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Discussion of Proposal B: - very dubious assertions
 
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{{ambox | text = '''For discussion on this page from the first phase of the discussion, see [[/Archive 1]]}}
{{ambox | text = '''Rules regarding discussion'''<p> Please see [[Wikipedia_talk:Centralized_discussion/Macedonia#Some_rules_regarding_the_presentation_and_discussion_of_proposals|here]] for a list of guidelines relating to the discussion and presentation of these proposals. [[User:Fritzpoll|Fritzpoll]] ([[User talk:Fritzpoll|talk]]) 16:05, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
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==Discussion of Proposal A.1 ==

Shadowmorph, can you please clarify if you mean to propose that additional note in ''all'' Greece-related articles, or only in the main [[Greece]] article? Either way it is unacceptable, but in the first case more so than in the second. In contexts where simple geographical facts are being described, the political issues of the naming recognition are plainly irrelevant, and enforcing artificial notes in those places has no other function than to symbolically bow down before the Greek POV sensitivities. The naming issue is as irrelevant for the lead of [[Greece]] as the non-recognition of [[Israel]] is in the lead of [[Lebanon]] (where the neighbouring country is mentioned in the same way, simply in a description of what borders on what.) Same comparison for mentioning the Republic of Macedonia in [[Florina prefecture]], and mentioning Israel in [[Bint Jbeil]].

You might also want to remove some beating-dead-horses material from the rationale. The fact that the "f.Y." position in the naming poll was overwhelmingly represented by Greek editors and that the results were polarised along Greeks-versus-Non-Greeks lines was noted as a fact even by Arbcom, and the need to overcome such polarisation is a central and compulsory part of our task here. Also, [[WP:AGF]] has nothing whatsoever to do with the issue – saying that the proponents were Greek editors in no way implies they were acting in bad faith. [[User:Future Perfect at Sunrise|Fut.Perf.]] [[User talk:Future Perfect at Sunrise|☼]] 13:19, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

:I mean only the [[Greece]] article.[[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 18:02, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

:Ok ''maybe'' some official Greece and Greek administrative regions too but not in anything in Wikipedia that is Greek-related.[[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 18:57, 13 June 2009 (UTC)
::This clarification in a hatnote or footnote or whatever is totally unnecessary. If a reader is looking for information about a country, they do not care that some other countries or organizations don't recognize said country under the name that the page title or link uses. [[User:J.delanoy|<font color="green">J'''.'''delanoy</font>]][[User Talk:J.delanoy|<sup><font color="red">gabs</font></sup>]][[Special:Contributions/J.delanoy|<font color="blue"><sub>adds</sub></font>]] 02:32, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
:::It is certainly true that the naming dispute will need to be discussed in the article, but I can't see any reason it belongs in the lead. It's not anything that sums up the article as a whole, as a lead section is suppose to do. [[User:Heimstern|Heimstern Läufer]] [[User talk:Heimstern|(talk)]] 06:05, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
::::As the article about Greece is about ''Greece'', and not about Macedonia or its name, then anything that detailed about Greece's neighbor in the lead is silly and POV pushing. The lead should summarize Greece. As Heimstern says, the naming dispute is only a matter of Greece's foreign policy. It should have a mention there, but nowhere else. ([[User:Taivo|Taivo]] ([[User talk:Taivo|talk]]) 06:18, 16 June 2009 (UTC))

To support this, and just as a background reminder of what the status quo in the [[Greece]] article actually is. There are currently three references to Macedonia in that page:
# In the intro: enumeration of neighbouring countries as part of the standard geographical overview. Uses "Republic of Macedonia", currently with a footnote "see naming dispute" (which I'd suggest we should remove)
# In the "foreign relations" section: mentions "the naming dispute with the former Yugoslav [[Republic of Macedonia]] ('FYROM')". (which uses "former Yugoslav" not as part of the name but as a useful bit of relevant historical background information)
# In a map in the "geography" section: uses abbreviated "Rep. Maced." (for space reasons)
[[User:Future Perfect at Sunrise|Fut.Perf.]] [[User talk:Future Perfect at Sunrise|☼]] 06:28, 16 June 2009 (UTC)

== Discussion of Proposal B ==

It is not Wikipedia's policy to use alternative names according to topic area, with one exception: when our reliable sources do the same. If you can show that either "Macedonia (Skopje)" or "Macedonia (FYROM)" are used by a clear majority of independent English-language sources dealing with Greece, we might begin to talk about this. Domain-specific alternate names, where they are used in Wikipedia, are ''never'' used with the purpose of making things more palatable to the POV sensitivities of some political group associated with the topic area. If at all, they are ''only ever'' used with the purpose of making facts more easily recognisable to the outside English-speaking reader. This is not the case here. [[User:Future Perfect at Sunrise|Fut.Perf.]] [[User talk:Future Perfect at Sunrise|☼]] 13:27, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

:Macedonia (FYROM) would additionally be deprecated as it would introduce an unexplained (and frankly redundant) term into the article. There's already a general agreement that the term FYROM should not be used. -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 15:01, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

::I didn't say to use [[Macedonia (Skopje)]] as the name. I said to use "Macedonia" or "Republic of Macedonia" as the name and (Skopje) or (FYROM) as a reference to the name that is used in Greece. The f.Y.... spelled out is used in many Greek related English texts (including some maps). [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 18:08, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

:::Why is "the name used in Greece" relevant for a general, English-speaking audience? -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 18:43, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

::::For one thing it will be included in almost all of the English texts that are written by an ethnic Greek. That includes Americans and Australians of Greek descent. Also international geologists, biologists... you get the point. Anything that a Greek wrote in English would use probably use one of those terms.
::::For another thing the reader might have encountered it just prior to searching for something Greek related in wikipedia. For instance he might have been reading about seismology in Greece in an English article (most of those are written by Greek seismologists) [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 19:03, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

:::::Can you provide any examples? This seems very hypothetical to me. -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 19:19, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

None of these forms is the most common English term and none of them are even in the running for "common" English term. That should be enough to disqualify this option. ([[User:Taivo|Taivo]] ([[User talk:Taivo|talk]]) 02:09, 15 June 2009 (UTC))
:They are not supposed to be. Think of it this way: it's like Macedonia (''ΠΓΔΜ'') or Macedonia (''Σκόπια'').[[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 09:52, 15 June 2009 (UTC)



Just to be up front here. In my view, ideally, we should never refer to the same entity by different names. In reality this is not possible, thus we use different terms where there is a reasonable possibility of confusion about what a word is referring to. (For example, the word "Macedonia" alone may not be enough to differentiate between the Greek province and the sovereign nation in an article which refers to Greece.)


== Rephrasing needed: Rationale of proposal A ==
When referring to a single entity, we should use no more than the absolute minimum number of terms necessary to provide sufficient differentiation between possible meanings of a word. In my opinion, "Republic of Macedonia" is sufficient to differentiate the modern country, as there has never been any other republic named Macedonia. I see using any term other than "Republic of Macedonia" or possibly simply "Macedonia" to refer to the modern country, on any article on this project, as redundant, inconsistent, and unnecessary. "Any article" includes articles about or relating to [[Greece]]. (I will add my thoughts things such as the UN, the EU, and so forth on [[Wikipedia:Centralized discussion/Macedonia/other page titles|/other page titles]] later.)


I find the phrasing in "Rationale 2": "''POV of that national group''" most problematic and would like someone to strike out the "national". What group is being talked about is already clear from the first part of the sentence. Right now, the rationale phrasing might be mistaken in a way that the POV of a fairly large, but distinct group of Greeks is considered to be the POV of all Greeks.
I am willing to be persuaded otherwise, but before this discussion goes any further, I want to make it clear that I am inclined to follow my above reasoning on this matter. I believe that it represents a very good implementation of Wikipedia's policies and guidelines relating to disambiguation and general consistency across the project. Unless I see a good reason to make Greece-related articles a special case, I will '''not''' support any proposal that suggests doing this. Note that I consider
*''Greece does not recognize the [[Republic of Macedonia|modern country]] under this name''
*''[[Republic of Macedonia|The country]] is recognized by the [[UN]], the [[EU]], [[NATO]], and the [[Gondor|Kingdom of Gondor]] as "the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia"''
to be insufficient reason to justify making Greece-related articles a special case. If you are trying to change my mind, show me, from Wikipedia's policies and guidelines, why there should be a third term to refer to the [[Republic of Macedonia|modern republic]]. [[User:J.delanoy|<font color="green">J'''.'''delanoy</font>]][[User Talk:J.delanoy|<sup><font color="red">gabs</font></sup>]][[Special:Contributions/J.delanoy|<font color="blue"><sub>adds</sub></font>]] 02:28, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
:Agreed, the remit laid down in the Arbcom decision was to consider this in conjunction with our existing policies and guidelines. I will stem off any suggestion of pre-judgement on our part here, but those who support this proposal should heed this advice if they want to make their case [[User:Fritzpoll|Fritzpoll]] ([[User talk:Fritzpoll|talk]]) 09:13, 16 June 2009 (UTC)
::For the record that proposal is not my first choice and I am not so concerned about the Greece-related part of this discussion.[[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 10:46, 16 June 2009 (UTC)


Similar problems occur in the phrasing of "Rationale 1": "''consensus of the large majority of Wikipedia editors except for Greek editors''". The opposing editors are not defined by their POV, but by their nationality, and since the nationality is used as the only qualification, that might be mistaken again as a generalization (all Greeks have that POV). I propose changing that to "''except for a large group of Greek editors''", if the opponents are indeed exclusively self-identifying Greeks. Alternatively, or if the opponents are not exclusively Greek, strike out the "''except for Greek editors''" - "''consensus of a large majority''" already implies that there has been some opposition.
(out) Using the Greece used term in parenthesis will allow us to use the simple name Republic of Macedonia or even the short Macedonia while ''stemming off ambiguity'' with the Macedonia in Greece. "Republic of" might not be a substantial disambiguator for Greece related texts. Since Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, considering the lay reader (the uninformed one), ''clear'' distinction should be made that [[Republic of Macedonia]] is unrelated to the region of [[Macedonia (Greece)|Macedonia]] in the context of Greece. For instance By using "Macedonia (FYROM)" we achieve three things mentioned in policy
#Simple common name used. This proposal actually is the only one that allows for "Macedonia" to be used as the name of the country in texts where Macedonia (Greece) is referred to as "Macedonia" too in the same text (or even paragraph).
#Simplest name that is ''not ambiguous'' is used in the text. In Greece-related text "Republic of Macedonia" alone, might be confusing to the reader. If the reader does not go ahead to read [[Macedonia (terminology)]] article, then the relation of the two "Macedonias" is left open in that sense.
#Added info in parenthesis (unlinked, so it is not a qualifier of the name), NPOV is met by mentioning the alternate name that Greece uses in its part. By being parenthesized and not linked, NPOV is not violated by means of not using "Wikipedia's editorial voice" because it is not part of the name. In that concern the parenthesized part is just a supplement. Significant confusion is in all the parts of Greece-related text. Since we have navigation boxes in WP, the first occurrence of Republic of Macedonia might be missed (unless it is in the lead) and "Macedonia" referring to the country might be falsely associated with the region in Greece. [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 05:29, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
::I am not certain how "Republic of Macedonia" alone could be confusing. Has there ever been another entity which called itself the "Republic of Macedonia"? [[User:J.delanoy|<font color="green">J'''.'''delanoy</font>]][[User Talk:J.delanoy|<sup><font color="red">gabs</font></sup>]][[Special:Contributions/J.delanoy|<font color="blue"><sub>adds</sub></font>]] 05:33, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
:::A lay reader does not have to know any of that (and what entities existed or not). Furthermore while Republic of Macedonia is part of the name, the connection between Macedonia and Republic of Macedonia is not apparent (obviously) while some room for fatal misconceptions exists. E.g. When one hears the name "Republic of Kosovo" what does he think is the connection with the [[Kosovo]] region of Serbia? The connection of Republic of [[Nagorno-Karabakh]] with the region of Azerbaijan? What comes into mind to the lay reader? Only in this case Republic of Macedonia has a gravely different connection to the region and no connection to the region in Greece. [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 05:58, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
::::Luxembourg and Azerbaijan. And what's more, they are fully recognised independent countries, just like Macedonia. Unlike Kosovo and Nagorno-Karabakh, which have a completely different status. '''[[User:BalkanFever|<font color="black">Balkan</font>]][[User talk:BalkanFever|<font color="#008">Fever</font>]]''' 06:13, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
:::::Well, considering that you did not mention any, I am going to assume that there has never been an entity (other than the modern country) that referred to itself as the Republic of Macedonia. But you did bring up the Greek region called Macedonia, so I will ask you about that as well.
:::::How could someone possibly confuse "Republic of Macedonia" with the region in Greece named Macedonia? Does the Greek region have any special autonomy that could make someone confuse it for a sovereign country (which the delimiter "Republic of" explicitly infers)? Surely it is ludicrous to suppose that Greek Macedonia is a separate Republic, and not part of the Hellenic Republic. When replying, please give me a ''direct'' answer. I do not care about any implications that they may possibly be related in time/space/history/culture/whatever. I want to know specifically, explicitly, and '''directly''' why "Republic of Macedonia" is not sufficient to ensure that a reader knows that the text is referring to the modern country. The sole point of disambiguation is to ensure that readers know what the text is referring to, not to "teach" the reader or whatever. [[User:J.delanoy|<font color="green">J'''.'''delanoy</font>]][[User Talk:J.delanoy|<sup><font color="red">gabs</font></sup>]][[Special:Contributions/J.delanoy|<font color="blue"><sub>adds</sub></font>]] 06:39, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
:::::: Sorry I will attempt to be more direct. Yes, There was no other Republic of Macedonia that I know of. I agree with all the above, '''of course it is ludicrous to mistake the Greek part as being autonomous''' (although it has a regional bureocracy). One would not confuse one '''''for''''' the other, but it is plausible that he might confuse the ''affiliation'' of the country with the region. I wanted to focus on that reverse case, that is that the relation of the Republic of Macedonia to the region is not immediately apparent. We have to have a concern to the reader that knows nothing about that. '''A reader will definately know that in the text, "Republic of Macedonia" is referring to the modern country''' (I didn't challenge that). The affiliation of the modern country to the region in Greece is what he might not know about (it is zero). Regarding that "[[United Macedonia]]" is a real and existing ideology, any possible confusion about that should be reduced to zero.[[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 07:32, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
::::::: I see a lot of speculation here. Do you have any hard evidence? The Greek region of Macedonia is relatively obscure - most [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Future_Perfect_at_Sunrise/MOSMAC2#Reference_works reference works] surveyed do not have separate articles about it, and it is not shown on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Future_Perfect_at_Sunrise/MOSMAC2#Cartographic_usage maps of the region] (apparently only on maps of Greece). How likely is it that most of our readers will even have heard of Greek Macedonia? -- [[User:ChrisO|ChrisO]] ([[User talk:ChrisO|talk]]) 07:50, 22 June 2009 (UTC)


The rationale behind the proposed changes is that nationality must not be used as a label for a POV. This is disregarding and maybe even offending all respective nationals who have another POV. Regardless of what public support a certain POV might have in a nation, it is never and most certainly well below 100%, and it must be taken into account that groups of editors pushing a "national POV" (either by their own claim or by impression of other editors) are most often overrepresented in distinct areas of wikipedia - in proportion as well as in activity. [[User:Skäpperöd|Skäpperöd]] ([[User talk:Skäpperöd|talk]]) 08:36, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
== Discussion of proposal C ==


:I have given up trying to explain all the points you mentioned above since I was routinely regarded as part of the sample in those [[faulty generalization]]s and thus ignored. Thanks for pointing that out too but good luck trying to make anyone hear you. [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 09:14, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
Wikipedia's editorial voice is solely its own. When it speaks for itself, it should use consistent terminology as much as possible. In Greece-related articles, "Macedonia" alone will not be sufficient under any circumstance I can anticipate, since there's a Greek region with the same name, but "Republic of Macedonia" is sufficient to distinguish the two. Using the term "Former Yugoslav..." is unnecessary and inconsistent with the rest of Wikipedia, and is just a concession to Greek foreign policy. Wikipedia speaks with its own voice, not that of its subjects. [[User:Heimstern|Heimstern Läufer]] [[User talk:Heimstern|(talk)]] 01:47, 22 June 2009 (UTC)


:The result of the poll was hardly a consensus, it was closer to a 50-50 split. While some of the people on the opposing side where self-identified Greeks, that was also the case for some people on the supporting side. Many of the people on the opposing side were designated as Greeks, even though they never self-identified as such, based on speculation on things such as their usernames. See arbitrator [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Macedonia_2/Proposed_decision#Outing comments] on why this constitutes rude and [[WP:CIV|incivil]] behaviour. Despite all that, however, I'd be very careful when pointing these things in the talk page, lest you be classified as a nationalist yourself. That is what happened to me a while back, even though I have chosen never to self-identify. I guess the way this is currently done is: ''if you disagree, then you are obviously Greek, which makes you a nationalist''. --[[User:Radjenef|Radjenef]] ([[User talk:Radjenef|talk]]) 09:47, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
:If you want to accurately quote Greece in Greece-related articles, then you'll have to use "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" in the articles anyway. Using both "Republic of Macedonia" and the longer form in the article would sacrifice [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style#Internal_consistency internal consistency]. That is why "former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia" is the best option to use in Greece-related articles. --[[User:Radjenef|Radjenef]] ([[User talk:Radjenef|talk]]) 02:06, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
::I think he's talking about consistency across the entire project. Namely, he's saying that "Macedonia" should be used in all places where there is no ambiguity, and "Republic of Macedonia" should be used where there is a possibility of confusion. As I stated in the section above, I wholeheartedly agree with this. Using three terms to refer to an entity when two terms are sufficient is illogical, and it is against policy. [[User:J.delanoy|<font color="green">J'''.'''delanoy</font>]][[User Talk:J.delanoy|<sup><font color="red">gabs</font></sup>]][[Special:Contributions/J.delanoy|<font color="blue"><sub>adds</sub></font>]] 02:10, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
:::''(ec)'' That guideline is solely about Wikipedia's own voice, not its quoting of others. How others write is completely outside our control, and we have the duty to reflect what they say. For example, in same places, there are quotes with patently incorrect spellings and word usages that we nonetheless reflect faithfully. That doesn't mean we do likewise in our own writing. Internal consistency doesn't apply to quotes. [[User:Heimstern|Heimstern Läufer]] [[User talk:Heimstern|(talk)]] 02:11, 22 June 2009 (UTC)


(out) I think this proposal needs a bit of wording in order to differentiate from the one about international orgs. Applying the same principles of that proposal for Greece (a country, not an organisation) only, sounds a little awkward. Maybe it was supposed to be that the convention used by any country should be followed in the articles related to that country (although I doubt e.g. Panama related articles will have any reasno even mention the RoM). In that case it might be subject to POV concerns because it puts the internationally political position of one country over another because organisational conventions is one thing (they are usually neutral and not one sided), conventions used by countries are biased to the POV of one country. So while the rationale for int.orgs might be valid, I believe it is problematic to be used as is for this case. What I understand is that this proposal means to copy the conventions of the subject entity of any article all around Wikipedia. It is supposed to be used in conjunction with the other proposal about organisations, if that one there is also selected. Maybe that has to be stated in the proposal or some more justification should be added. [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 04:58, 22 June 2009 (UTC)
::You forgot to mention some probable Romanian, Swedish and Scottish editors that were on the Greek side (which was actually the UN practice; the current Greek practice is to call the country ''Skopje'' or ''FYROM'' abbreviated). They were not painted in the poll analysis that was never renewed with up to date data from the conclusion of that poll. [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 10:21, 29 June 2009 (UTC)


:::Furthermore I would suggest Skäpperöd to not engage in conversation with any of the two of us. Other users that never self-identified as Greek and voted for [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AEsem0&diff=298506113&oldid=298307456 ''"reason, sanity and dignity"] have taken that course of action and have made preparative measures in their user talk pages in order to [http://en.wikipedia.org/enwiki/w/index.php?title=User_talk%3AEsem0&diff=298751795&oldid=298751536 avoid implications of "national liason :-)"] (not really :-) , and "sixth pillar" refers to [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:6th_pillar_of_Wikipedia.jpg this]) :-) [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 10:47, 29 June 2009 (UTC)
:All this proposal does is open up every single article in Wikipedia to a plethora of unintelligible and contradictory names. For example, applying this principle to the [[Persian Gulf]] would mean that it would be called one thing at [[Iran]] and another thing at [[Saudi Arabia]]. This is unacceptable in Wikipedia. One name must be used for every article in Wikipedia without regard for political niceties or nationalistic POVs. ([[User:Taivo|Taivo]] ([[User talk:Taivo|talk]]) 05:18, 22 June 2009 (UTC))
::I agree with you and in the sense of that last sentence I suggested that Republic of Macedonia should be used in all the article titles without the need to choose which are ambiguous and which ones are not (see other page titles section). By what you say I judge you agree with that proposal too, do you? [[User:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#224222;font-weight:bold">Shadow</span><span style="color:#335533">mor</span><span style="color:#668866">ph</span>]] <sup>[[User talk:Shadowmorph|<span style="color:#131313;font-weight:bold">^"^</span>]]</sup> 06:01, 22 June 2009 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 10:48, 29 June 2009

Rephrasing needed: Rationale of proposal A

[edit]

I find the phrasing in "Rationale 2": "POV of that national group" most problematic and would like someone to strike out the "national". What group is being talked about is already clear from the first part of the sentence. Right now, the rationale phrasing might be mistaken in a way that the POV of a fairly large, but distinct group of Greeks is considered to be the POV of all Greeks.

Similar problems occur in the phrasing of "Rationale 1": "consensus of the large majority of Wikipedia editors except for Greek editors". The opposing editors are not defined by their POV, but by their nationality, and since the nationality is used as the only qualification, that might be mistaken again as a generalization (all Greeks have that POV). I propose changing that to "except for a large group of Greek editors", if the opponents are indeed exclusively self-identifying Greeks. Alternatively, or if the opponents are not exclusively Greek, strike out the "except for Greek editors" - "consensus of a large majority" already implies that there has been some opposition.

The rationale behind the proposed changes is that nationality must not be used as a label for a POV. This is disregarding and maybe even offending all respective nationals who have another POV. Regardless of what public support a certain POV might have in a nation, it is never and most certainly well below 100%, and it must be taken into account that groups of editors pushing a "national POV" (either by their own claim or by impression of other editors) are most often overrepresented in distinct areas of wikipedia - in proportion as well as in activity. Skäpperöd (talk) 08:36, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I have given up trying to explain all the points you mentioned above since I was routinely regarded as part of the sample in those faulty generalizations and thus ignored. Thanks for pointing that out too but good luck trying to make anyone hear you. Shadowmorph ^"^ 09:14, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
The result of the poll was hardly a consensus, it was closer to a 50-50 split. While some of the people on the opposing side where self-identified Greeks, that was also the case for some people on the supporting side. Many of the people on the opposing side were designated as Greeks, even though they never self-identified as such, based on speculation on things such as their usernames. See arbitrator comments on why this constitutes rude and incivil behaviour. Despite all that, however, I'd be very careful when pointing these things in the talk page, lest you be classified as a nationalist yourself. That is what happened to me a while back, even though I have chosen never to self-identify. I guess the way this is currently done is: if you disagree, then you are obviously Greek, which makes you a nationalist. --Radjenef (talk) 09:47, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
You forgot to mention some probable Romanian, Swedish and Scottish editors that were on the Greek side (which was actually the UN practice; the current Greek practice is to call the country Skopje or FYROM abbreviated). They were not painted in the poll analysis that was never renewed with up to date data from the conclusion of that poll. Shadowmorph ^"^ 10:21, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Furthermore I would suggest Skäpperöd to not engage in conversation with any of the two of us. Other users that never self-identified as Greek and voted for "reason, sanity and dignity" have taken that course of action and have made preparative measures in their user talk pages in order to avoid implications of "national liason :-)" (not really :-) , and "sixth pillar" refers to this) :-) Shadowmorph ^"^ 10:47, 29 June 2009 (UTC)[reply]