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<!--FAtop--><div class="boilerplate metadata afd vfd xfd-closed" style="background-color: #E6F2FF; margin: 2em 0 0 0; padding: 0 10px 0 10px; border: 1px solid #AAAAAA;">
:''The following is an archived discussion of a [[Wikipedia:featured article candidates|featured article nomination]]. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the article's talk page or in [[Wikipedia talk:Featured article candidates]]. No further edits should be made to this page.''

The article was '''not promoted''' by [[User:Karanacs|Karanacs]] 00:58, 14 April 2010 [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?&diff=next&oldid=355669148].
----

===[[Aafia Siddiqui]]===
===[[Aafia Siddiqui]]===
<noinclude>{{la|Aafia Siddiqui}}</noinclude>
<noinclude>{{la|Aafia Siddiqui}}</noinclude>
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:::Good. Another one: http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/sns-ap-us-al-qaida-suspect-shooting,0,3232452.story appears to link to a page of search results, not the news story. [[User talk:Ucucha|Ucucha]] 23:14, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
:::Good. Another one: http://www.chicagotribune.com/topic/sns-ap-us-al-qaida-suspect-shooting,0,3232452.story appears to link to a page of search results, not the news story. [[User talk:Ucucha|Ucucha]] 23:14, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
:::*Good catch. Replaced.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:07, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::*Good catch. Replaced.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:07, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' External link source under "Disappearance and FBI warning" needs made as a citation. '''[[User:Grsz11|<font color="black">Grsz</font>]]<sup>[[User talk:Grsz11|<b><font color="red">11</font></b>]]</sup>''' 17:53, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
*'''Comment''' External link source under "Disappearance and FBI warning" needs made as a citation. '''[[User:Grsz11|<span style="color:black;">Grsz</span>]]<sup>[[User talk:Grsz11|<b><span style="color:red;">11</span></b>]]</sup>''' 17:53, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
:*Hi -- before I address, just want to make certain I understand. Are you suggesting that the inline of "wanted for questioning" be changed into a ref? Happy to do it, but just want to make sure I understand the comment.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 22:05, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
:*Hi -- before I address, just want to make certain I understand. Are you suggesting that the inline of "wanted for questioning" be changed into a ref? Happy to do it, but just want to make sure I understand the comment.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 22:05, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
'''Oppose''' because this [[WP:BLP|BLP]] article contravenes policy in several ways. In particular, [[WP:PSTS|primary sources]] (court records, indictments, psychiatric/psychology/forensic evaluations, affidavits) are liberally used, often without secondary sources to support them, in direct contravention of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:BLP#Misuse_of_primary_sources BLP's Misuse of Primary Sources section]. Also very worryingly, allegations sourced from legal documents of accusation are inappropriately presented as facts rather than attributed: the first 5 sentences of the third paragraph of the Lead are a particularly obvious example of this, but there are multiple other instances. I pointed these major problems out at length on the talkpage several weeks ago,[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Aafia_Siddiqui#Legal_documents_at_NEFA_foundation] and others have given similar advice at [[WP:RSN]] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_59#Legal_Indictments_etc]. No changes have been made, and unfortunately I haven't yet had the time to fix the problems myself.
'''Oppose''' because this [[WP:BLP|BLP]] article contravenes policy in several ways. In particular, [[WP:PSTS|primary sources]] (court records, indictments, psychiatric/psychology/forensic evaluations, affidavits) are liberally used, often without secondary sources to support them, in direct contravention of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:BLP#Misuse_of_primary_sources BLP's Misuse of Primary Sources section]. Also very worryingly, allegations sourced from legal documents of accusation are inappropriately presented as facts rather than attributed: the first 5 sentences of the third paragraph of the Lead are a particularly obvious example of this, but there are multiple other instances. I pointed these major problems out at length on the talkpage several weeks ago,[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Aafia_Siddiqui#Legal_documents_at_NEFA_foundation] and others have given similar advice at [[WP:RSN]] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reliable_sources/Noticeboard/Archive_59#Legal_Indictments_etc]. No changes have been made, and unfortunately I haven't yet had the time to fix the problems myself.
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*Eppefleche asked me to comment on the sourcing. The article seems to depend upon good secondary newspaper sources. That the primary sources are given also is a plus, not a minus. I'm just commenting on this, not the article in general. '''[[User:DGG| DGG]]''' ([[User talk:DGG| talk ]]) 23:11, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
*Eppefleche asked me to comment on the sourcing. The article seems to depend upon good secondary newspaper sources. That the primary sources are given also is a plus, not a minus. I'm just commenting on this, not the article in general. '''[[User:DGG| DGG]]''' ([[User talk:DGG| talk ]]) 23:11, 9 April 2010 (UTC)

*Slp is misreading the guidance. Of course, it would be nonsensical if the rule were "You can't use the indictment as a reference to reflect ''what'' the indictment says -- instead you have to rely on what ''Al Jazeerah'' (for example) said the indictment says". Or: "You can't use a ''NY Times'' editorial (the primary source) as a ref to reflect ''what'' the ''NY Times'' editorial says -- you need an ''Electronic Intifida'' article (for example; the secondary source) summarizing the ''NY Times'' editorial as your reference". That's because the guidance doesn't say that. The guideline in question, though no doubt it could have been drafted more carefully, is clearly aimed at: "''personal details''—such as date of birth, home value, traffic citations, vehicle registrations, and home or business addresses". We don't have any of those concerns here.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:07, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::But they aren't given as a plus. As you say and as I have made clear on the talkpage of the article, if they supported secondary sources there would be no problem. But on no less than 28 occasions primary sources (court documents) are used as the ''only'' citations for information on a BLP. Check the occasions where references (currently) numbered 4, 6, 10, 11, 28, 72, 76 are the only source(s) used either alone or in combination. Likely the primary sources could be replaced or supported by secondary sources for some/most of the information. But this needs to happen for this to be a FA, or frankly BLP compliant. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 23:42, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
::But they aren't given as a plus. As you say and as I have made clear on the talkpage of the article, if they supported secondary sources there would be no problem. But on no less than 28 occasions primary sources (court documents) are used as the ''only'' citations for information on a BLP. Check the occasions where references (currently) numbered 4, 6, 10, 11, 28, 72, 76 are the only source(s) used either alone or in combination. Likely the primary sources could be replaced or supported by secondary sources for some/most of the information. But this needs to happen for this to be a FA, or frankly BLP compliant. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 23:42, 9 April 2010 (UTC)


*Slp is misreading the guidance. Of course, it would be nonsensical if the rule were "You can't use the indictment as a reference to reflect ''what'' the indictment says -- instead you have to rely on what ''Al Jazeerah'' (for example) said the indictment says". Or: "You can't use a ''NY Times'' editorial (the primary source) as a ref to reflect ''what'' the ''NY Times'' editorial says -- you need an ''Electronic Intifida'' article (for example; the secondary source) summarizing the ''NY Times'' editorial as your reference". That's because the guidance doesn't say that. The guideline in question, though no doubt it could have been drafted more carefully, is clearly aimed at: "''personal details''—such as date of birth, home value, traffic citations, vehicle registrations, and home or business addresses". We don't have any of those concerns here.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:07, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::*'''Comment''' Fine, you don’t find the article to be FA quality, Slp1. I have zero problem with that. It ''would'' however, be exceedingly nice if you properly understood what [[WP:PSTS|primary sources]] (PSTS) is about so you aren’t misconstruing things and potentially confusing others.<p>PSTS is part of [[Wikipedia:No original research]] (WP:OR). In this context—and, as spelled out right in the PSTS, {{xt|'''Primary sources''' are very close to an event, often accounts written by people who are directly involved, offering an insider's view of an event}}. In many cases it clearly preferable that we not rely upon a primary source; for instance, some guy in Chevy Chase, Maryland, who purportedly received and read the contents of a letter written by [http://popomaticjeff.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/elvis-presley-2008-weekly-world-news-president.jpg Elvis] in 2006. In this context, ''secondary'' sources are preferred, such as a ''Newsweek'' article that endorses the witness’ first-hand account as being credible and doesn’t mention that the witness is currently being treated by a mental health expert.<p>Clearly, one would rightly call “court records, federal indictments,” etc. to be a “primary source” and that has you all sideways on the logic. Why? Because just as clearly, they <u>are</u> [[Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources|WP:Reliable sources]] and are <u>not</u>—by ''any'' stretch of the imagination—what is considered to be “original research.” In fact, court records will often take ''precedence'' over secondary sources. For instance, if ''Newsweek'' reported that a federal prosecutor had indicted a terrorist for possessing hollow-point bullets when in fact, the federal indictment papers themselves state right there in black & white that the bullets were armor-piercing, then one goes with what the indictment papers say. That doesn’t mean that the terrorist ''was guilty'' of possessing armor-piercing bullets or ''even possessed'' them; only that the ''federal indictment'' was for possessing armor-piercing bullets.<p>Seeking the most authoritative sources is what I typically do; I often contact the Ph.D. authors of scientific papers and have them send me PDFs of the actual paper so I can quote straight out of the papers. Besides, corresponding with the Ph.D. saves me money because I don’t have to subscribe to the journals. Exchanging dozens of e-mails with the author of the scientific paper in question until I thoroughly understand the issue sure beats simply ralphing out some gibberish gleaned from ''Popular Mechanics.''<p>I suggest you get over the primary/secondary-source issue since it seems to have gotten you all confused and just focus on the objective: cite reliable sources, which courts and federal prosecutors are considered to be. And such sources aren’t considered to be “original research”. This all falls under the heading of [[Wikipedia:Common_sense#Use_common_sense|WP:Common sense]], or, in the rest of the world is known as a [http://wallpapers-free.co.uk/backgrounds/cartoon/garfield/well-duh.jpg Well, ''DUH]'' thing.<p>It is obvious that if the article in question possesses, as you say, “liberal” citations referencing the actual court records and indictment papers, then this is a strength of the article and reflects well upon the editor, who obviously devoted great effort to cite accurate and unassailable facts. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 23:54, 9 April 2010 (UTC)
:How unusual is Slp's reading in its application here? The article has the sentence "In April 2009, Manhattan federal judge Richard Berman held that she was competent to stand trial." The ref? The actual Court Order. Of course that should be sufficient to support that statement; any other result is non-sensical.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 03:45, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::Please carefully reread what I wrote at the talkpage. There is a big difference between saying "X shot Y" and "According to the indictment, X shot Y". I have ''never'' suggested that "According to Al Jazeerah, the indictment said that X shot Y" was necessary.[http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk:Aafia_Siddiqui&diff=prev&oldid=349807115][http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk:Aafia_Siddiqui&diff=prev&oldid=349711643][http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Talk:Aafia_Siddiqui&diff=prev&oldid=350048764]. Just that any allegation be attributed to who made it.--[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 00:54, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::*As I've said before, as a general matter I've no problem with attribution. Attribute away. And as I've also said before, one must consider the difference between: a) an accusation/indictment, and b) a conviction upon the charges in the indictment. Feel free to attribute away where appropriate; that's not a reason for this not to be an FA, or to delete the ref and accompanying text, for all the reasons stated here and in the pages linked to above.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 01:07, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::Great. That's positive. But if you want this article to be promoted then you may actually have to do the leg work yourself to make sure it meets FA and BLP criteria, compliance and expectations You cannot just devolve responsibility to others. It needs to be compliant ''when'' it is promoted.--[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 02:10, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

::*'''Comment''' Fine, you don’t find the article to be FA quality, Slp1. I have zero problem with that. It ''would'' however, be exceedingly nice if you properly understood what [[WP:PSTS|primary sources]] (PSTS) is about so you aren’t misconstruing things and potentially confusing others.<p>PSTS is part of [[Wikipedia:No original research]] (WP:OR). In this context—and, as spelled out right in the PSTS, {{xt|'''Primary sources''' are very close to an event, often accounts written by people who are directly involved, offering an insider's view of an event}}. In many cases it clearly preferable that we not rely upon a primary source; for instance, some guy in Chevy Chase, Maryland, who purportedly received and read the contents of a letter written by [http://popomaticjeff.files.wordpress.com/2009/01/elvis-presley-2008-weekly-world-news-president.jpg Elvis] in 2006. In this context, ''secondary'' sources are preferred, such as a ''Newsweek'' article that endorses the witness’ first-hand account as being credible and doesn’t mention that the witness is currently being treated by a mental health expert.</p><p>Clearly, one would rightly call “court records, federal indictments,” etc. to be a “primary source” and that has you all sideways on the logic. Why? Because just as clearly, they <u>are</u> [[Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources|WP:Reliable sources]] and are <u>not</u>—by ''any'' stretch of the imagination—what is considered to be “original research.” In fact, court records will often take ''precedence'' over secondary sources. For instance, if ''Newsweek'' reported that a federal prosecutor had indicted a terrorist for possessing hollow-point bullets when in fact, the federal indictment papers themselves state right there in black & white that the bullets were armor-piercing, then one goes with what the indictment papers say. That doesn’t mean that the terrorist ''was guilty'' of possessing armor-piercing bullets or ''even possessed'' them; only that the ''federal indictment'' was for possessing armor-piercing bullets.</p><p>Seeking the most authoritative sources is what I typically do; I often contact the Ph.D. authors of scientific papers and have them send me PDFs of the actual paper so I can quote straight out of the papers. Besides, corresponding with the Ph.D. saves me money because I don’t have to subscribe to the journals. Exchanging dozens of e-mails with the author of the scientific paper in question until I thoroughly understand the issue sure beats simply ralphing out some gibberish gleaned from ''Popular Mechanics.''</p><p>I suggest you get over the primary/secondary-source issue since it seems to have gotten you all confused and just focus on the objective: cite reliable sources, which courts and federal prosecutors are considered to be. And such sources aren’t considered to be “original research”. This all falls under the heading of [[Wikipedia:Common_sense#Use_common_sense|WP:Common sense]], or, in the rest of the world is known as a [http://wallpapers-free.co.uk/backgrounds/cartoon/garfield/well-duh.jpg Well, ''DUH''] thing.</p><p>It is obvious that if the article in question possesses, as you say, “liberal” citations referencing the actual court records and indictment papers, then this is a strength of the article and reflects well upon the editor, who obviously devoted great effort to cite accurate and unassailable facts. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 23:54, 9 April 2010 (UTC)</p>


'''P.S.''' I fully endorse what DGG wrote, which summarizes what I was trying to say, only with far fewer words. Good job, DGG, next time I might run my posts by you for some copy editing. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 00:03, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
'''P.S.''' I fully endorse what DGG wrote, which summarizes what I was trying to say, only with far fewer words. Good job, DGG, next time I might run my posts by you for some copy editing. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 00:03, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
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:::Actually I don't think I am confused. I think if you look at WP's policies you'll find that per policy secondary sources are preferred over primary sources all the time. You'll also note that I never said that they were original research, just not appropriate sources per BLP, especially as they have not been correctly attributed as allegations not facts. You'll also note, looking at BLP policy that for BLPs, that we "Do not use .... court records or public documents" as sole sources.
:::Actually I don't think I am confused. I think if you look at WP's policies you'll find that per policy secondary sources are preferred over primary sources all the time. You'll also note that I never said that they were original research, just not appropriate sources per BLP, especially as they have not been correctly attributed as allegations not facts. You'll also note, looking at BLP policy that for BLPs, that we "Do not use .... court records or public documents" as sole sources.
:::Your foresight and energy in obtaining published scientific papers as sources is fantastic and a completely different matter. These are published ''secondary sources''... the fact that you have got them from the authors' themselves does not diminish that at all. And if you get better understanding of the topic from correspondence with the authors, so much the better. But I am confused about one thing. DGG mentions being asked to comment, but no on-wiki sign of this. Since you have been agreement with Epeefleche on other matters, I am now curious to know whether there is some off-wiki email canvassing going on? --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 00:28, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::Your foresight and energy in obtaining published scientific papers as sources is fantastic and a completely different matter. These are published ''secondary sources''... the fact that you have got them from the authors' themselves does not diminish that at all. And if you get better understanding of the topic from correspondence with the authors, so much the better. But I am confused about one thing. DGG mentions being asked to comment, but no on-wiki sign of this. Since you have been agreement with Epeefleche on other matters, I am now curious to know whether there is some off-wiki email canvassing going on? --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 00:28, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::*Clarification -- I never asked DGG to comment here.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:35, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::*Clarification -- I never asked DGG to comment here. Nor did he say that. I asked him his opinion, entre nous. He chose to leave a comment here, without any encouragement to do so (and without me knowing what his view would be).--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 00:35, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::::Thank you. I really and truly appreciate your clarification and honesty. But it would be useful to know if you contacted anybody else "entre vous" about this nomination and my objection to FA status. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 01:05, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

:::* Quoting you, Slp1: {{xt|You'll also note, looking at BLP policy that for BLPs, that we "Do not use .... court records or public documents" as sole sources.}} Gee, I see only one instance of “court records or public documents” in [[Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons|WP:BLP]]. And it says, [[Wikipedia:BLP#Misuse_of_primary_sources|right here]], as follows:

::{{Quotation|Exercise caution in using primary sources. Do ''not'' use public records that include personal details—such as date of birth, home value, traffic citations, vehicle registrations, and home or business addresses—or trial transcripts and other court records or public documents, unless a reliable secondary source has published the material. Where primary-source material was first published by a reliable secondary source, it may be acceptable to turn to open records to augment the secondary source, subject to the [[WP:NOR|no original research]] policy.}}


:::: I also see that your insertion of the … ellipsis in {{xt|"Do not use .... court records or public documents"}} and your cute {{xt|as sole sources}} appended outside the quotes '''''profoundly''''' changed the meaning of the above-quoted text. Though the paragraph is mangled, it is clear the concern is over revealing {{xt|date of birth, home value, traffic citations, vehicle registrations, and home or business addresses}}. I see this is hopeless and I don’t appreciate the techniques you’ve chosen to employ here. You have managed to take a strength (citing highly reliable sources), and make fallacious arguments and misquote guidelines to serve your own ends. Goodbye to you, sir, and happy editing. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 01:09, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

:::::I'm a Mme, for what it is worth. I am not making any kind of fallacious argument. Secondary sources are preferred, and BLP policy (deleting any material between dashes) states that we must ''not use public records that include personal details... or trial transcripts and other court records or public documents, unless a reliable secondary source has published the material.'' As I have said several times, I suspect much of this material could probably be sourced to secondary sources. But this needs to be done as a start towards better article sourcing, before any FA status is given. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 01:53, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::::::The material you deleted in your quote is the most important material, and informs us what the concern of the guideline is. That's not a concern in this article.--[[User:Epeefleche|Epeefleche]] ([[User talk:Epeefleche|talk]]) 01:59, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::::* Oh, no you don’t, Slp1. I’m not going to let you off the hook so easily. The guidelines are perfectly clear to everyone else. Your misquoting might strike a reasonable person as having been intentional because of the extreme care required to surgically excise the words in your 00:28, 10 April *quote* to masquerade its true meaning. I note a curious absence in your posts of providing full, quoted wording of what guidelines and policies '''''really''''' say, which can be fully well explained by the fact that they ''don’t'' say what you would like us to ''think'' they say. That’s why I can do as I did above: post “the guideline, the whole guideline, and nothing but the guideline” without resorting to the misdirection and hocus-pocus. The wording there isn’t hard for the rest of us to understand. The guideline [[Wikipedia:BLP#Misuse_of_primary_sources|right here on BLP]] is saying, in effect ''be careful when citing public records. You wouldn’t want to use them if they contain personal information like home phone numbers or someone’s business addresses unless that information has already been released into the public domain by newspapers and magazines.'' You keep on repeating the same, tired old mantra of how super-reliable and authoritative primary sources like court records and indictment papers are to be eschewed in favor of secondary sources like ''[http://www.clown-ministry.com/images/bozo-the-clown-adult-costume.jpg Parade]'' magazine (which is inane and defies logic). And, conveniently, you somehow never seem to be able to produce any evidence to buttress your allegations without mauling it beyond all comprehension to say something that is entirely different from what it really says. If you want to fire back with a “Well… I am just ''soooo'' right,” it would be exceedingly nice if you can (really really) point us to something that backs up your wild notions. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 03:24, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
::::::::More strawman arguments. Sigh. Take a look at how [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dash#Em_dash| dashes used at the sentence level - ie parenthetically -], and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Biographies_of_living_persons/Noticeboard/Archive74#Lester_Coleman this BLPN discussion - by others -] on this section of policy. That's it for me. --[[User:Slp1|Slp1]] ([[User talk:Slp1|talk]]) 12:08, 10 April 2010 (UTC)
:::::::::'''Wow!''' Instead of providing a link to a guideline or policy that supports your allegations, you provide a link to a discussion thread where others misdirected the galactically clueless (although some of them, like [[User:NeilN|'''<span style="color:#003F87;">Neil<span style="color:#CD0000;">N</span></span>''']] had it figured out). Because right there was ''yet another'' editor quoting guideline fragments out of context as a fine display of one’s inability to comprehend simple, 12th-grade English (or to purposely misdirect other wikipedians). This phenomenon seems to be pandemic on Wikipedia; apparently because so many wikipedians are too lazy to actually go and—you know—''read'' our guidelines. Why?<p>Because, User:Collect employed the ol’ [http://www.entertonement.com/clips/ckpsqgxgxq--Excuse-me-sir-Seeing-as-how-the-VP-is-such-a-VIP-shouldn't-we-keep-the-PC-on-the-QT-because-if-it-leaks-to-the-VC-you-could-end-up-an-MIA-and-then-we'd-all-be-put-on-KPRobin-Williams-Good-Morning-Vietnam-A1C-Adrian-Cronauer- shotgun-of-alphabet-soup] trick ([[Wikipedia:Biographies_of_living_persons/Noticeboard/Archive74#1999_arrest_on_charges_of_fraud|here]], 23:31, 15 November 2009) where he/she wrote …{{xt|contrary to WP:OR and WP:SYN as well as WP:V, WP:RS and lovely WP:BLP}}… ''without providing links or quoting the governing text.'' Apparently, everyone is supposed to think “Gee, he quoted so many acronyms and '''that looks like a lot to read''' and I don’t even know where to go find them because they are unlinked. He must be smart and is one of those types that makes Wikipedia go.”</p><p>And when User:Collect ''finally does'' quote text ([http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3ABiographies_of_living_persons%2FNoticeboard&action=historysubmit&diff=326075020&oldid=326074719 ∆ here)], he/she did one of those Professor Marvel-style “[http://verdoux.files.wordpress.com/2008/05/pay-no-attention-to-the-man-behind-the-curtain.jpg Pay no attention to that guideline behind the curtain!”] stunts and quoted only a fragment 180° out of context: {{xt|To make it quite clear -- [[WP:BLP]] says ''not'' to use "trial transcripts and other court records or public documents, unless a reliable secondary source has already cited them."}}</p><p>For yucks & giggles to anyone new to this thread, compare the meaning of that last, green-colored quote to the ''entire'' guideline in the above quote box in my 01:09, 10 April 2010 post. Then ponder over how sad the state of things are here when some editors perceive they can get away with these stunts. ''(*sigh*)''</p><p>Could it be that we are beating around the bush here because editors are coming to these terrorist-related articles with an agenda? I don’t have a jones one way or another about terrorist articles; my contributions tend to be stuff like fixing that [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=Anwar_al-Awlaki&oldid=354996277 profoundly lousy looking photograph] in [[Anwar al-Awlaki]] that no one seemed to give a dump about as editors battle away. It seems there is one camp there trying to introduce unflattering but well-cited facts that make the dude (who has presidential and National Security Council approval to bomb him clean out of his sandals) come across as a thoroughly mean & nasty person who kicks puppies. The other camp cleverly manages to delete such information and *balance* the article with stuff like how he [http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_DCBQ3nptxo0/SG1TrDhTvYI/AAAAAAAAApY/OnJKoVktT9s/s400/unicorn.jpg volunteers and swings a hammer] for [[Habitat for Humanity]] on weekends.</p><p>Similarly over here, both camps, rather than having the '''backbone''' to speak up and admit to what they are really trying to do, just busy themselves with slapping up a facade of smokescreens, such as citing imaginary “guidelines” like how <code><nowiki><Cognitive dissonance></nowiki></code><u>you can’t quote a [https://www.cia.gov/news-information/press-releases-statements/press-release-archive-2007/transcript-of-general-haydens-interview-with-wtop.html CIA transcript]&nbsp;because quoting ''[http://bridgecarolinas.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/playingbgidge2.jpg Readers Digest]'' is preferred!</u><code><nowiki></Cognitive dissonance></nowiki></code> Caught in the middle is a whole bunch of regular editors really don’t give a darn, simply want germane, topical, authoritatively cited, encyclopedic facts, and long for a way to simply vote editors with agendas off this island.</p><p>''(Oops, I did it again: using plain-speak, which was going out of fashion on Wikipedia there for a while, to talk about the 800-pound gorilla in the bedroom.)'' [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 16:48, 10 April 2010 (UTC)</p>
'''Support''' - Obviously a well-done article. [[User:Greg L|Greg L]] ([[User talk:Greg L|talk]]) 01:12, 10 April 2010 (UTC)

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