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::::::Thanks. --[[User:Anthonyhcole|Anthonyhcole]] ([[User talk:Anthonyhcole|talk]]) 13:17, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
::::::Thanks. --[[User:Anthonyhcole|Anthonyhcole]] ([[User talk:Anthonyhcole|talk]]) 13:17, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
::::Meh. Dougieb has made a total of 684 edits. --'''<font color="#0000FF">[[User:Jayen466|J]]</font><font color=" #FFBF00">[[User_Talk:Jayen466|N]]</font><font color="#0000FF">[[Special:Contributions/Jayen466|466]]</font>''' 15:28, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
::::Meh. Dougieb has made a total of 684 edits. --'''<font color="#0000FF">[[User:Jayen466|J]]</font><font color=" #FFBF00">[[User_Talk:Jayen466|N]]</font><font color="#0000FF">[[Special:Contributions/Jayen466|466]]</font>''' 15:28, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
::::To take another current example, compare Cirt's language [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk%3AWerner_Erhard_%28book%29&action=historysubmit&diff=438158213&oldid=436711433 here] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:MLKLewis#March_2011 here] to the language used by Sensei [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:MLKLewis#WE_Edits.2C_July_2011 here]. I would say that Sensei's approach is more in line with AGF, more conducive to a peaceful resolution of the content disagreement, and less likely to leave behind lingering resentment. Also note [[User_talk:Sensei48#July_2011]]. --'''<font color="#0000FF">[[User:Jayen466|J]]</font><font color=" #FFBF00">[[User_Talk:Jayen466|N]]</font><font color="#0000FF">[[Special:Contributions/Jayen466|466]]</font>''' 15:36, 7 July 2011 (UTC)
I agree that it looks like some of the charges are just throwing everything at him to see if something sticks. But there are also some legitimate charges in there as well. This RFC seems to be treating Cirt like OJ Simpson--like the police then, we're trying to frame someone who's guilty anyway. It's bad for the police to use bogus evidence, but ultimately, OJ did do the deed he was accused of. Ken Arromdee (talk) 19:36, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Gamaliel's comment seems to ridicule Jayen's evidence without any substantive analysis (which is rather ironic). I'd also like to add that Prioryman's claim about wikihounding is an exaggeration. I commented at the linked to discussion and Jayen was not "heavily criticized." Indeed the thread went nowhere and people suggested RFC/U as the appropriate courses of action if either editor had complaints about the other. On that point, the arbs also suggested RFC/U when they declined the RFAr that Coren started about Cirt and the Santorum issue. I don't see how posting notice to each arbitrator about the RFC/U individually (as opposed to on a much more public noticeboard) amounts to "canvassing." People should look at all the evidence and decide for themselves what may or may not have merit. Many will undoubtedly find, as Ken has, that even if some of it seems overly ambitious there are very clearly troubling bits in there as well. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 20:09, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
For example, (1) biasing Wikimedia pre-election content relating to two US elections in favour of the candidates preferred by Anonymous, involving both the Wikipedia and Wikiquote main pages. (2) Multiple violations of WP:BLPSPS. --JN46621:19, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Because you're planning to take my word for it? Cirt's involvement with political articles during elections is very troubling. I think his other promotional writing, like the Daryl Wine Bar article is also troubling, but less so because BLP issues are invovled with the political stuff not to mention gaming the encyclopedia to advance real life political interests. Those who have commented that Cirt has puffed up articles for both Democrats and Republicans fail to acknowledge that his interests in these matters clearly don't fall in line with party politics. The pattern her is clear by the way. Cirt has not only puffed these articles up when it mattered (ongoing elections or recent announcements of running for office), but he's worked as hard as he could to get maximum exposure through things like DYK. When someone engages in this kind of puffery they edit against WP:NPOV and WP:WEIGHT. One of the additional aspects of all this that Jayen has not even mentioned is that Cirt's puffery has caused a serious amount of disruption in multiple venues related to the good faith efforts of others to curtail his politicking. It took 2 AfDs to delete both the Dickson and Daryl Wine Bar articles (articles that very clearly never belonged in the encyclopedia). During the process Cirt dragged editors to AN/I and otherwise contributed to a very unproductive atmosphere in order to defend his work. That was what bothered me most. That people who are just trying to do their job and keep the encyclopedia filled with good quality encyclopedic content all of a sudden had to suffer harassment at AN/I and all kinds of accusations of incivility, hounding, etc. because they didn't have the social capital he had. Yet they were right all along. That's not something we need around here. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 21:33, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, if that is your view, why don't you draw up an Outside view? I'll sign up to that. :) The RfC/U is already a lot to read; there are lots of other issues in a similar vein that could have been added. Some of the ones you mention are touched upon in the AN/I threads linked towards the bottom, in the Canvassing section, i.e.
While I personally have the opinion that OJ did it, if I were on that jury I could not have convicted him... because the police were so busy trying to frame him, badly, that they introduced far too much reasonable doubt. It's deeply troubling to hear someone say "we're trying to frame someone who's guilty anyway". Look closely at that statement: It admits that one is providing false evidence or false testimony in order to falsely prove someone guilty of a crime, but justifies it by assuming the role of judge and jury, declaring guilt without evidence or due process. The statement is, in short, vigilantism, and I don't see how such is compatible with Wikipedia's Pillars. It sure isn't WP:PROVEIT. Besides, comparing Cirt's editing with the brutal stabbing death of two people...? // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 22:14, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not trying to justify framing anyone, I'm saying that yes, I agree with Gamaliel that many of the charges against Cirt are absurd and are an attempt to get him in any way we can--the one about the two recipes probably being the worst--but there do seem to be some genuinely bad things in there as well. We *are* trying to frame a guilty person, and it's *not* good that we're doing that. Bring up things that he has actually done and stop making things up. Ken Arromdee (talk) 15:47, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Sounds like we're in agreement there, then! My personal preference would be for this RfC/U to be closed out, and a new one opened by someone who does not have a long and antagonistic history with Cirt, addressing the specific behaviors that are troublesome, rather than trying to pillory him. It seems to me like we need more "stern intervention meeting" and less hatchet job. It'd be more productive. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 16:36, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I am sorry, but I disagree. Several people at FAC commented that they felt they were being "sold" the book. The FAC failed; if it hadn't, the article on the bacon book would one day have turned up on our main page. The article's lead says, " "The book received positive reviews, and its recipes were selected for inclusion in The Best American Recipes 2003–2004." That is making a lot of the fact that two recipes were thus included. Why not just say, "two of its recipes were included"? Yes, seen in isolation, it's trivial. If you see it a dozen times, you go Ahem. If you see it a hundred times, you get pissed off. The difference between you and me is simply that you've not seen it as often. Partridge, at santorum, was another wonderful example of twisting a source in such a way that, although what was said was strictly speaking "verifiable", it completely misrepresented that source to the reader, to support a POV in favour of that term. This from an editor who is a master at quoting out of context (Cirt: "[Gloria] Gaynor worked her way through Scientology"; source: "Gaynor worked her way though Scientology, transcendental meditation, and Buddhism [on her search for a spiritual home]" and fights tooth and nail against having that put right. But I can understand that to someone who comes to this with fresh eyes, it is not compelling. So I'm all in favour of concentrating on the more material points. Cheers, --JN46617:04, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I am completely unconvinced. Am I supposed to believe that in that text Cirt was trying to convince readers that the whole book was selected for inclusion in Best American Recipes? These seem like incredibly picayune things to pull up - especially by comparison to deletionists, for whom it's always their way or the highway, who make up a dozen bogus reasons to exclude something because they don't like it. Deletionists are all about the raw exercise of power, but for inclusionists, knowledge is the more important, and I cannot support a plan to punish an inclusionist for a few dubiously rough edges in a vast body of work. Wnt (talk) 23:09, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Timing of santorum edits
On May 9, Cirt made five edits to Santorum (neologism), primarily adding a response by Santorum that in my view substantially improved the article's NPOV. [1] Prior to this, he had not been a substantial contributor to the page for at least a year. [2]
On May 9, at 11 p.m. EDT, Jon Stewart suggested that users search Google for the term "santorum", leading the term to become one of Google's top hits. [3][4]
On the afternoon of May 10, Cirt began seriously editing the article. In the course of 14 hours, he made the majority of 100 edits by six users. [5] This all occurred after the term became newly newsworthy and notable thanks to Jon Stewart.
So, based on the timeline, there is a perfectly credible alternative to the "pure political motivation" theory for Cirt's edits. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 20:55, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Page view stats bear out the link to Jon Stewart's show. On 10 May, the day after it was broadcast, views of the article went up from 1,900 on 9 May to over 149,000 on 10 May. [6] Note that Santorum didn't announce his campaign formally until 6 June. [7] Stewart's show is the only conceivable factor that could have produced that usage spike. Prioryman (talk) 21:03, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict)Yeah, I'm having real trouble understanding the complaint... if something happens to make a topic suddenly far richer in reliable sources overnight, apparently what you should not do is make use of them and go digging for others that might have been missed? I guess I've been doing this Wikipedia editing thing all wrong... // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 21:14, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I wasn't aware of the Jon Stewart show. The article Macwhiz posted, published on the day after the show, described Santorum as a "presidential hopeful". Apparently, "On Monday night's Daily Show, Stewart ran down the list of lesser-known presidential [hopefuls] and encouraged viewers to Google them." --JN46621:11, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It's surprising that you weren't aware of it, considering that information about it was added (not by Cirt) to the article only a few hours after it was broadcast. [8] It's still there now in an amended form under "Reception and political impact", which says: "[Stewart's] reference to it in May 2011 caused the word to be one of the most queried search terms on Google the following day". Surely you must have read the article you've been campaigning against? Prioryman (talk) 21:16, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict)Jayen, I think that's where a lot of the consternation from "the other side" at santorum came from: that Daily Show clip generated tons of press in RSes, and fed interest in the term... leading to the reinforcement of the PageRank for Savage's page (and likely ours). If Cirt hadn't done it, someone else would have: bet you'd find a history of page expansions following notable usages on Stewart or Colbert's shows. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 21:17, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the timing is certainly close. Cirt started editing the article on 9 May, 22:21 UTC. That's 17:21 Eastern time, and probably a few hours before Stewart's late-night show. But I agree Stewart's show covering the presidential hopefuls, and subsequent press coverage, cast a spotlight on the issue. --JN46621:39, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
This is neither horseshoes nor hand grenades, though. As for the five edits Cirt made on the 9th, adding Santorum's POV to the article, I note that one of them was an article published on April 28—just 11 days earlier. This implies to me that Cirt was not exactly tending the article at the time. It is, however, consistent with an editor finding a recent source that has not yet been assimilated, and then finding other material in the process of balancing out the article. That's normal editing. Frankly, unless someone wants to present unequivocal evidence that Cirt was somehow collaborating with Dan Savage and Jon Stewart to hype the article before it made the news thanks to Stewart—which would be an absurd allegation—I think this has to be chalked up to coincidence. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 22:04, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. That whole complaint stinks of a witch hunt. That the complainants completely ignore the very obvious explanation for why the article ballooned in size and visibility and instead, along with SlimVirgin accuse Cirt of being in cahoots with Savage is deplorable. Even assuming that they legitimately did not know about Stewart's piece at the time that they compiled their complaints, it seriously suggests they were looking for things to complain about, rather than addressing real issues. The point about YouTube videos is just as patently ridiculous. The complainants may have some legitimate points in regards to problem behaviour by Cirt, but they've poisoned their case by including such suspiciously weak claims, and I can't see this rfcu going forward as a result. Just a lesson for next time: quality over quantity. Don't throw 20 complaints into the wild and see what sticks; research each one well and only include ones that can stand up to scrutiny. Throwaway85 (talk) 04:13, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Throwaway there is no "case" here to be poisoned. An RFC is not an all or nothing proposition. The initiator has made several claims about Cirt. If there are legitimate points in there then those should be noted and dealt with. If others bring up legitimate points same goes for that. To disregard "legitimate points" because you think others are not as legitimate does a disservice to the community and to the RFC process more specifically. Please remember also that the RFC does not result in sanctions. Its very purpose is to air these kinds of claims so that others in the community can evaluate them and determine which ones might require further action if any.Griswaldo (talk) 12:58, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The thing is, the readily-checked claims are either flimsy or trumped-up, so some of the other claims that depend on deep research into article histories get discounted: why go to the work of researching the minutae when everything else seems to be (how to be civil here?) lacking the full details to present a balanced view? It begs for TL;DR. There's also claims that depend not on objective evidence, but subjective evaluation of a vast editing history. I find it hard to invest the work in trying to find evidence of bad faith on Cirt's part when the evidence of good faith on the part of some of his accusers is so tenuous. I'm not saying that I couldn't be persuaded, nor that I think Cirt is perfect; I'm just saying that so far, this RfC/U isn't persuasive. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 16:43, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That is why I said, at the top of the RfC/U, Users are advised that understanding the problem requires a close review of several lengthy articles. Please do not comment until you have reviewed the article versions indicated. Thank you., and repeated at three points in the RfC/U, Before reading on, please review this article version for neutrality. We cannot arrive at a serious work result when people are prepared to spend 2 hours on posting and reading drive-by comments, but are not prepared to invest two hours in going from an RfC/U from top to bottom, following the indicated links, and then writing a considered and informed opinion. You said, For example, it's implied that the Corbin Fisher article was a promotional piece. Having read the full contents of the leaked conversation between Cirt, SlimVirgin, and Shell Kinney, I did not get this impression. From reading the conversation between SlimVirgin and Cirt? SlimVirgin's stance in the leaked conversation between her and Cirt will not make sense to you unless you have read the article that the conversation was about. TL;DR is not the correct method to respond to an RfC/U. --JN46618:58, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And what we're (or at least I am) saying is that it's pretty unreasonable to expect people to go through all of the trouble of reading every edit to an article before arriving at a decision when you don't go through the trouble of realizing the very simple reason behind the Santorum article so quickly gaining in size and popularity (sure he DYK'd it, but it would have been grossly expanded anyway), or why he would include the "Message to Scientology" video, or any of the other things that showed a lack of understanding and research on your part. When I said you've poisoned your "case", I meant it. It's damned hard to convince a large group of people that there's a problem with Cirt's behaviour when so much of your evidence is so clearly flawed. It's not just bad, it's self-evidently bad to anyone with the most cursory understanding of surrounding events. It's for that reason that I, and others, have described this as having the appearances of a witch hunt. Rather than a considered critique of Cirt's behaviour, your evidence reads as a throw-the-spaghetti-against-the-wall attempt to list as many things as possible in the hopes the community is outraged at one of them, or sufficiently encumbered by the weight of the evidence to be unable to come to any sensible conclusion. The simple fact of the matter is that the vast majority of the evidence you've presented does very little to convince me that there's a problem with Cirt's editing, and that makes me think there are ulterior motives, here. That conclusion is only buoyed by the leaked emails between Cirt and SlimVirgin. It was obvious that both of them were playing political games and scheming and trying to lure the other into saying something that could be used against them, and I have neither the time nor desire to involve myself in that bullshit. That the complaints presented here in large part mirror SV's complaints suggest that this is an extension of her politicking, and the whole thing leaves a bad taste in my mouth. I'm not going to defend Cirt, and I'm also not going to condemn him based on what is clearly an ongoing political struggle between rival groups on Wikipedia. Throwaway85 (talk) 19:20, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yeah, what Throwaway said. You're asking me to devote hours to researching myriad issues as "background" before understanding your claims. In deciding whether I'd rather spend my time doing that or, say, productively editing the encyclopedia, I look first at the easier-to-verify claims. I don't think I'm alone in this. In this case, those claims came up short. I am not saying that none of your claims have any merit, or that I won't look into them; I'm saying that, because you chose to include some real reaches, a person could easily reach the conclusion "the easy-to-check claims have no merit, so it's unlikely that the others do" and not bother to look further. It would have been better to concentrate on one or two things and clearly lay out the timeline, with appropriate diffs. Instead, much of what the RfC/U links to is either picayune, or makes those opposing Cirt look at least as bad as what the RfC/U claims Cirt has done. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 00:03, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
FYI, here's an article about an earlier plug for the neologism on the Colbert Report from February 2011.[9] and here's one from a week earlier with a Google screen shot showing the Wikipedia article was already the #2 hit for "santorum".[10]Will Bebacktalk23:28, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Quotation of Anonymous forum postings
The link given as evidence for the Anonymous forum: [11]
The message Jayen selectively quoted as evidence is numbered #18.
The message I quoted as saying Cirt is ethical is numbered #13.
Cirt's name entered the thread in message #6, apparently from someone looking to see which editor performed a "cleanup" of David Miscavige. Interestingly, while the RfC/U seems to be trying to paint Cirt as a rabid anti-Scientologist, the folks on this anti-Scientology forum were concerned that he was making pro-Scientology edits—and perhaps even a Scientologist plant himself. The later comments #13 and #18 were by way of refuting those concerns.
Personally, I think that it speaks well of Cirt's contributions to that area if both the pro- and anti- forces are concerned that he's pushing the other side's POV. If you're pissing off both sides, you must be doing something right. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 21:04, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The David Miscavige edits discussed at that board, by the way, were in response to a BLPN thread: Wikipedia:Biographies_of_living_persons/Noticeboard/Archive96#David_Miscavige. I don't think Cirt would deny that he has links with Anonymous. He has stated that he knows Xenubarb, and contacted her for assistance on the campaign articles. Gregg Houshfollows Cirt on scribd (as do Jason Beghe, and Mike Godwin, for that matter :) ). Cirt has uploaded tons of Anonymous videos to Commons, and has freely admitted joining Wikinews originally with a focus of reporting on that one issue. [12]Project Chanology is his most-edited article in Wikipedia. That's all fine; but I don't think it should induce an admin to actually set out to bias Wikimedia content pre-election in such a pronounced manner, using two projects' main pages. It's not good for this project to be used as an electioneering aid. --JN46621:30, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Please don't play "guilt by association". Knowing someone, even to the extent that you could ask their assistance in obtaining a copyright signoff from someone they know, isn't the same thing as being an associate of someone. I know someone who works on the crew of CSI, but that doesn't mean I'm associated with their chronic use of invalid IP addresses. We all know someone who has done something that other people don't like, without being in any way associated with their actions. (Or worse, not even knowing someone, but being observed by someone is not proof of taint!) Scientology is a hot topic on Wikipedia, and I fear that "He's (pro-|anti-)Scientology!" is the Wikipedia equivalent of "He supports terrorism!" at this point.
Reading the BLPN thread you linked and the associated talk-page discussion, I see what looks like WP:BRD, with Cirt making a number of deletions to make Jayen and Resident Anthropolgist happy. It looks like good collegial editing to me.
Per your link, I see Cirt saying "I know I focused on a particular topic when I started out here and was learning the ropes, but I have since attempted to diversify the type of articles I write, contributing to 10 articles on other unrelated topics." I don't think this is an uncommon thing. If I look at your edit history, Jayen, I see you concentrating on a small number of articles in a narrow range of topics in your early days, too—but I would not now try to paint you as unhealthily obsessed with cars and Indian mysticism.
I am still nowhere near convinced that you have made the case that Cirt is using Wikipedia as "an electioneering aid", and by the arguments in this RfC/U, I'm left to wonder if any editing of political articles would be acceptable during political silly season under this line of argument. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 22:33, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Reading the linked discussion [13], I see that Lar did raise concerns, but appeared to accept Cirt's clarification that he had reduced, rather than eliminated, edits on Scientology-related topics. His undertaking, quoted by Scott Mac, used the terms "shift my focus away from" and "avoid", which aren't absolutes. Lar and Sadads defended Cirt against Scott in the thread. It was pointed out that the articles in question were edited primarily due to Cirt's concentration on freedom of speech–related articles at the time, and were tangentially related to Scientology. Further, the whole incident was the result of a posting at Wikipedia Review, not on-wiki criticism. I don't see Cirt "doing the opposite of what he said he would do"; I see people not reading carefully and presuming that Cirt said something he did not.
What I found interesting was reading this after reading Scott Mac's position on Delicious carbuncle's first ARBSCI enforcement request against Cirt. Scott Mac wanted sanctions against Cirt, while other admins found Carbuncle's request faulty and not actionable. While both editors were warned, the sense I get of the comments is that several editors found Carbuncle "seem[ed] as if he instigated this conflict" and "clearly the dubious party here". (In fact, the comments were more pointed when Carbuncle filed a second request within an hour of the first request being closed.) See Future Perfect at Sunrise's comments here: [14] "Apparently, D.c. has been on a long campaign against Cirt, having posted about him extensively both on Wikipedia and on Wikipediareview for several months." In fact, digging further, I found that Cirt had previously sought, and obtained, an indefinite topic ban against Carbuncle from ARBSCI. [15] It worries me that there seems to be a certain list of names that keep appearing when criticism of Cirt is to be found, and that every time I look into the disputes, I seem to find Cirt acting with reason, consideration, good faith, and an intent to find a solution... and the disputants, not so much. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:26, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Lar and Sadads defended Cirt against Scott in the thread. Say what now? Sadads appears to defend Cirt every-time he involves himself with related discussions, which by the look of it is quite often, but how on earth do you get Lar "defend[ing] Cirt against Scott" in that thread? To Quote Lar: "Nevertheless, I think Scott asks legitimate questions about your area of focus. I think you should answer them rather than taking umbrage," and "I applaud your reduction. I just think you should go all the way." (emphasis added). Just because Lar is being very civil and extremely tactful doesn't mean he's defending Cirt. Also the admins disagreeing with Scott in the AE request are Jehochman and Doc James who both seem to have a history of supporting Cirt from what I can tell, and that was brought up in relation to the AE request. You say you are worried about the same names appearing in these discussions. 1) I hope you are also including the same names that appear to defend Cirt and to accuse those who call some of his edits into question of hounding and other disruptive behavior. 2) I think you ought to dig further to see if the "same names" that are critical of Cirt's editing now have always been of that mind or if specific events precipitated this, and if those events are related to the later moments of involvement. You should especially consider the idea that if a problem is repeating itself without solution editors who feel that they understand the problem will most likely continue to try to have it solved. Do these editors have anything to gain from criticizing Cirt? Are they POV opponents of his? What is their motive? If you would WP:AGF for just one second you might realize that just maybe some of these people are simply concerned about something they feel is harmful to Wikipedia, its community and/or its editing environment.Griswaldo (talk) 12:51, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I do not defend Cirt in everything, in fact I have expressed to him on multiple occassions that he should probably be redirecting his productivity on wiki to topic areas which have a little less controversy associated with them. However, I am just extremely alarmed at the aggressiveness of the rhetoric and persecution of him. The way in which various individuals have taken to trying to change Cirt's behaviour is extremely inappropriate and could have been handled with, for lack of a better way to describe the behaviour, more maturity. We are (or at least should be) a community built on principles of good faith, and I make it my business to defend individuals, who are likely humanly flawed, when they are persecuted aggressively without due cause, Sadads (talk) 01:13, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Troubled
I see that Cla68 (talk·contribs) has started a section which is entitled "Cirt's enablers", which I find troubling because it looks like the start of a type of "hit list". I'm not sure that this is constructive... although, I suppose that one faction enumerating those who they view to be the members of their opposition may be helpful, if there's really some confusion about that or something. I guess that I'm just wondering what the point of this is? Is the intent here to attack other editors because they are friendly towards Cirt? — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)04:04, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
This is indeed troubling, and looks like the out-of-process extension of the RfC/U to other disliked editors, who won't even have the basic protections of RfC/U prerequisites or the built-in space for a response. As it stands now, it serves to intimidate those editors who would offer a dissenting view to the certifiers of the RfC/U. When populated with names, it will only tar certain editors as "activists" and "bullies" by association. Insofar as this "hit list" makes no pretense towards dispute resolution or constructive dialogue, it offers a window into the motivations of the overall RfC/U on Cirt. Quigley (talk) 04:53, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the "enablers" section is unlikely to be helpful, and I would urge Cla68 to delete it. However, I would object to discrediting the RfC/U on this basis — preferring, instead, to WP:AGF and assume that Cla68 honestly believes that "These editors may be driven by a good faith respect for Cirt's editing ability and work". We should concentrate on Cirt's conduct and whether Cirt should modify his/her behaviour, and leave to another time (if ever) the question of whether or not other editors' actions may have contributed to the situation (if indeed there is a "situation" here). Richwales (talk · contribs) 05:27, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, it looks like he's refactored it into a statement in defense of DC and JN, which seems acceptable to me. Thanks for considering this criticism, Cla. :) — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)06:09, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Elections
Is anyone unclear about the election-related evidence? Hiram Monserrate and Jeff Stone were disliked by Anonymous [16][17]. As a result, their opponents Kenneth Dickson, Joel Anderson and Jose Peralta had political advertisements written for them, and featured on the Wikipedia (and Wikiquote) main page in the run-up to the elections. Are you all right with the ethics of this? Do you feel that being able to place such content on project main pages is a reasonable perk due to a prolific Wikimedia contributor? --JN46612:52, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
1) People who supported the continued existence of the santorum article, friends of Cirt and various uninvolved parties will support Cirt.
2) People who opposed the santorum article, those who hold a grudge against Cirt and those who have prior disagreements with him will support JN466.
3) Cirt will get a kicking from JN466's supporters.
4) JN466 will get a kicking from Cirt's supporters.
5) There will be a lot of futile bickering.
6) Nothing productive will come of this RfC/U.
7) After this RfC/U has failed, JN466 will continue pursuing Cirt until the community finally gets fed up and imposes an interaction ban on both of them. Prioryman (talk) 19:14, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
But many of the things identified by critics of Cirt as "problems" are not seen as problems by many other editors: expanding the santorum article, writing articles on Dan Savage books, DYK submissions, etc. We can find a way to deal with whatever Cirt does that everyone sees as problematic (promotional tone, etc.), but I'm not sure how we bridge the gap with the larger issues when so many editors don't think they are issues at all. Gamaliel (talk) 20:51, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I removed a box to hide and archive this conversation, because in truth, it is illuminating. Anyone reading the RfC page should recognize that this is a political trial, in which we are debating over what should be allowed, not what Cirt did. The question we really need to ask is, is there a path to peace? It's one thing to have normal arguments over content - it's another thing to have two political parties arguing over every word as a tactic toward radically different visions of Wikipedia. Is there some way that we can avoid having constant battles over whether most of what is in an article should be taken out, whether articles should be deleted, whether editors should be punished for trying to make articles or otherwise take part in the normal process of promoting them? I mean, could we fork the project, let the deletionists compress the content into a Micropedia while the inclusionists could build up a Macropedia? Anything? Wnt (talk) 23:00, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
This debate doesn't have a thing to do with the deletionistism vs. inclusionism wiki-war. If you really think that this is what it is been about this whole time, well, naive is about the mildest thing I can say here. This is about Cirt deliberately violating WP:BLP policy by using the Wikipedia to propagate Dan Savage's anti-Santorum crusade. This is about Cirt elevating a concocted slur into a "neologism", using questionable sourcing to try to show the word being used in everyday English. This is about Cirt gaming DYK to increase the visibility of Dan Savage's books, thus elevating the visibility of the small-s "santorum" shtick...also accomplished by edit-warring the faux word into several sex-related templates while creating another entirely new one (now-deleted) to spotlight it. And you, Wnt, have been a part of this. A co-conspirator, accomplice, whatever colorful term we can find. You and many others, deliberately and royally fucking this place up by using it to further your personal ideological bent.
Yes, of course it is. This is exactly the point I was trying to illustrate above. A few hours after it had been cited on Jon Stewart's show, producing a massive spike in usage and public interest, Cirt expanded an article; he added the term to a handful of templates in which it was only one of dozens of other linked articles; and he wrote several DYKs, none of which linked to or even mentioned the dispute article, as far as I saw. As many other editors have said, that is normal editing behaviour. When Sarah Palin made up some well-publicised nonsense about Paul Revere, it started a lot of editors working on that article. Same with the Japanese earthquake, the civil war in Libya and so on. Nothing that Cirt did appears to have affected the page ranking of Wikipedia's Santorum (neologism) article, nor could it have, as it was already at or almost at the top of search engine results months before he started editing it. I think that Tarc and others are seeing Cirt's edits through an ideological prism - Tarc's disapproval of the Santorum article is leading him to assign improper motives to Cirt's reasons for editing it. From what I've seen of this dispute, which first came to my notice at DYK, there is no reasonable evidence that Cirt was attempting to game search engine rankings for the article. Did people ever stop to think what the point of that would be when the article is already at the top of search engine results? Bottom line, this is a political dispute - all that this RfC/U is going to achieve is to give the Santorum partisans (on both sides) somewhere to vent. Prioryman (talk) 00:31, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know that it's so much of an ideological issue (although that's certainly an aspect, since if they shared the ideology that they attribute to Cirt I doubt there would be complaints), but there's certainly an interpersonal issue here (personalities clashing, which I think that you're properly describing as a "political dispute"). I suspect that you're correct about "Tarc's disapproval of the Santorum article is leading him to assign improper motives to Cirt's reasons for editing it." for sure, but he's not the only one doing so. One thing though is that giving people a place to "vent" isn't a bad thing in my opinion, and it's certainly not pointless. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)01:05, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The only path to peace I see, short of forking the project, is to allow people to build articles from reliably sourced material without accusing them of promoting the subject simply because they want to work on it; without accusing them of breaking BLP by covering people involved in controversies with other people; without selectively decrying the promotional effect of templates and DYKs only when they support a point of view you don't like. And that is accomplished by clarifying that policy indeed does not and shall not prohibit these things. In other words, for the inclusionists to win. ;)
While I understand it may be "naive" to characterize this as inclusionists versus deletionists rather than Anonymous versus Scientology or Democrats versus Republicans, there's a reason: because the latter debates are affected by the simple truth that one side has a lot of facts on its side. So the other has a lot of facts to hide. And so inclusionism becomes associated with one side of many different wiki debates - and always the right side, regardless of the issue. Wnt (talk) 02:23, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding points 3 and 4: I'll kick 'em both! The way I see it, Cirt has a blind spot when it comes to being too positive, and Jayen has a blind spot when it comes to Cirt. Neither blind spot makes either editor a bad person, nor merits their removal from the project dragging them in front of every tribunal Wikipedia has to offer, especially when one has a history of withdrawing from confrontation to the point where it's fair to wonder if they'll be driven to leave altogether. I don't hate either of them, nor am I devoted to either of 'em. I'm here because I'm a pretty good writer and researcher, and I want part of my legacy to this planet to be a net increase in humanity's knowledge. Wikipedia's a good way to do that. Helping other editors past their blind spots works toward that goal. I don't think this RfC/U does that. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 01:21, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Where does the idea that anyone should be "removed from the project" come from in the first place. I see the claim getting kicked all over this talk page that people want Cirt removed, but what is the source of that because I don't see it anywhere?Griswaldo (talk) 02:39, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I can only plead that I should not have posted that when I was so tired. Reading it again, I see that I failed to fully type out part of my thoughts, and as such wound up with a misstatement. I have corrected it. While I don't see anyone actually calling for Cirt's expulsion, I look at Cirt's historical reaction to these occasional dogpiles (namely, withdrawing from areas of editing), and I believe that no one can reasonably believe that this RfC/U won't end with a further withdrawal. At some point, after enough withdrawals, there's nothing left; one is implicitly removed from the project. See my longer statement below. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:25, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Wikihounders vs Whistleblowers
One of the accusations against Cirt in this RfC/U is that he did not come to an article "organically". While this is framed as an issue of "honesty" and "deceit" for Cirt, the same burden to come upon articles "organically" is not held to Cirt's accusers. The view by Pieter Kuiper is a prime example. He complains that he did one action, "fixed a deletion request on Commons of some of those anti-Scientology video files of his", which "got me on his/her list of ideological adversaries" and got him banned. However, the AE request he points to shows a more complex and common pattern of Cirt's enemies. Like Cla68, who was incited by Cirt's edits on "List of Scientologists", certain people cannot resist following the edit histories of those with whom they've had a minor dispute, and habitually reversing their actions the follower thinks is unjustified.
As evidenced by Cirt's AE thread, Pieter Kuiper did this by following Cirt out of commons into en.wiki, finding fault in Cirt's created article about Aaron Saxton, and then again in the "List of Scientologists" article, and then declining one of Cirt's DYKs with an unusually combative reason. It was Pieter Kuiper's edit-warring against Cirt to keep these changes in an area with active Arbcom remedies, among other things, that got him banned; not Wikilawyer magic. It is clear that Pieter Kuiper already decided himself an "ideological adversary" to Cirt before Cirt even filed the complaint.
But Jayen466 does not see it this way, endorsing Kuipel's summary with the lament that this AE action "never got overturned". It is fair to assume that Cla68 has a similarly sympathetic view, considering Cla68's section "whistleblower protection", formerly "Cirt's enablers", recasts those who point out behavior like Pieter Kuipel's as bullies or intimidators. However, it would go a long way towards resolving the dispute if the battleground mentality were dropped, and the Wikihounding policy reexamined. The connotations of "whistleblower" and "shooting the messenger", both used by opponents of Cirt in this conflict, suggest that Cirt is some pervasive juggernaut that must be stopped, and that following and disputing his every last edit to the death is justified, if not a duty for all good Wikipedians. However, if Cirt were to be treated as a fallable human being, who can feel annoyance and distress at the caravan of microscopic scrutiny surrounding him, encouraged by certain off-wiki sites; if his concessions in topic areas were to be taken as the basis of a solution instead of a signal to go for the kill, then a key component of what should be an acceptable solution to both parties will have appeared before our very eyes.
Taking from DGG's proposed remedy, in any desired outcome, those who feel themselves Cirt's "ideological adversaries" should relieve themselves of Cirtwatch duty. Already, this RfC/U has attracted the attention of previously uninvolved members who would take up the mantle. This way, the perception among those sympathetic to Cirt that he is being "Wikihounded" will cease, and the perception among Cirt's accusers that they are the victims of "bullying" for these accusations will cease. It is natural for those accused of both Wikihounding and bullying to take an absolutist stance, and to argue that objectively, one of these exists, and the other is a fabrication. But perceptions are powerful, and regardless of the relative merits of each accusation, this proposed component of a solution will eradicate the potential for an explosion of bad feelings on both sides, wherever Cirt's editing is organically brought up. Thoughts? Quigley (talk) 19:47, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Oh my, "So what?" is unusuallly combative? For me, a yawn is the natural response to the question: "Did you know that Australian Senator Nick Xenophon quoted statements by former Scientology official Aaron Saxton during a speech in Parliament?" The only people utterly fascinated by this kind of thing are people obsessed with scientology. /Pieter Kuiper (talk) 20:46, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Quigley, there is a lot of sense in what you are saying. On the other hand, it's not for nothing that Cirt has attracted attention on that website. His strong POV; his prolific contributions (who can keep up with someone who makes 4,000 edits a month?), his frequent contributions to "loaded" topics (like a critic's book, a lost lawsuit, etc.); his combativeness and knack to get opponents sanctioned—these are all factors that have contributed to that. Pieter, for example, did not "find fault" when he corrected Saxton's birthdate, he "found an error and corrected it". He was still templated. When Cirt created Werner Erhard vs. Columbia Broadcasting System, he prominently and at length discussed allegations of incest made against Erhard (a living person), but failed to mention that these allegations were later retracted. He mentioned tax issues, but didn't mention that it was the IRS who later on paid Erhard $200,000 in damages. I wish there were more editors who looked at these articles; as it was, Cirt gave those who did look at it to make it NPOV, after it came up at AfD, a very hard time [18]. Cirt took one of his disputants there, User:THF, to WP:COIN [19] and WP:ANI [20] on the same day (over THF's actions at a different article), all while his Erhard-related dispute with THF, which had started at the article's AFD the previous day, was ongoing. That's the sort of stuff that gets you noticed at WR, and legitimately so. --JN46623:11, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Honestly, I don't get it
I'm looking at the evidence presented here, and... I mean, I'm really trying hard to see and understand the criticism, but... I can see some minor issues, I guess, but from what I can see they're easily mitigated by the fact that, while it may not actually be "hounding", there's certainly a bit of a "battlefield mentality" that both factions have fostered. I don't consider myself part of the "clique" (which is what Tarc apparently sees), but if some of you want to include me in it just because I'm more on Cirt's 'side' here then on JN's then I'm fine with that. Y'all seem like fairly reasonable people (I've talked to JN466 on the VP about that essay, for example. He listened to what I had to say, which tells me that he's hardly unreasonable), and everyone involved here seem to be veterans. This seems like a series of content dispute skirmishes that have been steadily building up to something like this occurring.
I guess that I'm wondering... is this really about Cirt specifically, or is it a wider issue (I mean, Cirt is obviously at the center of this, but...)? Are there actually a couple of multi-party factions here? Maybe RFC/U, with it's inherent set of "rules" and standards, isn't the best venue for this? — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)23:22, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
multiply the minor issues by the over 2,000 edits per month rate. I edit kinda regularly and 200 is a lot in a month. each incident is not a big deal. the fact that there is one every month or multiple ones on the same month is the issue. The user's sheer volume and dedication to work on the project are what makes the bias, forum shopping, and requests to shoot the messenger about them such a problem. --Rocksanddirt (talk) 23:39, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cirt's editing rate has dropped significantly since at least 14 June (weeks before this RfC/U), where he indicated that he was going to "reduce [his] activity level significantly" and "shift efforts in new areas of interest", which he has done, to U.S. Supreme Court cases. Quigley (talk) 23:51, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yea, there's nothing quite like getting the fuck outta Dodge after you've just lit several fires, is there? Tarc (talk) 23:58, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The certifiers' stated desired outcome is not to punish Cirt for alleged past wrongs, but to amend Cirt's future behavior. If this is an honest statement of intent, then they might have already succeeded. Quigley (talk) 00:06, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
So this is where I'm a bit confused. Cirt's editing rates seem to be the main issue, which really make me wonder about the motivation here. Is "contributing too often" really going to be something that we're going to turn into a problem? Don't you guys think that this will have wider implications then any effect on Cirt? ...This whole thing just gives me a creepy feeling. There appears to be a significant amount of anger and resentment on the part of the "anti-Cirt" crowd, just below the surface. If the problem is that our content seems to be slanted, then the solution to that seems obvious to me (and the solution shouldn't be to attempt to get rid of other content editors). — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)00:22, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It's becoming obvious, I think, that the aim is to get rid of Cirt or at the least to make it impossible for him to contribute without being hounded at every turn. I'm a newbie to this dispute (I only learned of it when it spilled onto DYK) but there seem to be two things going on here - a long-running dispute between JN466/Carbuncle and Cirt relating to Scientology (or cults in general?), and a newer dispute over the Santorum article. It seems to me that the long-running disputants have taken advantage of the most recent dispute to try to go after Cirt with this RfC/U. As an aside, I agree about getting a creepy feeling, not least because of comments like this: "I am intending to do a monthly thread here about Cirt's Scientology edits, because I would like to help them kick their nasty habit. Cirt, I don't say this in a mean way, but when you edit articles related to Scientology, it makes your fingers and breath smell like Scientology. And no one wants to kiss someone whose breath smells like Scientology." [21] I don't see how you can characterise such obvious harassment as "whistleblowing". Cirt isn't under any content restrictions as far as I know (surely they would have been mentioned by JN466) so this looks very much like an attempt to bully him into withdrawing from particular content areas or from Wikipedia as a whole. I can't support that. Prioryman (talk) 00:41, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict)I definitely share V's feelings. Unless we want to limit Wikipedia to a certain class of high-functioning autistics, human nature says that virtually every editor is going to have personal biases. However, having thousands of active editors means that the biases average out. Someone makes an edit that seems biased? You edit their edit. If you disagree, you take it to talk and hash it out, maybe by getting a 3O or via an RFC. That's how the place is supposed to work! I haven't seen evidence that Cirt won't back down when confronted with reasonable evidence contrary to his position. (Why would you back down from someone who doesn't present reasonable evidence to the contrary?) In fact, it seems to me like Cirt's behavior is lapsing into learned helplessness at this point. This concerns me. I do not want to be the next person who is run out of town on a rail. This is personal for me, but not because I know Cirt (I don't) or because I'm part of some clique (I'm not) or for political reasons: It's personal for me because the contents of First they came... keeps running through my head. If there were a good case here, or if it were limited to just the editing behavior that is worrisome and actually discussed it instead of using it to vilify Cirt... if I didn't keep wondering if this is just groundwork to take Cirt back to ArbCom for formal ostracism... I wouldn't feel that way about this RfC/U. But... here we are. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 01:15, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Quite right Macwhiz, this has become personal because the approach to the treatment of Cirt has been degrading to all those involved in ways that hurts the culture of the project, which we are very much part of, Sadads (talk) 01:29, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
This comment hits the mark. What distinguishes Arbcom cases from ordinary aggregated content disputes is the level of tendentiousness involved. Cirt has not displayed the level of aggressive persistence in his views that many of his past enemies, who have come out of the woodwork to condemn him here, have shown. At every level of this recent dispute, he has voluntarily withdrawn into smaller and smaller areas in which to edit. The only goal left for his detractors seems to be to have him stop editing completely. This is the real story of bullying here. Quigley (talk) 01:31, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
But did we mess up the Sircar/Case Corollary to Godwin's Law, as sanctioned by the man himself? [22] (Do we start counting from the debate on santorum or the start of the RfC/U?) // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:03, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As someone who has used Wikipedia's dispute resolution system on several occasions, including a couple that progressed all the way to arbitration, I can attest that the process is not only time-consuming, but often involves having to endure some fairly harsh criticism from observers who don't approve and apparently feel that saying, "I don't agree with you" is an insufficient response. Emotions seem to run a little high, which I think might be helped if people remembered that this is just a website with most of its participants hiding behind anonymous accounts. Nevertheless, I guess being obliquely compared with the Nazis is par for the course. Cla68 (talk) 02:15, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Comment Huh? Do you all know how First they came… goes, and what that would translate to in the present situation? It would mean that when someone criticized Cirt's editing everyone would have just stood by while Cirt was crucified. That is exactly the opposite of what has been happening. When someone criticizes Cirt's edits it usually amounts to nothing as a best case scenario, and retaliation against the critic as a worst case scenario. Yet somehow you want people to believe that Cirt is a helpless victim here who is being bullied while the world stands by watching but refuses to help? A majority of people engaging this RFC have written and endorsed comments that state rather emphatically that Cirt's critics are full of shit, but somehow that means that Cirt is going to be railroaded? What planet do you live on? I'm sorry, but this is really starting to piss me off. Disagree with our comments all you want, but don't start playing the victim card in this way because it's totally offensive to every single person on this planet who actually has been a victim in their lives. Is your aim to increase the levels of drama and resentment against those who in good faith have come here to express their concerns? If you want to help us navigate this issue then point out the flaws in the arguments and endorse summaries that show how those critical of Cirt are wrong. And btw who wants Cirt gone? Who has proposed anything even remotely close to removing Cirt from the project? And who are Cirt's old "enemies"? The rhetoric being masticated and passed around above is completely counterproductive. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 02:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Oh and I didn't even want to touch the Nazi comparison, but clearly that's a rhetorical flourish that was not lost on me when I read this tripe. What is wrong with people?Griswaldo (talk) 02:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Totally offensive to every single person on this planet who actually has been a victim in their lives"? Talk about hyperbole and resentment. What I was talking about when I said Cirt's "past enemies" were comments like Pieter Kuiper's and LuftWaffle0's, where miniscule content and conduct disputes are woven together to create an alleged "pattern" of "bullying" and other behaviors; where the rebuttals to these cases exist, but are ignored because of the sheer volume of frivolous complaints being thrown at Cirt. Those who resent Cirt's activities on the project—and soon uninvolved editors, the certifiers hope—necessarily speak in platitudes, because they have information overload and little else in terms of quality of complaint. How can we speak of the real issues surrounding Cirt in a coherent, unified manner? We cannot, because it is only the sheer force of rage and resentment among certain editors that holds them together. Quigley (talk) 02:52, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(ec)You cannot because all you have to offer, apparently, is this rhetorical tripe. Someone compared those they disagree with to Nazis (though ironically they had to butcher the logic of the original story to do so), and you all stood around patting each others backs because you shared this level of outrage at the Nazilike Cirt critics of the world! And you want to tell me about my use of hyperbole? Give me a break son. It's disgusting what this has devolved to, and I mean that from the bottom of my heart, not hyperbolically.Griswaldo (talk) 03:05, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Calling criticisms against the filers and pilers on "rhetorical tripe" doesn't exactly win many friends. It's pretty clear that no one's saying Cirt is getting Final Solutioned. We're saying the attacks on him are disturbing and set a precedent that we don't want to see set. First they came is about Nazis, but the clear exhortation the author makes is to stand up when you see people get mistreated, even if you disagree with their views. Throwaway85 (talk) 03:15, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Son"?! And with all of this condescension, you really wonder why some people suspect that you're trying to drive people away from Wikipedia? Give me a break. This never "devolved" into anything disgusting; it was disgusting from the moment, long before this RfC/U, that Delicious Carbuncle started ogling Cirt's edits, talking about "kissing" and the "smell" of Cirt's "fingers and breath". This is the language of Cirt's critics, and you're legitimizing it. Quigley (talk) 03:19, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Am I Delicious Carbuncle? Is DGG Delicious Carbuncle? Is Cla68 Delicious Carbuncle? Is Collect? Is Pieter? Is Jayen466? I wont defend anything DC has said here or elsewhere, so why the hell should I or any of the other people offering criticisms of Cirt in the RFC suffer these ridiculous comparisons because of what DC said somewhere in cyberspace? "But Delicious Carbuncle said really bad things about Cirt over at evil Wikipedia Review" is the lamest excuse I've ever heard. Check yourself and what you're saying if you didn't intend to drag anyone but DC into the mud because you did. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 03:27, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's not an accurate interpretation of my own viewpoint, though. First they came... comes to mind as a reason for speaking up during this at all, for me. I don't personally have a bone to pick with anyone here (my only direct relationship to this issue is what I mentioned above, where I interacted with JN466 regarding concerns with the WikiBomb essay, immediately after he announced it's presence on the Village Pump). You guys may take exception to being compared to Nazis (which is certainly understandable), and may even be dismissive of these views because of that comparison (which would be unfortunate), but I hope that you can be reassured somewhat in the fact that (for me at least) the comparison is only incidental. First they came... can be used, and to me is used here, to express a feeling of strong misgivings related to observing the sort of behavior that this RFC/U appears to be. I certainly have no intention of calling you or anyone else a Nazi, but I don't want to see Cirt or anyone else run out of Wikipedia on a rail simply because some people don't agree with his (or her) politics. That smacks of... well, nothing good, I can tell you that (intentionally avoiding any other real world comparisons here, or other labels, regardless of how appropriate they may be).
I understand being upset based on the feeling that you're the messenger who is being shot, but we're trying to explain to yourself (and others) that there are implications to this that we have a hard time accepting. I don't think that the approach being taken here (especially the intense personalization of all this, centering on Cirt himself) is the best approach for the Project (and unfortunately, I have to admit that I wonder if that's not part of the goal of one or two of the participants, being an attempt to disrupt from within... The connections to WR certainly don't help alleviate that train of thought).
The one good thing to all of this is that at least it's actually being aired out. There seems to be a lot of resentment here because the concerns of quite a few people have been buried over the years, largely due to the "shoot the messenger" criticism. I think it's a mistake to attribute all of that to be Cirt's fault, though. Doing so sounds an awful lot like some sort of strange conspiracy theory, to me. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)02:58, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yet that's a complete 180 from the other thing that "troubled" you just above. You say that Cirt is not totally to blame for "shooting the messenger" now, but just above you were troubled exactly because someone appeared to be getting ready to discuss the others who might share that blame. And yes, you did join in the comparison of those you disagree with here to Nazis, and yes it remains offensive.Griswaldo (talk) 03:12, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Here's the thing; I don't know about anyone else, but I'm sympathetic towards your position (which makes all of this a bit confusing and difficult to express). I just have serious reservations about the manner in which y'all are trying to achieve... recognition that you've been wronged by the community? That, right there, is a huge part of the problem with this; I'm having a hard time finishing that sentence. The stated "desired outcome" on the front of this is tough to believe, and even if it is believed I think (and apparently other do as well) that there are wider ranging implications to all of this then you all are willing to admit. The structure chosen for this, and partially the venue chosen for this, is problematic.
Anyway, I hope that you'll stay engaged for a bit longer on the talk page here. I think that we should hash this out, collectively. Actually, I think that this discussion has a chance to be more productive than the RFC/U itself. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)03:31, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and the "troubling" aspect of the "Cirt's enablers" thing was that it was being added to an RFC/U... I mean, structurally this isn't supposed to be a threaded discussion type of thing. I'd like to point out that Richwales, who appears to be more on "your side", agreed with that concern as well. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)03:35, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cla68 could make a big show of good faith to this effect by removing his "Whistleblower protection" view, which by its origins is a generalized attack on anyone who has defended Cirt from any accusation in the past four years. Because while Ohms law and Macwhiz speak in hypotheticals about this RfC/U affecting them sometime in the future, the certifiers have already thrown a poisoned net over a broad range of users, or "enablers"—to use their dehumanizing language—, extending the scope of the crucifixion beyond Cirt to anyone who has stood up against his accusers. The "sides" are not a supplement from this discussion: they are the original sin of this RfC/U. Quigley (talk) 03:51, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cla68 edited the section to satisfy the reasonable concerns that Richwales had. By the way have you actually read Cla68's evidence in that section? Read through all the linked discussions? I highly suggest looking through the Delicious Carbuncle links specifically, then come back and tell me with a straight face that 1) people like me are on a certain "side" here, 2) Cirt hasn't pushed the boundaries of noticeboard use (hint see WP:FORUMSHOPPING) and 3) there aren't people out there running interference for Cirt when he gets into trouble. I, for one, rather explicitly admonished DC for his behavior in that scenario even supporting some kind of action against him for what he did actually do (violate WP:POINT) and defended Cirt, who around that time was showing a lot of good faith in fixing some of his POV pushing issues on other pages. However, Cirt stepped over the line when he refused to accept the results at AN/I and forumshopped his way to WP:AE, where he specifically requested help from admins on their talk pages. One of those admins showed up and topic banned DC, which was excessive and showed no parity. When truly uninvovled admins showed up at DC's AE appeal and started suggesting that either both editors should have the sanction or neither, one of Cirt's frequent defenders started running interference. The matter resolved in the lifting of DCs sanction, despite a clear consensus between truly uninvolved admins that Cirt and DC should have been topic banned from BLPs for some period of time. This incident rather clearly dispels several of the bogus claims you have all been spouting off here. 1) That there are "sides" in this matter, and that all the people critical of Cirt in the RFC are on some nefarious team out to get him and 2) that there aren't people out there who are on the ready to run interference for Cirt when others suggest remedies that might apply to him. Regarding the second point you might not like the fact that this type of thing does happen, but that doesn't change reality. And btw, I'm sure that a majority of the time that Cirt is criticized he is rightfully defended by people. No one is suggesting that justifiably defending Cirt amounts to enabling him. This regards specific types of situations quite clearly. I'm sick and tired of the straw man generalizations aimed at discrediting specific criticisms. Just utterly sick of it.Griswaldo (talk) 11:41, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't particularly like the "sides" thing either, but... it's endemic throughout this whole subject. I don't know how to avoid it, really. I have similar feelings of discomfort about apparently being on "this side" as you have about being on "that side", though. Maybe this is something which we can use in order to find commonality, here. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)03:57, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And how is it "endemic" exactly? I see people on this talk page repeating the same tired notions that there is a "side" of people who are nefariously working against Cirt for some yet unexplained reason. There are no natural "sides" in the RFC proper, but those who object to the various criticisms of Cirt have absolutely worked as hard as they can to make it look like a mere matter of clique behavior, partisanship, etc. I just don't see it anywhere except for in your claims. Otherwise maybe you'd care to substantiate them with some actual evidence.Griswaldo (talk) 13:47, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And I'd like to add that many of you here claim to be new to these issues, yet at the same time you boldly pronounce an understanding of the factionalism you think is involved here. If you are new to these issues how likely is it that you really understand the deeper social dynamics you keep on claiming here? Given the fact that I am less new to these issues, and I don't see what you're talking about, I'd expect the answer is not very. You want to convince someone that there it's fair to group all of those who have offered criticisms into one big gang then provide some evidence of that. If you can't then stop poisoning the well.Griswaldo (talk) 14:08, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure how to answer that exactly. It seems pretty self evident to me, from the links and whatnot that yourself and others have provided as evidence (let alone the statements). My observations lead me to the conclusion that there is factionalism here, regardless of whether you or anyone else intended them to exist. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)21:23, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's not an answer. What is the source of the factionalism? Simply agreeing at various times during different disputes that Cirt might be at fault to greater or lesser degrees does not create a "faction." So what sits at the basis of this "faction."?Griswaldo (talk) 21:43, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Is your aim to increase the levels of drama and resentment against those who in good faith have come here to express their concerns?"
Well, first off, let's clear one thing up: I am not calling anyone a Nazi. First they came... was first written about the Nazis, yes, but it is a parable. As our own article says, Niemöller's "statement, sometimes presented as a poem, is well-known, frequently quoted, and is a popular model for describing the dangers of political apathy, as it often begins with specific and targeted fear and hatred which soon escalates out of control."
I came here in good faith and presented my concern that this RfC/U, presented in the fashion in which it was given, looks like a witch hunt. The RfC/U suggests that Cirt deserves some sort of sanction because of a long-term pattern of disparate activity, most of which is not against the rules in and of itself. As I read it—and I see that I am not alone in this—it asks that we declare Cirt did wrong for doing things that most of us do at least occasionally, if not frequently: Writing articles on the basis of a suggestion; avoiding the drama that comes with negative statements in BLPs; seeking permission to use a photo; creating templates; editing articles in line with one's own interests; expanding an article after a massive increase in WP:N and WP:RS; using the term several to refer to two; asking others for help... Yet the RfC/U doesn't really distinguish what exactly makes doing those things bad.
And some of the claims in this RfC/U seem to be decidedly lacking in good faith: The selective quotation of the Anonymous forums, the omission of Jon Stewart's story in the timeline of the santorum edits, faulting Cirt for marshaling attention to WP:BOMB when it was clearly an attack polemic, the misrepresentation of undertakings to "shift focus away from" and "avoid" a topic as a promise to never touch the topic again... That is poisoning the well.
When I see that occur, and I see editors that I otherwise respect and believe to be of sound judgement endorse such views, yes, I become concerned. "If you are new to these issues how likely is it that you really understand the deeper social dynamics you keep on claiming here?" Well, that's sort of the point, isn't it? So far, this RfC/U isn't doing a very good job of explaining it. If Cirt's pattern of behavior is so bad to merit this much discussion—Jayen's been beating this drum for three years now, right?—then surely it can be explained to a newcomer clearly and succinctly.
But instead, I see an editor being faulted for doing things I have done and believed to be the right way to edit Wikipedia. I see some questionable tactics being used to discredit this editor. So yes, I find myself wondering, if I do not speak up now, and "the consensus of the community" is set that these things are wrong, will I then be at risk of sanction too?
So it looks to me like, to avoid creating drama, Cirt has backed away from editing Scientology, New Religious movement articles, DYK, interaction with Jayen, certain FAs, and political BLPs. Cirt posts to WikiProject talk pages before creating any new articles. These are pretty substantial chunks of repertoire to excise. As Quigley said, Cirt continually voluntarily withdraws into smaller and smaller areas in response to the rather substantial criticism. If I were in Cirt's shoes, I'd be thinking about giving up entirely, and I don't think that's right, just, or in the best interests of the project.
We have a statement that "Cirt has displayed a long-term pattern of... dishonesty and deceit", and the allegations of broken promises to withdraw seem to be the evidence for that statement—yet it asks for Cirt to make promises about future behavior. Wait, what? Accuse a man of lying about promises to do better, and then demand that he make some more of them to atone? So I think it beggars belief to suggest that this RfC/U asks only for admonishment. We know Cirt reacts to this sort of criticism by withdrawing from the field. The predictable outcome of this RfC/U is to cause further withdrawal. That's indeed railroading—"to procedurally bully someone into an unfair agreement".
Yet for the cries of rhetorical tripe, drama and resentment, mastication, butchery of logic, hyperbole, disgust, straw man generalizations, factionalism, and poisoning the well, if "simply agreeing at various times during different disputes that Cirt might be at fault to greater or lesser degrees" does create a faction, well, I'd have to count myself part of that faction. But I would not sign off on a statement about Cirt that kicks off the discussion with misrepresentations, and I would not dismiss the concerns of anyone who couldn't see my own point for all the hyperbole.
As much as this RfC/U purports to be a comment on Cirt, it's not written as one. It's written as the latest of many grudges against Cirt, and one that has a chilling effect on the behavior of a multitude of other editors. Give me a neutral, clear, well-sourced enumeration of Cirt's actual editing problems and I'll most likely endorse it. This RfC/U is not that document. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:09, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
whatever the factions
Whatever the factions users should attempt to step back from their personal positions and attempt to look at the editing patters of the user and to assist them by objectively commenting on the issues as laid out in the case. Clearly there are multiple problems with Cirts contributions. Simply supporting the user on the grounds of factionalism or whatever will not help address the clear issues that are laid out on the RFC page. If this RFC does not address the editing patterns they will only be repeated and the next location the user Cirt will find themselves at will be Arbitration, and they do look at the issues and edit patterns objectively. Failing to deal objectively and beneficially with one level of the dispute process just beckons the next level. Off2riorob (talk) 21:55, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure how to reply to this, because to me it's "factionalizing" participants in this discussion all by itself. The implication is that yourself and those who agree with you are able to step back and "see the true issues" (so to speak), while those of us who fail to agree with what you're saying are not being objective. Maybe that's not your intent, but that's what's coming across. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)23:42, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
My comment needs or requests no reply. Take it with a pinch of salt or don't take it at all. It is a stand alone personal opinion and not a focus or request for opinion and discussion. Off2riorob (talk) 23:51, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Not at all. I think my point was clearly made and without the need for me to restate it. I do find your habit of commenting out of the timeline disruptive, if its not against indenting guidelines it should be, can you indent please and follow the timelime. Off2riorob (talk) 10:23, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(ec)I agree there is factionalism here, but please understand that I did not speak in favor of Cirt because he is "in my faction". I spoke in favor because I, and many other people, do not believe, for example, that expanding articles, submitting multiple DYK hooks, writing articles about neologisms successfully started about living people, failing to add text based on a tabloid article critical to a living person, adding File: links, or reporting people to admin boards who are then blocked by an admin based on the admin's independent judgment, are crimes in the first place. No matter who does these things. This is an objective and beneficial decision - Wikipedia has too many rules already, and we don't need to be making up new ones on the spot. But you should know that there is also a certain amount of skepticism on my side about the objectivity of people on yours. Wnt (talk) 23:53, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, support support support meu amigo, is not imo really a helpful position for the person being discussed - as I have stated, so this section is not really a place to add more of that. Off2riorob (talk) 23:54, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cirt's contributions are divisive in themselves, that is part of the report. If a user writes an NPOV article no one comes looking. The user Cirt has created the factionalism through their contributions. Off2riorob (talk) 00:04, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
There is no shortage of people complaining about NPOV articles in politics - especially where Republicans are concerned. And if you don't want your comments to be discussed, you really oughtn't post them on a discussion page. Wnt (talk) 00:13, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cirt's recent contributions have been beyond such minor complaints and disrupted the whole project - attach that to the historic similar edit patterns and you have a clear contribution issue. - that is why we are here, not because of frothy lube. Off2riorob (talk) 00:17, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed. The frothy lube issue actually seems to be a rather trivial example here. It just also happens to be what got Slimvirgin and then Coren so hot and bothered that they started imitating action. But that doesn't mean that "santorum" is a pivitol issue in the RFC, and indeed I don't see it treated as such by those who are critical of some of Cirt's behaviors.Griswaldo (talk) 02:47, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Is there any common principle on which we could all agree?
In the interests of moving beyond factionalism, I was wondering, can we all agree to dismiss any of these charges as just plain wrong?
For a first issue which I think hasn't been argued yet, I would like to dismiss all consideration of charges that Cirt "got someone blocked/banned" - once in the initial complaint, once in Pieter Kuiper's response. My feeling is that if you suggest someone should be blocked on a noticeboard, without making clearly false statements, and an admin makes the decision to apply a block based on that, then the responsibility for the block is on the admin, not the person making the report. I am not saying those blocks are necessarily fair; just that they aren't Cirt's responsibility. I am also not saying that recommending someone to be blocked is blameless if you do it and the admin decides the block is unjustified, especially if this happens frequently or appears to be forum shopping. But to me it looks really bad to have people saying "he got me blocked" as part of the case against someone. Wnt (talk) 00:09, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
People are free to say what they wish here as far as I am concerned (within reason.) "He got me blocked" is not the greatest argument in the world as you just observed. Should poor arguments be removed? is a question I dont like. The Resident Anthropologist(talk)•(contribs) 00:17, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I could agree to this as well. I understand what you're saying as well RA, but... the idea is to try to get to what people think are the really important issues, and this seems like an easy issue to set aside. — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)00:19, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think that removing the absurd arguments is a good start. RA, I understand what you're saying about removing poor arguments; if Wnt were suggesting that we actually delete them from the page, I'd be wholeheartedly agreeing with you. But I think Wnt means "remove" in the sense of "dismissal of charges": an endorsed statement that a particular charge is without merit, or at least not something that rises to the level of scrutiny an RfC/U provides. There are definitely several items presented here that could gain consensus for such, not least of which is Wnt's suggested item. Much as I would ideally prefer to see this RfC/U be withdrawn and replaced by one written more neutrally by someone without such an, ah, colorful and storied history with Cirt, this suggestion at least moves us forward. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:16, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Let me ask you this. Do you or Wnt agree with any of the other criticisms of Cirt's editing made by people other than the RFC initiator? I ask because you've not endorsed any such statements. So far the only common ground either of you have suggested regards the dismissal of one of the criticisms levied against Cirt. If we continue down this path which of the criticisms will you actually get behind? I don't intend on stretching my principles to agree to all kinds of concessions that go in one direction.Griswaldo (talk) 02:45, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
To respond to Griswaldo's question, the main thing that Cirt has done which I'll admit is annoying is making promises to disengage rather than fighting it out at the time. I mean, I've talked about factionalism above, but I don't see Cirt as a member of my 'faction" because he doesn't really get up and argue for his rights the way I'd like. Instead he makes retreats that seem to get him picked on more, which have allowed the charges in this document to pile up unanswered. In this game he's not really my teammate, he's the ball. Now even so, as a matter of principle, I don't think an editor can be held to a binding commitment if he tells some other editor in a discussion that he'll back off editing a topic. It's up to him to decide how much and how long; that's what makes it "voluntary". But these retreats are a missed opportunity and have contributed to these troubles, because otherwise all (rather than most) of the issues here would be things being reargued after being debated to closure at some time in the past. I think in the future, in regard to any and all editors, we should put less emphasis on statements about withdrawing from the topic. We should try to say whether a pattern of behavior is right or wrong, as a matter of principle, whenever there is underlying political disagreement, not as a push to judge the editor, but as a push for clarity in how Wikipedia works. Wnt (talk) 05:39, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I concur (incidentally, the characterization of Cirt being the ball is compelling to me. Kudos). Oh, except I'd edit the last part to be "not as a push to judge the editor, but as a push for resolution of the issue." — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)06:33, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'll put it this way: I definitely see worrisome smoke and am looking for fire on the following points:
Misquoting references in a way that alters what they say
Questionable use of self-published YouTube videos
Excessively positive articles (albeit I'm open to the "tired of BLP zealot beatdowns" defense, but only to a point)
A tendency to undertake promises to change editing habits that are phrased in such a way that they are often misunderstood (although I see no reason to believe this is conscious or malicious)
I'll even raise you a concern not stated in the RfC/U: Since I started editing here, I remember seeing a few occasions where Cirt used admin powers somewhat capriciously, but... not maliciously, but more like an eager puppy, y'know? But before I would make a Federal case out of it, I'd want to see if it was just a new-admin thing, and how many new admins go through the same thing.
I'm not saying those are the only things I could agree on; just that those are the only ones where the RfC/U isn't making it very difficult for me to see the basis of the accusation. And I'll close by noting that I did, in fact, endorse Richwales' criticism earlier this evening. I need to think more on DGG's and RA's views. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:01, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, and I would be far more likely to endorse a desired outcome that's rehabilatory, rather than penal. If, for the sake of argument, I did agree with all the points Jayen presented, I can't see how I could accept the proposed outcome. It would make no sense. If Cirt really did do all this stuff, and all the hypothetical Cirt-supporters haven't set him straight, I don't see how he could be trusted to continue editing—we'd have established Cirt's word is no good. But I don't agree with all the points, I don't think it's that bad, and I do get the sense he is willing to address his problems if we approach this as helpful neighbors. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:08, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What about articles related to Scientology or Werner Erhard? Excessively positive? I don't think so. I think people have been arguing that some articles written by Cirt are promotional. Promotional means more than simply excessively positive, but even so not all his articles are promotional in a positive sense.Griswaldo (talk) 03:27, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure that I could be sufficiently neutral on the topic of Scientology to offer a worthwhile opinion. I'm not sure that we need to drag Scientology into it, though; there ought to be plenty of examples either way without crossing that bridge. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:46, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Why would we expect to find negative writing about subjects outside the ones that Cirt clearly has a negative attitudes towards? I don't follow. POV pushing can work in either direction ... excessively positive or excessively negative, but both require an impetus. If I edited Wikipedia mostly on topics related to Wicca, an I hated Wicca, and someone decided to start an RFC on my editing pointing out that I have a lot of negative POV pushing in the area of Wicca I suppose someone should tell them to find other examples of negative POV pushing from me, unrelated to Wicca? Makes no sense.Griswaldo (talk) 04:19, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Griswaldo, why have you not endorsed any statements that rebut criticisms of Cirt's editing? (Khazar's view is, on the whole, very negative about Cirt, except to make a meek acknowledgement of the "quality content [Cirt]'s created".) Is this not "stretching [one's] principles to agree to all kinds of concessions that go in one direction" on your part? Quigley (talk) 03:33, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That said I will promise to reread them all tomorrow. Maybe I've been too dismissive of them myself. I meant that honestly. I'm happy to reengage the comments I have not endorsed. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 03:52, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The RfC/U process solicits summaries "written by the user whose conduct is disputed, or by other users who think that the dispute is unjustified and that the above summary is biased or incomplete." You cannot say that the only productive and principled comments are the ones that praise Jayen466's and Cla68's summary, or that agree Cirt should be placed under sanctions. Quigley (talk) 03:51, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well my own comment, for instance, does none of those things so I'm unsure why you made that leap. As I just stated above, however, I will earnestly re-read the other comments tomorrow when I'm more awake.Griswaldo (talk) 03:53, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm guessing that this comment is in relation to macwhiz's, specifically regarding "Excessively positive articles" (so, you're saying you'd support "Excessively promotional articles")? — V = IR(Talk • Contribs)04:56, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It's a response to Griswaldo's response to me, but yes, I would support either of the two wordings, though the latter is probably more spot on. 14:17, 30 June 2011 (UTC)
Do I understand it right that a few editors here are trying to propose deleting some editor's views from the RfC without their permission? If so, I think this is a first. Cla68 (talk) 12:27, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that we should not delete views/claims from an RFC, even when they are clearly fictitious. However, by the same token, I think there should be consequences for filing an RFC full of provably false statements and invalid charges, and this RFC would clearly qualify. Raul654 (talk) 13:43, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's a serious charge Raul. I do not think there is agreement on that. Can you please list the "provably false statements and invalid charges" here so that those you accuse can respond. These types of statements amount to slander (and no I don't mean in any legal sense) unless they are accompanied by evidence.Griswaldo (talk) 13:53, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You've made it very difficult for people who value their time to take this RfC/U seriously, by demanding hours of background reading from users—many of whom did not feel incensed by Cirt after reading—and by inflating your statement of the dispute with easily falsifiable claims (pilloried on this page as well as in the outside views and response). Even those who broadly agree that Cirt is a Bad Guy™ concede that "many of the charges against Cirt are absurd", but that that's okay because Cirt is "guilty" (of what? I don't know). For many people jumping on the Cirt-hate dogpile, it seems that one's opinion of Cirt is more important than the points in this RfC/U. Quigley (talk) 19:07, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, that's an impasse. You have enough time to post 2000 words to express your opinion, but not enough time, it seems, to read the evidence. There's nothing much to say then. If you do happen to read the sections about the State Senate elections, let me have your considered opinion whether you think the use of Wikimedia projects and main pages to promote Peralta, Dickson and Anderson was appropriate. Cheers, and no hard feelings. --JN46621:06, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Nothing I said ever implied that I did not read your allegations regarding Peralta, Dickson, and Anderson. I did not comment on them in my own view, because I was not sufficiently involved at the time of those articles' writing to weigh all of the evidence (as opposed to your selective evidence) fairly. But my not signing your statement of the dispute did imply that I found those allegations lacking. In fact, I found your accusation that Cirt's motivation for improving those articles were the subjects' peripheral positions on Scientology as absurd a conspiracy theory as the accusation (a lead trial balloon which you did not include in your statement of the dispute, but which I included in my own summary) that Cirt improved the santorum article in 2011 because Dan Savage made a blog post critical of Scientology in 2008. The charges against Cirt are so bizarre, petty, and uninteresting that resolving the interpersonal dispute that seems to be at the heart of all this is infinitely more productive than playing six degrees of Xenu. Quigley (talk) 21:52, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think there is any particular connection between Santorum and Scientology. Santorum was accused once of having connections to the Moonies, and as a religious fundamentalist he would be likely to support religious fringe groups' rights in ways anti-cultists would not appreciate, but I don't think you need any of this to dislike Santorum. --JN46622:12, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The reason you can't find it in this RfC/U is that it's not there. It is true that Savage does not like Scientologists, and has written about them on various occasions, and it is true that he does not like Santorum, but these are dislikes shared by millions of people. --JN46622:43, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, let's look at this ... (1) a noted anti-Scientology activist on an Anonymous forum says it is important to campaign against Stone (2) she says she helped Cirt to acquire photos of politicians for the Jeff Stone/campaign articles on Wikipedia (3) Cirt writes promotionalarticles, described by several editors as "advertisements", on Stone's opponents in Wikipedia, prior to the election, and places them on the main page as DYKs (Dickson in Nov. 2009, and Anderson five weeks before the election) --- and it is an absurd conspiracy theory to surmise that anti-Scientology sentiment had anything to do with Cirt's interest in these articles? And then the same thing happens again a few months later with Jose Peralta and Hiram Monserrate (the latter a supporter of Scientology's detoxification program for 9/11 firefighters), a flattering bio of Peralta goes on the WP main page three days before the election, and an equally flattering Wikiquote entry goes on the Wikiquote main page for the entire week before the election? With respect, it seems to me more absurd to assert that Cirt's activities were unrelated to that outside campaign. --JN46622:09, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What are we supposed to do about what Wikiquote chooses to feature? Did he make them choose to accept that quote? What are we supposed to do about people on Anonymous forums talking about him?
Regarding your comment about reading the evidence, sure, think it's only right for people to read over the evidence. The problem is that when the "prosecution" dumps a huge unedited torrent of charges at someone, and so many (like I said in my response) are completely unjustified, how can you expect the people responding to go over every detail with exacting care? That becomes a guilty until proven innocent standard, where it is easy to lay more charges than someone can rebut. And so fairness demands that people stop taking the trouble to go over every charge in detail, focusing only on the broader picture that every one they look at closely falls apart. Wnt (talk) 23:14, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Alright, I do have to concede that, surprisingly enough, I see the semi-protected template he added the name to really does go straight to the Wikiquote main page. Some of the vandals aren't trying hard enough. It still is not Wikipedia and thus not our concern. I don't even know if NPOV is a policy on Wikiquote, or could be. The things I discussed on the entry I made are the things that sounded most serious to me - as I say there, there were things I couldn't or wouldn't run down in full detail. Wnt (talk) 23:36, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Wikiquote is obviously not our concern, except inasmuch as Cirt's actions there demonstrate the promotional pattern underlying his edits. He also placed santorum on the Wikiquote main page a few weeks back: [23]. --JN46610:13, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
A suggestion to Cirt
It is becoming obvious that editors commenting here are, to some extent, having difficulty coming to a consensus, and instead becoming polarized into something like opposing camps. Part of the reason for this is that the editors making the complaints have raised a large number of specific concerns, and it is difficult for those of us who have previously been uninvolved to sort through all of them, especially when there are some issues that seem to be quite serious and credible, and others that seem to be insubstantial.
Cirt, in your response you say: "While I don’t believe I’ve substantively breached these requirements, I concede that on occasion my actions have left me open to accusations of having done so." I would infer from that, that you consider most of the specific accusations against you to be factually in error, while acknowledging that there are also some areas in which you are quite willing to try to do better. However, you have not given any specifics (although other editors, of course, have done so). Would you be willing to refute, specifically, any of the accusations against you? As uninvolved editors try to work through the nearly-tl;dr accusations, it would be very helpful if you could indicate those accusations that you consider to be significantly inaccurate, as well as any that you are willing to acknowledge as valid (if any). You don't have to do that, of course, but if you do, you will increase the likelihood of an outcome that you could accept as valid. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:28, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Where the certifiers have unleashed this avalanche on Cirt before, he has tried to respond by addressing the factual concerns, but his pursuers seem satisfied by nothing less than an unconditional admission of wrongdoing and an imposed retirement. Quigley (talk) 21:32, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I looked at that link, and while it speaks to some of the issues raised here, it isn't really addressed to this RfC/U. Given that the link is followed by further discussion, it's not clear to me what Cirt's opinion is now. (And I am more persuaded by things like, to take an example from observations made by other editors during this RfC/U, that the increase in activity at the Santorum page followed Jon Stewart's comment, which is a claim of fact, than I am with statements along the line of I promise to abide by Wikipedia consensus, which isn't.) And I would much prefer to hear from Cirt him/herself, rather than from other editors who have already made their own views clear. An expansion, by Cirt, of Cirt's response could be very helpful. If it's merely a link to a previous refutation, that's fine, but I would like to hear it from Cirt. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:07, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
One thing I would like editors to remember is that an RfC/U is not a process to seek sanctions against an editor. It is an effort to air and discuss concerns, and talk about them as adults. --JN46622:27, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding the Partridge citation
One of the issues raised with Cirt's editing was the addition of a quote from The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English: [24] In the past, I have been critical of this edit myself. However, given that other quotations given as evidence of Cirt's bad faith have turned out to be less than complete, I wanted to see the whole context of Partridge for myself, not just the extended quotation provided here and at the santorum talk page. Luckily, it turns out to be available in Google Books' preview: [25]
Jayen did quote the entirety of the relevant paragraph from Partridge. However, I fear that without the context of the entire preface to the work, the paragraph may be misconstrued when deciding how Partridge feels about santorum.
Yes, Cirt's edit is far too easily read as implying that Partridge listed santorum. However, it seems to me that it's very much a judgement call, and one's interpretation of this issue seems to be a good barometer of how much good faith one feels willing to extend to Cirt. What Cirt wrote is literally true: Partridge did, in fact, cite santorum as an example of deliberate coining—in fact, as the sole such example, which one could argue is a degree of notoriety itself. It's not possible to argue the literal truth of the statement; instead, there's disagreement over what it implies by omission, and whether that omission was deliberate.
I think it's equally possible to conclude that Cirt carefully crafted this statement as a deliberate attempt to hide Partridge's decision to omit the word from its gloss in an attempt to confer more legitimacy on it, as it is to conclude that Cirt found a mention of the word in a respected work and created a paraphrase of that work that avoided giving it undue weight, without considering that others might misconstrue it. It's almost a Rorschach test.
(I note that Partridge never said santorum was not a legitimate word; only that they had made the editorial decision not to include intentionally-coined words. The Preface notes that they included "poorly attested words" and offensive words. It also mentions hoaxes, but gives a different example; it does not consider santorum a hoax.)
Looking into this clarified in my mind one of the problems with Cirt's editing: Cirt writes very precisely and with great economy. Cirt uses language with particular meanings, and expects people to read with equal precision. Reading many of the disagreements cited in this RfC/U, I think that people more often take issue with what they thought or remembered Cirt said than what the words strictly say. That's not to say the readers are wholly at fault; a writer who is correct in the details but frequently misunderstood is still at fault for not expressing themselves clearly to their audience. This is especially true when Cirt is interacting with other editors. When tempers flare, economy of words is interpreted as hostility, and precisely-chosen words may be interpreted with less precision.
In the absence of compelling and unequivocal evidence that Cirt is intentionally out to inject misrepresentations into Wikipedia, I presume good faith. However, I agree that this edit was troublesome, because while technically correct, it did wind up misleading some readers. Had the sentence been worded "The 2006 edition of The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English noted santorum in its preface, but chose not to include it because the term was deliberately coined", there would not have been the risk of incorrect perception. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:30, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(...was deliberately coined had not gained wide usage.") They use it as an exemplar of deliberate coinage but exclude it from their alphabetical listing because it has not been widely adopted. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 05:32, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, they did not exclude it solely because it hadn't been widely adopted. They excluded it because it had been deliberately coined. Compare with page ix, second column, halfway down: "If there was a question as to whether a potential entry fell within the target register, we erred on the side of inclusion. We generally chose to include poorly attested words, presenting the entry and our evidence of usage to the reader who is free to determine if a candidate passes probation." Also consider the initial statement of critera for inclusion in Partridge on that page: "We include (1) slang and unconventional English, (2) used anywhere in the English-speaking world and (3) after 1945." The editors didn't list "wide adoption" as a criterion for inclusion. In fact, they said that they'd err on the side of including words that hadn't appeared often in their version of reliable sources. Reading the entire Preface, I see that santorum was excluded not because it wasn't widely used, but because it was deliberately coined. I also get the sense that, deliberate or not, if it was widely used, it would have been included. While I still believe Cirt's edit was misleading, I do not think it was as bad a misquotation as it first appeared. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 14:16, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Macwhiz, I made an edit at the santorum article that I believe fairly closely parallels the wording you suggest above, and was reverted by Cirt within one minute: [26][27]. It made me think that Cirt had an investment in the previous wording, and was well aware of the subtle spin involved.
More generally speaking, I have simply seen too many instances of Cirt erring on the same side in quoting or summarising sources. There is a cumulative effect here, which I appreciate other editors cannot reproduce in their minds, but it leads me to favour one interpretation of the Rorschach plot. It's probably why I reacted to the "several", and got laughed out of court by most editors writing here. But the fact remains, "several" is defined as "more than two or three, but not [very] many" in both the Oxford English Dictionary and Websters. Moving from "two" to "several" (or just "its recipes were selected for inclusion in The Best American Recipes 2003–2004" in the article's lead) subtly inflated the good reception the book in question had received. I am sure we can all agree that writing "two of its recipes" would be more accurate and informative than writing "several" or just "its recipes were included" in this case, but I am sorry to have brought that particular point up.
For another lengthy discussion about skewed quoting, see [28], section "Remaining concerns". The article wording which the discussion was about is here. The article then was a hatchet job on an academic book on Scientology, mostly sourced to satirical magazine Private Eye. It too ran on the main page. I NPOV'd it eventually, by locating a 30-page scholarly review that hailed it as "the most sophisticated academic item published on Scientology so far", but of course by then it was no longer on the main page. I found that conversation with Cirt exasperating, and found it difficult to assume good faith—Hislop had clearly misrepresented the book by quoting out of context to support his polemics, and Cirt seemed to want very much for that mispresentation to be repeated in WP as well.
Another example was this source, summarised by Cirt as '"Gaynor worked her way through Scientology" and other movements'. Such a wording will lead at least some readers to assume she "worked her way through Scientology" (i.e. spent some extended time going through Scientology's multilayered program of courses), when in fact she only looked briefly into it, as she did with a dozen other religions. (If you can spare the time, please review the resulting BLPN discussion as well, and Cirt's argumentation in that discussion.)
It's when you see such subtle inaccuracies repeated consistently that it begins to look less like accident than design. I appreciate that you do not have that experience, and may not want to take my word for it. That's okay. But do consider that the election effort outlined below demonstrates a clear, and very strong and purposeful investment on Cirt's part in this issue, and that subtle source twisting is a rather common side-effect of such investment. Cheers, --JN46613:24, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jayen, I remember you making that edit; I also remember the discussions about whether your edit constituted original research on the talk page [29] and at OR/N [30] I agree that, given your mutual history, Cirt should not have reverted your edit. However, I note his edit comment: "That is a bit of WP:NOR interpretation from the source. best to just quote the source, itself." Okay, I've already said that Cirt's sentence was misleading and should've been improved. But your edit was obviously questionable as well; even the uninvolved folks at OR/N were split on it. If someone else had reverted your edit, I don't think we'd be debating whether or not it was a justifiable revert.
As for "several", I'll grant you that it's sloppy, I agree that it is inappropriate to describe a quantity of two, and that given my previous observation about Cirt's tendency toward precise language it does raise questions in my mind. But what I'm not seeing is why you think Cirt did this. I've seen a theory that Cirt is pushing a point of view on Scientologists, and a point of view on politicians, but I'm not seeing a nexus between either Scientology or politics and... bacon recipes. Okay, it's obvious Cirt has a positive point of view toward bacon. But... what's Cirt's motivation for supposedly fluffing this number? I mean, "Cirt has a thing about Scientologists so he writes misleading POV stuff about them" is an argument I can understand, whether or not I might agree with it. "Cirt writes misleading POV stuff about a book of bacon recipes because..." um... sorry, I just am not seeing it. What am I missing?
In the absence of a good theory with something to back it regarding Bacongate, I'm going to presume that it was a sloppy edit, and not malicious.
I'm not commenting on the rest of your comment yet, because frankly I don't have the time right now to dive as deep into them as I'd like to. Give me time, and I'll have a look.
But, the thing for me is, you say that it's Cirt's pattern over time that concerns you. If you were commenting on the pattern, that'd be one thing. But I see you commenting a lot on what you perceive to be Cirt's reasons for the pattern. I don't see a lot of actual evidence for those purported reasons. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I'm not seeing it so far. What I am seeing is that Cirt is accused of misrepresenting sources... but the accusation itself misrepresents sources, making it very difficult to take at face value. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 14:16, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You're not seeing the wood for the trees. Cirt writes hatchet jobs for people and things he and Anonymous dislike (such as politicians taking a soft or positive line towards Scientology), and puff-pieces for those they do like (free-speech lawyers, opposing politicians etc.). Motivation is irrelevant. The articles' pronounced lack of NPOV speaks for itself.
The accusation of misrepresentation is without merit. The one essential fact on that forum page was the evidence of collaboration, not that a couple of contributors there went tinfoily when they saw an editor remove negative material from the Miscavige article, or that someone else there then reassured them that "Cirt is one of us". You have complained that the RfC/U is tl;dr, and I did not want to make it even longer by adding that extraneous detail. Cirt's press on that forum, by the way, is generally quite good. --JN46612:06, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding the Joel Anderson article
"Cirt also completely re-wrote the article on Joel Anderson, increasing its size five-fold in a single edit"
...which is not abnormal in and of itself. I've done that. As for one edit, I hate editing articles in a browser window. I copy the code to a good text editor, work there, and copy it back.
"(thus fulfilling the criteria for a DYK main page appearance)"
The question in my mind is: Was this done to get it on the front page as a a bad-faith political campaign attempt, or as a misguided desire to rack up another DYK? We editors put a lot of bragging rights on DYKs, and they're difficult to get without puffing up an existing article. I'm not saying puffing up an article to get a DYK is right, not in the least, but it's far less dastardly than being a shadowy political hacker.
"On 28 May 2011, in response to concerns about his editing, Cirt asked other editors for an NPOV review."
Which notably glosses over the fact that it was Jayen, the submitter of this RfC/U, who raised those concerns. [31] It also fails to mention that Jayen originally complained about these things not on Wikipedia, but on Wikipedia Review. The other person commenting negatively on Cirt's editing in this thread was the co-endorser of the RfC/U, Cla68. The phrasing "concerns about his editing" implies that there was a more widespread base of dissatisfaction. Rather, Jayen at that point had already been warned for wikihounding Cirt [32] and forum-shopping his disagreements with other editors [33].
"...Cirt asked other editors for an NPOV review."
...in which, responding to Jayen and Cla68's accusations of biased editing, Cirt went to NPOV/N and asked to have the articles in question reviewed by neutral third parties, stated his commitment to no longer edit or watch those pages, and said he wouldn't object to any changes "proposed, discussed, or implemented".
While the RfC/U quotes Tomwsulcer accurately, it omits his earlier statement that Cirt's request was "way too much work", and the later statements by Tomwsulcer and Hekerui questioning why Cirt would make such an unusual request, wondering if there were edit wars or something going on. [34]
It also doesn't mention that, subsequent to these discussions, Sadads opened an ANI regarding Jayen wikihounding Cirt. [35]
"Joel Anderson is now tagged for multiple issues."
While this is true, it's highly misleading. Cirt made the supposedly objectionable edits to Joel Anderson on July 22, 2010. [36] The article remained untagged for 23 subsequent revisions [37] before being tagged by RightCowLeftCoast on May 28, 2011. [38] Of those revisions, only one was by Cirt, making straightforward and unobjectionable BLP and style changes on December 15, 2010. [39] The remaining 22 edits were by ten other editors, and it's my opinion that those edits added the need for copyediting that merited a "multiple issues" tag. The other tags, tone and too many quotations, are legitimate complaints...
But are they damning complaints? I notice that it took almost a year for anyone to tag the article after Cirt made the edits in question. I also note that, despite Jayen's impassioned critique of Cirt's edits listing what he perceives as many flaws in Cirt's edits, there's no evidence in the article's revision history that Jayen ever attempted to do anything about them. If I felt an article was an example of "promotionalism and activism", I would have applied WP:SOFIXIT. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:30, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Macwhiz, if I edited the article, I would doubtless be accused of wikihounding Cirt. Besides, minor US politicians are not a topic area I work in. What is important here is the context in which these edits occurred:
She helps Cirt to acquire photos of politicians for the Jeff Stone/campaign articles on Wikipedia.
Cirt writes highly promotional articles in Wikipedia on Kenneth Dickson and Joel Anderson, described by several editors as "advertisements", prior to the election, and places them on the main page as DYKs (Dickson in Nov. 2009, and Anderson five weeks before the election).
Dickson and Anderson were Stone's opponents. (The reason anti-Scientologists were interested in this local election is that Gold Base, the international headquarters of the Church of Scientology, is in Riverside County. Jeff Stone had supported a ban on picketing by protesters at Gold Base, and accused Anonymous of harassing Scientologists: [40]) Anyone in Riverside County looking up these politicians in Wikipedia to form a view as to how they should vote would have found nothing on Stone, and two articles making Dickson and Anderson look extremely attractive. The same thing happened with Jose Peralta and Hiram Monserrate, except that Cirt actually got Peralta on the main page just three or four days before the election, and onto the Wikiquote main page for the entire six days before the election.
Of course it is not a problem if an editor increases an article's size five-fold in one edit. What is a problem is if these articles are written specifically for an election, to make a candidate look good. Cirt's expansion of Joel Anderson was on 22 April 2010, not 22 July: [41] No one else but Cirt had edited the article for half a year. Post-expansion, the article ended,
In a statement upon declaring his intention to run for California State Senate, Anderson noted, "Over the last three years I've carried major legislation. I've worked hard in a bipartisan way to solve California 's problems. We have solutions to California 's problems, but they aren't all politically correct. I want to be part of that solution."[16]
On April 6, 2010, Anderson received the endorsement of San Diego Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher, who described the candidate as "a rock-solid conservative that gets things done in Sacramento".[28] Anderson also received endorsements from the California Republican Assembly and from Congressman Duncan Hunter.[29] In his endorsement, Congressman Hunter called Anderson "a great conservative leader who has fought to strengthen the economy by supporting tax credits to encourage new hiring and by eliminating excessive regulations on businesses."[30]
By the time of the election on 8 June, Cirt had expanded this to
In a statement upon declaring his intention to run for California State Senate, Anderson noted, "Over the last three years I've carried major legislation. I've worked hard in a bipartisan way to solve California 's problems. We have solutions to California 's problems, but they aren't all politically correct. I want to be part of that solution."[16]
On April 6, 2010, Anderson received the endorsement of San Diego Assemblyman Nathan Fletcher, who described the candidate as "a rock-solid conservative that gets things done in Sacramento".[30] Anderson also received endorsements from the California Republican Assembly and from Congressman Duncan Hunter.[31] In his endorsement, Congressman Hunter called Anderson "a great conservative leader who has fought to strengthen the economy by supporting tax credits to encourage new hiring and by eliminating excessive regulations on businesses."[32] Anderson's campaign gained the support of the San Diego Deputy Sheriff’s Association in April 2010.[33] Assembly member Martin Garrick endorsed Anderson, commenting that he has the "Reagan 'can-do' attitude" appropriate for the role.[34] San Diego City Attorney Jan Goldsmith endorsed Anderson in May 2010, and commented, "Assemblyman Joel Anderson's record in the legislature, which earned him the Legislator of the Year Award from the Deputy District Attorneys', proves that he understands that public safety should be priority number one for our state government."[35]
The Dickson article was even more positive, reflecting the outside campaign's preference for this candidate—if editors want, I can see whether we can get that article restored somewhere, on a user page, although the comments at Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Kenneth_Dickson_(2nd_nomination) should give you a good idea why that article was problematic, and attracted so much discussion. Remember, these are minor political figures. They do not have a big national profile. In fact, Jeff Stone, Anderson's opponent, does not have a Wikipedia article at all, as far as I can see.
In the case of Peralta, the article was a 53-word stub before Cirt came to it: [42]. By the time Cirt had expanded it, it ran to over 1,500 words, and ended like this at the time voters went to the polls, and at the time it was on the main page, three days before the election:
New York State Senate candidate
"Now more than ever we need a strong voice in the state Senate and Jose Peralta will be a senator we can be proud of."
In October 2009, Peralta stated his intention to run for the New York State Senate, for a seat representing District 13.[2] The Queens Democratic Party lended support to Peralta in his campaign for the Senate seat.[2] An article in the The New York Times in October 2009 described Peralta as "one of the party’s rising stars".[3] Politician Hiram Monserrate was expelled from the Senate on February 9, 2010 by a 53-8 vote of his former colleagues after being convicted of misdemeanorassault on his girlfriend Karla Giraldo.[2] Peralta became a candidate for the March 16, 2010 special election to fill the Senate seat left vacant due to Monserrate's expulsion.[2]United States CongressmanJoseph Crowley, the chairman of the Queens Democrats, issued a statement in support of Peralta, commenting, "Now more than ever we need a strong voice in the state Senate and Jose Peralta will be a senator we can be proud of."[1]
The Police Benevolent Association of the New York State Troopers endorsed Peralta on February 26, 2010.[4]Civil rights activist Al Sharpton endorsed Peralta in February 2010.[5] On March 2, 2010, Peralta received an endorsement from New York City Council member Julissa Ferreras.[6] Peralta received the endorsement of the Empire State Pride Agenda (ESPA), due to his support for LGBT rights.[7] Peralta also received endorsements from groups including the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women,[8] building services workers union the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) sector 32BJ,[9] and Fight Back New York.[10] "Peralta has a strong record of advocating for working families in the [Assembly]. Working families can count on him to be a leader in the fight for good jobs, affordable housing and an affordable state," said SEIU sector 32BJ president Mike Fishman.[9] An editorial in The New York Times commented favorably regarding Peralta's campaign for the New York State Senate, "Elected in 2002 to the Assembly, he has a strong record of supporting immigrants and working people in the community. He has a long list of Democratic endorsements, from almost every union and public official who counts. Among the most enthusiastic are women’s groups."[11]
Peralta's Wikiquote page contained the same endorsements: [43], and good soundbites from him. These elections are over now. Peralta and Anderson are in office, and it is understandable for Cirt to say he has no further interest in these articles, and no objection to others editing them as they see fit. What is relevant to this RfC/U is the clear promotional pattern of the editing, whether Cirt's actions affected the election result or not. --JN46609:36, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Before I comment on what you say about the context of the Anderson article, I want to do more research into what the sources were saying at the time. If the available sources were making predominantly positive comments, then it would be less a BLP POV issue and more of a recentism issue. I'm not saying I disagree that the article needs work, and that it's a quote farm. I'm just not sure I reach the same conclusion about the reason for it as you do. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 14:19, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
One issue the article makes curiously little of is the campaign finance scandal, on which there was widespread recent coverage at the time the article was written. There was also an article in the LA Times about Anderson's mail campaign that was rather unflattering:
Quote: Asked about the ethical questions raised by his settlement agreement with the FPPC, in which [Anderson] admitted to knowledge of wrongdoing over campaign finance violations, he replied, “I take full responsibility for the mistakes that were made. At the time, I believed I was operating within the confines of the law. When it was pointed out that mistakes were made, I voluntarily returned all of the donations in question ($150,000) and paid the necessary fine ($20,000). The FPPC’s two-month review determined that there was no intentional or malicious attempt to circumvent campaign finance laws.” [Editor’s note: Actually, the FPPC settlement documents state that “Respondents at worst deliberately and at best negligently received contributions in excess of the contribution limits. Additionally, receiving the contributions through the Fresno County Republican Central Committee indicates the potential of intent to conceal the violation and the true source, amount and nature of the contribution…” http://www.fppc.ca.gov/agendas/12-09/AndersonEx.pdf )
For the avoidance of doubt: The "Editor's note" here, complete with pdf link, was added by the newspaper editor, not by me.
That is by no means all. So I would not say the Joel Anderson article was "recentist". It is correctly described as a political advertisement glossing over significant, recent public scandal. --JN46616:31, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Far above this was described as one of your two largest concerns, and indeed, I don't like whitewashed Wikipedia articles. But the difference is that Cirt neglected to go out and find and add these references to this article, whereas any deletionist on Wikipedia would take out all this stuff from an article about a Republican, within three minutes of someone trying to add it, day or night, night and day, until the election. There are thousands of articles guarded like that. And nobody ever seems to call them to account. They cry "BLP" and say that it doesn't matter it's published, doesn't matter if it's well known, they make up bogus policy arguments, they say consensus doesn't apply to them! Heck, the 3RR rule doesn't even apply to them, except there are enough people in their ... grouping ... to ensure it isn't needed. And then you have the nerve to come after Cirt because he left this stuff out! The inclusion of direct quotes from endorsements - or criticisms - is something that I fully support and wouldn't change in any case. Wnt (talk) 16:53, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think it's a good illustration of the way the BLP policy can be abused as a weapon against editors; if you cover scandals you can be accused of producing an attack article, while if you don't you can be accused (as in this case) of whitewashing. In both cases it comes down to bad faith being assumed from the outset, which has been a theme running throughout this RfC/U. Prioryman (talk) 17:54, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
@Wnt, what on earth does that have to do with this discussion? You are directly suggesting to Jayen that he is being hypocritical for "having nerve to come after Cirt ..." based on the fact that other editors, completely unrelated to him or to Cirt engage in behaviors that you find deplorable. Are you actually engaging the specifics of this case or grinding some kind of axe related to political editing, because its becoming harder and harder not to interpret your comments in that way (since they have nothing to do with Jayen, the other critics who have commented here, or Cirt).
@Prioryman. I should ask you the same thing. How does your comment about BLP apply to this situation? Have you looked at the evidence? Cirt does not fluff up political entries generally speaking, and he has not shown any general interest in doing so. Then in two separate elections where Anonymous has a specific agenda that they have made clear he puffs up the entries of two very different candidates who share one thing only in common ... that Anonymous has been clear that they want them to win. Can you all please attempt, in good faith, to treat the situation in its full context? I think it is pretty clear why Cirt selected these two entries when he did. The question is if this is OK. You can, at any time say that you don't think it is a problem to make politicians one supports look as good as possible in their entries. No one is stopping you from saying that. What I don't like though, is this constant attempt to re-frame the discussion in ways that don't apply or in order to cast aspersions at those who do not agree, and believe this is a problem. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 18:06, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As I said in my statement, Cirt was criticized for taking out a false claim that some porno producer sued 40,000 people when he didn't sue any, and for not including negative material sourced to the New York Daily News, which is about as tabloid as a tabloid gets. It's true that I have "some sort of axe", in that I've been told so many times how desperately (absurdly) important BLP is supposed to be, and then one day it goes on vacation. I just want everyone to be free to include anything from a reliable source about anybody, and not to be required to do it when they're not feeling like doing that research that day. Wnt (talk) 02:18, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Wnt, we are neither discussing BLP nor writing an article here, we are discussing Cirt, and whether he's being even-handed or promotional. Cirt cited the NY Daily News (which, incidentally, has won ten Pulitzer Prizes), NY Magazine, the Gothamist etc. when working on Hiram Monserrate, doing everything he could to highlight significant scandal (see the edits diffed in the RfC/U). So why not for Peralta? There was significant scandal around Anderson, too, and Cirt buried it in one sentence past two-thirds of the way through a 1,500-word article, and covered up by one self-justifying quote from the subject himself. This is deftly done, mais ce n'est pas l'encyclopédie. The edit he removed from Corbin Fisher was not perfect, but it did have valid sources, which he removed as well. I understand, Wnt, that all you want to do here is poke holes, but by sniping at details you are not acknowledging the big picture: that depending on whether Cirt's for you or against you, you get puff-pieces or hatchet jobs in Wikipedia written about you, or, if you're an editor, you either get obsequious thank-you messages and flattery, or get templated and bullied at ANI. --JN46611:24, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You're scoring more points with this paragraph than you have in all your other comments combined; even so, I'm not moved. I didn't know the New York Daily News had such an impressive Pulitzer record - I hope you'll raise that point the next time someone proposes automatically blacklisting all tabloid sources from BLP articles. I'd like nothing more than for us to routinely include such sources in BLPs without hesitation. And I share your desire not to have biased articles. But the thing is, I don't think Cirt can be regarded as the author of the articles he expands. They're not his articles. So I see no philosophical basis to hold him to account for covering one side of an issue better than another in his edits. I think it is perfectly fair for a Wikipedia editor to cover one side of an issue today, and the other tomorrow ... and to flake off tomorrow and go fishing instead. (not a bad idea...)
This is not an argument I'm making just for Cirt, mind you - I made the exact same argument regarding the Noleander ArbCom case. Unfortunately I was not very successful in persuading them regarding principles; however in Noleander's case there was genuine misrepresentation of sources going on, so much so that one of his articles had to be scrapped entirely because people didn't trust that the offline references had been accurately described - which to me would have been sufficient justification by itself for all sanctions applied. But ArbCom didn't go beyond a few narrow categories of bias there - rejecting anti-gay bias as a category I might add - and I think that the politics there and here are due to meet and flare up again. I just hope this time we get it right and recognize that editors make edits, and that any set of contributions that can be decomposed into individually valid source+text edits is valid and welcome altogether, without high-level analysis of overall POV. Wnt (talk) 20:43, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict) I don't have the time to give Jayen's citations my full attention right now, and I may not be able to do so until later this weekend, but I do promise I will look into them with an open mind. However, without reference to particulars concerning Cirt one way or the other, I gotta say Wnt makes an excellent point. I, too, have encountered a certain resistance to negative statements in BLPs. There have been times where things I thought were neutral and notable were deemed to violate BLP. This seems to be pronounced on political biographies. At first glance, it sounds like there are unflattering things to say about Anderson that I would have considered adding to provide a balanced view. I'm not yet sure if they are things I think I could've defended against those who have a narrower view of BLP. Again, in general terms I can certainly understand any editor being reluctant to add a "scandal" to a political BLP without front-page coverage on bicoastal papers of record, a flood of Google News cites, scholarly treatises on those news articles, and ideally a permission note from Jimmy Wales' mom confirming it isn't tabloidy titillating rubbish. Sometimes it seems like that's what it takes to give WP:WELLKNOWN any traction. I'll look at this specific case as soon as I can, and at first blush it does appear questionable. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 18:08, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Okay, so I looked at Jayen's arguements on the Anderson article. First off, I agree that Cirt missed the campaign-finance issue, and that's a big omission. It should be in there. I expect that adding it will involve some BLP teeth-gnashing, although probably less so long as Anderson isn't in an election cycle. So yes, I agree the behavior was highly questionable, and a point that needs to be addressed.
However, the RfC/U addresses not only behavior, but asserts motivation on Cirt's part. Yes, Anderson was mentioned on whyweprotest.net... but I quote: "I think, given Joel Anderson's tainted reputation, Dickson is the best Republican candidate to beat Jeff Stone." [44] While Xenubarb posted that message, and also the message regarding the photos, there's no context for their relationship (if any). I can't find anything to tell me whether Cirt asked Xenubarb for the photos to further the goals of Anonymous, or if Cirt asked because Anonymous's interest in the election made them a good source of local assistance. I agree it is suspicious, but it is not damning. Likewise, given Cirt's history of DYKs, that in and of itself isn't damning. But merely suspicious isn't enough to toss AGF overboard. Also, if Cirt's motivation truly was to support Anonymous's agenda, I would have expected the articles to focus on their chosen candidate, Dickson, instead of spending time spiffing up Anderson. If this were truly intentional political activism, I would also have expected there to be an article on Stone that wasn't complimentary. It is odd... but still, with no firm basis to do more than suppose motivations on Cirt's part, I'd rather focus on the behavior. It seems to me like the requested outcomes can be reached based on discussion of behavior alone. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 20:26, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, you have to put the four articles together: Dickson, Anderson, Peralta, and Monserrate. What connects them is that Anonymous
liked Dickson (whose article was very flattering indeed; I can get you a copy),
would have preferred Anderson (who had the most realistic chance of beating Stone) to Stone (who had taken a stand against their picketing at Gold Base),
didn't like Monserrate, because he had praised Scientology' purification rundown and its use for 9/11 firefighters,
liked Peralta, as Monserrate's opponent.
If you want to focus on behaviour, three of these got puff pieces and main page exposure, Stone got nothing, Monserrate was brushed up to highlight the scandal with his girlfriend, and got unflattering exposure on Wikinews (which wasn't difficult, given that he had evidently not behaved well, to put it mildly) – 7 long articles, all by Cirt. Not one of these bios was edited neutrally. Make of that what you will. --JN46621:09, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Tell you what: I'll give you that Cirt's editing pattern with respect to these articles is consistent with a biased POV, and is difficult (if not quite impossible) to explain by an alternate theory. I've already said I've got issues with his editing. However, stipulating that Cirt's edits were POV, there's still no good proof that they were motivated by Anonymous or that Cirt was acting in league with Anonymous; he could simply independently share Anonymous's beliefs. But it seems to me that the Noleander case says we needn't consider the why of Cirt's edits if the what is clear...? If so, it might be better to avoid bringing why into it so much, as it may just confuse the issue. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:21, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Pro- and anti-Cirt factions
V = IR, above, you say "...if they shared the ideology that they attribute to Cirt I doubt there would be complaints" a point that is implicit in a lot of comments here and on Talk:Campaign for "santorum" neologism. As best as I can judge, I share Cirt's views on religion, politics, gender and sexuality, yet I disapprove of his behaviours outlined in this RfC. I am offended by your assumption that I couldn't be criticising Cirt purely on the basis of his bullying of opponents and NPOV/BLP transgressions.
A good case has been made on the RfC that Cirt's use of Partridge at Santorum (neologism) was misleading, that he bullies his opponents, that he creates blatant advertising for politicians and others, and misuses sources and uses dubious sources to support his obvious activism. None of my concerns about these points have been allayed, either by Cirt acknowledging them, or by others' attempts to minimise them. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:00, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not any kind of expert on WP policy but it seems to me that an obvious solution here is to take away Cirt's admin privileges. That would send a strong statement of the importance of following the rules. It would also free him up to continue making positive contributions to articles without spending time on admin tasks which could just as well be done by others. BigJim707 (talk) 14:18, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It hasn't even been agreed that he's done anything wrong. You might think desysopping is an "obvious solution", but I couldn't disagree more strongly. I also resent the notion that I, or anyone else who doesn't think he did anything wrong, is "pro-Cirt". I've barely ever interacted with him in the past, and certainly not in any way that would lead me to feel any loyalty towards him. I've just read some of the background on this case and I find the behaviour of his accusers to be just as bad as any of Cirt's supposed infractions, if not worse. It's clear that this RfC is part of a larger political struggle on Wikipedia involving powerful editors with a well-earned reputation for politicking, and I would feel pretty shitty if the community enabled their machinations. Throwaway85 (talk) 05:22, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
There is no way Cirt will be desysopped for any of this, that's another distraction. This RfC has highlighted some serious problems with Cirt's editing. The obvious solution here is for Cirt to acknowledge the political and commercial puff pieces, source misrepresentation and tendentious editing were a mistake.
Calling this just some anti-Cirt thing is a massive straw man that protects Cirt from having to confront those problems. Until he confronts them, they will persist. There may be people who see this as nothing but political but there are also people with no personal axe to grind, just sincere concern for the project, and we're being utterly sidelined by this "it's factionalism" straw man. I and others have a problem with his behaviour and he is completely ignoring us. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 05:02, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Whether or not there are legitimate concerns about Cirt's editing patterns, there is clearly a political component to this case, as evidenced by the near word-for-word similarity between the original complaint and SlimVirgin's email exchange with Cirt and Shell, which we would never have known about if not for the leak (that she decried heavily). Now, you can say that there are legitimate worries as well, but to say that those of us who are decrying this as a political farce are using a straw man argument is wrong on a whole host of levels. First, that is simply not what a straw man is. Nobody's setting up a straw man here. You might be thinking of red herring, but even that is false as the issue of SlimVirgin's political machinations is entirely central to the case at hand. Throwaway85 (talk) 06:16, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Wow. Yes. Thanks for pointing that out. God. I wonder how often I've misused that? Ugh. OK. I meant red herring. So, you're asserting there is such a similarity between the language used by the authors of this RfC and that used by SV in the leaked emails that she must be behind this RfC? Mmmm. That's a very strong accusation. I read the emails too and just saw pretty much what she and others have been saying online about this situation for some time. I'm open to persuasion, though. Can you give an example?
My reading of the emails was that SV assumed that Cirt's inappropriateness was so blatant that whatever arb sat in on the conversation would counsel him to desist. When Shell didn't do that, even after Cirt deceived her about being asked to write the article on the porn company by it's lawyer, SV pulled the pin. I totally understand her asking Shell to recuse herself from the running request for arbitration, when she (Shell) seemed to have seriously impaired judgment with regard to Cirt (though, Shell was never likely to comply). --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:02, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
My reading of the emails was that SV and Cirt were playing games with eachother and trying to get the other to say something incriminating, and that Shell was essentially having none of it. The only difference I could point to between SV's behaviour and Cirt's was that SV was being incredibly aggressive, and not backing off when a reasonable explanation was offered. She expected Shell to take her side and tell Cirt how naughty he'd been, and when she didn't do that SV quickly backed off and threatened an arbcom case. Her refusal to have Alison sit in on the convo was likely due to her lack of faith in Alison's willingness to toe the line, rather than her stated reasons. This: "Now you have added a second name without my consent, and without Shell's consent. And there's no indication that you won't continue to add names. I'm therefore withdrawing my suggestion of a private discussion between three of us, because I can see it isn't going to work. I was trying to do you a favour by discussing it privately, but you seem to have a problem seeing that." is, quite frankly, a load of horseshit. That the original claim in this RfC so closely mirrored hers, after she threatened to go to Arbcom (but couldn't, without proof of attempting to resolve the issue--with an RfC), makes it quite clear to me that this is an extension of her campaign against Cirt. Now, as I've said before, I'm not defending him. I think his claims of family health issues were suspect as well, but I'm not going to go calling him on that. At the end of the day, I wouldn't be objecting to this RfC if the emails hadn't been released, nor would I be doing so if SlimVirgin didn't have a pretty clearly-defined history of using her power, connections, and Wikipedia's dispute resolution processes to attack, vilify, and ultimately silence editors with whom she disagrees. I'm not coming to Cirt's defence, but rather opposing what I see as an abuse of process by the queen of abuses of process. Throwaway85 (talk) 07:39, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see enough difference between the language in this RfC and that used in the earlier on wiki discussions of this matter to be able to agree with you. JN and Cla seem to be their own men to me. But thanks for your clear and frank explanation of your view. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 09:06, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BOMB
I've just read the response by DracoEssentialis, and I do want to say that it caused me to think. What's bothering me about this whole thing isn't the RfC/U itself. As I've stated many times, I too see problems with Cirt's editing (though I honestly think many folks are way too upset about what I view as something minor, but I fully understand and accept that others reasonably see a big problem here). What bothers me more than anything was WP:BOMB. I viewed that as an attempt to use an essay to attack a single user and I feel that was _way_ over the line. The MfD on it made it pretty clear that others viewed it in the same way. Perhaps I've missed it somewhere but I for one would really like to see an acknowledgment from Jaden466 and SV that doing so was inappropriate (or at least acknowledge that the community felt it was inappropriate and that they understand why the community feels that way) and a promise not to do something like that again.
In response to DracoEssentialis, the problem is that a number of us see those two as the bullies. Cirt seems to be the classic kind of a guy who gets picked on and doesn't stand up for himself. Witness the leaked conversation between SV and Cirt. Certainly one of those two felt like a bully to me. One constantly on the attack, the other just backing away over and over again. Jaden and SV's use of an essay to further attack Cirt can reasonably be seen as further bullying, even if that's not the actual intent. Now I probably sound like a bully--by saying that person A was attacking person B, I can be reasonably characterized as attacking person A. What I'd really like is to see everyone back away from the attacking language and work to see a fair resolution of this.
Please understand that not all of us (maybe a third?) see the problems with Cirt in as an extreme way as Jaden sees them. But almost all of us see problems (85%?). The trick is figuring out what the next step is. I view Cirt as a good admin and highly productive contributor who has been shown in this RfC/U to be too one-sided in his coverage of material. I think of that as highly correctable by Cirt. I'm willing to "wipe away" his past sins if he is willing to acknowledge the problem and sin no further. The problem that I forsee is that no one, and no article, is truly NPOV. We do our best. So any improvements he does make I worry that others, who see him in a bad light, will find something else to jump all over him about. And thus we'll end up losing Cirt as an editor: a major loss to Wikipedia even if he becomes one of the best NPOV editors around. So I personally am hoping to just have Cirt promise to A) acknowledge past issues B) stay out of controversial areas for a while and C) work hard on NPOV issues. If problems as large as the more significant of those found here continue then we have a problem. But I'd be greatly disappointed to see issues like the "Bacon" one brought up as a serious issue or a significant misrepresentation of sources.
I'll note that it's exactly the same thing (acknowledge and promise not to do it again) I'd like to see from Jaden and SV. I have a pretty deep faith in people to do what they say they will, I just really want them to acknowledge the issues and agree to work on them... Hobit (talk) 23:03, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Hobit, I looked at the first version of WP:BOMB the other day, and with the benefit of hindsight, and a bit more distance from events, I would not write it like that today. Cirt's name was never in it, and I re-wrote it off my own bat two days after I'd created it, after feedback at the Village Pump, to take out links to the internal discussions that would identify Cirt with a single click [45]. When other editors deleted the account of the on-wiki history altogether, I did not revert. I am happy for the essay not to refer to it.
On the other hand, to this day, we have a number of essays that refer to Essjay's actions prominently and explicitly -- among them Wikipedia:Credentials_matter, Wikipedia:Credentials_are_irrelevant, WP:HONESTY, and WP:CRED. While the Essjay scandal was an order of magnitude larger than the upset the Santorum article caused, I don't think it is the community's view that an individual editor's actions cannot be discussed or alluded to in an essay.
At the time, given the significant amount of upset the Santorum article caused, and feeling fairly upset about the whole thing -- not because of Cirt personally, but because of what the state of the article seemed to say about us as a community -- I felt that the essay was justified, to get the community to think about an important issue, to draw attention to the issue of activism, and to highlight the need to make nav template links nofollow (which I still think we should do). I did not have any other example to refer to to illustrate the issue. But I did feel sorry about the way I had written it later, and apologise to Cirt that it came across as an attack on him.
It is not my intention to drive Cirt off this project. I fully recognise his writing talent, and he has a barnstar from me for his content creation skills. At the same time, the problems with NPOV and his personal interaction style have been very distressing at times. And while I have respect for Cirt, and have said so on numerous occasions, that part of it has always been a one-way street, and I don't feel it's mutual. --JN46600:57, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks. Obviously I feel there was a much larger problem with the essay, and Cirt's name not being there but it being really obvious who it was about actually made it worse IMO. I think the Essjay thing was much larger and I think he was pretty much out the door by the time those were written... But then again you feel there is a much larger problem with Cirt than I do. We can debate which is the most problematic, but I don't think there is a point there. It's the joy of reasonable people having very different opinions. In any case, I get the sense we are moving forward on the issues. As I said, I do feel that there are issues with Cirt's lack of NPOV on some of the articles and I'm hopeful this RfC/U gets us to a good point. I'm still a bit unclear about what outcome is actually desired. Is a generic statement from Cirt that he's written some one-sided articles and that he'll avoid highly controversial subjects for a while (months?) and he'll work hard on NPOV enough? If not, what else is desired? Hobit (talk) 02:45, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I would like Cirt to make a clean breast of their actions, especially with regard to the Peralta/Monserrate and Stone/Dickson/Anderson elections, as described above, and their harassment of content opponents, as e.g. with Njsustain and THF and PelleSmith ([46][47][48][49][50][51][52]). I would like to see some expression of regret for having driven User:PelleSmith off this project.
If there is an acknowledgement from Cirt that this conduct was not cricket, we can all put this behind us and move on. As long as such an acknowledgement is not forthcoming, my feeling is that Cirt has not disavowed this behaviour, and that it will continue, in one way or another. --JN46616:56, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Cirt seems to be the classic kind of a guy who gets picked on and doesn't stand up for himself." LOL Cirt is more than capable of defending himself when he feels like it or when none else will. Cirt is often just as content to disengage and let other people fight his battles for him. As for what I'd like to see your points of A,B, and C at the least Ideally I would like to see what Jayen466 just outlined and the Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Cirt#Desired outcome|Desired outcome as outlined in the of the RFC/U]]. People keep assuming on this talk page we want Cirt banned or that we are coming for him like the nazis did for the jews. We have stated our desires of out comes from the start of this and those desires have not changed. The Resident Anthropologist(talk)•(contribs) 18:38, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
First of all, I want to express my strong appreciation for what Jayen said above, about looking back on how the essay started. I think that is a very generous and impressive thing to say, the kind of thing I see all too rarely on Wikipedia. Thank you.
I'm still trying to figure out where, overall, I come down with respect to this RfC/U, but something Hobit said rings very true to me. I had watched the discussion about the e-mails on Shell Kinney's talk page, and wondered what those e-mails really contained. Now that they have been leaked (a bad thing, but it's done), I've been able to read them and decide for myself. What really stands out for me is the aggressively prosecutorial tone of what SV said to Cirt, not reciprocated by Cirt (as well as the imputation of side-taking against Shell and Allison when there was zero evidence of that side-taking). That prosecutorial tone was exactly like what was directed against me when I was a new editor, and falsely accused of being someone else's sock. I'm not saying that any of that gets Cirt off the hook, but it does give me reason to look skeptically at some of the "evidence". --Tryptofish (talk) 19:05, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I can't agree with any of this "sin no more" stuff. I don't see Cirt as having done anything significantly wrong; the worst thing he has done is to say he would disengage, which only emboldened his opponents and dragged out more arguments. To me it looks like editors under a topic ban are inevitably on their way out, doomed by opponents who scrutinize every little detail and find something that they say strayed from the path - opponents with much less skill at games than some of the work I've seen here. Wnt (talk) 23:19, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I wasn't aware that Cirt was under any topic bans. I'm sure JN466 would have mentioned it if he had been. As for the evidence, I think it's plain that a lot of it has been trumped up or grossly exaggerated. Personally, if I was Cirt, I'd choose to ignore JN466's demands, which have a distinct "have you stopped beating your wife" air about them, and get on with improving Wikipedia. If you compare JN466's contributions and Cirt's contributions lately, there's not much doubt about which of them is making the more valuable contribution to this project. Perhaps JN466 should use his time for more useful purposes than continually going after Cirt? Prioryman (talk) 00:15, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
He is not. Following an AE thread, he was advised that a discretionary topic ban was contemplated, and said he would reduce his involvement in the topic area, restricting himself to looking after existing FA and GA articles.
Prioryman, I trust that by saying what you are, you are not defending the editing around the Peralta and Anderson elections. --JN46600:30, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Frankly I don't know what to believe. I do know that you have clearly exaggerated and misrepresented many aspects of your evidence like selectively quoting the Anonymous forum comments, you have omitted crucial facts like the Santorum edits clearly being linked to the topic being promoted on Jon Stewart's show, and you have dragged up utterly trivial things (bacon??) in what looks like a throw-everything-at-the-wall-and-hope-something-sticks approach. I also gather that you have been pursuing Cirt literally for years, which strikes me as an unhealthy obsession. And I have the evidence of my own eyes, notably seeing Cirt being bullied and threatened into removing his already-approved DYKs, which is how I learned of this matter in the first place. Many DYK regulars, not just myself, were disgusted by what we saw then.
Cirt is clearly one of Wikipedia's most valuable contributors (as someone else pointed out, 12 FAs, 87 GAs and 152 DYKs over something like 150,000 edits) so any mistakes should be seen in that context. It would be a miracle if he hadn't made any errors in that time. However, I very much get the feeling that you have latched on to the Santorum controversy to advance your own long-running campaign against Cirt, and have recruited many of the partisans in that dispute (via the link to this RfC/U that you "helpfully" posted to the Santorum talk page). Given all of that, I am not inclined to take what you say at face value. There is too much of an air of vendetta and vindictiveness about this RfC/U. Certainly Cirt should review what people have said, but I don't think he has any obligation to bow to your demands. Prioryman (talk) 08:13, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Tryptofish, I think the reason SlimVirgin was so persistent was because Cirt, at different times, told two different stories about how he came to write the Corbin Fisher article. Cirt seemed to have forgotten that he had told SlimVirgin a while back that Corbin Fisher's counsel Marc Randazza had written to him, suggesting he write an article on Corbin Fisher, which Cirt then did. The result was a very promotional article indeed (see comments by DGG, who is a very experienced and respected Wikipedian).
When I recently raised a concern about the Corbin Fisher article's tone on Cirt's talk page, Cirt said to me he had come by it "organically", through his interest in other articles. Now that obviously did not tally with what he had told SlimVirgin before. So she contacted him privately. If you read through the conversation, Cirt then told her basically the same thing he had told me, until she reminded him that she already knew that he wrote the article because Marc Randazza had suggested it to him.
It's only at that point that Cirt owned up again to the fact that he wrote article in response to a suggestion by Marc Randazza -- Marc Randazza being someone on whom Cirt had written half a dozen articles on Wikinews, and whom he had interviewed for Wikinews.
If you look at Cirt's response to me, and the extent to which it refers to the Peralta/Monserrate and Dickson/Anderson/Stone articles, there was also no reference to everything detailed above -- the fact that Monserrate had commented positively on a Scientology program, and that Jeff Stone had attracted the ire of Anonymous by taking a stand against their picketing at Gold Base, and that Anonymous therefore very much did not want these candidates to be re-elected.
So there is an unpleasant pattern here of Cirt being economical with the truth, and only telling the whole truth after being confronted by someone who already knows it. I find it extremely troubling, because it makes it difficult or impossible to take Cirt at his word. If it had not been for the arbcom leaks, or for SlimVirgin's prior knowledge of Marc Randazza's mail to Cirt, this would never have come to light. It raises questions about what else we may not know that Cirt isn't prepared to admit, and which other individuals or organisations have asked him to edit Wikipedia on their behalf.
None of this would have been a problem if the articles concerned -- Corbin Fisher, and the articles on the four politicians -- had not been slanted in such an obvious way. --JN46600:30, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's a generous interpretation of SV's motives. A far more likely explanation, and a much more defensible one given SV's past actions towards editors she has been in a content dispute with, is that she is using Wikipedia's enforcement mechanisms to ensure the articles in question reflect her views by silencing those who oppose her and branding them as disruptive editors. To be clear, I can't recall ever interacting with SV directly, and I believe any interaction I had with Cirt would have been only indirect through 4chan-related articles. I have no personal grudge against SV, but I do strongly dislike her MO on Wikipedia. I wouldn't have given this RfC/U a second glance if I hadn't immediately noticed the striking similarities between the accusations made by yourself and your co-filers, and those made by SV in her email exchange with Cirt and Shell. Knowing SV's history on Wikipedia, I would have had to have stretched AGF past its breaking point to believe that this RfC did not arise directly from her failure to get what she wanted in that email exchange. Does that make Cirt innocent? Not in the slightest. It does, however, make me totally unwilling to play along with what appear to me to be clear ulterior motives behind this RfC. Now, if the community finds that Cirt has indeed overstepped his bounds, and that he is deserving of some sort of editing restriction, then I'll not oppose that. I will not, however, be a party to an attempt by one of the most powerful, well-connected, and arguably unscrupulous people on Wikipedia to throw her weight around. Throwaway85 (talk) 05:23, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jayen: I'm keeping an open mind, and I intend to look for myself at things like the differing versions to which you refer. But I am speaking from personal experience when I refer to my personal experience. Since that time, I've been able to work much better with Slim, and I respect her editing abilities, but I've seen that tone of interaction firsthand, and I can't see how that e-mail discussion needed to take the form that it did. If—based on what you say, I don't know myself—Cirt was being evasive, all that needed to happen would be to let that happen and present the concerns on-Wiki. I don't know what good could have been accomplished by engaging in an off-Wiki interaction of that form. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:42, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
SlimVirgin has the personal integrity not to reveal on-wiki what was disclosed to her in confidence in a private e-mail. So confronting Cirt on-wiki about the discrepancy was not an option for her. Her hands were tied. --JN46600:28, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
In any case, her attitude during the confrontation isn't supported by the community—and the community has made that clear. Regardless of what Cirt did or did not do, SlimVirgin isn't his prosecutor. Granted, she's performing a role that the majority of the inactive, absentee administrator core won't touch, and for that I thank her, but it isn't her role to go it alone. The fact is, many of us have been on the receiving end of these kinds of questions, not just Cirt. I agree with Tryptofish on this matter, and suggest that this needs to be done on-wiki, not off. I don't agree that her hands were tied. Viriditas (talk) 03:29, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
In the Sun, Jun 12, 2011 at 18:14 leaked email from SV to Cirt, she says "...you told me once that someone associated with Corbin Fisher asked you to write that article, though not for money. That is why I asked for this private exchange, with a third party to witness it. I don't want to cause you harm, or add to public drama, but there is clearly a serious issue here." If he told her this off-wiki, wouldn't it have been inappropriate for her to confront him with it on-wiki? I'm still learning the niceties of cyberspace. (For that matter, if it's inappropriate for me to paste these quotes, please delete this.) If he'd told her on-wiki, the only explanation for SV taking it off-wiki, that I can think of, is as stated: to avoid harm to Cirt's reputation and minimise drama. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 04:19, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Anthony, that doesn't add up for me. If the goal was "to avoid harm to Cirt's reputation and minimise drama", why was it so immediately followed by what happened on Shell's talkpage? --Tryptofish (talk) 22:46, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What's the big deal about writing an article because someone suggested it? We allow paid editing, apparently, so how is unpaid editing a violation of policy? Will Bebacktalk04:49, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree. Focusing on presumed motivation is pointless. SV was concerned Cirt was avoiding mentioning that the company's lawyer had suggested he write the article. I can understand Cirt not volunteering that, given the existing speculation around his motives. I read nothing suspicious into that at all. In his place, if my hands were clean, as I presume his were, I wouldn't feed the frenzy. The problem was the article, and an experienced editor producing such a puff piece is a problem, not any presumed motivation behind creating it. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 06:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
DracoEssentialis' post
I have seen many extraordinary things on Wikipedia in the past seven years. But I have never seen anything like this posting by DracoEssentialis, who calls herself "the long-suffering wife" of Jayen466, who describes how he obsessively "spent hours and hours" collating evidence against Cirt, who tells us that he is not a bully because Cirt is a bigger bully, who attacks editors as belonging to "Cirt's faction" by calling them "flying monkeys", who shows us her deep respect for BLPs by referring to "Rick Sanitarium", and who concludes by telling us how exciting their sex life is. This really "jumps the shark", as the saying goes. I really don't care a bit what Jayen466 and DracoEssentialis do between the sheets, though I'm glad for the both of them that Jayen466 has a supportive spouse who appreciates his bedroom acrobatics. But overall DracoEssentialis's posting is bizarre and does not offer anything constructive. I'm astonished that editors in good standing have endorsed her emotional appeal on his behalf. I haven't posted a view yet, but I think it's time to review the behavior of Jayen466, Cla466, and the other supporters of cults and new religious movements who've been involved in this. Will Bebacktalk06:53, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for explaining. So that's all this is: scientologists picking on Cirt. And there's me thinking it was about writing tendentiously and bullying people. Cirt has something to answer here. I am sick of this bull shit about the dark forces conspiring against your white knight. Can't you just address the argument about his occasional bad behaviour instead of constantly flinging ad hominems at the drafters of this RfC? I'm pretty sure I mean "ad hominem." :) --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:13, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(edit conflict)I concur with the characterization of DE's post, which also struck me as odd. The endorsement of same by otherwise well-respected editors is disturbing. I can't speak to JN or the others, but through my limited interactions with Cla68 and what I've read of his involvement elsewhere, I've found him to be generally principled and reasonable. It's disheartening, therefore, to see him put his name on what would in any other circumstances be dismissed as a bizarre rant. I wouldn't characterize any of the filers or heavy supporters of this RfC as "cult supporters" (having seen no evidence to suggest such), but I am concerned that they would be so willing to supports such a strange post for no apparent reason other than that its author agreed with them. Throwaway85 (talk) 07:17, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. Ad hominems. Look at you. Look at how you're dealing with this. In fact re-read what you've just posted. Pure ad hominem. I know this goes back some time. Of course it does. Cirt has been doing this a long time. And editors like you have been smearing those who disapprove of Cirt's puff pieces and activism a long time. Address the arguments, not the man. Cirt has been shown to have behaved badly on occasion. Your response is to say, oh well, they would say that, wouldn't they? Not relevant. Sorry. At least you're not impressing the genuinely independent editors here. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:57, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia:Requests for comment/User conduct/Guidance: "An RfC may bring close scrutiny on all involved editors. " This isn't a case where we can say, "it isn't about Jayen of Cla68, it's just about Cirt". No, it's about all involved editors. Their behavior is equally relevant. We can't evaluate Jayen's accusations without also looking at the history of their dispute. Will Bebacktalk08:08, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Of course. If you see inappropriate behaviour, bring it up and we'll deal with it. There is nothing inappropriate about drawing attention to poor behaviour. What I'm saying is the "defenders of Cirt" are simply not countering the claims of obvious activism and bullying with anything but "we don't have to address this because those who are criticising Cirt hate Cirt," without showing any actual bad behaviour on their part. It is not bad behaviour to point out bad behaviour. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 08:28, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Anthony, for my part I don't see myself as a "defender of Cirt" so much as a defender of principle. The allegations raised in the RfC/U are serious. They're so serious I have difficulty believing that a "sorry about that, I won't do it again" is the goal, nor that it would suffice to drop the issue for once and for all. Whether it was Cirt or anyone else, if I saw an RfC/U that didn't appear to be good faith, and that made various misrepresentations, I would question it. I think "activism" and "bullying" are words that ascribe motives to actions. They're inherently accusatory. I know some have strong suspicions about Cirt's motives, and I understand their reasons, but I don't see any proof of Cirt's motives. Lacking that, aren't we supposed to assume good faith? So, if there's more than one explanation, neither with actual proof, assume the more benign one. I'm not seeing so much of that. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 19:25, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
An RfC/U cannot impose sanctions. My wish would just be for Cirt to make a clean breast of things. It is clear to anyone with a little knowledge of Scientology affairs why Cirt edited the Peralta, Dickson, Anderson and Monserrate articles the way he did, or why Sharron Angle's BLP looked like this when Cirt was done with it – 90% of its content about Scientology allegations. It was a huge coatrack. Cirt has been an admin for many years. He knows WP:BLPSPS. Yet he dropped this video in, because warning people about the school was more important to him than following policy, which he didn't want to be bound by. To an extent it paid off; the video was in there for months before someone noticed. But it is still a policy violation; the place for that video is Youtube, not WP mainspace. It doesn't do for Cirt to assert he hasn't substantially breached policy – that he merely laid himself open to "accusations" of having done so – because that shifts the onus back on the observer, when the policy violation is unambiguous. He could only defend his action under WP:IAR, which would not get very far at BLP/N.
One way or another, it would help for Cirt to make a clean breast of things: because then the matter is over, trust is restored that there won't be any repeats, and we can move forward. Slipperiness and sidestepping don't build that trust. --JN46602:42, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Macwhiz, dragging an opponent through multiple forums and asking a specific admin to intervene is bullying. That Cirt is an activist is obvious. None of this relies on speculation about motive. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:10, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Hand picking an administrator to intervene was the key element. (I think Cirt actually acknowledged that.) But yes. A lot of the drama at the notice boards is somebody bullying somebody. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 09:01, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Some of the other editors here have done much the same thing. If using noticeboards is bullying then there's a lot of that going around. Will Bebacktalk22:47, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
A lot of the comments made throughout the RfC/U can genuinely be considered as alarming (including some remarks above and further up on this talk page, as well as the titling of this very section). Unfortunately, given that this partially due to the fact that this misbehavior is occurring on both "sides", I'm not sure what you hope will be accomplished though. There are some people (including, but not limited to, SlimVirgin) who has loudly made a fuss about RfC/Us having no need to be "clerked" (which is the term apparently assigned to formatting views and endorsements in line with what's already stipulated in the instruction pages). If something like that is meeting such stiff opposition, it's impossible to expect behavior or commentary to be brought into order. The RfC/U process cannot function smoothly in these sorts of circumstances, though really, the fact that it does not seem to occur so often in other RfC/Us does reflect more on the users involved - that is, their willingness to: compromise, show each other a basic level respect, abide by the standard practice/procedure of RfC/U, and to avoid unnecessary escalation (that is, actually focus on trying to resolve those differences). Ncmvocalist (talk) 08:11, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps a more fundamental problem is that RfC/Us, and certainly this one, seem to be structured essentially as indictments. I don't see an effort to "resolve differences" - I see an effort to indict and convict Cirt, presumably as a prelude to an arbitration case. We shouldn't be surprised at participants in an RfC/U confronting each other if the RfC/U itself is written and structured in a confrontational way. It's not exactly an invitation to resolve differences amicably. Prioryman (talk) 08:18, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I tend to agree about the concern that RfC/Us which are written and structured in a confrontational way are unlikely to be considered as an invitation to resolve differences amicably. The fundamental assumption to an RfC/U having a chance to work is that editors actually want to resolve their differences, and are willing to try their absolute best at doing so voluntarily (without the involuntary binding measures which would be the result of arbitration case). RfC/Us have worked in the past - though this may not happen too often, it certainly does indicate that it can work if all parties/participants put their mind to it. But where parties are not sufficiently interested in doing so, or have another agenda, then that's a problem. I'm not sure whether parties can be forced to try to genuinely resolve their differences, or what it will take to persuade those parties to use DR for resolution (rather than escalation). Maybe there are some suggestions out there which can work in practice? Ncmvocalist (talk) 08:42, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cirt is welcome to join in and resolve differences. He has chosen not to do that, and "the defenders of Cirt" are doing a terrible job on his behalf. He could shut this down by engaging with those who see problems with his behaviour. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 08:49, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think you're missing the point Anthonyhcole, in the same way that Will Beback might have missed the point. What someone has just pointed out is that "the attackers/prosecutors of Cirt" are doing a terrible job of convincing others that they actually want to resolve the differences (that instead, this is just a formality for the purposes of an arbitration case). Now you appear to be expressing a concern that Cirt and "the defenders of Cirt" is not here to resolve differences about problems you see with his behavior. So it's apparent that both "sides" have concerns.
I think that the rhetoric and commentary on both sides is not conducive to a resolution, so steps need to be taken by both parties ("sides") to address the issue. This is both a request in the present, and a caution to avoid what happens in the future. Obviously, I can't force anyone to heed that...but if that's not going to happen, or no actual resolution is expected or desired, one does have to wonder how much more/less is going to achieved by keeping this RfC/U open. Ncmvocalist (talk) 09:37, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As far as Cirt is concerned, I don't think any follow-up action is necessary at this time. Cirt has acknowledged the RfC. I look forward to his producing some excellent articles in the future on the topic of his choosing. Cla68 (talk) 10:55, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cla68, are you referring to Cirt's early statement that his personal life won't permit him to respond? Or have I missed something? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 12:54, 4 July 2011 (UTC) Assuming you're referring to this statement, he does not recognise that he has breached any of the items listed in the required outcomes, but concedes his actions have left him open to accusations of having done so, and he'll restrict the areas he edits in. Since he has no apparent insight into the behaviours criticised in this RfC, we can expect him to continue to bully his opponents and churn out puff pieces for commercial and political interests. Great.[reply]
Still, this RfC has had the effect of sharply defining the problematic behaviours, and presumably Cirt has understood what was said and, though he doesn't appear to recognise them in himself, or, if he does, doesn't think them a problem, at least he's been told very publicly what a large number of people think. And maybe he does see some flaws in his approach but just doesn't want to acknowledge it publicly. Perhaps it is time to move on and see if there's a behaviour change. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 15:44, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It's hard for me to see Cirt as a bully when he seems to be spending so much time rolled up in a ball getting kicked. But I had a policy question: does WP:Meatpuppet have any bearing on whether her views are to be considered? Wnt (talk) 18:54, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the connection is declared, both on our user pages and explicitly in the statement. So everyone can take it for what it is. Did you have time to review the Anderson sources, Macwhiz? Because while this is all good fun, we actually convened here to discuss concerns over non-neutral editing. --JN46619:35, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Comment Will, anyone who is married would find nothing bizarre about a spouse seeing their husband/wife in this position and wanting to stick up for them. Wnt, the notion that this has anything to do with meatpuppetry is yet another annoying bad faith distraction. The two of them are married and the one stuck up for the other in a very public manner. What the heck does that have to do with WP:MEAT? Then the rest of you lot questioning why editors of good standing would endorse a comment by a wife sticking up for her husband ... I have to AGF here and assume that you're all hopelessly single and don't understand why someone would do that. If you were willing to AGF regarding the comment you might consider the notion that whether or not you agree with him Jayen is acting in good faith here and his wife, who knows this better than anyone else, wants to make sure that is understood. That's the thing that comes through to me clear as day. I guess admitting that makes me some kind of idiot though right? Anthony has said it well elsewhere. The ad hominems are very disappointing indeed.Griswaldo (talk) 00:48, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see how the link modifies your comments. The fact remains that you have called the "Cirt faction" "flying monkeys". If it was not your intention to attack editors as flying monkeys then please redact your post. Will Bebacktalk04:59, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It’s not just the fact that Cirt’s Flying Monkeys consider themselves qualified to comment without having read all the evidence my husband spent hours and hours collating, it’s the way they twist the facts to make them fit in with their worldview. [..] Oh, and for what it’s worth, JN466 may be many things to the Cirt faction, but as a person intimately familiar with the workings of his heart and mind, I can assure you that he did not start this RFC because he had ‘an axe to grind’ with Cirt.
No, she wasn't talking about Savage. She was saying that about Wikipedia editors who "twist the facts" and who haven't read all of Jayen's evidence. The tone of her comment does not seem humorous, it seems like an attack on those who disagree with Jayen. She even ridiculed the medical problems of Cirt's relatives. If that's humor it's very mean-spirited. Will Bebacktalk09:38, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Uh, Will? It was Savage who wrote, "I'm going to have to sic my flying monkeys on him". That's who DracoEssentialis was referring to when she said "Cirt’s Flying Monkeys consider themselves qualified to comment without having read all the evidence". It was supposed to be funny, and it was. I can't comment on Cirt's relatives and their medical problems, but other editors did say that they found it strange that Cirt was editing the entire time he said he was busy dealing with it. Viriditas (talk) 09:43, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't follow. Are you saying that DracoEssentialis was saying that the "Cirt faction" here are the same people to whom Dan Savage was referring when he spoke of his "flying monkeys"? More generally, are personal attacks OK if some people find them funny? Will Bebacktalk22:47, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Where did she ridicule anyone's medical problems? Will is there any reason why you may not be able to judge people's criticism of Cirt rationally? Ironically given your distaste for Draco's involvement in this RFC as a reaction to what is happening to her husband, you appear to be having a very emotional reaction to criticism of Cirt. I am asking this question in good faith and have assumed nothing but I do wonder why this is. I would suggest that if you are having a hard time emotionally with all this that you step back and take a breath before commenting. The RFC could run for as long as 30 days (apparently) so there is no rush to comment in the heat of anger, or whatnot. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 11:19, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And isn’t it ‘interesting’ that a person so adept at hounding his critics on their respective talk pages/taking them to ANI is too beset by ‘family tragedies’ or rather too busy making hundreds of edits per day to his next pet projects to speak up for himself when he’s finally called out on _some_ of his actions?
I don't see how that could be read in any other way than as asserting that Cirt lied about the medical problems his family members were experiencing. Will Bebacktalk22:47, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
A neologism everyone can support
Anyone notice that DracoEssentialis has accidentally referred to this affair as a "cirtcus"? I think we can all agree on that at least... ;-) Prioryman (talk) 18:37, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I see. So, in your view, derogatory nicknames like "cirtcus" and "Rick Sanitarium" are acceptable or even amusing when referring to WP editors and other living people. Will Bebacktalk22:09, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
If _my_ comments offended you, where was your sense of moral outrage when my husband and all the folks who supported him and Cla68 were compared to the Nazis on June 29 (“First they came …”) by several editors on this page? Are you aware that your history of turning up whenever there is any JN-bashing to be done could well be considered bullying? You have gone to great lengths to prove my point. Thank you for that. --DracoEssentialis (talk) 02:21, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
If you'd like me to list the history of Jayen466 turning up at articles where Cirt or I are working then I think you'll find you're mistaken about who is the aggressor. And for the record, this RFC was not started to bash JN. Just the opposite. Will Bebacktalk04:59, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'd say the odds of you trying to change the mind of Jayen's wife are, oh, less than zero. Seriously dude, pick your battles. Viriditas (talk) 09:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Above, DracoEssentialis seems to say that I have no right to complain about her personal attacks since I didn't condemn a posting on this page which cites First they came..., which she says was tantamount to comparing Jayen466 and Cla68 to the Nazis. I think I've seen that used in many talk pages on Wikipedia. In fact, Viriditas used it to oppose a ban on a disruptive editor: This is an extremely dangerous precedent. I disapprove with what Kurt says, but I will defend his right to say it within acceptable guidelines. [..] First they came... Viriditas (talk) 03:05, 15 December 2008 (UTC)[53] Viriditas, is it true that citing this saying is grave personal attack? Will Bebacktalk11:21, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
IIRC, I was subsequently excoriated for using that phrase and the thread was shut down by Newyorkbrad. In hindsight, I shouldn't have used it. Will, you may not be aware of this, but it is generally poor form to cherry pick quotes from old, off-topic discussion threads from three years ago. At least try to stick to the current discussion. Viriditas (talk) 11:29, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Folks are cherry-picking things Cirt did from quite a while ago. What is the statute of limitations around here? As for "First they came..." - I actually was searching for some instances in which someone used it in reference to an enforcement action I was involved in. Your comment came up first. That phrase is still commonly trotted out to condemn enforcement actions. If it really is a heinous personal attack then we should let people know generally. More generally, DracoEssentialis's assertion falls into the category of "you didn't complain about X so you can't complain abut Y". I had nothing to do with the "First they came..." posting, so I don't see why she'd raise it here in her defense. Will Bebacktalk22:47, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You have gone to great lengths to prove my point - if you believed that, you wouldn't need to keep saying it. What you're actually doing is repeating an untruth in the hope that people might eventually believe it William M. Connolley (talk) 10:15, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Isn't it horrible when people "keep [on] saying" things once? I would ask you William on what knowledge you base your bad faith accusation of lying (i.e. repeating untruths), but it is clear that a much more basic question should be asked. Have you actually followed the RFC and the discussion on this page because it appears you haven't. If you haven't please refrain from accusing people of lying. This is the second time someone has done this. I'm still waiting for a response from Raul about his smear.Griswaldo (talk) 11:13, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I thought I'd seen it before. But you're right: it seems to be the first time. That doesn't make it any more accurate, though. I deliberately said "untruth" because it was less emotive than lying; I note your attempt to ratchet up the emotion-level but I think that is unwise William M. Connolley (talk) 11:24, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You show up to make accusations of lying, and do so in a manner that isn't even accurate, and then you accuse the person saying that your bullshit stinks of "ratchet[ing] up the emotion-level?" When you drive by, throwing matches out your window you don't get to get upset when people yell "fire." You want to keep digging this hole William? Be my guest.Griswaldo (talk) 11:35, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The irony in your comment is so thick we could spread it on toast. Usually the person who bites the lure isn't the one doing the trolling William. Yes you didn't use the word lying, but as Shakespeare once wrote, "stinkweed by any other name would smell as noxious." Cheers mate.Griswaldo (talk) 12:46, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Allegations of Pro-Osho POV
- In reply to Will, an experienced editor such as User:Cirt that repeatedly violates policy and has a lot of supporters of his edits needs a lot of investigative detail to file a report. Jayen is to be thanked for having the courage and care for the Wikipedia projects neutrality to bring User:Cirt's editng issues to the community and for laying them all out in one location for reference now and in the future should User:Cirt repeat any of the problematic behavior. Off2riorob (talk) 19:33, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It looks like he's been working this for four years. And he's got his fellow OSHO disciple to support him and watch his back. Is it incorrect that the two of you have both been followers of a small Indian religious movement, one which Cirt has written about? Will Bebacktalk22:12, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As for Jayen, would you say that your relationship with Cirt was entirely friendly up to 2010-05-28, the date of the edit you've linked to? Is that when you realized he was a bad editor? Or did that happen earlier? Will Bebacktalk23:37, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Will, you haven't signed any of the sections in the RfC. Do you agree with any of the statements or opinions expressed in this RfC? Cla68 (talk) 23:41, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
No - I am an independent person, I have interests in many things. I am here commenting because I have tired of seeing user:Cirt violate policy. Policy violations on multiple levels - uploading videos - signing them off on his OTRS account and adding them to BLP articles - these two violations for an experienced admin are prime examples of User:Cirt's editing problems that I am here to comment on - have a good look at the real issue here - Off2riorob (talk) 23:54, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
My relationship with Cirt has been up and down over the years; at times collegial, at other times oppositional. He has done some superb work, which I have very much admired. The same goes for you, by the way. But both of you have similar problems – getting overinvolved, and overeager to portray ideological opponents in a bad light, without any sense of when to stop. This article version is a disgrace. 90% of a politician's bio about alleged Scientology links! Cirt's versions of the Jose Peralta, Joel Anderson, Hiram Monserrate and Kenneth Dickson articles were a disgrace, and a discredit to this project. As was Corbin Fisher. They were so over the top it was a joke. Dropping a self-published YouTube videos recounting hearsay of sexual abuse allegations in an article is a disgrace. Harassing people like THF, Njsustain and PelleSmith in defence of such work is a disgrace. I could go on. I thought Cirt had turned a corner about half a year ago, when he made some edits to the Xenu article, and wrote an article, Church of Scientology editing of Wikipedia, with whose neutrality I was genuinely impressed. That was evenhanded work. I thought the old Cirt had gone for good, and I was glad and pleased for him that he seemed to have gotten whatever it was out of his system. But the santorum article sent a clear message that his persecutory instincts were alive and well, and that we were back to square one. --JN46600:16, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
On 4 November 2009, Cirt embedded a non-notable, self-published YouTube video making allegations about third parties in the article, in violation of WP:BLPSPS. (Removed by User:Off2riorob on 10 April 2010 after RS/N thread.)
On 23 March 2010, Cirt embedded a non-notable, self-published YouTube video making allegations about third parties in the article, in violation of WP:BLPSPS. (Removed by User:Off2riorob on 31 March 2011, after BLPN thread.)
Thanks but please let's talk about the history of your interactions with Cirt. Back in 2009, you wrote of an article Cirt had written, 1985 Rajneeshee assassination plot: "this article could have been written by the kind of person that at the time was gettin his gun to go shoot some rajneeshees..." [54] Is it incorrect to conclude that your negative view of Cirt is connected to his editing of Rajneesh/Osho-related articles, and dates back to 2009 or 2008? Will Bebacktalk00:03, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
RFC can cover the behavior of all involved persons. You wrote:
Osho as I know him probably could'nt have cared less about what was written on his entry paper he had his mind on spiritual matters. (Off2riorob (talk) 17:10, 5 December 2008 (UTC))[55]
Those incidents with the videos seem over the top. Isn't that whole area subject to sanctions? Hopefully there's more to it than is immediately visible. Tom HarrisonTalk00:11, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Hi Tom. There is nothing else to see in that situation - the two of those uploads and insertions are as bad policy violations as they look. Uploaded from utube by User:Cirt - Off2riorob (talk) 00:21, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I don't even know myself, never mind somebody else. The question is quite unrelated to the case and the policy violating diffs as laid out on the RFC page. Off2riorob (talk) 00:17, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
oh hello cirt again..are you following me around ? I can do nothing without you appearing as if by magic! I shall take it as a mark of respect that you consider me worthy of tracking (Off2riorob (talk) 20:42, 11 May 2009 (UTC))[56]
It appears that your relationship with Cirt predates the edits you're complaining about here. Is it incorrect to conclude that your negative views of Cirt date back several years? Will Bebacktalk00:25, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's obviously incorrect. Your interest in his editing clearly predates the issues talked about in this RFC, and clearly stem from his editing of Osho-related articles. This is a topic in which both you and Jayen466 have been strongly involved, from a pro-Osho POV. That makes your ongoing criticism of him appear to be due to animus rather than an impartial concern about Wikipedia policy. Will Bebacktalk00:38, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, thank you, I really appreciate you posting the diffs as well when you post my quotes, especially when you post only part of a comment and not the whole. thanksOff2riorob (talk) 01:09, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Getting back to the issue: it appears that you had a negative view of Cirt dating back to your earliest edits here, when you were editing Osho-related articles almost exclusively. Is that incorrect? Will Bebacktalk11:03, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I have already said, I stumbled into wikipedia seeing what was bias in an article and rode in in my charger with the intension of correcting it all. User:Cirt was the main contributor in that area and it didn't go well for me. I was banging around like some newbies do and I didn't understand policy. I moved on and lost interest in that topic and I left it behind a couple of years ago. Since then I had had some positive and some not so positive meetings with User:Cirt - I have at times supported them and at times been in opposition to their edits. I have not got a negative view of User:Cirt. My issues are in the diffs laid out on the RFC page, they are not historic. Off2riorob (talk) 16:08, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Here's another post by Off2riorob which indicates he is has extraordinary knowledge of Osho:
I could resesrch the details for this.. I think he first went to uraguay and was allowed permission to stay with the president saying (as I recall) nice things about Osho.. and he gave some talks there called the transmission of the lamp . I would need to reference these details this is just a rough idea. Then as I recall the American government stepped in to coerce Uruguay to take away his permit to stay and they bowed under the pressure of having there loans recalled and threw him out.. then he was in Greece also granted a tourist visa, after he soon started talking and calling the priests fools he was again thrown out . [Ireland] was also a place that allowed him to stay ,I think he was there with a few friends for four weeks were he stayed in a small bed and breakfast in limerick as I recall where I imagine they appreciated his joke telling and then finally I think he flew to Nepal where he was allowed to stay and talk ..where a property was also looked for until the best option was finally India and a deal was done with the Indians to settle the old tax bill and he was allowed to return to Poona. It wasn't that he pass actually deported from 21 countries .. I think the only country that refused him entry on his arrival was the UK., the rest was just nespaper speculation and national posturing from goverments. [..] (Off2riorob (talk) 11:18, 9 December 2008 (UTC))[57]
Without doing research, Off2riorob knows, off the top of his head, extensive details about Osho's travels in the mid-1980s. Yet despite his extensive personal knowledge of Osho's teachings and travels, Off2riorob coyly refuses to confirm that he had any connection to that leader of a small Indian-based new religious movement, one about which Cirt has written extensively. Instead there are protestations that we must not look behind the curtain at the people making charges against an editor. This smacks of dishonesty. Will Bebacktalk00:52, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, thanks for posting the diff, please check the others and add any missing, thanks. As you can see , my comments here are all pretty vague, I was not personally involved. This was a topic I was interested in when I first edited here - cut my teeth on it you could say - those issues have nothing to do with my comments here. I never think of them, never edit in those areas and care less about them. The policy violations by User:Cirt are laid out on the RFC page for all to see. I hope to never have to remove such a violation as I posted above again from an experienced administrator. If I do - User:Cirt will be at arbitration before his feet touch the ground. Off2riorob (talk) 01:02, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
You just happened to know that Osho stayed in a "small" bed and breakfast in Limerick over 20 years ago? You know he was thrown out of Greece for criticizing priests, just because you had some interest in the topic? That really doesn't ring true. Editors who refuse to admit their conflicts of interest, or avoid areas where they have such conflicts, are one of the problems which give Wikipedia a bad name. Will Bebacktalk01:27, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As I said, I was interested in the topic but not personally enough to consider myself having a conflict of interest in any way. I am interested in many things, and stumbled into the wikipedia , researching as I went along. Any interest I had would be a pin prick compared to User:Cirt's Scientology focus. Off2riorob (talk) 01:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
The boundary of where editors have a conflict of interest seems to be vague in some people's minds. What level of involvement with a spiritual movement is necessary, in your opinion, to create a conflict of interest? Will Bebacktalk22:35, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Will, this is nuts. You're one of the most experienced and respected editors on the project. Uploading/linking the videos was okay or it wasn't, no matter who asks about it. If it was okay, defend it. If it wasn't, say so; or just let it go and take a break. Impugning the guy who asks about it is wrong, and not helpful to anyone. Tom HarrisonTalk00:57, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What do videos have to do with the topic is this thread, which concerns the long-standing animosity between Cirt and two editors with a history of pro-Osho editing? Will Bebacktalk01:08, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Let's not change the topic. You have a history of pro-Osho editing, as does Off2riorob. Both of you have been persistent critics of Cirt for years. You are trying to make it sound like your concerns about Cirt are pure, and you even got your wife to come tell us that you don't have an ax to grind with Cirt. But that's hard to believe considering your history together, which dates back four years. You say you have no connection to the Osho movement anymore, but I also see that you've asked for and obtained permission to use their copyrighted photographs. That gives the impression that you still have a connection. Will Bebacktalk05:30, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As far as I recall, I contacted Osho's estate three or four years ago to ask if they would be prepared to release a photo of him for his biography, as the photos we had were all copyvios and kept getting deleted. They refused, but agreed to release an image of their meditation resort. Do you feel it was improper of me to ask? Asking for an image does not make me beholden to them, and I very much doubt his PR staff would like my edits. --JN46609:36, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Sorry, maybe I went off topic there asking about those videos. I do not know nor have I ever known anyone named Osho, nor have I ever followed anyone named Rajneesh, except one time I followed this guy who, now that I think about it, looked like he might have been named Rajneesh (hope that doesn't make me a racist.) Anyway, I asked this guy if there was a soda machine and he said 'follow me.' I did, and lo! there it was. Maybe his name wasn't Rajneesh, but I can't say for sure that it was not. Hopefully that addresses the main question. Still, uploading and linking those videos seems inappropriate, unless there's more to it, and I still kind of wonder about that. It would be good to hear what that was all about. Tom HarrisonTalk00:28, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As far as I am concerned, the Mace-Kingsley Ranch School video is as clear a BLPSPS violation as any I have seen. --JN46600:34, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Allegations of pro-NRM bias by RFC participants
This kind of interrogation tactic is inappropriate. Its also inappropriate for Will Beback to imply comments on this RfC/U lack legitimacy because he is making associations with organizations or associations which he may not on some level support or like. This can intimidate editors who may publicly or privately have some kind of connections with the organizations Will is identifying. This smacks of bias, and bigotry. While I am not concerned about myself having dealt with this kind of thing before, other editors may not have had my fortunate /unfortunate history. I am reminded that editors are not in any way required to submit to this kind of interrogation about their private lives, while they should consider if replying to Will's questions would appear to endorse this kind of behaviour. Further, Draco Essentials' comment seems no more or less unusual to me than multiple other comments I have read in DR pages. By all means investigate every editor on these pages but if that is done, you can expect editors to refuse to comment in the future. And do not even consider investigating editors selected on basis of some perceived connection to some organization as outlined by Will Bebeack. That is straight up bigotry. I would continue on with our regularly scheduled program and leave behind this advertisement for what Wikipedia is not. (olive (talk) 00:35, 5 July 2011 (UTC))[reply]
Ah, another follower of an Indian-based new religious movement who opposes Cirt. I see your colleague Timidguy has participated in this RfC too. Just by random chance, I'm sure. No ganging up on Cirt by pro-NRM editors. Don't even dare suggest that. Will Bebacktalk00:59, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Let me make something very clear. I know very little of Cirt's history except for what I see here. I read and commented in I think three places. And that's ganging up? My personal concerns are based on multiple, odd, Future Perfect/Cirt tandem comments/closures on DR boards. Once again: As a means to discredit, attempting to connect editors to some organization, and alleging that COI had driven editors to act in an unfair way indicates a fundamental misunderstanding of WP:COI, and is a form of bigotry. As a reminder, this board is a means to review behaviour so forums where bans or blocks can be meted out aren't necessary, and editors can improve. Could we get on with that?(olive (talk) 04:50, 5 July 2011 (UTC))[reply]
So it's OK to accuse Cirt of promoting gay porn, but it's bigotry to say that longtime members of new religious movement might be biased in favor of their spiritual leaders? I think that's a double standard. It's OK to accuse Future Perfect/Cirt of complicity, but comments about co-religionists working together are just an attempt to discredit them? Another double standard. It looks like editors with clear conflicts of interest are trying to get Cirt to leave, or at least to stop editing articles related to new religious movements. Will Bebacktalk06:55, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Hasn't Cirt already stopped editing articles in the NRM area? I don't see where anyone is trying to get him to stop doing so. The problems with his editing, as outlined in the RFC, have to do with promotional articles being written in other areas. As far as I can see no one is concerned with the cause of his activist editing of political entries, but only with the result. I say this because only the cause of this editing is connected to NRMs (Scientology specifically). So Will, I think you're massively confused here about the motives of editors critical of Cirt. I can buy that there is some lingering resentment if what you say is true, but clearly this is not an active campaign to get him to stop editing articles he's not really editing anymore. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 11:43, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I could be mistaken - it's happened once or twice. ;) I recall a comment about avoiding Scientology, or at least reducing editing there. What has Cirt said about stopping editing NRMs in general? Will Bebacktalk12:20, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, Olive. This is one of the reasons why I'm currently drafting an editor conduct RfC on Will Beback, because of a pattern of this type of behavior. If you'd like to participate, please put my user talk page on your watchlist and I'll announce there when it's finalized. Cla68 (talk) 00:47, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Cla68, you've been threatening an RFC against me for at least half a year. It seems like a bullying tactic. Have I violated any policies or guidelines in this thread? When I've confronted you with your accusations before you've refused to specify anything, saying that you'd put it in an RfC or an RFAR (you filed one of those and it was rejected). So please, say exactly which policy or guideline I've violated here. Will Bebacktalk00:56, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Make sure you read the whole thing: pointing out an editor's relevant conflict of interest and its relevance to the discussion at hand is not considered a personal attack...Will Bebacktalk07:07, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Editors here are alleging all kinds of motives for Cirt's editing. So motivation is clearly on the table. We have Jayen466 and Off2riorob, who have a history of pro-Osho editing. There's Littleolive oil and TimidGuy, who mostly edit articles related to Transcendental Mediation and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. There's even an editor here who has a long history of making edits favorable to another new religious movement, Twelve Tribes communities. Is that incorrect? Will Bebacktalk01:20, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Who cut off your research? 01:34, 5 July 2011 (UTC)
As a new editor on the Osho articles I saw what I precieved was a less than neutral reporting of the subject and attempted to correct it - you know how it is when your a wiki newbie without any experience. I have no idea - what is a pro NRM bias? - Ah ok , a new religious movement - crikey, this is getting silly - go read the policy violations on the RFC page, you are overly involved to even see any violations Will. Off2riorob (talk) 01:24, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
These are some pretty serious, game-changing accusations. The alleged pro-NRM editors better address them in full, because we might have a more serious problem on our hands than some puffy pieces on podunk restaurants. The reaction thus far, which has consisted of evasion, ad-hominem attacks against Will, and threats of another RfC/U show that these "pro-NRM" editors who are prosecuting the RfC/U against Cirt regard the RfC/U process as a manner of intimidating religious opponents instead of discussing and resolving disputes. Quigley (talk) 01:30, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Reply to user:Guigley - Such claims are a side show - User:Cirt's policy violations are clearly laid out in the RFC for all to see, hopefully such problems won't occur again, the User:Cirt seems to have taken them on board, so lets hope this will be the end of it. Off2riorob (talk) 01:36, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Reply to Quiqley (is that "Quigley" like New Zealand ("Kiwi") politician Derek Quigley?) - I am very sorry to report that I'm unfortunately not associated with any cult, but to please you and others who insist that I must be, I've requested on User talk:DracoEssentialis[58] that a cult be assigned to me so that I may properly fit into the imaginative "make-believe" world you've created in your head. Please excuse any temporary interruption in your fantasy as I learn the ways and rituals of this cult and learn to conform to the wishes of the group. Viriditas (talk) 02:58, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Symmetric and antisymmetric POV
Reading over the comments about Corbin Fisher, I think that there is some fundamental difference in how some people here react when they have a POV. To me, someone like Dan Savage is a good columnist, so I want us to have very detailed articles about him and his activities so people can read everything they want about him. And someone like Corbin Fisher, whose legal letter-writing campaign I can't really describe using words consistent with the BLP policy - I also want us to have very detailed articles about him, so that the people at the end of those letters can read what he's done, what he hasn't done, and perchance gain useful intel that will serve them in whatever means they wish to make their displeasure known. So to me POV is symmetric: positive POV and negative POV both lead me to exactly the same conclusion: I want as much information as possible to go up in the article. And when I don't know about a topic? Well, then obviously we need more information so I can develop a POV... But there are people here who talk as if writing about a person means that you side with him, and whose views at AfDs make me think that if they like something they want it kept and if they dislike it they want it deleted. It is as if they have an antisymmetric POV. I really wonder if this is true: is fundamental Wikipolitics really split up into bosons and fermions according to some weird application of quantum mechanics? What does that say about consciousness as a phenomenon? Wnt (talk) 19:27, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
If you're saying that the Corbin Fisher article was non-neutral, I'd happily agree with you. :) Perhaps you want to sign up under DGG. --JN46619:37, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, these are forces at work and that will lead to spontaneous symmetry breaking on Wikipedia. But an entire article does not fit in one domain where the symmetry is broken in one or the other way, so you have domain walls inside the articles and editors on both sides want to push the domain walls in opposite directions. Count Iblis (talk) 20:18, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Clearly Wnt is a symmetricism apologist. Just saying. Hume said reason is the slave of the emotions, modern neuroscience doesn't contradict that, so "I like = 'keep' followed by rationalisations." There are people whose frontal lobes can imagine fairness and work against such instincts, but distinguishing them on a Wikipedia talk page is a challenge. I think it's a bit early to apply quantum mechanics principles to consciousness, but that's because I just don't like the idea. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 08:42, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Where to?
I'm here to learn if there is any problem with Cirt's behaviour. There is. It is a shame Cirt denies this, because we'll likely be seeing more of it. His withdrawal from subject areas is based on "I haven't done anything wrong but they don't want me there, so I'll go." This just bolsters the martyr/persecuted hero myth and moves the problem elsewhere. I don't see anywhere for this RfC to go now. Is it time to wrap up? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 05:09, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I can't see it getting anywhere constructive at this stage - quite the opposite given the bickering above. Wrapping it up seems like a very good idea. Prioryman (talk) 05:21, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Actually there is nowhere to get to - RFC users are not a request for anything at all but a discussion about a users problematic contributions. I have not much experience with RFCuser but experienced editors that do will close in good time. Off2riorob (talk) 05:26, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I reverted Jehochman's closure. Jehochman is heavily involved in many of Cirt's attempts to use noticeboards for advantage in content disputes, not to mention protecting Cirt when others complain about him. This is evident in the links provided by commentators at the RFC. Jehochman is much to involved to close this down, and absolutely too involved to add a non-neutral summary chastising those who are criticizing Cirt. For shame. Please let someone neutral close this if necessary.Griswaldo (talk) 15:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree. I generally side with the anti-cult/anti-NRM faction, but I suspect that Cirt's editing behavior in Scientology is not okay. The end result in Wikipedia shows an unhealthy obsession for trivia and overly critical treatment of Scientology for my taste. (I did not look at the evidence of Cirt's edits.) I think that Jehochman's closure does not reflect the MANY complexities of the cult/nrm field. Andries (talk) 15:51, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree Jehochman's partisan closure was inappropriate, but he is right: it is unfair to have two discussions of Cirt's conduct running concurrently. I would have no problem with an uninvolved editor closing this. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 16:06, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
There is still active discussions going on, there is no reason to close at this time. The RFARB ius about a lot of people - the fact that that case is under discussion is no reason to close this RFC at this time. Off2riorob (talk) 16:17, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's a potentially valid argument, though I think the results here are plain enough, and that allowing the feud page to continue operating will not serve Wikipedia's interests. JehochmanTalk16:19, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure what the point of keeping this open is unless editors here are willing to work towards constructive and mutually agreeable solutions. It seems like there's just arguing and accusations of bad faith here. Gamaliel (talk) 16:23, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I agree. This is a good reason for early closure: to prevent further deepening of feuds. A request for arbitration is pending. Those who feel further steps are needed should make a case for arbitration. JehochmanTalk16:26, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think Jehochman is right in desiring a closure. Griswaldo is also right in asking for someone more neutral to do it. So let it be so and end the argument. Eh? -- Avanu (talk) 16:29, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
No objection to this being closed. Big objection to the closing summary that tars everyone who commented here as a malicious sockpuppet and/or responsible for socking at NARM articles. --JN46616:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And you endorsed Jehochman's nasty comments, like "... this RFC is just an extension of a long running dirty tricks campaign. Good advice for those promoting this RFC would be to put your own house in order." I felt that Cirt was doing the tricking. /Pieter Kuiper (talk) 17:04, 5 July 2011 (UTC) Was clarified. /Pieter Kuiper (talk) 17:50, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Closure is fine. I reject any suggestion that those of us with blp concerns are cult members out to destroy Cirt. Still, Cirt has to a degree acknowledged peoples' concerns, and he'll probably be more aware of blp in the future. Tom HarrisonTalk17:07, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
(ec) Unfortunately, his summary has been the subject of much discussion, and editors are strongly discouraged from editing or blanking comments that don't belong to them. It would be best if Jehochman would voluntarily strikethrough his statement, but since it has already been discussed and may well be relevant during the arbcom case, I'm not going to outright remove it. The WordsmithTalk to me17:33, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
No big deal. Things often come out with an emphasis that wasn't intended, or are too broadly read, especially when everyone is annoyed. Tom HarrisonTalk17:50, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Agree with Rob. I withdraw my objections. Let Jehochman's grossly partisan closure stand as a perfect illustration of the problem here. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 17:35, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
To be clear, my summary is presented as a concise summary of the relevant background facts and most prevalent statements at the RFC. These are not my personal opinions, which are actually somewhat different, and at the moment, irrelevant. Tom Harrison's remark is especially relevant, "Things often come out with an emphasis that wasn't intended, or are too broadly read, especially when everyone is annoyed." I have miniaturized the parts of the closure that are dictum and left full size that which is binding, per The Wordsmith: this RFC is closed, and Cirt should continue to strive to be a better editor and to closely follow BLP, as should we all. I don't appreciate the "Jehochman is obviously biased ZOMG!!!" style comments. If you want to make a case for bias or involvement, do it with diffs. Don't just assert negative things about another editor. JehochmanTalk18:05, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Ha, ha, ha. Wicked funny. You have to show diffs of my prior involvement in editorial disputes related to these topics. You'll have a hard time doing that because New Age religions and cults don't interest me at all. I don't edit these topics, except perhaps once in a great while to neutralize a BLP problem. JehochmanTalk18:13, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
If you think that attacking anyone who does not approve of Cirt's conduct or that "this RFC is just an extension of a long running dirty tricks campaign", then that in and of itself speaks to your inability to fairly consider the merits of the RFC. --B (talk) 19:07, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Yes. The diffs required to establish any bias towards Cirt will be on noticeboards and pages like this. I've reread your comment on JN's page and it just seems like dissembling. You may think it's all true, but if your behaviour on this page is anything to go by, you need to rethink. You just assumed we were all new age Cirt-haters and made no effort to actually hear our arguments. They don't appear in your "summary". Most of the admin interaction I've seen around Cirt has been of the same lazy rubber stamp quality. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 19:14, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Question: would there be any procedural objection to being able to re-open this RfC/U in the event that ArbCom does not accept the case, or if they accept a case with a scope that is different than the issues that were being examined here? --Tryptofish (talk) 20:16, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
So are you saying that if you don't like the result, you are just going to keep campaigning anyway? That's doesn't seem like a wise statement for you to be making right before an arbitration case opens. A better statement would be, "I will use dispute resolution, and then accept the results, even if I don't like them." If you look at this RFC, you will see large numbers of editors who feel that this RFC was overstating the complaints. You need to recognize which way the wind is blowing. JehochmanTalk20:28, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
From your indent, it sounds like you are saying that to me, rather than to editors higher up in this discussion thread. If so, you have not familiarized yourself with what I have (and haven't yet) said in this RfC/U (no comments in the RfC itself, and the only previous talk comments in #A suggestion to Cirt and #WP:BOMB, above), and your comment is inappropriate. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:13, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm going to make note of this: [59], and conclude that Jehochman made the comment to me, above, unencumbered by knowledge of the facts. And then I'm going to shrug, and move on. --Tryptofish (talk) 22:09, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jehochman, your neutrality is more than in question on the issue of Cirt. In five minutes of searching, I found Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Enforcement/Archive78#Cirt where you "closed" a sanction request regarding Cirt over repeated objections as to your involvement and then of course there's his RFA where you hounded several good faith users who opposed it. It's not just the impropriety - it's the appearance of impropriety. When it's obvious that a decent number of people don't accept you as a neutral arbiter, you should bow out and let someone who is unquestionably neutral deal with it. I recognize that there are some prolific users that everyone has dealt with at one time or another, but surely there exists at least one admin who has not taken action regarding Cirt. --B (talk) 20:33, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Who is edit warring? You are in fact edit warring over the closure, unfortunately. Please see what Ncmvocalist told Jehochman about proper procedure here. RfCs are not usually closed until the Arbitration is actually accepted, so as to not disrupt it unnecessarily.Griswaldo (talk) 23:02, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Any further concerns can in the Request for arbitration where Jenchoman's involvement (or lack there of) can be evaluated better in the evidence section. Jehochman is an editor I have a long standing respect for though I disagree with his evaluation of the RFC/U griping about here serve no purpose in advancing this RFC/U. The Resident Anthropologist(talk)•(contribs) 21:05, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Reopened
RfC's normally run for 30 days. Jehochman, to his credit, openly declared that one reason he closed the RfC was because he disapproved of it. I've warned him on his talk page and moved his comments down as a "view" in the RfC. I've also asked for administrator intervention at AN [60] to ensure the RfC is allowed to run its course. Cla68 (talk) 23:09, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What's the point of having the RfC running alongside the arbcom case? If you want to keep it open for now, that's fine (though I would argue pointless), but if arbcom accepts then we should close this and consolidate all associated bickering over there. Throwaway85 (talk) 23:30, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
There is no arbcom case yet. If arbcom doesn't accept then what? The proper thing to do is to wait until such time they accept before closing. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 23:33, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think I understand what Ncmvocalist means. It should stay open until there is a case; if there isn't one, then it will run the standard 30 days. --JN46623:34, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
That's what I was arguing, as well. Even so, I don't see much happening with the RfC even if it stays open and arbcom rejects it. Throwaway85 (talk) 01:59, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
What a productive RfC this is. May I suggest we lay off the attacks and either focus on the issue at hand (which Cirt seems to have dealt with), or call it a day? Throwaway85 (talk) 05:38, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm done with him.
This RfC has been productive, but over the last couple of days it degenerated into a shit-fight. Hopefully, the RfAR has acted as a circuit-break to that. The way I see it is: some clear instances of problematic behaviour on Cirt's behalf have come to light. Cirt's response is, I didn't do anything wrong here, but I'll move out of the area of political BLP.
Accusations of hounding have been leveled at those who bring evidence of his misbehaviour. If the accusations of hounding have merit, they need to be addressed, but not here. This is RfCU/Cirt.
The question for us is, is Cirt's response a suitable end to this process? I believe it is not, because if he doesn't recognise his problem behaviours, he'll carry them with him into whatever area he moves into, as he took them from Scientology into Santorum. I'd have liked to have seen this RfCU provide him with the necessary insight but, as Stephan's table below points out, this is split down partisan lines, and the more I familiarise myself with this case, the more I see the same editors turning up, year after year to criticise and defend Cirt. This partisanship runs right through the admin corps, too, so the only place I can see, that might offer Cirt good counsel is the arbitration committee. As Hobit says at the RfAR, it shouldn't take long and may put an end to this saga. I'm pretty sure most of Cirt's critics just want him to acknowledge that he's made some very serious errors. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 06:13, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Actual closing rules
Please note that there is no magic 30-day timer for RFC/Us. The 30-day bot only works for content RFCs. RFC/Us are always closed manually, and we like to think that we're smarter than a calendar-driven bot. The actual rule is that RFC/Us are closed under three circumstances:
when nothing's happening ("due to inactivity")
when something else is happening ("due to other dispute resolution")
when everyone agrees that they're done ("by agreement")
There are good grounds to have closed it because Arbitration is clearly going to be accepted and everybody is already duplicating statements here and there. Moreover, this RFC had descended into acrimony, with both sides digging in deeper, and uninvolved parties being repelled by all the mud slinging. On the whole it was not benefiting Wikipedia to continue, quiet the opposite. We are not bound by any rule except to do what is best for Wikipedia. JehochmanTalk21:32, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
@Jehochman - As for your claim of acrimony - Will was asking some questions he felt were relevant and he felt needed discussing, personally I thought we were getting somewhere, your unnecessary and objected to close stopped that discussion/progress and possible resolution dead in its tracks. There was/is no current reason to close this RFC User:Cirt at all while discussion is ongoing, the RFCArbitration is not currently focused on User:Cirt but much more broad in focus. I object to the early closure of this RFC. I would suggest you leave this RFC user open for the normal amount of time - around thirty days. As the time progresses more uninvolved users may read and comment. Off2riorob (talk) 21:44, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As just stated on the main page, I've started a table of all views and all endorsers. I went through the first 12 statements - now I go to bed. Given that this is a Wiki, feel free to complete the table. The raw form, suitable for extension, is below. The table is based on this version of the RfC. If someone wants to extend this, I strongly recommend using a fixed font... --Stephan Schulz (talk) 00:31, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
1- 2- 3- 4- 5+ 6+ 7= 8= 9+ A- B+ C+
Jayen466 X X X X X X
Cla68 X X X
The Resident Anthropologist X X X X X
Collect X X
Griswaldo X X X X X
SlimVirgin X
Nolelover X X
Viriditas X
DGG X X
Rocksanddirt X X X
Off2riorb X X X
THF X
Anthonyhcole X X
Kanguole X X
Wnt X X X
LadyOfShalott X
Quigley X X X X
Macwhiz X X X X X
Ohms law X X X X
Gamaliel X X X X
JamesMLane X X X
Hobit X X X X X
Piotrus X X X
Orderinchaos X X X X
Jmh649 X
Sadads X X X X
Brewcrewer X X X X
Cardamon X X
Jusdafax X X X
Atmoz X X X
AKMask X X X
MartinPoulter X X X
William M. Connolley X X
Protonk X X X
OlEnglish X
R. Baley X X
Count Iblis X X X
Khazar X
Cirt X
Qrsdogg X
LuftWaffle0 X
Georgewilliamherbert X
Tarc X
Richwales X
Prioryman X X
JoshuaZ X X
Raoul654 X
Throwaway85 X
Ginsengbomb X
Bearian X
OhanaUnited X
Elektrik Shoos X
Yes, I am afraid the policy violations and patterns have existed for quite some time. Part of the responsibility lies with users that have supported the User:Cirt in his on wiki activism, without their support this would have been far less of a problem. Like in this case User:Cirt's awful content was supported by another editor with a strong focus on Scientology User:Coffeepusher. Together they got the new user who making totally correct edits blocked. Off2riorob (talk) 23:39, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
We've all made edits in the past that we might not defend today. The ArbCom usually does not pay attention to issues over a year old, especially if editors have changed their behavior. Will Bebacktalk23:45, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
User:Cirt was a massively experienced editor when he turned that BLP into an awful indefensible anti Scientology coatrack - there have been issues since then also. - What does User:Cirt have to say about his creating such content -... he is going to edit in other areas... as I said, when the editor is the issue wherever they go , they remain - I would like to see User:Cirt actually accept his serious violations of core policy, that would be a good start. As User:Cirt's contributions to these search results for Sharon Angle at wikinews show, the User:Cirt is actively following the same editing patterns using multiple wiki projects. Off2riorob (talk) 23:55, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Which editor was blocked? Is it always wrong for two editors to revert a third editor? I've seen instances where Jayen and Cla68 have worked together to do reverts, for example. I think this a spurious complaint based on an assumption of bad faith. Will Bebacktalk02:52, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Come now Will, you know just as well as I that WP:COATRACK might as well be policy for all the times it is quite validly cited in NPOV discussions.
As far as Sharron Angle goes, I was involved with that; I was actually the person who cleaned up that article. I must say, that to Cirt's credit, after I brought up the problems and made one follow up, he was quite willing to change his approach to that article at least. That much at least should be mentioned in the evidence summary. Otherwise, it lends credence to the belief that this RFC/U is being treated as a battleground, adversarial position and not as a proper instrument of dispute resolution. NW(Talk)03:06, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I've added a note, NW. If you can think of a better way of phrasing it, please feel free to edit and amend it, as you were involved at the time.
I will say though that this is part of a pattern I seem to recall observing: if it is an IP or a single editor who raises a problem like this, Cirt is very combative, templating the other party with vandalism warnings, stating on their talk page that they deleted sourced material, etc., always phrased in such a way as to increase the likelihood of sanctions if the matter goes to a board and an admin comes by and gives the page a superficial look-over. (Aha! 3 templates! Clearly a vandal. Blocked.) However, if an established editor like you joins in, Cirt immediately drops it, and becomes mellow and cooperative. <shrug> --JN46603:36, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Fair enough. Not sure I entirely agree, but I haven't looked into this matter enough to stake out a firm position (kind of per [61], to be honest). NW(Talk)03:45, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jayen, specific criticisms like this, stated calmly are useful. Are you saying that Cirt needs to extend the same good faith to new users as estalished users? I find that AGF often works well even when it isn't deserved. Our hope is for Cirt to receive good advice, and follow it. RFC is not merely a formality on the path to sanctining an editor. JehochmanTalk03:47, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Extending good faith to new users would help, yes. I am sorry, but I often have the impression he considers them an annoying interruption, and seeks to get them out of the way as efficiently as possible; especially if their POV seems not to be the same as his. :( --JN46603:54, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Biting newbies is one indicator of an activist editor. I think I highlighted that fact in the essay I helped write on the topic. I'm not sure if what I wrote on it is still in the essay, because the essay later underwent an extensive rewrite by other editors. Cla68 (talk) 04:41, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I note the editor effectively gave up editing after that experience. [62] User notified of this conversation. [63] This user has a clean block log. [64] Were you mistaken, or referring to someone else, Rob? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 09:08, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
To take another current example, compare Cirt's language here and here to the language used by Sensei here. I would say that Sensei's approach is more in line with AGF, more conducive to a peaceful resolution of the content disagreement, and less likely to leave behind lingering resentment. Also note User_talk:Sensei48#July_2011. --JN46615:36, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Contents
Wikipedia talk:Requests for comment/Cirt: Difference between revisions
Revision as of 15:44, 7 July 2011
Alleged cavassing
I do not consider this to be canvassing, and in any case, it's had no immediate effect, as I responded to put off the work. Bearian (talk) 17:29, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Re: Outside view by Gamaliel
I agree that it looks like some of the charges are just throwing everything at him to see if something sticks. But there are also some legitimate charges in there as well. This RFC seems to be treating Cirt like OJ Simpson--like the police then, we're trying to frame someone who's guilty anyway. It's bad for the police to use bogus evidence, but ultimately, OJ did do the deed he was accused of. Ken Arromdee (talk) 19:36, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Timing of santorum edits
So, based on the timeline, there is a perfectly credible alternative to the "pure political motivation" theory for Cirt's edits. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 20:55, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
FYI, here's an article about an earlier plug for the neologism on the Colbert Report from February 2011.[9] and here's one from a week earlier with a Google screen shot showing the Wikipedia article was already the #2 hit for "santorum".[10] Will Beback talk 23:28, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Quotation of Anonymous forum postings
The link given as evidence for the Anonymous forum: [11]
Personally, I think that it speaks well of Cirt's contributions to that area if both the pro- and anti- forces are concerned that he's pushing the other side's POV. If you're pissing off both sides, you must be doing something right. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 21:04, 27 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Promise made by Cirt to Lar, Scott MacDonald"
The RfC/U has a section, WP:Requests for comment/Cirt#Promise made by Cirt to Lar, Scott MacDonald, which claims "Cirt... does the opposite of what he said he would do", claiming Lar and Scott MacDonald felt Cirt had not kept his promise as a justification for the claim. I find this to be an incomplete version of events.
Reading the linked discussion [13], I see that Lar did raise concerns, but appeared to accept Cirt's clarification that he had reduced, rather than eliminated, edits on Scientology-related topics. His undertaking, quoted by Scott Mac, used the terms "shift my focus away from" and "avoid", which aren't absolutes. Lar and Sadads defended Cirt against Scott in the thread. It was pointed out that the articles in question were edited primarily due to Cirt's concentration on freedom of speech–related articles at the time, and were tangentially related to Scientology. Further, the whole incident was the result of a posting at Wikipedia Review, not on-wiki criticism. I don't see Cirt "doing the opposite of what he said he would do"; I see people not reading carefully and presuming that Cirt said something he did not.
What I found interesting was reading this after reading Scott Mac's position on Delicious carbuncle's first ARBSCI enforcement request against Cirt. Scott Mac wanted sanctions against Cirt, while other admins found Carbuncle's request faulty and not actionable. While both editors were warned, the sense I get of the comments is that several editors found Carbuncle "seem[ed] as if he instigated this conflict" and "clearly the dubious party here". (In fact, the comments were more pointed when Carbuncle filed a second request within an hour of the first request being closed.) See Future Perfect at Sunrise's comments here: [14] "Apparently, D.c. has been on a long campaign against Cirt, having posted about him extensively both on Wikipedia and on Wikipediareview for several months." In fact, digging further, I found that Cirt had previously sought, and obtained, an indefinite topic ban against Carbuncle from ARBSCI. [15] It worries me that there seems to be a certain list of names that keep appearing when criticism of Cirt is to be found, and that every time I look into the disputes, I seem to find Cirt acting with reason, consideration, good faith, and an intent to find a solution... and the disputants, not so much. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 03:26, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Troubled
I see that Cla68 (talk · contribs) has started a section which is entitled "Cirt's enablers", which I find troubling because it looks like the start of a type of "hit list". I'm not sure that this is constructive... although, I suppose that one faction enumerating those who they view to be the members of their opposition may be helpful, if there's really some confusion about that or something. I guess that I'm just wondering what the point of this is? Is the intent here to attack other editors because they are friendly towards Cirt?
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 04:04, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 06:09, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Elections
Is anyone unclear about the election-related evidence? Hiram Monserrate and Jeff Stone were disliked by Anonymous [16][17]. As a result, their opponents Kenneth Dickson, Joel Anderson and Jose Peralta had political advertisements written for them, and featured on the Wikipedia (and Wikiquote) main page in the run-up to the elections. Are you all right with the ethics of this? Do you feel that being able to place such content on project main pages is a reasonable perk due to a prolific Wikimedia contributor? --JN466 12:52, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Predictions
1) People who supported the continued existence of the santorum article, friends of Cirt and various uninvolved parties will support Cirt.
2) People who opposed the santorum article, those who hold a grudge against Cirt and those who have prior disagreements with him will support JN466.
3) Cirt will get a kicking from JN466's supporters.
4) JN466 will get a kicking from Cirt's supporters.
5) There will be a lot of futile bickering.
6) Nothing productive will come of this RfC/U.
7) After this RfC/U has failed, JN466 will continue pursuing Cirt until the community finally gets fed up and imposes an interaction ban on both of them. Prioryman (talk) 19:14, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:25, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 01:05, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 23:09, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:26, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
their removal from the projectdragging them in front of every tribunal Wikipedia has to offer, especially when one has a history of withdrawing from confrontation to the point where it's fair to wonder if they'll be driven to leave altogether. I don't hate either of them, nor am I devoted to either of 'em. I'm here because I'm a pretty good writer and researcher, and I want part of my legacy to this planet to be a net increase in humanity's knowledge. Wikipedia's a good way to do that. Helping other editors past their blind spots works toward that goal. I don't think this RfC/U does that. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 01:21, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]Wikihounders vs Whistleblowers
One of the accusations against Cirt in this RfC/U is that he did not come to an article "organically". While this is framed as an issue of "honesty" and "deceit" for Cirt, the same burden to come upon articles "organically" is not held to Cirt's accusers. The view by Pieter Kuiper is a prime example. He complains that he did one action, "fixed a deletion request on Commons of some of those anti-Scientology video files of his", which "got me on his/her list of ideological adversaries" and got him banned. However, the AE request he points to shows a more complex and common pattern of Cirt's enemies. Like Cla68, who was incited by Cirt's edits on "List of Scientologists", certain people cannot resist following the edit histories of those with whom they've had a minor dispute, and habitually reversing their actions the follower thinks is unjustified.
As evidenced by Cirt's AE thread, Pieter Kuiper did this by following Cirt out of commons into en.wiki, finding fault in Cirt's created article about Aaron Saxton, and then again in the "List of Scientologists" article, and then declining one of Cirt's DYKs with an unusually combative reason. It was Pieter Kuiper's edit-warring against Cirt to keep these changes in an area with active Arbcom remedies, among other things, that got him banned; not Wikilawyer magic. It is clear that Pieter Kuiper already decided himself an "ideological adversary" to Cirt before Cirt even filed the complaint.
But Jayen466 does not see it this way, endorsing Kuipel's summary with the lament that this AE action "never got overturned". It is fair to assume that Cla68 has a similarly sympathetic view, considering Cla68's section "whistleblower protection", formerly "Cirt's enablers", recasts those who point out behavior like Pieter Kuipel's as bullies or intimidators. However, it would go a long way towards resolving the dispute if the battleground mentality were dropped, and the Wikihounding policy reexamined. The connotations of "whistleblower" and "shooting the messenger", both used by opponents of Cirt in this conflict, suggest that Cirt is some pervasive juggernaut that must be stopped, and that following and disputing his every last edit to the death is justified, if not a duty for all good Wikipedians. However, if Cirt were to be treated as a fallable human being, who can feel annoyance and distress at the caravan of microscopic scrutiny surrounding him, encouraged by certain off-wiki sites; if his concessions in topic areas were to be taken as the basis of a solution instead of a signal to go for the kill, then a key component of what should be an acceptable solution to both parties will have appeared before our very eyes.
Taking from DGG's proposed remedy, in any desired outcome, those who feel themselves Cirt's "ideological adversaries" should relieve themselves of Cirtwatch duty. Already, this RfC/U has attracted the attention of previously uninvolved members who would take up the mantle. This way, the perception among those sympathetic to Cirt that he is being "Wikihounded" will cease, and the perception among Cirt's accusers that they are the victims of "bullying" for these accusations will cease. It is natural for those accused of both Wikihounding and bullying to take an absolutist stance, and to argue that objectively, one of these exists, and the other is a fabrication. But perceptions are powerful, and regardless of the relative merits of each accusation, this proposed component of a solution will eradicate the potential for an explosion of bad feelings on both sides, wherever Cirt's editing is organically brought up. Thoughts? Quigley (talk) 19:47, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Honestly, I don't get it
I'm looking at the evidence presented here, and... I mean, I'm really trying hard to see and understand the criticism, but... I can see some minor issues, I guess, but from what I can see they're easily mitigated by the fact that, while it may not actually be "hounding", there's certainly a bit of a "battlefield mentality" that both factions have fostered. I don't consider myself part of the "clique" (which is what Tarc apparently sees), but if some of you want to include me in it just because I'm more on Cirt's 'side' here then on JN's then I'm fine with that. Y'all seem like fairly reasonable people (I've talked to JN466 on the VP about that essay, for example. He listened to what I had to say, which tells me that he's hardly unreasonable), and everyone involved here seem to be veterans. This seems like a series of content dispute skirmishes that have been steadily building up to something like this occurring.
I guess that I'm wondering... is this really about Cirt specifically, or is it a wider issue (I mean, Cirt is obviously at the center of this, but...)? Are there actually a couple of multi-party factions here? Maybe RFC/U, with it's inherent set of "rules" and standards, isn't the best venue for this?
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 23:22, 28 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:22, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 01:08, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 01:19, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Comment Huh? Do you all know how First they came… goes, and what that would translate to in the present situation? It would mean that when someone criticized Cirt's editing everyone would have just stood by while Cirt was crucified. That is exactly the opposite of what has been happening. When someone criticizes Cirt's edits it usually amounts to nothing as a best case scenario, and retaliation against the critic as a worst case scenario. Yet somehow you want people to believe that Cirt is a helpless victim here who is being bullied while the world stands by watching but refuses to help? A majority of people engaging this RFC have written and endorsed comments that state rather emphatically that Cirt's critics are full of shit, but somehow that means that Cirt is going to be railroaded? What planet do you live on? I'm sorry, but this is really starting to piss me off. Disagree with our comments all you want, but don't start playing the victim card in this way because it's totally offensive to every single person on this planet who actually has been a victim in their lives. Is your aim to increase the levels of drama and resentment against those who in good faith have come here to express their concerns? If you want to help us navigate this issue then point out the flaws in the arguments and endorse summaries that show how those critical of Cirt are wrong. And btw who wants Cirt gone? Who has proposed anything even remotely close to removing Cirt from the project? And who are Cirt's old "enemies"? The rhetoric being masticated and passed around above is completely counterproductive. Cheers.Griswaldo (talk) 02:24, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 02:58, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 03:31, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 03:35, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 03:57, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 21:23, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"Is your aim to increase the levels of drama and resentment against those who in good faith have come here to express their concerns?"
Well, first off, let's clear one thing up: I am not calling anyone a Nazi. First they came... was first written about the Nazis, yes, but it is a parable. As our own article says, Niemöller's "statement, sometimes presented as a poem, is well-known, frequently quoted, and is a popular model for describing the dangers of political apathy, as it often begins with specific and targeted fear and hatred which soon escalates out of control."
I came here in good faith and presented my concern that this RfC/U, presented in the fashion in which it was given, looks like a witch hunt. The RfC/U suggests that Cirt deserves some sort of sanction because of a long-term pattern of disparate activity, most of which is not against the rules in and of itself. As I read it—and I see that I am not alone in this—it asks that we declare Cirt did wrong for doing things that most of us do at least occasionally, if not frequently: Writing articles on the basis of a suggestion; avoiding the drama that comes with negative statements in BLPs; seeking permission to use a photo; creating templates; editing articles in line with one's own interests; expanding an article after a massive increase in WP:N and WP:RS; using the term several to refer to two; asking others for help... Yet the RfC/U doesn't really distinguish what exactly makes doing those things bad.
And some of the claims in this RfC/U seem to be decidedly lacking in good faith: The selective quotation of the Anonymous forums, the omission of Jon Stewart's story in the timeline of the santorum edits, faulting Cirt for marshaling attention to WP:BOMB when it was clearly an attack polemic, the misrepresentation of undertakings to "shift focus away from" and "avoid" a topic as a promise to never touch the topic again... That is poisoning the well.
When I see that occur, and I see editors that I otherwise respect and believe to be of sound judgement endorse such views, yes, I become concerned. "If you are new to these issues how likely is it that you really understand the deeper social dynamics you keep on claiming here?" Well, that's sort of the point, isn't it? So far, this RfC/U isn't doing a very good job of explaining it. If Cirt's pattern of behavior is so bad to merit this much discussion—Jayen's been beating this drum for three years now, right?—then surely it can be explained to a newcomer clearly and succinctly.
But instead, I see an editor being faulted for doing things I have done and believed to be the right way to edit Wikipedia. I see some questionable tactics being used to discredit this editor. So yes, I find myself wondering, if I do not speak up now, and "the consensus of the community" is set that these things are wrong, will I then be at risk of sanction too?
So it looks to me like, to avoid creating drama, Cirt has backed away from editing Scientology, New Religious movement articles, DYK, interaction with Jayen, certain FAs, and political BLPs. Cirt posts to WikiProject talk pages before creating any new articles. These are pretty substantial chunks of repertoire to excise. As Quigley said, Cirt continually voluntarily withdraws into smaller and smaller areas in response to the rather substantial criticism. If I were in Cirt's shoes, I'd be thinking about giving up entirely, and I don't think that's right, just, or in the best interests of the project.
We have a statement that "Cirt has displayed a long-term pattern of... dishonesty and deceit", and the allegations of broken promises to withdraw seem to be the evidence for that statement—yet it asks for Cirt to make promises about future behavior. Wait, what? Accuse a man of lying about promises to do better, and then demand that he make some more of them to atone? So I think it beggars belief to suggest that this RfC/U asks only for admonishment. We know Cirt reacts to this sort of criticism by withdrawing from the field. The predictable outcome of this RfC/U is to cause further withdrawal. That's indeed railroading—"to procedurally bully someone into an unfair agreement".
Yet for the cries of rhetorical tripe, drama and resentment, mastication, butchery of logic, hyperbole, disgust, straw man generalizations, factionalism, and poisoning the well, if "simply agreeing at various times during different disputes that Cirt might be at fault to greater or lesser degrees" does create a faction, well, I'd have to count myself part of that faction. But I would not sign off on a statement about Cirt that kicks off the discussion with misrepresentations, and I would not dismiss the concerns of anyone who couldn't see my own point for all the hyperbole.
As much as this RfC/U purports to be a comment on Cirt, it's not written as one. It's written as the latest of many grudges against Cirt, and one that has a chilling effect on the behavior of a multitude of other editors. Give me a neutral, clear, well-sourced enumeration of Cirt's actual editing problems and I'll most likely endorse it. This RfC/U is not that document. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:09, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
whatever the factions
Whatever the factions users should attempt to step back from their personal positions and attempt to look at the editing patters of the user and to assist them by objectively commenting on the issues as laid out in the case. Clearly there are multiple problems with Cirts contributions. Simply supporting the user on the grounds of factionalism or whatever will not help address the clear issues that are laid out on the RFC page. If this RFC does not address the editing patterns they will only be repeated and the next location the user Cirt will find themselves at will be Arbitration, and they do look at the issues and edit patterns objectively. Failing to deal objectively and beneficially with one level of the dispute process just beckons the next level. Off2riorob (talk) 21:55, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 23:42, 29 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:15, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Is there any common principle on which we could all agree?
In the interests of moving beyond factionalism, I was wondering, can we all agree to dismiss any of these charges as just plain wrong?
For a first issue which I think hasn't been argued yet, I would like to dismiss all consideration of charges that Cirt "got someone blocked/banned" - once in the initial complaint, once in Pieter Kuiper's response. My feeling is that if you suggest someone should be blocked on a noticeboard, without making clearly false statements, and an admin makes the decision to apply a block based on that, then the responsibility for the block is on the admin, not the person making the report. I am not saying those blocks are necessarily fair; just that they aren't Cirt's responsibility. I am also not saying that recommending someone to be blocked is blameless if you do it and the admin decides the block is unjustified, especially if this happens frequently or appears to be forum shopping. But to me it looks really bad to have people saying "he got me blocked" as part of the case against someone. Wnt (talk) 00:09, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 00:19, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 06:33, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 04:56, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
— V = IR (Talk • Contribs) 04:56, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
A suggestion to Cirt
It is becoming obvious that editors commenting here are, to some extent, having difficulty coming to a consensus, and instead becoming polarized into something like opposing camps. Part of the reason for this is that the editors making the complaints have raised a large number of specific concerns, and it is difficult for those of us who have previously been uninvolved to sort through all of them, especially when there are some issues that seem to be quite serious and credible, and others that seem to be insubstantial.
Cirt, in your response you say: "While I don’t believe I’ve substantively breached these requirements, I concede that on occasion my actions have left me open to accusations of having done so." I would infer from that, that you consider most of the specific accusations against you to be factually in error, while acknowledging that there are also some areas in which you are quite willing to try to do better. However, you have not given any specifics (although other editors, of course, have done so). Would you be willing to refute, specifically, any of the accusations against you? As uninvolved editors try to work through the nearly-tl;dr accusations, it would be very helpful if you could indicate those accusations that you consider to be significantly inaccurate, as well as any that you are willing to acknowledge as valid (if any). You don't have to do that, of course, but if you do, you will increase the likelihood of an outcome that you could accept as valid. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:28, 30 June 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Regarding the Partridge citation
One of the issues raised with Cirt's editing was the addition of a quote from The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English: [24] In the past, I have been critical of this edit myself. However, given that other quotations given as evidence of Cirt's bad faith have turned out to be less than complete, I wanted to see the whole context of Partridge for myself, not just the extended quotation provided here and at the santorum talk page. Luckily, it turns out to be available in Google Books' preview: [25]
Jayen did quote the entirety of the relevant paragraph from Partridge. However, I fear that without the context of the entire preface to the work, the paragraph may be misconstrued when deciding how Partridge feels about santorum.
Yes, Cirt's edit is far too easily read as implying that Partridge listed santorum. However, it seems to me that it's very much a judgement call, and one's interpretation of this issue seems to be a good barometer of how much good faith one feels willing to extend to Cirt. What Cirt wrote is literally true: Partridge did, in fact, cite santorum as an example of deliberate coining—in fact, as the sole such example, which one could argue is a degree of notoriety itself. It's not possible to argue the literal truth of the statement; instead, there's disagreement over what it implies by omission, and whether that omission was deliberate.
I think it's equally possible to conclude that Cirt carefully crafted this statement as a deliberate attempt to hide Partridge's decision to omit the word from its gloss in an attempt to confer more legitimacy on it, as it is to conclude that Cirt found a mention of the word in a respected work and created a paraphrase of that work that avoided giving it undue weight, without considering that others might misconstrue it. It's almost a Rorschach test.
(I note that Partridge never said santorum was not a legitimate word; only that they had made the editorial decision not to include intentionally-coined words. The Preface notes that they included "poorly attested words" and offensive words. It also mentions hoaxes, but gives a different example; it does not consider santorum a hoax.)
Looking into this clarified in my mind one of the problems with Cirt's editing: Cirt writes very precisely and with great economy. Cirt uses language with particular meanings, and expects people to read with equal precision. Reading many of the disagreements cited in this RfC/U, I think that people more often take issue with what they thought or remembered Cirt said than what the words strictly say. That's not to say the readers are wholly at fault; a writer who is correct in the details but frequently misunderstood is still at fault for not expressing themselves clearly to their audience. This is especially true when Cirt is interacting with other editors. When tempers flare, economy of words is interpreted as hostility, and precisely-chosen words may be interpreted with less precision.
In the absence of compelling and unequivocal evidence that Cirt is intentionally out to inject misrepresentations into Wikipedia, I presume good faith. However, I agree that this edit was troublesome, because while technically correct, it did wind up misleading some readers. Had the sentence been worded "The 2006 edition of The New Partridge Dictionary of Slang and Unconventional English noted santorum in its preface, but chose not to include it because the term was deliberately coined", there would not have been the risk of incorrect perception. // ⌘macwhiz (talk) 02:30, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
was deliberately coinedhad not gained wide usage.") They use it as an exemplar of deliberate coinage but exclude it from their alphabetical listing because it has not been widely adopted. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 05:32, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]Regarding the Joel Anderson article
Macwhiz, if I edited the article, I would doubtless be accused of wikihounding Cirt. Besides, minor US politicians are not a topic area I work in. What is important here is the context in which these edits occurred:
Dickson and Anderson were Stone's opponents. (The reason anti-Scientologists were interested in this local election is that Gold Base, the international headquarters of the Church of Scientology, is in Riverside County. Jeff Stone had supported a ban on picketing by protesters at Gold Base, and accused Anonymous of harassing Scientologists: [40]) Anyone in Riverside County looking up these politicians in Wikipedia to form a view as to how they should vote would have found nothing on Stone, and two articles making Dickson and Anderson look extremely attractive. The same thing happened with Jose Peralta and Hiram Monserrate, except that Cirt actually got Peralta on the main page just three or four days before the election, and onto the Wikiquote main page for the entire six days before the election.
Of course it is not a problem if an editor increases an article's size five-fold in one edit. What is a problem is if these articles are written specifically for an election, to make a candidate look good. Cirt's expansion of Joel Anderson was on 22 April 2010, not 22 July: [41] No one else but Cirt had edited the article for half a year. Post-expansion, the article ended,
By the time of the election on 8 June, Cirt had expanded this to
The Dickson article was even more positive, reflecting the outside campaign's preference for this candidate—if editors want, I can see whether we can get that article restored somewhere, on a user page, although the comments at Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Kenneth_Dickson_(2nd_nomination) should give you a good idea why that article was problematic, and attracted so much discussion. Remember, these are minor political figures. They do not have a big national profile. In fact, Jeff Stone, Anderson's opponent, does not have a Wikipedia article at all, as far as I can see.
In the case of Peralta, the article was a 53-word stub before Cirt came to it: [42]. By the time Cirt had expanded it, it ran to over 1,500 words, and ended like this at the time voters went to the polls, and at the time it was on the main page, three days before the election:
—U.S. Congressman Joseph Crowley[1]
In October 2009, Peralta stated his intention to run for the New York State Senate, for a seat representing District 13.[2] The Queens Democratic Party lended support to Peralta in his campaign for the Senate seat.[2] An article in the The New York Times in October 2009 described Peralta as "one of the party’s rising stars".[3] Politician Hiram Monserrate was expelled from the Senate on February 9, 2010 by a 53-8 vote of his former colleagues after being convicted of misdemeanor assault on his girlfriend Karla Giraldo.[2] Peralta became a candidate for the March 16, 2010 special election to fill the Senate seat left vacant due to Monserrate's expulsion.[2] United States Congressman Joseph Crowley, the chairman of the Queens Democrats, issued a statement in support of Peralta, commenting, "Now more than ever we need a strong voice in the state Senate and Jose Peralta will be a senator we can be proud of."[1]
The Police Benevolent Association of the New York State Troopers endorsed Peralta on February 26, 2010.[4] Civil rights activist Al Sharpton endorsed Peralta in February 2010.[5] On March 2, 2010, Peralta received an endorsement from New York City Council member Julissa Ferreras.[6] Peralta received the endorsement of the Empire State Pride Agenda (ESPA), due to his support for LGBT rights.[7] Peralta also received endorsements from groups including the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women,[8] building services workers union the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) sector 32BJ,[9] and Fight Back New York.[10] "Peralta has a strong record of advocating for working families in the [Assembly]. Working families can count on him to be a leader in the fight for good jobs, affordable housing and an affordable state," said SEIU sector 32BJ president Mike Fishman.[9] An editorial in The New York Times commented favorably regarding Peralta's campaign for the New York State Senate, "Elected in 2002 to the Assembly, he has a strong record of supporting immigrants and working people in the community. He has a long list of Democratic endorsements, from almost every union and public official who counts. Among the most enthusiastic are women’s groups."[11]
Peralta's Wikiquote page contained the same endorsements: [43], and good soundbites from him. These elections are over now. Peralta and Anderson are in office, and it is understandable for Cirt to say he has no further interest in these articles, and no objection to others editing them as they see fit. What is relevant to this RfC/U is the clear promotional pattern of the editing, whether Cirt's actions affected the election result or not. --JN466 09:36, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
One issue the article makes curiously little of is the campaign finance scandal, on which there was widespread recent coverage at the time the article was written. There was also an article in the LA Times about Anderson's mail campaign that was rather unflattering:
Los Angeles Times
San Diego Union:
East County Magazine:
Fresno Bee:
That is by no means all. So I would not say the Joel Anderson article was "recentist". It is correctly described as a political advertisement glossing over significant, recent public scandal. --JN466 16:31, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Pro- and anti-Cirt factions
V = IR, above, you say "...if they shared the ideology that they attribute to Cirt I doubt there would be complaints" a point that is implicit in a lot of comments here and on Talk:Campaign for "santorum" neologism. As best as I can judge, I share Cirt's views on religion, politics, gender and sexuality, yet I disapprove of his behaviours outlined in this RfC. I am offended by your assumption that I couldn't be criticising Cirt purely on the basis of his bullying of opponents and NPOV/BLP transgressions.
A good case has been made on the RfC that Cirt's use of Partridge at Santorum (neologism) was misleading, that he bullies his opponents, that he creates blatant advertising for politicians and others, and misuses sources and uses dubious sources to support his obvious activism. None of my concerns about these points have been allayed, either by Cirt acknowledging them, or by others' attempts to minimise them. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 07:00, 1 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
WP:BOMB
I've just read the response by DracoEssentialis, and I do want to say that it caused me to think. What's bothering me about this whole thing isn't the RfC/U itself. As I've stated many times, I too see problems with Cirt's editing (though I honestly think many folks are way too upset about what I view as something minor, but I fully understand and accept that others reasonably see a big problem here). What bothers me more than anything was WP:BOMB. I viewed that as an attempt to use an essay to attack a single user and I feel that was _way_ over the line. The MfD on it made it pretty clear that others viewed it in the same way. Perhaps I've missed it somewhere but I for one would really like to see an acknowledgment from Jaden466 and SV that doing so was inappropriate (or at least acknowledge that the community felt it was inappropriate and that they understand why the community feels that way) and a promise not to do something like that again.
In response to DracoEssentialis, the problem is that a number of us see those two as the bullies. Cirt seems to be the classic kind of a guy who gets picked on and doesn't stand up for himself. Witness the leaked conversation between SV and Cirt. Certainly one of those two felt like a bully to me. One constantly on the attack, the other just backing away over and over again. Jaden and SV's use of an essay to further attack Cirt can reasonably be seen as further bullying, even if that's not the actual intent. Now I probably sound like a bully--by saying that person A was attacking person B, I can be reasonably characterized as attacking person A. What I'd really like is to see everyone back away from the attacking language and work to see a fair resolution of this.
Please understand that not all of us (maybe a third?) see the problems with Cirt in as an extreme way as Jaden sees them. But almost all of us see problems (85%?). The trick is figuring out what the next step is. I view Cirt as a good admin and highly productive contributor who has been shown in this RfC/U to be too one-sided in his coverage of material. I think of that as highly correctable by Cirt. I'm willing to "wipe away" his past sins if he is willing to acknowledge the problem and sin no further. The problem that I forsee is that no one, and no article, is truly NPOV. We do our best. So any improvements he does make I worry that others, who see him in a bad light, will find something else to jump all over him about. And thus we'll end up losing Cirt as an editor: a major loss to Wikipedia even if he becomes one of the best NPOV editors around. So I personally am hoping to just have Cirt promise to A) acknowledge past issues B) stay out of controversial areas for a while and C) work hard on NPOV issues. If problems as large as the more significant of those found here continue then we have a problem. But I'd be greatly disappointed to see issues like the "Bacon" one brought up as a serious issue or a significant misrepresentation of sources.
I'll note that it's exactly the same thing (acknowledge and promise not to do it again) I'd like to see from Jaden and SV. I have a pretty deep faith in people to do what they say they will, I just really want them to acknowledge the issues and agree to work on them... Hobit (talk) 23:03, 2 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
First of all, I want to express my strong appreciation for what Jayen said above, about looking back on how the essay started. I think that is a very generous and impressive thing to say, the kind of thing I see all too rarely on Wikipedia. Thank you.
I'm still trying to figure out where, overall, I come down with respect to this RfC/U, but something Hobit said rings very true to me. I had watched the discussion about the e-mails on Shell Kinney's talk page, and wondered what those e-mails really contained. Now that they have been leaked (a bad thing, but it's done), I've been able to read them and decide for myself. What really stands out for me is the aggressively prosecutorial tone of what SV said to Cirt, not reciprocated by Cirt (as well as the imputation of side-taking against Shell and Allison when there was zero evidence of that side-taking). That prosecutorial tone was exactly like what was directed against me when I was a new editor, and falsely accused of being someone else's sock. I'm not saying that any of that gets Cirt off the hook, but it does give me reason to look skeptically at some of the "evidence". --Tryptofish (talk) 19:05, 3 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
DracoEssentialis' post
I have seen many extraordinary things on Wikipedia in the past seven years. But I have never seen anything like this posting by DracoEssentialis, who calls herself "the long-suffering wife" of Jayen466, who describes how he obsessively "spent hours and hours" collating evidence against Cirt, who tells us that he is not a bully because Cirt is a bigger bully, who attacks editors as belonging to "Cirt's faction" by calling them "flying monkeys", who shows us her deep respect for BLPs by referring to "Rick Sanitarium", and who concludes by telling us how exciting their sex life is. This really "jumps the shark", as the saying goes. I really don't care a bit what Jayen466 and DracoEssentialis do between the sheets, though I'm glad for the both of them that Jayen466 has a supportive spouse who appreciates his bedroom acrobatics. But overall DracoEssentialis's posting is bizarre and does not offer anything constructive. I'm astonished that editors in good standing have endorsed her emotional appeal on his behalf. I haven't posted a view yet, but I think it's time to review the behavior of Jayen466, Cla466, and the other supporters of cults and new religious movements who've been involved in this. Will Beback talk 06:53, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Still, this RfC has had the effect of sharply defining the problematic behaviours, and presumably Cirt has understood what was said and, though he doesn't appear to recognise them in himself, or, if he does, doesn't think them a problem, at least he's been told very publicly what a large number of people think. And maybe he does see some flaws in his approach but just doesn't want to acknowledge it publicly. Perhaps it is time to move on and see if there's a behaviour change. --Anthonyhcole (talk) 15:44, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Well, it's no surprise to me that some sectors of Wikipedia have become like an online version of Big Brother. Count Iblis (talk) 15:30, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Comment Will, anyone who is married would find nothing bizarre about a spouse seeing their husband/wife in this position and wanting to stick up for them. Wnt, the notion that this has anything to do with meatpuppetry is yet another annoying bad faith distraction. The two of them are married and the one stuck up for the other in a very public manner. What the heck does that have to do with WP:MEAT? Then the rest of you lot questioning why editors of good standing would endorse a comment by a wife sticking up for her husband ... I have to AGF here and assume that you're all hopelessly single and don't understand why someone would do that. If you were willing to AGF regarding the comment you might consider the notion that whether or not you agree with him Jayen is acting in good faith here and his wife, who knows this better than anyone else, wants to make sure that is understood. That's the thing that comes through to me clear as day. I guess admitting that makes me some kind of idiot though right? Anthony has said it well elsewhere. The ad hominems are very disappointing indeed.Griswaldo (talk) 00:48, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
A neologism everyone can support
Anyone notice that DracoEssentialis has accidentally referred to this affair as a "cirtcus"? I think we can all agree on that at least... ;-) Prioryman (talk) 18:37, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Allegations of Pro-Osho POV
Article concerned: Aaron Saxton
Article concerned: List of Scientologists- Off2riorob (talk) 23:54, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Allegations of pro-NRM bias by RFC participants
As I said, and more of the same.(olive (talk) 01:07, 5 July 2011 (UTC))[reply]
Symmetric and antisymmetric POV
Reading over the comments about Corbin Fisher, I think that there is some fundamental difference in how some people here react when they have a POV. To me, someone like Dan Savage is a good columnist, so I want us to have very detailed articles about him and his activities so people can read everything they want about him. And someone like Corbin Fisher, whose legal letter-writing campaign I can't really describe using words consistent with the BLP policy - I also want us to have very detailed articles about him, so that the people at the end of those letters can read what he's done, what he hasn't done, and perchance gain useful intel that will serve them in whatever means they wish to make their displeasure known. So to me POV is symmetric: positive POV and negative POV both lead me to exactly the same conclusion: I want as much information as possible to go up in the article. And when I don't know about a topic? Well, then obviously we need more information so I can develop a POV... But there are people here who talk as if writing about a person means that you side with him, and whose views at AfDs make me think that if they like something they want it kept and if they dislike it they want it deleted. It is as if they have an antisymmetric POV. I really wonder if this is true: is fundamental Wikipolitics really split up into bosons and fermions according to some weird application of quantum mechanics? What does that say about consciousness as a phenomenon? Wnt (talk) 19:27, 4 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Where to?
I'm here to learn if there is any problem with Cirt's behaviour. There is. It is a shame Cirt denies this, because we'll likely be seeing more of it. His withdrawal from subject areas is based on "I haven't done anything wrong but they don't want me there, so I'll go." This just bolsters the martyr/persecuted hero myth and moves the problem elsewhere. I don't see anywhere for this RfC to go now. Is it time to wrap up? --Anthonyhcole (talk) 05:09, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Request for arbitration
Hello, due to recent events a request for arbitration has been filed by ResidentAnthropologist (talk · contribs) regarding long standing issues in the "Cult" topic area. The request can be found at Wikipedia:Arbitration/Requests/Case#Cults The Resident Anthropologist (talk)•(contribs) 07:39, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jehochman closure
I reverted Jehochman's closure. Jehochman is heavily involved in many of Cirt's attempts to use noticeboards for advantage in content disputes, not to mention protecting Cirt when others complain about him. This is evident in the links provided by commentators at the RFC. Jehochman is much to involved to close this down, and absolutely too involved to add a non-neutral summary chastising those who are criticizing Cirt. For shame. Please let someone neutral close this if necessary.Griswaldo (talk) 15:44, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
There is still active discussions going on, there is no reason to close at this time. The RFARB ius about a lot of people - the fact that that case is under discussion is no reason to close this RFC at this time. Off2riorob (talk) 16:17, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
To save myself the trouble of following the page's instructions and notifying multiple people: Wikipedia:Administrators'_noticeboard/Incidents#Wikipedia:Requests_for_comment.2FCirt William M. Connolley (talk) 16:21, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure what the point of keeping this open is unless editors here are willing to work towards constructive and mutually agreeable solutions. It seems like there's just arguing and accusations of bad faith here. Gamaliel (talk) 16:23, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I think Jehochman is right in desiring a closure. Griswaldo is also right in asking for someone more neutral to do it. So let it be so and end the argument. Eh? -- Avanu (talk) 16:29, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As an uninvolved admin, I have endorsed the closure. The WordsmithTalk to me 16:55, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
And you endorsed Jehochman's nasty comments, like "... this RFC is just an extension of a long running dirty tricks campaign. Good advice for those promoting this RFC would be to put your own house in order." I felt that Cirt was doing the tricking./Pieter Kuiper (talk) 17:04, 5 July 2011 (UTC) Was clarified. /Pieter Kuiper (talk) 17:50, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]Closure is fine. I reject any suggestion that those of us with blp concerns are cult members out to destroy Cirt. Still, Cirt has to a degree acknowledged peoples' concerns, and he'll probably be more aware of blp in the future. Tom Harrison Talk 17:07, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I have now clarified that I endorse the act of closing, and the first/last sentences of the initial summary. I do not endorse the whole thing. The WordsmithTalk to me 17:22, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
It adds weight ot the reasons for arbitration, and he should be added to the case. Off2riorob (talk) 17:30, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Involvement
When I said that Jehochman was too involved to close this RFC I largely had in mind events surrounding the first link provided by B just above. As B also points out Jehochman was highly involved in aiding Cirt during Cirt's RFA. That was an interesting read. I have a hard time, based on those actions alone, to understand how he thinks it is appropriate to act as an admin in this capacity now. I am also of the mind that the non-neutral closing message pretty much speaks for itself in this regard. Anyway here is Jehochman Generally running interference for Cirt at AE. During that discussion deflects attention from concerns about Cirt’s editing while broadly threatening to block people who don’t stop criticizing Cirt. But read the entire discussion because it is quite illuminating. Not long after that Jehochman accuses Jayen of “hounding Cirt," while he again lobbies for no sanctions on Cirt. I suggest also to read that entire exchange. As to involvement in related topic areas, which Jehochman proclaims he doesn't have, it is important to note that User:Jehochman hardly ever makes any content edits on Wikipedia at all, or at least not from what I could see when I tried looking just now. He does however, often engage in content related disputes on noticeboards (see above) and other venues like arbitration. During the Scientology arbitration he [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Scientology/Evidence&oldid=291874918 presented evidence and made workshop proposals that were firmly on Cirt's side of things. He also lobbied for Cirt and other Scientology critics on the workshop pages -- that is lobbied to have proposed sanctions not placed on them. I want it to be clear here that I am not accusing Jehochman of any wrong doing when it comes to his POV or about his relationship with Cirt. He's welcome to think whatever he wants and argue for his buddies whenever he wants, but he needs to refrain from taking administrative action on their behalf in this way.Griswaldo (talk) 22:55, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Move on
Any further concerns can in the Request for arbitration where Jenchoman's involvement (or lack there of) can be evaluated better in the evidence section. Jehochman is an editor I have a long standing respect for though I disagree with his evaluation of the RFC/U griping about here serve no purpose in advancing this RFC/U. The Resident Anthropologist (talk)•(contribs) 21:05, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Reopened
RfC's normally run for 30 days. Jehochman, to his credit, openly declared that one reason he closed the RfC was because he disapproved of it. I've warned him on his talk page and moved his comments down as a "view" in the RfC. I've also asked for administrator intervention at AN [60] to ensure the RfC is allowed to run its course. Cla68 (talk) 23:09, 5 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Actual closing rules
Please note that there is no magic 30-day timer for RFC/Us. The 30-day bot only works for content RFCs. RFC/Us are always closed manually, and we like to think that we're smarter than a calendar-driven bot. The actual rule is that RFC/Us are closed under three circumstances:
I know that WP:Nobody reads the directions, but if you're aiming for #2, the advice is this: "RfC/Us are also closed when the dispute has proceeded to another venue in dispute resolution. Bear in mind that if it has proceeded to arbitration or mediation, a case needs to have been accepted and opened before the RfC/U should be closed."
Consequently, this RFC/U should technically be left open. WhatamIdoing (talk) 17:28, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Analysis table
As just stated on the main page, I've started a table of all views and all endorsers. I went through the first 12 statements - now I go to bed. Given that this is a Wiki, feel free to complete the table. The raw form, suitable for extension, is below. The table is based on this version of the RfC. If someone wants to extend this, I strongly recommend using a fixed font... --Stephan Schulz (talk) 00:31, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
1 Certifiers and endorsers
2 Additional views by Cla68
3 Whistleblower protection
4 Additional views by Jayen466
5 Semi-involved view by Wnt
6 Peripherally-involved view by Quigley
7 Semi-involved view by Khazar
8 Semi-involved view by LuftWaffle0
9 Semi-involved view by Georgewilliamherbert
A Outside view by Collect
B Outside view by Gamaliel
C Outside view by macwhiz
Sharron Angle
I've added a section on editing of the Sharron Angle biography to the evidence part of the RfC/U. --JN466 18:50, 6 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
As far as Sharron Angle goes, I was involved with that; I was actually the person who cleaned up that article. I must say, that to Cirt's credit, after I brought up the problems and made one follow up, he was quite willing to change his approach to that article at least. That much at least should be mentioned in the evidence summary. Otherwise, it lends credence to the belief that this RFC/U is being treated as a battleground, adversarial position and not as a proper instrument of dispute resolution. NW (Talk) 03:06, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Jayen, specific criticisms like this, stated calmly are useful. Are you saying that Cirt needs to extend the same good faith to new users as estalished users? I find that AGF often works well even when it isn't deserved. Our hope is for Cirt to receive good advice, and follow it. RFC is not merely a formality on the path to sanctining an editor. Jehochman Talk 03:47, 7 July 2011 (UTC)[reply]