go to the Dab page, just saying that many more random wikipedians are looking for Barack Obama than any of the other Obama references, so the commonsense approach here is generally to go directly to the most likely page that is being searched for, to make it easier for readers. We've provided statistics about the popularity of the page (by the way, many more hits than Hillary CLinton, even though she is the frontrunner - presumably because Obama is the newcomer and people want to know more about him) and quite frankly have not seen any substantive reasons given as to why adding the dab step first is preferable. Especially if we discount the "American bias" claim which I think in this context is wrong. This is not the end of the world either way , and we're spending far too much time on it - it just is a matter of efficiency. The non-American, non- English speaking precedents are there (Chirac, Yeltsin, even Trudeau) for those who care about such distinctions, and it simply seems to me to make more sense. There don't seem to be any real arguments given on the other side, so I don't get it. Tvoz |talk 07:40, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Accusations of "American bias" and "systemic bias" seem to be speaking more about the bias of the commenters than the logic of the redirect. No one in support of the redirect to Barack Obama has suggested that because he is American he is more important. The simple fact that no one in this column has addressed is that Barack Obama receives far and away the most hits of all of the other Obama pages, probably all of them combined, by a large margin. In August so far it ranks as the 316th most viewed page on Wikipedia. It is reasonable to assume that most people who come here now to search on "Obama" because they too do not know how to spell his first name (it's "Barack"), will be looking for the candidate. Either he will get the nomination or he won't: if he does, interest in him will likely skyrocket; if he does not, and if he is not the Vice Presidential nominee, likely interest in him will decrease - but no one here can say by how much. So I think we should now be looking at the situation as it now is - this has nothing to do with recentism, and that's actually not what recentism means - it is a fact that his page gets thousands of hits and the others do not; it is a fact that if his popularity significantly drops, making his page comparable to the page about the city in Japan, etc, then we can change the redirect. We are supposed to make it easier for readers and searchers - that's all we're trying to do. Not promote him because he is American. AGF, friends. And try responding to the points raised, as Neier did below. Tvoz |talk 05:53, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
- Support. The number of reverts and changes is a clear statement that there is no primary use so that dab page should be a at the main name space. Lacking a clear consensus for something other then a dab page, the only choice is to use the dab page. If consensus develops in the future it can be changed. I'd also suggest that the page be move protected. Vegaswikian 23:31, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- The number of reverts are a clear statement of Neier's willingness to engage in edit-warring, nothing more. Italiavivi 17:25, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
Choice C: Abstain on basis of dislike of polls.
- Nil Einne I'm leaning to B but I'm fairly new to this discussion so would like to see the arguments from those who support choice A as to what evidence they have that Barack Obama is significantly more likely to be what someone is looking for when looking for Obama before saying for sure Nil Einne 07:03, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Wikipedia's Barack Obama article ranked number 263 on the Wikicharts for July 2007. It is the only "Obama" article in the Wikicharts top 1000 for that month. --HailFire 08:25, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- As another measure of user interest, Barack Obama has over 1300 Wikipedia links, all others listed on the dab have less than 50. --HailFire 06:20, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- The evidence is all above on this talk page. Start at the top of the page and start reading down. A large amount of evidence has already been given. Summary: Michelle Obama is notable only as Barack Obama's wife. The Prime Minister of Equatorial Guinea is Ricardo Nfubea; Obama is just one of his middle names. Obama, Japan, is a tiny city of 32,000. By comparison to these other meanings, Barack Obama is a major American politician, both a sitting US Senator and a leading candidate for the United States presidency. —Lowellian (reply) 07:39, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Appreciate your asking, Nil Einne. My reasons stated several times above are pretty much as Lowellian and HailFire have summmarized, plus I would add that of the 14 pages listed on the disambiguation page, 2 are Barack Obama and his wife who would be easily found via his page, and of the remaining 12, only 5 even have pages, and 3 of those are short stubs (including the stub about the PM of Equatorial Guinea who is not commonly referred to as Obama), leaving only 2 actual articles that are not about Barack Obama - Obama, Fukui and Obama Domain. It just does not seem likely that most people searching on Obama would be in fact looking for the hot spring or the train station or the surname or even the small city or feudal domain - whereas Barack Obama is a major contender for the presidency and his article was in the top 300 Wikipedia articles read in the month of July, the only Obama article in the top 1000 - an important statistic for these types of discussions. We want to make the encyclopedia as accessible as possible to the largest number of readers, and the redirect of Obama directly to Barack Obama seems, at this time in history, to be the most sensible one, with clear pointer to the dab page. The decision can always be revisited if Endroit is right and Barack Obama is soon forgotten. But since we can't predict the future, we should look at the current state of afairs which are that Senator Obama is a leading contender for the US Presidency whose article is viewed by
thousands ofmany readers everydaymonth. Tvoz |talk 02:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
Comments
Questions from Italiavivi
- I ask in sincerity: How has the town in Japan ever been notable on even a Japanese national, no less international, scale? Its entire article seems to be ripped from one website. Italiavivi 21:42, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I cannot speak to the content on Obama, Fukui, but the Obama Domain article I wrote, along the Monumenta Nipponica article cited there, may serve to illuminate somewhat the significance of the port city. It was (according to the WP article) "a prosperous port city throughout much of the 15th-17th centuries" and "an important link in the domestic sea routes between Ezo and the Sea of Japan coast." Certainly, in the widest sense, there are many sites in Japan and abroad with more overall historical significance, but if one were researching Japanese medieval sea trade, or regional history of the Japanese domains along the coast of the Sea of Japan, Obama would be one of the significant sites within that topic. LordAmeth 02:33, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- Why are editors in support of "Obama" being a DAB page trying to refer to their preference as the "current arrangement"? I thought we agreed to drop pretenses of past versions and revert wars holding any authority. Italiavivi 22:54, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- How many times will Neier try to enforce his preference of the Obama redirect via edit warring despite his lack of comments in this discussion? Italiavivi 23:32, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I don't see where I need to comment anymore, until there is a request to move the article. The current majority prefers a DAB page; multiple admins have warned against moving away from a DAB; etc. The course seems clear to me. Neier 23:34, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Sorry to interupt, but I call bullshit. Turtlescrubber 01:10, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- "Multiple admins have warned against moving away from a DAB": Beg your pardon? Do respond with links, please. Italiavivi 23:37, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- Both Nihonjoe and Nil Einne above. I wish you would realize that we were having a reasonable discussion here in the past couple of days while you were away. Maybe it is a coincidence? But, the level of whining and rhetoric has seemed to grow in the last couple of hours, to say the least. Neier 23:42, 15 August 2007 (UTC)
- I had assumed that from his/her response at AN/I. As for majority, please see the section above, where Lowellian claims to have a majority; although the opposite is/was true. Two more people not on that list have since added comments to the DAB straw poll since then. Neier 00:16, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- So it's not "multiple admins" warning against anything, right? Lowellian is an admin too, by the way, and is trying here to move this discussion along with a clearer request for people to state their opinionsthan what was posted earlier. I do not think you should be counting support from people who have not weighed in on this latest attempt at reaching consensus. The now-closed discussion above was poorly framed, and unclear what people were commenting on or supporting or not - as several users said. We pretty much agreed to start fresh on this, and I think HailFire's caveat about sockpuppetry is also worth keeping in mind. And, of course, "majority" is irrelevant - this is not a vote, it is merely an expression of where people stand on this and why. I'm also somewhat curious about the interest shown in this obscure discussion by people who haven't been parties to any of it before, or editors of relevant pages, but of course any legitimate editor is free to do so. Tvoz |talk 02:09, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
- If I had to guess, some of the new-to-the-discussion editors probably saw the note on my talk page left by Italiavivi and decided to come here to see what the fuss was about. As for the previous poll, I think at one point or another, everyone made their individual opinions known even though the poll was confusing. For example, Chris!'s oppose vote actually made it clear that he supported the Obama-as-DAB. Regarding sock puppetry, I don't think that's a problem here, as most contributors (with an exception tagged below) have been around for quite some time. Neier 01:45, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
I am not really clear on what the controversy really is. The wiki policy is pretty cut and dry.
For example, the word "Mercury" can refer to several different things, including: an element, a planet, an automobile brand, a record label, a NASA manned-spaceflight project, a plant, and a Roman god. Since only one Wikipedia page can have the generic name "Mercury", unambiguous article titles must be used for each of these topics: Mercury (element), Mercury (planet), Mercury (automobile), Mercury Records, Project Mercury, Mercury (plant), Mercury (mythology). There must then be a way to direct the reader to the correct specific article when an ambiguous term is referenced by linking, browsing or searching; this is what is known as disambiguation.
"Obama" can mean many things as have been previously discussed "Barack Obama" can mean only one as far as I can tell. Obama goes to a DAB page so people can choose from the different meanings of Obama. What is the problem with that (using wiki policy)? --Rtrev 14:39, 16 August 2007 (UTC)
Disclaimer: I do not work for Fox news corp. My view: Make Obama the disamb page. --Multipleidentitynumberthree 23:16, 16 August 2007 (UTC) This template must be substituted.
- There is certainly disagreement on whether the Obama page should redirect to American politician Barack Obama or to a neutral disambiguation page. In case of a genuine disagreement, the neutral approach of having a disambiguation page is the preferred, unbiased approach. It appears that many editors have expressed legitimate reasons for the neutral approach. PalestineRemembered 07:00, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
- I object to the characterization of either preference as the "neutral" approach. I could just as quickly accuse Nihonjoe and Neier of Japanese bias (one has his signature in Japanese for Christssakes), as those of us who support Obama piping to Barack with an arrow are accused of American bias. Neither side is the "neutral" side, and we are debating the merits of the redirects based upon policy and precedent. Italiavivi 19:50, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
Comments from Neier
For starters, my absence in the straw poll above is not due to dislike of polls, or anything else. Much of my original rationale was based on claims regarding the prime minister, who (as it turns out) may or may not ever be referred to as PM Obama. With a sitting PM Obama, it was an open/shut case in my mind. Since then, I have been thinking the situation over in more detail.
So far, WP:DAB#Primary topic has been used to justify both styles of disambiguation. Like most WP policies, the amount of may and should contained within that passage makes any wiki-lawyering easy to do regardless of one's stance; but, we're not here to wiki-lawyer.
With no doubt, Barack Obama is currently the most popular article of any article listed on Obama; just as Hillary Clinton is the most popular article on Hillary, or Britney Spears is the most popular article on Britney, or Dick Cheney is the most popular article on Cheney, or Rush Limbaugh is the most popular article on Limbaugh (and, maybe Rush too – no disrepect to Neil Peart), etc. Arguing that there is one form of disambiguation or another on one page is just a form of WP:OTHERSTUFFEXISTS, but the examples above do demonstrate that wikipedia consensus still does not give a slam-dunk to the most popular article in the cases of redirects from partial names. Sometimes it goes that way (Trudeau, Chirac, and (since yesterday) Beckham), and sometimes it doesn't. That's why even DABs have talk pages.
- It is not just that his is the most popular, it's that half the other articles on this DAB are red-links, stubs, or rips from other web pages. There were countless domains in Japanese history, and the one person used in this argument turned out to not go by "Obama" at all. Italiavivi 19:56, 18 August 2007 (UTC)
So, although I'm closer to the middle than before, I'm still not convinced that Obama should not be a disambiguation page. And, lest you think my opinion is clouded by Japan-bias, I would feel the same if someone were to question the redirect from Barack, even though I'm not a brandy drinker. Neier 01:45, 17 August 2007 (UTC)
Interim tally
A clear trend has emerged, at 12 to 6, in favor of disambiguating "Obama".
- Those who prefer Obama to be a Disambiguation page or leaning towards it: 12
- (Neier, DAJF, Endroit, John Smith's, LordAmeth, Nihonjoe, Kyaa the Catlord, AjaxSmack, Rtrev, Vegaswikian, Nil Einne, PalestineRemembered)
- Those who prefer to redirect Obama to Barack Obama: 6
- (Lowellian, Turtlescrubber, Tvoz, HailFire, Italiavivi, R. Baley)
--Endroit 15:36, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I would note that User:Endroit was the one who first started canvassing this survey. This non-binding poll has been rendered completely moot by your canvassing at WikiProject Japan, Endroit. Italiavivi 16:36, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Italiavivi, you're in violation of WP:NPA here, as well as WP:POINT throughout this talk page and through your revert-warring. I'm not guilty of canvassing, but if you believe otherwise, ask for a third opinion, and formally follow through with WP:DR.--Endroit 16:45, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Your false invocation of policy is positively laughable. If you feel "personally attacked" that someone would point out your recruitment at WikiProject Japan and the bloc voting of those who came here as a result, so be it. The only violation of WP:POINT here has been certain WikiProject Japan members' revert-warring and harassment of those who disagree with them. Italiavivi 17:18, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- All our edit histories speak for themselves.--Endroit 17:19, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yours [2] [3], in addition to Neier's edit history and Nihonjoe's protection log, certainly do. Time for you to go read WP:POT, Endroit. Italiavivi 17:22, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Good for you. Read WP:DR carefully, and follow it, if you believe you have a case. It's obvious your commenting here is not helping resolve any disputes. Use the proper forum for it.--Endroit 17:34, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- My commenting here has helped keep things legit. The previous RFM was bogus, and the current non-binding survey has been flooded by WikiProject Japan members voting as a bloc. Then there's you, the loudly partisan Republican Party supporter and Wikiproject Japan member; clearly a neutral observer. I am pointing out the obvious, like it or not. I will continue our work here, thank you though. Italiavivi 17:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Like it or not, I believe you're just trying to throw out votes and opinions of others by accusing them, rather than build any consensus here. You should really learn to work with others.--Endroit 17:56, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- There is a difference between "consensus" and democracy, which Wikipedia is not. Flooding a survey with a bloc of voters recruited from WikiProject Japan is not an indicator of any consensus. Italiavivi 23:16, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- What you are trying to do is to exclude editors from WP:JA by citing WP:IAR, which you most definitely cannot because of its relevance to Obama (disambiguation). If you disagree, ask for a third opinion.--Endroit 23:30, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I have never cited WP:IAR, ever, in any discussion on Wikipedia. If you can't address my actual arguments due to the weakness of yours, don't address them at all. Again, Wikipedia is not a democracy; your constant fixation on "votes" and tallies from those you recruited from your message at WikiProject Japan makes your confusion about Wikipedia and democracy clear. Italiavivi 23:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- You have suggested invalidating this WP:RM request due to your belief that it has been "flooded" by WP:JA editors. In other words, you are requesting this WP:RM process to be ignored, am I not right?--Endroit 23:46, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- You again show your confusion. This particular survey was disclaimed as non-binding from its start, and I am simply affirming its non-binding nature in light of your canvassing at WikiProject Japan (and the subsequent bloc voting). There is no invalidating a survey which was identified as non-binding from the beginning, and voting-fixated/vote-canvassing persons like yourself are precisely why Wikipedia is not a democracy. Italiavivi 23:53, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- You have suggested invalidating this WP:RM request due to your belief that it has been "flooded" by WP:JA editors. In other words, you are requesting this WP:RM process to be ignored, am I not right?--Endroit 23:46, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I have never cited WP:IAR, ever, in any discussion on Wikipedia. If you can't address my actual arguments due to the weakness of yours, don't address them at all. Again, Wikipedia is not a democracy; your constant fixation on "votes" and tallies from those you recruited from your message at WikiProject Japan makes your confusion about Wikipedia and democracy clear. Italiavivi 23:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- What you are trying to do is to exclude editors from WP:JA by citing WP:IAR, which you most definitely cannot because of its relevance to Obama (disambiguation). If you disagree, ask for a third opinion.--Endroit 23:30, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- There is a difference between "consensus" and democracy, which Wikipedia is not. Flooding a survey with a bloc of voters recruited from WikiProject Japan is not an indicator of any consensus. Italiavivi 23:16, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Like it or not, I believe you're just trying to throw out votes and opinions of others by accusing them, rather than build any consensus here. You should really learn to work with others.--Endroit 17:56, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- My commenting here has helped keep things legit. The previous RFM was bogus, and the current non-binding survey has been flooded by WikiProject Japan members voting as a bloc. Then there's you, the loudly partisan Republican Party supporter and Wikiproject Japan member; clearly a neutral observer. I am pointing out the obvious, like it or not. I will continue our work here, thank you though. Italiavivi 17:38, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Good for you. Read WP:DR carefully, and follow it, if you believe you have a case. It's obvious your commenting here is not helping resolve any disputes. Use the proper forum for it.--Endroit 17:34, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Yours [2] [3], in addition to Neier's edit history and Nihonjoe's protection log, certainly do. Time for you to go read WP:POT, Endroit. Italiavivi 17:22, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- All our edit histories speak for themselves.--Endroit 17:19, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Your false invocation of policy is positively laughable. If you feel "personally attacked" that someone would point out your recruitment at WikiProject Japan and the bloc voting of those who came here as a result, so be it. The only violation of WP:POINT here has been certain WikiProject Japan members' revert-warring and harassment of those who disagree with them. Italiavivi 17:18, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Italiavivi, you're in violation of WP:NPA here, as well as WP:POINT throughout this talk page and through your revert-warring. I'm not guilty of canvassing, but if you believe otherwise, ask for a third opinion, and formally follow through with WP:DR.--Endroit 16:45, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I would note that User:Endroit was the one who first started canvassing this survey. This non-binding poll has been rendered completely moot by your canvassing at WikiProject Japan, Endroit. Italiavivi 16:36, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
moves and reversions
I've reverted the most recent edits to Obama by Italiavivi again. The discussion is difficult enough to follow when the pages are stable, let alone if they are being moved all the time. Wait for the discussion to end before deciding whether Obama should contain the DAB page, or if it should redirect to Barack. Neier 00:42, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Your change was the recent one, it can stay how it was since December 2006 and change if the discussion decides that. You will not get your preference through edit warring. This is all part of an attempt by editors who want to change the DAB format to frame their version as the "current" version and the old format as a "requested move," and I completely reject that disingenuous framing. Italiavivi 02:24, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Have you even read any of the comments above in response to your claims that the article was stable since December 2006? You are the only one who keeps trying to move this against the discussion, and against the wikipedia principles; and I am about resigned to the fact that you don't want to discuss this rationally, and are looking for a ban of some sort. Neier 02:42, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- "Move this against discussion" my ass, Neier. Like I said, this edit warring toward your preferred change is simply meant to frame the debate in your terms, and I reject it. I am resigned to the fact that you are hoping you can make your move without anyone contesting or reverting your change, and it's not going to happen. Make empty ban threats all you like, you're just as likely to catch a ban for edit warring as I am, trust me. :) Sounds like someone needs to read WP:POT to me. Italiavivi 02:46, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Look, I'm not going to get sucked into games of "no I didn't... he did!". If you have any insightful analysis as to why the redirect was more "current" than the DAB, please feel free to debunk the itemized list of revision histories above. I am not "framing" unless you equate "framing" to "using facts to support the position". Also, the discussion has a 7/6 split in the straw poll towards DAB, with others who support the DAB (including me) not in that tally. I'm still considering the opinions; but, the one thing I am not flexible on is the blatant childishness that you show by trying to move the page back to where you think it should be, when the discussion is still going on. Neier 02:55, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- As I've said: Pot, kettle, black. Edit warrior, heal thyself. If you're the bigger man, quit reverting everyone, hm? Italiavivi 03:03, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- By the way, as for the 7/6 split in the non-binding survey? Funny how the two votes who put your preference over the line are both fellow members of WikiProject Japan, right? Not like what is essentially a canvassing notice placed at the Japan project [4] by advocates of your position is turning out editors with Japanese bias, or anything. Italiavivi 03:04, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This was also subject to a link on ANI, was that canvassing as well? (And it is common for related topics to be listed on wikiprojects such as it was on wp:japan) Kyaa the Catlord 03:21, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- By the way, as for the 7/6 split in the non-binding survey? Funny how the two votes who put your preference over the line are both fellow members of WikiProject Japan, right? Not like what is essentially a canvassing notice placed at the Japan project [4] by advocates of your position is turning out editors with Japanese bias, or anything. Italiavivi 03:04, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Kyaa, there is not much point in trying to make any rational or reasonable points on this page today. When Italiavivi was not around, the discussion stayed relevant and avoided rhetoric, name calling, and reversion wars while focussing on resolving the issues via discussion. Of course posting a notice to a related project in order to hear more discussion viewpoints from people who may actually care about some of the content would seem strange to such a user, who seems to avoid dialogue like that and actively goes out of the way to disrupt it (as in the first move request above). I fail to see how it is canvassing when the WP:RM was copied verbatim without any editorial content, nor any messages on the talk page of the project or the users. The rationale that we are all in the same club is so ridiculous that it doesn't warrant a response. I applaud Nihonjoe for extracting himself from this mess when he did. Although I'm a bit late, I am going to do the same thing. If y'all want to discuss the merits again like adults, give me a ring. Until then, I have no more interest in dealing with this. Bye bye (er, ciao, I guess). Neier 04:23, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This had nothing to do with finding "more discussion viewpoints from people who may actually care about the content" at WikiProject Japan (despite describing seeking input from AN/I as "inappropriate"), and color me shocked that you "applaud" someone who's been giving you Japan-based barnstars on your User page. Someone sounds unhappy that the "wrong version" was protected to me, and I am quite tired of being accused of "American bias" by an influx of editors who came here en masse from a nationally-based WikiProject. Addio (which would be more appropriate in this context), Neier! Italiavivi 04:27, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- All I am saying is that it is funny (especially being a citizen of Italy myself) to watch myself and others be accused of "systemic American bias" by a gaggle of editors from WikiProject Japan who are all trying to assert the notability of a tiny Japanese town over an internationally prominent figure whose article is among Wikipedia's most viewed. Italiavivi 03:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This had nothing to do with finding "more discussion viewpoints from people who may actually care about the content" at WikiProject Japan (despite describing seeking input from AN/I as "inappropriate"), and color me shocked that you "applaud" someone who's been giving you Japan-based barnstars on your User page. Someone sounds unhappy that the "wrong version" was protected to me, and I am quite tired of being accused of "American bias" by an influx of editors who came here en masse from a nationally-based WikiProject. Addio (which would be more appropriate in this context), Neier! Italiavivi 04:27, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- As I've said: Pot, kettle, black. Edit warrior, heal thyself. If you're the bigger man, quit reverting everyone, hm? Italiavivi 03:03, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Have you even read any of the comments above in response to your claims that the article was stable since December 2006? You are the only one who keeps trying to move this against the discussion, and against the wikipedia principles; and I am about resigned to the fact that you don't want to discuss this rationally, and are looking for a ban of some sort. Neier 02:42, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
AN/I would be a pretty stupid place to canvass, don't you think, blatantly out there in front of all those admins? My thought was that we needed to go to a neutral group to ask their opinions, not to a group whose opinions might be swayed by their own cultural biases. Neier and Nihonjoe didn't like that idea, and both tried to close the AN/I request down, saying it wasn't appropriate. Maybe if I had known that Wikiproject Japan was being notified I would have questioned the neutrality of those commenters, but nothing was posted here to let us know that they were being asked. Tvoz |talk 03:48, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- You should have assumed that WikiProject Japan would have been notified about this whole dispute given the large number of Japan-related links on the page. It shouldn't come as any surprise. As for any cultural bias, please keep your culturally biased opinions to yourself. You have no idea where I'm from, so you have no standing to be questioning whether or not a cultural bias exists with me or anyone else at WP:JA. For all we know, you have an American-centric cultural bias, but you don't see me accusing you of that, do we? I encourage everyone to drop the "cultural bias" stones and just get back to the discussion at hand. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 05:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Two editors above from WikiProject Japan already accused disagreeing editors of American bias, with one also accusing us of "recentism." You act as if WikiProject Japan's members haven't been making accusations of "American bias" this entire time. Your group of Japan-centric editors, who appear to have been recruited here by Endroit's message at WikiProject Japan, shouldn't throw "nation bias" stones while living in very transparent glass houses. Italiavivi 06:18, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- You should have assumed that WikiProject Japan would have been notified about this whole dispute given the large number of Japan-related links on the page. It shouldn't come as any surprise. As for any cultural bias, please keep your culturally biased opinions to yourself. You have no idea where I'm from, so you have no standing to be questioning whether or not a cultural bias exists with me or anyone else at WP:JA. For all we know, you have an American-centric cultural bias, but you don't see me accusing you of that, do we? I encourage everyone to drop the "cultural bias" stones and just get back to the discussion at hand. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 05:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- So to Neier and Nihonjoe, AN/I is an "inappropriate" place to seek comment but WikiProject Japan was fine and dandy? All while accusing others of espousing bias? How funny. Italiavivi 03:52, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This discussion has everything to do with Japan since half (or more) of the items linked to from this disambig page have to do with Japan. If you read the top of the various admin boards, you'll notice that ALL of them state that content disputes do not belong there. That's basically all this is, so yes, I don't think that the discussion belongs there (though it may now on WP:AIV given the revert war you and Neier seem to be having today). I strongly suggest that no one move this page at all until it's determined exactly what should be done with it. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 05:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- The page has been protected by an uninvolved sysop (a lesson you could stand to learn). Neier appears to have withdrawn himself from the discussion shortly after the protection went into effect. It's completely moot now. Italiavivi 06:22, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Protection is not endorsement. The page will be unlocked after a while as per usual - in which case the problem will start again. John Smith's 19:02, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- If Neier and others truly abhor revert wars, they will keep their fingers off the "UNDO" button, plain and simple. Any other cries and complaints whilst they continue their revert warring is simply WP:POT. Italiavivi 19:33, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Unless you would want to claim you don't mind revert wars, the same would apply to you. John Smith's 14:35, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- They are the ones claiming a "higher road" and decrying edit wars whilst rapid-fire reverting. I've made no such claims of superiority. Their hypocrisy here has been blatant. Italiavivi 16:35, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- Unless you would want to claim you don't mind revert wars, the same would apply to you. John Smith's 14:35, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- If Neier and others truly abhor revert wars, they will keep their fingers off the "UNDO" button, plain and simple. Any other cries and complaints whilst they continue their revert warring is simply WP:POT. Italiavivi 19:33, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- Protection is not endorsement. The page will be unlocked after a while as per usual - in which case the problem will start again. John Smith's 19:02, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- The page has been protected by an uninvolved sysop (a lesson you could stand to learn). Neier appears to have withdrawn himself from the discussion shortly after the protection went into effect. It's completely moot now. Italiavivi 06:22, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
- This discussion has everything to do with Japan since half (or more) of the items linked to from this disambig page have to do with Japan. If you read the top of the various admin boards, you'll notice that ALL of them state that content disputes do not belong there. That's basically all this is, so yes, I don't think that the discussion belongs there (though it may now on WP:AIV given the revert war you and Neier seem to be having today). I strongly suggest that no one move this page at all until it's determined exactly what should be done with it. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 05:25, 19 August 2007 (UTC)
Mediation suggested
I think it would be a good idea if the involved parties submitted to mediation, informal or formal. It's silly for the page to be locked over an issue like this. Talk it over with an uninvolved third-party. John Smith's 14:36, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- I will not accept any mediator who is active with WikiProject Japan. The nation-centric bloc voting of this group has been painfully obvious. Italiavivi 16:33, 20 August 2007 (UTC)
- AFAIK, there are no mediators who are part of WP:JA. ···日本穣? · Talk to Nihonjoe 17:55, 20 August 2007 (UTC)