Just to address your assertion that "this article certifies that a New Cold War exists between Russia" and the United States, that's just absolutely erroneous. The article does nothing of the sort. The article states that "'New Cold War' is a term used to describe a perceived rekindling of conflict, tension, and competition between Russia and other Western Powers." If reliable, verifiable sources are defining this term as one to refer to relations between the United States and Russia, it's our job to address that, not to superimpose our viewpoint.
user:j (aka justen) 02:42, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Recognizing a current perception is not predicting the future, and the term has been in general use for nearly a decade as it relates to this topic, so I think repeating your "neologism" argument doesn't make it any more accurate.
user:j (aka justen) 03:22, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
This example shows the problems inherent in Google tests. Of the first ten articles, two are warnings not to provoke a new cold war, two are denials that any such thing exists, and the remaining six are highly duplicative. The next ten are mostly speculative articles about whether such a thing could come about. Skimming through the results convinces me that this is a term du jour at best. Google never was intended to serve this kind of purpose, and outside of identifying topics with almost no hits, it doesn't do it particularly well. As for "second dot-com bubble", I had never heard a non-joking non-hyperbolic reference to such a thing before I read your response above.
Robert A.West (
Talk)
02:47, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Which is why I don't like the test, either. The question shouldn't be the quantity of the sources once you get to a certain point, but the relevance and reliability. Which is why I hope you'll take a closer look at the sources cited in the article, and address those, which do define the term and address the topic. (As to Bubble 2.0, my reference to it is in jest. It appears to be a non-notable topic, which is why I think EconomistBR's bringing it up at this AfD shouldn't be used as any sort of a straw man with regard to the notability of
New Cold War.)
user:j (aka justen) 02:58, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete not notable neologism almost exclusively referenced from recent media sources. 04:20, 18 August 2008 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Annette46 (
talk •
contribs)
Since you asked, every time we get a face-off between the 2 superpowers the media trots out hackneyed neologisms like New Cold War. For me a neologism like
Transmogrifier is notable, because it is slowly but surely establishing its notability and does not depend upon its inherent "NEW"ness or fashion.
Annette46 (
talk)
04:55, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The
third link I offered up there is from 2004, talking about a New Cold War between Russia and the West, with "Georgia [as] the cockpit of a new cold war." Your
transmogrifier neologism began in 1987, but it has had only about sixty apparent mentions in the media since then. I could cite just as many, if not more, going back nearly a decade, that clearly define and outline the topic of this article. Do you believe that this topic, as it is defined in this article, is non-notable? I think there are an overwhelming number of verifiable and reliable sources that indicate that this topic is notable, with about a dozen currently cited in the article... If you're not seeing that, I'm just not sure what to say, except that your
transmogrifier might be interfering with the fact that this topic is notable... :)
user:j (aka justen) 06:04, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong Delete A google search for transmogrifier does not show ANY media hits for the first 50 results, google search would show that it is no longer a neologism but entering common speech as the best descriptive word for a particular concept. OTOH "New Cold War" means too many different things to different people. A strong notable contender for this article would be the book "New Cold War" publ 1970 auth "Edward Crankshaw" (many many google hits, its even on googlebooks) which speaks of a "new" cold war between Moscow and Pekin. I just altered my "vote" to Strong DeleteAnnette46 (
talk)
17:06, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong keep. It is clear that, despite a considerable cooling off in international politics over the course of the 90s, the trend has been reversed and a New Cold War is very much alive and well. While the article goes a bit far in suggesting the SCO and CSTO are the red to NATO's blue, there is notable coverage of the "New Cold War". Do a google search.
62.72.110.11 (
talk)
13:47, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Are you suggesting that this person's opinion is somehow irrelevant? Registration is not required to participate. Further, I don't see any actual references to Wikipedia policy in this IP's statement; it seems more like an appeal to common sense.
GlassCobra21:19, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete - You'd have to have had your head in a bucket not to notice the international tension in the past fortnight. But that's not the point. The point is whether there are sufficient reliable sources to suggest that the term 'New Cold War' is an accepted description of that situation. I don't think so, personally. Not that long ago, most usage of the term related to relations between China and various other nations. I'm just not sure that, as presented, the term is notable enough.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
14:31, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Does
this book from six months ago, or
this one from a year ago, both in reference to Russia, fall within your fortnight policy? The article has a dozen reliable, verifiable references for the term, as presented.
user:j (aka justen) 14:59, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete - such things as "cold war" are the terms used by historians to label roughly some time periods on the grounds of a consensus among the academicians, usually many years after the period has started. Mass-media labeling does not apply. --
CopperKettle (
talk)
15:02, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Let's compare:
Cold War - Soviet Union by force changes the regimes on the occupied territories to a communist ones. Now: Russia has market economy and Russian forces stationed in Georgia in the days of the Rose Revolution did nothing to prevent the power change.
Cold War - Soviet Block citizens are prohibited from leaving the Soviet sphere of influence. Now: Russia witnessed a huge surge in the international tourism of its citizens.
Cold War - wars-by-proxy in Korea and Vietnam, with each side trying to drastically change the economic and social ways of the country. Now: no radical changes, no ideological fight. --
CopperKettle (
talk)
15:22, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I wish I could substitute the wisdom of "historians" in place of the reality of "mass-media labeling," but I can't, and neither should you. When did AfD become "my opinion and my viewpoint matter more than policy"? Take care,
user:j (aka justen) 15:42, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong keep. Much well-sourced encyclopedic information here; plenty of sources to show that it's not "just" a neologism. Maybe would be better renamed or merged into a more comprehensive article at some point in the future, but deletion is way over the top.--
Kotniski (
talk)
17:39, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Plenty? What? I see two books by MacKinnon and Lucas, and a bunch of headline writers who have found "new Cold War", usually so capped, convenient. There isn't even evidence of common ideas here.
SeptentrionalisPMAnderson18:41, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Per
WP:NOTCRYSTAL and
Wikipedia:Avoid neologisms. This article is doing a disservice to the history of the 20th Century. Just because some TV pundits and journalists are trowing this expression around, this article is certifying that a New Cold War exists between Russia and USA. This term is being used because it is catchy but it is still a undefined and unrecognized neologism.
To call the US-Russia war of words over the South Ossetian conflict as a full blown Cold War is premature at best, Wikipedia is not a
WP:NOTCRYSTAL. This article suffers from the same problem as the
Second dot-com bubble.
Such a serious conflict should be unquestionable, an unanimity among historians and clearly defined.
⇨ EconomistBR ⇦Talk02:07, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Pathetic comment. You put in doubt my reputation just to prove your point, that's awful. Be a man at least now, and talk it out with me over there instead of smearing my reputation. ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦Talk02:43, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I'm only questioning your reliability because with your having attempted to deny war crimes -- or at least disparage them -- I no longer see any reason whatsoever to assume good faith. Russia is violating the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions and trying (unsuccessfully) to hide it, and you are providing them moral support. I want to make sure that administrators who are new to the conflict are aware of that.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
14:39, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Whatever man...you humiliated me by putting into question my reputation. I am not providing them with anything, I commented on the News article, which I still consider a op-ed.
Please be more careful in the future: arguing in favor of a position is providing it moral support, at least in my book, and I don't take kindly to violators of the Geneva Conventions -- although I directed at you too much of my anger at the Russians. Let me emphasize that I did not intend to humiliate you, and I sincerely hope that you'll forgive me for that.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
This debate is not about allegations of Russian war crimes in Georgia or elsewhere, though. It's about whether this specific application of this specific neologism is notable. There's plenty of coverage of the conflict in northern Georgia in other articles. I don't think President Medvedev cares very much about Wikipedia editors, tbh.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
14:41, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Both points are true. I get angry very easily about these issues... My revised opinion below stands: I think the article should be kept, and the discussion should be ended; but there should be discussion of the full range of meanings of "New Cold War."
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Comment: I would hope that we can discuss whether this meets Wikipedia standards without worrying about the politics of it one way or another. I am certainly not interested in "whitewashing" Russia (and I've never heard of the Ossetia war before reading your post), but in my research I've come across the phrase "new cold war" in multiple instances since the 1970s to describe all kinds of things, including the book I cited above. This example of its being used in the past couple weeks is interesting, but no more notable than its use in other contexts, and the sources cited are strung together as if they were coherent when they are in fact talking about different things (the very definition of a
WP:SYN violation). This is totally independent of anyone's feelings about Russia or Ossetia or anything else in terms of actual content.
csloat (
talk)
21:45, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Although I agree with you, you should probably be aware that showing ignorance of the war over South Ossetia diminishes rather than enhances your ability to speak with authority on this topic; it has unquestionably been the major relevant news story in the past fortnight, and arguably the single biggest international story of all in that period - it's been on the Wikipedia front page for a reasonable proportion of that time.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
21:52, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Sorry I should have clarified - here in the U.S. we've been informed about the crisis and military action but the papers mostly refer to Georgia and not Ossetia. So, yes, I have actually heard of it, but I haven't been paying attention and this is the first time I was aware of the name of Ossetia.
csloat (
talk)
03:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
On politics and whitewashing: I'm convinced by the various posts here that "New Cold War" is used of more than just the response to the 2008 war in Georgia; however, this makes it less suitable for deletion, rather than more. Let me change my vote to Withdraw AfD -- this is an article that should discuss more, not less.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
14:39, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Sorry about that -- I missed that statement above. Make that Strong Keep again, with discussion of the full range of meanings "New Cold War" has been given.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
We should be using reliable sources confirming that this new conflict exists in the first place. Right now we are officiallizing something that is not consensus among historians. An incredibly serious conflict based on News articles nothing more, that borders original research.
528,000 results on a Google search and two published books, ISBN-13s 978-0230606128 and 978-0786720835 (both of which predate the 2008 invasion of Georgia), are an interesting definition of "not notable," as Poeticbent points out.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
20:13, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Half a million results talking about half a million different things. We cannot have a wikipedia article about a neologism that is so ill defined that it can be used in so many different ways. Simply citing numbers of google hits does not help your point; in fact, it refutes it, as I have shown below.
csloat (
talk)
22:07, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete On above grounds. such a war does not exist, the map is made of Bs alliances with Nato being the only one that truely is realistic. When such a thing as a NCW start up, make the article, until then, its speculation and crystaling. --
Jakezing (
talk)
00:35, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The media and scholars have used the term in hundreds of different ways for about 4 decades. Concentrating on this one crystal ball example is a real problem in terms of WP:SYN and WP:UNDUE.
csloat (
talk)
04:07, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Revised nomination discussion
EconomistBR's attempt to revise the nom after much discussion had already taken place can be found
here. It's worth pointing out the key focus of the article is not solely the situation in South Ossetia, and many of the cited sources go back months or years before the military conflict, and address Poland, the Ukraine, etc.
user:j (aka justen) 17:04, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Are you crazy?? You crossed the line there.
I have the right to edit and delete what I write as many times as I want. That's none of your business. Don't do that again.
You have been flooding the discussion page, instead of being concise and letting others speak.
You have written 10 different comments on that page, you are attempting to keep that article through brute force. Am I complaining? NO, because you have the RIGHT to do so. So respect my rights.
You can write "ten different comments," or more, regardless of their relevancy, and place them anywhere in the AfD you want, but your revised commentary belongs in the discussion, not in the nom. However, you cannot significantly modify your nom midstream. It implies that others may have endorsed your revised rationale, which is not the case. Clearly identify your revision or I will do it for you.
user:j (aka justen) 18:48, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
It doesn't imply anything. Every single delete or keep vote is justified and explained by the editor himself, I am not being endorsed. They vote and then explain their vote, otherwise their vote is worthless, you know that.
Another thing, I much rather have 1 concise comment explaing my point than 10 different comments breaking up my point, flooding the discussion page and forcing editors to waste time reading all that in order to understand the situation.
We should search for the best argument and that requires constant improvement. We must be capable of expressing our opinion in shortest possible ammount of space in order to convince the Administrator judging that Afd.
Mind that the administrators read all comments and then make their rulling based on the quality of the arguments.
That said, I advise everybody to improve their respective arguments. If anybody desires to read our past arguments just check the History
Improving your communication of your opinion is encouraged. Significantly revising your opinion after others have responded to that opinion is not conducive to an open and honest discussion on Wikipedia.
user:j (aka justen) 03:52, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Why not? We are all free to edit our arguments in response to other people editing their arguments.
This way we save time from the administrators reading the Afd. It goes back to "reading 10 different comments instead of reading just 1 really good comment" is a waste of time.
We really need to be concise, administrators are tired of reading Afd arguments.
No, administrators will read however much is necessary; it's part of the job. Economist, your argument of "we are all free to edit our arguments in response to other people editing [theirs]" is incorrect, as you're the only one currently editing your comments. Please see the comment that I left on your talkpage, detailing why strikethrough is used, as well as its documentation in guidelines and etiquette lists:
guidelines for editing one's own comments,
WP:REFACTOR and
AfD Wikietiquette.
GlassCobra06:14, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Other uses of "new cold war"
Just looking at google books, I find the following titles:
The New Cold War: 1970 book referring to the Sino-Soviet conflict.
The New Cold War?: 1994 book describing the rise of religious fundamentalism and nationalism
Towards a New Cold War: 1982 book about U.S. military adventurism and support for dictators in the Middle East and East Timor
The New Cold War: 2007 book on the failure of democratization in Russia (this one seems the only book even tangentially related to the topic of the article as it is)
Those are just books with "New Cold War" in the title. There are hundreds of scholarly articles and books using this phrase going back to the 1970s, and startlingly few of them use the phrase the way it is used in this article. So those advocating "keep" must indicate if they are willing to support an article with radically different content (all the stuff about Georgia shortened to a single paragraph, and all these other uses highlighted as well), or whether they wish to merge whatever content is here into South Ossetian war.
csloat (
talk)
04:05, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
What an amazing research! The best argument I've read so far. Your research totally debunks User:J's main argument for keeping this article.
You really should add that to your main argument, the administrators have to read this.
I really think that User_j should remain dispassionate. I could also have made out the same list as Commodore Sloat but this debate is now too linked to Ossetia to make any sense.
Annette46 (
talk)
04:49, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
EconomistBR, I'm a little confused as to why you think the presentation of evidence that "New Cold War" as a term is in fact notable and widespread somehow debunks a keep argument. This means that the article should be expanded, not deleted. As per your acknowledgement of this renewed evidence, would you be willing to withdraw this AfD?
GlassCobra04:54, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The evidence is a strong argument for article deletion not expansion, and its amazing how the originators of this article are singing a different "expansion" tune when confronted with the evidence from as basic a source as google. With 40 years of use of the term "New" Cold War for so many different things unconnected with the article even while the "Old" Cold War was ongoing, this establishes that this current avatar is as non-notable and unencyclopedic as its predecessors. Lets delete this article first and if anyone is so passionate to keep it let them give us a
draft for this article on your User Page incorporating all the "evidence".
Annette46 (
talk)
05:12, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Pardon? You appear to be lumping me in with some arbitrary "originators" group when in fact I had no exposure to this article prior to this current AfD. It escapes me how exactly you can come to the conclusion that all the evidence you yourself presented that documents specifically how often and in how many different contexts this term has been used somehow means that this page should in fact be deleted. I repeat, if anything, the list of evidence presented by csloat proves to me that this term is quite notable, having been used for several different situations. This AfD should be withdrawn, and the page improved to include all the varying usages. Why must the page be deleted before it can be expanded?
GlassCobra06:06, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The fact that this term is so "weaselly" and non-specific should preclude its use in encyclopedia (even non-paper ones) for its self-evident LACK of notability and consistency. In the History of Wikipedia no one had though fit to start an article for the 50 other uses of the term; the article as it stands is such a non-notable neologism that a delete is the best way out to PREVENT this "modern" usage from SWAMPING out all the others. Its just one of those banal terms which hacks and scholars trot out when they have to meet a deadline.
Annette46 (
talk)
06:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Would "those banal terms" also include "Cold War", "World War", "Mutually Assured Destruction" and "New World Order" per chance? O_o; —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
62.72.110.11 (
talk)
08:34, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I’m hearing and seeing more and more of a current subject summarized by the phrase “new cold war”. This is an useful search term, and it should at least be a
dab page pointing to more specific (less ambiguous) subjects, as clearly exist as per above. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
08:32, 30 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Just to address your assertion that "this article certifies that a New Cold War exists between Russia" and the United States, that's just absolutely erroneous. The article does nothing of the sort. The article states that "'New Cold War' is a term used to describe a perceived rekindling of conflict, tension, and competition between Russia and other Western Powers." If reliable, verifiable sources are defining this term as one to refer to relations between the United States and Russia, it's our job to address that, not to superimpose our viewpoint.
user:j (aka justen) 02:42, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Recognizing a current perception is not predicting the future, and the term has been in general use for nearly a decade as it relates to this topic, so I think repeating your "neologism" argument doesn't make it any more accurate.
user:j (aka justen) 03:22, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
This example shows the problems inherent in Google tests. Of the first ten articles, two are warnings not to provoke a new cold war, two are denials that any such thing exists, and the remaining six are highly duplicative. The next ten are mostly speculative articles about whether such a thing could come about. Skimming through the results convinces me that this is a term du jour at best. Google never was intended to serve this kind of purpose, and outside of identifying topics with almost no hits, it doesn't do it particularly well. As for "second dot-com bubble", I had never heard a non-joking non-hyperbolic reference to such a thing before I read your response above.
Robert A.West (
Talk)
02:47, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Which is why I don't like the test, either. The question shouldn't be the quantity of the sources once you get to a certain point, but the relevance and reliability. Which is why I hope you'll take a closer look at the sources cited in the article, and address those, which do define the term and address the topic. (As to Bubble 2.0, my reference to it is in jest. It appears to be a non-notable topic, which is why I think EconomistBR's bringing it up at this AfD shouldn't be used as any sort of a straw man with regard to the notability of
New Cold War.)
user:j (aka justen) 02:58, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete not notable neologism almost exclusively referenced from recent media sources. 04:20, 18 August 2008 (UTC) —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Annette46 (
talk •
contribs)
Since you asked, every time we get a face-off between the 2 superpowers the media trots out hackneyed neologisms like New Cold War. For me a neologism like
Transmogrifier is notable, because it is slowly but surely establishing its notability and does not depend upon its inherent "NEW"ness or fashion.
Annette46 (
talk)
04:55, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The
third link I offered up there is from 2004, talking about a New Cold War between Russia and the West, with "Georgia [as] the cockpit of a new cold war." Your
transmogrifier neologism began in 1987, but it has had only about sixty apparent mentions in the media since then. I could cite just as many, if not more, going back nearly a decade, that clearly define and outline the topic of this article. Do you believe that this topic, as it is defined in this article, is non-notable? I think there are an overwhelming number of verifiable and reliable sources that indicate that this topic is notable, with about a dozen currently cited in the article... If you're not seeing that, I'm just not sure what to say, except that your
transmogrifier might be interfering with the fact that this topic is notable... :)
user:j (aka justen) 06:04, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong Delete A google search for transmogrifier does not show ANY media hits for the first 50 results, google search would show that it is no longer a neologism but entering common speech as the best descriptive word for a particular concept. OTOH "New Cold War" means too many different things to different people. A strong notable contender for this article would be the book "New Cold War" publ 1970 auth "Edward Crankshaw" (many many google hits, its even on googlebooks) which speaks of a "new" cold war between Moscow and Pekin. I just altered my "vote" to Strong DeleteAnnette46 (
talk)
17:06, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong keep. It is clear that, despite a considerable cooling off in international politics over the course of the 90s, the trend has been reversed and a New Cold War is very much alive and well. While the article goes a bit far in suggesting the SCO and CSTO are the red to NATO's blue, there is notable coverage of the "New Cold War". Do a google search.
62.72.110.11 (
talk)
13:47, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Are you suggesting that this person's opinion is somehow irrelevant? Registration is not required to participate. Further, I don't see any actual references to Wikipedia policy in this IP's statement; it seems more like an appeal to common sense.
GlassCobra21:19, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete - You'd have to have had your head in a bucket not to notice the international tension in the past fortnight. But that's not the point. The point is whether there are sufficient reliable sources to suggest that the term 'New Cold War' is an accepted description of that situation. I don't think so, personally. Not that long ago, most usage of the term related to relations between China and various other nations. I'm just not sure that, as presented, the term is notable enough.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
14:31, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Does
this book from six months ago, or
this one from a year ago, both in reference to Russia, fall within your fortnight policy? The article has a dozen reliable, verifiable references for the term, as presented.
user:j (aka justen) 14:59, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete - such things as "cold war" are the terms used by historians to label roughly some time periods on the grounds of a consensus among the academicians, usually many years after the period has started. Mass-media labeling does not apply. --
CopperKettle (
talk)
15:02, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Let's compare:
Cold War - Soviet Union by force changes the regimes on the occupied territories to a communist ones. Now: Russia has market economy and Russian forces stationed in Georgia in the days of the Rose Revolution did nothing to prevent the power change.
Cold War - Soviet Block citizens are prohibited from leaving the Soviet sphere of influence. Now: Russia witnessed a huge surge in the international tourism of its citizens.
Cold War - wars-by-proxy in Korea and Vietnam, with each side trying to drastically change the economic and social ways of the country. Now: no radical changes, no ideological fight. --
CopperKettle (
talk)
15:22, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I wish I could substitute the wisdom of "historians" in place of the reality of "mass-media labeling," but I can't, and neither should you. When did AfD become "my opinion and my viewpoint matter more than policy"? Take care,
user:j (aka justen) 15:42, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Strong keep. Much well-sourced encyclopedic information here; plenty of sources to show that it's not "just" a neologism. Maybe would be better renamed or merged into a more comprehensive article at some point in the future, but deletion is way over the top.--
Kotniski (
talk)
17:39, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Plenty? What? I see two books by MacKinnon and Lucas, and a bunch of headline writers who have found "new Cold War", usually so capped, convenient. There isn't even evidence of common ideas here.
SeptentrionalisPMAnderson18:41, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Per
WP:NOTCRYSTAL and
Wikipedia:Avoid neologisms. This article is doing a disservice to the history of the 20th Century. Just because some TV pundits and journalists are trowing this expression around, this article is certifying that a New Cold War exists between Russia and USA. This term is being used because it is catchy but it is still a undefined and unrecognized neologism.
To call the US-Russia war of words over the South Ossetian conflict as a full blown Cold War is premature at best, Wikipedia is not a
WP:NOTCRYSTAL. This article suffers from the same problem as the
Second dot-com bubble.
Such a serious conflict should be unquestionable, an unanimity among historians and clearly defined.
⇨ EconomistBR ⇦Talk02:07, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Pathetic comment. You put in doubt my reputation just to prove your point, that's awful. Be a man at least now, and talk it out with me over there instead of smearing my reputation. ⇨ EconomistBR ⇦Talk02:43, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I'm only questioning your reliability because with your having attempted to deny war crimes -- or at least disparage them -- I no longer see any reason whatsoever to assume good faith. Russia is violating the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions and trying (unsuccessfully) to hide it, and you are providing them moral support. I want to make sure that administrators who are new to the conflict are aware of that.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
14:39, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Whatever man...you humiliated me by putting into question my reputation. I am not providing them with anything, I commented on the News article, which I still consider a op-ed.
Please be more careful in the future: arguing in favor of a position is providing it moral support, at least in my book, and I don't take kindly to violators of the Geneva Conventions -- although I directed at you too much of my anger at the Russians. Let me emphasize that I did not intend to humiliate you, and I sincerely hope that you'll forgive me for that.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
This debate is not about allegations of Russian war crimes in Georgia or elsewhere, though. It's about whether this specific application of this specific neologism is notable. There's plenty of coverage of the conflict in northern Georgia in other articles. I don't think President Medvedev cares very much about Wikipedia editors, tbh.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
14:41, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Both points are true. I get angry very easily about these issues... My revised opinion below stands: I think the article should be kept, and the discussion should be ended; but there should be discussion of the full range of meanings of "New Cold War."
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Comment: I would hope that we can discuss whether this meets Wikipedia standards without worrying about the politics of it one way or another. I am certainly not interested in "whitewashing" Russia (and I've never heard of the Ossetia war before reading your post), but in my research I've come across the phrase "new cold war" in multiple instances since the 1970s to describe all kinds of things, including the book I cited above. This example of its being used in the past couple weeks is interesting, but no more notable than its use in other contexts, and the sources cited are strung together as if they were coherent when they are in fact talking about different things (the very definition of a
WP:SYN violation). This is totally independent of anyone's feelings about Russia or Ossetia or anything else in terms of actual content.
csloat (
talk)
21:45, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Although I agree with you, you should probably be aware that showing ignorance of the war over South Ossetia diminishes rather than enhances your ability to speak with authority on this topic; it has unquestionably been the major relevant news story in the past fortnight, and arguably the single biggest international story of all in that period - it's been on the Wikipedia front page for a reasonable proportion of that time.
AlexTiefling (
talk)
21:52, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Sorry I should have clarified - here in the U.S. we've been informed about the crisis and military action but the papers mostly refer to Georgia and not Ossetia. So, yes, I have actually heard of it, but I haven't been paying attention and this is the first time I was aware of the name of Ossetia.
csloat (
talk)
03:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
On politics and whitewashing: I'm convinced by the various posts here that "New Cold War" is used of more than just the response to the 2008 war in Georgia; however, this makes it less suitable for deletion, rather than more. Let me change my vote to Withdraw AfD -- this is an article that should discuss more, not less.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
14:39, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Sorry about that -- I missed that statement above. Make that Strong Keep again, with discussion of the full range of meanings "New Cold War" has been given.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
15:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
We should be using reliable sources confirming that this new conflict exists in the first place. Right now we are officiallizing something that is not consensus among historians. An incredibly serious conflict based on News articles nothing more, that borders original research.
528,000 results on a Google search and two published books, ISBN-13s 978-0230606128 and 978-0786720835 (both of which predate the 2008 invasion of Georgia), are an interesting definition of "not notable," as Poeticbent points out.
ExOttoyuhr (
talk)
20:13, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Half a million results talking about half a million different things. We cannot have a wikipedia article about a neologism that is so ill defined that it can be used in so many different ways. Simply citing numbers of google hits does not help your point; in fact, it refutes it, as I have shown below.
csloat (
talk)
22:07, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Delete On above grounds. such a war does not exist, the map is made of Bs alliances with Nato being the only one that truely is realistic. When such a thing as a NCW start up, make the article, until then, its speculation and crystaling. --
Jakezing (
talk)
00:35, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The media and scholars have used the term in hundreds of different ways for about 4 decades. Concentrating on this one crystal ball example is a real problem in terms of WP:SYN and WP:UNDUE.
csloat (
talk)
04:07, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Revised nomination discussion
EconomistBR's attempt to revise the nom after much discussion had already taken place can be found
here. It's worth pointing out the key focus of the article is not solely the situation in South Ossetia, and many of the cited sources go back months or years before the military conflict, and address Poland, the Ukraine, etc.
user:j (aka justen) 17:04, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Are you crazy?? You crossed the line there.
I have the right to edit and delete what I write as many times as I want. That's none of your business. Don't do that again.
You have been flooding the discussion page, instead of being concise and letting others speak.
You have written 10 different comments on that page, you are attempting to keep that article through brute force. Am I complaining? NO, because you have the RIGHT to do so. So respect my rights.
You can write "ten different comments," or more, regardless of their relevancy, and place them anywhere in the AfD you want, but your revised commentary belongs in the discussion, not in the nom. However, you cannot significantly modify your nom midstream. It implies that others may have endorsed your revised rationale, which is not the case. Clearly identify your revision or I will do it for you.
user:j (aka justen) 18:48, 18 August 2008 (UTC)reply
It doesn't imply anything. Every single delete or keep vote is justified and explained by the editor himself, I am not being endorsed. They vote and then explain their vote, otherwise their vote is worthless, you know that.
Another thing, I much rather have 1 concise comment explaing my point than 10 different comments breaking up my point, flooding the discussion page and forcing editors to waste time reading all that in order to understand the situation.
We should search for the best argument and that requires constant improvement. We must be capable of expressing our opinion in shortest possible ammount of space in order to convince the Administrator judging that Afd.
Mind that the administrators read all comments and then make their rulling based on the quality of the arguments.
That said, I advise everybody to improve their respective arguments. If anybody desires to read our past arguments just check the History
Improving your communication of your opinion is encouraged. Significantly revising your opinion after others have responded to that opinion is not conducive to an open and honest discussion on Wikipedia.
user:j (aka justen) 03:52, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Why not? We are all free to edit our arguments in response to other people editing their arguments.
This way we save time from the administrators reading the Afd. It goes back to "reading 10 different comments instead of reading just 1 really good comment" is a waste of time.
We really need to be concise, administrators are tired of reading Afd arguments.
No, administrators will read however much is necessary; it's part of the job. Economist, your argument of "we are all free to edit our arguments in response to other people editing [theirs]" is incorrect, as you're the only one currently editing your comments. Please see the comment that I left on your talkpage, detailing why strikethrough is used, as well as its documentation in guidelines and etiquette lists:
guidelines for editing one's own comments,
WP:REFACTOR and
AfD Wikietiquette.
GlassCobra06:14, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Other uses of "new cold war"
Just looking at google books, I find the following titles:
The New Cold War: 1970 book referring to the Sino-Soviet conflict.
The New Cold War?: 1994 book describing the rise of religious fundamentalism and nationalism
Towards a New Cold War: 1982 book about U.S. military adventurism and support for dictators in the Middle East and East Timor
The New Cold War: 2007 book on the failure of democratization in Russia (this one seems the only book even tangentially related to the topic of the article as it is)
Those are just books with "New Cold War" in the title. There are hundreds of scholarly articles and books using this phrase going back to the 1970s, and startlingly few of them use the phrase the way it is used in this article. So those advocating "keep" must indicate if they are willing to support an article with radically different content (all the stuff about Georgia shortened to a single paragraph, and all these other uses highlighted as well), or whether they wish to merge whatever content is here into South Ossetian war.
csloat (
talk)
04:05, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
What an amazing research! The best argument I've read so far. Your research totally debunks User:J's main argument for keeping this article.
You really should add that to your main argument, the administrators have to read this.
I really think that User_j should remain dispassionate. I could also have made out the same list as Commodore Sloat but this debate is now too linked to Ossetia to make any sense.
Annette46 (
talk)
04:49, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
EconomistBR, I'm a little confused as to why you think the presentation of evidence that "New Cold War" as a term is in fact notable and widespread somehow debunks a keep argument. This means that the article should be expanded, not deleted. As per your acknowledgement of this renewed evidence, would you be willing to withdraw this AfD?
GlassCobra04:54, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The evidence is a strong argument for article deletion not expansion, and its amazing how the originators of this article are singing a different "expansion" tune when confronted with the evidence from as basic a source as google. With 40 years of use of the term "New" Cold War for so many different things unconnected with the article even while the "Old" Cold War was ongoing, this establishes that this current avatar is as non-notable and unencyclopedic as its predecessors. Lets delete this article first and if anyone is so passionate to keep it let them give us a
draft for this article on your User Page incorporating all the "evidence".
Annette46 (
talk)
05:12, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Pardon? You appear to be lumping me in with some arbitrary "originators" group when in fact I had no exposure to this article prior to this current AfD. It escapes me how exactly you can come to the conclusion that all the evidence you yourself presented that documents specifically how often and in how many different contexts this term has been used somehow means that this page should in fact be deleted. I repeat, if anything, the list of evidence presented by csloat proves to me that this term is quite notable, having been used for several different situations. This AfD should be withdrawn, and the page improved to include all the varying usages. Why must the page be deleted before it can be expanded?
GlassCobra06:06, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
The fact that this term is so "weaselly" and non-specific should preclude its use in encyclopedia (even non-paper ones) for its self-evident LACK of notability and consistency. In the History of Wikipedia no one had though fit to start an article for the 50 other uses of the term; the article as it stands is such a non-notable neologism that a delete is the best way out to PREVENT this "modern" usage from SWAMPING out all the others. Its just one of those banal terms which hacks and scholars trot out when they have to meet a deadline.
Annette46 (
talk)
06:48, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
Would "those banal terms" also include "Cold War", "World War", "Mutually Assured Destruction" and "New World Order" per chance? O_o; —Preceding
unsigned comment added by
62.72.110.11 (
talk)
08:34, 19 August 2008 (UTC)reply
I’m hearing and seeing more and more of a current subject summarized by the phrase “new cold war”. This is an useful search term, and it should at least be a
dab page pointing to more specific (less ambiguous) subjects, as clearly exist as per above. --
SmokeyJoe (
talk)
08:32, 30 August 2008 (UTC)reply