...and now I've read it. Hardly a resounding consensus, hardly recent, hardly convincing. You could try RFC if you wish to persist.—
S MarshallT/
C17:06, 13 March 2020 (UTC)reply
No. The Manual of Style's broad-brush, one-size-fits-all rules are very unhelpful and have historically been disregarded in law case-list templates. I certainly do not think it is appropriate to remove the external links. I have restored the stable version. WilliamJE, you and I don't communicate effectively with each other and I do not expect to be able reach consensus with you. Go to RFC if you wish to persist.—
S MarshallT/
C16:03, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
You were told
[1] at ANI 4 years ago, 'We do have a Manual of Style for a reason, and while exceptions can and should be made, there should be a reason for those exceptions'. MOS applies.
...William, is the complaint department really on
the roof?16:36, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
You remember this matter so well that you can drag up individual diffs from four years ago. Therefore I'm not going to explain the reasons for the exception to you again. This is also the last time that I will ask you to stop reverting.—
S MarshallT/
C17:43, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
How you, WilliamJE, can resolve this
In your capacity as the expert on our manual of style, you can bring this cycle to a permanent end by taking the following steps:
But I haven't read the manual of style, and I won't. You're the one who cares about it, not me. I'm content for you to move those external links to whatever place you think is appropriate provided the reader can find them. But that's not your behaviour. For the past several years your behaviour has been to remove the external links. Then I put them somewhere else and you remove them again.
I find it incredibly frustrating that you don't understand how disruptive this is.
If they're in the wrong place, you may move them, or (much preferably) you can just bugger off and do something else, but you absolutely may not remove them and leave the article less informative. Capsice?—
S MarshallT/
C21:44, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
Following NAV isn't disruptive. You're being rude and violating CIVIL by telling me to bugger off. I didn't hear it isn't an excuse for what you're doing. It's been quoted, been pointed to multiple times. You couldn't even take this discussion to somewhere where someone else would chime in. Nobody comes to template talk pages. Go to NAV's talk page but you're afraid of being rejected like you have in the past, @
ScrapIronIV: and keep using language like asshattery, ridiculous, pathetic, fuckint timesink, and so on.
...William, is the complaint department really on
the roof?00:57, 23 March 2020 (UTC)reply
Yes, on this occasion I've allowed my extreme anger at your behaviour to spill over into incivility. I should not have done that, and I will try to be less frank in future. You may follow NAV by moving the external links to the correct place. Do not remove them and leave it up to me to clean up your mess.—
S MarshallT/
C01:14, 23 March 2020 (UTC)reply
...and now I've read it. Hardly a resounding consensus, hardly recent, hardly convincing. You could try RFC if you wish to persist.—
S MarshallT/
C17:06, 13 March 2020 (UTC)reply
No. The Manual of Style's broad-brush, one-size-fits-all rules are very unhelpful and have historically been disregarded in law case-list templates. I certainly do not think it is appropriate to remove the external links. I have restored the stable version. WilliamJE, you and I don't communicate effectively with each other and I do not expect to be able reach consensus with you. Go to RFC if you wish to persist.—
S MarshallT/
C16:03, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
You were told
[1] at ANI 4 years ago, 'We do have a Manual of Style for a reason, and while exceptions can and should be made, there should be a reason for those exceptions'. MOS applies.
...William, is the complaint department really on
the roof?16:36, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
You remember this matter so well that you can drag up individual diffs from four years ago. Therefore I'm not going to explain the reasons for the exception to you again. This is also the last time that I will ask you to stop reverting.—
S MarshallT/
C17:43, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
How you, WilliamJE, can resolve this
In your capacity as the expert on our manual of style, you can bring this cycle to a permanent end by taking the following steps:
But I haven't read the manual of style, and I won't. You're the one who cares about it, not me. I'm content for you to move those external links to whatever place you think is appropriate provided the reader can find them. But that's not your behaviour. For the past several years your behaviour has been to remove the external links. Then I put them somewhere else and you remove them again.
I find it incredibly frustrating that you don't understand how disruptive this is.
If they're in the wrong place, you may move them, or (much preferably) you can just bugger off and do something else, but you absolutely may not remove them and leave the article less informative. Capsice?—
S MarshallT/
C21:44, 22 March 2020 (UTC)reply
Following NAV isn't disruptive. You're being rude and violating CIVIL by telling me to bugger off. I didn't hear it isn't an excuse for what you're doing. It's been quoted, been pointed to multiple times. You couldn't even take this discussion to somewhere where someone else would chime in. Nobody comes to template talk pages. Go to NAV's talk page but you're afraid of being rejected like you have in the past, @
ScrapIronIV: and keep using language like asshattery, ridiculous, pathetic, fuckint timesink, and so on.
...William, is the complaint department really on
the roof?00:57, 23 March 2020 (UTC)reply
Yes, on this occasion I've allowed my extreme anger at your behaviour to spill over into incivility. I should not have done that, and I will try to be less frank in future. You may follow NAV by moving the external links to the correct place. Do not remove them and leave it up to me to clean up your mess.—
S MarshallT/
C01:14, 23 March 2020 (UTC)reply