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Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water...
- Background: User talk:Tryptofish/Archive 25#Sad news
...the fish has come back! Thanks everyone who has wished me well!
It was difficult for me for a while, but I also decided to extend my Wiki-break a lot longer, beyond the point where I was arguably settled enough to come back. Partly, for a while I felt rather irritable, and I figured that I would be doing no one any favors by coming back only to have a short temper with the first editor to disagree with me. So now, I feel comfortably past that point. Also, I simply decided that some time away from this place would be a good idea. And it was. I've always believed that this strange website and the strange community that drives it can keep sputtering on, even without any individual editor. And behold: it's still here!
But I'm also going to need some time to get caught up, so please bear with me. And I've decided to try to make a few changes in my editing efforts, now that I'm back. I've decided that I was, in the past, too involved in "drama" and not involved enough in content creation in the topics that interest me. That means that, for now, I'm going to try (and probably fail!) to cut back on my involvement in other editors' disputes, outside of the mediation that I already committed to. It also means that, for all the editors who come to my talk page looking for me to help editing the pages that interest them (yes, EEng, I'm looking at you!), I'm going to be a bit less responsive, favoring instead those pages that interest me. So I hope that you will understand.
Thanks again! --Tryptofish (talk) 22:58, 19 June 2015 (UTC)
- Looking forward to your bubbles. - The project is really unsafe, imagine me out of prison! --Gerda Arendt (talk) 10:59, 20 June 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks! (Bubble, bubble.) --Tryptofish (talk) 20:18, 20 June 2015 (UTC)
Cognitive enhancement on the natch
Saw this posted on Hacker News and thought it would make a nice article. Any interest or ideas? Do we already have an article on this topic? Viriditas (talk) 19:19, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- We actually do have Nootropic. I regard this as one of those topics where the cautions at WP:MEDRS become important: much of this pharmacology is either experimental, bogus, or subject to significant caveats when used clinically, and so Wikipedia should not oversell it. Smart just doesn't come in a bottle. --Tryptofish (talk) 20:40, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- Hello, my friend! Please take another look at the source. The phrase "on the natch" means "without drugs". The article is about non-nootropic cognitive enhancement. Thanks. Viriditas (talk) 21:16, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- Woops, I think this fish still hasn't quite gotten my editing sea-legs back again (mixed metaphor overload!). Sorry that I was kind of superficial and dismissive in my first reply. I'm just kind of tired today. I'll look again tomorrow, but working on a page on the subject probably won't be a high priority for me for some time. I'm hoping to focus for a while on some fish-related content, and I'll probably be going light on other topic areas for a while. But thanks for drawing it to my attention, and I truly will look at it more, um, intelligently tomorrow. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:58, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- No worries! I think that if I do write something, I'll just present you with a more organized thesis to critique. However, by all means, read it when you have time, as I would be very grateful to get some feedback on the review article, particularly from your own POV. Viriditas (talk) 23:00, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- Woops, I think this fish still hasn't quite gotten my editing sea-legs back again (mixed metaphor overload!). Sorry that I was kind of superficial and dismissive in my first reply. I'm just kind of tired today. I'll look again tomorrow, but working on a page on the subject probably won't be a high priority for me for some time. I'm hoping to focus for a while on some fish-related content, and I'll probably be going light on other topic areas for a while. But thanks for drawing it to my attention, and I truly will look at it more, um, intelligently tomorrow. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:58, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
- Hello, my friend! Please take another look at the source. The phrase "on the natch" means "without drugs". The article is about non-nootropic cognitive enhancement. Thanks. Viriditas (talk) 21:16, 9 July 2015 (UTC)
OK, now I've actually read it properly, and applied the appropriate facepalm to myself. I have to admit, I had never heard of "on the natch" before, but I certainly should have looked at the source enough to have seen that it is plainly about "non pharmacological" methods. Oh well. So here is what I think. I pretty much agree with the authors of the source, in what they say in their "Conclusion and future research" section. As they say, stuff like physical exercise, sleep (Tryptofish: take the hint!), meditation and yoga, spirituality, music, and cognitive work with a properly trained health care professional, are all techniques that "are based on widely accepted traditional habits". Speaking personally, I have no reason to doubt that they can be good things, insofar as they go. For that matter, I could make a case that editing Wikipedia, if done thoughtfully, can be better than being a couch potato. I follow the primary literature on brain stimulation, and it can only be considered to be very early-stage as a research topic. It's nowhere near to being reliably useful as a general way of cognitive enhancement. So, that's my opinion of where it's at. We have a page on Cognitive remediation therapy, which deals with one aspect of the subject. A look at its talk page shows that it can be a topic where one shouldn't just add content subjectively, and what I said above about MEDRS really does come into play here. Likewise, for some of the "traditional habits", we have pages like Research on meditation. I have a feeling that creating a new page combining all the topics that are in that source could open up issues like being a POV-fork, so a case could be made instead for adding content to existing pages, and in some cases having a talk page discussion before adding it. But if you decide to pursue this, please do it with open eyes as regards the MEDRS issues that other editors will, appropriately, insist upon. --Tryptofish (talk) 20:39, 10 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking another look. "Natch", a shortened form of "naturally", likely originates from mid-1940s African American slang. I'm only familiar with "natch' and "on the natch" through the works of American novelist Thomas Pynchon. I'll take a look at CRT. Viriditas (talk) 09:12, 11 July 2015 (UTC)
- Sounds good. As for "natch", I guess it just reconfirms that smart doesn't come in a bottle. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:36, 11 July 2015 (UTC)
Christian terrorism page
Hello
Why is there a section on northern Ireland when the section itself makes it quite clear that the violence in northern Ireland was not 'Christian'?
You reverted the section being removed. I don't see why there is any need for it. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.111.168.151 (talk) 03:22, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- Hello, and thank you for asking me about it on my talk page. The answer to your question is that it is not "quite clear". The content that you have now deleted for a second time contains reliable sourcing that three loyalist groups are indeed Christian terrorists. I also want to draw your attention to the notice that I am reproducing below, which you can click to make visible:
Please click to view.
|
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- Where it says my user name (because I put it here instead of at the Christian terrorism page), it actually applies to that section of the page that you have been deleting. What it means is that you did the wrong thing by "reverting" a second time, when you reverted my restoration of the section (a violation of what is called "1RR"). It's not enough to have contacted me here at my user talk page, although you are welcome to do that as well. You needed to get consensus from other editors before you made the edit that deleted the section that second time (and you won't get that consensus, although you may very well get consensus to write the material differently). My advice is to go to Talk:Christian terrorism, and continue your discussion with me there, not here. You need to understand that this is a very contentious editing topic, and that you will have to work with other editors instead of just deleting what you want to delete. OK? --Tryptofish (talk) 22:59, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
had to look that up, actually. you literary neuroscientist you. Jytdog (talk) 23:41, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- Yeah, I was too lazy to blue-link it. I wish you... peace! --Tryptofish (talk) 23:45, 12 July 2015 (UTC)
- If you have any feedback on my COI work I would be happy to hear it, btw, here or via email - or not at all - as you prefer. Jytdog (talk) 21:20, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Great, I'll do that right here, and please feel free to point other editors with whom you are discussing it to what I am saying here. First, I see that our Javert page provides a ton of plot summary, but gives short shrift to the character's cultural significance: Javert is a prototype for someone who want to "do the right thing", but who becomes so single-mindedly zealous in pursuing those who might be in the wrong, that he becomes a seemingly evil pursuer. Now don't worry, I'm not calling you "evil", and all I said was that you should try to be less Javert-like.
- If you have any feedback on my COI work I would be happy to hear it, btw, here or via email - or not at all - as you prefer. Jytdog (talk) 21:20, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Think of it this way: you got involved in COIN in the first place after that discussion we were both in, where some other editors wrongly accused you of having a COI about GMOs. Now, you've gotten so involved in COIN that the role is reversed: you are the one making the accusations. So my advice is to put yourself in the other editors' shoes (which is actually always good advice for any on-Wiki dispute). You know what it feels like to be accused, so keep it in mind when you are doing the accusing. We have a serious problem with COI editing, and it's good to have volunteers who keep an eye on it. But I would suggest being sensitive about what you say about who people are in real life, and being sensitive about not seeming too vengeful.
- There are enough recent drama board threads about you that you are at risk of being tarred by innuendo: if there are that many editors complaining about him, he must be doing something wrong. I've said to you before that it's a mistake to take stuff personally, so please don't make it a personal matter to nail the COI violators. You are doing a good thing by asking around for advice, so good for you about that! --Tryptofish (talk) 21:58, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking the time. I have written about five responses to you. I am really unhappy with your characterizations here and I really struggle with them coming from you. "Nail the COI violators".... really - is that how you see my work on COI? Coming from you (who I trust enough to take things personally), that is really hard to read. Jytdog (talk) 23:50, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- But I do appreciate you taking the time. I will think on these things. Jytdog (talk) 23:56, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- I understand what you are saying to me here, and I'm happy to continue discussing it as much as you want. Keep this in perspective: I strongly defended you at RFAR, and I said there that your COIN work is excellent, and that Wikipedia is better for it. But this is a discussion in user talk, and you asked me for an honest critique, and I'm giving you honest advice. I certainly do not think that you would have wanted me just to praise you without any advice about how to address the issues that Risker and others are raising. Strictly speaking, I didn't say that you need to stop nailing people. I said that you should stop making it a personal matter. You should understand that it's not like I've been spending the last couple of months watching your COIN work. I'm actually taking into account what the editors who have been accusing you have been saying, and they sure perceive you that way. So I don't know everything about your COIN work, but I'm seeing what's going on now. And you really are in danger of getting tarred by innuendo, in ways that could lead to blocks or bans. And that's the last thing that I want to see happen, so I'm telling it to you like it is, so you can continue your excellent work without someone, well, nailing you!
- But I do appreciate you taking the time. I will think on these things. Jytdog (talk) 23:56, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for taking the time. I have written about five responses to you. I am really unhappy with your characterizations here and I really struggle with them coming from you. "Nail the COI violators".... really - is that how you see my work on COI? Coming from you (who I trust enough to take things personally), that is really hard to read. Jytdog (talk) 23:50, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- There are enough recent drama board threads about you that you are at risk of being tarred by innuendo: if there are that many editors complaining about him, he must be doing something wrong. I've said to you before that it's a mistake to take stuff personally, so please don't make it a personal matter to nail the COI violators. You are doing a good thing by asking around for advice, so good for you about that! --Tryptofish (talk) 21:58, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- From what you say, I'm glad that I didn't see the four replies to me that you decided not to leave here. But that right there should tell you something. I keep harping on the issue of you taking things personally. I think you will do best if you really make a habit of taking a deep breath, or a whole bunch of deep breaths, before responding when another editor disagrees with you. For what it's worth, compare the thread immediately above this one on my talk. An IP editor (who geolocates to Dublin, no less!) keeps blanking the NI section at the CT page, unaware of the 1RR restriction. That person blanked the section, and I reverted them (once!), and I subsequently spent a considerable amount of time fixing up that section, going through sources, and thinking hard about where I might be able to compromise with other editors. And then the IP came back and deleted the whole thing, including my own work, acting as if nothing had changed, and then left the message above, after deleting it all. Between you, me, and everyone else on Teh Internets who reads here, I'm pissed off. But I've never reverted it back, and I don't intend to. It's just gone from the page, and will likely stay gone until post-mediation. And you can judge for yourself: I think that, under the circumstances, I was pretty reasonable in replying to the IP just above. Because it's not personal. Wikipedia is just a website. --Tryptofish (talk) 01:28, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thinking about it some more, let me get specific about one part of it. I have very strong negative feelings about what is referred to as "doxing". As a result, I think one has to be very careful about how one comments, on-Wiki, about who editors are in real life. And as Doc James just pointed out in your user talk, that makes COIN work difficult. As I looked at the RFAR, the filing editor seemed to show that you posted quite a bit about stuff you found outside Wikipedia (how another site had just changed what they said about somebody, etc. – something that, although it strengthens the case that there was COI, wasn't really necessary to meet the basic minimum of establishing probable COI). I'm not questioning that you did so in good faith, and please remember that my position there was that there was no case against you, and if anything, there was a boomerang. But per what I said above, about putting oneself in the other editor's shoes, I can see how they would have felt taken aback to see you posting that information on-Wiki. That would be the kind of thing that I would regard as potentially overzealous. So, you don't need to make the perfect case of COI, just enough of a case, and if the editor insists on arguing with you, maybe let other editors deal with it. --Tryptofish (talk) 01:47, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for this even longer reply. I really appreciate it, Trytpo. I wasn't looking for ass-kissing from you :) but I was just surprised at the way you framed your criticism. I really don"t try to "nail" anybody - I try to teach people. (Paid editors and other editors with a COI can make great contributions and we can protect the integrity of WP, if they learn our policies and follow our process of making edit requests instead of directly editing. My goal is never to drive anyone away. That is what it made so difficult to hear. It would be like telling a teacher that they are out to nail students with failing grades. It is not the goal!)
- I do understand about taking deep breaths, not reacting emotionally, and the importance of self-restraint - -that nothing here is personal. That is something you are a model of.
- About doxing - I do acknowledge that what I posted about Atsme was in bad taste and not necessary. There were some reasons for it, but at the end of the day it was bad judgement. I screw up sometimes.
- But please know that I am extremely careful about OUTING -- even as poor taste as my postings on the Atsme matter were in some places, they were not oversighted. I went further than I have ever gone toward "doxing" (and probably ever will go again) with Atsme and was aware I was going "out there."
- Having lived through the many discussions about banning paid editing following the WIki-PR and Banc de Binary scandals, I am acutely aware of - and respect - the value the community places on anonymity and the fierce protection of that value, and I am aware of how this makes it very tricky to try to honor the strong concern in the community to protect WP's integrity from advocacy and COI. (I've laid out my thoughts on the tension between protecting privacy and protecting integrity in WP, and how to navigate through that tension, on my User page, if that is of interest to you) And I am also aware that a significant chunk of the community looks at dealing with COI at all, as deeply antithetical to the spirit of Wikipedia, which makes working on COI issues not only tricky, but dangerous. Hence my extreme care around OUTING. Anyway, I have heard everything you wrote, and again, I appreciate the time and thought you took to write it. I hope you can see where I am coming from a bit more now, too. Jytdog (talk) 02:20, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Am getting other feedback echoing the zealot/shrill thing. Which i have been at times. Having done that, am stuck with it. Jytdog (talk) 12:15, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- I really am happy to help in whatever way that I can, and you can be certain that there are a lot of other editors for whom I would not have bothered to put this much thought into it. As I said before, I'm saying these things, not because I see you as a problem editor, but because I see you as one of the best editors I work with, and consequently I want to make sure that you don't get caught in any traps. I appreciate and respect the fact that you have sought out serious feedback, and that you are taking that feedback seriously. A lot of people wouldn't be capable of handling it, but you are amply capable. I've understood all along that it wasn't "the goal". It's a tricky thing about communicating online: one can have excellent intentions and yet have other people misread those intentions. And believe me, we all "screw up sometimes"! Just look at another thread on my talk where someone asked me about non-pharmacological ways of doing something and I replied in terms of pharmacological ways! It doesn't matter that one can make mistakes, because we all do because we're all human, but what matters is what one does to learn from the mistakes and improve. You aren't "stuck" with past mistakes unless you refuse to learn from them. What you are doing now, with thinking about feedback, is exactly the right thing. --Tryptofish (talk) 17:00, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- I just read Risker's advice to you at ANI, where she talks about ways that COIN issues are not urgent, and about ways to deal with those issues in a gradual, incremental way, and I think that what she said to you about that is excellent advice. It's something that I hadn't thought of before, but it's a very good insight. Just because something isn't good for the project or isn't good for a particular page, doesn't necessarily mean that it has to be dealt with as an emergency. --Tryptofish (talk) 17:17, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- I really am happy to help in whatever way that I can, and you can be certain that there are a lot of other editors for whom I would not have bothered to put this much thought into it. As I said before, I'm saying these things, not because I see you as a problem editor, but because I see you as one of the best editors I work with, and consequently I want to make sure that you don't get caught in any traps. I appreciate and respect the fact that you have sought out serious feedback, and that you are taking that feedback seriously. A lot of people wouldn't be capable of handling it, but you are amply capable. I've understood all along that it wasn't "the goal". It's a tricky thing about communicating online: one can have excellent intentions and yet have other people misread those intentions. And believe me, we all "screw up sometimes"! Just look at another thread on my talk where someone asked me about non-pharmacological ways of doing something and I replied in terms of pharmacological ways! It doesn't matter that one can make mistakes, because we all do because we're all human, but what matters is what one does to learn from the mistakes and improve. You aren't "stuck" with past mistakes unless you refuse to learn from them. What you are doing now, with thinking about feedback, is exactly the right thing. --Tryptofish (talk) 17:00, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Am getting other feedback echoing the zealot/shrill thing. Which i have been at times. Having done that, am stuck with it. Jytdog (talk) 12:15, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thinking about it some more, let me get specific about one part of it. I have very strong negative feelings about what is referred to as "doxing". As a result, I think one has to be very careful about how one comments, on-Wiki, about who editors are in real life. And as Doc James just pointed out in your user talk, that makes COIN work difficult. As I looked at the RFAR, the filing editor seemed to show that you posted quite a bit about stuff you found outside Wikipedia (how another site had just changed what they said about somebody, etc. – something that, although it strengthens the case that there was COI, wasn't really necessary to meet the basic minimum of establishing probable COI). I'm not questioning that you did so in good faith, and please remember that my position there was that there was no case against you, and if anything, there was a boomerang. But per what I said above, about putting oneself in the other editor's shoes, I can see how they would have felt taken aback to see you posting that information on-Wiki. That would be the kind of thing that I would regard as potentially overzealous. So, you don't need to make the perfect case of COI, just enough of a case, and if the editor insists on arguing with you, maybe let other editors deal with it. --Tryptofish (talk) 01:47, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- While I hope this discussion proves useful to Jytdog, I remain cautiously optimistic. I think it's only fair to mention that in my case, it wasn't just about the unnecessary exposure or his overzealousness to start a case at COIN before he even tried to contact me. Digging into domain registrations should have been actionable. He also erroneously listed three articles, (1) Gabor B. Racz which was in no way related and caused a flurry of further disruption to the project, Ambush predators which I never edited, and Paddlefish, where I made one edit, added an EL, and there was a discussion on the TP. All three articles were tagged with the COI template. In fact, the discussion was just above his post on that TP.
Photos and footage of criminal arrests for the llegal poaching of paddlefish, and much more.
- If the editors overseeing this article think it would be useful, I can provide a link to a video segment showing actual paddlefish caviar, criminal arrests, and interviews with FWS special agents and Missouri state agents who participated in the much talked about covert operation that took place in Missouri back in the 80s. The sting operation was an historic event because 23 people were arrested, charged & successfully prosecuted in state court in Missouri, while 6 were arrested on felony charges at the federal level for interstate trafficking of wildlife. They were convicted, heavily fined and sentenced to time in a federal peneteniary. I can also make photographs available and help expand upon the paddlefish article in general, but my participation would be considered a COI, so I'm posting this information for editors to consider. I also need to mention there is a comprehensive one-hour documentary about paddlefish available for viewing at YouTube. The documentary is a valid resource produced in cooperation with State and Federal resource agencies, and contains rare underwater footage of paddlefish in the wild, interviews with State and Federal fish biologists, several of whom participated in the writing of "the books and research papers" that were the initial references for some of the Wiki references, including L.K. Graham, D.L. Scarnecchia, and Clifton Stone. The documentary also shows artificial propagation of paddlefish, C-section surgery, hatchery conditions, snagging, a demonstration of how poachers made caviar from paddlefish roe, etc. I await your response. Atsme (talk) 5:44 pm, 14 October 2011, Friday (3 years, 9 months, 1 day ago) (UTC−4)
- I don't think any video showing people caught into questionable activities would fly here, unless the article was exactly about these questionable activity and those people. There would be concerns related to WP:BLP and privacy. About the documentary, that is probably a decent external link. By the way, why you editing the paddlefish article(s) would imply COI? Are you a paddlefish? Face-smile.svg --cyclopiaspeak! 11:00 am, 9 June 2014, Monday (1 year, 1 month, 5 days ago) (UTC−4)
- I'm a primitive species. Self-trout I made the COI comment back in 2011 before I fully understood what it meant. Oh, and I'm still working on uploading some bowfin video. I also have some footage of a paddlefish filter feeding, which should probably go with the American paddlefish article, and not the paddlefish article, or should it? And what about the taxobox on both the American paddlefish article and Paddlefish article? The image is an American paddlefish which doesn't look anything like a Chinese paddlefish. It was confusing enough trying to keep the information in the article itself separated especially considering there are only two extant species with more differences between them than similarities. Anyway, look over it when you get a chance. Atsme☯Consult 1:53 am, 11 June 2014, Wednesday (1 year, 1 month, 4 days ago) (UTC−4)
- Well, trout myself as well, I didn't notice it was a 2011 comment! I now still want to go ahead with the bowfin, but I'll have a look at the paddlefish situation when I can. --cyclopiaspeak! 3:36 am, 11 June 2014, Wednesday (1 year, 1 month, 4 days ago) (UTC−4)
- His actions at COIN were punitive and an abuse of the process. He got off unscathed this time. His incivility is not unusual and has become far more noticeable. It dates back from his earliest beginnings and continues to this day especially when it involves articles he disapproves or happen to be in his "suite of articles". Here are a few examples, [1], [2], [3]. I was reminded of the movie "Anger Management" starring Jack Nicholson and Adam Sandler. Atsme📞📧 22:44, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Atsme, thank you for taking the time to explain these things at my talk page, and I will say that you make some very valid points. Right off the bat, I think that the 3 diffs you provide in the last paragraph of your message are a surprise to me, and I consider them unacceptable, so I agree with you about that. @Jytdog: I want you to know that I consider your tone and language in those three diffs really, really bad, and you need to get a hold on that. Also Mann jess is someone I've worked with lots of times, and is a very reasonable and helpful editor.
- At the same time, Atsme, I see my role in this discussion as getting us all back to more peaceful editing. I really hope that you saw, above, where Jytdog said "I do acknowledge that what I posted about Atsme was in bad taste and not necessary." Please take some comfort from that. I've seen Jytdog do lots of good work, and I do think that he is starting to see that he has been making mistakes. Some of the things that you point out he listed carelessly were mistakes, and it would, in turn, be a mistake on your part to insist on punishment for it. Wikipedia isn't about punishment; it's about preventing further problems. (I've had various editors say some pretty awful things about me at various times, and my standard response has become: "Yes, and I smell bad, too.")
- I want to explain to you that, when I said what I said about the ArbCom case request, I was speaking in that context – that this was not something that ArbCom should take as a case, and that instead, the problems should be dealt with by the community, as we are doing right here. You say that Jytdog took it on himself to follow you around; well, the diffs you've presented to me suggest that you are responding in kind. So please, let's all find ways to get back to peaceful editing.
- I'm happy to continue this discussion if anyone has more that they want to discuss, but I'm going to request that Jytdog and Atsme direct any further comments to me, and not to one another, and also not to seek any tit-for-tat. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:53, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- Appreciate the input, Tryptofish. I've read many good things about you and regret that our initial interaction is over this COINOSCOPY but I appreciate your attempts at
medicationmediation. My providing diffs were to support my comments. The only thing I'm following are PAGs because without diffs my comments may be misconstrued as casting aspersions. While I understand the point you're trying to make, I don't think it was a good comparison considering Jytdog dug into my PL off-wiki, including personal domain registrations in his failed attempt to prove the conspiracy theories he developed for his 4th of July fireworks display. Also keep in mind that the evidence I recently uncovered, some of which is provided above, further demonstrates the case he initiated truly was unwarranted. I just want a review of the close so it will properly reflect that the case against me was mishandled and unwarranted based on the recent findings. If you can help me get that done, there's no need for me to open a case at ANI. Do you think that's possible? Jytdog also owes me an apology for what he did, which brings up another problem - he rarely if ever progresses beyond striking his ill-conceived, ill-intentioned comments but even then the strikes are viewed more as a CYA than regret because he keeps doing it. He indicated the following to me months ago, [4], and January 9, 2015, We have different goals with respect to our work here, and different views on PAG I don't care at all about "gold stars" like GA/FA or DYK (I just want to create good and maintain good content in WP, per PAG, as I see it) and those seem important to you.. As he sees it is where the problems lie. Perhaps it also explains why he used COIN to target the GAs and FA I edited in a GF collaborative effort - he saw them as "important" to me.
- Appreciate the input, Tryptofish. I've read many good things about you and regret that our initial interaction is over this COINOSCOPY but I appreciate your attempts at
- I guess the big question now is, can we believe his behavior will change? I think that each time he walks away unscathed he becomes a little more emboldened but I sincerely hope I'm wrong. Unfortunately, discussions like the following demonstrate otherwise: [5], [6]. For stark differences in the way he sees things, compare his actions over Gabor B. Racz, a GA that was criticized by certain team collaborators as "promotional", "puffery", poorly written, etc. vs his actions at David Gorski, and regarding the latter, notice the section on Skepticism which is clearly promotional of Gorski's advocacy (be it a good advocacy or not). Look at the TP discussions and you'll see which article is protected by "team collaborators" which looks a lot like an advocacy to me. It doesn't require a rocket scientist to figure it out. Also notice how Jytdog added an unwarranted recruiting label on Gorski [7], based on another of his conspiracy theories and unwarranted warning of canvassing against me because I mentioned Gorski in an unrelated discussion [8]. Wow. While I'd like to believe Jytdog's recent posts to various admins and editors are a sincere attempt to self-analyze, I think the following comment in response to Jytdog's excuses sums it up best, [9]. At this point in time, I'll stick with "cautiously optimistic" and hope that I'm pleasantly surprised. Atsme📞📧 20:04, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- Atsme, thank you very much for the kind words about me. I appreciate that very much. In my opinion, these two diffs are very bad: [10] and [11]. I know Jytdog watches here, and I trust that he hears me that I am very disturbed about them. My sincere advice to you, Atsme, is that most of the rest that you have presented to me here do not persuade me all that much, and I promise that I have looked carefully at everything, so I think that if you seek further dispute resolution, you will find it disappointing. Please, don't pursue this dispute any further, unless there are new events in the future. It's not worth it, and much of your evidence is not convincing. I hope that you can keep your optimism up! --Tryptofish (talk) 21:12, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- Trypto. Yes, they are on the face of them bad. Second. if you look around them in time. you will see that I went and apologized to ManJess very shortly after i wrote that and he forgave me, and the interaction with Protein1EFN was a long and complex one that included me talking on the phone to and emailing with the head of social media for IMS (that is who they work for) and things are fine now. This is kind of cherry-picking ick that Atsme generates (she can be a good rhetorician) and I am disappointed with you for not asking me anything about them, much less looking at them yourself (doesn't seem you did), before you judged so flatly. (yes, they are bad on their face) Jytdog (talk) 21:43, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- Trypto, I had promised myself that I would just read these posts and not respond, but this is beyond the pale. Jytdog called and emailed an editor's employer? Why wasn't he blocked? He contacted an editor's employer a second time and no one thinks that this was inappropriate? Jesus! People have lost their jobs in the real world from this type of crap. I don't care if the guy was the worst WP:COI violator in Wiki-history, we don't take off-wiki actions to enforce on-wiki policies. If mere editors are contacting employers, they are creating all sorts of potential problems for Wikipedia if someone is damaged from that contact. Someone needs to explain to him very strongly that contacting editors or their employers off-wiki is not acceptable conduct under any circumstances. GregJackP Boomer! 06:48, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- GregJackP, the boss emailed me directly and opened a discussion with me, which included some back and forth emailing and phone calls and in which I included other WP:MED members. IMS wanted to establish a presence on Wikipedia as part of a larger internet strategy, and wanted to do it in compliance with our policies and guidelines. Discussions about this ensued at WT:MED and COIN and a few user Talk pages. Hasn't gone much of anywhere. The first dif you link to was an email to the editor; the second dif you link to where I said I emailed their boss happened after the boss had reached out to me, and in those discussions he asked me to let him know if there were any subsequent problems. Bigger picture - you are letting your resentment blind you - as in this case, you didn't even stop to consider what the facts of the matter might actually be, before jumping to very strong conclusions. This is only going to harm you here in WP, the longer you let that keep happening. You will do as you will. Jytdog (talk) 12:11, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- GregJackP, I'm happy to hear from you here at my talk page, but I also want to remind you of my suggestion at ANI, that you and Jytdog voluntarily refrain from commenting on one another. OK? I haven't looked at the diffs or their contexts, because I am getting fatigued with this discussion, but I think that there is nothing wrong with responding to e-mails initiated by the editor's boss, if the boss initiated the interaction. Jytdog, it sure sounds like you understand quite well that it's an entirely different matter if you, as an editor here, initiate the first contact, and I'm a lot more interested in things working better going forward than in rehashing the past. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:11, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- GregJackP, the boss emailed me directly and opened a discussion with me, which included some back and forth emailing and phone calls and in which I included other WP:MED members. IMS wanted to establish a presence on Wikipedia as part of a larger internet strategy, and wanted to do it in compliance with our policies and guidelines. Discussions about this ensued at WT:MED and COIN and a few user Talk pages. Hasn't gone much of anywhere. The first dif you link to was an email to the editor; the second dif you link to where I said I emailed their boss happened after the boss had reached out to me, and in those discussions he asked me to let him know if there were any subsequent problems. Bigger picture - you are letting your resentment blind you - as in this case, you didn't even stop to consider what the facts of the matter might actually be, before jumping to very strong conclusions. This is only going to harm you here in WP, the longer you let that keep happening. You will do as you will. Jytdog (talk) 12:11, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- Trypto, I had promised myself that I would just read these posts and not respond, but this is beyond the pale. Jytdog called and emailed an editor's employer? Why wasn't he blocked? He contacted an editor's employer a second time and no one thinks that this was inappropriate? Jesus! People have lost their jobs in the real world from this type of crap. I don't care if the guy was the worst WP:COI violator in Wiki-history, we don't take off-wiki actions to enforce on-wiki policies. If mere editors are contacting employers, they are creating all sorts of potential problems for Wikipedia if someone is damaged from that contact. Someone needs to explain to him very strongly that contacting editors or their employers off-wiki is not acceptable conduct under any circumstances. GregJackP Boomer! 06:48, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- Trypto, sorry to be contributing to drama on your Talk page, but I am so incensed that Jytdog could write "Yes, they are on the face of them bad." What part of such edits could be considered as anything other than absolutely disgusting and totally unacceptable. To be writing such messages to other editors deserves, in my opinion, a life-time ban.DrChrissy (talk) 22:07, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- Hi, Dr. Chrissy. It's good to hear from you. Jytdog, I am glad that you apologized to Mann jess, as well you should have. You should not be "disappointed with [me] for not asking [you] anything about them", because I have expected that you are watching here, and you are free to respond. However, I want to be very clear about the following: they are not only bad on their face, they are bad, full stop. I thought very seriously about going to ANI myself about them, and you should count yourself lucky that I didn't. Apology afterward is absolutely the only appropriate posture for you about them. This has nothing to do with anyone being a good rhetorician or good anything else, because I am quite capable of evaluating these things myself. I respect you a lot, and I trust that this will not happen again. If it does, do not expect me to defend you. Really, you are too good an editor and too good an asset to Wikpedia, for you to be letting your anger get the better of you in these ways. Better to apologize than not, but better still not to make mistakes this big in the first place. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:22, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- I didn't deny even a little bit that I wrote those things. I did. They were bad. We are getting into the the problem of harm and its aftermath. I am indelibly marked by the bad things I have done in the community - those diffs will be there for all time, for people to dredge up and stab me with. And I will have to take it. I expect that from some quarters. Some people I have been rude to are also marked, and have been unable to heal. I know that too. In the actual living Wikipedia community, there are relationships, and these things happened in specific ones. The story does matter. In those two cases, the parties who were actually involved have moved on. They are over. But there are people I have been rude to or had clashes with, who won't or can't move on.
- I don't know what you got out of feeding Atsme's desire for vengeance by also making sure you repeated to me (three times now) that they were bad. I know they were bad, Trypto. I knew they were bad ages ago.
- It is clear that from your words, Atsme drew succor in her resentment against me - and to be straight with you, in my view, you are not helping her or the community by feeding her resentment. She of course has a right to hold onto her pain and to try to pursue that as far as she wants to. DrChrissy too. (I was rude to him, I apologized and was warned at ANI. I have moved on and am trying to do better; he has unfortunately not been able to move on and holds a grudge, and even tracks me in his sandbox. I am sad about that but there is nothing I can do about it. Again, the problem of harm and its aftermath; in the case of DrChrissy, complicated by watching the person I insulted being unable to heal and destroying himself.)
- What can one do, when one does harm, other than apologize and move on and keep trying to do better (and actually try, not just say it)? That is not a rhetorical question. There are people who do too much harm and we ban them. Maybe I have been rude enough times for that to be the case. I don't think so. But maybe it is so. But to make things as absolute as you are doing with regard to those two diffs in particular, is somehow brittle and false.
- And all of this reminds me that there is something I need to do... Jytdog (talk) 23:11, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- "...and even tracks me in his sandbox." Jytdog, if you know that, you have been tracking me! That does not bother me in the slightest, but it makes me wonder how you, a single editor, finds the time to know that along with all the other edits and COI interactions.DrChrissy (talk) 23:22, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- I put your sandbox on my watchlist ages ago. Jytdog (talk) 23:56, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- Dr. Chrissy, I'm still not clear on what really went on during my prolonged absence from WP, but I want to repeat something that I also said earlier. I have very much enjoyed my editing of various pages, separately, with Dr. Chrissy and with Jytdog, and I value both of you as editors very much. I don't really understand how the conflict between you two began, but I really hope that both of you will become friendly collaborators in the future. After all, Viriditas and I have done two DYKs together.
- I put your sandbox on my watchlist ages ago. Jytdog (talk) 23:56, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- "...and even tracks me in his sandbox." Jytdog, if you know that, you have been tracking me! That does not bother me in the slightest, but it makes me wonder how you, a single editor, finds the time to know that along with all the other edits and COI interactions.DrChrissy (talk) 23:22, 16 July 2015 (UTC)
- I'm going to close this talk thread soon, because I think that it is getting close to going past its use-by date. But I want to leave things open a little longer, on the theory that it's better for editors to blow off steam on my talk page than somewhere else, so I'm still listening for just a bit longer. Jytdog, let me repeat something else. I said earlier, and I meant it, that I wouldn't expend this much time and thought on most editors. I'm doing it for you because I hold you in very high regard, as an editor, and as a Wiki-friend. I'm glad that you understand what I have been telling you, and I trust you to learn, going forward, which is the main thing I care about here. I have tried to treat Atsme with the respect and consideration that I do for any editor who comes to my talk in a civil way, but what I have told her has been honest, and you need to recognize that I cautioned her not to pursue any further dispute resolution with you. Before I replied here, I first looked nervously at ANI, and was relieved to see nothing new there.
- About healing, now that is something that I hope to see all around! It's time for Javert to exit the stage, and Cossette to enter. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:11, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- Happy healing :-) DrChrissy (talk) 23:39, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
- About healing, now that is something that I hope to see all around! It's time for Javert to exit the stage, and Cossette to enter. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:11, 17 July 2015 (UTC)
I'm closing this discussion now, with thanks to everyone who was here. It being my talk page, I get to give myself the last word, and to pontificate a bit.
I've observed that many Wikipedia editors are human beings. As such, all humans make mistakes. (I, of course, am instead a fish, and therefore perfect.) When an editor makes a mistake, it's best for the project if one recognizes that this is simply human, and not rush to assign blame. And when one makes a mistake, it's best to recognize it, do whatever one can to fix it, and learn from it. It's only when an editor chooses not to learn from and correct mistakes that dispute resolution becomes necessary.
And that in turn leads to a bit of advice. I catch myself making mistakes about this all the time, in fact, but it's something to aim for, at least. Whenever you find yourself in a dispute with another editor, think about what you say to that editor, not simply in terms of what you want to say to them, but also from the perspective that you want whatever you say to sound "right" to any uninvolved editor who might come along and read your comments with no preconceptions. By sounding "right", what I mean is that you want to sound level-headed, not angry, and doing your best to advance the writing of an encyclopedia even in the face of others who do not have such good intentions. You want to sound that way, relative to the other editor, rather than to have it sound the other way around. Often that means taking a bit of time to compose your thoughts before you hit the save button. At least that's something useful to aim for.
Please don't anyone think I'm directing that at any individual editor. I think it applies to everyone who has been a party to this discussion. And I wish everyone happy editing, moving on. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:40, 19 July 2015 (UTC)
Winding up
Not to press, but if you'll give your assent to the resolutions of issues #A4, A5, A6a, and A7, plus the discussion at Talk:Phineas_Gage#Disposition_of_behavior_citations (which should be easy) then the only things left will be Talk:Phineas_Gage#And_another_thing.2C_dagnabbit.21 and Talk:Phineas_Gage#Notes. For both of those the ball's in your court, and I'm not sure you still care about them. After that we're done! EEng (talk) 01:04, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Maybe sometime in the future. --Tryptofish (talk) 01:06, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- I said that last night after a tough day of editing disagreements, so I was more curt than I should have been. But please give me some time, a lot of time. (Obviously, what I said at what is now the top of my talk page, about intending to stay away from dramas for a while – I've been failing miserably at following my own advice!) --Tryptofish (talk) 22:02, 13 July 2015 (UTC)
- Well, you'll be happy to know that I think this should be drama-free. The items listed are action items you and I had worked out (mostly integrating notes into main text etc.), plus Mirokado's and my solution to the technical problem of citing sources from within notes. There's nothing left to do, but I want your imprimatur so no one can say due consideration wasn't given to you-know-who's nonsense, and I'd like to get this stuff off the discussion page.
- The two threads that remain after that were your additional concerns about the quantity of notes. I'm hoping that with all the changes under the earlier threads, this won't be a concern any more. EEng (talk) 03:08, 14 July 2015 (UTC)
- Done. I'd still encourage you to work on what I said at Talk:Phineas_Gage#Notes. Otherwise, I find the page much improved! --Tryptofish (talk) 20:56, 19 July 2015 (UTC)
Strange
I just came across some unusual material in the atropine article and I was wondering if you know anything about the mechanism:
Atropine eye drops have been shown to be effective in slowing the progression of myopia in children in several studies, but it is not available for this use, and side effects would limit its use.[12]
Do you think in the future we might be able to treat myopia with simple eye drops? Provided we can eliminate the dancing wallpaper and furry elves? :) Viriditas (talk) 04:33, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- Sure, I'm quite familiar with those concepts (even taught them). Atropine blocks a kind of receptor for acetylcholine. That has the effect of altering the curvature of the eye, by altering the tone of the smooth muscles that control that curvature (by blocking the effect of the nerve that controls the muscle). It also dilates the pupil of the eye. In fact, if you've ever had an eye exam where the doctor gave you eye drops to dilate the pupils, those drops were you-guess-what. And that means that, using it this way in children, it interferes with exposing the eyes to bright light. A further problem with atropine is that, if you use it for any length of time, it doesn't stay in place, but moves throughout the body, where it does all kinds of things like raising blood pressure and a lot of other stuff that would be considered side effects.
- Now as for a future pharmacological treatment for myopia, I suppose there's no reason why not, although the biggest issue would be that you want something that can be overridden by voluntary focusing of the eye. If the drops just fixed your eyes in focus at the distance, then you wouldn't like it if it prevented you from reading something close up. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:49, 15 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for your detailed response. I just saw this news item and thought you might have something to say about it. Viriditas (talk) 08:35, 26 July 2015 (UTC)
- No problem, I'm happy to do it. (And you are getting quite a deal: there was a time when someone would have to have paid a lot of tuition to get that lecture from me! ) As for the cataracts study, I looked at it and it looks very solid to me. (The principal weakness is that they don't really understand the mechanism, and thus don't really know cause-and-effect.) --Tryptofish (talk) 19:58, 26 July 2015 (UTC)
Section break
This discussion is closed, and I hope that editors will come to find that they can work together happily. --Tryptofish (talk) 20:31, 29 July 2015 (UTC) |
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The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
V, you haven't made any statements that I can respond to. That was a pretty long post and you just made general claims. I asked you what specifically you found objectionable. That is all I can do, since I don't know what you had issues with. Bigger picture, I always try to respond directly to what people say to me. I know you were frustrated by our interactions in the past; I didn't find them productive either. I am sorry you feel victimized - for what its worth I thought you treated me pretty badly, pretty consistently, and I was happier when you stopped interacting with me. It isn't nice to be treated in a dehumanizing way like this (and your interactions with me were full of stuff like that). I also do not seek you out; I have no desire to interact with you generally. But V, dehumanizing people and carrying around the anger with which you did that - that is what hate is. No love there - no recognition of someone else's humanity. It is bad to experience the outcome, but it really hurts the one who carries it around. I am sorry you are in that condition. Like I said, if you want to discuss (and I do mean discuss) anything I wrote in that diff - for example what specifically you find in it that reflects "a misunderstanding about how Wikipedia works" I will do that. Jytdog (talk) 04:06, 28 July 2015 (UTC)
|
My RfA
Thank for !voting at my recent RfA. You voted Oppose so you get only one cookie, but a nice one. (Better luck next time.) |
Thank you
Your comment meant a lot to me, thank you for your support. Kharkiv07 (T) 02:33, 18 July 2015 (UTC)
- You are, of course, very welcome! --Tryptofish (talk) 22:53, 18 July 2015 (UTC)
Atheism
Hello dear User, please pay attention to this topic - Talk:Atheism#The last edition of Ramos 1990. Thanks. M.Karelin (talk) 17:59, 19 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thank you for asking me. However, it is not a high priority for me at the moment. --Tryptofish (talk) 19:02, 19 July 2015 (UTC)
Community desysoping RfC
Hi. You are invited to comment at RfC for BARC - a community desysoping process. --Kudpung กุดผึ้ง (talk) 06:41, 24 July 2015 (UTC)
- Done. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:14, 25 July 2015 (UTC)
What oft was thought, but ne'er so well expressed . . .
You're a good man, Tryptofish: [13]. Dirtlawyer1 (talk) 00:59, 25 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks, Dirtlawyer1. It truly does seem to me to be an RfA gone awry. (But... are you sure that I'm a man?) --Tryptofish (talk) 21:58, 25 July 2015 (UTC)
- Pretty sure. But only The Shadow knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. Dirtlawyer1 (talk) 23:59, 28 July 2015 (UTC)
- Ah, but I'm actually a fish. (And let's leave it at that, wink.) --Tryptofish (talk) 20:17, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- Pretty sure. But only The Shadow knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men. Dirtlawyer1 (talk) 23:59, 28 July 2015 (UTC)
Conspiracy theories and soapboxing
You mentioned something about conspiracy theories and soapboxing, and although I know what those concepts mean, I didn't understand what you were referring to in the context of the previous discussion. Could you take a moment to briefly explain? Thanks. Viriditas (talk) 21:50, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- I was referring to this diff: [14]. And I would prefer not to have an extended argument over it. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:55, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thank you. That was very helpful, as I really didn't know what you were talking about. After seeing that diff, I'm not all that interested in discussing soapboxing, but if you could, would you be so kind to point to the conspiracy theory in your own words? From what I can tell, I'm just seeing business as usual, analogous to the tobacco industry trying to promote their product for profit and downplaying the health impact for fifty years; or the fossil fuel industry promoting their product and downplaying the environmental impact of climate change for a century; or the private military industry selling weapons and waging war while downplaying the regional instability and terrorism their policies cause. Is the biotech sector historically any different? Viriditas (talk) 22:14, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- In my own words? You list a bunch of examples where I'm pretty sure I agree with you: the tobacco industry denying the science that shows their product to be dangerous, the fossil fuel industry denying the science of climate degradation that shows their products to be dangerous, and so on. I dislike science denial in the service of financial greed just as much as you do. And I'll agree with you also (in my personal opinion, not in my role as an editor), that there are some very objectionable things about how the biotech industry operates and how the government mishandles it. But, in the case of biotech, the science shows that the products are actually not dangerous (with a few caveats), and that the products can (with caveats) offer good things to society. That's a fundamental difference relative to tobacco products. It's actually science denial by the critics of an industry. But conflating them strikes me as wrong, and anti-science, and anti-intellectual. Whether that conflation is exactly a matter of "conspiracy theories" or whether some other choice of words would be more apt, maybe there is a better choice of words, but I think that is Wikilawyering. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:33, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for your detailed response. Am I correct in assuming that you haven't looked into or studied the history of opposition to GMOs? I ask, because when you look into it, you'll find it has little to do with "anti-science" positions or "science denial" by critics. When you study the issue you find a complex trail of regulatory controversy, combined with risk aversion and industry influence. In many significant ways, my analogy was more than apt: the same people and groups involved in the tobacco, climate change, and military advocacy detailed above are also involved in biotech advocacy. Perhaps names like the American Council on Science and Health ring a bell from the past. There are many front groups like this that have been active on the same issues. One of the most active right now is the Cornell Alliance for Science, which has received almost six million (from a three billion dollar fund earmarked for agriculture) from the Gates Foundation to advocate for GMOs in the media and on the Internet. Viriditas (talk) 04:46, 30 July 2015 (UTC)
- Bottom line for me is that much prejudice exists with regard to GMO coverage on WP. A large group of editors claim to believe that any questioning of the whitewashed GM articles comes from Monsanto haters, quacks, or fringe adherents. But what the RfC showed (and these facts are unrelated to my credibility as a witness) is that the ENSSER is on point: the 'scientific consensus' of GM safety is not supported by facts. We have a long list of refs after the claim, but none of them support it either alone or SYNTHed. It turns out only Domingo has done a review of the studies looking specifically at GM food and human health impacts - and half of the studies raise questions. Meanwhile, if editors were truly here to represent the science and WP guidelines, one would assume the unsupported claim would be tweaked, removed, or supporting refs found and added. None of this is the case. To have over 300 scientists calling out Wikipedia's Genetically Modified food article as misrepresenting the science and creating a consensus claim that doesn't exist is very serious, yet no one is able to remedy the problem due to ownership issues and the aforementioned good ole boys club that turns all criticism back on the messenger. Soapboxing on a talk page is in no way comparable to misrepresenting science in article space to such a degree that an international body of scientists writes a paper about it. petrarchan47คุก 05:21, 30 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for your detailed response. Am I correct in assuming that you haven't looked into or studied the history of opposition to GMOs? I ask, because when you look into it, you'll find it has little to do with "anti-science" positions or "science denial" by critics. When you study the issue you find a complex trail of regulatory controversy, combined with risk aversion and industry influence. In many significant ways, my analogy was more than apt: the same people and groups involved in the tobacco, climate change, and military advocacy detailed above are also involved in biotech advocacy. Perhaps names like the American Council on Science and Health ring a bell from the past. There are many front groups like this that have been active on the same issues. One of the most active right now is the Cornell Alliance for Science, which has received almost six million (from a three billion dollar fund earmarked for agriculture) from the Gates Foundation to advocate for GMOs in the media and on the Internet. Viriditas (talk) 04:46, 30 July 2015 (UTC)
- In my own words? You list a bunch of examples where I'm pretty sure I agree with you: the tobacco industry denying the science that shows their product to be dangerous, the fossil fuel industry denying the science of climate degradation that shows their products to be dangerous, and so on. I dislike science denial in the service of financial greed just as much as you do. And I'll agree with you also (in my personal opinion, not in my role as an editor), that there are some very objectionable things about how the biotech industry operates and how the government mishandles it. But, in the case of biotech, the science shows that the products are actually not dangerous (with a few caveats), and that the products can (with caveats) offer good things to society. That's a fundamental difference relative to tobacco products. It's actually science denial by the critics of an industry. But conflating them strikes me as wrong, and anti-science, and anti-intellectual. Whether that conflation is exactly a matter of "conspiracy theories" or whether some other choice of words would be more apt, maybe there is a better choice of words, but I think that is Wikilawyering. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:33, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- Thank you. That was very helpful, as I really didn't know what you were talking about. After seeing that diff, I'm not all that interested in discussing soapboxing, but if you could, would you be so kind to point to the conspiracy theory in your own words? From what I can tell, I'm just seeing business as usual, analogous to the tobacco industry trying to promote their product for profit and downplaying the health impact for fifty years; or the fossil fuel industry promoting their product and downplaying the environmental impact of climate change for a century; or the private military industry selling weapons and waging war while downplaying the regional instability and terrorism their policies cause. Is the biotech sector historically any different? Viriditas (talk) 22:14, 29 July 2015 (UTC)
- I'm also curious as to what Tryptofish thinks of people like Dennis T. Avery, who not only has a long history with the Heartland Institute and the Hudson Institute, but is notable for his science denial in support of his biotech advocacy. Please also note the connection between the military, tobacco, climate change, and GMOs. It's right there. Viriditas (talk) 07:28, 30 July 2015 (UTC)