This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 |
I fail to see how selectively questioning a seemingly random piece of biographical ancestry information is acceptable. I don't care what idiotic policy pages you point me at, it's plain wrong. My edits were in good faith. What exactly is the suggested 'citation' for someone's ancestry?
I can't even begin to imagine the mental gymnastics involved in failing to see the problem with such an arbitrary and difficult to fulfill citation request.
Regardless, I guess you 'win' this edit war. I had no idea who Danielle Smith was before reading a news article a few weeks ago, and edited what I believed to be an excessive and irrational citation request upon finding her article. I should have better things to do with my life than argue over minutia. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Howel t ( talk • contribs) 00:16, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: DOne. Fences& Windows 01:05, 30 July 2010 (UTC)
Danielle Smith (politician) →
Danielle Smith — Per
WP:TWODABS, disambiguation pages for only two uses are unnecessary— it is much more effective to lead directly to the
primary topic and
hatnote to the secondary topic. Since the politician is more notable (and thus more of a primary topic) than
Danielle Smith (martial artist), this page should be moved to
Danielle Smith, with a hatnote added linking to the other. -
M.Nelson (
talk)
01:25, 20 July 2010 (UTC)
I noticed that there has been some edit-warring over the use of "anti-gay remarks" and "remarks that were interpreted as anti-gay" with regards to a statement by Wildrose candidate Allen Hunsberger. As the editor who had penned both descriptions and self-reverted over the issue, I must say that upon revisiting it, it would seem that "interpreted as being anti-gay" is perhaps a bit more appropriate. The original incident was described as follows by the Edmonton Journal:
"on his blog in 2011. Hunsperger, a minister with The House church in Tofield, suggested if gays and lesbians continue to choose their sexual orientation they will suffer in the afterlife: “You will suffer the rest of eternity in the lake of fire, hell."
But the case is still debateable: one could argue that since he was only asking gays to 'change their ways or else...', it was not a comment condemning gays but really a call to action for gays to repent. Therefore Hunsberger may argue that contrary to being "anti-gay", he was in fact trying to "save gays". Without going into how ridiculous these views may be to you or I, I don't know if you can conclude that the original action was, in and of itself, anti-gay. Per our WP:NPOV policy, even if you and I are very convinced that such a statement is anti-gay, we cannot describe it as such in the article. Therefore "remarks that were interpreted as anti-gay" is probably best. Colipon+( Talk) 01:06, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
In my opinion, to attempt to 'save gays' by asking them to not be gay is anti-gay by definition, as the message is 'do not be gay' or negative towards one being homosexual, hence 'anti-gay'. I don't think Allen's comments can in any way be simply 'interpreted' as anti-gay, they ARE anti-gay. It is not a question of interpretation, but the fact that Allen asking people to NOT be gay is anti-gay --- hence the use of negative words prior to the word 'gay'. A clear comparison is to say ' We don't like women' - which would be anti-woman, not 'interpreted' as anti-women, as the negation ('don't like) of women is equivalent to 'anti'. --- Hope this makes sense, thanks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Lellogram ( talk • contribs) 05:11, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
On April 24, I added a "citation needed" tag on the following sentence for this article:
The Progressive Conservatives surpassed the Wildrose in support in early 2010; however the Wildrose Party was able to remain in second place for the next two years.
I noticed that on April 25, the tag was removed, along with a comment that the general list of references at another article ( 27th Alberta Legislative Assembly) support the claims made in this sentence.
I must disagree with this approach.
If the sentence is actually true (which I dispute), or at least what it claims can be supported by more than one Wikipedian's opinion, with non-original research, then a specific third party reference that supports the claim(s) made in the sentence should be provided, or the sentence should be removed or modified.
According to the article that 117Avenue referred to, the Alberta Liberals were in second place as the Official Opposition throughout that entire time period, as shown by the number of seats they held in the Legislative Assembly. If we are referring to polling data rather than seats in the Assembly, while it may be possible that certain specific polls done between 2010 and 2012 showed the Wildrose second in popular support behind the Progressive Conservatives, and others may have shown that the provincial PCs were leading in the polls early in 2010, one must keep in mind that polls are specific snapshots in time so the sentence should reflect the dynamic nature of how polling works by being more specific in its claims - I think it is misleading at best for this sentence to suggest that the Wildrose Party was in second place in popularity throughout the province for an entire two year period of time and no references are provided to support this broad and vague claim. In reality (or rather, I should say at this juncture, in my opinion until I can provide reliable third party references), widespread support for Wildrose was primarily regional in nature (southern Alberta), peaked in the two weeks just prior to the election (mostly based on biased news coverage depicting the election as a two-horse race), was exaggerated by the media based on a whole lot of wishful thinking (or fear-mongering) based on polls done with faulty methodology, and dropped off in the final days of the election campaign. The election results "prove" this, despite the overexaggerated and unsubstantiated claims of widespread "strategic voting" by voters who would otherwise have voted NDP, Liberal, or "other". Garth of the Forest ( talk) 17:27, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
Ms. Smith's full first name is Marlaina (as she herself says on Twitter, and as referred to by Elections Alberta). However, this article refers to her as M. Danielle Smith (as a result of the previous editor noting that she referred to herself as "Marlaina Danielle Smith," but not making out at least the spelling of "Marlaina"), which could possibly be read as a title rather than an initial, and is out of step with other people who use their middle names, such as James Gordon Brown or Willard Mitt Romney. As a result, I've edited the article to refer to Marlaina Danielle Smith. 80.193.191.80 ( talk) 12:13, 14 September 2012 (UTC)
Suggestions for discussion on a few matters of fairness and relevancy.
- In Background, the statement: "Other prominent conservatives who attended the university during the same period included journalist Ezra Levant and Member of Parliament Rob Anders" should be deleted. It has no relevancy. There is no mention of notable people other political leaders in Alberta attended university with, which makes this reference unnecessary. No relevancy.
- Name of first husband should be deleted. He is not a public figure and the mention is irrelevant.
- Photo: the photo of the election sign in Background is quite outdated and lacks relevancy.
- In 2012 election, the statement: "Others contend that they have been relegated to a southern Alberta social conservative rump, a protest party, and their longevity and potential historical impact – not unlike that of other southern Alberta conservative protest movements such as the Western Canada Concept Party, the old Wildrose Party, and the Alliance Party – remains yet to be proven" - should be deleted. This lacks any relevancy. Further, it can be successfully argued that Wildrose has far surpassed the accomplishments of any of these three parties by forming official opposition. The comparison is unjustified.
-The results in this section should be moved to the top of the section instead of buried at the bottom. Montueswed ( talk) 16:35, 1 August 2013 (UTC)
I know Smith directed CanPRRI (Canadian Property Rights Research Institute) prior to her 1998 stint on the school board (I met her as the director before that). I just lack a reliable source (or time to find one now). Could you help me? Thanks. >> M.P.Schneider,LC ( parlemus • feci) 22:34, 12 August 2013 (UTC)
Per WP:GOODBIAS, mention that she is anti-vaxx and conservative in the lede section. It will help make it more rightfully neutral to guide readers on a social cause. 176.112.147.64 ( talk) 17:44, 23 October 2022 (UTC)
Premiership of Danielle Smith I have created a new article which will be moved to "Premiership of Danielle Smith" when the automatic redirect from the Danielle Smith article has been removed. As of December 10, the new article is temporarily entitled "Danielle Smith's premiership". The {{ Help me}} request has been made there for assist in removing the redirect, then moving the article to "Premiership of Danielle Smith".
I am hoping for a robust talk page with the new article which will maintain neutrality, improve its quality, and eventually earn the article evaluation to a B grade assessment as in the Premiership of Jason Kenney article. Oceanflynn ( talk) 20:18, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
Doesn't seem like any other politician in the world gets that bad treatment 2001:56A:78B5:3000:96C3:E892:31A0:FA53 ( talk) 13:12, 5 April 2023 (UTC)
I've requested semi-protection at Wikipedia:Requests_for_page_protection#Danielle_Smith due to the IP vandalism on the page in the last bit. Paleking ( talk) 16:20, 17 December 2014 (UTC)
This is an archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the current talk page. |
Archive 1 |
I fail to see how selectively questioning a seemingly random piece of biographical ancestry information is acceptable. I don't care what idiotic policy pages you point me at, it's plain wrong. My edits were in good faith. What exactly is the suggested 'citation' for someone's ancestry?
I can't even begin to imagine the mental gymnastics involved in failing to see the problem with such an arbitrary and difficult to fulfill citation request.
Regardless, I guess you 'win' this edit war. I had no idea who Danielle Smith was before reading a news article a few weeks ago, and edited what I believed to be an excessive and irrational citation request upon finding her article. I should have better things to do with my life than argue over minutia. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Howel t ( talk • contribs) 00:16, 20 January 2010 (UTC)
The result of the move request was: DOne. Fences& Windows 01:05, 30 July 2010 (UTC)
Danielle Smith (politician) →
Danielle Smith — Per
WP:TWODABS, disambiguation pages for only two uses are unnecessary— it is much more effective to lead directly to the
primary topic and
hatnote to the secondary topic. Since the politician is more notable (and thus more of a primary topic) than
Danielle Smith (martial artist), this page should be moved to
Danielle Smith, with a hatnote added linking to the other. -
M.Nelson (
talk)
01:25, 20 July 2010 (UTC)
I noticed that there has been some edit-warring over the use of "anti-gay remarks" and "remarks that were interpreted as anti-gay" with regards to a statement by Wildrose candidate Allen Hunsberger. As the editor who had penned both descriptions and self-reverted over the issue, I must say that upon revisiting it, it would seem that "interpreted as being anti-gay" is perhaps a bit more appropriate. The original incident was described as follows by the Edmonton Journal:
"on his blog in 2011. Hunsperger, a minister with The House church in Tofield, suggested if gays and lesbians continue to choose their sexual orientation they will suffer in the afterlife: “You will suffer the rest of eternity in the lake of fire, hell."
But the case is still debateable: one could argue that since he was only asking gays to 'change their ways or else...', it was not a comment condemning gays but really a call to action for gays to repent. Therefore Hunsberger may argue that contrary to being "anti-gay", he was in fact trying to "save gays". Without going into how ridiculous these views may be to you or I, I don't know if you can conclude that the original action was, in and of itself, anti-gay. Per our WP:NPOV policy, even if you and I are very convinced that such a statement is anti-gay, we cannot describe it as such in the article. Therefore "remarks that were interpreted as anti-gay" is probably best. Colipon+( Talk) 01:06, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
In my opinion, to attempt to 'save gays' by asking them to not be gay is anti-gay by definition, as the message is 'do not be gay' or negative towards one being homosexual, hence 'anti-gay'. I don't think Allen's comments can in any way be simply 'interpreted' as anti-gay, they ARE anti-gay. It is not a question of interpretation, but the fact that Allen asking people to NOT be gay is anti-gay --- hence the use of negative words prior to the word 'gay'. A clear comparison is to say ' We don't like women' - which would be anti-woman, not 'interpreted' as anti-women, as the negation ('don't like) of women is equivalent to 'anti'. --- Hope this makes sense, thanks. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Lellogram ( talk • contribs) 05:11, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
On April 24, I added a "citation needed" tag on the following sentence for this article:
The Progressive Conservatives surpassed the Wildrose in support in early 2010; however the Wildrose Party was able to remain in second place for the next two years.
I noticed that on April 25, the tag was removed, along with a comment that the general list of references at another article ( 27th Alberta Legislative Assembly) support the claims made in this sentence.
I must disagree with this approach.
If the sentence is actually true (which I dispute), or at least what it claims can be supported by more than one Wikipedian's opinion, with non-original research, then a specific third party reference that supports the claim(s) made in the sentence should be provided, or the sentence should be removed or modified.
According to the article that 117Avenue referred to, the Alberta Liberals were in second place as the Official Opposition throughout that entire time period, as shown by the number of seats they held in the Legislative Assembly. If we are referring to polling data rather than seats in the Assembly, while it may be possible that certain specific polls done between 2010 and 2012 showed the Wildrose second in popular support behind the Progressive Conservatives, and others may have shown that the provincial PCs were leading in the polls early in 2010, one must keep in mind that polls are specific snapshots in time so the sentence should reflect the dynamic nature of how polling works by being more specific in its claims - I think it is misleading at best for this sentence to suggest that the Wildrose Party was in second place in popularity throughout the province for an entire two year period of time and no references are provided to support this broad and vague claim. In reality (or rather, I should say at this juncture, in my opinion until I can provide reliable third party references), widespread support for Wildrose was primarily regional in nature (southern Alberta), peaked in the two weeks just prior to the election (mostly based on biased news coverage depicting the election as a two-horse race), was exaggerated by the media based on a whole lot of wishful thinking (or fear-mongering) based on polls done with faulty methodology, and dropped off in the final days of the election campaign. The election results "prove" this, despite the overexaggerated and unsubstantiated claims of widespread "strategic voting" by voters who would otherwise have voted NDP, Liberal, or "other". Garth of the Forest ( talk) 17:27, 2 May 2012 (UTC)
Ms. Smith's full first name is Marlaina (as she herself says on Twitter, and as referred to by Elections Alberta). However, this article refers to her as M. Danielle Smith (as a result of the previous editor noting that she referred to herself as "Marlaina Danielle Smith," but not making out at least the spelling of "Marlaina"), which could possibly be read as a title rather than an initial, and is out of step with other people who use their middle names, such as James Gordon Brown or Willard Mitt Romney. As a result, I've edited the article to refer to Marlaina Danielle Smith. 80.193.191.80 ( talk) 12:13, 14 September 2012 (UTC)
Suggestions for discussion on a few matters of fairness and relevancy.
- In Background, the statement: "Other prominent conservatives who attended the university during the same period included journalist Ezra Levant and Member of Parliament Rob Anders" should be deleted. It has no relevancy. There is no mention of notable people other political leaders in Alberta attended university with, which makes this reference unnecessary. No relevancy.
- Name of first husband should be deleted. He is not a public figure and the mention is irrelevant.
- Photo: the photo of the election sign in Background is quite outdated and lacks relevancy.
- In 2012 election, the statement: "Others contend that they have been relegated to a southern Alberta social conservative rump, a protest party, and their longevity and potential historical impact – not unlike that of other southern Alberta conservative protest movements such as the Western Canada Concept Party, the old Wildrose Party, and the Alliance Party – remains yet to be proven" - should be deleted. This lacks any relevancy. Further, it can be successfully argued that Wildrose has far surpassed the accomplishments of any of these three parties by forming official opposition. The comparison is unjustified.
-The results in this section should be moved to the top of the section instead of buried at the bottom. Montueswed ( talk) 16:35, 1 August 2013 (UTC)
I know Smith directed CanPRRI (Canadian Property Rights Research Institute) prior to her 1998 stint on the school board (I met her as the director before that). I just lack a reliable source (or time to find one now). Could you help me? Thanks. >> M.P.Schneider,LC ( parlemus • feci) 22:34, 12 August 2013 (UTC)
Per WP:GOODBIAS, mention that she is anti-vaxx and conservative in the lede section. It will help make it more rightfully neutral to guide readers on a social cause. 176.112.147.64 ( talk) 17:44, 23 October 2022 (UTC)
Premiership of Danielle Smith I have created a new article which will be moved to "Premiership of Danielle Smith" when the automatic redirect from the Danielle Smith article has been removed. As of December 10, the new article is temporarily entitled "Danielle Smith's premiership". The {{ Help me}} request has been made there for assist in removing the redirect, then moving the article to "Premiership of Danielle Smith".
I am hoping for a robust talk page with the new article which will maintain neutrality, improve its quality, and eventually earn the article evaluation to a B grade assessment as in the Premiership of Jason Kenney article. Oceanflynn ( talk) 20:18, 10 December 2022 (UTC)
Doesn't seem like any other politician in the world gets that bad treatment 2001:56A:78B5:3000:96C3:E892:31A0:FA53 ( talk) 13:12, 5 April 2023 (UTC)
I've requested semi-protection at Wikipedia:Requests_for_page_protection#Danielle_Smith due to the IP vandalism on the page in the last bit. Paleking ( talk) 16:20, 17 December 2014 (UTC)