Details for log entry 37,576,774

17:51, 26 April 2024: 37.111.141.111 ( talk) triggered filter 987, performing the action "edit" on Talk:United States. Actions taken: Warn; Filter description: Empty edit request ( examine)

Changes made in edit

:[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
:[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
:{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
:{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)

== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 ==

{{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}}
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'{{talk header}} {{FAQ|collapsed=no}} {{Contentious topics/talk notice|ap|long}} {{American English|date=September 2011}} {{Article history |action1=GAN |action1date=02:27, 15 December 2005 |action1result=listed |action1oldid=31414825 |action2=FAC |action2date=00:10, 7 May 2006 |action2link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive1 |action2result=not promoted |action2oldid=51892109 |action3=FAC |action3date=21:56, 8 May 2006 |action3link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive2 |action3result=not promoted |action3oldid=52202348 |action4=PR |action4date=19:59, 18 May 2006 |action4link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive1 |action4oldid=53888193 |action5=FAC |action5date=22:20, 3 July 2006 |action5link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive3 |action5result=not promoted |action5oldid=61900268 |action6=PR |action6date=16:03, 21 September 2006 |action6link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive2 |action6oldid=76974796 |action7=FAC |action7date= 19 October 2006 |action7link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive4 |action7result=not promoted |action8=FAC |action8date=18:01, 19 June 2007 |action8link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive5 |action8result=not promoted |action8oldid=139239542 |action9=GAR |action9date=09:11, 9 July 2008 (UTC) |action9link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/1 |action9result=kept |action9oldid=224506293 |action10=FAC |action10date=16:56, 27 June 2009 |action10link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive6 |action10result=not promoted |action10oldid=298963267 |action11=PR |action11date=03:25, 6 September 2009 |action11link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive3 |action11result=reviewed |action11oldid=311950730 |action12=PR |action12date=20:57, 19 January 2011 |action12link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive4 |action12result=reviewed |action12oldid=408843044 |action13=GAR |action13date=13:12, 18 March 2012 (UTC) |action13link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/2 |action13result=delisted |action13oldid=482121399 |action14=GAN |action14date=23:32, 10 August 2012 (UTC) |action14link=Talk:United States/GA1 |action14result=not listed |action14oldid=506806669 |action15=GAN |action15date=16:08, 21 January 2015 (UTC) |action15link=Talk:United States/GA2 |action15result= listed |action15oldid=506806669 |action16=GAR |action16date=19:52, 22 February 2020 (UTC) |action16link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/3 |action16result= delisted |action16oldid=974086316 |action17=PR |action17date=2020-12-19 |action17link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive5 |action17result= reviewed |action17oldid=995167082 |currentstatus=DGA |topic=geography |dykdate=3 February 2015 |dykentry=... that the '''[[United States]]''' accounts for 37% of all [[List of countries by military expenditures|global military spending]]? |dyknom= Template:Did you know nominations/United States |otd1date=2008-07-04|otd1link=Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/July 4 }} {{WikiProject banner shell |class=B |collapsed=yes |vital=yes |listas=United States |1= {{WikiProject United States |importance=Top |past-collaboration=yes|USGov=yes}} {{WikiProject North America |importance=Top}} {{WikiProject Countries}} }} {{Press|date=August 17, 2009|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/wikipedia/6043534/The-50-most-viewed-Wikipedia-articles-in-2009-and-2008.html|title=The 50 most-viewed Wikipedia articles in 2009 and 2008|org=''[[The Daily Telegraph]]''|title2=Topics that spark Wikipedia 'edit wars' revealed|org2=[[BBC News]]|url2=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-23354613|date2=July 18, 2013|accessdate2=July 18, 2013}} {{Banner holder|collapsed=yes| {{Backwardscopy |author=Surhone, L. M., Timpledon, M. T., & Marseken, S. F. |year=2010 |title=Orson Scott Card: United States, author, critic, public speaking, activism, genre |org=Betascript Publishing |comments={{OCLC|636651797}}, {{ISBN|9786130336431}}. |author2=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year2=2009 |title2=Biosphere 2: Biosphere 2, closed ecological system, Oracle, Arizona, Arizona, United States, Biome, space colonization, Biosphere, rainforest, Ed Bass, BIOS-3, Eden project |org2=Alphascript |comments2={{OCLC|699544461}}, {{ISBN|9786130219581}}. |author3=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year3=2010 |title3=Military journalism: Combatant commander, psychological warfare, United States, public affairs (military), propaganda, journalist, Civil-military operations |org3=Alphascript Publishing |comments3={{OCLC|671248488}}, {{ISBN|9786130072650}}. |bot=LivingBot }} {{All time pageviews|237}} {{Annual report|[[Wikipedia:2007 Top 50 Report|2007]], [[Wikipedia:2008 Top 50 Report|2008]], [[Wikipedia:2009 Top 50 Report|2009]], [[Wikipedia:2010 Top 50 Report|2010]], [[Wikipedia:2011 Top 50 Report|2011]], [[Wikipedia:2012 Top 50 Report|2012]], [[Wikipedia:2013 Top 50 Report|2013]], [[Wikipedia:2014 Top 50 Report|2014]], [[Wikipedia:2015 Top 50 Report|2015]], [[Wikipedia:Top 25 Report/2016|2016]], [[Wikipedia:2017 Top 50 Report|2017]], [[Wikipedia:2018 Top 50 Report|2018]], [[Wikipedia:2019 Top 50 Report|2019]], [[Wikipedia:2020 Top 50 Report|2020]], [[Wikipedia:2021 Top 50 Report|2021]], [[Wikipedia:2022 Top 50 Report|2022]], and [[Wikipedia:2023 Top 50 Report|2023]]}} {{Top 25 report | April 7, 2013 | April 28, 2013 | May 5, 2013 | September 8, 2013 | October 6, 2013 | until | February 23, 2014 | March 9, 2014 | until | March 30, 2014 | April 27, 2014 | May 4, 2014 | September 21, 2014 | October 12, 2014 | November 9, 2014 | November 16, 2014 | November 30, 2014 | December 7, 2014 | December 14, 2014 | January 25, 2015 | April 19, 2015 | May 10, 2015 | November 8, 2015 | March 27, 2016 | April 10, 2016 | May 15, 2016 | May 22, 2016 }} {{Annual readership}} {{section sizes}} }} {{User:HBC Archive Indexerbot/OptIn|target=/Archive index|mask=/Archive <#>|leading_zeros=0|indexhere=yes }} {{User:MiszaBot/config |archiveheader={{Automatic archive navigator}} |maxarchivesize=125K |counter=111 |minthreadsleft=4 |algo=old(30d) |archive=Talk:United States/Archive %(counter)d }} <!-- Talk page begins here. --> == "America" should not redirect to the United States == In the disambiguation page for America[/info/en/?search=America_(disambiguation)], it is specified that ''"America is a short-form name for the United States of America"''. However, the United States aren't known officially as the "United States of America", instead they are just the "United States". The name of the article is United States, and not United States of America. The nation is called "United States" and "of America" is only an unofficial addition to distinguish with other nations that go by United States. This is useless nowadays, considering that when "United States" is mentioned it is always referring to the one in America, unless said otherwise. Furthermore, America is a common name for much more than just the US, and nowadays it is much more common to see "America" being used to refer to the continent rather than the nation. [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|talk]]) 01:02, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :In the English language, America is usually used to refer to the United States, such that it is the overwhelmingly [[WP:PRIMARYTOPIC|primary topic]] for that word. This is not limited to usage within the United States but is the common meaning of the word in reliable sources globally, such as ''[https://indianexpress.com/about/america/ Indian Express]'', ''[https://mondediplo.com/2024/02/ Le Monde]'', ''[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/commentary/2023/09/13/world/restless-america/ Japan Times]'', ''[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/series/how-the-world-sees-america The Guardian]'', etc. It is true that in many languages America does not necessarily refer to the United States, but the English Wikipedia reflects English-language usage, which does support [[America]] redirecting here. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:19, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] In Le Monde, the International section is divided into ''Americas'' and in that section is the ''United States''. Looking up 'America' in Le Monde itself doesn't show any US-related articles using the term to refer to the US. ::The same goes for The Guardian [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|talk]]) 01:28, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :::The examples I gave directly and unambiguously use America to refer specifically and exclusively to the United States. The international section of ''Le Monde'' using "Americas" reinforces the idea that in the English language, Americas is used to refer to the landmass called [[Americas]] in contrast to America, which is overwhelmingly used to refer to the United States. I'm not sure what you're searching to not find any results, but when searching through ''Le Monde'' it is very easy to find English-language articles that use America to describe the United States, [https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2024/02/17/america-falls-out-of-love-with-tesla-and-electric-vehicles_6533006_19.html this example] is from a couple of days ago. ''The Guardian'' has an entire section called [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/americas-dirty-divide America's dirty divide] that it describes as {{tq|A series examining '''the country's''' vast environmental inequalities and how climate change will make things worse}} (emphasis added). When English-language reliable sources use America, it almost always is used to refer to the United States. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:42, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :The purpose of re-directs is that readers are taken to the article they are searching for. My guess is that over 95% of readers who type in America are looking for this article. If you have evidence that they are looking for another article, please tell me what it is. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 01:59, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::The '''United States of America''' is the official name, and is for example used in international relations, as for example titles of ambassadors. For usage in Congress see https://www.congress.gov/search?q=%7B%22congress%22%3A%5B%22118%22%5D%2C%22source%22%3A%22all%22%2C%22search%22%3A%22United%20States%20of%20America%22%7D [[User:Rjensen|Rjensen]] ([[User talk:Rjensen|talk]]) :::That doesn't matter. The official name of Mexico is "The United States of Mexico", but if you look up "United States" it directs to here. This is not a conversation worth entertaining, plenty of RFCs have been conducted and the consensus has been to keep things as they are. You're welcome to try to change consensus, but it will almost certainly fail. --[[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 00:31, 22 February 2024 (UTC) ::It is true that redirects should take you where you want to land. But i guess most (90% or so) people wo type America search for the continent America not the country USA. At least this was the case when i searched america and was confusied why it redirects me here. America = contient, USA = country in America. You also don't expect a redirect from europe to the article [[European_Union]], despite the EU having the a much larger portion of Europe than the USA has of America, or do you? [[Special:Contributions/185.62.82.91|185.62.82.91]] ([[User talk:185.62.82.91|talk]]) 11:50, 20 March 2024 (UTC) :::America is not a continent though. North America is a continent. South America is a continent. [[Special:Contributions/24.34.64.221|24.34.64.221]] ([[User talk:24.34.64.221|talk]]) 21:44, 28 March 2024 (UTC) ::For example, I myself came here by typing in ''America''… [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) ==Problematic changes made to United States-Indigenous Peoples articles== There's recently been a massive, radical restructuring of articles surrounding relations between the indigenous peoples of the Americas and the United States. Generally in the form of calling events that were previously predominately labeled as "ethnic cleansing", "mass atrocities", and "forced population transfers" and referring to the events as "genocidal" instead. This is despite the fact that this viewpoint is a small minority among historians, political scientists, and anthropologists. The titles for these articles in of themselves are problematic: * [[Native American genocide in the United States]] According to Jeffrey Ostler — who holds perhaps one of the most "negative maximalist" viewpoints of American actions among mainstream scholars — this is a small minority viewpoint among those working in the field: <blockquote>This is not because there is a consensus behind the “pro-genocide” position. In fact, although few scholars in the fields of American Indian and western U.S. history have systematically addressed the question of genocide, for many, perhaps most, scholars in these fields, an overarching indictment of genocide seems too extreme. Some might label specific events and cases, such as the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 or widespread settler violence against Indians during the California Gold Rush, as genocidal, but they would not see U.S. policies and settler actions as consistently so. Others would resist arguments for even limited genocide in U.S. history, citing definitions of genocide that would appear to require a federal government policy to physically destroy all (or most) Indians and observing that federal policies were intended to prevent physical disappearance by promoting assimilation. Some scholars would propose ethnic cleansing as an appropriate alternative to genocide. Others might consider assimilation to be a form of cultural genocide but would insist on a strong distinction between this policy and physical elimination.</blockquote> and: <blockquote>Since 1992, the argument for a total, relentless, and pervasive genocide in the Americas has become accepted in some areas of Indigenous studies and genocide studies. For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields.</blockquote> '''Note that I support ''keeping'' the ''contents'' for the article but ''renaming'' the page'''. The California genocide article is also problematic. It has been changed from: * ''California Indian Catastrophe'' -> [[California genocide]] ("California Indian Catastrophe" is used more in [[WP: RS]]'s; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of as of 2023], mainstream scholars are divided between ethnic cleansing and genocide.) Other articles such as: * [[Andrew Jackson]] * [[Racism in the United States]] * [[Historical negationism]] * [[Racism against Native Americans in the United States]] * [[Indian removal]] * [[California]] * [[Trail of Tears]] * [[Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas]] * [[Manifest Destiny]] * ''Etc.'' Have similarly been rewritten to imply that this is an overwhelming consensus. Tagging {{ping|ShirtNShoesPls}}, {{ping|Mason.Jones}}, {{ping|Moxy}}, {{ping|FMSky}}, {{ping|Rambling Rambler}}, and {{ping|Rockstone35}}. Many editors seem to be classifying all ethnic cleansing/population transfers, atrocities, et al. as inherently ''genocidal'', which isn't accepted by a majority of scholars. This is probably a discussion that needs to be had. Since I can't imagine that any version of these pages aren't going to generate controversy. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:24, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :My two cents would be any discussion of "genocide" should be kept out of the lead and any discussion in the body of text must be extremely well-sourced given the controversial nature of it. Seems to be too much "I've already decided it was genocide, here's the first result that came up on google as my source". [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 14:44, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :@Klay -- in this article, it's not "many editors"; it's one editor (who has already been warned about aggressive POV-pushing and edit-warring). I agree with Rambling above: unsuitable for the lede, mentioned in history section with reliable sources (not ideological academic treatises). [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 17:54, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]], on that editor there's an open ANI post about their conduct. If you'd like to contribute to it you can do [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#User ShirtNShoesPls, Block on grounds of repeated disruption (CIR/IDHT)|here]]. [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 18:26, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::ShirtNShoesPls is definitely one problematic user. However, many of these changes were made by others. :::I responded on the ANI, btw. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:12, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :Genocide is one of the more serious [[WP:LABEL|labels]], so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. Unfortunately, the political value of the word creates an incentive to creep the definition wider, to capture more rhetorical ground. This semantic dilution threatens to make word unencyclopedic to use at all. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 22:18, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::Came here from the [[2024 United States presidential election]] article. This is exactly what is happening, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}. There's no consensus that the events were genocide... A fact stated in the [[California genocide]] article itself! Could you remove it? I don't usually edit on here and apparently it locks me off from editing. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 10:59, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :@[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] Genocide is a word that needs to be used seriously and with strong sourcing. However, the discussion so far mis-states the fields that should be considered in deciding on its use. Fields of national history are one area, but so too are scholarship on the target groups (in this case, Native American Studies) and comparative scholarship on genocide itself (Genocide Studies). Formal official statements of responsibility are relevant as well. The key issue becomes describing and attributing these multiple literatures. Ostler's quote describes one of these fields, not all. ::To take two examples, the Trail of Tears and the violence preceding it is the central example in a major genocide studies text (Wolfe, "Settler colonialism and the elimination of the Native") while the American history literature on Andrew Jackson is voluminous and skeptical on such a label. Wikipedia should refer to both, whether discussing Cherokee history, the Trail of Tears itself, and Jackson in particular. Separately, the publication of two scholarly monographs (around 10 years ago) on the California genocide by historians, and their reception, should influence our use of the word on that situation. :[[User:Carwil|Carwil]] ([[User talk:Carwil|talk]]) 12:46, 1 March 2024 (UTC) :::Let's focus on content: {{od}} Indeed it was more than five years ago that an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RfC on the California genocide]] determined language that should be used in that section. Oddly, the words California genocide do not appear in the article despite that consensus, and all the sources have been deleted from the article. Can someone point to a more recent RfC consensus or should we reinstate the language and sources decided upon in September 2018? -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 18:30, 25 February 2024 (UTC) As it turns out, it was {{Ping|KlayCax}} on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]] who removed the reference to the California Genocide which had been in the article since the 2018 RfC with no edit summary. No consensus was sought on the talk page for this change. (Looking back, I see that I started [[Talk:United_States/Archive_108#Removal_of_Trail_of_Tears,_Indian_Removal_Act,_Foraker_Act,_Insular_Cases,_California_genocide|this discussion]] which did not yield a consensus to overturn the previous RfC.) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 19:56, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :I've reinstated the content per the 2018 RfC. A new RfC can be started if there is reason to debate this content which was in the article from 2018-2023. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::As {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} states above: {{tqi|Genocide is one of the more serious labels, so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. }}. There's no consensus (and it's a minority viewpoint) that the events in California were genocide. (See [https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-3 Ostler, 2015]; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of Magliari, 2023]) Thus, Wikipedia shouldn't state so in Wikivoice. Consensus can also ''change''. I'll start a RFC if necessary, but words such as genocide should be avoided unless there's a historical consensus. Adding it into the article otherwise presents significant [[WP: NPOV]] concerns. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::{{U|KlayCax}}, citing an article on [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1210295868 scalp bounties] while removing a paragraph on genocide isn't really... well it's not OK. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 23:16, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::: Many historians don't consider the events in California a genocide, instead referring to it as ethnic cleansing, mass murder, atrocity, ''et al.'' See what Michael F. Magliari [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of writes about the matter in the article]: {{tqi|In the often contentious and acrimonious debates over whether the Golden State’s Indigenous peoples were targeted for genocide by white Euro-Americans between 1846 and 1873}}. That's why it shouldn't be in the article. The [[WP: ONUS]] would be on including this. :::: They're both horrendous. However, they're different things. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:21, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::::[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]], wait. I'm telling you that your edit summary makes no sense in relation to the actual edit, and your response is to repeat the same irrelevant citation, this time with a quote which ''also'' totally doesn't make your point. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:53, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::::The problem is that implies that there's a consensus the events constitute a genocide. Both sources make it clear that there's no agreement among historians on the matter. ::::::It's also odd to focus specifically on the events in California. (And leave out the broader American-Indian wars that occurred after the conclusion of the Civil War.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:55, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::: Btw {{ping|Drmies}} I agree that the events in California were likely a genocide. However, there's been a general consensus and precedent on Wikipedia that a country's articles shouldn't include the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" unless there's an ''overwhelming academic consensus'' on the matter. (See [[Talk:United_States#Genocide_wording|above]].) ::::: * For instance, the USSR's article doesn't refer to the [[Holodomor]] as a genocide ::::: * Neither does [[China]]'s refer to the [[Uyghur genocide]] ::::: * Neither does [[Japan]] or the [[Empire of Japan]]'s pages use the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" on their articles. ::::: And so on and so forth. The reason is simply: there's no consensus on the matter. (And even among historians who affirm it, most would place the blame on settlers or the state government, rather than the national government.) ::::: Jeffery Ostler is clear that this is a minority position (at the very least) in the literature. I get the urge to [[WP: RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] but we can't state it in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:42, 25 February 2024 (UTC) {{od}} You say that consensus can change. However, no consensus has developed for your deletion of this content in the months that you've been deleting it. I noticed in the [[California genocide]] article that Magliari's view is not what you would have us believe. These are the final words of his review of the Yale University source you deleted: {{tq|Madley’s case for genocide is overwhelming and compelling in many specific instances. As his evidence makes plain, deliberately exterminatory campaigns devastated at least eighteen California tribes, including the Achumawi, Karuk, Lassik, Nisenan, Nongatl, Owens Valley Paiute, Pomo, Shasta, Sinkyone, Tolowa, Wailaki, Wappo, Whilkut, Wintu, Wiyot, Yana, Yuki, and Yurok. Beyond the shadow of any reasonable doubt (and by the standards of any reasonable definition), genocide did in fact play a significant role in the US conquest and subjugation of Native California.}} (source accessible [https://read-dukeupress-edu.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/ethnohistory/article/64/2/341/26348/An-American-Genocide-The-United-States-and-the?searchresult=1 here] via Wikipedia Library (Duke)) I'm not sure why you're so adamant about overturning [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|this prior consensus]] when the scholar you are citing quite clearly disagrees with you. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :[[User:SashiRolls]] it feels like I'm on Facebook. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:54, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::And I'm going back to bed. :) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:07, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :I'm aware of Michael F. Magliari's and Jeffrey Ostler's views. I cited them specifically ''because'' of the fact that they hold a "genocidal/maximalist" view on the issue. (Yet also state there's widespread debate within the literature.) :* The first part of the articles is how he views the current academic consensus ''within the field''. This aspect of the article is the part I'm citing. :* The conclusion is ''his view ''on the matter. :There's been a longtime precedent to not use the word "genocide" in articles unless there's a consensus it happened for the reason Barnards.tar.gz mentioned. (Which is why I cite the [[Japan]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[United Kingdom]], [[Australia]], and [[Canada]] pages, none of which mention genocide. Even [[Belgium]]'s page - which ran the [[Congo Free State]] - specifically and intentionally excludes mention of the word.) :It would also be weird if we focus specifically on this and not the broader [[American Indian Wars|American-Indian Wars]] that occurred after the Civil War. :I'd be okay with "forced population transfer/ethnic cleansing" being used. "Genocide" is far more contentious and not anywhere near close enough to a consensus to include. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:11, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::How do you know "genocide" in [[Belgium]] is "specifically and intentionally" excluded? There's nothing on the talk page or in the talk page archives. Maybe that article should be updated. And [[China]] ''does'' mention the Uyghur genocide. Should I look at the others too? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :::* The first talk page discussion on the matter can be found [[Talk:Congo Free State/Archive 1#Not Genocide|here]]. The [[Congo Free State]] genocide question is the article. However, multiple Wikipedia administrators (including Wav) repeatedly removed any mention of "genocide" in Wikivoice from the article, and this has been ''ongoing over the past twenty years''. [[Belgium]]'s article never brings up genocide once. (Also per talk page discussion.) I agree that it does seem wrong. ([[Japan]]'s article never uses ethnic cleansing or genocide, either.) :::* The China wording was recently added. However, it keeps getting reverted by multiple editors (both on the Uyghur genocide and China pages), and never uses the term "genocide" to describe it with Wikivoice. :::* Australia's, Canada's, and New Zealand's pages — which are probably the closest analogies to the American treatment of its native populations — also don't mention the word genocide anywhere in their articles: [[History wars#Genocide debate|despite many scholars saying so]]. :::If it is replaced with "ethnic cleansing" and "forced population transfers" — and further expounding on the genocide debate in the respective articles — then the text would be completely alright with me. There's a clear historical consensus that the events would be classified today as [[war crimes]] — whether from "minimalists" who hold a narrow definition of "genocide" like [[Guenter Lewy]] to "maximalists" like [[David Stannard]] and Jeffrey Ostler who emphasize the utter devastation it caused on native cultures/peoples. Not sure what the right answer to #3 is (and it's a good question. I'll raise the issue on talk within the next week). Does replacing the word with "ethnic cleansing" work? :::It's a clear historical consensus among essentially every mainstream scholar that ''ethnic cleansing ''occurred, which is a war crime, and it avoids the terminology game on what "genocide" means. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:56, 28 February 2024 (UTC) ::::It's just one deflection after another. You say in Belgium it's explicitly excluded, but there's no proof of it on the talk page of ''that'' article. You can't even cite a diff. You said China doesn't mention it--it does. You suggest I should look at other articles because they're more similar--sure. You say "does replacing the word with 'ethnic cleansing' work?" Well, I think you not editing these articles should work much better. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) ::::There is no generalized statement about genocide in the lede of the article "United States". There's ''one'' reference under "History" to the California genocide, which has a WP link and sourced article. For you to oppose its mere mention (and linking) is baffling. True, King Leopold's genocidal crimes in Congo should appear in the "Belgium" article, and its editors might have conspired to squelch any mention of it. That's a major flaw of Wikipedia's libertarian "open encyclopedia" model: there's no procedure in place to stop "patriotic editing" of country articles. [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 16:41, 28 February 2024 (UTC) :::::Don't get me wrong. I don't mean in a [[WP: OTHERSTUFF]] sense. Rather, longstanding [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. As for the Belgium, China, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USSR articles, I similarly oppose mentioning genocide on their pages, for the reasons Barnards.tar.gz expounded upon. "Ethnic cleansing" is consensus in the literature. So if other editors use it to describe the "American-Indian Wars" I'd wholeheartedly support. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:16, 1 March 2024 (UTC) {{od}} It is interesting to note that {{Ping|KlayCax}} has removed about 5K of sourced material from another entry based on an alleged consensus that seems rather opposed to what I'm reading above. ([[Special:Diff/1210296886|diff]]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 15:36, 29 February 2024 (UTC) : There has been a series of changes made by KlayCax, sometimes with inaccurate summaries, pushing for what they believe should be added or removed. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 05:57, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::None of my edit summaries have been "inaccurate". (Such as?) We obviously have our disagreements. But that should be expected on articles surrounding politically contentious topics. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:09, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::{{Ping|Drmies}} mentioned the article ''California''. I restored (to the History section) the sole link to ''California genocide'' after KlayCax removed not just the section on CA genocide, but all links to that article [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=California&diff=prev&oldid=1205274231]. If the positions are split 50-50 as claimed, why did their edit retain more on the position against ''genocide''? I did not restore another link in the lead, only for SashiRolls to point out later that there actually was a reason for it to be there, before KlayCax removed it. They also said [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1189862365] there was "general agreement" to remove the Trinity atomic bomb/nuclear test picture from this article ''United States''. But the discussion [/info/en/?search=Talk:United_States/Archive_104#Raising_the_American_flag_during_the_Battle_of_Iwo_Jima_vs._nuclear_mushroom_cloud_(Trinity_nuclear_test)] did not agree on removing it. I think KlayCax wants to push through editorial changes such as these. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 04:05, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :::Bring it up on ANI for a topic ban, [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]]. Who wants to deal with this? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :I didn't say consensus, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. I said that ''other'' editors believe that it should be removed. You can see this [[Talk:Historical negationism/Archive 8#Japan|here]] from UnitedStatesian. Gavin Newsom [https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/19/us/newsom-native-american-apology.html explicitly labeled it genocide] in 2019, and the debate between historians is between ''ethnic cleansing ''and ''genocide ''(both of which are war crimes), instead of saying that the events didn't occur. The citation used to source the notion is weak. Is there a notable historical denialist movement that denies what happened? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:07, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::Seems anti-American editors have an axe that want to grind, {{ping|KlayCax}}. Could you remove it? It's obviously being inserted into the article as a form of propaganda. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 11:00, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :::Wikipedia is [[WP:NOTCENSORED]], just because you feel it is "anti-American" doesn't give you the grounds to delete whatever you think is "propaganda." [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:29, 11 March 2024 (UTC) * {{u|KlayCax}} brought up at least nine or ten different articles but didn't tag anyone that was involved in those discussions on the various talk pages. This is not the proper place to discuss issues you may have with other articles, only this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 13:47, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *:Agreed. This is not an appropriate location to launch a widespread discussion about many different articles. If you want to suggest a change to one article, say [[California genocide]], then take that conversation up on [[Talk:California genocide]]. [[User:Yuchitown|Yuchitown]] ([[User talk:Yuchitown|talk]]) 14:23, 11 March 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown *:I agree with this too, this is not the place to discuss many other articles. It needs to be discussed before unilaterally removing sourced content willy-nilly. [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:28, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *::I think we should make a broad, Wikipedia-spanning topic on what events should be classified as genocide in Wikivoice. (See the article on [[genocide definitions]]) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 16:56, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *:::While I don't necessarily disagree I will reiterate that this talk page is about [[United States]] and how best to improve this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:12, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *::::I know. I was just bringing it up since it's tangent to the conversation. The current article titles are widely inconsistent with one another: *::::For instance: *::::* [[Native American genocide in the United States]] (implies that it is consensus) *::::* [[Palestinian genocide accusation]] (implies that it is debated) *::::* [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]] (no mention of genocide at all) *::::This is definitely a subject in which a unified consensus and [[WP: PRECEDENT]] between articles is needed. I'm under the opinion that anything not covered under [[Yehuda Bauer]]'s definition of Holocaust shouldn't be referred to in Wikivoice as genocide: {{tqi|[Holocaust is] the planned physical annihilation, for ideological or pseudo-religious reasons, of all the members of a national, ethnic, or racial group.}} Anything else is highly subjective and prone to inconsistency. *::::The [[Holocaust]], [[Rwandan Genocide]], and the like? I think the criteria is indisputably met by any scholar. *::::The [[Holodomor]], [[European colonization of the Americas]], and the [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China|Chinese treatment of the Uyghurs]]? I can see well-intentioned people legitimately disagreeing on that. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::You want us to change possibly hundreds of articles on your opinion alone? I'm telling you that isn't going to happen. Start discussions on the respective article talk pages and start RFC's for the community to comment and build consensus or this is a waste of time. [[Native American genocide in the United States]] is a title of an article that simply says the subject is notable and then sets out to describe and summarize that based on what is found in reliable sources about the subject. If there is content you disagree with then discuss it there. Same for the other articles. This isn't a hard process to follow. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:04, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::: Nothing would have to be changed. The RFC would be on what events should be definitely classified as "genocide" in Wikivoice v. "historians X take this view" and "historians Y take this view". [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:13, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 574 Native American tribes are recognized in the United States. Add this information to the demographics section Source: https://www.usa.gov/indian-tribes-alaska-native [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:31, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Pictogram voting question.svg|20px|link=|alt=]]&nbsp;'''Question:'''<!-- Template:EEp --> where is it supposed to be added and how would you formulate it? [[User:M.Bitton|M.Bitton]] ([[User talk:M.Bitton|talk]]) 14:37, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 (2) == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 169 Native American languages are spoken in the United States. Add this information to languages section. Source: https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/2011/acs/acsbr10-10.pdf [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:35, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Genocide in California == Prominent historians have [https://historyreclaimed.co.uk/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ rebutted the idea] that the California Indian Wars constituted genocide. <blockquote>Benjamin Madley, for his part, has been almost single-handedly responsible for re-branding the conflicts previously known as the “California Indian Wars” as the California Genocide. It is worth remembering that these are conflicts that just over 20 years ago, the authors of the Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas saw fit to detail without a single reference to the term “genocide.” Madley himself resorts to describing this as a genocide “hidden in plain sight”—i.e. a “genocide” that generations of historians before him had simply failed to notice. With a relentless focus on violent killing, and a reluctance to contextualize the big picture for the purpose of exaggerating an impression of unending massacre, Madley’s account has convinced many a reader that American officials in California were responsible for something in the neighbourhood of 150,000 violent deaths—a number which is likely 10x higher than the true death toll (including war casualties). For example, Madley’s text prompted a professor at UC Hastings named John Briscoe to write an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle asserting that: “After 1834… when the native population plummeted from 150,000 to 18,000… Indian hunting was sport for the mostly white gold-seekers and settlers. Indian-hunting raids nearly annihilated the population.” In reality, Madley’s own figures show that “Indian-hunting raids” likely claimed something less than 5% of the 132,000 casualties that Hastings implies in his widely quoted op-ed. Many of the other “missing” Indians might never have existed (i.e. they might be the result of exaggerated population estimates, on which more below). In addition, large numbers will have emigrated to Mexico when the missions were disbanded or when the territory was handed over to the United States, and still others will have assimilated into the US population in various ways. One thing is certain: the nature of our sources requires a caution that the sensationalists singularly lack.</blockquote> May someone note this on the page? [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 12:18, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :NB the "prominent historian" in question originally published this op-ed (outside his area of expertise, medieval Spanish economics) in ''The Spectator''. ([https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ §]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:42, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::You're responding to a single purpose account, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. Look at the edit history. (I agree that Jeff Fynn-Paul is not a reliable source here.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:43, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :::(Update: It was a sockpuppet.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:05, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Academic debate on genocide == I'm going to have to get this out of the way, aren't I? The tragic, cruel oppression of the American Indian was truly despicable, and the atrocities committed by European colonizers sicken anyone with a conscience. No sane person does or should deny this. The article completely ignores the fact that 90% of American Indians were accidentally wiped out by the completely unintentional introduction of Old World diseases. When the European colonizers first landed, they had no way of knowing how diseases spread. They thought it was caused by the "evil eye" or "the Devil." (Epidemiology as a science doesn't come about until the 1830s or 1840s.) Sneezing on somebody or their crops 300+ years before anyone knew that causes bad things does not make someone the equivalent of Hitler. Furthermore, the UN definition of genocide says that there has to be a deliberate policy of extermination (e.g. the Holocaust as perpetrated by Nazi Germany.) '''California was arguably a genocide because there was a deliberate policy of extermination and said policy was enacted with that goal in mind. The rest of the country? Nope. There has never been any federal policy ordering or implying the desirability of the extermination of the Indians. No order from President Grant or General Sherman/General Sheridan, no Act of Congress, nothing. No evidence is offered by this article to the contrary.''' The recent added sentences on "genocide" needs to be deleted because of this issue. I'd make a footnote called: "Debate over Terminology," something to that effect. I'd also include legitimate sources (NOT Michael Medved or the repulsive Stefan Molyneux) that dispute whether or not the term "genocide" is applicable. Scholars generally see American actions as failing to meet the criteria for genocide (in the vast majority of circumstances). That's just the case. It's also interesting that the citation used to claim it never uses the word "genocide". [[User:InvaderMichael|InvaderMichael]] ([[User talk:InvaderMichael|talk]]) 18:20, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :I may have missed it so could you point me to where it says encyclopedia content is based upon the UN's definition or directives versus providing reliable sources and gaining consensus through discussion? Thanks. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:12, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :"No synthesis" means that you would need a reliable source that makes that argument. The UN definition incidentally does not use the term "deliberate policy of extermination." Instead, it says to destroy in whole or in part. Apparently that can include a policy of assimilation, [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 15:08, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::He's right, {{ping|User:The Four Deuces}}. Jeffrey Ostler (who is probably the most prominent historian to argue that several American actions were) states that it's a small minority position within the literature: {{tqi|For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields}}. The only plausible case of this, as he mentioned above, to me is California. As their first governor [[Peter Hardeman Burnett]]'s stated: ::<blockquote> That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected.</blockquote> ::For the [[Trail of Tears]], Stony Brook University [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ states]: {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears. We don't (and shouldn't) label the [[Holodomor]] and similar events as genocide in Wikivoice for the same reason as {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} mentioned above. ::Even many historians who take a far more critical view of American history do not label (at least the vast majority of) American actions as genocidal. They instead describe it as settler colonialist or ethnic cleansing. ::Today, both would be considered war crimes, but the word genocide generally carries an "internationally exterminationist" connotation that the other two words lack. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:07, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::{{Ping|KlayCax}} wrote: {{tq|The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears.}} This is '''false''', at least as far as the text of the book goes. In the book, it is true that one finds the sentence {{maroon|Today Americans deplore the expropriation and expulsion of racial minorities, a practice now called "ethnic cleansing".}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/419/mode/1up source]) '''At no point''' does the author indicate that the white supremacy he talks about repeatedly ''never'' added up to genocide as KlayCax suggests. He simply doesn't use the term, as he is not talking about deaths, but about displacements and property rights /white speculation on expropriated Indian territory. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::: I spoke to him during an undergraduate history course of mine. (Which is why I know about the book in the first place.) He stated the Trial of Tears and California genocide/Indian Wars were best described as ethnic cleansing rather than genocide. While personal correspondence is not a reliable source, it's important to note that he personally describes the events as ethnic cleansing in the book, and never describes it as genocide. ::::: A reliable source that does talk about the view of mainstream historians [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples is here]; it states that {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. Ostler comments are brought up below so don't want to fork the conversation. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:53, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You are absolutely right: what you claim to have understood in a private conversation is not an RS. That you say the book speaks of the California Indian Wars (when it does not) as not being genocide is telling... given that the book's subject matter ends in 1848 with the following resumé: {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/852/mode/1up source]) I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do (on several different articles).-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::: What do you mean by it being telling? {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} Even people who characterize the events as ethnic cleansing affirm this. {{tqi|I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do }} It says exactly what I stated. He characterizes the Trail of Tears and (at least until 1848) American-Indian contact in California as a form of ethnic cleansing. (Never mentioning genocide at all in his book.) I suppose you ''could'' argue that he may implicitly see it as both genocide and ethnic cleansing. But it would be remarkably strange (to the point of absurdity) for him to just leave it out of the book entirely if he believed that. ::::::: Other sources on the Trail of Tears predominantly describe it as "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" as well. ::::::: Again, no one's denying the "domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government". No one. Ethnic cleansing is categorized today as a [[crime against humanity]]. Saying that the United States inflicted policies, including massacres and forced population transfers (including ethnic cleansing), that ultimately had catastrophic effects on native populations is by no means a glowing historiography. ::::::: Genocide also carries connotations of extermination in the popular imagination. So any reference to it would have be extensively detailed and contained within the article. There's no way to properly summarize it in that time. ::::::: We'd need overwhelming consensus (see below with what TFD wrote: which I agree with) to include it in the article. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:56, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Lest there be any confusion: the book does not "state that "ethnic cleansing" ''rather than "genocide"'' is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears." His book ends prior to the former and he only says with regard to ''part'' of the latter issue that it fit what people "now called" expropriation and explusion of racial minorities seventeen years ago. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 08:21, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::Again, you are making these arguments on the article talk page for [[United States]] which is what Wikipedia expressly states should not happen. If you have an issue with [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Holodomor]] or any of the other articles you listed we should be having those conversations on those respective article talk pages. If there are ten articles we should be having ten individual discussions, period. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:18, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I'm talking about [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=1211898233&oldid=1211852518 the recent edit by DivineReality], {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I think for the most part these issues are being discussed and consensus is being gathered. The issue is when editors choose to ignore consensus because they don't like the conclusion. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::There's no consensus among historians that the Holodomor, Trial of Tears, Gaza, Xinjiang, or the Russian invasion of Ukraine comprises a genocide. :::::Perhaps one could make the argument that there's a consensus that all of those things are war crimes/grave moral atrocities. But where is the consensus you're referring to? [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Trail%20of%20Tears&diff=1213549764&oldid=1213180265 The previous version] of the [[Trail of Tears]] implied that there was unanimous consensus among historians that the events were genocidal. Yet [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html the PBS citation makes no mention of genocide] and [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ among historians it's a small, minority viewpoint that the Trial of Tears was such]. ::::: "Grave moral wrongs/horrendously evil actions/mass murder" ≠ genocide. It would be wrong for us to state in Wikivoice that any of these things are as such. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You keep quoting a source that says it is a minority viewpoint but offer no specific numbers proving your point. A google scholar search revealed 279,000 instances of genocide related to "Native American" and "genocide". It is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship. You may quote the authors you wish and, in their voice, describe them as saying it is a minority view but we shouldn't say it in Wiki-voice without an in-depth analysis. We state in Wikivoice that some historians describe it as genocidal acts. Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint using those terms exactly and quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter? We have a good compromise solution already laid out without the need to diminish a significant viewpoint because some historians disagree. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 20:24, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::What do you mean by "specific numbers"? Paul Kelton, Jeffrey Ostler, and many, many, many others clearly state that it is a minority viewpoint. Are you talking like a poll that aggregates the views of historians? Because few polls like that exist at all. We do however have people like Paul Kelton and Jeffrey Ostler who have spoken about the present views of historians. For Ostler, who is definitely isn't a whitewasher of American history, and is an openly revisionist historian who challenges many of the traditional (positive) accounts of it, he states that it is a minority viewpoint. (Outside of California at least.) :::::::{{tqi|it is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship... quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter}}. Outside of California, it certainly is, and multiple sources state this. No one here is denying the utter destruction that American actions had on native populations. It's just that the vast majority of this is classified as "ethnic cleansing" or "settler colonialism" rather than genocide. :::::::{{tqi|Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint}} Because the previous version of the article implied that it was a consensus viewpoint of historians. I'm okay with ethnic cleansing, settler colonialism, and forced displacement, that's pretty uncontroversial with many mainstream historian, but outside of California "genocide" is a small minority viewpoint in the literature. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:46, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Our article on [[genocide]] says "Genocide is the intentional destruction of a people[a] in whole or in part." If one settler or a group of settlers worked to eliminate all or most native Americans from the land they were taking, it seems to pretty well fit that definition. It doesn't have to be official government policy. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 23:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::That's generally classified as [[ethnic cleansing]], not [[genocide]]. :::::::::Both are classified as [[crimes against humanity]]. However, they're generally regarded as two different forms of it, even if many scholars view the processes as interconnected in at least some ways. :::::::::(For instance, Jeffrey Ostler argues that the threat of genocide was used to compel ethnic cleansing, which I think is undeniable if anyone reads the primary sources.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:35, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::Looks like you'd better get over and fix our article on [[Genocide]]. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 03:29, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::: Ostler expounds upon this when discussing his book, Surviving Genocide [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Surviving_Genocide/6zeWDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Surviving+Genocide&printsec=frontcover], when he said, “Wherever we live in America, I believe any of us is well served to learn the history of the land’s original inhabitants, and to acknowledge the extremes of violence in our own history by calling it what is was: genocide.”[https://around.uoregon.edu/content/historian-examines-native-american-genocide-its-legacy-and-survivors] He goes on the state when describing this debate, "Given the history of the American genocide debate, however, it is doubtful that a consensus will emerge. It is safe to say the debate will continue." He tried to avoid the question of genocide altogether but he said he found he couldn't escape the sense that genocide is an integral part of the history he's written about. He resolves that genocide did not exist all the time but very much was a repeatable theme of the whole interaction of Natives with European/American's. :::::::: Another historian, Bernard Bailyn, who takes the approach that both sides in this debate committed savagery, summed it up like this "Well, the Indians were not genocidal, not on the whole. Their effort was not to wipe Europeans off the face of the map. It was the English who write these letters 'wipe them off the map'."[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-shocking-savagery-of-americas-early-history-22739301/] This debate is not small and no consensus exists among scholars or historians. We shouldn't present this position as minority in Wikivoice using that term exactly, any more than I would use such weight laden words as "growing" or "expanding". I think the wording on [[Trail of Tears]] aptly defines this debate, presenting ethnic cleansing first and genocide second and both describing the fact that some very respected historians and scholars believe either term or both terms are the best description of what happened but that there is no consensus. By applying "some" to both terms we admit in Wikivoice this is not a settled debate by any stretch. That is the most NPOV approach to this debate because it reflects the sources and leaves it to our readers to decide. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:58, 15 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::If {{tqi|"no consensus exists"}} then we shouldn't include it in Wikivoice within article. We've already renamed the ''Uyghur genocide ''→ [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]]. :::::::::We don't mention it on the [[Canada]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], or [[Ireland]] pages, either. :::::::::And of course I don't oppose mentioning it in the specific articles. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:54, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ===TFD conversation (forked in order to prevent multiple topics in same conversation)=== The term genocide is currently being used a lot for colonial history and even for current events including Xinjiang, Ukraine, and Gaza. There should be a guideline, because there are a lot of issues when using the term. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 19:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :To give a rough sketch of the situation, I definitely agree there should be a consistent guideline between articles on the matter. Having different standards on different articles simply doesn't make sense and the word is clearly being used inconsistently between articles. The most simple solution to me is ignoring the classic debate on what "genocide" actually means and basing it on whether an overwhelming majority of mainstream historians categorize the events as genocide with near-unanimous/or greater support. :That would place: :* Events such as the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide would continue to be categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :* Events such as the Holodomor, Uyghur persuections, Trail of Tears, Gaza, California Indian Wars/Genocide, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine would not categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :I think we're going to be spinning around in circles otherwise. Do you think that's a good solution, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}? Or do you have a better idea? Some form of standardization between articles is needed. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:27, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :: Not sure where this discussion would fit best but it's definitely needed. :: The increasing usage of "genocide" in Wikivoice of articles — when scholars are either mixed/generally opposed to the usage — is concerning. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:30, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::How about the usage of "genocide" in [[Genocide]]? [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 05:39, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::Generally agree. Since the concept of genocide was created to describe the Holocaust, the Holocaust falls within all the definitions provided. A number of other incidents meet some definitions but not others. ::Other than the Holocaust and a few other cases, normally if the term is used I would expect to see who used it and what they meant. ::There's also the issue of using a term to describe events long before the term was created. Frequently reliable sources will not address the issue. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 03:54, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::For those interested in origins, those who have studied Lemkin's notes suggest that he found the Holocaust (a term he apparently never used) to be a case of genocide, but certainly did not consider it the first genocide, nor even a prototype (according to the authors). Both the Armenian genocide and the genocides in the Americas predated it. I would suggest reading "[[Raphael Lemkin]] as historian of genocide in the Americas" (2005) ([https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/14623520500349951# source] available via Wikipedia Library). This allows one to see that Lemkin's research model for genocide studies very definitely included colonialism / imperialism in the Americas (particularly Spanish America). His notes concerning "16. Genocide against the American Indians" are apparently incompletely preserved. sample citation: "If Lemkin's definition of genocide as colonial has been studiously ignored by the literature, Australian, German, and English scholars interested in imperial history have now begun to implement it in their research on the destructive dimensions of colonialism." -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:52, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::::The reason Lemkin never used the term Holocaust is that it came into usage after he died. Anyway, while he coined the term genocide, his definition was altered when adopted by the UN and there was no recognition of genocides by Turkey, the United States or the Soviet Union. The only agreement on using the term was for the Holocaust, which is what led to the adoption of the Convention on Genocide. ::::Concepts often come to be used differently from originally meant, such as Adam Smith's "[[invisible hand]]." In that case, telling libertarians that is not what Smith actually meant is an etymological fallacy and unlikely to be persuasive. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 13:32, 15 March 2024 (UTC) === Removal on 3 April 2024 === :::::I'm removing it from the article for the time being, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}. If there's {{tqi|"no consensus"}} on how Indian removal policies are classified then we shouldn't say so in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:55, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::Given that there has already been an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RFC]] the correct thing to do is leave it in the article and start a new RfC if you think there is a pressing need to remove it. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::* RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::* The RFC in question is half a decade old, malformed, and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s.}} Neither is great. :::::::* It also appears to not even be a proper RFC. I can't find a tag for it. :::::::* The RFC wording is not presently in the article. A different phrasing was created by you a month ago. Several editors, including TFD, InvaderMichael, me, and others all objected to the wording. However, I was alright with it remaining in the article if a source saying that a consensus was established could be found. It hasn't. Regardless, as the wording is not in the RFC, it can not be said to fall under the bounds of what the RFC determined. :::::::Is there a consensus that the United States committed genocide, {{ping|SashiRolls}}? An honest observer knows that the matter is significantly contentious. It at least shouldn't be put in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:37, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::I disagree that "no consensus" means that you can remove it. No consensus means it should not be touched until we gain consensus. No changes to how Indian removal policies are described should be changed on any article until consensus is gathered either way. This is a highly contentious topic and all these edits to fit your point of view will potentially lead to edit warring and further disruption. It has been explained to you the proper way forward. On articles where there is not a current RFC discussing the matter you should open one. On articles where there is a current RFC you may join the process. There is no rush to form a conclusion on the matter as it is not a BLPVIO issue. I recommend opening discussions on the respective article talk pages or at the appropriate venue to allow the community to comment before arbitrarily making any edits on this specific matter. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:32, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::: {{tqi|This is a highly contentious topic}} If it is, as you said, a highly contentious topic, then why should the claim remain in Wikivoice? I'll note that the wording was recently readded by SashiRolls around a month ago. ::::::: '''I, TFD, and others left it in to try and have editor's establish the claim as having consensus in the historical literature, which, even then, seemed doubtful.''' The sources provided (including Ostler) only seem to further give credence to the idea that it's a minority view within the literature. Ostler [https://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/08/04/was-indian-removal-genocidal/ notes that]: {{tqi|But specialists have [generally] not argued that the policy is genocidal.}} and that {{tqi|Interestingly, however, most recent scholarship on Indian removal, while supporting the view that the policy was vicious and inhuman, has not addressed the question of genocide}}. The problem with citing only one historian is that so much has been written about the history of the United States that you can selectively pick books and quotations from reputable historians to bolster any narrative that you want. (From the "god-like American Founding Fathers" to "the genocidal, settler-colonialist, enslavers on lands now known as the United States".) ::::::: My opinion is that the majority of the events were predominantly [[ethnic cleansing]] and forced [[population transfers]] rather than genocide. (With a few possible exceptions.) It's also the widespread opinion of many scholars. I'm failing to see why you think it should cited as such in Wikivoice when you yourself have stated that there's "no consensus" on the matter and that it's a "highly contentious topic" in American history. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:30, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::The reason it should stay is that discussion is ongoing. To change it in the middle of discussion, whether the discussion has been going for five seconds or two years, is disruptive to the process. I would say that no matter what language was used except in the case of a BLP violation, as I stated. It hurts the collaborative effort for an editor to arbitrarily decide, once the attempt has been made to gather consensus or issues are raised, to then decide they don't like the terminology based on their interpretation of sources to remove it from the article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:40, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Once discussion is concluded and the community has spoken, you can have at it. But if there is no consensus that genocide belongs there is also no consensus that it should be solely classified as ethnic cleansing. No consensus is no consensus so get consensus. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:43, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::And on Ostler, it should be noted that he has on numerous occasions stated that he believes some acts, including the Trail of Tears, was genocidal. He agrees there is no consensus on the terminology among scholars but that goes for other terms as well. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:47, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::: That's exactly ''why'' I cited him, {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. Unlike conservative/traditionalist scholars, who would have the motivation to make the "genocide" position seem more fringe than it is, a revisionist scholar would have the ''opposite'' incentive. Ostler directly says that it is a (small?) minority position. If there is no consensus among scholars — which I think is indisputable at the very least — then why should the article make a determination that it is in Wikivoice? :::::::::: I'm fine with ethnic cleansing. But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose [the] [phrasing] SashiRolls [is supporting] (Note: Later word change for greater clarity per request). [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:57, 4 April 2024 (UTC) {{od}}Please redact my username from this statement, {{Ping|KlayCax}}. As you are very well aware, the long-standing "phrasing" that you deleted on 1 October 2023 long predates my first contribution to this article on 18 February 2023, at which time the exact phrasing I recently restored had been in the article for [[Special:Diff/883146875|four years]], when someone slightly modified the original wording from [[Special:Diff/860174730|Sept 2018]] added after the RfC. Trying to personalize the discussion diverts attention from the fact that it was *you* who deleted long-standing content and supporting references on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]]. Moreover, the phrasing you deleted on [[Special:Diff/1217049683|3 April 2024]] is not "my" phrasing either, as the 2019 formulation was modified by somebody else [[Special:Diff/1210307040|on 25 February 2024]], the day after I had restored it. Distorting my role leads me to want to chew on the [[WP:BAIT]] 🐟 , but upon reflection I think I'll just post the diffs... Also, feel free to ping the four editors you claim oppose the content that was in the article from Sept 2018 – October 2023 and from 24 Feb 2024 – 3 April 2024. Additionally, I'm not sure why you're talking about Indian removal in general and about the Trail of Tears when the content you are allegedly disputing refers to neither. This is becoming, as others have said, a timesink.-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:57, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::We all know you are fine with ethnic cleansing but you have yet to open a RFC on any article to ask for community consensus as has been suggested to you many times. You cherry pick statements just like you accuse others of doing to prove your point. If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship. But that isn't my issue. My issue is you wanting to change the articles while discussion is ongoing. And my warning is that it may lead to an edit war. No one wins in edit wars. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:12, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::: RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::::::: {{tqi|If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship}}. There's a consensus in the literature that the United States ethnically cleansed Native Americans. There isn't a consensus on the question of genocide. It's very possible for one to be true but not the other. :::::::::::: Again, all I'm asking is: if there isn't a consensus that the United States committed genocide. Why should it be referred to ''in Wikivoice'' as genocide? {{ping|ARoseWolf}}? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:16, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::: I don't understand what your objection is. If there's no objections to us 4's proposed changes then the discussion can be concluded. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::I read TFD's comments and I don't see that they necessarily agree with you. I don't see any proposed wording or changes other than you don't like the word genocide in Wikivoice when it comes to Native American treatment by the US. Your opinion is that because there is no agreement in scholarship to call it genocide we should not state it in Wikivoice and that it should be called ethnic cleansing, also not agreed on by scholarship, or crimes against humanity (patronizing) based solely on your opinion and interpretation. I see that, on '''one''' article talk page, you are trying to force some standardization on '''all''' articles that discuss genocide when you have been told by several editors that it needs to be separate discussions or if you can find the appropriate community venue to make sure this decision gets the wider community discussion. We shouldn't be trying to form Wikipedia policy on an article talk page. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:31, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::I object to having this discussion on this article talk page which is supposed to be only about improvements to this article specifically. I hope that clarifies my objection though I'm not sure why that was so hard to decipher because I said as much in several of my responses. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:38, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::The broad genocide discussion would go elsewhere. This conversation is narrowly about this article. :::::::::::::::I'm asking whether ''this'' page should state that the United States committed genocide ''in Wikivoice''? Yes or no? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:50, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::If there is reason enough to state it as ethnic cleansing so definitively with Wikivoice I think there is cause to state it as genocide, as has been done on other articles about Native American's treatment by the US. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:53, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::::In regards to [[United States]], I believe the article is very neutrally worded, making mention of genocide once and only as a wikilink to an article with the same title about this subject. It calls the Trail of Tears a forced removal, which I think is very generous. Before that it states in one sentence about the policies of Indian removal and assimilation that many, not most, many being more than one or two, respected scholars, both Native and non-Native, classify as genocidal acts in part or in whole. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::::If there's not a consensus than we shouldn't take a position either way. Particularly if it's a ''minority ''position within the literature. ::::::::::::::::::[[Trail of Tears]] isn't even mentioned in the article. The current phrasing in the article is about so-called "[[Indian Removal]]" in general. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) :: 1.) I already explained the 2018 RFC above. 1.) RFC's are matters of last resort. 2.) The RFC in question is half a decade old, '''was malformed''', and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|"In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s."}} Neither option was great. Heck, the only part of the statement still in the article is "genocide". Therefore, I can't see it as still [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. :: 2.) I've never reported anyone to an administrator on here and my statements weren't [[WP: BAIT]]. I was simply responding to the phrasing you reinstated. Editors with the best of intentions can disagree with one another on how articles should be written. That's entirely normal and should be expected. I apologize if something I said was taken the wrong way. It wasn't my intention. :: 3.) There's a lot more than 4 who have objected. {{ping|The Four Deuces}}, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}, {{ping|InvaderMichael}}, {{ping|Cmguy777}} {{ping|Dhtwiki}}, me, ''etc.'' have all opposed the wording (at least in ''Wikivoice'') over the past year for the simple reason that there's no current historical consensus on the matter. (And even worse: a lot of this appears to be a minority within the literature.) A note explaining the historiography and leaving it an open question would be far superior. (Or not mentioning it at all.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :: 4.) Because there was proposals to also list the [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Indian Removal]] (in general) as genocidal as well. There were two conversations going on at once. :: 5.) Without getting more bogged down in the weeds: 1.) There's no consensus in the literature. Additionally, many of these claims are ''minority'' positions within it. 2.) Therefore, Wikipedia shouldn't state it in Wikivoice. :Is there a consensus on any of this? If not, how can it remain in the article's voice? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) The fact that you ignored my request to redact the misleading attribution is noted. I look forward to reading the folks you pinged to see if anyone supports your removal. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 02:21, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :The only thing I said was {{tqi|But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose the SashiRolls [preferred] phrasing as is}}. (I'll add [preferred]) The context was obviously about how the phrasing that you're in favor of (I didn't say it was ''yours''; I only brought your name up in context due to the fact that ) is different from the RFC version. So citing the (incredible malformed and false dichotomy-induced) RFC that is now half a decade old doesn't have much weight. :My question is: if there's no consensus, why promote one view over the other? We've already renamed the [[Uyghur genocide]] to ''Persecution of the Uyghurs in China''. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:43, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Thank you for acknowledging that the wording is not mine. I do indeed prefer ''some'' wording to ''no'' wording (your preference). I am not opposed to including both the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, if you prefer. My thought is that using summary style is to be preferred and linking to the daughter article (California genocide) is simpler than splitting hairs in this article. :I haven't supported or opposed any particular wording. I left my view that genocide is a serious label that requires the highest standard of sourcing. I haven't looked into the sourcing of this particular subject in any great detail, but I can make a few generic comments: :1) If there's a problem with the title of the article on [[California genocide]] then [[Talk:California genocide]] is the place to discuss it. :2) I'm not sure any further site-wide guideline on use of this term is necessary or helpful. It should always come down to what sources say, so it's perfectly possible for articles on, say, [[China]] and [[Ukraine]] to be inconsistent on their use of the term, as long as they both reflect what their respective sources say. :3) If there is not clear consensus amongst sources, then we cannot pick one POV's preferred label and present it in wikivoice - and the more inflammatory the label, the clearer that consensus needs to be. :4) The [[United States]] is a vast subject. Almost everything in this article should be written in [[WP:SS|summary style]]. The section titled [[United_States#Revolution_and_expansion_(1776–1861)|Revolution and expansion (1776–1861)]] is headed {{tq|Further information: [[History of the United States (1776–1789)]], [[History of the United States (1789–1815)]], and [[History of the United States (1815–1849)]]}}, so logically the section should summarise what those articles say, with due weight. None of them use the word genocide as far as I can see. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 12:47, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Surprisingly, this was not even covered in the 1849-1865 page, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=History_of_the_United_States_%281849%E2%80%931865%29&diff=1217550713&oldid=1216784830 I have fixed that oversight]. As you can see, I have no problem with using ''both'' the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, since both are frequently seen in the scholarship, and en.wp represents all major viewpoints. If it is thought that Yale University press and University of Nebraska press books and the California governor are fringe sources, someone could open a thread at the Fringe theories noticeboard ([[WP:FTN]]) to get opinions there... -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 14:02, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::As an addendum, when I noticed [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1210296886 KlayCax deleting] the California genocide from Historical negationism a couple months ago (due to his post in an earlier section of this page), I learned that textbook editors were unwilling to refer to the events as "genocide" and pressured their authors not to use the term if they wanted to be published: "In spite of a wealth of sources, the California Department of Education denies the genocide of its first people, and publishers and authors of social studies texts almost entirely ignore the killing thousands of Indians and enslavement of thousands of others (California State Board of Education, 2000)." ([https://journals-sagepub-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1177/0002764213495032 source] available through Wikipedia Library) ::Times changed in 2019 with the governor's apology. Today, [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Talk:Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1217583771 new accounts are being created] to help KlayCax remove the longstanding text from that entry. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::Like SashiRolls, I am not opposed to both, and other, terms being discussed in articles. In fact, on most article discussions I have been involved with I voted against only the inclusion of genocide. I think many terms can and should be applied because there is no consensus among scholarship. They, much like Wikipedia, cannot agree on what even constitutes a genocide. I completely disagree with the notion it cannot apply to these events and I do not see how one it can definitively be called one and not the other when neither has consensus. Our best hope is to define the terms as neutrally as possible with citations and let our readers decide what to believe or not. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 12:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :This as a USA topic I generally avoid as I'm simply not that familiar with the academic research. But why aren't we saying something simply like {{Green|The westward expansion and nation building resulted in the displacement of many Native Peoples, that controversially has been described as ethnic cleansing or genocide by various scholars,,,,}} [https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3 source]{{cite book | last=Ostler | first=Jeffrey | title=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History | chapter=Genocide and American Indian History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2015-03-02 | isbn=978-0-19-932917-5 | doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3}} <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 17:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == The Lead == I checked back here for the first time in a while. It's really nice to see that it's been shortened so much! Good job all. -- [[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 05:46, 23 March 2024 (UTC) :It definitely reads better but it's a giant sea of blue. ...... It's been used as an example of what not to do lately in discussions about accessibility for readers.<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 19:10, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Military == The fact that the US has the strongest military in the world is not mentioned anywhere in the article. Why is this? [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 21:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC) :"Strongest" might be tricky to precisely define, but the article clearly states "The United States spent $877 billion on its military in 2022, which is by far the largest amount of any country, making up 39% of global military spending...The United States has the third-largest combined armed forces in the world". [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 01:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC) ::All good. I was just a little curious because the page for the US armed forces describe it as the strongest, so I thought that would be mentioned here. [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 20:31, 27 March 2024 (UTC) == Should the United States be called North Columbia? == '''Originally, the United States was planned to be called Columbia''' named after Columbus who landed in North America. And plus, the government officials officially planned to name the United States, Columbia but unfortunately, the South American republic of Columbia already took the name too early so the US had to settle with its current name. So, should the United States been called Columbia before the South Americans got ahold of the name or no? [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 13:14, 2 April 2024 (UTC) :Columbia was a name often used to refer to the United States, see [[Columbia (personification)]]. This fell out of fashion in the 20th century, although evidence remains in names such as the [[District of Columbia]]. Article talk pages are generally used to article development specifically, if you have general questions in the future they may be better addressed at the [[Wikipedia:Reference desk]]. Best, [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:36, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :The United States was named before the country of [[Colombia]], and its original name was actually [[United Colonies]]. [[User:Randy Kryn|Randy Kryn]] ([[User talk:Randy Kryn|talk]]) 03:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::Yeah I know Randy, but should the US change it's name from the United States of '''America''' onto the United States of '''Columbia''' and why you may ask? For Americans ahem I mean '''North Columbians''' to be proud of the founding fathers and their history. [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 05:42, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::Columbus was hardly a founding father of the USA. He never set foot on the land that is now the USA, and persisted to his death in believing that he had made it to Asia. And he's hardly a fine example of what you want to name your country after. He had two sons, one by his wife and one by his mistress. He called the local people he found ''Los Indios (Indians)'', a name that still creates confusion today. Columbus once punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. There are strong suggestions he was rather brutal in a lot more of his treatment of the natives. His name in his native Genoese language was ''Cristoffa Corombo'', so maybe the country could be called ''Corombia''. Alternatively, use the Spanish version of his name, ''Cristóbal Colón'', and call it ''Colonland''. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 06:34, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::I didn't meant Columbus was a founding father, I meant the some founding fathers and many other major individuals involved in the United States' founding wanted to change the name of the United States to Columbia but Colonland probably is a mighty option. I agree I guess [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 02:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Suggestions from AI == Condensed by a human: *The number of Indian reservations is mentioned as 326. This number can vary due to changes in federal recognition and the establishment of new reservations. It's essential to verify the current number for accuracy. **326 wasn't mentioned in the main body, now added. *The population number and global rank are correct as of the last update, but these are dynamic figures that change annually. It’s useful to note the year these numbers were reported for current context. *The discussion on the health care system, particularly the Affordable Care Act, may need an update to reflect any recent changes or impacts on insurance coverage and healthcare access. *briefly mentions the Civil War's impact on slavery but could elaborate on its profound effects on American society, including the Reconstruction era, the civil rights movement, and ongoing discussions around racial equity. *While discussing the economy, more emphasis could be placed on the shift towards technology and service industries over the past few decades, reflecting the current economic landscape. *The cultural section could benefit from a discussion on the influence of immigrant cultures on American cuisine, music, and festivals, highlighting the diversity of American cultural practices. *Geography mentions physical features but could discuss environmental challenges the US faces, such as climate change impacts on different regions, conservation efforts, and sustainability initiatives. *A brief explanation of the Electoral College system could provide readers with a clearer understanding of the presidential election process. *Mentions the popularity of American football, basketball, and baseball but could acknowledge the growing interest in soccer, both at a professional level and grassroots participation, reflecting changing sports preferences. [[User:Tpbradbury|Tom B]] ([[User talk:Tpbradbury|talk]]) 09:15, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Incorrect claim “highest median income of a non-microstate” == Factual error. I’d like to adjust it, but the page is protected. Several average sized countries such as Norway, Switzerland and a couple more have higher median income. Correct: US has a high median income. (Though not the highest.) Would someone with editing rights please correct. Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/178.238.174.47|178.238.174.47]] ([[User talk:178.238.174.47|talk]]) 17:48, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :[https://data.oecd.org/hha/household-disposable-income.htm According to OECD], the United States has a higher median income than Norway or Switzerland. A few microstates surpass it. However, that's already specified. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:03, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::It should be made more precise by saying this is disposable income according the OECD. These types of terms and statistics are usually defined in slightly different ways depending on their source. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 03:56, 19 April 2024 (UTC) == Request for edit on type of government. == I've noticed that there's been a change in the type of government on the page. Before it was "federal presidential constitutional republic", now "constitutional" was taken out which is a bad edit. The United States's rule of law is the constitution. To say we aren't constitutional anymore is taking away the true meaning behind the form of government. It's fundamental to our rule of law. I'm not sure if it was a mistake or intentional but putting "constitutional" back in is needed. [[Special:Contributions/208.38.225.183|208.38.225.183]] ([[User talk:208.38.225.183|talk]]) 01:00, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == "[[:EE. UU.]]" listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|Redirects for discussion]] == [[File:Information.svg|30px]] The redirect <span class="plainlinks">[//en.wikipedia.org/?title=EE._UU.&redirect=no EE. UU.]</span> has been listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|redirects for discussion]] to determine whether its use and function meets the [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect guidelines]]. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at '''{{slink|Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 April 9#EE. UU.}}''' until a consensus is reached. <!-- Template:RFDNote --> <span style="background-color: #FFCFBF; font-variant: small-caps">[[User:Utopes|Utopes]] <sub>('''[[User talk:Utopes|talk]]''' / '''[[Special:Contributions/Utopes|cont]]''')</sub></span> 21:14, 9 April 2024 (UTC) == Star spangled banner source == Currently it links to https://uscode.house.gov/statviewer.htm?volume=46&page=1508 which is something about the Battle of Kings Mountain? I think this maybe an error [[User:Idkjustathing|Idkjustathing]] ([[User talk:Idkjustathing|talk]]) 21:59, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :Look at the short piece of legislation at the top of the page reproduced when you click the link. It is not an error. <span style="font-family: Gill Sans MT, Arial, Helvetica; font-weight:140;">[[User:General Ization|<span style="color: #006633;">General <i>Ization</i></span>]]</span> <sup>[[User talk:General Ization|<i style="color: #000666;">Talk </i>]] </sup> 22:04, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == Federal Presidential republic?? == i could have sworn we were a federal CONSTITUTIONAL republic. sounds mighty strange.... [[Special:Contributions/12.166.63.211|12.166.63.211]] ([[User talk:12.166.63.211|talk]]) 01:17, 16 April 2024 (UTC) :See [[Talk:United States/Archive 94#RFC: Use "Federal presidential constitutional republic" in_infobox]]. Essentially, "republic" already implies "constitutional" as all republics are constitutional. While not all republics choose to codify as a single written document is another matter, but not having it as a single written document doesn't mean you aren't running in a constitutional manner (see [[United Kingdom]], which is a parliamentary [[constitutional monarchy]] without having a codified single document as its constitution, but rather a body of laws acting as such). See [[constitution]]. All ''republics'' have to operate on some sort of constitutional based system since they aren't operating on absolutist authority of a single person, like in an [[absolute monarchy]]. This is why a monarchical form of government has to establish whether or not it is constitutional or not, since non-constitutional monarchies can exist (i.e. absolute monarchies vs constitutional monarchies). Republics, however, must be constitutional in some form. --[[User:OuroborosCobra|OuroborosCobra]] ([[User talk:OuroborosCobra|talk]]) 12:33, 16 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 19 April 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} Page does not link to United Kingdom when first mentioned [[User:Crystallyn0|Crystallyn0]] ([[User talk:Crystallyn0|talk]]) 12:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
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M., Timpledon, M. T., & Marseken, S. F. |year=2010 |title=Orson Scott Card: United States, author, critic, public speaking, activism, genre |org=Betascript Publishing |comments={{OCLC|636651797}}, {{ISBN|9786130336431}}. |author2=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year2=2009 |title2=Biosphere 2: Biosphere 2, closed ecological system, Oracle, Arizona, Arizona, United States, Biome, space colonization, Biosphere, rainforest, Ed Bass, BIOS-3, Eden project |org2=Alphascript |comments2={{OCLC|699544461}}, {{ISBN|9786130219581}}. |author3=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year3=2010 |title3=Military journalism: Combatant commander, psychological warfare, United States, public affairs (military), propaganda, journalist, Civil-military operations |org3=Alphascript Publishing |comments3={{OCLC|671248488}}, {{ISBN|9786130072650}}. |bot=LivingBot }} {{All time pageviews|237}} {{Annual report|[[Wikipedia:2007 Top 50 Report|2007]], [[Wikipedia:2008 Top 50 Report|2008]], [[Wikipedia:2009 Top 50 Report|2009]], [[Wikipedia:2010 Top 50 Report|2010]], [[Wikipedia:2011 Top 50 Report|2011]], [[Wikipedia:2012 Top 50 Report|2012]], [[Wikipedia:2013 Top 50 Report|2013]], [[Wikipedia:2014 Top 50 Report|2014]], [[Wikipedia:2015 Top 50 Report|2015]], [[Wikipedia:Top 25 Report/2016|2016]], [[Wikipedia:2017 Top 50 Report|2017]], [[Wikipedia:2018 Top 50 Report|2018]], [[Wikipedia:2019 Top 50 Report|2019]], [[Wikipedia:2020 Top 50 Report|2020]], [[Wikipedia:2021 Top 50 Report|2021]], [[Wikipedia:2022 Top 50 Report|2022]], and [[Wikipedia:2023 Top 50 Report|2023]]}} {{Top 25 report | April 7, 2013 | April 28, 2013 | May 5, 2013 | September 8, 2013 | October 6, 2013 | until | February 23, 2014 | March 9, 2014 | until | March 30, 2014 | April 27, 2014 | May 4, 2014 | September 21, 2014 | October 12, 2014 | November 9, 2014 | November 16, 2014 | November 30, 2014 | December 7, 2014 | December 14, 2014 | January 25, 2015 | April 19, 2015 | May 10, 2015 | November 8, 2015 | March 27, 2016 | April 10, 2016 | May 15, 2016 | May 22, 2016 }} {{Annual readership}} {{section sizes}} }} {{User:HBC Archive Indexerbot/OptIn|target=/Archive index|mask=/Archive <#>|leading_zeros=0|indexhere=yes }} {{User:MiszaBot/config |archiveheader={{Automatic archive navigator}} |maxarchivesize=125K |counter=111 |minthreadsleft=4 |algo=old(30d) |archive=Talk:United States/Archive %(counter)d }} <!-- Talk page begins here. --> == "America" should not redirect to the United States == In the disambiguation page for America[/info/en/?search=America_(disambiguation)], it is specified that ''"America is a short-form name for the United States of America"''. However, the United States aren't known officially as the "United States of America", instead they are just the "United States". The name of the article is United States, and not United States of America. The nation is called "United States" and "of America" is only an unofficial addition to distinguish with other nations that go by United States. This is useless nowadays, considering that when "United States" is mentioned it is always referring to the one in America, unless said otherwise. Furthermore, America is a common name for much more than just the US, and nowadays it is much more common to see "America" being used to refer to the continent rather than the nation. [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|talk]]) 01:02, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :In the English language, America is usually used to refer to the United States, such that it is the overwhelmingly [[WP:PRIMARYTOPIC|primary topic]] for that word. This is not limited to usage within the United States but is the common meaning of the word in reliable sources globally, such as ''[https://indianexpress.com/about/america/ Indian Express]'', ''[https://mondediplo.com/2024/02/ Le Monde]'', ''[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/commentary/2023/09/13/world/restless-america/ Japan Times]'', ''[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/series/how-the-world-sees-america The Guardian]'', etc. It is true that in many languages America does not necessarily refer to the United States, but the English Wikipedia reflects English-language usage, which does support [[America]] redirecting here. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:19, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] In Le Monde, the International section is divided into ''Americas'' and in that section is the ''United States''. Looking up 'America' in Le Monde itself doesn't show any US-related articles using the term to refer to the US. ::The same goes for The Guardian [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|talk]]) 01:28, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :::The examples I gave directly and unambiguously use America to refer specifically and exclusively to the United States. The international section of ''Le Monde'' using "Americas" reinforces the idea that in the English language, Americas is used to refer to the landmass called [[Americas]] in contrast to America, which is overwhelmingly used to refer to the United States. I'm not sure what you're searching to not find any results, but when searching through ''Le Monde'' it is very easy to find English-language articles that use America to describe the United States, [https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2024/02/17/america-falls-out-of-love-with-tesla-and-electric-vehicles_6533006_19.html this example] is from a couple of days ago. ''The Guardian'' has an entire section called [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/americas-dirty-divide America's dirty divide] that it describes as {{tq|A series examining '''the country's''' vast environmental inequalities and how climate change will make things worse}} (emphasis added). When English-language reliable sources use America, it almost always is used to refer to the United States. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:42, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :The purpose of re-directs is that readers are taken to the article they are searching for. My guess is that over 95% of readers who type in America are looking for this article. If you have evidence that they are looking for another article, please tell me what it is. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 01:59, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::The '''United States of America''' is the official name, and is for example used in international relations, as for example titles of ambassadors. For usage in Congress see https://www.congress.gov/search?q=%7B%22congress%22%3A%5B%22118%22%5D%2C%22source%22%3A%22all%22%2C%22search%22%3A%22United%20States%20of%20America%22%7D [[User:Rjensen|Rjensen]] ([[User talk:Rjensen|talk]]) :::That doesn't matter. The official name of Mexico is "The United States of Mexico", but if you look up "United States" it directs to here. This is not a conversation worth entertaining, plenty of RFCs have been conducted and the consensus has been to keep things as they are. You're welcome to try to change consensus, but it will almost certainly fail. --[[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 00:31, 22 February 2024 (UTC) ::It is true that redirects should take you where you want to land. But i guess most (90% or so) people wo type America search for the continent America not the country USA. At least this was the case when i searched america and was confusied why it redirects me here. America = contient, USA = country in America. You also don't expect a redirect from europe to the article [[European_Union]], despite the EU having the a much larger portion of Europe than the USA has of America, or do you? [[Special:Contributions/185.62.82.91|185.62.82.91]] ([[User talk:185.62.82.91|talk]]) 11:50, 20 March 2024 (UTC) :::America is not a continent though. North America is a continent. South America is a continent. [[Special:Contributions/24.34.64.221|24.34.64.221]] ([[User talk:24.34.64.221|talk]]) 21:44, 28 March 2024 (UTC) ::For example, I myself came here by typing in ''America''… [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) ==Problematic changes made to United States-Indigenous Peoples articles== There's recently been a massive, radical restructuring of articles surrounding relations between the indigenous peoples of the Americas and the United States. Generally in the form of calling events that were previously predominately labeled as "ethnic cleansing", "mass atrocities", and "forced population transfers" and referring to the events as "genocidal" instead. This is despite the fact that this viewpoint is a small minority among historians, political scientists, and anthropologists. The titles for these articles in of themselves are problematic: * [[Native American genocide in the United States]] According to Jeffrey Ostler — who holds perhaps one of the most "negative maximalist" viewpoints of American actions among mainstream scholars — this is a small minority viewpoint among those working in the field: <blockquote>This is not because there is a consensus behind the “pro-genocide” position. In fact, although few scholars in the fields of American Indian and western U.S. history have systematically addressed the question of genocide, for many, perhaps most, scholars in these fields, an overarching indictment of genocide seems too extreme. Some might label specific events and cases, such as the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 or widespread settler violence against Indians during the California Gold Rush, as genocidal, but they would not see U.S. policies and settler actions as consistently so. Others would resist arguments for even limited genocide in U.S. history, citing definitions of genocide that would appear to require a federal government policy to physically destroy all (or most) Indians and observing that federal policies were intended to prevent physical disappearance by promoting assimilation. Some scholars would propose ethnic cleansing as an appropriate alternative to genocide. Others might consider assimilation to be a form of cultural genocide but would insist on a strong distinction between this policy and physical elimination.</blockquote> and: <blockquote>Since 1992, the argument for a total, relentless, and pervasive genocide in the Americas has become accepted in some areas of Indigenous studies and genocide studies. For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields.</blockquote> '''Note that I support ''keeping'' the ''contents'' for the article but ''renaming'' the page'''. The California genocide article is also problematic. It has been changed from: * ''California Indian Catastrophe'' -> [[California genocide]] ("California Indian Catastrophe" is used more in [[WP: RS]]'s; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of as of 2023], mainstream scholars are divided between ethnic cleansing and genocide.) Other articles such as: * [[Andrew Jackson]] * [[Racism in the United States]] * [[Historical negationism]] * [[Racism against Native Americans in the United States]] * [[Indian removal]] * [[California]] * [[Trail of Tears]] * [[Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas]] * [[Manifest Destiny]] * ''Etc.'' Have similarly been rewritten to imply that this is an overwhelming consensus. Tagging {{ping|ShirtNShoesPls}}, {{ping|Mason.Jones}}, {{ping|Moxy}}, {{ping|FMSky}}, {{ping|Rambling Rambler}}, and {{ping|Rockstone35}}. Many editors seem to be classifying all ethnic cleansing/population transfers, atrocities, et al. as inherently ''genocidal'', which isn't accepted by a majority of scholars. This is probably a discussion that needs to be had. Since I can't imagine that any version of these pages aren't going to generate controversy. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:24, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :My two cents would be any discussion of "genocide" should be kept out of the lead and any discussion in the body of text must be extremely well-sourced given the controversial nature of it. Seems to be too much "I've already decided it was genocide, here's the first result that came up on google as my source". [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 14:44, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :@Klay -- in this article, it's not "many editors"; it's one editor (who has already been warned about aggressive POV-pushing and edit-warring). I agree with Rambling above: unsuitable for the lede, mentioned in history section with reliable sources (not ideological academic treatises). [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 17:54, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]], on that editor there's an open ANI post about their conduct. If you'd like to contribute to it you can do [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#User ShirtNShoesPls, Block on grounds of repeated disruption (CIR/IDHT)|here]]. [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 18:26, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::ShirtNShoesPls is definitely one problematic user. However, many of these changes were made by others. :::I responded on the ANI, btw. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:12, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :Genocide is one of the more serious [[WP:LABEL|labels]], so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. Unfortunately, the political value of the word creates an incentive to creep the definition wider, to capture more rhetorical ground. This semantic dilution threatens to make word unencyclopedic to use at all. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 22:18, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::Came here from the [[2024 United States presidential election]] article. This is exactly what is happening, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}. There's no consensus that the events were genocide... A fact stated in the [[California genocide]] article itself! Could you remove it? I don't usually edit on here and apparently it locks me off from editing. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 10:59, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :@[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] Genocide is a word that needs to be used seriously and with strong sourcing. However, the discussion so far mis-states the fields that should be considered in deciding on its use. Fields of national history are one area, but so too are scholarship on the target groups (in this case, Native American Studies) and comparative scholarship on genocide itself (Genocide Studies). Formal official statements of responsibility are relevant as well. The key issue becomes describing and attributing these multiple literatures. Ostler's quote describes one of these fields, not all. ::To take two examples, the Trail of Tears and the violence preceding it is the central example in a major genocide studies text (Wolfe, "Settler colonialism and the elimination of the Native") while the American history literature on Andrew Jackson is voluminous and skeptical on such a label. Wikipedia should refer to both, whether discussing Cherokee history, the Trail of Tears itself, and Jackson in particular. Separately, the publication of two scholarly monographs (around 10 years ago) on the California genocide by historians, and their reception, should influence our use of the word on that situation. :[[User:Carwil|Carwil]] ([[User talk:Carwil|talk]]) 12:46, 1 March 2024 (UTC) :::Let's focus on content: {{od}} Indeed it was more than five years ago that an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RfC on the California genocide]] determined language that should be used in that section. Oddly, the words California genocide do not appear in the article despite that consensus, and all the sources have been deleted from the article. Can someone point to a more recent RfC consensus or should we reinstate the language and sources decided upon in September 2018? -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 18:30, 25 February 2024 (UTC) As it turns out, it was {{Ping|KlayCax}} on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]] who removed the reference to the California Genocide which had been in the article since the 2018 RfC with no edit summary. No consensus was sought on the talk page for this change. (Looking back, I see that I started [[Talk:United_States/Archive_108#Removal_of_Trail_of_Tears,_Indian_Removal_Act,_Foraker_Act,_Insular_Cases,_California_genocide|this discussion]] which did not yield a consensus to overturn the previous RfC.) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 19:56, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :I've reinstated the content per the 2018 RfC. A new RfC can be started if there is reason to debate this content which was in the article from 2018-2023. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::As {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} states above: {{tqi|Genocide is one of the more serious labels, so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. }}. There's no consensus (and it's a minority viewpoint) that the events in California were genocide. (See [https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-3 Ostler, 2015]; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of Magliari, 2023]) Thus, Wikipedia shouldn't state so in Wikivoice. Consensus can also ''change''. I'll start a RFC if necessary, but words such as genocide should be avoided unless there's a historical consensus. Adding it into the article otherwise presents significant [[WP: NPOV]] concerns. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::{{U|KlayCax}}, citing an article on [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1210295868 scalp bounties] while removing a paragraph on genocide isn't really... well it's not OK. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 23:16, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::: Many historians don't consider the events in California a genocide, instead referring to it as ethnic cleansing, mass murder, atrocity, ''et al.'' See what Michael F. Magliari [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of writes about the matter in the article]: {{tqi|In the often contentious and acrimonious debates over whether the Golden State’s Indigenous peoples were targeted for genocide by white Euro-Americans between 1846 and 1873}}. That's why it shouldn't be in the article. The [[WP: ONUS]] would be on including this. :::: They're both horrendous. However, they're different things. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:21, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::::[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]], wait. I'm telling you that your edit summary makes no sense in relation to the actual edit, and your response is to repeat the same irrelevant citation, this time with a quote which ''also'' totally doesn't make your point. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:53, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::::The problem is that implies that there's a consensus the events constitute a genocide. Both sources make it clear that there's no agreement among historians on the matter. ::::::It's also odd to focus specifically on the events in California. (And leave out the broader American-Indian wars that occurred after the conclusion of the Civil War.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:55, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::: Btw {{ping|Drmies}} I agree that the events in California were likely a genocide. However, there's been a general consensus and precedent on Wikipedia that a country's articles shouldn't include the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" unless there's an ''overwhelming academic consensus'' on the matter. (See [[Talk:United_States#Genocide_wording|above]].) ::::: * For instance, the USSR's article doesn't refer to the [[Holodomor]] as a genocide ::::: * Neither does [[China]]'s refer to the [[Uyghur genocide]] ::::: * Neither does [[Japan]] or the [[Empire of Japan]]'s pages use the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" on their articles. ::::: And so on and so forth. The reason is simply: there's no consensus on the matter. (And even among historians who affirm it, most would place the blame on settlers or the state government, rather than the national government.) ::::: Jeffery Ostler is clear that this is a minority position (at the very least) in the literature. I get the urge to [[WP: RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] but we can't state it in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:42, 25 February 2024 (UTC) {{od}} You say that consensus can change. However, no consensus has developed for your deletion of this content in the months that you've been deleting it. I noticed in the [[California genocide]] article that Magliari's view is not what you would have us believe. These are the final words of his review of the Yale University source you deleted: {{tq|Madley’s case for genocide is overwhelming and compelling in many specific instances. As his evidence makes plain, deliberately exterminatory campaigns devastated at least eighteen California tribes, including the Achumawi, Karuk, Lassik, Nisenan, Nongatl, Owens Valley Paiute, Pomo, Shasta, Sinkyone, Tolowa, Wailaki, Wappo, Whilkut, Wintu, Wiyot, Yana, Yuki, and Yurok. Beyond the shadow of any reasonable doubt (and by the standards of any reasonable definition), genocide did in fact play a significant role in the US conquest and subjugation of Native California.}} (source accessible [https://read-dukeupress-edu.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/ethnohistory/article/64/2/341/26348/An-American-Genocide-The-United-States-and-the?searchresult=1 here] via Wikipedia Library (Duke)) I'm not sure why you're so adamant about overturning [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|this prior consensus]] when the scholar you are citing quite clearly disagrees with you. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :[[User:SashiRolls]] it feels like I'm on Facebook. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:54, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::And I'm going back to bed. :) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:07, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :I'm aware of Michael F. Magliari's and Jeffrey Ostler's views. I cited them specifically ''because'' of the fact that they hold a "genocidal/maximalist" view on the issue. (Yet also state there's widespread debate within the literature.) :* The first part of the articles is how he views the current academic consensus ''within the field''. This aspect of the article is the part I'm citing. :* The conclusion is ''his view ''on the matter. :There's been a longtime precedent to not use the word "genocide" in articles unless there's a consensus it happened for the reason Barnards.tar.gz mentioned. (Which is why I cite the [[Japan]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[United Kingdom]], [[Australia]], and [[Canada]] pages, none of which mention genocide. Even [[Belgium]]'s page - which ran the [[Congo Free State]] - specifically and intentionally excludes mention of the word.) :It would also be weird if we focus specifically on this and not the broader [[American Indian Wars|American-Indian Wars]] that occurred after the Civil War. :I'd be okay with "forced population transfer/ethnic cleansing" being used. "Genocide" is far more contentious and not anywhere near close enough to a consensus to include. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:11, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::How do you know "genocide" in [[Belgium]] is "specifically and intentionally" excluded? There's nothing on the talk page or in the talk page archives. Maybe that article should be updated. And [[China]] ''does'' mention the Uyghur genocide. Should I look at the others too? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :::* The first talk page discussion on the matter can be found [[Talk:Congo Free State/Archive 1#Not Genocide|here]]. The [[Congo Free State]] genocide question is the article. However, multiple Wikipedia administrators (including Wav) repeatedly removed any mention of "genocide" in Wikivoice from the article, and this has been ''ongoing over the past twenty years''. [[Belgium]]'s article never brings up genocide once. (Also per talk page discussion.) I agree that it does seem wrong. ([[Japan]]'s article never uses ethnic cleansing or genocide, either.) :::* The China wording was recently added. However, it keeps getting reverted by multiple editors (both on the Uyghur genocide and China pages), and never uses the term "genocide" to describe it with Wikivoice. :::* Australia's, Canada's, and New Zealand's pages — which are probably the closest analogies to the American treatment of its native populations — also don't mention the word genocide anywhere in their articles: [[History wars#Genocide debate|despite many scholars saying so]]. :::If it is replaced with "ethnic cleansing" and "forced population transfers" — and further expounding on the genocide debate in the respective articles — then the text would be completely alright with me. There's a clear historical consensus that the events would be classified today as [[war crimes]] — whether from "minimalists" who hold a narrow definition of "genocide" like [[Guenter Lewy]] to "maximalists" like [[David Stannard]] and Jeffrey Ostler who emphasize the utter devastation it caused on native cultures/peoples. Not sure what the right answer to #3 is (and it's a good question. I'll raise the issue on talk within the next week). Does replacing the word with "ethnic cleansing" work? :::It's a clear historical consensus among essentially every mainstream scholar that ''ethnic cleansing ''occurred, which is a war crime, and it avoids the terminology game on what "genocide" means. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:56, 28 February 2024 (UTC) ::::It's just one deflection after another. You say in Belgium it's explicitly excluded, but there's no proof of it on the talk page of ''that'' article. You can't even cite a diff. You said China doesn't mention it--it does. You suggest I should look at other articles because they're more similar--sure. You say "does replacing the word with 'ethnic cleansing' work?" Well, I think you not editing these articles should work much better. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) ::::There is no generalized statement about genocide in the lede of the article "United States". There's ''one'' reference under "History" to the California genocide, which has a WP link and sourced article. For you to oppose its mere mention (and linking) is baffling. True, King Leopold's genocidal crimes in Congo should appear in the "Belgium" article, and its editors might have conspired to squelch any mention of it. That's a major flaw of Wikipedia's libertarian "open encyclopedia" model: there's no procedure in place to stop "patriotic editing" of country articles. [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 16:41, 28 February 2024 (UTC) :::::Don't get me wrong. I don't mean in a [[WP: OTHERSTUFF]] sense. Rather, longstanding [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. As for the Belgium, China, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USSR articles, I similarly oppose mentioning genocide on their pages, for the reasons Barnards.tar.gz expounded upon. "Ethnic cleansing" is consensus in the literature. So if other editors use it to describe the "American-Indian Wars" I'd wholeheartedly support. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:16, 1 March 2024 (UTC) {{od}} It is interesting to note that {{Ping|KlayCax}} has removed about 5K of sourced material from another entry based on an alleged consensus that seems rather opposed to what I'm reading above. ([[Special:Diff/1210296886|diff]]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 15:36, 29 February 2024 (UTC) : There has been a series of changes made by KlayCax, sometimes with inaccurate summaries, pushing for what they believe should be added or removed. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 05:57, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::None of my edit summaries have been "inaccurate". (Such as?) We obviously have our disagreements. But that should be expected on articles surrounding politically contentious topics. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:09, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::{{Ping|Drmies}} mentioned the article ''California''. I restored (to the History section) the sole link to ''California genocide'' after KlayCax removed not just the section on CA genocide, but all links to that article [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=California&diff=prev&oldid=1205274231]. If the positions are split 50-50 as claimed, why did their edit retain more on the position against ''genocide''? I did not restore another link in the lead, only for SashiRolls to point out later that there actually was a reason for it to be there, before KlayCax removed it. They also said [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1189862365] there was "general agreement" to remove the Trinity atomic bomb/nuclear test picture from this article ''United States''. But the discussion [/info/en/?search=Talk:United_States/Archive_104#Raising_the_American_flag_during_the_Battle_of_Iwo_Jima_vs._nuclear_mushroom_cloud_(Trinity_nuclear_test)] did not agree on removing it. I think KlayCax wants to push through editorial changes such as these. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 04:05, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :::Bring it up on ANI for a topic ban, [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]]. Who wants to deal with this? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :I didn't say consensus, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. I said that ''other'' editors believe that it should be removed. You can see this [[Talk:Historical negationism/Archive 8#Japan|here]] from UnitedStatesian. Gavin Newsom [https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/19/us/newsom-native-american-apology.html explicitly labeled it genocide] in 2019, and the debate between historians is between ''ethnic cleansing ''and ''genocide ''(both of which are war crimes), instead of saying that the events didn't occur. The citation used to source the notion is weak. Is there a notable historical denialist movement that denies what happened? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:07, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::Seems anti-American editors have an axe that want to grind, {{ping|KlayCax}}. Could you remove it? It's obviously being inserted into the article as a form of propaganda. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 11:00, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :::Wikipedia is [[WP:NOTCENSORED]], just because you feel it is "anti-American" doesn't give you the grounds to delete whatever you think is "propaganda." [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:29, 11 March 2024 (UTC) * {{u|KlayCax}} brought up at least nine or ten different articles but didn't tag anyone that was involved in those discussions on the various talk pages. This is not the proper place to discuss issues you may have with other articles, only this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 13:47, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *:Agreed. This is not an appropriate location to launch a widespread discussion about many different articles. If you want to suggest a change to one article, say [[California genocide]], then take that conversation up on [[Talk:California genocide]]. [[User:Yuchitown|Yuchitown]] ([[User talk:Yuchitown|talk]]) 14:23, 11 March 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown *:I agree with this too, this is not the place to discuss many other articles. It needs to be discussed before unilaterally removing sourced content willy-nilly. [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:28, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *::I think we should make a broad, Wikipedia-spanning topic on what events should be classified as genocide in Wikivoice. (See the article on [[genocide definitions]]) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 16:56, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *:::While I don't necessarily disagree I will reiterate that this talk page is about [[United States]] and how best to improve this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:12, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *::::I know. I was just bringing it up since it's tangent to the conversation. The current article titles are widely inconsistent with one another: *::::For instance: *::::* [[Native American genocide in the United States]] (implies that it is consensus) *::::* [[Palestinian genocide accusation]] (implies that it is debated) *::::* [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]] (no mention of genocide at all) *::::This is definitely a subject in which a unified consensus and [[WP: PRECEDENT]] between articles is needed. I'm under the opinion that anything not covered under [[Yehuda Bauer]]'s definition of Holocaust shouldn't be referred to in Wikivoice as genocide: {{tqi|[Holocaust is] the planned physical annihilation, for ideological or pseudo-religious reasons, of all the members of a national, ethnic, or racial group.}} Anything else is highly subjective and prone to inconsistency. *::::The [[Holocaust]], [[Rwandan Genocide]], and the like? I think the criteria is indisputably met by any scholar. *::::The [[Holodomor]], [[European colonization of the Americas]], and the [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China|Chinese treatment of the Uyghurs]]? I can see well-intentioned people legitimately disagreeing on that. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::You want us to change possibly hundreds of articles on your opinion alone? I'm telling you that isn't going to happen. Start discussions on the respective article talk pages and start RFC's for the community to comment and build consensus or this is a waste of time. [[Native American genocide in the United States]] is a title of an article that simply says the subject is notable and then sets out to describe and summarize that based on what is found in reliable sources about the subject. If there is content you disagree with then discuss it there. Same for the other articles. This isn't a hard process to follow. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:04, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::: Nothing would have to be changed. The RFC would be on what events should be definitely classified as "genocide" in Wikivoice v. "historians X take this view" and "historians Y take this view". [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:13, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 574 Native American tribes are recognized in the United States. Add this information to the demographics section Source: https://www.usa.gov/indian-tribes-alaska-native [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:31, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Pictogram voting question.svg|20px|link=|alt=]]&nbsp;'''Question:'''<!-- Template:EEp --> where is it supposed to be added and how would you formulate it? [[User:M.Bitton|M.Bitton]] ([[User talk:M.Bitton|talk]]) 14:37, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 (2) == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 169 Native American languages are spoken in the United States. Add this information to languages section. Source: https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/2011/acs/acsbr10-10.pdf [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:35, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Genocide in California == Prominent historians have [https://historyreclaimed.co.uk/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ rebutted the idea] that the California Indian Wars constituted genocide. <blockquote>Benjamin Madley, for his part, has been almost single-handedly responsible for re-branding the conflicts previously known as the “California Indian Wars” as the California Genocide. It is worth remembering that these are conflicts that just over 20 years ago, the authors of the Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas saw fit to detail without a single reference to the term “genocide.” Madley himself resorts to describing this as a genocide “hidden in plain sight”—i.e. a “genocide” that generations of historians before him had simply failed to notice. With a relentless focus on violent killing, and a reluctance to contextualize the big picture for the purpose of exaggerating an impression of unending massacre, Madley’s account has convinced many a reader that American officials in California were responsible for something in the neighbourhood of 150,000 violent deaths—a number which is likely 10x higher than the true death toll (including war casualties). For example, Madley’s text prompted a professor at UC Hastings named John Briscoe to write an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle asserting that: “After 1834… when the native population plummeted from 150,000 to 18,000… Indian hunting was sport for the mostly white gold-seekers and settlers. Indian-hunting raids nearly annihilated the population.” In reality, Madley’s own figures show that “Indian-hunting raids” likely claimed something less than 5% of the 132,000 casualties that Hastings implies in his widely quoted op-ed. Many of the other “missing” Indians might never have existed (i.e. they might be the result of exaggerated population estimates, on which more below). In addition, large numbers will have emigrated to Mexico when the missions were disbanded or when the territory was handed over to the United States, and still others will have assimilated into the US population in various ways. One thing is certain: the nature of our sources requires a caution that the sensationalists singularly lack.</blockquote> May someone note this on the page? [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 12:18, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :NB the "prominent historian" in question originally published this op-ed (outside his area of expertise, medieval Spanish economics) in ''The Spectator''. ([https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ §]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:42, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::You're responding to a single purpose account, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. Look at the edit history. (I agree that Jeff Fynn-Paul is not a reliable source here.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:43, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :::(Update: It was a sockpuppet.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:05, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Academic debate on genocide == I'm going to have to get this out of the way, aren't I? The tragic, cruel oppression of the American Indian was truly despicable, and the atrocities committed by European colonizers sicken anyone with a conscience. No sane person does or should deny this. The article completely ignores the fact that 90% of American Indians were accidentally wiped out by the completely unintentional introduction of Old World diseases. When the European colonizers first landed, they had no way of knowing how diseases spread. They thought it was caused by the "evil eye" or "the Devil." (Epidemiology as a science doesn't come about until the 1830s or 1840s.) Sneezing on somebody or their crops 300+ years before anyone knew that causes bad things does not make someone the equivalent of Hitler. Furthermore, the UN definition of genocide says that there has to be a deliberate policy of extermination (e.g. the Holocaust as perpetrated by Nazi Germany.) '''California was arguably a genocide because there was a deliberate policy of extermination and said policy was enacted with that goal in mind. The rest of the country? Nope. There has never been any federal policy ordering or implying the desirability of the extermination of the Indians. No order from President Grant or General Sherman/General Sheridan, no Act of Congress, nothing. No evidence is offered by this article to the contrary.''' The recent added sentences on "genocide" needs to be deleted because of this issue. I'd make a footnote called: "Debate over Terminology," something to that effect. I'd also include legitimate sources (NOT Michael Medved or the repulsive Stefan Molyneux) that dispute whether or not the term "genocide" is applicable. Scholars generally see American actions as failing to meet the criteria for genocide (in the vast majority of circumstances). That's just the case. It's also interesting that the citation used to claim it never uses the word "genocide". [[User:InvaderMichael|InvaderMichael]] ([[User talk:InvaderMichael|talk]]) 18:20, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :I may have missed it so could you point me to where it says encyclopedia content is based upon the UN's definition or directives versus providing reliable sources and gaining consensus through discussion? Thanks. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:12, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :"No synthesis" means that you would need a reliable source that makes that argument. The UN definition incidentally does not use the term "deliberate policy of extermination." Instead, it says to destroy in whole or in part. Apparently that can include a policy of assimilation, [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 15:08, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::He's right, {{ping|User:The Four Deuces}}. Jeffrey Ostler (who is probably the most prominent historian to argue that several American actions were) states that it's a small minority position within the literature: {{tqi|For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields}}. The only plausible case of this, as he mentioned above, to me is California. As their first governor [[Peter Hardeman Burnett]]'s stated: ::<blockquote> That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected.</blockquote> ::For the [[Trail of Tears]], Stony Brook University [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ states]: {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears. We don't (and shouldn't) label the [[Holodomor]] and similar events as genocide in Wikivoice for the same reason as {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} mentioned above. ::Even many historians who take a far more critical view of American history do not label (at least the vast majority of) American actions as genocidal. They instead describe it as settler colonialist or ethnic cleansing. ::Today, both would be considered war crimes, but the word genocide generally carries an "internationally exterminationist" connotation that the other two words lack. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:07, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::{{Ping|KlayCax}} wrote: {{tq|The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears.}} This is '''false''', at least as far as the text of the book goes. In the book, it is true that one finds the sentence {{maroon|Today Americans deplore the expropriation and expulsion of racial minorities, a practice now called "ethnic cleansing".}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/419/mode/1up source]) '''At no point''' does the author indicate that the white supremacy he talks about repeatedly ''never'' added up to genocide as KlayCax suggests. He simply doesn't use the term, as he is not talking about deaths, but about displacements and property rights /white speculation on expropriated Indian territory. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::: I spoke to him during an undergraduate history course of mine. (Which is why I know about the book in the first place.) He stated the Trial of Tears and California genocide/Indian Wars were best described as ethnic cleansing rather than genocide. While personal correspondence is not a reliable source, it's important to note that he personally describes the events as ethnic cleansing in the book, and never describes it as genocide. ::::: A reliable source that does talk about the view of mainstream historians [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples is here]; it states that {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. Ostler comments are brought up below so don't want to fork the conversation. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:53, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You are absolutely right: what you claim to have understood in a private conversation is not an RS. That you say the book speaks of the California Indian Wars (when it does not) as not being genocide is telling... given that the book's subject matter ends in 1848 with the following resumé: {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/852/mode/1up source]) I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do (on several different articles).-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::: What do you mean by it being telling? {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} Even people who characterize the events as ethnic cleansing affirm this. {{tqi|I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do }} It says exactly what I stated. He characterizes the Trail of Tears and (at least until 1848) American-Indian contact in California as a form of ethnic cleansing. (Never mentioning genocide at all in his book.) I suppose you ''could'' argue that he may implicitly see it as both genocide and ethnic cleansing. But it would be remarkably strange (to the point of absurdity) for him to just leave it out of the book entirely if he believed that. ::::::: Other sources on the Trail of Tears predominantly describe it as "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" as well. ::::::: Again, no one's denying the "domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government". No one. Ethnic cleansing is categorized today as a [[crime against humanity]]. Saying that the United States inflicted policies, including massacres and forced population transfers (including ethnic cleansing), that ultimately had catastrophic effects on native populations is by no means a glowing historiography. ::::::: Genocide also carries connotations of extermination in the popular imagination. So any reference to it would have be extensively detailed and contained within the article. There's no way to properly summarize it in that time. ::::::: We'd need overwhelming consensus (see below with what TFD wrote: which I agree with) to include it in the article. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:56, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Lest there be any confusion: the book does not "state that "ethnic cleansing" ''rather than "genocide"'' is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears." His book ends prior to the former and he only says with regard to ''part'' of the latter issue that it fit what people "now called" expropriation and explusion of racial minorities seventeen years ago. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 08:21, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::Again, you are making these arguments on the article talk page for [[United States]] which is what Wikipedia expressly states should not happen. If you have an issue with [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Holodomor]] or any of the other articles you listed we should be having those conversations on those respective article talk pages. If there are ten articles we should be having ten individual discussions, period. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:18, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I'm talking about [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=1211898233&oldid=1211852518 the recent edit by DivineReality], {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I think for the most part these issues are being discussed and consensus is being gathered. The issue is when editors choose to ignore consensus because they don't like the conclusion. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::There's no consensus among historians that the Holodomor, Trial of Tears, Gaza, Xinjiang, or the Russian invasion of Ukraine comprises a genocide. :::::Perhaps one could make the argument that there's a consensus that all of those things are war crimes/grave moral atrocities. But where is the consensus you're referring to? [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Trail%20of%20Tears&diff=1213549764&oldid=1213180265 The previous version] of the [[Trail of Tears]] implied that there was unanimous consensus among historians that the events were genocidal. Yet [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html the PBS citation makes no mention of genocide] and [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ among historians it's a small, minority viewpoint that the Trial of Tears was such]. ::::: "Grave moral wrongs/horrendously evil actions/mass murder" ≠ genocide. It would be wrong for us to state in Wikivoice that any of these things are as such. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You keep quoting a source that says it is a minority viewpoint but offer no specific numbers proving your point. A google scholar search revealed 279,000 instances of genocide related to "Native American" and "genocide". It is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship. You may quote the authors you wish and, in their voice, describe them as saying it is a minority view but we shouldn't say it in Wiki-voice without an in-depth analysis. We state in Wikivoice that some historians describe it as genocidal acts. Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint using those terms exactly and quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter? We have a good compromise solution already laid out without the need to diminish a significant viewpoint because some historians disagree. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 20:24, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::What do you mean by "specific numbers"? Paul Kelton, Jeffrey Ostler, and many, many, many others clearly state that it is a minority viewpoint. Are you talking like a poll that aggregates the views of historians? Because few polls like that exist at all. We do however have people like Paul Kelton and Jeffrey Ostler who have spoken about the present views of historians. For Ostler, who is definitely isn't a whitewasher of American history, and is an openly revisionist historian who challenges many of the traditional (positive) accounts of it, he states that it is a minority viewpoint. (Outside of California at least.) :::::::{{tqi|it is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship... quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter}}. Outside of California, it certainly is, and multiple sources state this. No one here is denying the utter destruction that American actions had on native populations. It's just that the vast majority of this is classified as "ethnic cleansing" or "settler colonialism" rather than genocide. :::::::{{tqi|Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint}} Because the previous version of the article implied that it was a consensus viewpoint of historians. I'm okay with ethnic cleansing, settler colonialism, and forced displacement, that's pretty uncontroversial with many mainstream historian, but outside of California "genocide" is a small minority viewpoint in the literature. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:46, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Our article on [[genocide]] says "Genocide is the intentional destruction of a people[a] in whole or in part." If one settler or a group of settlers worked to eliminate all or most native Americans from the land they were taking, it seems to pretty well fit that definition. It doesn't have to be official government policy. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 23:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::That's generally classified as [[ethnic cleansing]], not [[genocide]]. :::::::::Both are classified as [[crimes against humanity]]. However, they're generally regarded as two different forms of it, even if many scholars view the processes as interconnected in at least some ways. :::::::::(For instance, Jeffrey Ostler argues that the threat of genocide was used to compel ethnic cleansing, which I think is undeniable if anyone reads the primary sources.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:35, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::Looks like you'd better get over and fix our article on [[Genocide]]. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 03:29, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::: Ostler expounds upon this when discussing his book, Surviving Genocide [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Surviving_Genocide/6zeWDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Surviving+Genocide&printsec=frontcover], when he said, “Wherever we live in America, I believe any of us is well served to learn the history of the land’s original inhabitants, and to acknowledge the extremes of violence in our own history by calling it what is was: genocide.”[https://around.uoregon.edu/content/historian-examines-native-american-genocide-its-legacy-and-survivors] He goes on the state when describing this debate, "Given the history of the American genocide debate, however, it is doubtful that a consensus will emerge. It is safe to say the debate will continue." He tried to avoid the question of genocide altogether but he said he found he couldn't escape the sense that genocide is an integral part of the history he's written about. He resolves that genocide did not exist all the time but very much was a repeatable theme of the whole interaction of Natives with European/American's. :::::::: Another historian, Bernard Bailyn, who takes the approach that both sides in this debate committed savagery, summed it up like this "Well, the Indians were not genocidal, not on the whole. Their effort was not to wipe Europeans off the face of the map. It was the English who write these letters 'wipe them off the map'."[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-shocking-savagery-of-americas-early-history-22739301/] This debate is not small and no consensus exists among scholars or historians. We shouldn't present this position as minority in Wikivoice using that term exactly, any more than I would use such weight laden words as "growing" or "expanding". I think the wording on [[Trail of Tears]] aptly defines this debate, presenting ethnic cleansing first and genocide second and both describing the fact that some very respected historians and scholars believe either term or both terms are the best description of what happened but that there is no consensus. By applying "some" to both terms we admit in Wikivoice this is not a settled debate by any stretch. That is the most NPOV approach to this debate because it reflects the sources and leaves it to our readers to decide. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:58, 15 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::If {{tqi|"no consensus exists"}} then we shouldn't include it in Wikivoice within article. We've already renamed the ''Uyghur genocide ''→ [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]]. :::::::::We don't mention it on the [[Canada]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], or [[Ireland]] pages, either. :::::::::And of course I don't oppose mentioning it in the specific articles. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:54, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ===TFD conversation (forked in order to prevent multiple topics in same conversation)=== The term genocide is currently being used a lot for colonial history and even for current events including Xinjiang, Ukraine, and Gaza. There should be a guideline, because there are a lot of issues when using the term. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 19:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :To give a rough sketch of the situation, I definitely agree there should be a consistent guideline between articles on the matter. Having different standards on different articles simply doesn't make sense and the word is clearly being used inconsistently between articles. The most simple solution to me is ignoring the classic debate on what "genocide" actually means and basing it on whether an overwhelming majority of mainstream historians categorize the events as genocide with near-unanimous/or greater support. :That would place: :* Events such as the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide would continue to be categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :* Events such as the Holodomor, Uyghur persuections, Trail of Tears, Gaza, California Indian Wars/Genocide, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine would not categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :I think we're going to be spinning around in circles otherwise. Do you think that's a good solution, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}? Or do you have a better idea? Some form of standardization between articles is needed. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:27, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :: Not sure where this discussion would fit best but it's definitely needed. :: The increasing usage of "genocide" in Wikivoice of articles — when scholars are either mixed/generally opposed to the usage — is concerning. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:30, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::How about the usage of "genocide" in [[Genocide]]? [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 05:39, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::Generally agree. Since the concept of genocide was created to describe the Holocaust, the Holocaust falls within all the definitions provided. A number of other incidents meet some definitions but not others. ::Other than the Holocaust and a few other cases, normally if the term is used I would expect to see who used it and what they meant. ::There's also the issue of using a term to describe events long before the term was created. Frequently reliable sources will not address the issue. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 03:54, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::For those interested in origins, those who have studied Lemkin's notes suggest that he found the Holocaust (a term he apparently never used) to be a case of genocide, but certainly did not consider it the first genocide, nor even a prototype (according to the authors). Both the Armenian genocide and the genocides in the Americas predated it. I would suggest reading "[[Raphael Lemkin]] as historian of genocide in the Americas" (2005) ([https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/14623520500349951# source] available via Wikipedia Library). This allows one to see that Lemkin's research model for genocide studies very definitely included colonialism / imperialism in the Americas (particularly Spanish America). His notes concerning "16. Genocide against the American Indians" are apparently incompletely preserved. sample citation: "If Lemkin's definition of genocide as colonial has been studiously ignored by the literature, Australian, German, and English scholars interested in imperial history have now begun to implement it in their research on the destructive dimensions of colonialism." -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:52, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::::The reason Lemkin never used the term Holocaust is that it came into usage after he died. Anyway, while he coined the term genocide, his definition was altered when adopted by the UN and there was no recognition of genocides by Turkey, the United States or the Soviet Union. The only agreement on using the term was for the Holocaust, which is what led to the adoption of the Convention on Genocide. ::::Concepts often come to be used differently from originally meant, such as Adam Smith's "[[invisible hand]]." In that case, telling libertarians that is not what Smith actually meant is an etymological fallacy and unlikely to be persuasive. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 13:32, 15 March 2024 (UTC) === Removal on 3 April 2024 === :::::I'm removing it from the article for the time being, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}. If there's {{tqi|"no consensus"}} on how Indian removal policies are classified then we shouldn't say so in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:55, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::Given that there has already been an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RFC]] the correct thing to do is leave it in the article and start a new RfC if you think there is a pressing need to remove it. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::* RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::* The RFC in question is half a decade old, malformed, and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s.}} Neither is great. :::::::* It also appears to not even be a proper RFC. I can't find a tag for it. :::::::* The RFC wording is not presently in the article. A different phrasing was created by you a month ago. Several editors, including TFD, InvaderMichael, me, and others all objected to the wording. However, I was alright with it remaining in the article if a source saying that a consensus was established could be found. It hasn't. Regardless, as the wording is not in the RFC, it can not be said to fall under the bounds of what the RFC determined. :::::::Is there a consensus that the United States committed genocide, {{ping|SashiRolls}}? An honest observer knows that the matter is significantly contentious. It at least shouldn't be put in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:37, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::I disagree that "no consensus" means that you can remove it. No consensus means it should not be touched until we gain consensus. No changes to how Indian removal policies are described should be changed on any article until consensus is gathered either way. This is a highly contentious topic and all these edits to fit your point of view will potentially lead to edit warring and further disruption. It has been explained to you the proper way forward. On articles where there is not a current RFC discussing the matter you should open one. On articles where there is a current RFC you may join the process. There is no rush to form a conclusion on the matter as it is not a BLPVIO issue. I recommend opening discussions on the respective article talk pages or at the appropriate venue to allow the community to comment before arbitrarily making any edits on this specific matter. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:32, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::: {{tqi|This is a highly contentious topic}} If it is, as you said, a highly contentious topic, then why should the claim remain in Wikivoice? I'll note that the wording was recently readded by SashiRolls around a month ago. ::::::: '''I, TFD, and others left it in to try and have editor's establish the claim as having consensus in the historical literature, which, even then, seemed doubtful.''' The sources provided (including Ostler) only seem to further give credence to the idea that it's a minority view within the literature. Ostler [https://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/08/04/was-indian-removal-genocidal/ notes that]: {{tqi|But specialists have [generally] not argued that the policy is genocidal.}} and that {{tqi|Interestingly, however, most recent scholarship on Indian removal, while supporting the view that the policy was vicious and inhuman, has not addressed the question of genocide}}. The problem with citing only one historian is that so much has been written about the history of the United States that you can selectively pick books and quotations from reputable historians to bolster any narrative that you want. (From the "god-like American Founding Fathers" to "the genocidal, settler-colonialist, enslavers on lands now known as the United States".) ::::::: My opinion is that the majority of the events were predominantly [[ethnic cleansing]] and forced [[population transfers]] rather than genocide. (With a few possible exceptions.) It's also the widespread opinion of many scholars. I'm failing to see why you think it should cited as such in Wikivoice when you yourself have stated that there's "no consensus" on the matter and that it's a "highly contentious topic" in American history. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:30, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::The reason it should stay is that discussion is ongoing. To change it in the middle of discussion, whether the discussion has been going for five seconds or two years, is disruptive to the process. I would say that no matter what language was used except in the case of a BLP violation, as I stated. It hurts the collaborative effort for an editor to arbitrarily decide, once the attempt has been made to gather consensus or issues are raised, to then decide they don't like the terminology based on their interpretation of sources to remove it from the article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:40, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Once discussion is concluded and the community has spoken, you can have at it. But if there is no consensus that genocide belongs there is also no consensus that it should be solely classified as ethnic cleansing. No consensus is no consensus so get consensus. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:43, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::And on Ostler, it should be noted that he has on numerous occasions stated that he believes some acts, including the Trail of Tears, was genocidal. He agrees there is no consensus on the terminology among scholars but that goes for other terms as well. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:47, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::: That's exactly ''why'' I cited him, {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. Unlike conservative/traditionalist scholars, who would have the motivation to make the "genocide" position seem more fringe than it is, a revisionist scholar would have the ''opposite'' incentive. Ostler directly says that it is a (small?) minority position. If there is no consensus among scholars — which I think is indisputable at the very least — then why should the article make a determination that it is in Wikivoice? :::::::::: I'm fine with ethnic cleansing. But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose [the] [phrasing] SashiRolls [is supporting] (Note: Later word change for greater clarity per request). [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:57, 4 April 2024 (UTC) {{od}}Please redact my username from this statement, {{Ping|KlayCax}}. As you are very well aware, the long-standing "phrasing" that you deleted on 1 October 2023 long predates my first contribution to this article on 18 February 2023, at which time the exact phrasing I recently restored had been in the article for [[Special:Diff/883146875|four years]], when someone slightly modified the original wording from [[Special:Diff/860174730|Sept 2018]] added after the RfC. Trying to personalize the discussion diverts attention from the fact that it was *you* who deleted long-standing content and supporting references on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]]. Moreover, the phrasing you deleted on [[Special:Diff/1217049683|3 April 2024]] is not "my" phrasing either, as the 2019 formulation was modified by somebody else [[Special:Diff/1210307040|on 25 February 2024]], the day after I had restored it. Distorting my role leads me to want to chew on the [[WP:BAIT]] 🐟 , but upon reflection I think I'll just post the diffs... Also, feel free to ping the four editors you claim oppose the content that was in the article from Sept 2018 – October 2023 and from 24 Feb 2024 – 3 April 2024. Additionally, I'm not sure why you're talking about Indian removal in general and about the Trail of Tears when the content you are allegedly disputing refers to neither. This is becoming, as others have said, a timesink.-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:57, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::We all know you are fine with ethnic cleansing but you have yet to open a RFC on any article to ask for community consensus as has been suggested to you many times. You cherry pick statements just like you accuse others of doing to prove your point. If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship. But that isn't my issue. My issue is you wanting to change the articles while discussion is ongoing. And my warning is that it may lead to an edit war. No one wins in edit wars. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:12, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::: RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::::::: {{tqi|If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship}}. There's a consensus in the literature that the United States ethnically cleansed Native Americans. There isn't a consensus on the question of genocide. It's very possible for one to be true but not the other. :::::::::::: Again, all I'm asking is: if there isn't a consensus that the United States committed genocide. Why should it be referred to ''in Wikivoice'' as genocide? {{ping|ARoseWolf}}? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:16, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::: I don't understand what your objection is. If there's no objections to us 4's proposed changes then the discussion can be concluded. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::I read TFD's comments and I don't see that they necessarily agree with you. I don't see any proposed wording or changes other than you don't like the word genocide in Wikivoice when it comes to Native American treatment by the US. Your opinion is that because there is no agreement in scholarship to call it genocide we should not state it in Wikivoice and that it should be called ethnic cleansing, also not agreed on by scholarship, or crimes against humanity (patronizing) based solely on your opinion and interpretation. I see that, on '''one''' article talk page, you are trying to force some standardization on '''all''' articles that discuss genocide when you have been told by several editors that it needs to be separate discussions or if you can find the appropriate community venue to make sure this decision gets the wider community discussion. We shouldn't be trying to form Wikipedia policy on an article talk page. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:31, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::I object to having this discussion on this article talk page which is supposed to be only about improvements to this article specifically. I hope that clarifies my objection though I'm not sure why that was so hard to decipher because I said as much in several of my responses. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:38, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::The broad genocide discussion would go elsewhere. This conversation is narrowly about this article. :::::::::::::::I'm asking whether ''this'' page should state that the United States committed genocide ''in Wikivoice''? Yes or no? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:50, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::If there is reason enough to state it as ethnic cleansing so definitively with Wikivoice I think there is cause to state it as genocide, as has been done on other articles about Native American's treatment by the US. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:53, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::::In regards to [[United States]], I believe the article is very neutrally worded, making mention of genocide once and only as a wikilink to an article with the same title about this subject. It calls the Trail of Tears a forced removal, which I think is very generous. Before that it states in one sentence about the policies of Indian removal and assimilation that many, not most, many being more than one or two, respected scholars, both Native and non-Native, classify as genocidal acts in part or in whole. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::::If there's not a consensus than we shouldn't take a position either way. Particularly if it's a ''minority ''position within the literature. ::::::::::::::::::[[Trail of Tears]] isn't even mentioned in the article. The current phrasing in the article is about so-called "[[Indian Removal]]" in general. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) :: 1.) I already explained the 2018 RFC above. 1.) RFC's are matters of last resort. 2.) The RFC in question is half a decade old, '''was malformed''', and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|"In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s."}} Neither option was great. Heck, the only part of the statement still in the article is "genocide". Therefore, I can't see it as still [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. :: 2.) I've never reported anyone to an administrator on here and my statements weren't [[WP: BAIT]]. I was simply responding to the phrasing you reinstated. Editors with the best of intentions can disagree with one another on how articles should be written. That's entirely normal and should be expected. I apologize if something I said was taken the wrong way. It wasn't my intention. :: 3.) There's a lot more than 4 who have objected. {{ping|The Four Deuces}}, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}, {{ping|InvaderMichael}}, {{ping|Cmguy777}} {{ping|Dhtwiki}}, me, ''etc.'' have all opposed the wording (at least in ''Wikivoice'') over the past year for the simple reason that there's no current historical consensus on the matter. (And even worse: a lot of this appears to be a minority within the literature.) A note explaining the historiography and leaving it an open question would be far superior. (Or not mentioning it at all.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :: 4.) Because there was proposals to also list the [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Indian Removal]] (in general) as genocidal as well. There were two conversations going on at once. :: 5.) Without getting more bogged down in the weeds: 1.) There's no consensus in the literature. Additionally, many of these claims are ''minority'' positions within it. 2.) Therefore, Wikipedia shouldn't state it in Wikivoice. :Is there a consensus on any of this? If not, how can it remain in the article's voice? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) The fact that you ignored my request to redact the misleading attribution is noted. I look forward to reading the folks you pinged to see if anyone supports your removal. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 02:21, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :The only thing I said was {{tqi|But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose the SashiRolls [preferred] phrasing as is}}. (I'll add [preferred]) The context was obviously about how the phrasing that you're in favor of (I didn't say it was ''yours''; I only brought your name up in context due to the fact that ) is different from the RFC version. So citing the (incredible malformed and false dichotomy-induced) RFC that is now half a decade old doesn't have much weight. :My question is: if there's no consensus, why promote one view over the other? We've already renamed the [[Uyghur genocide]] to ''Persecution of the Uyghurs in China''. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:43, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Thank you for acknowledging that the wording is not mine. I do indeed prefer ''some'' wording to ''no'' wording (your preference). I am not opposed to including both the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, if you prefer. My thought is that using summary style is to be preferred and linking to the daughter article (California genocide) is simpler than splitting hairs in this article. :I haven't supported or opposed any particular wording. I left my view that genocide is a serious label that requires the highest standard of sourcing. I haven't looked into the sourcing of this particular subject in any great detail, but I can make a few generic comments: :1) If there's a problem with the title of the article on [[California genocide]] then [[Talk:California genocide]] is the place to discuss it. :2) I'm not sure any further site-wide guideline on use of this term is necessary or helpful. It should always come down to what sources say, so it's perfectly possible for articles on, say, [[China]] and [[Ukraine]] to be inconsistent on their use of the term, as long as they both reflect what their respective sources say. :3) If there is not clear consensus amongst sources, then we cannot pick one POV's preferred label and present it in wikivoice - and the more inflammatory the label, the clearer that consensus needs to be. :4) The [[United States]] is a vast subject. Almost everything in this article should be written in [[WP:SS|summary style]]. The section titled [[United_States#Revolution_and_expansion_(1776–1861)|Revolution and expansion (1776–1861)]] is headed {{tq|Further information: [[History of the United States (1776–1789)]], [[History of the United States (1789–1815)]], and [[History of the United States (1815–1849)]]}}, so logically the section should summarise what those articles say, with due weight. None of them use the word genocide as far as I can see. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 12:47, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Surprisingly, this was not even covered in the 1849-1865 page, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=History_of_the_United_States_%281849%E2%80%931865%29&diff=1217550713&oldid=1216784830 I have fixed that oversight]. As you can see, I have no problem with using ''both'' the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, since both are frequently seen in the scholarship, and en.wp represents all major viewpoints. If it is thought that Yale University press and University of Nebraska press books and the California governor are fringe sources, someone could open a thread at the Fringe theories noticeboard ([[WP:FTN]]) to get opinions there... -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 14:02, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::As an addendum, when I noticed [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1210296886 KlayCax deleting] the California genocide from Historical negationism a couple months ago (due to his post in an earlier section of this page), I learned that textbook editors were unwilling to refer to the events as "genocide" and pressured their authors not to use the term if they wanted to be published: "In spite of a wealth of sources, the California Department of Education denies the genocide of its first people, and publishers and authors of social studies texts almost entirely ignore the killing thousands of Indians and enslavement of thousands of others (California State Board of Education, 2000)." ([https://journals-sagepub-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1177/0002764213495032 source] available through Wikipedia Library) ::Times changed in 2019 with the governor's apology. Today, [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Talk:Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1217583771 new accounts are being created] to help KlayCax remove the longstanding text from that entry. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::Like SashiRolls, I am not opposed to both, and other, terms being discussed in articles. In fact, on most article discussions I have been involved with I voted against only the inclusion of genocide. I think many terms can and should be applied because there is no consensus among scholarship. They, much like Wikipedia, cannot agree on what even constitutes a genocide. I completely disagree with the notion it cannot apply to these events and I do not see how one it can definitively be called one and not the other when neither has consensus. Our best hope is to define the terms as neutrally as possible with citations and let our readers decide what to believe or not. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 12:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :This as a USA topic I generally avoid as I'm simply not that familiar with the academic research. But why aren't we saying something simply like {{Green|The westward expansion and nation building resulted in the displacement of many Native Peoples, that controversially has been described as ethnic cleansing or genocide by various scholars,,,,}} [https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3 source]{{cite book | last=Ostler | first=Jeffrey | title=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History | chapter=Genocide and American Indian History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2015-03-02 | isbn=978-0-19-932917-5 | doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3}} <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 17:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == The Lead == I checked back here for the first time in a while. It's really nice to see that it's been shortened so much! Good job all. -- [[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 05:46, 23 March 2024 (UTC) :It definitely reads better but it's a giant sea of blue. ...... It's been used as an example of what not to do lately in discussions about accessibility for readers.<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 19:10, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Military == The fact that the US has the strongest military in the world is not mentioned anywhere in the article. Why is this? [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 21:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC) :"Strongest" might be tricky to precisely define, but the article clearly states "The United States spent $877 billion on its military in 2022, which is by far the largest amount of any country, making up 39% of global military spending...The United States has the third-largest combined armed forces in the world". [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 01:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC) ::All good. I was just a little curious because the page for the US armed forces describe it as the strongest, so I thought that would be mentioned here. [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 20:31, 27 March 2024 (UTC) == Should the United States be called North Columbia? == '''Originally, the United States was planned to be called Columbia''' named after Columbus who landed in North America. And plus, the government officials officially planned to name the United States, Columbia but unfortunately, the South American republic of Columbia already took the name too early so the US had to settle with its current name. So, should the United States been called Columbia before the South Americans got ahold of the name or no? [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 13:14, 2 April 2024 (UTC) :Columbia was a name often used to refer to the United States, see [[Columbia (personification)]]. This fell out of fashion in the 20th century, although evidence remains in names such as the [[District of Columbia]]. Article talk pages are generally used to article development specifically, if you have general questions in the future they may be better addressed at the [[Wikipedia:Reference desk]]. Best, [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:36, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :The United States was named before the country of [[Colombia]], and its original name was actually [[United Colonies]]. [[User:Randy Kryn|Randy Kryn]] ([[User talk:Randy Kryn|talk]]) 03:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::Yeah I know Randy, but should the US change it's name from the United States of '''America''' onto the United States of '''Columbia''' and why you may ask? For Americans ahem I mean '''North Columbians''' to be proud of the founding fathers and their history. [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 05:42, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::Columbus was hardly a founding father of the USA. He never set foot on the land that is now the USA, and persisted to his death in believing that he had made it to Asia. And he's hardly a fine example of what you want to name your country after. He had two sons, one by his wife and one by his mistress. He called the local people he found ''Los Indios (Indians)'', a name that still creates confusion today. Columbus once punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. There are strong suggestions he was rather brutal in a lot more of his treatment of the natives. His name in his native Genoese language was ''Cristoffa Corombo'', so maybe the country could be called ''Corombia''. Alternatively, use the Spanish version of his name, ''Cristóbal Colón'', and call it ''Colonland''. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 06:34, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::I didn't meant Columbus was a founding father, I meant the some founding fathers and many other major individuals involved in the United States' founding wanted to change the name of the United States to Columbia but Colonland probably is a mighty option. I agree I guess [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 02:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Suggestions from AI == Condensed by a human: *The number of Indian reservations is mentioned as 326. This number can vary due to changes in federal recognition and the establishment of new reservations. It's essential to verify the current number for accuracy. **326 wasn't mentioned in the main body, now added. *The population number and global rank are correct as of the last update, but these are dynamic figures that change annually. It’s useful to note the year these numbers were reported for current context. *The discussion on the health care system, particularly the Affordable Care Act, may need an update to reflect any recent changes or impacts on insurance coverage and healthcare access. *briefly mentions the Civil War's impact on slavery but could elaborate on its profound effects on American society, including the Reconstruction era, the civil rights movement, and ongoing discussions around racial equity. *While discussing the economy, more emphasis could be placed on the shift towards technology and service industries over the past few decades, reflecting the current economic landscape. *The cultural section could benefit from a discussion on the influence of immigrant cultures on American cuisine, music, and festivals, highlighting the diversity of American cultural practices. *Geography mentions physical features but could discuss environmental challenges the US faces, such as climate change impacts on different regions, conservation efforts, and sustainability initiatives. *A brief explanation of the Electoral College system could provide readers with a clearer understanding of the presidential election process. *Mentions the popularity of American football, basketball, and baseball but could acknowledge the growing interest in soccer, both at a professional level and grassroots participation, reflecting changing sports preferences. [[User:Tpbradbury|Tom B]] ([[User talk:Tpbradbury|talk]]) 09:15, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Incorrect claim “highest median income of a non-microstate” == Factual error. I’d like to adjust it, but the page is protected. Several average sized countries such as Norway, Switzerland and a couple more have higher median income. Correct: US has a high median income. (Though not the highest.) Would someone with editing rights please correct. Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/178.238.174.47|178.238.174.47]] ([[User talk:178.238.174.47|talk]]) 17:48, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :[https://data.oecd.org/hha/household-disposable-income.htm According to OECD], the United States has a higher median income than Norway or Switzerland. A few microstates surpass it. However, that's already specified. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:03, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::It should be made more precise by saying this is disposable income according the OECD. These types of terms and statistics are usually defined in slightly different ways depending on their source. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 03:56, 19 April 2024 (UTC) == Request for edit on type of government. == I've noticed that there's been a change in the type of government on the page. Before it was "federal presidential constitutional republic", now "constitutional" was taken out which is a bad edit. The United States's rule of law is the constitution. To say we aren't constitutional anymore is taking away the true meaning behind the form of government. It's fundamental to our rule of law. I'm not sure if it was a mistake or intentional but putting "constitutional" back in is needed. [[Special:Contributions/208.38.225.183|208.38.225.183]] ([[User talk:208.38.225.183|talk]]) 01:00, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == "[[:EE. UU.]]" listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|Redirects for discussion]] == [[File:Information.svg|30px]] The redirect <span class="plainlinks">[//en.wikipedia.org/?title=EE._UU.&redirect=no EE. UU.]</span> has been listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|redirects for discussion]] to determine whether its use and function meets the [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect guidelines]]. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at '''{{slink|Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 April 9#EE. UU.}}''' until a consensus is reached. <!-- Template:RFDNote --> <span style="background-color: #FFCFBF; font-variant: small-caps">[[User:Utopes|Utopes]] <sub>('''[[User talk:Utopes|talk]]''' / '''[[Special:Contributions/Utopes|cont]]''')</sub></span> 21:14, 9 April 2024 (UTC) == Star spangled banner source == Currently it links to https://uscode.house.gov/statviewer.htm?volume=46&page=1508 which is something about the Battle of Kings Mountain? I think this maybe an error [[User:Idkjustathing|Idkjustathing]] ([[User talk:Idkjustathing|talk]]) 21:59, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :Look at the short piece of legislation at the top of the page reproduced when you click the link. It is not an error. <span style="font-family: Gill Sans MT, Arial, Helvetica; font-weight:140;">[[User:General Ization|<span style="color: #006633;">General <i>Ization</i></span>]]</span> <sup>[[User talk:General Ization|<i style="color: #000666;">Talk </i>]] </sup> 22:04, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == Federal Presidential republic?? == i could have sworn we were a federal CONSTITUTIONAL republic. sounds mighty strange.... [[Special:Contributions/12.166.63.211|12.166.63.211]] ([[User talk:12.166.63.211|talk]]) 01:17, 16 April 2024 (UTC) :See [[Talk:United States/Archive 94#RFC: Use "Federal presidential constitutional republic" in_infobox]]. Essentially, "republic" already implies "constitutional" as all republics are constitutional. While not all republics choose to codify as a single written document is another matter, but not having it as a single written document doesn't mean you aren't running in a constitutional manner (see [[United Kingdom]], which is a parliamentary [[constitutional monarchy]] without having a codified single document as its constitution, but rather a body of laws acting as such). See [[constitution]]. All ''republics'' have to operate on some sort of constitutional based system since they aren't operating on absolutist authority of a single person, like in an [[absolute monarchy]]. This is why a monarchical form of government has to establish whether or not it is constitutional or not, since non-constitutional monarchies can exist (i.e. absolute monarchies vs constitutional monarchies). Republics, however, must be constitutional in some form. --[[User:OuroborosCobra|OuroborosCobra]] ([[User talk:OuroborosCobra|talk]]) 12:33, 16 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 19 April 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} Page does not link to United Kingdom when first mentioned [[User:Crystallyn0|Crystallyn0]] ([[User talk:Crystallyn0|talk]]) 12:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}} {{subst:trim|1= <!-- State UNAMBIGUOUSLY your suggested changes below this line, preferably in a "change X to Y" format. Other editors need to know what to add or remove. Blank edit requests will be declined. --> <!-- Write your request ABOVE this line and do not remove the tildes and curly brackets below. --> }} ~~~~'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -544,2 +544,13 @@ :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC) + +== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 == + +{{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}} +{{subst:trim|1= +<!-- State UNAMBIGUOUSLY your suggested changes below this line, preferably in a "change X to Y" format. Other editors need to know what to add or remove. Blank edit requests will be declined. --> + + + +<!-- Write your request ABOVE this line and do not remove the tildes and curly brackets below. --> +}} ~~~~ '
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Details for log entry 37,576,774

17:51, 26 April 2024: 37.111.141.111 ( talk) triggered filter 987, performing the action "edit" on Talk:United States. Actions taken: Warn; Filter description: Empty edit request ( examine)

Changes made in edit

:[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
:[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
:{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
:{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)

== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 ==

{{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}}
{{subst:trim|1=
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'{{talk header}} {{FAQ|collapsed=no}} {{Contentious topics/talk notice|ap|long}} {{American English|date=September 2011}} {{Article history |action1=GAN |action1date=02:27, 15 December 2005 |action1result=listed |action1oldid=31414825 |action2=FAC |action2date=00:10, 7 May 2006 |action2link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive1 |action2result=not promoted |action2oldid=51892109 |action3=FAC |action3date=21:56, 8 May 2006 |action3link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive2 |action3result=not promoted |action3oldid=52202348 |action4=PR |action4date=19:59, 18 May 2006 |action4link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive1 |action4oldid=53888193 |action5=FAC |action5date=22:20, 3 July 2006 |action5link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive3 |action5result=not promoted |action5oldid=61900268 |action6=PR |action6date=16:03, 21 September 2006 |action6link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive2 |action6oldid=76974796 |action7=FAC |action7date= 19 October 2006 |action7link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive4 |action7result=not promoted |action8=FAC |action8date=18:01, 19 June 2007 |action8link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive5 |action8result=not promoted |action8oldid=139239542 |action9=GAR |action9date=09:11, 9 July 2008 (UTC) |action9link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/1 |action9result=kept |action9oldid=224506293 |action10=FAC |action10date=16:56, 27 June 2009 |action10link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive6 |action10result=not promoted |action10oldid=298963267 |action11=PR |action11date=03:25, 6 September 2009 |action11link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive3 |action11result=reviewed |action11oldid=311950730 |action12=PR |action12date=20:57, 19 January 2011 |action12link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive4 |action12result=reviewed |action12oldid=408843044 |action13=GAR |action13date=13:12, 18 March 2012 (UTC) |action13link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/2 |action13result=delisted |action13oldid=482121399 |action14=GAN |action14date=23:32, 10 August 2012 (UTC) |action14link=Talk:United States/GA1 |action14result=not listed |action14oldid=506806669 |action15=GAN |action15date=16:08, 21 January 2015 (UTC) |action15link=Talk:United States/GA2 |action15result= listed |action15oldid=506806669 |action16=GAR |action16date=19:52, 22 February 2020 (UTC) |action16link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/3 |action16result= delisted |action16oldid=974086316 |action17=PR |action17date=2020-12-19 |action17link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive5 |action17result= reviewed |action17oldid=995167082 |currentstatus=DGA |topic=geography |dykdate=3 February 2015 |dykentry=... that the '''[[United States]]''' accounts for 37% of all [[List of countries by military expenditures|global military spending]]? |dyknom= Template:Did you know nominations/United States |otd1date=2008-07-04|otd1link=Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/July 4 }} {{WikiProject banner shell |class=B |collapsed=yes |vital=yes |listas=United States |1= {{WikiProject United States |importance=Top |past-collaboration=yes|USGov=yes}} {{WikiProject North America |importance=Top}} {{WikiProject Countries}} }} {{Press|date=August 17, 2009|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/wikipedia/6043534/The-50-most-viewed-Wikipedia-articles-in-2009-and-2008.html|title=The 50 most-viewed Wikipedia articles in 2009 and 2008|org=''[[The Daily Telegraph]]''|title2=Topics that spark Wikipedia 'edit wars' revealed|org2=[[BBC News]]|url2=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-23354613|date2=July 18, 2013|accessdate2=July 18, 2013}} {{Banner holder|collapsed=yes| {{Backwardscopy |author=Surhone, L. 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However, the United States aren't known officially as the "United States of America", instead they are just the "United States". The name of the article is United States, and not United States of America. The nation is called "United States" and "of America" is only an unofficial addition to distinguish with other nations that go by United States. This is useless nowadays, considering that when "United States" is mentioned it is always referring to the one in America, unless said otherwise. Furthermore, America is a common name for much more than just the US, and nowadays it is much more common to see "America" being used to refer to the continent rather than the nation. [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|talk]]) 01:02, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :In the English language, America is usually used to refer to the United States, such that it is the overwhelmingly [[WP:PRIMARYTOPIC|primary topic]] for that word. This is not limited to usage within the United States but is the common meaning of the word in reliable sources globally, such as ''[https://indianexpress.com/about/america/ Indian Express]'', ''[https://mondediplo.com/2024/02/ Le Monde]'', ''[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/commentary/2023/09/13/world/restless-america/ Japan Times]'', ''[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/series/how-the-world-sees-america The Guardian]'', etc. It is true that in many languages America does not necessarily refer to the United States, but the English Wikipedia reflects English-language usage, which does support [[America]] redirecting here. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:19, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] In Le Monde, the International section is divided into ''Americas'' and in that section is the ''United States''. Looking up 'America' in Le Monde itself doesn't show any US-related articles using the term to refer to the US. ::The same goes for The Guardian [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|talk]]) 01:28, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :::The examples I gave directly and unambiguously use America to refer specifically and exclusively to the United States. The international section of ''Le Monde'' using "Americas" reinforces the idea that in the English language, Americas is used to refer to the landmass called [[Americas]] in contrast to America, which is overwhelmingly used to refer to the United States. I'm not sure what you're searching to not find any results, but when searching through ''Le Monde'' it is very easy to find English-language articles that use America to describe the United States, [https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2024/02/17/america-falls-out-of-love-with-tesla-and-electric-vehicles_6533006_19.html this example] is from a couple of days ago. ''The Guardian'' has an entire section called [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/americas-dirty-divide America's dirty divide] that it describes as {{tq|A series examining '''the country's''' vast environmental inequalities and how climate change will make things worse}} (emphasis added). When English-language reliable sources use America, it almost always is used to refer to the United States. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:42, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :The purpose of re-directs is that readers are taken to the article they are searching for. My guess is that over 95% of readers who type in America are looking for this article. If you have evidence that they are looking for another article, please tell me what it is. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 01:59, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::The '''United States of America''' is the official name, and is for example used in international relations, as for example titles of ambassadors. For usage in Congress see https://www.congress.gov/search?q=%7B%22congress%22%3A%5B%22118%22%5D%2C%22source%22%3A%22all%22%2C%22search%22%3A%22United%20States%20of%20America%22%7D [[User:Rjensen|Rjensen]] ([[User talk:Rjensen|talk]]) :::That doesn't matter. The official name of Mexico is "The United States of Mexico", but if you look up "United States" it directs to here. This is not a conversation worth entertaining, plenty of RFCs have been conducted and the consensus has been to keep things as they are. You're welcome to try to change consensus, but it will almost certainly fail. --[[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 00:31, 22 February 2024 (UTC) ::It is true that redirects should take you where you want to land. But i guess most (90% or so) people wo type America search for the continent America not the country USA. At least this was the case when i searched america and was confusied why it redirects me here. America = contient, USA = country in America. You also don't expect a redirect from europe to the article [[European_Union]], despite the EU having the a much larger portion of Europe than the USA has of America, or do you? [[Special:Contributions/185.62.82.91|185.62.82.91]] ([[User talk:185.62.82.91|talk]]) 11:50, 20 March 2024 (UTC) :::America is not a continent though. North America is a continent. South America is a continent. [[Special:Contributions/24.34.64.221|24.34.64.221]] ([[User talk:24.34.64.221|talk]]) 21:44, 28 March 2024 (UTC) ::For example, I myself came here by typing in ''America''… [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) ==Problematic changes made to United States-Indigenous Peoples articles== There's recently been a massive, radical restructuring of articles surrounding relations between the indigenous peoples of the Americas and the United States. Generally in the form of calling events that were previously predominately labeled as "ethnic cleansing", "mass atrocities", and "forced population transfers" and referring to the events as "genocidal" instead. This is despite the fact that this viewpoint is a small minority among historians, political scientists, and anthropologists. The titles for these articles in of themselves are problematic: * [[Native American genocide in the United States]] According to Jeffrey Ostler — who holds perhaps one of the most "negative maximalist" viewpoints of American actions among mainstream scholars — this is a small minority viewpoint among those working in the field: <blockquote>This is not because there is a consensus behind the “pro-genocide” position. In fact, although few scholars in the fields of American Indian and western U.S. history have systematically addressed the question of genocide, for many, perhaps most, scholars in these fields, an overarching indictment of genocide seems too extreme. Some might label specific events and cases, such as the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 or widespread settler violence against Indians during the California Gold Rush, as genocidal, but they would not see U.S. policies and settler actions as consistently so. Others would resist arguments for even limited genocide in U.S. history, citing definitions of genocide that would appear to require a federal government policy to physically destroy all (or most) Indians and observing that federal policies were intended to prevent physical disappearance by promoting assimilation. Some scholars would propose ethnic cleansing as an appropriate alternative to genocide. Others might consider assimilation to be a form of cultural genocide but would insist on a strong distinction between this policy and physical elimination.</blockquote> and: <blockquote>Since 1992, the argument for a total, relentless, and pervasive genocide in the Americas has become accepted in some areas of Indigenous studies and genocide studies. For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields.</blockquote> '''Note that I support ''keeping'' the ''contents'' for the article but ''renaming'' the page'''. The California genocide article is also problematic. It has been changed from: * ''California Indian Catastrophe'' -> [[California genocide]] ("California Indian Catastrophe" is used more in [[WP: RS]]'s; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of as of 2023], mainstream scholars are divided between ethnic cleansing and genocide.) Other articles such as: * [[Andrew Jackson]] * [[Racism in the United States]] * [[Historical negationism]] * [[Racism against Native Americans in the United States]] * [[Indian removal]] * [[California]] * [[Trail of Tears]] * [[Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas]] * [[Manifest Destiny]] * ''Etc.'' Have similarly been rewritten to imply that this is an overwhelming consensus. Tagging {{ping|ShirtNShoesPls}}, {{ping|Mason.Jones}}, {{ping|Moxy}}, {{ping|FMSky}}, {{ping|Rambling Rambler}}, and {{ping|Rockstone35}}. Many editors seem to be classifying all ethnic cleansing/population transfers, atrocities, et al. as inherently ''genocidal'', which isn't accepted by a majority of scholars. This is probably a discussion that needs to be had. Since I can't imagine that any version of these pages aren't going to generate controversy. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:24, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :My two cents would be any discussion of "genocide" should be kept out of the lead and any discussion in the body of text must be extremely well-sourced given the controversial nature of it. Seems to be too much "I've already decided it was genocide, here's the first result that came up on google as my source". [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 14:44, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :@Klay -- in this article, it's not "many editors"; it's one editor (who has already been warned about aggressive POV-pushing and edit-warring). I agree with Rambling above: unsuitable for the lede, mentioned in history section with reliable sources (not ideological academic treatises). [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 17:54, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]], on that editor there's an open ANI post about their conduct. If you'd like to contribute to it you can do [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#User ShirtNShoesPls, Block on grounds of repeated disruption (CIR/IDHT)|here]]. [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 18:26, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::ShirtNShoesPls is definitely one problematic user. However, many of these changes were made by others. :::I responded on the ANI, btw. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:12, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :Genocide is one of the more serious [[WP:LABEL|labels]], so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. Unfortunately, the political value of the word creates an incentive to creep the definition wider, to capture more rhetorical ground. This semantic dilution threatens to make word unencyclopedic to use at all. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 22:18, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::Came here from the [[2024 United States presidential election]] article. This is exactly what is happening, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}. There's no consensus that the events were genocide... A fact stated in the [[California genocide]] article itself! Could you remove it? I don't usually edit on here and apparently it locks me off from editing. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 10:59, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :@[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] Genocide is a word that needs to be used seriously and with strong sourcing. However, the discussion so far mis-states the fields that should be considered in deciding on its use. Fields of national history are one area, but so too are scholarship on the target groups (in this case, Native American Studies) and comparative scholarship on genocide itself (Genocide Studies). Formal official statements of responsibility are relevant as well. The key issue becomes describing and attributing these multiple literatures. Ostler's quote describes one of these fields, not all. ::To take two examples, the Trail of Tears and the violence preceding it is the central example in a major genocide studies text (Wolfe, "Settler colonialism and the elimination of the Native") while the American history literature on Andrew Jackson is voluminous and skeptical on such a label. Wikipedia should refer to both, whether discussing Cherokee history, the Trail of Tears itself, and Jackson in particular. Separately, the publication of two scholarly monographs (around 10 years ago) on the California genocide by historians, and their reception, should influence our use of the word on that situation. :[[User:Carwil|Carwil]] ([[User talk:Carwil|talk]]) 12:46, 1 March 2024 (UTC) :::Let's focus on content: {{od}} Indeed it was more than five years ago that an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RfC on the California genocide]] determined language that should be used in that section. Oddly, the words California genocide do not appear in the article despite that consensus, and all the sources have been deleted from the article. Can someone point to a more recent RfC consensus or should we reinstate the language and sources decided upon in September 2018? -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 18:30, 25 February 2024 (UTC) As it turns out, it was {{Ping|KlayCax}} on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]] who removed the reference to the California Genocide which had been in the article since the 2018 RfC with no edit summary. No consensus was sought on the talk page for this change. (Looking back, I see that I started [[Talk:United_States/Archive_108#Removal_of_Trail_of_Tears,_Indian_Removal_Act,_Foraker_Act,_Insular_Cases,_California_genocide|this discussion]] which did not yield a consensus to overturn the previous RfC.) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 19:56, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :I've reinstated the content per the 2018 RfC. A new RfC can be started if there is reason to debate this content which was in the article from 2018-2023. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::As {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} states above: {{tqi|Genocide is one of the more serious labels, so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. }}. There's no consensus (and it's a minority viewpoint) that the events in California were genocide. (See [https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-3 Ostler, 2015]; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of Magliari, 2023]) Thus, Wikipedia shouldn't state so in Wikivoice. Consensus can also ''change''. I'll start a RFC if necessary, but words such as genocide should be avoided unless there's a historical consensus. Adding it into the article otherwise presents significant [[WP: NPOV]] concerns. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::{{U|KlayCax}}, citing an article on [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1210295868 scalp bounties] while removing a paragraph on genocide isn't really... well it's not OK. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 23:16, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::: Many historians don't consider the events in California a genocide, instead referring to it as ethnic cleansing, mass murder, atrocity, ''et al.'' See what Michael F. Magliari [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of writes about the matter in the article]: {{tqi|In the often contentious and acrimonious debates over whether the Golden State’s Indigenous peoples were targeted for genocide by white Euro-Americans between 1846 and 1873}}. That's why it shouldn't be in the article. The [[WP: ONUS]] would be on including this. :::: They're both horrendous. However, they're different things. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:21, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::::[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]], wait. I'm telling you that your edit summary makes no sense in relation to the actual edit, and your response is to repeat the same irrelevant citation, this time with a quote which ''also'' totally doesn't make your point. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:53, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::::The problem is that implies that there's a consensus the events constitute a genocide. Both sources make it clear that there's no agreement among historians on the matter. ::::::It's also odd to focus specifically on the events in California. (And leave out the broader American-Indian wars that occurred after the conclusion of the Civil War.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:55, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::: Btw {{ping|Drmies}} I agree that the events in California were likely a genocide. However, there's been a general consensus and precedent on Wikipedia that a country's articles shouldn't include the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" unless there's an ''overwhelming academic consensus'' on the matter. (See [[Talk:United_States#Genocide_wording|above]].) ::::: * For instance, the USSR's article doesn't refer to the [[Holodomor]] as a genocide ::::: * Neither does [[China]]'s refer to the [[Uyghur genocide]] ::::: * Neither does [[Japan]] or the [[Empire of Japan]]'s pages use the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" on their articles. ::::: And so on and so forth. The reason is simply: there's no consensus on the matter. (And even among historians who affirm it, most would place the blame on settlers or the state government, rather than the national government.) ::::: Jeffery Ostler is clear that this is a minority position (at the very least) in the literature. I get the urge to [[WP: RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] but we can't state it in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:42, 25 February 2024 (UTC) {{od}} You say that consensus can change. However, no consensus has developed for your deletion of this content in the months that you've been deleting it. I noticed in the [[California genocide]] article that Magliari's view is not what you would have us believe. These are the final words of his review of the Yale University source you deleted: {{tq|Madley’s case for genocide is overwhelming and compelling in many specific instances. As his evidence makes plain, deliberately exterminatory campaigns devastated at least eighteen California tribes, including the Achumawi, Karuk, Lassik, Nisenan, Nongatl, Owens Valley Paiute, Pomo, Shasta, Sinkyone, Tolowa, Wailaki, Wappo, Whilkut, Wintu, Wiyot, Yana, Yuki, and Yurok. Beyond the shadow of any reasonable doubt (and by the standards of any reasonable definition), genocide did in fact play a significant role in the US conquest and subjugation of Native California.}} (source accessible [https://read-dukeupress-edu.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/ethnohistory/article/64/2/341/26348/An-American-Genocide-The-United-States-and-the?searchresult=1 here] via Wikipedia Library (Duke)) I'm not sure why you're so adamant about overturning [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|this prior consensus]] when the scholar you are citing quite clearly disagrees with you. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :[[User:SashiRolls]] it feels like I'm on Facebook. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:54, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::And I'm going back to bed. :) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:07, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :I'm aware of Michael F. Magliari's and Jeffrey Ostler's views. I cited them specifically ''because'' of the fact that they hold a "genocidal/maximalist" view on the issue. (Yet also state there's widespread debate within the literature.) :* The first part of the articles is how he views the current academic consensus ''within the field''. This aspect of the article is the part I'm citing. :* The conclusion is ''his view ''on the matter. :There's been a longtime precedent to not use the word "genocide" in articles unless there's a consensus it happened for the reason Barnards.tar.gz mentioned. (Which is why I cite the [[Japan]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[United Kingdom]], [[Australia]], and [[Canada]] pages, none of which mention genocide. Even [[Belgium]]'s page - which ran the [[Congo Free State]] - specifically and intentionally excludes mention of the word.) :It would also be weird if we focus specifically on this and not the broader [[American Indian Wars|American-Indian Wars]] that occurred after the Civil War. :I'd be okay with "forced population transfer/ethnic cleansing" being used. "Genocide" is far more contentious and not anywhere near close enough to a consensus to include. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:11, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::How do you know "genocide" in [[Belgium]] is "specifically and intentionally" excluded? There's nothing on the talk page or in the talk page archives. Maybe that article should be updated. And [[China]] ''does'' mention the Uyghur genocide. Should I look at the others too? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :::* The first talk page discussion on the matter can be found [[Talk:Congo Free State/Archive 1#Not Genocide|here]]. The [[Congo Free State]] genocide question is the article. However, multiple Wikipedia administrators (including Wav) repeatedly removed any mention of "genocide" in Wikivoice from the article, and this has been ''ongoing over the past twenty years''. [[Belgium]]'s article never brings up genocide once. (Also per talk page discussion.) I agree that it does seem wrong. ([[Japan]]'s article never uses ethnic cleansing or genocide, either.) :::* The China wording was recently added. However, it keeps getting reverted by multiple editors (both on the Uyghur genocide and China pages), and never uses the term "genocide" to describe it with Wikivoice. :::* Australia's, Canada's, and New Zealand's pages — which are probably the closest analogies to the American treatment of its native populations — also don't mention the word genocide anywhere in their articles: [[History wars#Genocide debate|despite many scholars saying so]]. :::If it is replaced with "ethnic cleansing" and "forced population transfers" — and further expounding on the genocide debate in the respective articles — then the text would be completely alright with me. There's a clear historical consensus that the events would be classified today as [[war crimes]] — whether from "minimalists" who hold a narrow definition of "genocide" like [[Guenter Lewy]] to "maximalists" like [[David Stannard]] and Jeffrey Ostler who emphasize the utter devastation it caused on native cultures/peoples. Not sure what the right answer to #3 is (and it's a good question. I'll raise the issue on talk within the next week). Does replacing the word with "ethnic cleansing" work? :::It's a clear historical consensus among essentially every mainstream scholar that ''ethnic cleansing ''occurred, which is a war crime, and it avoids the terminology game on what "genocide" means. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:56, 28 February 2024 (UTC) ::::It's just one deflection after another. You say in Belgium it's explicitly excluded, but there's no proof of it on the talk page of ''that'' article. You can't even cite a diff. You said China doesn't mention it--it does. You suggest I should look at other articles because they're more similar--sure. You say "does replacing the word with 'ethnic cleansing' work?" Well, I think you not editing these articles should work much better. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) ::::There is no generalized statement about genocide in the lede of the article "United States". There's ''one'' reference under "History" to the California genocide, which has a WP link and sourced article. For you to oppose its mere mention (and linking) is baffling. True, King Leopold's genocidal crimes in Congo should appear in the "Belgium" article, and its editors might have conspired to squelch any mention of it. That's a major flaw of Wikipedia's libertarian "open encyclopedia" model: there's no procedure in place to stop "patriotic editing" of country articles. [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 16:41, 28 February 2024 (UTC) :::::Don't get me wrong. I don't mean in a [[WP: OTHERSTUFF]] sense. Rather, longstanding [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. As for the Belgium, China, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USSR articles, I similarly oppose mentioning genocide on their pages, for the reasons Barnards.tar.gz expounded upon. "Ethnic cleansing" is consensus in the literature. So if other editors use it to describe the "American-Indian Wars" I'd wholeheartedly support. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:16, 1 March 2024 (UTC) {{od}} It is interesting to note that {{Ping|KlayCax}} has removed about 5K of sourced material from another entry based on an alleged consensus that seems rather opposed to what I'm reading above. ([[Special:Diff/1210296886|diff]]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 15:36, 29 February 2024 (UTC) : There has been a series of changes made by KlayCax, sometimes with inaccurate summaries, pushing for what they believe should be added or removed. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 05:57, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::None of my edit summaries have been "inaccurate". (Such as?) We obviously have our disagreements. But that should be expected on articles surrounding politically contentious topics. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:09, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::{{Ping|Drmies}} mentioned the article ''California''. I restored (to the History section) the sole link to ''California genocide'' after KlayCax removed not just the section on CA genocide, but all links to that article [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=California&diff=prev&oldid=1205274231]. If the positions are split 50-50 as claimed, why did their edit retain more on the position against ''genocide''? I did not restore another link in the lead, only for SashiRolls to point out later that there actually was a reason for it to be there, before KlayCax removed it. They also said [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1189862365] there was "general agreement" to remove the Trinity atomic bomb/nuclear test picture from this article ''United States''. But the discussion [/info/en/?search=Talk:United_States/Archive_104#Raising_the_American_flag_during_the_Battle_of_Iwo_Jima_vs._nuclear_mushroom_cloud_(Trinity_nuclear_test)] did not agree on removing it. I think KlayCax wants to push through editorial changes such as these. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 04:05, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :::Bring it up on ANI for a topic ban, [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]]. Who wants to deal with this? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :I didn't say consensus, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. I said that ''other'' editors believe that it should be removed. You can see this [[Talk:Historical negationism/Archive 8#Japan|here]] from UnitedStatesian. Gavin Newsom [https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/19/us/newsom-native-american-apology.html explicitly labeled it genocide] in 2019, and the debate between historians is between ''ethnic cleansing ''and ''genocide ''(both of which are war crimes), instead of saying that the events didn't occur. The citation used to source the notion is weak. Is there a notable historical denialist movement that denies what happened? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:07, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::Seems anti-American editors have an axe that want to grind, {{ping|KlayCax}}. Could you remove it? It's obviously being inserted into the article as a form of propaganda. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 11:00, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :::Wikipedia is [[WP:NOTCENSORED]], just because you feel it is "anti-American" doesn't give you the grounds to delete whatever you think is "propaganda." [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:29, 11 March 2024 (UTC) * {{u|KlayCax}} brought up at least nine or ten different articles but didn't tag anyone that was involved in those discussions on the various talk pages. This is not the proper place to discuss issues you may have with other articles, only this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 13:47, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *:Agreed. This is not an appropriate location to launch a widespread discussion about many different articles. If you want to suggest a change to one article, say [[California genocide]], then take that conversation up on [[Talk:California genocide]]. [[User:Yuchitown|Yuchitown]] ([[User talk:Yuchitown|talk]]) 14:23, 11 March 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown *:I agree with this too, this is not the place to discuss many other articles. It needs to be discussed before unilaterally removing sourced content willy-nilly. [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:28, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *::I think we should make a broad, Wikipedia-spanning topic on what events should be classified as genocide in Wikivoice. (See the article on [[genocide definitions]]) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 16:56, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *:::While I don't necessarily disagree I will reiterate that this talk page is about [[United States]] and how best to improve this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:12, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *::::I know. I was just bringing it up since it's tangent to the conversation. The current article titles are widely inconsistent with one another: *::::For instance: *::::* [[Native American genocide in the United States]] (implies that it is consensus) *::::* [[Palestinian genocide accusation]] (implies that it is debated) *::::* [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]] (no mention of genocide at all) *::::This is definitely a subject in which a unified consensus and [[WP: PRECEDENT]] between articles is needed. I'm under the opinion that anything not covered under [[Yehuda Bauer]]'s definition of Holocaust shouldn't be referred to in Wikivoice as genocide: {{tqi|[Holocaust is] the planned physical annihilation, for ideological or pseudo-religious reasons, of all the members of a national, ethnic, or racial group.}} Anything else is highly subjective and prone to inconsistency. *::::The [[Holocaust]], [[Rwandan Genocide]], and the like? I think the criteria is indisputably met by any scholar. *::::The [[Holodomor]], [[European colonization of the Americas]], and the [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China|Chinese treatment of the Uyghurs]]? I can see well-intentioned people legitimately disagreeing on that. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::You want us to change possibly hundreds of articles on your opinion alone? I'm telling you that isn't going to happen. Start discussions on the respective article talk pages and start RFC's for the community to comment and build consensus or this is a waste of time. [[Native American genocide in the United States]] is a title of an article that simply says the subject is notable and then sets out to describe and summarize that based on what is found in reliable sources about the subject. If there is content you disagree with then discuss it there. Same for the other articles. This isn't a hard process to follow. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:04, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::: Nothing would have to be changed. The RFC would be on what events should be definitely classified as "genocide" in Wikivoice v. "historians X take this view" and "historians Y take this view". [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:13, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 574 Native American tribes are recognized in the United States. Add this information to the demographics section Source: https://www.usa.gov/indian-tribes-alaska-native [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:31, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Pictogram voting question.svg|20px|link=|alt=]]&nbsp;'''Question:'''<!-- Template:EEp --> where is it supposed to be added and how would you formulate it? [[User:M.Bitton|M.Bitton]] ([[User talk:M.Bitton|talk]]) 14:37, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 (2) == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 169 Native American languages are spoken in the United States. Add this information to languages section. Source: https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/2011/acs/acsbr10-10.pdf [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:35, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Genocide in California == Prominent historians have [https://historyreclaimed.co.uk/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ rebutted the idea] that the California Indian Wars constituted genocide. <blockquote>Benjamin Madley, for his part, has been almost single-handedly responsible for re-branding the conflicts previously known as the “California Indian Wars” as the California Genocide. It is worth remembering that these are conflicts that just over 20 years ago, the authors of the Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas saw fit to detail without a single reference to the term “genocide.” Madley himself resorts to describing this as a genocide “hidden in plain sight”—i.e. a “genocide” that generations of historians before him had simply failed to notice. With a relentless focus on violent killing, and a reluctance to contextualize the big picture for the purpose of exaggerating an impression of unending massacre, Madley’s account has convinced many a reader that American officials in California were responsible for something in the neighbourhood of 150,000 violent deaths—a number which is likely 10x higher than the true death toll (including war casualties). For example, Madley’s text prompted a professor at UC Hastings named John Briscoe to write an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle asserting that: “After 1834… when the native population plummeted from 150,000 to 18,000… Indian hunting was sport for the mostly white gold-seekers and settlers. Indian-hunting raids nearly annihilated the population.” In reality, Madley’s own figures show that “Indian-hunting raids” likely claimed something less than 5% of the 132,000 casualties that Hastings implies in his widely quoted op-ed. Many of the other “missing” Indians might never have existed (i.e. they might be the result of exaggerated population estimates, on which more below). In addition, large numbers will have emigrated to Mexico when the missions were disbanded or when the territory was handed over to the United States, and still others will have assimilated into the US population in various ways. One thing is certain: the nature of our sources requires a caution that the sensationalists singularly lack.</blockquote> May someone note this on the page? [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 12:18, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :NB the "prominent historian" in question originally published this op-ed (outside his area of expertise, medieval Spanish economics) in ''The Spectator''. ([https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ §]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:42, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::You're responding to a single purpose account, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. Look at the edit history. (I agree that Jeff Fynn-Paul is not a reliable source here.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:43, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :::(Update: It was a sockpuppet.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:05, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Academic debate on genocide == I'm going to have to get this out of the way, aren't I? The tragic, cruel oppression of the American Indian was truly despicable, and the atrocities committed by European colonizers sicken anyone with a conscience. No sane person does or should deny this. The article completely ignores the fact that 90% of American Indians were accidentally wiped out by the completely unintentional introduction of Old World diseases. When the European colonizers first landed, they had no way of knowing how diseases spread. They thought it was caused by the "evil eye" or "the Devil." (Epidemiology as a science doesn't come about until the 1830s or 1840s.) Sneezing on somebody or their crops 300+ years before anyone knew that causes bad things does not make someone the equivalent of Hitler. Furthermore, the UN definition of genocide says that there has to be a deliberate policy of extermination (e.g. the Holocaust as perpetrated by Nazi Germany.) '''California was arguably a genocide because there was a deliberate policy of extermination and said policy was enacted with that goal in mind. The rest of the country? Nope. There has never been any federal policy ordering or implying the desirability of the extermination of the Indians. No order from President Grant or General Sherman/General Sheridan, no Act of Congress, nothing. No evidence is offered by this article to the contrary.''' The recent added sentences on "genocide" needs to be deleted because of this issue. I'd make a footnote called: "Debate over Terminology," something to that effect. I'd also include legitimate sources (NOT Michael Medved or the repulsive Stefan Molyneux) that dispute whether or not the term "genocide" is applicable. Scholars generally see American actions as failing to meet the criteria for genocide (in the vast majority of circumstances). That's just the case. It's also interesting that the citation used to claim it never uses the word "genocide". [[User:InvaderMichael|InvaderMichael]] ([[User talk:InvaderMichael|talk]]) 18:20, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :I may have missed it so could you point me to where it says encyclopedia content is based upon the UN's definition or directives versus providing reliable sources and gaining consensus through discussion? Thanks. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:12, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :"No synthesis" means that you would need a reliable source that makes that argument. The UN definition incidentally does not use the term "deliberate policy of extermination." Instead, it says to destroy in whole or in part. Apparently that can include a policy of assimilation, [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 15:08, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::He's right, {{ping|User:The Four Deuces}}. Jeffrey Ostler (who is probably the most prominent historian to argue that several American actions were) states that it's a small minority position within the literature: {{tqi|For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields}}. The only plausible case of this, as he mentioned above, to me is California. As their first governor [[Peter Hardeman Burnett]]'s stated: ::<blockquote> That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected.</blockquote> ::For the [[Trail of Tears]], Stony Brook University [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ states]: {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears. We don't (and shouldn't) label the [[Holodomor]] and similar events as genocide in Wikivoice for the same reason as {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} mentioned above. ::Even many historians who take a far more critical view of American history do not label (at least the vast majority of) American actions as genocidal. They instead describe it as settler colonialist or ethnic cleansing. ::Today, both would be considered war crimes, but the word genocide generally carries an "internationally exterminationist" connotation that the other two words lack. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:07, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::{{Ping|KlayCax}} wrote: {{tq|The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears.}} This is '''false''', at least as far as the text of the book goes. In the book, it is true that one finds the sentence {{maroon|Today Americans deplore the expropriation and expulsion of racial minorities, a practice now called "ethnic cleansing".}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/419/mode/1up source]) '''At no point''' does the author indicate that the white supremacy he talks about repeatedly ''never'' added up to genocide as KlayCax suggests. He simply doesn't use the term, as he is not talking about deaths, but about displacements and property rights /white speculation on expropriated Indian territory. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::: I spoke to him during an undergraduate history course of mine. (Which is why I know about the book in the first place.) He stated the Trial of Tears and California genocide/Indian Wars were best described as ethnic cleansing rather than genocide. While personal correspondence is not a reliable source, it's important to note that he personally describes the events as ethnic cleansing in the book, and never describes it as genocide. ::::: A reliable source that does talk about the view of mainstream historians [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples is here]; it states that {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. Ostler comments are brought up below so don't want to fork the conversation. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:53, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You are absolutely right: what you claim to have understood in a private conversation is not an RS. That you say the book speaks of the California Indian Wars (when it does not) as not being genocide is telling... given that the book's subject matter ends in 1848 with the following resumé: {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/852/mode/1up source]) I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do (on several different articles).-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::: What do you mean by it being telling? {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} Even people who characterize the events as ethnic cleansing affirm this. {{tqi|I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do }} It says exactly what I stated. He characterizes the Trail of Tears and (at least until 1848) American-Indian contact in California as a form of ethnic cleansing. (Never mentioning genocide at all in his book.) I suppose you ''could'' argue that he may implicitly see it as both genocide and ethnic cleansing. But it would be remarkably strange (to the point of absurdity) for him to just leave it out of the book entirely if he believed that. ::::::: Other sources on the Trail of Tears predominantly describe it as "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" as well. ::::::: Again, no one's denying the "domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government". No one. Ethnic cleansing is categorized today as a [[crime against humanity]]. Saying that the United States inflicted policies, including massacres and forced population transfers (including ethnic cleansing), that ultimately had catastrophic effects on native populations is by no means a glowing historiography. ::::::: Genocide also carries connotations of extermination in the popular imagination. So any reference to it would have be extensively detailed and contained within the article. There's no way to properly summarize it in that time. ::::::: We'd need overwhelming consensus (see below with what TFD wrote: which I agree with) to include it in the article. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:56, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Lest there be any confusion: the book does not "state that "ethnic cleansing" ''rather than "genocide"'' is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears." His book ends prior to the former and he only says with regard to ''part'' of the latter issue that it fit what people "now called" expropriation and explusion of racial minorities seventeen years ago. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 08:21, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::Again, you are making these arguments on the article talk page for [[United States]] which is what Wikipedia expressly states should not happen. If you have an issue with [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Holodomor]] or any of the other articles you listed we should be having those conversations on those respective article talk pages. If there are ten articles we should be having ten individual discussions, period. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:18, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I'm talking about [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=1211898233&oldid=1211852518 the recent edit by DivineReality], {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I think for the most part these issues are being discussed and consensus is being gathered. The issue is when editors choose to ignore consensus because they don't like the conclusion. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::There's no consensus among historians that the Holodomor, Trial of Tears, Gaza, Xinjiang, or the Russian invasion of Ukraine comprises a genocide. :::::Perhaps one could make the argument that there's a consensus that all of those things are war crimes/grave moral atrocities. But where is the consensus you're referring to? [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Trail%20of%20Tears&diff=1213549764&oldid=1213180265 The previous version] of the [[Trail of Tears]] implied that there was unanimous consensus among historians that the events were genocidal. Yet [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html the PBS citation makes no mention of genocide] and [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ among historians it's a small, minority viewpoint that the Trial of Tears was such]. ::::: "Grave moral wrongs/horrendously evil actions/mass murder" ≠ genocide. It would be wrong for us to state in Wikivoice that any of these things are as such. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You keep quoting a source that says it is a minority viewpoint but offer no specific numbers proving your point. A google scholar search revealed 279,000 instances of genocide related to "Native American" and "genocide". It is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship. You may quote the authors you wish and, in their voice, describe them as saying it is a minority view but we shouldn't say it in Wiki-voice without an in-depth analysis. We state in Wikivoice that some historians describe it as genocidal acts. Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint using those terms exactly and quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter? We have a good compromise solution already laid out without the need to diminish a significant viewpoint because some historians disagree. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 20:24, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::What do you mean by "specific numbers"? Paul Kelton, Jeffrey Ostler, and many, many, many others clearly state that it is a minority viewpoint. Are you talking like a poll that aggregates the views of historians? Because few polls like that exist at all. We do however have people like Paul Kelton and Jeffrey Ostler who have spoken about the present views of historians. For Ostler, who is definitely isn't a whitewasher of American history, and is an openly revisionist historian who challenges many of the traditional (positive) accounts of it, he states that it is a minority viewpoint. (Outside of California at least.) :::::::{{tqi|it is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship... quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter}}. Outside of California, it certainly is, and multiple sources state this. No one here is denying the utter destruction that American actions had on native populations. It's just that the vast majority of this is classified as "ethnic cleansing" or "settler colonialism" rather than genocide. :::::::{{tqi|Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint}} Because the previous version of the article implied that it was a consensus viewpoint of historians. I'm okay with ethnic cleansing, settler colonialism, and forced displacement, that's pretty uncontroversial with many mainstream historian, but outside of California "genocide" is a small minority viewpoint in the literature. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:46, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Our article on [[genocide]] says "Genocide is the intentional destruction of a people[a] in whole or in part." If one settler or a group of settlers worked to eliminate all or most native Americans from the land they were taking, it seems to pretty well fit that definition. It doesn't have to be official government policy. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 23:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::That's generally classified as [[ethnic cleansing]], not [[genocide]]. :::::::::Both are classified as [[crimes against humanity]]. However, they're generally regarded as two different forms of it, even if many scholars view the processes as interconnected in at least some ways. :::::::::(For instance, Jeffrey Ostler argues that the threat of genocide was used to compel ethnic cleansing, which I think is undeniable if anyone reads the primary sources.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:35, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::Looks like you'd better get over and fix our article on [[Genocide]]. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 03:29, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::: Ostler expounds upon this when discussing his book, Surviving Genocide [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Surviving_Genocide/6zeWDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Surviving+Genocide&printsec=frontcover], when he said, “Wherever we live in America, I believe any of us is well served to learn the history of the land’s original inhabitants, and to acknowledge the extremes of violence in our own history by calling it what is was: genocide.”[https://around.uoregon.edu/content/historian-examines-native-american-genocide-its-legacy-and-survivors] He goes on the state when describing this debate, "Given the history of the American genocide debate, however, it is doubtful that a consensus will emerge. It is safe to say the debate will continue." He tried to avoid the question of genocide altogether but he said he found he couldn't escape the sense that genocide is an integral part of the history he's written about. He resolves that genocide did not exist all the time but very much was a repeatable theme of the whole interaction of Natives with European/American's. :::::::: Another historian, Bernard Bailyn, who takes the approach that both sides in this debate committed savagery, summed it up like this "Well, the Indians were not genocidal, not on the whole. Their effort was not to wipe Europeans off the face of the map. It was the English who write these letters 'wipe them off the map'."[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-shocking-savagery-of-americas-early-history-22739301/] This debate is not small and no consensus exists among scholars or historians. We shouldn't present this position as minority in Wikivoice using that term exactly, any more than I would use such weight laden words as "growing" or "expanding". I think the wording on [[Trail of Tears]] aptly defines this debate, presenting ethnic cleansing first and genocide second and both describing the fact that some very respected historians and scholars believe either term or both terms are the best description of what happened but that there is no consensus. By applying "some" to both terms we admit in Wikivoice this is not a settled debate by any stretch. That is the most NPOV approach to this debate because it reflects the sources and leaves it to our readers to decide. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:58, 15 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::If {{tqi|"no consensus exists"}} then we shouldn't include it in Wikivoice within article. We've already renamed the ''Uyghur genocide ''→ [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]]. :::::::::We don't mention it on the [[Canada]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], or [[Ireland]] pages, either. :::::::::And of course I don't oppose mentioning it in the specific articles. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:54, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ===TFD conversation (forked in order to prevent multiple topics in same conversation)=== The term genocide is currently being used a lot for colonial history and even for current events including Xinjiang, Ukraine, and Gaza. There should be a guideline, because there are a lot of issues when using the term. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 19:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :To give a rough sketch of the situation, I definitely agree there should be a consistent guideline between articles on the matter. Having different standards on different articles simply doesn't make sense and the word is clearly being used inconsistently between articles. The most simple solution to me is ignoring the classic debate on what "genocide" actually means and basing it on whether an overwhelming majority of mainstream historians categorize the events as genocide with near-unanimous/or greater support. :That would place: :* Events such as the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide would continue to be categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :* Events such as the Holodomor, Uyghur persuections, Trail of Tears, Gaza, California Indian Wars/Genocide, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine would not categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :I think we're going to be spinning around in circles otherwise. Do you think that's a good solution, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}? Or do you have a better idea? Some form of standardization between articles is needed. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:27, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :: Not sure where this discussion would fit best but it's definitely needed. :: The increasing usage of "genocide" in Wikivoice of articles — when scholars are either mixed/generally opposed to the usage — is concerning. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:30, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::How about the usage of "genocide" in [[Genocide]]? [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 05:39, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::Generally agree. Since the concept of genocide was created to describe the Holocaust, the Holocaust falls within all the definitions provided. A number of other incidents meet some definitions but not others. ::Other than the Holocaust and a few other cases, normally if the term is used I would expect to see who used it and what they meant. ::There's also the issue of using a term to describe events long before the term was created. Frequently reliable sources will not address the issue. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 03:54, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::For those interested in origins, those who have studied Lemkin's notes suggest that he found the Holocaust (a term he apparently never used) to be a case of genocide, but certainly did not consider it the first genocide, nor even a prototype (according to the authors). Both the Armenian genocide and the genocides in the Americas predated it. I would suggest reading "[[Raphael Lemkin]] as historian of genocide in the Americas" (2005) ([https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/14623520500349951# source] available via Wikipedia Library). This allows one to see that Lemkin's research model for genocide studies very definitely included colonialism / imperialism in the Americas (particularly Spanish America). His notes concerning "16. Genocide against the American Indians" are apparently incompletely preserved. sample citation: "If Lemkin's definition of genocide as colonial has been studiously ignored by the literature, Australian, German, and English scholars interested in imperial history have now begun to implement it in their research on the destructive dimensions of colonialism." -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:52, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::::The reason Lemkin never used the term Holocaust is that it came into usage after he died. Anyway, while he coined the term genocide, his definition was altered when adopted by the UN and there was no recognition of genocides by Turkey, the United States or the Soviet Union. The only agreement on using the term was for the Holocaust, which is what led to the adoption of the Convention on Genocide. ::::Concepts often come to be used differently from originally meant, such as Adam Smith's "[[invisible hand]]." In that case, telling libertarians that is not what Smith actually meant is an etymological fallacy and unlikely to be persuasive. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 13:32, 15 March 2024 (UTC) === Removal on 3 April 2024 === :::::I'm removing it from the article for the time being, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}. If there's {{tqi|"no consensus"}} on how Indian removal policies are classified then we shouldn't say so in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:55, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::Given that there has already been an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RFC]] the correct thing to do is leave it in the article and start a new RfC if you think there is a pressing need to remove it. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::* RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::* The RFC in question is half a decade old, malformed, and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s.}} Neither is great. :::::::* It also appears to not even be a proper RFC. I can't find a tag for it. :::::::* The RFC wording is not presently in the article. A different phrasing was created by you a month ago. Several editors, including TFD, InvaderMichael, me, and others all objected to the wording. However, I was alright with it remaining in the article if a source saying that a consensus was established could be found. It hasn't. Regardless, as the wording is not in the RFC, it can not be said to fall under the bounds of what the RFC determined. :::::::Is there a consensus that the United States committed genocide, {{ping|SashiRolls}}? An honest observer knows that the matter is significantly contentious. It at least shouldn't be put in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:37, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::I disagree that "no consensus" means that you can remove it. No consensus means it should not be touched until we gain consensus. No changes to how Indian removal policies are described should be changed on any article until consensus is gathered either way. This is a highly contentious topic and all these edits to fit your point of view will potentially lead to edit warring and further disruption. It has been explained to you the proper way forward. On articles where there is not a current RFC discussing the matter you should open one. On articles where there is a current RFC you may join the process. There is no rush to form a conclusion on the matter as it is not a BLPVIO issue. I recommend opening discussions on the respective article talk pages or at the appropriate venue to allow the community to comment before arbitrarily making any edits on this specific matter. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:32, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::: {{tqi|This is a highly contentious topic}} If it is, as you said, a highly contentious topic, then why should the claim remain in Wikivoice? I'll note that the wording was recently readded by SashiRolls around a month ago. ::::::: '''I, TFD, and others left it in to try and have editor's establish the claim as having consensus in the historical literature, which, even then, seemed doubtful.''' The sources provided (including Ostler) only seem to further give credence to the idea that it's a minority view within the literature. Ostler [https://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/08/04/was-indian-removal-genocidal/ notes that]: {{tqi|But specialists have [generally] not argued that the policy is genocidal.}} and that {{tqi|Interestingly, however, most recent scholarship on Indian removal, while supporting the view that the policy was vicious and inhuman, has not addressed the question of genocide}}. The problem with citing only one historian is that so much has been written about the history of the United States that you can selectively pick books and quotations from reputable historians to bolster any narrative that you want. (From the "god-like American Founding Fathers" to "the genocidal, settler-colonialist, enslavers on lands now known as the United States".) ::::::: My opinion is that the majority of the events were predominantly [[ethnic cleansing]] and forced [[population transfers]] rather than genocide. (With a few possible exceptions.) It's also the widespread opinion of many scholars. I'm failing to see why you think it should cited as such in Wikivoice when you yourself have stated that there's "no consensus" on the matter and that it's a "highly contentious topic" in American history. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:30, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::The reason it should stay is that discussion is ongoing. To change it in the middle of discussion, whether the discussion has been going for five seconds or two years, is disruptive to the process. I would say that no matter what language was used except in the case of a BLP violation, as I stated. It hurts the collaborative effort for an editor to arbitrarily decide, once the attempt has been made to gather consensus or issues are raised, to then decide they don't like the terminology based on their interpretation of sources to remove it from the article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:40, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Once discussion is concluded and the community has spoken, you can have at it. But if there is no consensus that genocide belongs there is also no consensus that it should be solely classified as ethnic cleansing. No consensus is no consensus so get consensus. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:43, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::And on Ostler, it should be noted that he has on numerous occasions stated that he believes some acts, including the Trail of Tears, was genocidal. He agrees there is no consensus on the terminology among scholars but that goes for other terms as well. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:47, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::: That's exactly ''why'' I cited him, {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. Unlike conservative/traditionalist scholars, who would have the motivation to make the "genocide" position seem more fringe than it is, a revisionist scholar would have the ''opposite'' incentive. Ostler directly says that it is a (small?) minority position. If there is no consensus among scholars — which I think is indisputable at the very least — then why should the article make a determination that it is in Wikivoice? :::::::::: I'm fine with ethnic cleansing. But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose [the] [phrasing] SashiRolls [is supporting] (Note: Later word change for greater clarity per request). [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:57, 4 April 2024 (UTC) {{od}}Please redact my username from this statement, {{Ping|KlayCax}}. As you are very well aware, the long-standing "phrasing" that you deleted on 1 October 2023 long predates my first contribution to this article on 18 February 2023, at which time the exact phrasing I recently restored had been in the article for [[Special:Diff/883146875|four years]], when someone slightly modified the original wording from [[Special:Diff/860174730|Sept 2018]] added after the RfC. Trying to personalize the discussion diverts attention from the fact that it was *you* who deleted long-standing content and supporting references on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]]. Moreover, the phrasing you deleted on [[Special:Diff/1217049683|3 April 2024]] is not "my" phrasing either, as the 2019 formulation was modified by somebody else [[Special:Diff/1210307040|on 25 February 2024]], the day after I had restored it. Distorting my role leads me to want to chew on the [[WP:BAIT]] 🐟 , but upon reflection I think I'll just post the diffs... Also, feel free to ping the four editors you claim oppose the content that was in the article from Sept 2018 – October 2023 and from 24 Feb 2024 – 3 April 2024. Additionally, I'm not sure why you're talking about Indian removal in general and about the Trail of Tears when the content you are allegedly disputing refers to neither. This is becoming, as others have said, a timesink.-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:57, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::We all know you are fine with ethnic cleansing but you have yet to open a RFC on any article to ask for community consensus as has been suggested to you many times. You cherry pick statements just like you accuse others of doing to prove your point. If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship. But that isn't my issue. My issue is you wanting to change the articles while discussion is ongoing. And my warning is that it may lead to an edit war. No one wins in edit wars. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:12, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::: RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::::::: {{tqi|If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship}}. There's a consensus in the literature that the United States ethnically cleansed Native Americans. There isn't a consensus on the question of genocide. It's very possible for one to be true but not the other. :::::::::::: Again, all I'm asking is: if there isn't a consensus that the United States committed genocide. Why should it be referred to ''in Wikivoice'' as genocide? {{ping|ARoseWolf}}? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:16, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::: I don't understand what your objection is. If there's no objections to us 4's proposed changes then the discussion can be concluded. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::I read TFD's comments and I don't see that they necessarily agree with you. I don't see any proposed wording or changes other than you don't like the word genocide in Wikivoice when it comes to Native American treatment by the US. Your opinion is that because there is no agreement in scholarship to call it genocide we should not state it in Wikivoice and that it should be called ethnic cleansing, also not agreed on by scholarship, or crimes against humanity (patronizing) based solely on your opinion and interpretation. I see that, on '''one''' article talk page, you are trying to force some standardization on '''all''' articles that discuss genocide when you have been told by several editors that it needs to be separate discussions or if you can find the appropriate community venue to make sure this decision gets the wider community discussion. We shouldn't be trying to form Wikipedia policy on an article talk page. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:31, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::I object to having this discussion on this article talk page which is supposed to be only about improvements to this article specifically. I hope that clarifies my objection though I'm not sure why that was so hard to decipher because I said as much in several of my responses. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:38, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::The broad genocide discussion would go elsewhere. This conversation is narrowly about this article. :::::::::::::::I'm asking whether ''this'' page should state that the United States committed genocide ''in Wikivoice''? Yes or no? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:50, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::If there is reason enough to state it as ethnic cleansing so definitively with Wikivoice I think there is cause to state it as genocide, as has been done on other articles about Native American's treatment by the US. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:53, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::::In regards to [[United States]], I believe the article is very neutrally worded, making mention of genocide once and only as a wikilink to an article with the same title about this subject. It calls the Trail of Tears a forced removal, which I think is very generous. Before that it states in one sentence about the policies of Indian removal and assimilation that many, not most, many being more than one or two, respected scholars, both Native and non-Native, classify as genocidal acts in part or in whole. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::::If there's not a consensus than we shouldn't take a position either way. Particularly if it's a ''minority ''position within the literature. ::::::::::::::::::[[Trail of Tears]] isn't even mentioned in the article. The current phrasing in the article is about so-called "[[Indian Removal]]" in general. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) :: 1.) I already explained the 2018 RFC above. 1.) RFC's are matters of last resort. 2.) The RFC in question is half a decade old, '''was malformed''', and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|"In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s."}} Neither option was great. Heck, the only part of the statement still in the article is "genocide". Therefore, I can't see it as still [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. :: 2.) I've never reported anyone to an administrator on here and my statements weren't [[WP: BAIT]]. I was simply responding to the phrasing you reinstated. Editors with the best of intentions can disagree with one another on how articles should be written. That's entirely normal and should be expected. I apologize if something I said was taken the wrong way. It wasn't my intention. :: 3.) There's a lot more than 4 who have objected. {{ping|The Four Deuces}}, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}, {{ping|InvaderMichael}}, {{ping|Cmguy777}} {{ping|Dhtwiki}}, me, ''etc.'' have all opposed the wording (at least in ''Wikivoice'') over the past year for the simple reason that there's no current historical consensus on the matter. (And even worse: a lot of this appears to be a minority within the literature.) A note explaining the historiography and leaving it an open question would be far superior. (Or not mentioning it at all.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :: 4.) Because there was proposals to also list the [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Indian Removal]] (in general) as genocidal as well. There were two conversations going on at once. :: 5.) Without getting more bogged down in the weeds: 1.) There's no consensus in the literature. Additionally, many of these claims are ''minority'' positions within it. 2.) Therefore, Wikipedia shouldn't state it in Wikivoice. :Is there a consensus on any of this? If not, how can it remain in the article's voice? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) The fact that you ignored my request to redact the misleading attribution is noted. I look forward to reading the folks you pinged to see if anyone supports your removal. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 02:21, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :The only thing I said was {{tqi|But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose the SashiRolls [preferred] phrasing as is}}. (I'll add [preferred]) The context was obviously about how the phrasing that you're in favor of (I didn't say it was ''yours''; I only brought your name up in context due to the fact that ) is different from the RFC version. So citing the (incredible malformed and false dichotomy-induced) RFC that is now half a decade old doesn't have much weight. :My question is: if there's no consensus, why promote one view over the other? We've already renamed the [[Uyghur genocide]] to ''Persecution of the Uyghurs in China''. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:43, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Thank you for acknowledging that the wording is not mine. I do indeed prefer ''some'' wording to ''no'' wording (your preference). I am not opposed to including both the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, if you prefer. My thought is that using summary style is to be preferred and linking to the daughter article (California genocide) is simpler than splitting hairs in this article. :I haven't supported or opposed any particular wording. I left my view that genocide is a serious label that requires the highest standard of sourcing. I haven't looked into the sourcing of this particular subject in any great detail, but I can make a few generic comments: :1) If there's a problem with the title of the article on [[California genocide]] then [[Talk:California genocide]] is the place to discuss it. :2) I'm not sure any further site-wide guideline on use of this term is necessary or helpful. It should always come down to what sources say, so it's perfectly possible for articles on, say, [[China]] and [[Ukraine]] to be inconsistent on their use of the term, as long as they both reflect what their respective sources say. :3) If there is not clear consensus amongst sources, then we cannot pick one POV's preferred label and present it in wikivoice - and the more inflammatory the label, the clearer that consensus needs to be. :4) The [[United States]] is a vast subject. Almost everything in this article should be written in [[WP:SS|summary style]]. The section titled [[United_States#Revolution_and_expansion_(1776–1861)|Revolution and expansion (1776–1861)]] is headed {{tq|Further information: [[History of the United States (1776–1789)]], [[History of the United States (1789–1815)]], and [[History of the United States (1815–1849)]]}}, so logically the section should summarise what those articles say, with due weight. None of them use the word genocide as far as I can see. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 12:47, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Surprisingly, this was not even covered in the 1849-1865 page, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=History_of_the_United_States_%281849%E2%80%931865%29&diff=1217550713&oldid=1216784830 I have fixed that oversight]. As you can see, I have no problem with using ''both'' the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, since both are frequently seen in the scholarship, and en.wp represents all major viewpoints. If it is thought that Yale University press and University of Nebraska press books and the California governor are fringe sources, someone could open a thread at the Fringe theories noticeboard ([[WP:FTN]]) to get opinions there... -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 14:02, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::As an addendum, when I noticed [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1210296886 KlayCax deleting] the California genocide from Historical negationism a couple months ago (due to his post in an earlier section of this page), I learned that textbook editors were unwilling to refer to the events as "genocide" and pressured their authors not to use the term if they wanted to be published: "In spite of a wealth of sources, the California Department of Education denies the genocide of its first people, and publishers and authors of social studies texts almost entirely ignore the killing thousands of Indians and enslavement of thousands of others (California State Board of Education, 2000)." ([https://journals-sagepub-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1177/0002764213495032 source] available through Wikipedia Library) ::Times changed in 2019 with the governor's apology. Today, [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Talk:Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1217583771 new accounts are being created] to help KlayCax remove the longstanding text from that entry. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::Like SashiRolls, I am not opposed to both, and other, terms being discussed in articles. In fact, on most article discussions I have been involved with I voted against only the inclusion of genocide. I think many terms can and should be applied because there is no consensus among scholarship. They, much like Wikipedia, cannot agree on what even constitutes a genocide. I completely disagree with the notion it cannot apply to these events and I do not see how one it can definitively be called one and not the other when neither has consensus. Our best hope is to define the terms as neutrally as possible with citations and let our readers decide what to believe or not. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 12:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :This as a USA topic I generally avoid as I'm simply not that familiar with the academic research. But why aren't we saying something simply like {{Green|The westward expansion and nation building resulted in the displacement of many Native Peoples, that controversially has been described as ethnic cleansing or genocide by various scholars,,,,}} [https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3 source]{{cite book | last=Ostler | first=Jeffrey | title=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History | chapter=Genocide and American Indian History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2015-03-02 | isbn=978-0-19-932917-5 | doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3}} <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 17:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == The Lead == I checked back here for the first time in a while. It's really nice to see that it's been shortened so much! Good job all. -- [[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 05:46, 23 March 2024 (UTC) :It definitely reads better but it's a giant sea of blue. ...... It's been used as an example of what not to do lately in discussions about accessibility for readers.<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 19:10, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Military == The fact that the US has the strongest military in the world is not mentioned anywhere in the article. Why is this? [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 21:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC) :"Strongest" might be tricky to precisely define, but the article clearly states "The United States spent $877 billion on its military in 2022, which is by far the largest amount of any country, making up 39% of global military spending...The United States has the third-largest combined armed forces in the world". [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 01:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC) ::All good. I was just a little curious because the page for the US armed forces describe it as the strongest, so I thought that would be mentioned here. [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 20:31, 27 March 2024 (UTC) == Should the United States be called North Columbia? == '''Originally, the United States was planned to be called Columbia''' named after Columbus who landed in North America. And plus, the government officials officially planned to name the United States, Columbia but unfortunately, the South American republic of Columbia already took the name too early so the US had to settle with its current name. So, should the United States been called Columbia before the South Americans got ahold of the name or no? [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 13:14, 2 April 2024 (UTC) :Columbia was a name often used to refer to the United States, see [[Columbia (personification)]]. This fell out of fashion in the 20th century, although evidence remains in names such as the [[District of Columbia]]. Article talk pages are generally used to article development specifically, if you have general questions in the future they may be better addressed at the [[Wikipedia:Reference desk]]. Best, [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:36, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :The United States was named before the country of [[Colombia]], and its original name was actually [[United Colonies]]. [[User:Randy Kryn|Randy Kryn]] ([[User talk:Randy Kryn|talk]]) 03:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::Yeah I know Randy, but should the US change it's name from the United States of '''America''' onto the United States of '''Columbia''' and why you may ask? For Americans ahem I mean '''North Columbians''' to be proud of the founding fathers and their history. [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 05:42, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::Columbus was hardly a founding father of the USA. He never set foot on the land that is now the USA, and persisted to his death in believing that he had made it to Asia. And he's hardly a fine example of what you want to name your country after. He had two sons, one by his wife and one by his mistress. He called the local people he found ''Los Indios (Indians)'', a name that still creates confusion today. Columbus once punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. There are strong suggestions he was rather brutal in a lot more of his treatment of the natives. His name in his native Genoese language was ''Cristoffa Corombo'', so maybe the country could be called ''Corombia''. Alternatively, use the Spanish version of his name, ''Cristóbal Colón'', and call it ''Colonland''. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 06:34, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::I didn't meant Columbus was a founding father, I meant the some founding fathers and many other major individuals involved in the United States' founding wanted to change the name of the United States to Columbia but Colonland probably is a mighty option. I agree I guess [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 02:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Suggestions from AI == Condensed by a human: *The number of Indian reservations is mentioned as 326. This number can vary due to changes in federal recognition and the establishment of new reservations. It's essential to verify the current number for accuracy. **326 wasn't mentioned in the main body, now added. *The population number and global rank are correct as of the last update, but these are dynamic figures that change annually. It’s useful to note the year these numbers were reported for current context. *The discussion on the health care system, particularly the Affordable Care Act, may need an update to reflect any recent changes or impacts on insurance coverage and healthcare access. *briefly mentions the Civil War's impact on slavery but could elaborate on its profound effects on American society, including the Reconstruction era, the civil rights movement, and ongoing discussions around racial equity. *While discussing the economy, more emphasis could be placed on the shift towards technology and service industries over the past few decades, reflecting the current economic landscape. *The cultural section could benefit from a discussion on the influence of immigrant cultures on American cuisine, music, and festivals, highlighting the diversity of American cultural practices. *Geography mentions physical features but could discuss environmental challenges the US faces, such as climate change impacts on different regions, conservation efforts, and sustainability initiatives. *A brief explanation of the Electoral College system could provide readers with a clearer understanding of the presidential election process. *Mentions the popularity of American football, basketball, and baseball but could acknowledge the growing interest in soccer, both at a professional level and grassroots participation, reflecting changing sports preferences. [[User:Tpbradbury|Tom B]] ([[User talk:Tpbradbury|talk]]) 09:15, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Incorrect claim “highest median income of a non-microstate” == Factual error. I’d like to adjust it, but the page is protected. Several average sized countries such as Norway, Switzerland and a couple more have higher median income. Correct: US has a high median income. (Though not the highest.) Would someone with editing rights please correct. Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/178.238.174.47|178.238.174.47]] ([[User talk:178.238.174.47|talk]]) 17:48, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :[https://data.oecd.org/hha/household-disposable-income.htm According to OECD], the United States has a higher median income than Norway or Switzerland. A few microstates surpass it. However, that's already specified. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:03, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::It should be made more precise by saying this is disposable income according the OECD. These types of terms and statistics are usually defined in slightly different ways depending on their source. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 03:56, 19 April 2024 (UTC) == Request for edit on type of government. == I've noticed that there's been a change in the type of government on the page. Before it was "federal presidential constitutional republic", now "constitutional" was taken out which is a bad edit. The United States's rule of law is the constitution. To say we aren't constitutional anymore is taking away the true meaning behind the form of government. It's fundamental to our rule of law. I'm not sure if it was a mistake or intentional but putting "constitutional" back in is needed. [[Special:Contributions/208.38.225.183|208.38.225.183]] ([[User talk:208.38.225.183|talk]]) 01:00, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == "[[:EE. UU.]]" listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|Redirects for discussion]] == [[File:Information.svg|30px]] The redirect <span class="plainlinks">[//en.wikipedia.org/?title=EE._UU.&redirect=no EE. UU.]</span> has been listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|redirects for discussion]] to determine whether its use and function meets the [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect guidelines]]. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at '''{{slink|Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 April 9#EE. UU.}}''' until a consensus is reached. <!-- Template:RFDNote --> <span style="background-color: #FFCFBF; font-variant: small-caps">[[User:Utopes|Utopes]] <sub>('''[[User talk:Utopes|talk]]''' / '''[[Special:Contributions/Utopes|cont]]''')</sub></span> 21:14, 9 April 2024 (UTC) == Star spangled banner source == Currently it links to https://uscode.house.gov/statviewer.htm?volume=46&page=1508 which is something about the Battle of Kings Mountain? I think this maybe an error [[User:Idkjustathing|Idkjustathing]] ([[User talk:Idkjustathing|talk]]) 21:59, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :Look at the short piece of legislation at the top of the page reproduced when you click the link. It is not an error. <span style="font-family: Gill Sans MT, Arial, Helvetica; font-weight:140;">[[User:General Ization|<span style="color: #006633;">General <i>Ization</i></span>]]</span> <sup>[[User talk:General Ization|<i style="color: #000666;">Talk </i>]] </sup> 22:04, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == Federal Presidential republic?? == i could have sworn we were a federal CONSTITUTIONAL republic. sounds mighty strange.... [[Special:Contributions/12.166.63.211|12.166.63.211]] ([[User talk:12.166.63.211|talk]]) 01:17, 16 April 2024 (UTC) :See [[Talk:United States/Archive 94#RFC: Use "Federal presidential constitutional republic" in_infobox]]. Essentially, "republic" already implies "constitutional" as all republics are constitutional. While not all republics choose to codify as a single written document is another matter, but not having it as a single written document doesn't mean you aren't running in a constitutional manner (see [[United Kingdom]], which is a parliamentary [[constitutional monarchy]] without having a codified single document as its constitution, but rather a body of laws acting as such). See [[constitution]]. All ''republics'' have to operate on some sort of constitutional based system since they aren't operating on absolutist authority of a single person, like in an [[absolute monarchy]]. This is why a monarchical form of government has to establish whether or not it is constitutional or not, since non-constitutional monarchies can exist (i.e. absolute monarchies vs constitutional monarchies). Republics, however, must be constitutional in some form. --[[User:OuroborosCobra|OuroborosCobra]] ([[User talk:OuroborosCobra|talk]]) 12:33, 16 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 19 April 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} Page does not link to United Kingdom when first mentioned [[User:Crystallyn0|Crystallyn0]] ([[User talk:Crystallyn0|talk]]) 12:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC)'
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'{{talk header}} {{FAQ|collapsed=no}} {{Contentious topics/talk notice|ap|long}} {{American English|date=September 2011}} {{Article history |action1=GAN |action1date=02:27, 15 December 2005 |action1result=listed |action1oldid=31414825 |action2=FAC |action2date=00:10, 7 May 2006 |action2link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive1 |action2result=not promoted |action2oldid=51892109 |action3=FAC |action3date=21:56, 8 May 2006 |action3link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive2 |action3result=not promoted |action3oldid=52202348 |action4=PR |action4date=19:59, 18 May 2006 |action4link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive1 |action4oldid=53888193 |action5=FAC |action5date=22:20, 3 July 2006 |action5link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive3 |action5result=not promoted |action5oldid=61900268 |action6=PR |action6date=16:03, 21 September 2006 |action6link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive2 |action6oldid=76974796 |action7=FAC |action7date= 19 October 2006 |action7link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive4 |action7result=not promoted |action8=FAC |action8date=18:01, 19 June 2007 |action8link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive5 |action8result=not promoted |action8oldid=139239542 |action9=GAR |action9date=09:11, 9 July 2008 (UTC) |action9link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/1 |action9result=kept |action9oldid=224506293 |action10=FAC |action10date=16:56, 27 June 2009 |action10link=Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/United States/archive6 |action10result=not promoted |action10oldid=298963267 |action11=PR |action11date=03:25, 6 September 2009 |action11link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive3 |action11result=reviewed |action11oldid=311950730 |action12=PR |action12date=20:57, 19 January 2011 |action12link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive4 |action12result=reviewed |action12oldid=408843044 |action13=GAR |action13date=13:12, 18 March 2012 (UTC) |action13link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/2 |action13result=delisted |action13oldid=482121399 |action14=GAN |action14date=23:32, 10 August 2012 (UTC) |action14link=Talk:United States/GA1 |action14result=not listed |action14oldid=506806669 |action15=GAN |action15date=16:08, 21 January 2015 (UTC) |action15link=Talk:United States/GA2 |action15result= listed |action15oldid=506806669 |action16=GAR |action16date=19:52, 22 February 2020 (UTC) |action16link=Wikipedia:Good article reassessment/United States/3 |action16result= delisted |action16oldid=974086316 |action17=PR |action17date=2020-12-19 |action17link=Wikipedia:Peer review/United States/archive5 |action17result= reviewed |action17oldid=995167082 |currentstatus=DGA |topic=geography |dykdate=3 February 2015 |dykentry=... that the '''[[United States]]''' accounts for 37% of all [[List of countries by military expenditures|global military spending]]? |dyknom= Template:Did you know nominations/United States |otd1date=2008-07-04|otd1link=Wikipedia:Selected anniversaries/July 4 }} {{WikiProject banner shell |class=B |collapsed=yes |vital=yes |listas=United States |1= {{WikiProject United States |importance=Top |past-collaboration=yes|USGov=yes}} {{WikiProject North America |importance=Top}} {{WikiProject Countries}} }} {{Press|date=August 17, 2009|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/wikipedia/6043534/The-50-most-viewed-Wikipedia-articles-in-2009-and-2008.html|title=The 50 most-viewed Wikipedia articles in 2009 and 2008|org=''[[The Daily Telegraph]]''|title2=Topics that spark Wikipedia 'edit wars' revealed|org2=[[BBC News]]|url2=http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-23354613|date2=July 18, 2013|accessdate2=July 18, 2013}} {{Banner holder|collapsed=yes| {{Backwardscopy |author=Surhone, L. M., Timpledon, M. T., & Marseken, S. F. |year=2010 |title=Orson Scott Card: United States, author, critic, public speaking, activism, genre |org=Betascript Publishing |comments={{OCLC|636651797}}, {{ISBN|9786130336431}}. |author2=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year2=2009 |title2=Biosphere 2: Biosphere 2, closed ecological system, Oracle, Arizona, Arizona, United States, Biome, space colonization, Biosphere, rainforest, Ed Bass, BIOS-3, Eden project |org2=Alphascript |comments2={{OCLC|699544461}}, {{ISBN|9786130219581}}. |author3=Miller, F. P., Vandome, A. F., & McBrewster, J. |year3=2010 |title3=Military journalism: Combatant commander, psychological warfare, United States, public affairs (military), propaganda, journalist, Civil-military operations |org3=Alphascript Publishing |comments3={{OCLC|671248488}}, {{ISBN|9786130072650}}. |bot=LivingBot }} {{All time pageviews|237}} {{Annual report|[[Wikipedia:2007 Top 50 Report|2007]], [[Wikipedia:2008 Top 50 Report|2008]], [[Wikipedia:2009 Top 50 Report|2009]], [[Wikipedia:2010 Top 50 Report|2010]], [[Wikipedia:2011 Top 50 Report|2011]], [[Wikipedia:2012 Top 50 Report|2012]], [[Wikipedia:2013 Top 50 Report|2013]], [[Wikipedia:2014 Top 50 Report|2014]], [[Wikipedia:2015 Top 50 Report|2015]], [[Wikipedia:Top 25 Report/2016|2016]], [[Wikipedia:2017 Top 50 Report|2017]], [[Wikipedia:2018 Top 50 Report|2018]], [[Wikipedia:2019 Top 50 Report|2019]], [[Wikipedia:2020 Top 50 Report|2020]], [[Wikipedia:2021 Top 50 Report|2021]], [[Wikipedia:2022 Top 50 Report|2022]], and [[Wikipedia:2023 Top 50 Report|2023]]}} {{Top 25 report | April 7, 2013 | April 28, 2013 | May 5, 2013 | September 8, 2013 | October 6, 2013 | until | February 23, 2014 | March 9, 2014 | until | March 30, 2014 | April 27, 2014 | May 4, 2014 | September 21, 2014 | October 12, 2014 | November 9, 2014 | November 16, 2014 | November 30, 2014 | December 7, 2014 | December 14, 2014 | January 25, 2015 | April 19, 2015 | May 10, 2015 | November 8, 2015 | March 27, 2016 | April 10, 2016 | May 15, 2016 | May 22, 2016 }} {{Annual readership}} {{section sizes}} }} {{User:HBC Archive Indexerbot/OptIn|target=/Archive index|mask=/Archive <#>|leading_zeros=0|indexhere=yes }} {{User:MiszaBot/config |archiveheader={{Automatic archive navigator}} |maxarchivesize=125K |counter=111 |minthreadsleft=4 |algo=old(30d) |archive=Talk:United States/Archive %(counter)d }} <!-- Talk page begins here. --> == "America" should not redirect to the United States == In the disambiguation page for America[/info/en/?search=America_(disambiguation)], it is specified that ''"America is a short-form name for the United States of America"''. However, the United States aren't known officially as the "United States of America", instead they are just the "United States". The name of the article is United States, and not United States of America. The nation is called "United States" and "of America" is only an unofficial addition to distinguish with other nations that go by United States. This is useless nowadays, considering that when "United States" is mentioned it is always referring to the one in America, unless said otherwise. Furthermore, America is a common name for much more than just the US, and nowadays it is much more common to see "America" being used to refer to the continent rather than the nation. [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:889E:6913:F93D:EA87:874C|talk]]) 01:02, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :In the English language, America is usually used to refer to the United States, such that it is the overwhelmingly [[WP:PRIMARYTOPIC|primary topic]] for that word. This is not limited to usage within the United States but is the common meaning of the word in reliable sources globally, such as ''[https://indianexpress.com/about/america/ Indian Express]'', ''[https://mondediplo.com/2024/02/ Le Monde]'', ''[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/commentary/2023/09/13/world/restless-america/ Japan Times]'', ''[https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/series/how-the-world-sees-america The Guardian]'', etc. It is true that in many languages America does not necessarily refer to the United States, but the English Wikipedia reflects English-language usage, which does support [[America]] redirecting here. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:19, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] In Le Monde, the International section is divided into ''Americas'' and in that section is the ''United States''. Looking up 'America' in Le Monde itself doesn't show any US-related articles using the term to refer to the US. ::The same goes for The Guardian [[Special:Contributions/2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91]] ([[User talk:2804:14D:5C50:80D8:E97D:ED:8CD6:4B91|talk]]) 01:28, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :::The examples I gave directly and unambiguously use America to refer specifically and exclusively to the United States. The international section of ''Le Monde'' using "Americas" reinforces the idea that in the English language, Americas is used to refer to the landmass called [[Americas]] in contrast to America, which is overwhelmingly used to refer to the United States. I'm not sure what you're searching to not find any results, but when searching through ''Le Monde'' it is very easy to find English-language articles that use America to describe the United States, [https://www.lemonde.fr/en/economy/article/2024/02/17/america-falls-out-of-love-with-tesla-and-electric-vehicles_6533006_19.html this example] is from a couple of days ago. ''The Guardian'' has an entire section called [https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/americas-dirty-divide America's dirty divide] that it describes as {{tq|A series examining '''the country's''' vast environmental inequalities and how climate change will make things worse}} (emphasis added). When English-language reliable sources use America, it almost always is used to refer to the United States. - [[User:Aoidh|Aoidh]] ([[User talk:Aoidh|talk]]) 01:42, 21 February 2024 (UTC) :The purpose of re-directs is that readers are taken to the article they are searching for. My guess is that over 95% of readers who type in America are looking for this article. If you have evidence that they are looking for another article, please tell me what it is. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 01:59, 21 February 2024 (UTC) ::The '''United States of America''' is the official name, and is for example used in international relations, as for example titles of ambassadors. For usage in Congress see https://www.congress.gov/search?q=%7B%22congress%22%3A%5B%22118%22%5D%2C%22source%22%3A%22all%22%2C%22search%22%3A%22United%20States%20of%20America%22%7D [[User:Rjensen|Rjensen]] ([[User talk:Rjensen|talk]]) :::That doesn't matter. The official name of Mexico is "The United States of Mexico", but if you look up "United States" it directs to here. This is not a conversation worth entertaining, plenty of RFCs have been conducted and the consensus has been to keep things as they are. You're welcome to try to change consensus, but it will almost certainly fail. --[[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 00:31, 22 February 2024 (UTC) ::It is true that redirects should take you where you want to land. But i guess most (90% or so) people wo type America search for the continent America not the country USA. At least this was the case when i searched america and was confusied why it redirects me here. America = contient, USA = country in America. You also don't expect a redirect from europe to the article [[European_Union]], despite the EU having the a much larger portion of Europe than the USA has of America, or do you? [[Special:Contributions/185.62.82.91|185.62.82.91]] ([[User talk:185.62.82.91|talk]]) 11:50, 20 March 2024 (UTC) :::America is not a continent though. North America is a continent. South America is a continent. [[Special:Contributions/24.34.64.221|24.34.64.221]] ([[User talk:24.34.64.221|talk]]) 21:44, 28 March 2024 (UTC) ::For example, I myself came here by typing in ''America''… [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) [[User:Coulomb1|Coulomb1]] ([[User talk:Coulomb1|talk]]) 21:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC) ==Problematic changes made to United States-Indigenous Peoples articles== There's recently been a massive, radical restructuring of articles surrounding relations between the indigenous peoples of the Americas and the United States. Generally in the form of calling events that were previously predominately labeled as "ethnic cleansing", "mass atrocities", and "forced population transfers" and referring to the events as "genocidal" instead. This is despite the fact that this viewpoint is a small minority among historians, political scientists, and anthropologists. The titles for these articles in of themselves are problematic: * [[Native American genocide in the United States]] According to Jeffrey Ostler — who holds perhaps one of the most "negative maximalist" viewpoints of American actions among mainstream scholars — this is a small minority viewpoint among those working in the field: <blockquote>This is not because there is a consensus behind the “pro-genocide” position. In fact, although few scholars in the fields of American Indian and western U.S. history have systematically addressed the question of genocide, for many, perhaps most, scholars in these fields, an overarching indictment of genocide seems too extreme. Some might label specific events and cases, such as the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 or widespread settler violence against Indians during the California Gold Rush, as genocidal, but they would not see U.S. policies and settler actions as consistently so. Others would resist arguments for even limited genocide in U.S. history, citing definitions of genocide that would appear to require a federal government policy to physically destroy all (or most) Indians and observing that federal policies were intended to prevent physical disappearance by promoting assimilation. Some scholars would propose ethnic cleansing as an appropriate alternative to genocide. Others might consider assimilation to be a form of cultural genocide but would insist on a strong distinction between this policy and physical elimination.</blockquote> and: <blockquote>Since 1992, the argument for a total, relentless, and pervasive genocide in the Americas has become accepted in some areas of Indigenous studies and genocide studies. For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields.</blockquote> '''Note that I support ''keeping'' the ''contents'' for the article but ''renaming'' the page'''. The California genocide article is also problematic. It has been changed from: * ''California Indian Catastrophe'' -> [[California genocide]] ("California Indian Catastrophe" is used more in [[WP: RS]]'s; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of as of 2023], mainstream scholars are divided between ethnic cleansing and genocide.) Other articles such as: * [[Andrew Jackson]] * [[Racism in the United States]] * [[Historical negationism]] * [[Racism against Native Americans in the United States]] * [[Indian removal]] * [[California]] * [[Trail of Tears]] * [[Population history of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas]] * [[Manifest Destiny]] * ''Etc.'' Have similarly been rewritten to imply that this is an overwhelming consensus. Tagging {{ping|ShirtNShoesPls}}, {{ping|Mason.Jones}}, {{ping|Moxy}}, {{ping|FMSky}}, {{ping|Rambling Rambler}}, and {{ping|Rockstone35}}. Many editors seem to be classifying all ethnic cleansing/population transfers, atrocities, et al. as inherently ''genocidal'', which isn't accepted by a majority of scholars. This is probably a discussion that needs to be had. Since I can't imagine that any version of these pages aren't going to generate controversy. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:24, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :My two cents would be any discussion of "genocide" should be kept out of the lead and any discussion in the body of text must be extremely well-sourced given the controversial nature of it. Seems to be too much "I've already decided it was genocide, here's the first result that came up on google as my source". [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 14:44, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :@Klay -- in this article, it's not "many editors"; it's one editor (who has already been warned about aggressive POV-pushing and edit-warring). I agree with Rambling above: unsuitable for the lede, mentioned in history section with reliable sources (not ideological academic treatises). [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 17:54, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::@[[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]], on that editor there's an open ANI post about their conduct. If you'd like to contribute to it you can do [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/Incidents#User ShirtNShoesPls, Block on grounds of repeated disruption (CIR/IDHT)|here]]. [[User:Rambling Rambler|Rambling Rambler]] ([[User talk:Rambling Rambler|talk]]) 18:26, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::ShirtNShoesPls is definitely one problematic user. However, many of these changes were made by others. :::I responded on the ANI, btw. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:12, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :Genocide is one of the more serious [[WP:LABEL|labels]], so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. Unfortunately, the political value of the word creates an incentive to creep the definition wider, to capture more rhetorical ground. This semantic dilution threatens to make word unencyclopedic to use at all. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 22:18, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::Came here from the [[2024 United States presidential election]] article. This is exactly what is happening, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}. There's no consensus that the events were genocide... A fact stated in the [[California genocide]] article itself! Could you remove it? I don't usually edit on here and apparently it locks me off from editing. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 10:59, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :@[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] Genocide is a word that needs to be used seriously and with strong sourcing. However, the discussion so far mis-states the fields that should be considered in deciding on its use. Fields of national history are one area, but so too are scholarship on the target groups (in this case, Native American Studies) and comparative scholarship on genocide itself (Genocide Studies). Formal official statements of responsibility are relevant as well. The key issue becomes describing and attributing these multiple literatures. Ostler's quote describes one of these fields, not all. ::To take two examples, the Trail of Tears and the violence preceding it is the central example in a major genocide studies text (Wolfe, "Settler colonialism and the elimination of the Native") while the American history literature on Andrew Jackson is voluminous and skeptical on such a label. Wikipedia should refer to both, whether discussing Cherokee history, the Trail of Tears itself, and Jackson in particular. Separately, the publication of two scholarly monographs (around 10 years ago) on the California genocide by historians, and their reception, should influence our use of the word on that situation. :[[User:Carwil|Carwil]] ([[User talk:Carwil|talk]]) 12:46, 1 March 2024 (UTC) :::Let's focus on content: {{od}} Indeed it was more than five years ago that an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RfC on the California genocide]] determined language that should be used in that section. Oddly, the words California genocide do not appear in the article despite that consensus, and all the sources have been deleted from the article. Can someone point to a more recent RfC consensus or should we reinstate the language and sources decided upon in September 2018? -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 18:30, 25 February 2024 (UTC) As it turns out, it was {{Ping|KlayCax}} on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]] who removed the reference to the California Genocide which had been in the article since the 2018 RfC with no edit summary. No consensus was sought on the talk page for this change. (Looking back, I see that I started [[Talk:United_States/Archive_108#Removal_of_Trail_of_Tears,_Indian_Removal_Act,_Foraker_Act,_Insular_Cases,_California_genocide|this discussion]] which did not yield a consensus to overturn the previous RfC.) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 19:56, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :I've reinstated the content per the 2018 RfC. A new RfC can be started if there is reason to debate this content which was in the article from 2018-2023. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) ::As {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} states above: {{tqi|Genocide is one of the more serious labels, so the sourcing had better be impeccable and unanimous before applying it in wikivoice. It is a powerfully condemnatory word, and thus represents a major prize for anyone who can successfully brand their opponents with it. }}. There's no consensus (and it's a minority viewpoint) that the events in California were genocide. (See [https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-3 Ostler, 2015]; [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of Magliari, 2023]) Thus, Wikipedia shouldn't state so in Wikivoice. Consensus can also ''change''. I'll start a RFC if necessary, but words such as genocide should be avoided unless there's a historical consensus. Adding it into the article otherwise presents significant [[WP: NPOV]] concerns. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:09, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::{{U|KlayCax}}, citing an article on [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1210295868 scalp bounties] while removing a paragraph on genocide isn't really... well it's not OK. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 23:16, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::: Many historians don't consider the events in California a genocide, instead referring to it as ethnic cleansing, mass murder, atrocity, ''et al.'' See what Michael F. Magliari [https://online.ucpress.edu/ch/article-abstract/100/2/4/196102/The-California-Indian-Scalp-Bounty-MythEvidence-of writes about the matter in the article]: {{tqi|In the often contentious and acrimonious debates over whether the Golden State’s Indigenous peoples were targeted for genocide by white Euro-Americans between 1846 and 1873}}. That's why it shouldn't be in the article. The [[WP: ONUS]] would be on including this. :::: They're both horrendous. However, they're different things. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:21, 25 February 2024 (UTC) :::::[[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]], wait. I'm telling you that your edit summary makes no sense in relation to the actual edit, and your response is to repeat the same irrelevant citation, this time with a quote which ''also'' totally doesn't make your point. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:53, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::::The problem is that implies that there's a consensus the events constitute a genocide. Both sources make it clear that there's no agreement among historians on the matter. ::::::It's also odd to focus specifically on the events in California. (And leave out the broader American-Indian wars that occurred after the conclusion of the Civil War.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:55, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::::: Btw {{ping|Drmies}} I agree that the events in California were likely a genocide. However, there's been a general consensus and precedent on Wikipedia that a country's articles shouldn't include the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" unless there's an ''overwhelming academic consensus'' on the matter. (See [[Talk:United_States#Genocide_wording|above]].) ::::: * For instance, the USSR's article doesn't refer to the [[Holodomor]] as a genocide ::::: * Neither does [[China]]'s refer to the [[Uyghur genocide]] ::::: * Neither does [[Japan]] or the [[Empire of Japan]]'s pages use the terms "ethnic cleansing" or "genocide" on their articles. ::::: And so on and so forth. The reason is simply: there's no consensus on the matter. (And even among historians who affirm it, most would place the blame on settlers or the state government, rather than the national government.) ::::: Jeffery Ostler is clear that this is a minority position (at the very least) in the literature. I get the urge to [[WP: RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] but we can't state it in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:42, 25 February 2024 (UTC) {{od}} You say that consensus can change. However, no consensus has developed for your deletion of this content in the months that you've been deleting it. I noticed in the [[California genocide]] article that Magliari's view is not what you would have us believe. These are the final words of his review of the Yale University source you deleted: {{tq|Madley’s case for genocide is overwhelming and compelling in many specific instances. As his evidence makes plain, deliberately exterminatory campaigns devastated at least eighteen California tribes, including the Achumawi, Karuk, Lassik, Nisenan, Nongatl, Owens Valley Paiute, Pomo, Shasta, Sinkyone, Tolowa, Wailaki, Wappo, Whilkut, Wintu, Wiyot, Yana, Yuki, and Yurok. Beyond the shadow of any reasonable doubt (and by the standards of any reasonable definition), genocide did in fact play a significant role in the US conquest and subjugation of Native California.}} (source accessible [https://read-dukeupress-edu.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/ethnohistory/article/64/2/341/26348/An-American-Genocide-The-United-States-and-the?searchresult=1 here] via Wikipedia Library (Duke)) I'm not sure why you're so adamant about overturning [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|this prior consensus]] when the scholar you are citing quite clearly disagrees with you. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :[[User:SashiRolls]] it feels like I'm on Facebook. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 00:54, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::And I'm going back to bed. :) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:07, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :I'm aware of Michael F. Magliari's and Jeffrey Ostler's views. I cited them specifically ''because'' of the fact that they hold a "genocidal/maximalist" view on the issue. (Yet also state there's widespread debate within the literature.) :* The first part of the articles is how he views the current academic consensus ''within the field''. This aspect of the article is the part I'm citing. :* The conclusion is ''his view ''on the matter. :There's been a longtime precedent to not use the word "genocide" in articles unless there's a consensus it happened for the reason Barnards.tar.gz mentioned. (Which is why I cite the [[Japan]], [[Brazil]], [[China]], [[United Kingdom]], [[Australia]], and [[Canada]] pages, none of which mention genocide. Even [[Belgium]]'s page - which ran the [[Congo Free State]] - specifically and intentionally excludes mention of the word.) :It would also be weird if we focus specifically on this and not the broader [[American Indian Wars|American-Indian Wars]] that occurred after the Civil War. :I'd be okay with "forced population transfer/ethnic cleansing" being used. "Genocide" is far more contentious and not anywhere near close enough to a consensus to include. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:11, 26 February 2024 (UTC) ::How do you know "genocide" in [[Belgium]] is "specifically and intentionally" excluded? There's nothing on the talk page or in the talk page archives. Maybe that article should be updated. And [[China]] ''does'' mention the Uyghur genocide. Should I look at the others too? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 15:18, 26 February 2024 (UTC) :::* The first talk page discussion on the matter can be found [[Talk:Congo Free State/Archive 1#Not Genocide|here]]. The [[Congo Free State]] genocide question is the article. However, multiple Wikipedia administrators (including Wav) repeatedly removed any mention of "genocide" in Wikivoice from the article, and this has been ''ongoing over the past twenty years''. [[Belgium]]'s article never brings up genocide once. (Also per talk page discussion.) I agree that it does seem wrong. ([[Japan]]'s article never uses ethnic cleansing or genocide, either.) :::* The China wording was recently added. However, it keeps getting reverted by multiple editors (both on the Uyghur genocide and China pages), and never uses the term "genocide" to describe it with Wikivoice. :::* Australia's, Canada's, and New Zealand's pages — which are probably the closest analogies to the American treatment of its native populations — also don't mention the word genocide anywhere in their articles: [[History wars#Genocide debate|despite many scholars saying so]]. :::If it is replaced with "ethnic cleansing" and "forced population transfers" — and further expounding on the genocide debate in the respective articles — then the text would be completely alright with me. There's a clear historical consensus that the events would be classified today as [[war crimes]] — whether from "minimalists" who hold a narrow definition of "genocide" like [[Guenter Lewy]] to "maximalists" like [[David Stannard]] and Jeffrey Ostler who emphasize the utter devastation it caused on native cultures/peoples. Not sure what the right answer to #3 is (and it's a good question. I'll raise the issue on talk within the next week). Does replacing the word with "ethnic cleansing" work? :::It's a clear historical consensus among essentially every mainstream scholar that ''ethnic cleansing ''occurred, which is a war crime, and it avoids the terminology game on what "genocide" means. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 03:56, 28 February 2024 (UTC) ::::It's just one deflection after another. You say in Belgium it's explicitly excluded, but there's no proof of it on the talk page of ''that'' article. You can't even cite a diff. You said China doesn't mention it--it does. You suggest I should look at other articles because they're more similar--sure. You say "does replacing the word with 'ethnic cleansing' work?" Well, I think you not editing these articles should work much better. [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) ::::There is no generalized statement about genocide in the lede of the article "United States". There's ''one'' reference under "History" to the California genocide, which has a WP link and sourced article. For you to oppose its mere mention (and linking) is baffling. True, King Leopold's genocidal crimes in Congo should appear in the "Belgium" article, and its editors might have conspired to squelch any mention of it. That's a major flaw of Wikipedia's libertarian "open encyclopedia" model: there's no procedure in place to stop "patriotic editing" of country articles. [[User:Mason.Jones|Mason.Jones]] ([[User talk:Mason.Jones|talk]]) 16:41, 28 February 2024 (UTC) :::::Don't get me wrong. I don't mean in a [[WP: OTHERSTUFF]] sense. Rather, longstanding [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. As for the Belgium, China, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USSR articles, I similarly oppose mentioning genocide on their pages, for the reasons Barnards.tar.gz expounded upon. "Ethnic cleansing" is consensus in the literature. So if other editors use it to describe the "American-Indian Wars" I'd wholeheartedly support. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:16, 1 March 2024 (UTC) {{od}} It is interesting to note that {{Ping|KlayCax}} has removed about 5K of sourced material from another entry based on an alleged consensus that seems rather opposed to what I'm reading above. ([[Special:Diff/1210296886|diff]]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 15:36, 29 February 2024 (UTC) : There has been a series of changes made by KlayCax, sometimes with inaccurate summaries, pushing for what they believe should be added or removed. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 05:57, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::None of my edit summaries have been "inaccurate". (Such as?) We obviously have our disagreements. But that should be expected on articles surrounding politically contentious topics. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:09, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::{{Ping|Drmies}} mentioned the article ''California''. I restored (to the History section) the sole link to ''California genocide'' after KlayCax removed not just the section on CA genocide, but all links to that article [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=California&diff=prev&oldid=1205274231]. If the positions are split 50-50 as claimed, why did their edit retain more on the position against ''genocide''? I did not restore another link in the lead, only for SashiRolls to point out later that there actually was a reason for it to be there, before KlayCax removed it. They also said [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=prev&oldid=1189862365] there was "general agreement" to remove the Trinity atomic bomb/nuclear test picture from this article ''United States''. But the discussion [/info/en/?search=Talk:United_States/Archive_104#Raising_the_American_flag_during_the_Battle_of_Iwo_Jima_vs._nuclear_mushroom_cloud_(Trinity_nuclear_test)] did not agree on removing it. I think KlayCax wants to push through editorial changes such as these. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 04:05, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :::Bring it up on ANI for a topic ban, [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]]. Who wants to deal with this? [[User:Drmies|Drmies]] ([[User talk:Drmies|talk]]) 04:12, 2 March 2024 (UTC) :I didn't say consensus, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. I said that ''other'' editors believe that it should be removed. You can see this [[Talk:Historical negationism/Archive 8#Japan|here]] from UnitedStatesian. Gavin Newsom [https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/19/us/newsom-native-american-apology.html explicitly labeled it genocide] in 2019, and the debate between historians is between ''ethnic cleansing ''and ''genocide ''(both of which are war crimes), instead of saying that the events didn't occur. The citation used to source the notion is weak. Is there a notable historical denialist movement that denies what happened? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 12:07, 1 March 2024 (UTC) ::Seems anti-American editors have an axe that want to grind, {{ping|KlayCax}}. Could you remove it? It's obviously being inserted into the article as a form of propaganda. [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 11:00, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :::Wikipedia is [[WP:NOTCENSORED]], just because you feel it is "anti-American" doesn't give you the grounds to delete whatever you think is "propaganda." [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:29, 11 March 2024 (UTC) * {{u|KlayCax}} brought up at least nine or ten different articles but didn't tag anyone that was involved in those discussions on the various talk pages. This is not the proper place to discuss issues you may have with other articles, only this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 13:47, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *:Agreed. This is not an appropriate location to launch a widespread discussion about many different articles. If you want to suggest a change to one article, say [[California genocide]], then take that conversation up on [[Talk:California genocide]]. [[User:Yuchitown|Yuchitown]] ([[User talk:Yuchitown|talk]]) 14:23, 11 March 2024 (UTC)Yuchitown *:I agree with this too, this is not the place to discuss many other articles. It needs to be discussed before unilaterally removing sourced content willy-nilly. [[User:PersusjCP|PersusjCP]] ([[User talk:PersusjCP|talk]]) 18:28, 11 March 2024 (UTC) *::I think we should make a broad, Wikipedia-spanning topic on what events should be classified as genocide in Wikivoice. (See the article on [[genocide definitions]]) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 16:56, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *:::While I don't necessarily disagree I will reiterate that this talk page is about [[United States]] and how best to improve this article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:12, 3 April 2024 (UTC) *::::I know. I was just bringing it up since it's tangent to the conversation. The current article titles are widely inconsistent with one another: *::::For instance: *::::* [[Native American genocide in the United States]] (implies that it is consensus) *::::* [[Palestinian genocide accusation]] (implies that it is debated) *::::* [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]] (no mention of genocide at all) *::::This is definitely a subject in which a unified consensus and [[WP: PRECEDENT]] between articles is needed. I'm under the opinion that anything not covered under [[Yehuda Bauer]]'s definition of Holocaust shouldn't be referred to in Wikivoice as genocide: {{tqi|[Holocaust is] the planned physical annihilation, for ideological or pseudo-religious reasons, of all the members of a national, ethnic, or racial group.}} Anything else is highly subjective and prone to inconsistency. *::::The [[Holocaust]], [[Rwandan Genocide]], and the like? I think the criteria is indisputably met by any scholar. *::::The [[Holodomor]], [[European colonization of the Americas]], and the [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China|Chinese treatment of the Uyghurs]]? I can see well-intentioned people legitimately disagreeing on that. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::You want us to change possibly hundreds of articles on your opinion alone? I'm telling you that isn't going to happen. Start discussions on the respective article talk pages and start RFC's for the community to comment and build consensus or this is a waste of time. [[Native American genocide in the United States]] is a title of an article that simply says the subject is notable and then sets out to describe and summarize that based on what is found in reliable sources about the subject. If there is content you disagree with then discuss it there. Same for the other articles. This isn't a hard process to follow. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:04, 4 April 2024 (UTC) *:::::: Nothing would have to be changed. The RFC would be on what events should be definitely classified as "genocide" in Wikivoice v. "historians X take this view" and "historians Y take this view". [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:13, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 574 Native American tribes are recognized in the United States. Add this information to the demographics section Source: https://www.usa.gov/indian-tribes-alaska-native [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:31, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Pictogram voting question.svg|20px|link=|alt=]]&nbsp;'''Question:'''<!-- Template:EEp --> where is it supposed to be added and how would you formulate it? [[User:M.Bitton|M.Bitton]] ([[User talk:M.Bitton|talk]]) 14:37, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 10 March 2024 (2) == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} 169 Native American languages are spoken in the United States. Add this information to languages section. Source: https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/2011/acs/acsbr10-10.pdf [[Special:Contributions/193.187.88.197|193.187.88.197]] ([[User talk:193.187.88.197|talk]]) 22:35, 10 March 2024 (UTC) :{{Done}} <span style="border:3px outset;border-radius:8pt 0;padding:1px 5px;color:#FFF;background:linear-gradient(6rad,#00897B,#48d9ab)">[[User:Antrotherkus|<span style="color:#FFF;text-decoration:inherit;font:1em Lucida Sans">''Antrotherkus''</span>]]</span> 18:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) == Genocide in California == Prominent historians have [https://historyreclaimed.co.uk/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ rebutted the idea] that the California Indian Wars constituted genocide. <blockquote>Benjamin Madley, for his part, has been almost single-handedly responsible for re-branding the conflicts previously known as the “California Indian Wars” as the California Genocide. It is worth remembering that these are conflicts that just over 20 years ago, the authors of the Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas saw fit to detail without a single reference to the term “genocide.” Madley himself resorts to describing this as a genocide “hidden in plain sight”—i.e. a “genocide” that generations of historians before him had simply failed to notice. With a relentless focus on violent killing, and a reluctance to contextualize the big picture for the purpose of exaggerating an impression of unending massacre, Madley’s account has convinced many a reader that American officials in California were responsible for something in the neighbourhood of 150,000 violent deaths—a number which is likely 10x higher than the true death toll (including war casualties). For example, Madley’s text prompted a professor at UC Hastings named John Briscoe to write an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle asserting that: “After 1834… when the native population plummeted from 150,000 to 18,000… Indian hunting was sport for the mostly white gold-seekers and settlers. Indian-hunting raids nearly annihilated the population.” In reality, Madley’s own figures show that “Indian-hunting raids” likely claimed something less than 5% of the 132,000 casualties that Hastings implies in his widely quoted op-ed. Many of the other “missing” Indians might never have existed (i.e. they might be the result of exaggerated population estimates, on which more below). In addition, large numbers will have emigrated to Mexico when the missions were disbanded or when the territory was handed over to the United States, and still others will have assimilated into the US population in various ways. One thing is certain: the nature of our sources requires a caution that the sensationalists singularly lack.</blockquote> May someone note this on the page? [[User:HickTheStick|HickTheStick]] ([[User talk:HickTheStick|talk]]) 12:18, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :NB the "prominent historian" in question originally published this op-ed (outside his area of expertise, medieval Spanish economics) in ''The Spectator''. ([https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-myth-of-new-world-genocide/ §]) -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 01:42, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::You're responding to a single purpose account, {{ping|SashiRolls}}. Look at the edit history. (I agree that Jeff Fynn-Paul is not a reliable source here.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:43, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :::(Update: It was a sockpuppet.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:05, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Academic debate on genocide == I'm going to have to get this out of the way, aren't I? The tragic, cruel oppression of the American Indian was truly despicable, and the atrocities committed by European colonizers sicken anyone with a conscience. No sane person does or should deny this. The article completely ignores the fact that 90% of American Indians were accidentally wiped out by the completely unintentional introduction of Old World diseases. When the European colonizers first landed, they had no way of knowing how diseases spread. They thought it was caused by the "evil eye" or "the Devil." (Epidemiology as a science doesn't come about until the 1830s or 1840s.) Sneezing on somebody or their crops 300+ years before anyone knew that causes bad things does not make someone the equivalent of Hitler. Furthermore, the UN definition of genocide says that there has to be a deliberate policy of extermination (e.g. the Holocaust as perpetrated by Nazi Germany.) '''California was arguably a genocide because there was a deliberate policy of extermination and said policy was enacted with that goal in mind. The rest of the country? Nope. There has never been any federal policy ordering or implying the desirability of the extermination of the Indians. No order from President Grant or General Sherman/General Sheridan, no Act of Congress, nothing. No evidence is offered by this article to the contrary.''' The recent added sentences on "genocide" needs to be deleted because of this issue. I'd make a footnote called: "Debate over Terminology," something to that effect. I'd also include legitimate sources (NOT Michael Medved or the repulsive Stefan Molyneux) that dispute whether or not the term "genocide" is applicable. Scholars generally see American actions as failing to meet the criteria for genocide (in the vast majority of circumstances). That's just the case. It's also interesting that the citation used to claim it never uses the word "genocide". [[User:InvaderMichael|InvaderMichael]] ([[User talk:InvaderMichael|talk]]) 18:20, 11 March 2024 (UTC) :I may have missed it so could you point me to where it says encyclopedia content is based upon the UN's definition or directives versus providing reliable sources and gaining consensus through discussion? Thanks. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:12, 12 March 2024 (UTC) :"No synthesis" means that you would need a reliable source that makes that argument. The UN definition incidentally does not use the term "deliberate policy of extermination." Instead, it says to destroy in whole or in part. Apparently that can include a policy of assimilation, [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 15:08, 12 March 2024 (UTC) ::He's right, {{ping|User:The Four Deuces}}. Jeffrey Ostler (who is probably the most prominent historian to argue that several American actions were) states that it's a small minority position within the literature: {{tqi|For the most part, however, this argument has had little impact on mainstream scholarship in U.S. history or American Indian history. Scholars are more inclined than they once were to gesture to particular actions, events, impulses, and effects as genocidal, but genocide has not become a key concept in scholarship in these fields}}. The only plausible case of this, as he mentioned above, to me is California. As their first governor [[Peter Hardeman Burnett]]'s stated: ::<blockquote> That a war of extermination will continue to be waged between the two races until the Indian race becomes extinct, must be expected.</blockquote> ::For the [[Trail of Tears]], Stony Brook University [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ states]: {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears. We don't (and shouldn't) label the [[Holodomor]] and similar events as genocide in Wikivoice for the same reason as {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}} mentioned above. ::Even many historians who take a far more critical view of American history do not label (at least the vast majority of) American actions as genocidal. They instead describe it as settler colonialist or ethnic cleansing. ::Today, both would be considered war crimes, but the word genocide generally carries an "internationally exterminationist" connotation that the other two words lack. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:07, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::{{Ping|KlayCax}} wrote: {{tq|The Pulitzer Prize–winning book ''[[What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848]]'' also states that "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears.}} This is '''false''', at least as far as the text of the book goes. In the book, it is true that one finds the sentence {{maroon|Today Americans deplore the expropriation and expulsion of racial minorities, a practice now called "ethnic cleansing".}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/419/mode/1up source]) '''At no point''' does the author indicate that the white supremacy he talks about repeatedly ''never'' added up to genocide as KlayCax suggests. He simply doesn't use the term, as he is not talking about deaths, but about displacements and property rights /white speculation on expropriated Indian territory. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::: I spoke to him during an undergraduate history course of mine. (Which is why I know about the book in the first place.) He stated the Trial of Tears and California genocide/Indian Wars were best described as ethnic cleansing rather than genocide. While personal correspondence is not a reliable source, it's important to note that he personally describes the events as ethnic cleansing in the book, and never describes it as genocide. ::::: A reliable source that does talk about the view of mainstream historians [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples is here]; it states that {{tqi|Scholars generally agree that the Trail of Tears was not genocide but instead ethnic cleansing: “rendering an area ethnically homogenous by using force or intimidation to remove from a given area persons of another ethnic or religious group.”}}. Ostler comments are brought up below so don't want to fork the conversation. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:53, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You are absolutely right: what you claim to have understood in a private conversation is not an RS. That you say the book speaks of the California Indian Wars (when it does not) as not being genocide is telling... given that the book's subject matter ends in 1848 with the following resumé: {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} ([https://archive.org/details/whathathgodwroug00howe/page/852/mode/1up source]) I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do (on several different articles).-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::: What do you mean by it being telling? {{tq|The most bloody conflicts, however, derived from the domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government. If a primary driving force can be identified in American history for this period, this was it.}} Even people who characterize the events as ethnic cleansing affirm this. {{tqi|I will note with some dismay that this is at least the third time that I've read sources you've given that do not say what you say they do }} It says exactly what I stated. He characterizes the Trail of Tears and (at least until 1848) American-Indian contact in California as a form of ethnic cleansing. (Never mentioning genocide at all in his book.) I suppose you ''could'' argue that he may implicitly see it as both genocide and ethnic cleansing. But it would be remarkably strange (to the point of absurdity) for him to just leave it out of the book entirely if he believed that. ::::::: Other sources on the Trail of Tears predominantly describe it as "ethnic cleansing" rather than "genocide" as well. ::::::: Again, no one's denying the "domination and exploitation of the North American continent by the white people of the United States and their government". No one. Ethnic cleansing is categorized today as a [[crime against humanity]]. Saying that the United States inflicted policies, including massacres and forced population transfers (including ethnic cleansing), that ultimately had catastrophic effects on native populations is by no means a glowing historiography. ::::::: Genocide also carries connotations of extermination in the popular imagination. So any reference to it would have be extensively detailed and contained within the article. There's no way to properly summarize it in that time. ::::::: We'd need overwhelming consensus (see below with what TFD wrote: which I agree with) to include it in the article. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:56, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Lest there be any confusion: the book does not "state that "ethnic cleansing" ''rather than "genocide"'' is an accurate description for the California Indian Wars/Genocide and Trial of Tears." His book ends prior to the former and he only says with regard to ''part'' of the latter issue that it fit what people "now called" expropriation and explusion of racial minorities seventeen years ago. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 08:21, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::Again, you are making these arguments on the article talk page for [[United States]] which is what Wikipedia expressly states should not happen. If you have an issue with [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Holodomor]] or any of the other articles you listed we should be having those conversations on those respective article talk pages. If there are ten articles we should be having ten individual discussions, period. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:18, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I'm talking about [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=United_States&diff=1211898233&oldid=1211852518 the recent edit by DivineReality], {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:34, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::I think for the most part these issues are being discussed and consensus is being gathered. The issue is when editors choose to ignore consensus because they don't like the conclusion. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:15, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::There's no consensus among historians that the Holodomor, Trial of Tears, Gaza, Xinjiang, or the Russian invasion of Ukraine comprises a genocide. :::::Perhaps one could make the argument that there's a consensus that all of those things are war crimes/grave moral atrocities. But where is the consensus you're referring to? [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Trail%20of%20Tears&diff=1213549764&oldid=1213180265 The previous version] of the [[Trail of Tears]] implied that there was unanimous consensus among historians that the events were genocidal. Yet [https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html the PBS citation makes no mention of genocide] and [https://news.stonybrook.edu/humanities/kelton-lecture-describes-debate-over-genocide-of-indigenous-peoples/ among historians it's a small, minority viewpoint that the Trial of Tears was such]. ::::: "Grave moral wrongs/horrendously evil actions/mass murder" ≠ genocide. It would be wrong for us to state in Wikivoice that any of these things are as such. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::You keep quoting a source that says it is a minority viewpoint but offer no specific numbers proving your point. A google scholar search revealed 279,000 instances of genocide related to "Native American" and "genocide". It is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship. You may quote the authors you wish and, in their voice, describe them as saying it is a minority view but we shouldn't say it in Wiki-voice without an in-depth analysis. We state in Wikivoice that some historians describe it as genocidal acts. Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint using those terms exactly and quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter? We have a good compromise solution already laid out without the need to diminish a significant viewpoint because some historians disagree. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 20:24, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::What do you mean by "specific numbers"? Paul Kelton, Jeffrey Ostler, and many, many, many others clearly state that it is a minority viewpoint. Are you talking like a poll that aggregates the views of historians? Because few polls like that exist at all. We do however have people like Paul Kelton and Jeffrey Ostler who have spoken about the present views of historians. For Ostler, who is definitely isn't a whitewasher of American history, and is an openly revisionist historian who challenges many of the traditional (positive) accounts of it, he states that it is a minority viewpoint. (Outside of California at least.) :::::::{{tqi|it is not a small viewpoint among historians, scholars, academia and reliable authorship... quoting one source that states that as the ultimate authority on the matter}}. Outside of California, it certainly is, and multiple sources state this. No one here is denying the utter destruction that American actions had on native populations. It's just that the vast majority of this is classified as "ethnic cleansing" or "settler colonialism" rather than genocide. :::::::{{tqi|Why are you so dead set on stating it as a minority viewpoint}} Because the previous version of the article implied that it was a consensus viewpoint of historians. I'm okay with ethnic cleansing, settler colonialism, and forced displacement, that's pretty uncontroversial with many mainstream historian, but outside of California "genocide" is a small minority viewpoint in the literature. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 20:46, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Our article on [[genocide]] says "Genocide is the intentional destruction of a people[a] in whole or in part." If one settler or a group of settlers worked to eliminate all or most native Americans from the land they were taking, it seems to pretty well fit that definition. It doesn't have to be official government policy. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 23:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::That's generally classified as [[ethnic cleansing]], not [[genocide]]. :::::::::Both are classified as [[crimes against humanity]]. However, they're generally regarded as two different forms of it, even if many scholars view the processes as interconnected in at least some ways. :::::::::(For instance, Jeffrey Ostler argues that the threat of genocide was used to compel ethnic cleansing, which I think is undeniable if anyone reads the primary sources.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:35, 13 March 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::Looks like you'd better get over and fix our article on [[Genocide]]. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 03:29, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::: Ostler expounds upon this when discussing his book, Surviving Genocide [https://www.google.com/books/edition/Surviving_Genocide/6zeWDwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Surviving+Genocide&printsec=frontcover], when he said, “Wherever we live in America, I believe any of us is well served to learn the history of the land’s original inhabitants, and to acknowledge the extremes of violence in our own history by calling it what is was: genocide.”[https://around.uoregon.edu/content/historian-examines-native-american-genocide-its-legacy-and-survivors] He goes on the state when describing this debate, "Given the history of the American genocide debate, however, it is doubtful that a consensus will emerge. It is safe to say the debate will continue." He tried to avoid the question of genocide altogether but he said he found he couldn't escape the sense that genocide is an integral part of the history he's written about. He resolves that genocide did not exist all the time but very much was a repeatable theme of the whole interaction of Natives with European/American's. :::::::: Another historian, Bernard Bailyn, who takes the approach that both sides in this debate committed savagery, summed it up like this "Well, the Indians were not genocidal, not on the whole. Their effort was not to wipe Europeans off the face of the map. It was the English who write these letters 'wipe them off the map'."[https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-shocking-savagery-of-americas-early-history-22739301/] This debate is not small and no consensus exists among scholars or historians. We shouldn't present this position as minority in Wikivoice using that term exactly, any more than I would use such weight laden words as "growing" or "expanding". I think the wording on [[Trail of Tears]] aptly defines this debate, presenting ethnic cleansing first and genocide second and both describing the fact that some very respected historians and scholars believe either term or both terms are the best description of what happened but that there is no consensus. By applying "some" to both terms we admit in Wikivoice this is not a settled debate by any stretch. That is the most NPOV approach to this debate because it reflects the sources and leaves it to our readers to decide. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:58, 15 March 2024 (UTC) :::::::::If {{tqi|"no consensus exists"}} then we shouldn't include it in Wikivoice within article. We've already renamed the ''Uyghur genocide ''→ [[Persecution of Uyghurs in China]]. :::::::::We don't mention it on the [[Canada]], [[Australia]], [[New Zealand]], or [[Ireland]] pages, either. :::::::::And of course I don't oppose mentioning it in the specific articles. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:54, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ===TFD conversation (forked in order to prevent multiple topics in same conversation)=== The term genocide is currently being used a lot for colonial history and even for current events including Xinjiang, Ukraine, and Gaza. There should be a guideline, because there are a lot of issues when using the term. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 19:10, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :To give a rough sketch of the situation, I definitely agree there should be a consistent guideline between articles on the matter. Having different standards on different articles simply doesn't make sense and the word is clearly being used inconsistently between articles. The most simple solution to me is ignoring the classic debate on what "genocide" actually means and basing it on whether an overwhelming majority of mainstream historians categorize the events as genocide with near-unanimous/or greater support. :That would place: :* Events such as the Holocaust and Rwandan genocide would continue to be categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :* Events such as the Holodomor, Uyghur persuections, Trail of Tears, Gaza, California Indian Wars/Genocide, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine would not categorized as genocide in Wikivoice. :I think we're going to be spinning around in circles otherwise. Do you think that's a good solution, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}? Or do you have a better idea? Some form of standardization between articles is needed. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:27, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :: Not sure where this discussion would fit best but it's definitely needed. :: The increasing usage of "genocide" in Wikivoice of articles — when scholars are either mixed/generally opposed to the usage — is concerning. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:30, 13 March 2024 (UTC) :::How about the usage of "genocide" in [[Genocide]]? [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 05:39, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::Generally agree. Since the concept of genocide was created to describe the Holocaust, the Holocaust falls within all the definitions provided. A number of other incidents meet some definitions but not others. ::Other than the Holocaust and a few other cases, normally if the term is used I would expect to see who used it and what they meant. ::There's also the issue of using a term to describe events long before the term was created. Frequently reliable sources will not address the issue. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 03:54, 14 March 2024 (UTC) :::For those interested in origins, those who have studied Lemkin's notes suggest that he found the Holocaust (a term he apparently never used) to be a case of genocide, but certainly did not consider it the first genocide, nor even a prototype (according to the authors). Both the Armenian genocide and the genocides in the Americas predated it. I would suggest reading "[[Raphael Lemkin]] as historian of genocide in the Americas" (2005) ([https://www-tandfonline-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1080/14623520500349951# source] available via Wikipedia Library). This allows one to see that Lemkin's research model for genocide studies very definitely included colonialism / imperialism in the Americas (particularly Spanish America). His notes concerning "16. Genocide against the American Indians" are apparently incompletely preserved. sample citation: "If Lemkin's definition of genocide as colonial has been studiously ignored by the literature, Australian, German, and English scholars interested in imperial history have now begun to implement it in their research on the destructive dimensions of colonialism." -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:52, 14 March 2024 (UTC) ::::The reason Lemkin never used the term Holocaust is that it came into usage after he died. Anyway, while he coined the term genocide, his definition was altered when adopted by the UN and there was no recognition of genocides by Turkey, the United States or the Soviet Union. The only agreement on using the term was for the Holocaust, which is what led to the adoption of the Convention on Genocide. ::::Concepts often come to be used differently from originally meant, such as Adam Smith's "[[invisible hand]]." In that case, telling libertarians that is not what Smith actually meant is an etymological fallacy and unlikely to be persuasive. [[User:The Four Deuces|TFD]] ([[User talk:The Four Deuces|talk]]) 13:32, 15 March 2024 (UTC) === Removal on 3 April 2024 === :::::I'm removing it from the article for the time being, {{ping|The Four Deuces}}. If there's {{tqi|"no consensus"}} on how Indian removal policies are classified then we shouldn't say so in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 14:55, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::Given that there has already been an [[Talk:United_States/Archive_94#RFC_on_California_Genocide|RFC]] the correct thing to do is leave it in the article and start a new RfC if you think there is a pressing need to remove it. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 21:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::* RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::* The RFC in question is half a decade old, malformed, and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s.}} Neither is great. :::::::* It also appears to not even be a proper RFC. I can't find a tag for it. :::::::* The RFC wording is not presently in the article. A different phrasing was created by you a month ago. Several editors, including TFD, InvaderMichael, me, and others all objected to the wording. However, I was alright with it remaining in the article if a source saying that a consensus was established could be found. It hasn't. Regardless, as the wording is not in the RFC, it can not be said to fall under the bounds of what the RFC determined. :::::::Is there a consensus that the United States committed genocide, {{ping|SashiRolls}}? An honest observer knows that the matter is significantly contentious. It at least shouldn't be put in Wikivoice. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:37, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::I disagree that "no consensus" means that you can remove it. No consensus means it should not be touched until we gain consensus. No changes to how Indian removal policies are described should be changed on any article until consensus is gathered either way. This is a highly contentious topic and all these edits to fit your point of view will potentially lead to edit warring and further disruption. It has been explained to you the proper way forward. On articles where there is not a current RFC discussing the matter you should open one. On articles where there is a current RFC you may join the process. There is no rush to form a conclusion on the matter as it is not a BLPVIO issue. I recommend opening discussions on the respective article talk pages or at the appropriate venue to allow the community to comment before arbitrarily making any edits on this specific matter. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 11:32, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::: {{tqi|This is a highly contentious topic}} If it is, as you said, a highly contentious topic, then why should the claim remain in Wikivoice? I'll note that the wording was recently readded by SashiRolls around a month ago. ::::::: '''I, TFD, and others left it in to try and have editor's establish the claim as having consensus in the historical literature, which, even then, seemed doubtful.''' The sources provided (including Ostler) only seem to further give credence to the idea that it's a minority view within the literature. Ostler [https://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/08/04/was-indian-removal-genocidal/ notes that]: {{tqi|But specialists have [generally] not argued that the policy is genocidal.}} and that {{tqi|Interestingly, however, most recent scholarship on Indian removal, while supporting the view that the policy was vicious and inhuman, has not addressed the question of genocide}}. The problem with citing only one historian is that so much has been written about the history of the United States that you can selectively pick books and quotations from reputable historians to bolster any narrative that you want. (From the "god-like American Founding Fathers" to "the genocidal, settler-colonialist, enslavers on lands now known as the United States".) ::::::: My opinion is that the majority of the events were predominantly [[ethnic cleansing]] and forced [[population transfers]] rather than genocide. (With a few possible exceptions.) It's also the widespread opinion of many scholars. I'm failing to see why you think it should cited as such in Wikivoice when you yourself have stated that there's "no consensus" on the matter and that it's a "highly contentious topic" in American history. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:30, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::The reason it should stay is that discussion is ongoing. To change it in the middle of discussion, whether the discussion has been going for five seconds or two years, is disruptive to the process. I would say that no matter what language was used except in the case of a BLP violation, as I stated. It hurts the collaborative effort for an editor to arbitrarily decide, once the attempt has been made to gather consensus or issues are raised, to then decide they don't like the terminology based on their interpretation of sources to remove it from the article. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:40, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::Once discussion is concluded and the community has spoken, you can have at it. But if there is no consensus that genocide belongs there is also no consensus that it should be solely classified as ethnic cleansing. No consensus is no consensus so get consensus. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:43, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::And on Ostler, it should be noted that he has on numerous occasions stated that he believes some acts, including the Trail of Tears, was genocidal. He agrees there is no consensus on the terminology among scholars but that goes for other terms as well. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 17:47, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::: That's exactly ''why'' I cited him, {{ping|ARoseWolf}}. Unlike conservative/traditionalist scholars, who would have the motivation to make the "genocide" position seem more fringe than it is, a revisionist scholar would have the ''opposite'' incentive. Ostler directly says that it is a (small?) minority position. If there is no consensus among scholars — which I think is indisputable at the very least — then why should the article make a determination that it is in Wikivoice? :::::::::: I'm fine with ethnic cleansing. But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose [the] [phrasing] SashiRolls [is supporting] (Note: Later word change for greater clarity per request). [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 17:57, 4 April 2024 (UTC) {{od}}Please redact my username from this statement, {{Ping|KlayCax}}. As you are very well aware, the long-standing "phrasing" that you deleted on 1 October 2023 long predates my first contribution to this article on 18 February 2023, at which time the exact phrasing I recently restored had been in the article for [[Special:Diff/883146875|four years]], when someone slightly modified the original wording from [[Special:Diff/860174730|Sept 2018]] added after the RfC. Trying to personalize the discussion diverts attention from the fact that it was *you* who deleted long-standing content and supporting references on [[Special:Diff/1178012430|1 October 2023]]. Moreover, the phrasing you deleted on [[Special:Diff/1217049683|3 April 2024]] is not "my" phrasing either, as the 2019 formulation was modified by somebody else [[Special:Diff/1210307040|on 25 February 2024]], the day after I had restored it. Distorting my role leads me to want to chew on the [[WP:BAIT]] 🐟 , but upon reflection I think I'll just post the diffs... Also, feel free to ping the four editors you claim oppose the content that was in the article from Sept 2018 – October 2023 and from 24 Feb 2024 – 3 April 2024. Additionally, I'm not sure why you're talking about Indian removal in general and about the Trail of Tears when the content you are allegedly disputing refers to neither. This is becoming, as others have said, a timesink.-- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 00:57, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::We all know you are fine with ethnic cleansing but you have yet to open a RFC on any article to ask for community consensus as has been suggested to you many times. You cherry pick statements just like you accuse others of doing to prove your point. If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship. But that isn't my issue. My issue is you wanting to change the articles while discussion is ongoing. And my warning is that it may lead to an edit war. No one wins in edit wars. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:12, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::: RFC's are matters of last resort. :::::::::::: {{tqi|If there is no consensus that these acts were genocidal then there is no consensus that these acts were ethnic cleansing. When there is no consensus among scholarship then there is no consensus among scholarship}}. There's a consensus in the literature that the United States ethnically cleansed Native Americans. There isn't a consensus on the question of genocide. It's very possible for one to be true but not the other. :::::::::::: Again, all I'm asking is: if there isn't a consensus that the United States committed genocide. Why should it be referred to ''in Wikivoice'' as genocide? {{ping|ARoseWolf}}? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:16, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::: I don't understand what your objection is. If there's no objections to us 4's proposed changes then the discussion can be concluded. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:18, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::I read TFD's comments and I don't see that they necessarily agree with you. I don't see any proposed wording or changes other than you don't like the word genocide in Wikivoice when it comes to Native American treatment by the US. Your opinion is that because there is no agreement in scholarship to call it genocide we should not state it in Wikivoice and that it should be called ethnic cleansing, also not agreed on by scholarship, or crimes against humanity (patronizing) based solely on your opinion and interpretation. I see that, on '''one''' article talk page, you are trying to force some standardization on '''all''' articles that discuss genocide when you have been told by several editors that it needs to be separate discussions or if you can find the appropriate community venue to make sure this decision gets the wider community discussion. We shouldn't be trying to form Wikipedia policy on an article talk page. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:31, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::I object to having this discussion on this article talk page which is supposed to be only about improvements to this article specifically. I hope that clarifies my objection though I'm not sure why that was so hard to decipher because I said as much in several of my responses. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:38, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::The broad genocide discussion would go elsewhere. This conversation is narrowly about this article. :::::::::::::::I'm asking whether ''this'' page should state that the United States committed genocide ''in Wikivoice''? Yes or no? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:50, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::If there is reason enough to state it as ethnic cleansing so definitively with Wikivoice I think there is cause to state it as genocide, as has been done on other articles about Native American's treatment by the US. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 18:53, 4 April 2024 (UTC) :::::::::::::::::In regards to [[United States]], I believe the article is very neutrally worded, making mention of genocide once and only as a wikilink to an article with the same title about this subject. It calls the Trail of Tears a forced removal, which I think is very generous. Before that it states in one sentence about the policies of Indian removal and assimilation that many, not most, many being more than one or two, respected scholars, both Native and non-Native, classify as genocidal acts in part or in whole. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 19:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) ::::::::::::::::::If there's not a consensus than we shouldn't take a position either way. Particularly if it's a ''minority ''position within the literature. ::::::::::::::::::[[Trail of Tears]] isn't even mentioned in the article. The current phrasing in the article is about so-called "[[Indian Removal]]" in general. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 23:55, 5 April 2024 (UTC) :: 1.) I already explained the 2018 RFC above. 1.) RFC's are matters of last resort. 2.) The RFC in question is half a decade old, '''was malformed''', and offered a false dichotomy between a heavily biased and nationalist POV and {{tqi|"In 1869, a new Peace Policy nominally promised to protect Native-Americans from abuses, avoid further war, and secure their eventual U.S. citizenship. Nonetheless, conflicts and state-sanctioned murder, including the California Genocide, continued throughout the West into the 1900s."}} Neither option was great. Heck, the only part of the statement still in the article is "genocide". Therefore, I can't see it as still [[WP: PRECEDENT]]. :: 2.) I've never reported anyone to an administrator on here and my statements weren't [[WP: BAIT]]. I was simply responding to the phrasing you reinstated. Editors with the best of intentions can disagree with one another on how articles should be written. That's entirely normal and should be expected. I apologize if something I said was taken the wrong way. It wasn't my intention. :: 3.) There's a lot more than 4 who have objected. {{ping|The Four Deuces}}, {{ping|Barnards.tar.gz}}, {{ping|InvaderMichael}}, {{ping|Cmguy777}} {{ping|Dhtwiki}}, me, ''etc.'' have all opposed the wording (at least in ''Wikivoice'') over the past year for the simple reason that there's no current historical consensus on the matter. (And even worse: a lot of this appears to be a minority within the literature.) A note explaining the historiography and leaving it an open question would be far superior. (Or not mentioning it at all.) [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :: 4.) Because there was proposals to also list the [[Trail of Tears]] or [[Indian Removal]] (in general) as genocidal as well. There were two conversations going on at once. :: 5.) Without getting more bogged down in the weeds: 1.) There's no consensus in the literature. Additionally, many of these claims are ''minority'' positions within it. 2.) Therefore, Wikipedia shouldn't state it in Wikivoice. :Is there a consensus on any of this? If not, how can it remain in the article's voice? [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 01:44, 6 April 2024 (UTC) The fact that you ignored my request to redact the misleading attribution is noted. I look forward to reading the folks you pinged to see if anyone supports your removal. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 02:21, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :The only thing I said was {{tqi|But there's at least 4+ editors now who oppose the SashiRolls [preferred] phrasing as is}}. (I'll add [preferred]) The context was obviously about how the phrasing that you're in favor of (I didn't say it was ''yours''; I only brought your name up in context due to the fact that ) is different from the RFC version. So citing the (incredible malformed and false dichotomy-induced) RFC that is now half a decade old doesn't have much weight. :My question is: if there's no consensus, why promote one view over the other? We've already renamed the [[Uyghur genocide]] to ''Persecution of the Uyghurs in China''. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 02:43, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Thank you for acknowledging that the wording is not mine. I do indeed prefer ''some'' wording to ''no'' wording (your preference). I am not opposed to including both the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, if you prefer. My thought is that using summary style is to be preferred and linking to the daughter article (California genocide) is simpler than splitting hairs in this article. :I haven't supported or opposed any particular wording. I left my view that genocide is a serious label that requires the highest standard of sourcing. I haven't looked into the sourcing of this particular subject in any great detail, but I can make a few generic comments: :1) If there's a problem with the title of the article on [[California genocide]] then [[Talk:California genocide]] is the place to discuss it. :2) I'm not sure any further site-wide guideline on use of this term is necessary or helpful. It should always come down to what sources say, so it's perfectly possible for articles on, say, [[China]] and [[Ukraine]] to be inconsistent on their use of the term, as long as they both reflect what their respective sources say. :3) If there is not clear consensus amongst sources, then we cannot pick one POV's preferred label and present it in wikivoice - and the more inflammatory the label, the clearer that consensus needs to be. :4) The [[United States]] is a vast subject. Almost everything in this article should be written in [[WP:SS|summary style]]. The section titled [[United_States#Revolution_and_expansion_(1776–1861)|Revolution and expansion (1776–1861)]] is headed {{tq|Further information: [[History of the United States (1776–1789)]], [[History of the United States (1789–1815)]], and [[History of the United States (1815–1849)]]}}, so logically the section should summarise what those articles say, with due weight. None of them use the word genocide as far as I can see. [[User:Barnards.tar.gz|Barnards.tar.gz]] ([[User talk:Barnards.tar.gz|talk]]) 12:47, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::Surprisingly, this was not even covered in the 1849-1865 page, but [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=History_of_the_United_States_%281849%E2%80%931865%29&diff=1217550713&oldid=1216784830 I have fixed that oversight]. As you can see, I have no problem with using ''both'' the terms ethnic cleansing and genocide, since both are frequently seen in the scholarship, and en.wp represents all major viewpoints. If it is thought that Yale University press and University of Nebraska press books and the California governor are fringe sources, someone could open a thread at the Fringe theories noticeboard ([[WP:FTN]]) to get opinions there... -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 14:02, 6 April 2024 (UTC) ::As an addendum, when I noticed [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1210296886 KlayCax deleting] the California genocide from Historical negationism a couple months ago (due to his post in an earlier section of this page), I learned that textbook editors were unwilling to refer to the events as "genocide" and pressured their authors not to use the term if they wanted to be published: "In spite of a wealth of sources, the California Department of Education denies the genocide of its first people, and publishers and authors of social studies texts almost entirely ignore the killing thousands of Indians and enslavement of thousands of others (California State Board of Education, 2000)." ([https://journals-sagepub-com.wikipedialibrary.idm.oclc.org/doi/full/10.1177/0002764213495032 source] available through Wikipedia Library) ::Times changed in 2019 with the governor's apology. Today, [https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Talk:Historical_negationism&diff=prev&oldid=1217583771 new accounts are being created] to help KlayCax remove the longstanding text from that entry. -- [[User:SashiRolls | SashiRolls]] <sup>[[User_talk:SashiRolls | 🌿 ]] · [[Special:Contributions/SashiRolls| 🍥]]</sup> 20:34, 6 April 2024 (UTC) :::Like SashiRolls, I am not opposed to both, and other, terms being discussed in articles. In fact, on most article discussions I have been involved with I voted against only the inclusion of genocide. I think many terms can and should be applied because there is no consensus among scholarship. They, much like Wikipedia, cannot agree on what even constitutes a genocide. I completely disagree with the notion it cannot apply to these events and I do not see how one it can definitively be called one and not the other when neither has consensus. Our best hope is to define the terms as neutrally as possible with citations and let our readers decide what to believe or not. --[[User:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b76e79">'''A'''</span><span style="color:#be4f60">'''Rose'''</span>]][[User talk:ARoseWolf|<span style="color:#b87333">'''Wolf'''</span>]] 12:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :This as a USA topic I generally avoid as I'm simply not that familiar with the academic research. But why aren't we saying something simply like {{Green|The westward expansion and nation building resulted in the displacement of many Native Peoples, that controversially has been described as ethnic cleansing or genocide by various scholars,,,,}} [https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3 source]{{cite book | last=Ostler | first=Jeffrey | title=Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History | chapter=Genocide and American Indian History | publisher=Oxford University Press | date=2015-03-02 | isbn=978-0-19-932917-5 | doi=10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.3}} <span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 17:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == The Lead == I checked back here for the first time in a while. It's really nice to see that it's been shortened so much! Good job all. -- [[User:Rockstone35|<span style="color:#DF0101"><b>Rockstone</b></span>]][[User talk:Rockstone35|<span style="color:0000ff;font-size:15px"><sup><small><b>Send me a message!</b></small></sup></span>]] 05:46, 23 March 2024 (UTC) :It definitely reads better but it's a giant sea of blue. ...... It's been used as an example of what not to do lately in discussions about accessibility for readers.<span style="font-weight:bold;color:darkblue">[[User:Moxy|Moxy]]</span>🍁 19:10, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Military == The fact that the US has the strongest military in the world is not mentioned anywhere in the article. Why is this? [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 21:54, 26 March 2024 (UTC) :"Strongest" might be tricky to precisely define, but the article clearly states "The United States spent $877 billion on its military in 2022, which is by far the largest amount of any country, making up 39% of global military spending...The United States has the third-largest combined armed forces in the world". [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 01:28, 27 March 2024 (UTC) ::All good. I was just a little curious because the page for the US armed forces describe it as the strongest, so I thought that would be mentioned here. [[User:Man-Man122|Man-Man122]] ([[User talk:Man-Man122|talk]]) 20:31, 27 March 2024 (UTC) == Should the United States be called North Columbia? == '''Originally, the United States was planned to be called Columbia''' named after Columbus who landed in North America. And plus, the government officials officially planned to name the United States, Columbia but unfortunately, the South American republic of Columbia already took the name too early so the US had to settle with its current name. So, should the United States been called Columbia before the South Americans got ahold of the name or no? [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 13:14, 2 April 2024 (UTC) :Columbia was a name often used to refer to the United States, see [[Columbia (personification)]]. This fell out of fashion in the 20th century, although evidence remains in names such as the [[District of Columbia]]. Article talk pages are generally used to article development specifically, if you have general questions in the future they may be better addressed at the [[Wikipedia:Reference desk]]. Best, [[User:Chipmunkdavis|CMD]] ([[User talk:Chipmunkdavis|talk]]) 02:36, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :The United States was named before the country of [[Colombia]], and its original name was actually [[United Colonies]]. [[User:Randy Kryn|Randy Kryn]] ([[User talk:Randy Kryn|talk]]) 03:07, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::Yeah I know Randy, but should the US change it's name from the United States of '''America''' onto the United States of '''Columbia''' and why you may ask? For Americans ahem I mean '''North Columbians''' to be proud of the founding fathers and their history. [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 05:42, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :::Columbus was hardly a founding father of the USA. He never set foot on the land that is now the USA, and persisted to his death in believing that he had made it to Asia. And he's hardly a fine example of what you want to name your country after. He had two sons, one by his wife and one by his mistress. He called the local people he found ''Los Indios (Indians)'', a name that still creates confusion today. Columbus once punished a man found guilty of stealing corn by having his ears and nose cut off and then selling him into slavery. There are strong suggestions he was rather brutal in a lot more of his treatment of the natives. His name in his native Genoese language was ''Cristoffa Corombo'', so maybe the country could be called ''Corombia''. Alternatively, use the Spanish version of his name, ''Cristóbal Colón'', and call it ''Colonland''. [[User:HiLo48|HiLo48]] ([[User talk:HiLo48|talk]]) 06:34, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::::I didn't meant Columbus was a founding father, I meant the some founding fathers and many other major individuals involved in the United States' founding wanted to change the name of the United States to Columbia but Colonland probably is a mighty option. I agree I guess [[User:DarJoOu|DarJoOu]] ([[User talk:DarJoOu|talk]]) 02:06, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == Suggestions from AI == Condensed by a human: *The number of Indian reservations is mentioned as 326. This number can vary due to changes in federal recognition and the establishment of new reservations. It's essential to verify the current number for accuracy. **326 wasn't mentioned in the main body, now added. *The population number and global rank are correct as of the last update, but these are dynamic figures that change annually. It’s useful to note the year these numbers were reported for current context. *The discussion on the health care system, particularly the Affordable Care Act, may need an update to reflect any recent changes or impacts on insurance coverage and healthcare access. *briefly mentions the Civil War's impact on slavery but could elaborate on its profound effects on American society, including the Reconstruction era, the civil rights movement, and ongoing discussions around racial equity. *While discussing the economy, more emphasis could be placed on the shift towards technology and service industries over the past few decades, reflecting the current economic landscape. *The cultural section could benefit from a discussion on the influence of immigrant cultures on American cuisine, music, and festivals, highlighting the diversity of American cultural practices. *Geography mentions physical features but could discuss environmental challenges the US faces, such as climate change impacts on different regions, conservation efforts, and sustainability initiatives. *A brief explanation of the Electoral College system could provide readers with a clearer understanding of the presidential election process. *Mentions the popularity of American football, basketball, and baseball but could acknowledge the growing interest in soccer, both at a professional level and grassroots participation, reflecting changing sports preferences. [[User:Tpbradbury|Tom B]] ([[User talk:Tpbradbury|talk]]) 09:15, 3 April 2024 (UTC) == Incorrect claim “highest median income of a non-microstate” == Factual error. I’d like to adjust it, but the page is protected. Several average sized countries such as Norway, Switzerland and a couple more have higher median income. Correct: US has a high median income. (Though not the highest.) Would someone with editing rights please correct. Thanks. [[Special:Contributions/178.238.174.47|178.238.174.47]] ([[User talk:178.238.174.47|talk]]) 17:48, 3 April 2024 (UTC) :[https://data.oecd.org/hha/household-disposable-income.htm According to OECD], the United States has a higher median income than Norway or Switzerland. A few microstates surpass it. However, that's already specified. [[User:KlayCax|KlayCax]] ([[User talk:KlayCax|talk]]) 18:03, 3 April 2024 (UTC) ::It should be made more precise by saying this is disposable income according the OECD. These types of terms and statistics are usually defined in slightly different ways depending on their source. [[User:Senorangel|Senorangel]] ([[User talk:Senorangel|talk]]) 03:56, 19 April 2024 (UTC) == Request for edit on type of government. == I've noticed that there's been a change in the type of government on the page. Before it was "federal presidential constitutional republic", now "constitutional" was taken out which is a bad edit. The United States's rule of law is the constitution. To say we aren't constitutional anymore is taking away the true meaning behind the form of government. It's fundamental to our rule of law. I'm not sure if it was a mistake or intentional but putting "constitutional" back in is needed. [[Special:Contributions/208.38.225.183|208.38.225.183]] ([[User talk:208.38.225.183|talk]]) 01:00, 4 April 2024 (UTC) == "[[:EE. UU.]]" listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|Redirects for discussion]] == [[File:Information.svg|30px]] The redirect <span class="plainlinks">[//en.wikipedia.org/?title=EE._UU.&redirect=no EE. UU.]</span> has been listed at [[Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion|redirects for discussion]] to determine whether its use and function meets the [[Wikipedia:Redirect|redirect guidelines]]. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at '''{{slink|Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 April 9#EE. UU.}}''' until a consensus is reached. <!-- Template:RFDNote --> <span style="background-color: #FFCFBF; font-variant: small-caps">[[User:Utopes|Utopes]] <sub>('''[[User talk:Utopes|talk]]''' / '''[[Special:Contributions/Utopes|cont]]''')</sub></span> 21:14, 9 April 2024 (UTC) == Star spangled banner source == Currently it links to https://uscode.house.gov/statviewer.htm?volume=46&page=1508 which is something about the Battle of Kings Mountain? I think this maybe an error [[User:Idkjustathing|Idkjustathing]] ([[User talk:Idkjustathing|talk]]) 21:59, 15 April 2024 (UTC) :Look at the short piece of legislation at the top of the page reproduced when you click the link. It is not an error. <span style="font-family: Gill Sans MT, Arial, Helvetica; font-weight:140;">[[User:General Ization|<span style="color: #006633;">General <i>Ization</i></span>]]</span> <sup>[[User talk:General Ization|<i style="color: #000666;">Talk </i>]] </sup> 22:04, 15 April 2024 (UTC) == Federal Presidential republic?? == i could have sworn we were a federal CONSTITUTIONAL republic. sounds mighty strange.... [[Special:Contributions/12.166.63.211|12.166.63.211]] ([[User talk:12.166.63.211|talk]]) 01:17, 16 April 2024 (UTC) :See [[Talk:United States/Archive 94#RFC: Use "Federal presidential constitutional republic" in_infobox]]. Essentially, "republic" already implies "constitutional" as all republics are constitutional. While not all republics choose to codify as a single written document is another matter, but not having it as a single written document doesn't mean you aren't running in a constitutional manner (see [[United Kingdom]], which is a parliamentary [[constitutional monarchy]] without having a codified single document as its constitution, but rather a body of laws acting as such). See [[constitution]]. All ''republics'' have to operate on some sort of constitutional based system since they aren't operating on absolutist authority of a single person, like in an [[absolute monarchy]]. This is why a monarchical form of government has to establish whether or not it is constitutional or not, since non-constitutional monarchies can exist (i.e. absolute monarchies vs constitutional monarchies). Republics, however, must be constitutional in some form. --[[User:OuroborosCobra|OuroborosCobra]] ([[User talk:OuroborosCobra|talk]]) 12:33, 16 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 19 April 2024 == {{Edit extended-protected|United States|answered=yes}} Page does not link to United Kingdom when first mentioned [[User:Crystallyn0|Crystallyn0]] ([[User talk:Crystallyn0|talk]]) 12:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC) == Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 == {{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}} {{subst:trim|1= <!-- State UNAMBIGUOUSLY your suggested changes below this line, preferably in a "change X to Y" format. Other editors need to know what to add or remove. Blank edit requests will be declined. --> <!-- Write your request ABOVE this line and do not remove the tildes and curly brackets below. --> }} ~~~~'
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff)
'@@ -544,2 +544,13 @@ :[[File:Red question icon with gradient background.svg|20px|link=|alt=]] '''Not done:''' it's not clear what changes you want to be made. Please mention the specific changes in a [[WP:EDITXY|"change X to Y" format]] and provide a [[Wikipedia:Reliable sources|reliable source]] if appropriate.<!-- Template:EEp --> <code><nowiki>'''[[</nowiki>'''[[User:CanonNi]]'''<nowiki>]]'''</nowiki></code> ([[User talk:CanonNi|talk]]<nowiki>|</nowiki>[[Special:Contributions/CanonNi|contribs]]) 12:20, 19 April 2024 (UTC) :{{Done|Fixed}}. –<span style="box-shadow: 0px 0px 12px red;border-radius:9em;padding:0 2px;background:#D00">[[User:Gluonz|<span style="color:#AFF">'''Gluonz'''</span>]]<sup>''' [[User talk:Gluonz|talk]] [[Special:Contributions/Gluonz|contribs]]'''</sup></span> 04:40, 21 April 2024 (UTC) + +== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 == + +{{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}} +{{subst:trim|1= +<!-- State UNAMBIGUOUSLY your suggested changes below this line, preferably in a "change X to Y" format. Other editors need to know what to add or remove. Blank edit requests will be declined. --> + + + +<!-- Write your request ABOVE this line and do not remove the tildes and curly brackets below. --> +}} ~~~~ '
New page size (new_size)
106032
Old page size (old_size)
105588
Size change in edit (edit_delta)
444
Lines added in edit (added_lines)
[ 0 => '', 1 => '== Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 26 April 2024 ==', 2 => '', 3 => '{{edit extended-protected|United States|answered=no}}', 4 => '{{subst:trim|1=', 5 => '<!-- State UNAMBIGUOUSLY your suggested changes below this line, preferably in a "change X to Y" format. Other editors need to know what to add or remove. Blank edit requests will be declined. -->', 6 => '', 7 => '', 8 => '', 9 => '<!-- Write your request ABOVE this line and do not remove the tildes and curly brackets below. -->', 10 => '}} ~~~~' ]
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines)
[]
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node)
false
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
'1714153898'

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