Wikipedia:Deletion review/Log/2008 November 24

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24 November 2008

The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it.
File:Wpdms nasa topo olympic peninsula.jpg (edit | talk | history | links | watch | logs) (restore | cache){{subst:[[Template:|[[:|article]]||[[:|article]]]]}})

This file was damaged during the 5 September image loss. It can be recovered on enwiki as a previous copy of this file was deleted here. Please undelete and mark it for transfer to Wikimedia Commons. Thank you! Ukko.de (talk) 22:04, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it.

U Card (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore | cache | AfD))

See also User:Linda Golden/U Card

I would like to request a History-only undeleltion for my University of Minnesota Stub: U Card. NawlinWiki deleted it because it was blatant advertising. I fixed the advertising aspect of the stub and simply stated the U Card's relation to the University, as well as background information about the card. Since it is a stub I thought it would be noteworthy to note the Campus card as a campus stub page. I know there isn't enough information to make a page, but a stub should work out just fine. The U Card is unique to the University of Minnesota, and not all campuses have the same program for their carding systems. Since it is a stub it is noteworthy and unique to the University of Minnesota. Please look at User:Linda Golden/U Card to examine the updated page. -- Linda Golden 01:19, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

  • A history-only deletion applies only when a new page has been created at that title. Please clarify what you want or consider adding details of the U Card in a section of
    talk) 10:19, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
  • Chick Bowen 02:45, 8 December 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it.

List of notable people who wore the bowler hat (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore | cache | AfD
)) The list has encyclopedic value, because it supports the article bowler hat by showing this piece of headwear in its social or artistic context in images on (many of) the articles listed. I've reverted bowler hat back to before the split-off so people participating here can see the list for themselves until this discussion is resolved. The AfD was an obvious miscall. It is clearly "no consensus" because the support on both sides (delete vs keep/merge) was almost equal. Also, work was being done to the article, with editors committed to further improving it and it could be revived on that basis alone. Benjiboi captured the essence of the situation. But the closing admin appears to have merely counted the votes without bothering to read or weigh the arguments: because he didn't explain his reasoning. Please take a look. And if need be, I'll chip in to help clean up the list. Please undelete it. Thank you. The Transhumanist 21:18, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Instead of reverting bowler hat, it may be better for this discussion to use {{
List of notable people who wore the bowler hat. Thanks. -- Suntag 00:47, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Overturn as no consensus- In looking through the AFD, I don't see a clear consensus to delete. Umbralcorax (talk) 21:34, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Undeleting this would be pointless. The content still exists in the article that it came from, and where it was being challenged on the grounds of verifiability. The fact that you yourself were able to restore that content in that article is evidence of that. Having a non-GFDL-compliant copy in another article is pointless, and restoring it achieves nothing useful. Stop concentrating upon processes and start concentrating upon content. It's saddening to see that none of the people who want this content are actually willing to sit down and work on making the list verifiable in the article where it actually was at the start. This is not editors working on making an encyclopaedia verifiable. Nor are either of the actions taken, both in splitting the content off into a separate article and then bringing that separate article to Deletion Review, the proper ways to respond when verifiability is challenged. Both actions are just wasting time that would be better spent working productively on the original article. The proper way to respond is to cite sources from which the content can be verified, and restore it, discussing on Talk:bowler hat as necessary. Continually side-stepping this discussion, both with article forks and Deletion Reviews, will not help improve the encyclopaedia. Even restoring the content "so that people can see the list" is not actually aimed at improving the encyclopaedia. One can just as easily give a permalink to an older version of the article, without editing the article for purposes of debate, rather than actual improvement. Please focus on actually rising to the challenge of verifiability, and on improving the article that started this so that it is clearly verifiable, rather than wasting so much time with deletion processes. Uncle G (talk) 21:59, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • I do my best to improve this encyclopedia. Whether the list is officially restored as a separate page or in the article it was split-off from makes no difference to me. As long as it can't be summarily redeleted as already having been AfD'd, I'm happy. But since it has been AfD'd, that needs to be overturned for it to remain in article space, and so I'm here asking that the deletion be overturned, because clear consensus to delete was not reached in the deletion discussion, and reviewing such discussions is the purpose of this department. The Transhumanist 00:26, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
      • You still aren't getting it. It was already in article space, in bowler hat, and the deletion or otherwise of this article does not affect that. This article was just a non-GFDL-compliant copy of part of an existing article, created as an article fork in a misguided attempt to side-step a content dispute over verifiability, when the correct response was to have simply cited sources in the original article where the dispute was. Uncle G (talk) 12:19, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • Here's the permalink you wanted: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bowler_hat&oldid=253853409 - though it's not as developed as the AfD'd page. I've reverted my restoration of the content, as it was an outdated version of the list anyways. The Transhumanist 02:09, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Overturn as no consensus Correct me if wrong, but the list does NOT exist now in the original article. It was deleted. An inferior version exists in older versions of the article, but the sorting of the list I did into categories, and the refs added by Benjiboi are gone. If you know how to restore them, and would do so, please do. I don't mind them in the original article. But I think you're wrong. They aren't there.

    And yes, the list was challenged as to verifiability. And it was pointed out that most of the items were verfied in the Wikis they referenced, often with drawing or photo. A list can be have a significant fraction of

    TempUndelete}} does absolutely no good if somebody has already deleted the article. I think the damage has been permanently done. Thanks a lot for wasting my work, guys. I'd have kept a spare copy, but it never occurred to me that in a place as full of junk as wikipedia, people would be so hot to remove beyond recovery, and against policy, a several-page article. Sheesh. SBHarris 01:04, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]

    • Pages don't get deleted, actually. They're still in the database with a deletion tag so that they don't show up in Wikipedia proper. It's an easy matter for an admin to restore the page. The Transhumanist 01:48, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
    • You're wrong, so here's the correction: The list is in the original article's edit history, and was edited out (not deleted) by editors who asserted that it was not verifiable from reliable sources. Instead of rising to that challenge and citing sources you have (a) edit warred, (b) forked the article to put your preferred content elsewhere, (c) not complied with the requirements of the GFDL when creating that fork, (d) made massive assumptions of bad faith about the other editors that were challenging the content, (e) misportrayed an ordinary verifiability dispute as a size issue, (f) misportrayed the deletion of this list article as somehow being a consensus to exclude the building of a verifiable list in bowler hat, and (g) failed to learn from all this, despite my encouragement to learn that forking is not the way to respond to a verifiability challenge.

      You're also wrong about what constitutes good sourcing in Wikipedia. Wikipedia is not a source for itself. The edit summary in the very first verifiability challenge linked to Wikipedia:Reliable sources. Please read it.

      As for wasting your work: You did that yourself. You don't get to blame anyone else but yourself for this. You have brought this entire episode down on yourself. I told you at the start what would happen, because it's what does happen, and what has happened time after time in the years that I've been here. You forked an article out of a content dispute, and your fork got deleted. The correct response to a verifiability challenge is to cite sources to show that the content is verifiable. This would have involved editing the original article (without simply revert-warring) to re-grow the list, picking the content out of the edit history as sources were found, citing sources along the way to show that each entry on the list belonged on the list. (I observe from this diff, that you didn't even show that individual entries were verifiable in your fork.) If you had done that, your work would not have been wasted, and neither AFD nor Deletion Review would ever have been involved. By doing what you did, you caused all of this, wasted the time of both yourself and a lot of other editors, both in deletion and in checkuser/blocking/unblocking, and ended up without the article improvements to bowler hat that you could have done quite a lot of by now.

      As I have said several times, now: Please learn from this experience. Uncle G (talk) 12:19, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]

      • Learn what, Uncle G? You've quoted no good policy; only your own preferences. In
        WP:SS? SBHarris 23:57, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
        ]

  • Please explasin why you haven't followed the instructions above to first discuss the deletion with the deleting admin before raising a DRV?
    Spartaz Humbug! 22:09, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
  • Overturn as no consensus - per my review request above. The Transhumanist 01:02, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • As the nominator you are assumed to be in favor of the requested result and should not !vote again.
    talk) 04:38, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
Note: I have undeleted all 23 revisions of the article that were still deleted, per Sbharris' request on my talk page.--
the Orphanage 07:21, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]
  • Keep deleted, valid closure and correct result.
    talk) 10:21, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
  • Endorse deletion, but open to bringing back a list of names on the main Bowler hat article. In this case, restoring a list at the main hat article will probably not require keeping this list's history per GFDL, since the list is a split-out from the original article, with no novel writing. (Reverting to an old version does not require GFDL attributions, even if there were a brief split-out at some point.) Consensus was clear enough that the list should not have a separate article. The number of people arguing merge or delete far outnumbered those requesting the article kept outright, and they made reasoned arguments. The arguments for keeping were not entirely unreasonable, but they were somewhat general, and not tied so well to this specific list. Unlike the bow tie case (which I intended to vote delete after seeing the title, then changed my mind to "keep" when reading the article), this list does not contain a justification as to why the presence of a bowler matters, i.e. a reason for why this list is not simply indiscriminate. In conclusion, the consensus for deletion is present for the bowler hat case, it was not present in the bow tie case. Sjakkalle (Check!) 12:08, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse - competently closed. PhilKnight (talk) 13:58, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Reluctant endorse closure I'd likely have !voted "keep" here, but I cannot imagine that this should have been closed as "no consensus", consistent, in large part, with the analysis of Sjakkalle. I am, though, with DGG on the procedural issue; I have suggested from time to time that we rid ourselves of the "courteously invite the admin to take a second look" instruction, for various reasons that I should sometime set out briefly, and I would suggest that at the very least we not permit the lister's failure to comply divert us from an inquiry that is now, rightly or wrongly, well and broadly before us (and that's from a
    PIIer). Joe 19:41, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
actually, I dont don't think we should get rid of it as advice, just as requirement . It's good advice, when people do ask, very often the admins do explain things satisfactorily and the person who asks gets a better understanding of what's wanted or at least realised the uselessness of proceeding further; sometimes the admins do in fact revert the closure; and sometimes if they do not they at least help the person make a better appeal. It's good advice--I agree with Spartaz there. But we makes all sorts of allowances for people making procedural mistakes--for the most complicated, we have a whole class of people clerking at arb com. Incomplete nominations at AfD are fixed, not rejected. If some one speedies or prods for an incorrect reason & there's a good reason, I and most reviewers simply change the reason. We don't want unnecessary barriers to deleting the junk, or to possibly keeping the good stuff either. DGG (talk) 05:13, 27 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse deletion. I have read the AfD, while still in progress, since I was thinking to close it myself but I thought it was difficult to take a decision. Rechecking now I think the decision is correct. If we can do something is to add some people in the Bowler hat article. The fiction part is not worthy at all. -- Magioladitis (talk) 16:17, 27 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
  • Endorse deletion. While both sides employed arguments defensible under policy, there was an adequate supermajority of contributors supporting deletion.  Sandstein  18:16, 27 November 2008 (UTC)[reply]
Possibly not all of the contributors have benefitted by reading the relevant policy about stand-alone lists? It is at
List of minor characters in Dilbert is given as an example, in the policy Wiki itself. If you don't agree with this WP policy, go and change it! Don't just decide to ignore it here, because you want to. SBHarris 21:22, 27 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]
Thank you. Now, everyone, on to killing the infamous
List of Chinese people! SBHarris 23:24, 30 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]
The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it.

Kairos Foundation (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore | cache | AfD))

G11: Blatant advertising

talk) 16:41, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]

The article was deleted because it was alleged to be 'blatant advertising' for the Kairos Foundation. This is completely incorrect, there was no intention to promote the organisation made at all, in fact once some basic facts about the organisation had been stated the text moved on to describe a user testimony from a cult watch website that spoke of the use of 'mind and behaviour control' techniques and apparent psychological manipulation during a 'More To Life' weekend, so the text was in fact somewhat critical of the Kairos Foundation.

As far as the criticisms made by Jimfbleak that the article contains unverifiable claims and sources of a dubious nature, I refute this. It is quite true to say that KF events have been described as transcending "all intellectual knowledge and historical speculation" - by The Kairos Foundation itself. That does not mean it is indeed true that the events actually do transcend all intellectual knowledge and historial speculation, merely that the Kairos Foundation claims that they do, and a url showing this claim being made was included. It seems inappropriate to me to suggest that anyone could write a balanced article about a political, religious or other organisation without including some direct documentation of said organisations stated aims, goals or purpose. I cannot accept Jimfbleak comment that "Putting the spam in quotation marks, or saying the the foundation claims.... is just dressing it up" - it seems to me to be an entirely different thing to say 'Coke... is the real thing' to saying Coke claims to be 'the real thing.' In writing the article I assumed that readers would be able to make their own judgement as to whether the claims the KF makes about its courses are reasonable or not.

The article included factual items about the Kairos Foundation including a description of its assets and revenue from a third party source. The use of KF publicity material was legitimate in my opinion, as i think it is entirely appopriate to include some direct evidence of an organisation's promotional material, since this is how it attracts participants. Whilst it was not perfect and was not researched in great depth, it represented a few hours work and I viewed it as a good starting point for a more detailed analysis. I would have been happy to revise the article in accordance with guidance from an experienced user, and I felt deeply dissapointed that it was summarily withdrawn without me or any anyone else being given a chance to improve or expand it. I think the kairos Foundation's notability should be obvious as they have a 27-year history, and extensive, international, membership and revenue. The allegations of mind control made via a New Zealand cult watch organisation and other testimony about negative effects of KF training for vulnerable indivuals also make for considerable controversy, and I think it is a great shame that external discussion about this group was quashed as soon as it had begun.

talk) 14:03, 25 November 2008 (UTC)• (contribs) 13:50, 25 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]

The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.
  • Air India Express destinations – The gallant knight who closed the AFD has restored and redirected the page in question. Closing this DRV now since the action has happened. – Sjakkalle (Check!) 08:03, 27 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
    ]
The following is an archived debate of the deletion review of the article above. Please do not modify it.

talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) (restore | cache | AfD
))

Closed as "delete and merge". First, if this is to be merged, then the list should not be deleted but rather redirected. Second, I don't think there was a consensus for deletion here, the rationale given in the close looks more like the closer's opinion than an evaluation of consensus. Third, the closer writes that he took

Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/American Airlines destinations into account, but that "given the age of that AfD and the fact that it was not unanimous, and given the arguments below, consensus, and policy, have changed."; well I cannot see that either consensus or policy have changed at all in this regard. Regarding consensus, the more recent, only a few weeks old, and perfectly comparable Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Sterling Airlines destinations ended unanimously against outright deletion, the only question being whether to keep or merge. Regarding policy, a list of destinations is standard for all our airline articles. Deleting the list temporarily left the main Air India Express article in a very sorry state indeed, an airline article which doesn't even tell the reader where the airline flies (which is a fundamental part of describing the airline's business, perhaps more fundamental than the fleet they fly with). Sjakkalle (Check!) 08:43, 24 November 2008 (UTC)[reply
]

The above is an archive of the deletion review of the page listed in the heading. Please do not modify it.