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It seems unlikely that most East Jerusalem Arab residents "refuse" to become citizens. There is no source for this claim. Each person's choice, or lack thereof, is dependent on their situation and it is not up to Wikipedia to paint them in such a broad brush. I will reword the sentence within the next couple of days if nobody objects.
GHcool (
talk)
19:07, 12 July 2022 (UTC)reply
If they aren't citizens, isn't it because they refuse to become one, since they are eligible to do so? Regardless of why they do so, they still refuse to do so.
[1],
[2],
[3] etc.
Sir Joseph(talk)20:16, 12 July 2022 (UTC)reply
revocation of residency is not the same thing as citizenship stuff. Right now we're discussing citizenship and your source even says only 5 percent has citizenship.
Sir Joseph(talk)13:50, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Residency and citizenship are discussed in the article but as it happens we are in agreement for once, these figures stand in rather stark contrast to the supposed desire of East Jerusalem PcoI for Israeli citizenship according to a poll which only two years ago said it was 15% but now says it is 48%. If this desire exists, why are they not applying? Can't find the forms?
Selfstudier (
talk)
13:58, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The figures for applications and refusals are right there in the source I provided "Over the past 20 years, only 38 percent of the 16,573 applications have been approved." This is a very small amount in relation to a pop of nearly 400K.
Selfstudier (
talk)
21:41, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
and perhaps others see applying as futile, given rejection rates. The point is, we are not here to second guess opinion polls reported by mainstream media.
Izzy Borden (
talk)
21:56, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I am pointing up a relevant source and I will be including material from it (and other relevant material) in the article in due course and will leave it to readers to decide what to make of it. Also, fyi, Fikra Forum is not mainstream media, it's a blog, that's why it is attributed to the individual (who I will protem accept as an expert per
WP:SPS) that "supervised" the poll (of 300 people with 6% margin of error).
Selfstudier (
talk)
22:08, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The better source tags were not added to Haaretz, tags apply to the source they follow. On top of which the poor sources that were actually tagged have been left in (IH and JISS, both relatively poor sources) Care to put them back? Or remove the poor ones if you want to just rely on Haaretz.
Selfstudier (
talk)
22:22, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
There's no need to place that tag when there are other reliable sources given for the sentence in question, just remove the unreliable sources. I have no idea about JISS, but Israel Hayom is a mainstream newspaper, and not problematic.
Izzy Borden (
talk)
22:57, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I don't think
Israel Hayom is reliable at all for Palestinian opinion. The story claims to be reporting a poll published by the Palestine News Network, but
where is it? Lots of polls are on the PNN site but I don't find this one, nor should we trust Israel Hayom's account of it.
Zerotalk00:12, 15 July 2022 (UTC)reply
It's not PNN, it's Shfa PNN which
is banned by the PA. If you google the idiotic headline "93% of east Jerusalem Arabs prefer Israeli rule, poll shows" you will find it repeated by the usual suspects. It is directly contradicted by the following sentence in the article so I am going to take this out shortly if no one objects.
Selfstudier (
talk)
15:33, 21 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Probably need to deal with that one a bit differently, FIKRA is a blog but Pollock has been doing these polls since 2010, the point is that they are all over the shop, 2010 (35%), 2011 (42%), early 2015 (52%), late 2015 (15%) ! and stays at 15% until 2020 and now suddenly back to 48% so that needs to be brought out somehow. And as I said before it doesn't jive with the Harretz stats on applications for citizenship. Working on it.
Selfstudier (
talk)
16:03, 21 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Comment: There is some really odd false equivalence at work here, largely born out of the poor design of the surveys around which these types of stories are based. East Jerusalem Palestinians don't have options. Of the hypothetical options presented in some of these surveys, such as Israeli citizenship, Palestinian citizenship, or in some cases, the third option of Jordanian citizenship, only one even has an actual theoretical pathway within the context of continuing to live in East Jerusalem: Israeli citizenship. East Jerusalem Palestinians are otherwise bound to a perpetual Kafkaesque state of legal limbo. Certain questions are actually several, such as: would you like to live in Jerusalem under Israeli rule or have East Jerusalem handed over to the PA. This is portrayed as a referendum on Israeli vs Palestinian rule, but that isn't really the case, is it? Because Palestinian rule isn't actually self-rule, and living under the PA still involves living under Israeli rule as well, so it's just the option between one or two layers of Kafkaesque bureaucracy. And secondly, the question also entails the question of whether they want their city split. Most Jerusalemites, understandably, probably don't want their city split. Unless we appreciate that the very nature of these surveys is hopelessly POV at the very outset due to the exceptionally conflated nature of their framing and leading questions, everyone is going to continue to talk at cross purposes.
Iskandar323 (
talk)
17:35, 15 July 2022 (UTC)3, 15 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 31 October 2022
This
edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 25 August 2023
Please change ′In 2022, East Jerusalem had a population of 595,000 inhabitants′ to ′In 2020, East Jerusalem had a population of 595,000 inhabitants′. Although the source document is published in 2022, the data are for 2020. --
Smaug the Golden (
talk -
contributions -
logs)
17:15, 25 August 2023 (UTC)reply
The
contentious topics procedure applies to this article. This article is related to the
Arab–Israeli conflict, which is a contentious topic. Furthermore, the following rules apply when editing this article:
You must be logged-in and
extended-confirmed to edit or discuss this topic on any page (except for
making edit requests, provided they are not disruptive)
You may not make more than 1 revert within 24 hours on any edits related to this topic
The exceptions to the extended confirmed restriction are:
Non-extended-confirmed editors may use the "Talk:" namespace only to
make edit requests related to articles within the topic area, provided they are not disruptive.
Non-extended-confirmed editors may not create new articles, but administrators may exercise discretion when deciding how to enforce this remedy on article creations. Deletion of new articles created by non-extended-confirmed editors is permitted but not required.
With respect to the WP:1RR restriction:
Clear vandalism of whatever origin may be reverted without restriction. Also, reverts made solely to enforce the extended confirmed restriction are not considered edit warring.
Editors who violate this restriction may be blocked by any uninvolved administrator, even on a first offence.
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Palestinian people and the
State of Palestine on Wikipedia. Join us by visiting
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It seems unlikely that most East Jerusalem Arab residents "refuse" to become citizens. There is no source for this claim. Each person's choice, or lack thereof, is dependent on their situation and it is not up to Wikipedia to paint them in such a broad brush. I will reword the sentence within the next couple of days if nobody objects.
GHcool (
talk)
19:07, 12 July 2022 (UTC)reply
If they aren't citizens, isn't it because they refuse to become one, since they are eligible to do so? Regardless of why they do so, they still refuse to do so.
[1],
[2],
[3] etc.
Sir Joseph(talk)20:16, 12 July 2022 (UTC)reply
revocation of residency is not the same thing as citizenship stuff. Right now we're discussing citizenship and your source even says only 5 percent has citizenship.
Sir Joseph(talk)13:50, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Residency and citizenship are discussed in the article but as it happens we are in agreement for once, these figures stand in rather stark contrast to the supposed desire of East Jerusalem PcoI for Israeli citizenship according to a poll which only two years ago said it was 15% but now says it is 48%. If this desire exists, why are they not applying? Can't find the forms?
Selfstudier (
talk)
13:58, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The figures for applications and refusals are right there in the source I provided "Over the past 20 years, only 38 percent of the 16,573 applications have been approved." This is a very small amount in relation to a pop of nearly 400K.
Selfstudier (
talk)
21:41, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
and perhaps others see applying as futile, given rejection rates. The point is, we are not here to second guess opinion polls reported by mainstream media.
Izzy Borden (
talk)
21:56, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I am pointing up a relevant source and I will be including material from it (and other relevant material) in the article in due course and will leave it to readers to decide what to make of it. Also, fyi, Fikra Forum is not mainstream media, it's a blog, that's why it is attributed to the individual (who I will protem accept as an expert per
WP:SPS) that "supervised" the poll (of 300 people with 6% margin of error).
Selfstudier (
talk)
22:08, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
The better source tags were not added to Haaretz, tags apply to the source they follow. On top of which the poor sources that were actually tagged have been left in (IH and JISS, both relatively poor sources) Care to put them back? Or remove the poor ones if you want to just rely on Haaretz.
Selfstudier (
talk)
22:22, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
There's no need to place that tag when there are other reliable sources given for the sentence in question, just remove the unreliable sources. I have no idea about JISS, but Israel Hayom is a mainstream newspaper, and not problematic.
Izzy Borden (
talk)
22:57, 13 July 2022 (UTC)reply
I don't think
Israel Hayom is reliable at all for Palestinian opinion. The story claims to be reporting a poll published by the Palestine News Network, but
where is it? Lots of polls are on the PNN site but I don't find this one, nor should we trust Israel Hayom's account of it.
Zerotalk00:12, 15 July 2022 (UTC)reply
It's not PNN, it's Shfa PNN which
is banned by the PA. If you google the idiotic headline "93% of east Jerusalem Arabs prefer Israeli rule, poll shows" you will find it repeated by the usual suspects. It is directly contradicted by the following sentence in the article so I am going to take this out shortly if no one objects.
Selfstudier (
talk)
15:33, 21 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Probably need to deal with that one a bit differently, FIKRA is a blog but Pollock has been doing these polls since 2010, the point is that they are all over the shop, 2010 (35%), 2011 (42%), early 2015 (52%), late 2015 (15%) ! and stays at 15% until 2020 and now suddenly back to 48% so that needs to be brought out somehow. And as I said before it doesn't jive with the Harretz stats on applications for citizenship. Working on it.
Selfstudier (
talk)
16:03, 21 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Comment: There is some really odd false equivalence at work here, largely born out of the poor design of the surveys around which these types of stories are based. East Jerusalem Palestinians don't have options. Of the hypothetical options presented in some of these surveys, such as Israeli citizenship, Palestinian citizenship, or in some cases, the third option of Jordanian citizenship, only one even has an actual theoretical pathway within the context of continuing to live in East Jerusalem: Israeli citizenship. East Jerusalem Palestinians are otherwise bound to a perpetual Kafkaesque state of legal limbo. Certain questions are actually several, such as: would you like to live in Jerusalem under Israeli rule or have East Jerusalem handed over to the PA. This is portrayed as a referendum on Israeli vs Palestinian rule, but that isn't really the case, is it? Because Palestinian rule isn't actually self-rule, and living under the PA still involves living under Israeli rule as well, so it's just the option between one or two layers of Kafkaesque bureaucracy. And secondly, the question also entails the question of whether they want their city split. Most Jerusalemites, understandably, probably don't want their city split. Unless we appreciate that the very nature of these surveys is hopelessly POV at the very outset due to the exceptionally conflated nature of their framing and leading questions, everyone is going to continue to talk at cross purposes.
Iskandar323 (
talk)
17:35, 15 July 2022 (UTC)3, 15 July 2022 (UTC)reply
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 31 October 2022
This
edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.
Extended-confirmed-protected edit request on 25 August 2023
Please change ′In 2022, East Jerusalem had a population of 595,000 inhabitants′ to ′In 2020, East Jerusalem had a population of 595,000 inhabitants′. Although the source document is published in 2022, the data are for 2020. --
Smaug the Golden (
talk -
contributions -
logs)
17:15, 25 August 2023 (UTC)reply