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{{WikiProject Russia}}
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{{WikiProject Russia|importance=Mid|ethno=yes}}
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{{Archive box|[[/Archive 1]] [[/Archive 2]]}}


== Edit-warring over unsourced nonsense which has mutated over the years ==
[[special:diff/602301429|This unsourced nonsense started expanding since 2014]]. Note the use of the weasel-word "some" in its early manifestation. Now from the earliest form: {{talkquote|Some [[Rusyn American]]s identify as Russian American.}} it accreted to {{talkquote|Some [[Ukrainian American]]s, [[Belarusian American]]s, Russian [[Jewish American]]s, Russian [[German American]]s and [[Rusyn American]]s identify as Russian American.}} and then metastacised into:{{talkquote|The term "Russian American" may be restricted to people of [[ethnic Russian]] descent, but is often applied to any American with ancestors from its historic empire or Soviet Union, which might include [[Ukrainian American]]s, [[Belarusian American]]s, [[Jewish American]]s, [[German American]]s, [[Polish American]]s, [[Georgian American]]s, [[Azerbaijani American]]s, [[Armenian American]]s, and [[Rusyn American]]s.}} Please note the abundance of [[WP:WEASELWORDS]] supporting this unsourced speculation like "some", "might" and "often".


At the same time, "Russian German Americans" in the earlier version, has become "German Americans" in the latest, which is patent nonsense because since when German Americans are considered Russian? The same fate exactly befell "Jewish Americans" who having lost the descriptor "Russian" of the earlier version, now qualify en-masse as Russians just by virtue of being Jewish. If that is not ridiculous, I am hard-pressed to see what is. Please also note the creeping SYNTH as the verb of the first two versions "identify as" changes to "is often applied to" which radically changes the meaning of the paragraph, unsourced and SYNTH as it was.
== '''Russian Americans''' ==


It is unacceptable and even more so is the edit-warring supporting it. I know there are local editors here who feel that they have to discourage newcomers to this article like me coming in but this is ridiculous and discouraging. Especially when I get reverted using non-sequitur edit-summaries like {{tq|Rv In which case, it has become WP:CON by virtue of being long-standing. Feel free to tag it for citations, but not remove it}}. I think removing such unsourced garbage is a duty. [[User:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue;font-size: 1em;">Dr.</span>]] [[User talk:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue; font-size: 1em">K.</span>]] 03:37, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
If you are a Russian American, we (amongst ourselves) had this classification in place:
'''1st Wave:''' Russians who migrated before or during the Russian Revoltuion of 1917. Most of these Russians settled around the east coast; New York, New Jersey, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida. They also made their way to Ohio and Illinois. west coast; California, Oregon (these were mostly Old Believer Orthodox Followers). For the most part we were Christians, Russian Orthodox Believers. Also note, we didn't emmigrate, we were not persecuted, and most of all, we had a term which differentiated from the Soviet Russian, We were White Russians[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_movement]. Most do know the Russian language and attend church services. The older generation is dying, the younger generations growing, the younger they are, the less they know the Russian language.
'''2nd Wave:''' Russians who migrated from Europe and Asia[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghai_Russians] before or during WW2. Mostly Russian Orthodox Believers. (Oddly enough, the term "2nd wave" was barely used)
'''3rd Wave:''' Are Russians who emigrated from the Soviet Union. For the most part, they didn't want to be considered as Russians, and were eager enough to just become Americans. They emigrated mostly to Brighton Beach New York. Later they started to migrate to other destinations; New Jersey, Boston, Miami, California. Most of these Russians were of Jewish descent.
'''4th Wave:''' is the newest wave of Russians who left Russia during the 1990's, seeking for a change of life, new jobs, or students at universities. They migrated anywhere possible or where there was a need for them. They were not leaving Russia for being persecuted, so they are of different faiths and religion.
'''Non Classified:''' These are the Russians who made their way to America prior to all these waves. Fort Ross[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Ross] in California, as an example or Alaska [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Alaska]


:Instead of playing at semantics, please refresh your memory as to [[WP:EDITCONSENSUS]] and [[WP:TALKDONTREVERT]]. You've simply entered the arena declaring it to be nonsense and are now edit-warring with no apparent knowledge of the subject, but adamant that you are right. Just to give you a flavour of what is meant by confusion of ethnic identity (and not all of them are probably correct), read [https://books.google.com.au/books?id=3gZ9l82pHRIC&pg=PR8&lpg=PR8&dq=emigration+from+Russian+empire&source=bl&ots=ZjBAaw5gIA&sig=xK1cVmee9s2rZYPoDxyXPcF5bLE&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwipqY7TvazQAhWDmpQKHRhqBro4ChDoAQhVMAk#v=onepage&q=emigration%20from%20Russian%20empire&f=false a few pages of this], plus [http://www.nber.org/chapters/c5118.pdf this]. The ethnicity of those coming from the Russian Empire was heavily confused and badly recorded. In fact, read the entire article before calling it nonsense. Conflation of ethnicity is already prevalent in the caption "Russian-''speaking'' bankers in Chicago, 1916" [my emphasis], and in the "Russian American communities" section, with its 'see also' hatnote pointing to [[Russian Americans in New York City]]. You need to think carefully about what "Russian descent" actually means, because this article is unable to attribute the self-identification as 'Russian ethnic' until the post-Soviet influx into the USA. --[[User:Iryna Harpy|Iryna Harpy]] ([[User talk:Iryna Harpy|talk]]) 05:35, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
Most of the Russian American webpages on the net, are generated already by the 4th wave Russians.


::Your heavy-handed reprimands about playing with semantics, consensus, lack of subject knowledge, and edit-warring are all misplaced and I AGF that they just lack an understanding of my arguments, rather than being deliberately designed to discourage my participation here by making the environment unpleasant. Especially the note about edit-warring, when you are currently at three reverts, is rather ironic. In any case, again, I repeat what I wrote above: {{tq|Please also note the creeping SYNTH as the verb of the first two versions "identify as" changes to "is often applied to" which radically changes the meaning of the paragraph, unsourced and SYNTH as it was.}} If you can find an RS that the term "Russian American is often applied to German-Americans and Jewish Americans etc." then please supply it.
==Jewish==
::Otherwise, please stop the attempts to restore this patent SYNTH. According to the SYNTH criteria of the now-removed paragraph, any ethnicity, Greek, Italian, French etc. could be called Russian Americans, as long as they had an ancestor in the old Soviet Union. This very notion, makes including this long list at the lead untenable, not at least without using a suitable RS and replacing the explicit listing of the ethnicities with a much shorter generalisation and eliminating the sea-of-blue overlinking. Also, the thing is, when you use the phrase "often applied to", questions arise such as: How often is it applied? By whom is it applied? To whom is it applied? First, second, third-generation immigrants? How could this be applied to a segment of second, third-generation German, Pole, or Jewish immigrants when they would have assimilated fully into the American culture and they wouldn't have any external trace of their purported Russian background so noone external to them, from the wider American population, would know their background and would thus be unable to "apply" to them the label "Russian-American"? And why these Germans, Poles, Armenians etc. - the list is almost never-ending- would not be identified as simply Germans, Poles etc.? [[User:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue;font-size: 1em;">Dr.</span>]] [[User talk:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue; font-size: 1em">K.</span>]] 06:17, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
"Approximately 90% of Russian-speaking Americans are Jewish". Ridiculously high. Even the alleged supporting material (Pravda) only mentions 6 out of 10, and the sample size is the smallest possible. Remove unless cited better. [[User:AnonEMouse|AnonEMouse]] <sup>[[User_talk:AnonEMouse|(squeak)]]</sup> 19:21, 7 August 2006 (UTC).
:Maybe they were talking about [[Brighton Beach]]. [[User:BirdValiant|BirdValiant]] 00:21, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
:: the great wave of russian immigrants was from 1820 and 1920... more than 90% of russians are Jewish though they speak russian not jewish... {{unsigned|167.135.59.100|13:13, November 16, 2006}}
:::The article clearly defines RAs as people born in the Russian Empire, the USSR, or the post-1991 Russian Federation - not people whose ''ancestors'' were born there. [[User:Zapiens|Zapiens]] 13:12, 27 April 2007 (UTC)
::::I agree with AnonEMOuse, thats stupid. And this stupidity came from the fact that the USAians mistakenly labled "Russians" everybody who came from Russia. [[User:M.V.E.i.|M.V.E.i.]] 09:45, 14 August 2007 (UTC)
::::: I agree. Most Russian Americans are not jewish. Jewish Americans however, do have alot of central and eastern backgrounds.


:::The Soviet Union wasn't ''Russia'' even if many Americans believed so. [[User:Xx236|Xx236]] ([[User talk:Xx236|talk]]) 07:53, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
== Deletion vote ==


::::Thank you {{u|Xx236}}. I fully agree with you. [[User:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue;font-size: 1em;">Dr.</span>]] [[User talk:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue; font-size: 1em">K.</span>]] 12:02, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
Please see [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/List of Russian Americans]]. [[User:Badagnani|Badagnani]] 01:08, 1 September 2007 (UTC)


:::{{re|Dr.K.}} It is you who started on this talk page in an aggressive manner, which is a clear demonstration of your lack of AGF. Is the title of this section AGF? Does repeating 'unsourced nonsense' suggest anything other than an aggressive position to any editors who believe the content to be correct? If you're going to invoke [[WP:WEASEL]], make certain that it is WEASEL: {{tq|"The examples given above are not automatically weasel words. They may also be used in the lead section of an article or in a topic sentence of a paragraph, and the article body or the rest of the paragraph can supply attribution."}} Those are the very words you are pointing to as being 'weasel'. The lead you've left behind is equally weasel: {{tq|"Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the Russian Empire, and the former Soviet Union. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th century Russian settlements in northwestern America which includes today's US states of Alaska, California, Oregon and Washington."}} What is a Russian-American who "trace their ancestry to... the Russian Empire, and former Soviet Union..." mean? Does that make them "Russian"-American? The Russian Empire and former Soviet Union were not "Russia", nor were their denizens uniquely and exclusively Russian. The current lead is a terrible piece of unsupported [[WP:SYNTH]] which was previously balanced out by the paragraph you've removed and not restored despite being reverted by a couple of editors. Can you please meet [[WP:BURDEN]] and find RS demonstrating that the lead you've left is both sourced and realistic? I don't see anything in the body of the article that even begins to suggest that any source has defined Russian-Americans in that manner. --[[User:Iryna Harpy|Iryna Harpy]] ([[User talk:Iryna Harpy|talk]]) 09:18, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
== "Notable people" in infobox ==


::::{{tq|It is you who started on this talk page in an aggressive manner, which is a clear demonstration of your lack of AGF.}} Sorry Iryna, but this is utter hogwash. I removed blatant, unsourced SYNTH and I have explained why multiple times and in painstaking detail and I called it for what it is: "Nonsense". What is so lacking AGF about that? {{tq|What is a Russian-American who "trace their ancestry to... the Russian Empire, and former Soviet Union..." mean? Does that make them "Russian"-American?}} Are you asking me? I am an absolute newcomer to the article remember? I was blinded by the SYNTH of the second paragraph and I removed it. I didn't get to see the SYNTH of the first part of the lead so I could remove it too. {{tq| Can you please meet WP:BURDEN and find RS demonstrating that the lead you've left is both sourced and realistic?}} Really? Seriously? I quote from BURDEN (thanks for the wikilink, but it was not necessary.): {{talkquote|The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material, }} I ask you: since when did I add or restore the material of the lead that pre-existed my arrival at this article for years? Is this how you want to encourage participation by uninvolved editors who remove crap from this article by BURDENing them to be responsible for material they have no idea about and they did not touch in any way?
Most of the people in the box are very old and do not reflect the latest wave of Russian immigration. Adding someone like [[Sergey Brin]] would be ideal. --[[Special:Contributions/66.167.203.61|66.167.203.61]] ([[User talk:66.167.203.61|talk]]) 23:20, 4 January 2008 (UTC)
::::{{tq|The current lead is a terrible piece of unsupported [[WP:SYNTH]] which was previously balanced out by the paragraph you've removed...}} Since when a terrible piece of SYNTH is supposed to be supported by another "terrible piece of SYNTH"? Obviously both should be removed and the lead completely rewritten from scratch. At least, in an awkward way, we now both agree that the lead is garbage and should be completely rewritten. Hopefully, you will not accuse me of lack of AGF for saying that.
::::It is ironic that instead of thanking me for removing a "terrible piece of SYNTH" which had the added bonus of exposing yet another "terrible piece of SYNTH", you instead tell me that describing it as "nonsense" lacks AGF and, as a kind of weird bonus, you want to BURDEN me to support the remaining "terrible piece of SYNTH". This is getting unreal. Since I am an absolute newcomer to this article I have no idea how to fix the remaining garbage in the lead other than by completely removing it. I hope you can offer your considerable knowledge of the subject to [[WP:SOFIXIT|fix it]]. In the meantime, perhaps we can stub the lead pending its rewrite. But I don't want to start an edit-war removing the remaining piece of crap so I ask you, what do you think about removing it? [[User:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue;font-size: 1em;">Dr.</span>]] [[User talk:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue; font-size: 1em">K.</span>]] 11:53, 16 November 2016 (UTC)


:::::{{re|Dr.K.}} Okay, agreed that the lead needs a rethink, so I'm going to think on it. Do you have any objections to my pinging a few other editors who have expertise in the area? I'll make it a balance of editors who don't necessarily agree with each other on the subject of what being "Russian" means - but know how to work in a collegial manner - in order to thrash it out for the best results in terms of content for the reader. Also, my apologies for being short with you. I know you to be a good editor, and it sets a terrible example to have a couple of experienced editors being curt with each other over content. I've actually thought the article to be a bit of a mess in terms of conflating actual historical Russian colonies with later immigration. --[[User:Iryna Harpy|Iryna Harpy]] ([[User talk:Iryna Harpy|talk]]) 21:19, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
I agree, [[Sergei Brin]] is probably the most well known Russian-American out there. Realistically, I don't think the average person has heard of most of the people shown ([[Rachmaninoff]] being the obvious exception). [[User:CommanderJamesBond|CommanderJamesBond]] ([[User talk:CommanderJamesBond|talk]]) 06:45, 21 January 2008 (UTC)


::::::My job is done here Iryna. I am more than happy to leave this article in your capable and knowledgeable hands. {{u|TU-nor}} cleaned up my bit, so I am happy to leave things as they are. Please call any editor you choose from the regulars and thank you for offering to clean up the article. Thank you for your kind words, which are reciprocated fully on my part. I too regret that we had to exchange a few robust comments between us, despite our great past collaboration and respect for each other, which has not diminished even after this recent exchange. Problems were quickly resolved in any case, which befits two experienced editors who also happen to be friends. Take care. [[User:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue;font-size: 1em;">Dr.</span>]] [[User talk:Dr.K.|<span style="font-weight:600;font-family: arial;color: steelblue; font-size: 1em">K.</span>]] 21:35, 16 November 2016 (UTC)
:'''I live in L.A. and i can ashure you that even the youngsters know Rachmaninoff, while only few know Brin'''. The best cretarea to choose people for images is to choose those whose fame was historicaly proved. You cant enter young celebreties because it would look more like a glamour journal. I caouldn't make a better choice myself, then what the user did, and by learning his detales i have seen that he's kind off a pro in those things at Wikipedia, so i think this is the best image and no changes should be done. [[Special:Contributions/79.180.7.175|79.180.7.175]] ([[User talk:79.180.7.175|talk]]) 23:12, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
::I agree with you!!! The image right now is the most representetive that can get. It shows some of the most important people in American history, in it's politics, science and culture. It's perfect!!! Any change will be, sorry, stupid. Dont fix something if it ain't broken. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 20:37, 27 March 2008 (UTC)


Greetings all. I see that the argument has subsided, but the issues with the lead remain. I thought I'd add my two cents, as I'm responsible for transforming the offending passage from the second manifestation to the third quoted in Dr. K's original post. I'm a longtime but very occasional contributor of minor edits to Wikipedia, so I apologize wholeheartedly for not having been fully aware of all the proper rules. In retrospect I see that it was a bit heavy on weasel words, though as Iryna mentioned, they may to an extent be permissible in a lead if elaboration is provided in the article's body. At the time of making the edit I was totally unaware of the SYNTH rule, which I agree I may have been violating.
== Neutrality dispute ==


However, I maintain that my intentions were good and that what I wanted to do still needs to be done! The problem, reflected very clearly on this very talk page, is of course the tension between different definitions of "Russian American". All I wanted to do was, in the lead, make it clear to the uninformed reader that the term can be used in different ways, either restricted to ethnic Russians or encompassing people of other ethnicities, most notably Jews. What was there before my edit seemed to do more to confuse than to clarify and I think the same is true of the current version.
I think that Russian Jews should be considered ethnically Russian, because apparently, a lot of ethnic Russians have converted to Judaism. My mother's family is Roman Catholic and came from Italy, but considered themselves Italian-American, not Catholic-American. My father's family is Jewish and came from Russia, but considered themselves Russian-American, not Jewish-American. Therefore, I can't be half-Italian and half-Jewish, or half-Catholic and half-Russian. Having said that, I am half-Italian and half-Russian, or half-Catholic and half-Jewish. If anyone objects to me editing the article to suit this argument, please let me know within a day. [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 14:42, 26 April 2008 (UTC)


In response to Dr. K's claim that "[a]ccording to the SYNTH criteria of the now-removed paragraph, any ethnicity, Greek, Italian, French etc. could be called Russian Americans, as long as they had an ancestor in the old Soviet Union", I would like to say that it seems to me quite reasonable that, for example, someone of Greek ethnic ancestry who only speaks Russian and was born and raised somewhere like Stavropol would identify primarily as "Russian" and, in the US, would be identified as "Russian" by others and that his children, born and raised in the US, might identify as "Russian American". Obviously something seeming like it reasonably could be true isn't enough to get it included in Wikipedia, but it should serve to refute Dr. K's characterization of my contribution as "nonsense". The point as applied to Greeks is not particularly important, but it is highly pertinent in relation to Jews. Indeed, if this premise is rejected, a large part of the article's content, which deals with Jews, would need to be removed. However, in reality it is beyond reasonable dispute that the term "Russian American" is commonly applied to those descended from Russian-speaking Jews (whether from Saint Petersburg or Odessa). It would seem logical that the same is true of Americans descended from Tatars, Yakuts, Chechens, Mordvins and other stateless nations that the average American has never heard of, as well as descendants of Russia's ethnic Germans.
:You got to confused. A Jew cant be of Russian ethnicity. Ethnicity is race, blood. What you talk about is relegion. Relegion is not ethnicity. Give a link to the claim that many ethnic Russians converted to Judaism. Even if some have, that still wont make all people whose relegion is Judaism Russians. This version is the most nutral one and explaines important things. What you did is returning the version that the edit wars started because of in the first place. In Russian, Nationality means ethnicity, and many Russians when have seen on Jews nationality Russian protested, and an explanation is so really needed. You cant escape the topic. This version is the concensus one when both sides are shown. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 16:22, 7 May 2008 (UTC)


When I originally made the edit, I didn't think what I was doing was controversial, or adding any new information, just rephrasing to make the meaning clearer, which is why I (foolishly, lazily) didn't bother to find any sources. In light of the edit war and the discussion here, however, it's clear that reliable sources are needed. Rather than come wading in with my own clumsy edits, I'd rather leave the resolution of this apparently contentious issue to more experienced editors with a more in-depth knowledge of the issue. That said, I don't think it's acceptable to leave things as they are. The lead doesn't properly define the term at all, rendering the information below fairly meaningless. [[User:Static Sleepstorm|Static Sleepstorm]] ([[User talk:Static Sleepstorm|talk]]) 11:55, 6 January 2017 (UTC)
By definition, a Russian American is someone who '''believes he is a Russian American'''. Period. Ethicity=identity. Since the U.S. census is based on free responses of the individuals in question, its data are definitive. [[User:Causantin|Causantin]] ([[User talk:Causantin|talk]]) 13:38, 29 April 2008 (UTC)
:But we brpught to censuses. One asking if you are Russian, and one if you are Russian ethnicity. The results were different. And ethnicity is race, origin, blood. What you said means that a German may decide he is Chinese. Ethnicity means racial identity. Origin, blood, history. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 16:23, 7 May 2008 (UTC)
:: Firstly, your first sentence is gibberish. Do you mean there is a second census, other than the U.S. Census Bureau one? Where is it? Secondly, as per the [[ethnicity|relevant Wikipedia article]] "an ethnic group (also called a people or an ethnicity) is a group of human beings whose members '''identify''' with each other, '''usually''' on the basis of a '''presumed''' common genealogy or ancestry." Your definition is the racist one. "Origin, blood"? " '''Racial Identity'''"? You might want to think again before making such points openly, the current political climate is not very favorable to racists... Back to the point, who thinks that a non-Russian would answer "yes" to the question "are you a Russian-American"? Realistically, it's silly to believe a Jewish-American would register as a Russian- or Polish- or German- American. As for the German, the point is not if he ''says'' he is Chinese, but if he '''believes''' it (which is unlikely)... [[User:Causantin|Causantin]] ([[User talk:Causantin|talk]]) 16:28, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
:::You speak demogogic pretty words right now. There is such a word race, it's not a curse. The second census id given in the article to. By a university, Harward, which shows how much ethnic Russians there are. Ethnicity, ethnic groups, is race. racism is saying that one race is worst then another, i havent said that. You want to say that beetwen you, and a black man, theres really no difference? That difference doesnt make one of you better or worst, but your DNA is different. The quote you gave uses geneology as creterea. Russian-Jews and real Russians dont have the same geneology. Brin for example. He's Jewish but he calles himself a Russian-American. Why? Because he was born in Russia, and his what called a Rossiyanin in Russian, which means resident of Russia, or was. Ethnic Russian is Russkiy, which means Russian by ethnicity. Even if he was born in France, which means he's not Rossiyanin, but that wont change the fact he's Russkiy. In America, both can identify themselves as Russian-American, but different types. And we should explaine it here. The dact that in Russian popular culture they laugh about Jews like Brin who call themselves Russian-American, just see the movie Brat 2 (Brother 2) where they show a stereotypical Jew with a Jewish accent saying: "We Russians...", this movie took plaace in America by the way, show that many people dont understand the difference, thats why it should be explained and shown. This disccusion already awoke here so many times. The current version is a concensus one, because it brings both views. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 18:49, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
::::I am a Russian immigrant and I don't undestand what are you saying. The definition of "ethnic russian" in your Harvard FAS reference is "either born in Russia or have at least one parent or grandparent of ethnic Russian heritage", but the reference does not pass [[WP:RS]] in this context because it does not mention any sources for their figures. At most, it can be used to justify a sentence such as "some scholars find the US Census results unrealistic" --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 20:24, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::Here's the quote from the Harvard link: "According to the US Census of 1990, the estimated total population from Russia and the Soviet Union living in the United States was 2,880,000 people. But a more realistic figure is 750,000 Americans of ethnic Russian descent". What i say is that it's important to notice most of Russian-Americans are not ethnic Russians. That's important to expaline because i gave an example from popular culture that in Russia for example people laugh about Jews from Russia in America labeling themselves as "Russian-Americans". [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 20:41, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Your right the 750,000 is not an offical census number, but deleting it as an option from the Total Population would hurt the concensus reached long time ago, to include both versions. Thats why in the Total Population i wrote a note stating it's not an offical number but a statement by Harward University researchers. That way we dont hurt the concensus, and yet make a difference beetwen an offical census and a University number. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 21:02, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::Many people have converted to Judaism all over the world, and some of them have names that are native to their home country. And you '''can't''' be Russian Orthodox by ethnicity. If you were born and raised in Russia, your ethnicity is Russian. In my opinion, Jewish (like Christian) is a religious reference, not an ethnic reference. In addition, you skimped on my ethnic/religious statements, which I will repeat. I am '''not''' half-Italian and half-Jewish at the same time, nor am I half-Catholic and half-Russian at the same time. I am either half-Italian and half-Russian, or half-Catholic and half-Jewish. My father's enthnicity is '''not''' Jewish, because my mother's ethnicity is not Roman Catholic. I gave you guys more than '''one full day''' to discuss this, but alas, your time ran up! [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 15:05, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::Please, be careful when reverting this article, you've deleted a big chunk of work that had nothing to do with your dispute with Shpakovich. --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 15:17, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::I took that in mind, and this time, I was more careful. [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 15:19, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::The number of Russians who converted to Judaism as small. Much more Jews converted to Christianity but i havent seen you adding Russian Orthodoxy in the relegions at the Jewish Americans article. I keep Judiasm and Islam, but there should be an explanation. Almost all Russians are Orthodox christians. I havent wrote all, i wrote most. Again, we could simply delete Judaism and Islam, like once many have done, and finish the argument. Stop this revert war! I havent deleted anything you added, while you keep an edit war when you were explained you revert an old concensus version. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 16:23, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::::The number of ethnic Russians who converted to Judaism was not small '''at all'''. And why do you think more Jews converted to Christianity than Russians to Judaism? In fact, there are Russian Jewish cemeteries all across New York and New Jersey with mostly Russian-sounding names. Why? Probably because their Russian ancestors converted to Judaism, probably as a result of rabbis and Jews seeking converts. Russia has had a strong Jewish tradition. Historically, Jews were '''not''' a small minority in every single European country. In eastern European countries such as Poland and Romania, the population of Jews was '''immense'''. It is also an error to say that almost all Russians are Orthodox Christians. Many Russians are atheists, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Protestants, and Roman Catholics. And there was no consensus. Please, do '''''NOT''''' even think about reverting another Wikipedian's extensive work in improving the article, especially when it involves reversing to an undesired version. When you do, it is very damaging to the article, and it makes you look foolish. Although you seem unwilling to compromise, I am. I will be putting a neutrality dispute tag at the top of the article. [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 17:45, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Actually, i k now many Jews in the US who converted to Orthodoxy. I dont know one Russian who converted to Judaism. Russia doesnt has a "Jewish tradition". Till 1917 Jews werent alowed to live in Russia itself. Ok, lets assume that not the majority of ethnic Russians are Orthodox. You still agree that it's the biggest faith among them? So i changed the formulation. Could you expaline me why the NPOV tag is here? I said that this is a Harward statistics. I reverse to the undesired version? The version i revert to is for a long time here. Your version was cancled. Why? Because it speaks nothing about how much are ethnic Russians. There were radicals like you from the other side. In relegion they left only Orthodoxy. The number was only 750000. All words about Jews were deleted. Saying that i'm unwilling to compromise is a cheap propoganda. If i would be unwiiling, i would delete every word about Jews. But since i'm for compromise, i dont. Please notice i havent deleted one word of what you said! All i did was including the other view. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 18:30, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Now you're just being silly. Of course there were Jews in Russia before 1917. Half of my ancestors were from Russia, and they were Jewish. Persecutions against Russia's Jews did not begin until the late 19th century. Judaism was in Russia since early medieval times. [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 18:41, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Wait! Do you mean the holly Russia or Russian Empire? In Israel, where i live, for example, they say: "Golda Meir was born in the Russian city Kiev". Thats Russian Empire but not inner Russia. Pale of settelment. And in Israel, like in the rest of the world, they call "Russian" anyone who speaks Russian, even if he's from Ukraine or Belarus. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 18:54, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::I just noticed that there is an IP number editing from Israel. You say you live in Israel, so I strongly assume it's you. As far as I know, half of my ancestors came from mainland Russia. And [[Boris Pasternak]] was born in Moscow in 1890 into a Jewish family. By the way, are you Jewish by faith? [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 19:14, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Yeah it was me, forgot to sign in. But the edit i did was what i wrote about. Instaed of writing that most Russians are Orthodox, i simply write it's the biggest faith among them. By faith i'm Atheist, or Deist more precicely. By ethnicity i'm half Jewish, by mother, and half Russian, by father. I support Zionism. Yes Boris Pasternak was born in inner Russia but his anccesors converted to Orthodoxy. Those who converted could live in Russia. The composer Rubinstein is the same story. Were your anccesors from inner Russia converts? Because then that explaines it. If not you should ask questions about it. It might be Crimea which till Chrushev was Russia, but Jews were allowed their. Or it could be New Russia, which was Russia but Jews were allowed there. Till 1917 anyway it had no connection to Ukraine. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 19:25, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::My Russian ancestors remained Jewish, never converted to Christianity. And I agree with Causantin's first argument. My father is Jewish and had a bar mitzvah, but no longer practices Judaism. And although he never converted to Christianity, he considers himself Russian-American. There is at least one site that says that Boris Pasternak's religion was Jewish, though he is categorized on Wikipedia as a Russian Orthodox Christian. Perhaps '''he''' converted to Christianity from Judaism at some point in his life. [[User:Marcus2|Marcus2]] ([[User talk:Marcus2|talk]]) 19:44, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::Pasternak? He never converted. His father have. Your father is Russian-American. Why? Because his nationality is Russian. But is his ethnicity Russian? Is he of the Slavic ethnic group called Russians? DNA. And thats why the whole argument started. Since there is such a group Jewish-Americans, many people started a few month ago deleting Judaism as relegion, and writing 300000 as the number of Russians in America. They said: "Jews from Russia are not Russian-Americans but Jewish-Americans". Another point which made the discussion harder is that in Russian, nationality means ethnicity. Just ask your father for his birth ID. In the Soviet Union it was written nationality:Jewish. Thats why when they were told that the Jews from Russia are Russians by nationality they answered: "No there not! There jews by nationality". Then it was understood that in the article it all should be explained. Thats why it's a concensus version. Jews from Russia were remained Russian Americans, and Judaism remaןned as one of the relegions here. But the whole thing was explained and alternative statistic were entered. That was the compromise back then. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 19:57, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
===Represent this in the article?===
Guys, since there is a dispute, how about creating a subsection, such as "Ethnicity and Nationality", where all this argument could be contained? We could explain that in the USSR, ethnicity was written in the documents issued to every citizen, which often contradicted with "ethnicity" in its common English language definition. The situation was even more complicated for Russian Jews, who had three independent definitions of ethnicity: [[Who is a Jew?|matrilinear]], documented, and cultural. You could have a jewish grandmother on your mother's side (and thus be recognized as "jewish" by Israel, regardless of faith), live in Georgian SSR with your father (and look georgian and speak georgian), and have "Russian" written in your soviet passport. I've never really looked into this, so I don't know what [[WP:RS]] exist on this subject. --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 15:49, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:Exellent idea!!! But for now, this version stays, because it's a concensus one. I havent execluded Jews from Russian Americans, even thought once many wanted to, but i belive an explanation should be made. And the version with the explanation is the concensus version. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 16:23, 9 May 2008 (UTC)


:Thank you, {{u|Static Sleepstorm}}. I have no doubt that your additions to the lead were AGF. Unfortunately, I've been caught up in so many other articles that this one has fallen so far back on my backburner/wishlist that it's actually slipped my mind. Currently, we've had a run of hot weather down under, and my thinking cap is more of a tired thinking blob than anything constructive. I'm amenable to discussing how to improve it. As many editors are taking a break IRL, I'm reticent to ping anyone until later in the month. --[[User:Iryna Harpy|Iryna Harpy]] ([[User talk:Iryna Harpy|talk]]) 20:41, 6 January 2017 (UTC)
== actual numbers ==


Some unknown author added this, it was the most eloquent and accurate version (better than the updates I made by far), Russian American is a confusing term because it is equivalent to Latin American but also equivalent to say "Italian" which could be clarified as American ethnic-Russian, English does not disambiguate between the vague term ethnic Russian, and Russian citizen, hence the confusion, that said, the edit which was far clearer than mine or anyone elses edit:
Here's some qualifications to your numerical arguments, guys:
:"Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the former Russian Empire, or the former Soviet Union. This means that 'Russian' does not necessarily refer to East Slavic ethnic Russians, but to the broader cultural area of Russia and the post-Soviet space. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th-century Russian settlements in northwestern America." [[User:Vyaiskaya|Vyaiskaya]] ([[User talk:Vyaiskaya|talk]]) 09:09, 26 December 2020 (UTC)
* 3,009,876 (ref is in the article) is from the year 2005 ''U.S. Census American Community Survey'' (not the same as U.S. Census). It lists the people who wrote "Russian" in Question 10, which asked people to write in their "ancestry or ethnic origin." The question was based on self-identification; results represent <b>self-classification by people according to the ancestry group or groups with which they most closely identify</b>. It also lists 963,263 americans as Americans with Ukrainian ancestry and 125,992 as Americans with Israeli ancestry. A more up to date number would be 3,105,965 for year 2006 [http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ADPTable?_bm=y&-context=adp&-qr_name=ACS_2006_EST_G00_DP2&-ds_name=&-tree_id=306&-redoLog=false&-geo_id=01000US&-format=&-_lang=en&-search_map_config=|b=46|l=en|t=306|zf=0.0|ms=sel_06acs|dw=1.9557697048764706E7|dh=1.4455689123E7|dt=gov.census.aff.domain.map.LSRMapExtent|if=gif|cx=-1159354.4783500005|cy=7122022.5|zl=10|pz=10|bo=1999:2031:2005:2004:2002|bl=2001:2000:2032:2006:2003|ft=2087:2065:2053:2085:2073:2081:2059|fl=2088:2066:2054:2086:2074:2082:2060|g=01000US] (also lists 961,113 Ukrainians)

* 2,652,214 Americans wrote "Russian" in the same question of the actual U.S. Census in the year 2000 (the next full census will happen in 2010)
== "Russian American" means an American of Russian ethnicity ==
* 706,000 Americans <b>speak Russian language most frequently at home</b> according to the actual year 2000 U.S. Census [http://www.census.gov/prod/2003pubs/c2kbr-29.pdf]. This is a very strict defition - I am a Russian American, and I speak Russian freely, but I don't speak Russian at home (my wife is an Irish American), so I would not be counted as one of this 0.7 mil.
Poles, Jews, Volga Germans, Ukrainians, etc... don't belong in this article. When another term is put before the word American, it is a reference to the person's ethnic background. This article should only include people who are actually of Russian ethnicity. (e.g. [[Walter Afanasieff]] is Russian-American, [[Irving Berlin]] is not) [http://faculty.ce.berkeley.edu/coby/essays/seipel.htm Here] is an essay written by a Jewish American, born in Poland, who makes it very clear that he is not Polish. [[User:Genealogizer|Genealogizer]] ([[User talk:Genealogizer|talk]]) 00:11, 24 April 2017 (UTC)
* 758,600 foreign-born Americans list Russia as their <b>birthplace</b> in [http://usa.ipums.org/cgi-bin/sdaweb/hsda?../../share/sda_support/harcsda+2000-062107 IPUMS] year 2000 dataset. This appears to be the source of the Harvard FAS reference.

I don't know of any other nation-wide statistics gathered in the USA. --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 21:04, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:Ukrainians often do identify as Russian Americans. That doesn't mean all do to the same degree, but the term is and historically used much like latin americans, with reference to immigrants from post soviet space, the USSR, or Russian Empire, as well as ethnic Rusyns. It may be a double identity as well, Russian American and an ethnic _. Many Russian Jews are identified as Russian Americans. Poles, not usually... Ukrainians, yes. Buryat or Tatar, Yes. Jewish poles are another matter from Russian Jews. Things are complicated due to there being multple senses of the word Russian, and this is probably the heaat of the confusion, and this should be factored in and made note of, that Russian American, and American Ethnic-Russian are separate concepts. So, it's a complicated matter. [[User:Vyaiskaya|Vyaiskaya]] ([[User talk:Vyaiskaya|talk]]) 08:56, 26 December 2020 (UTC)
:Sergey Brin is the example. He labels himself Russian American. But his not Russian Ethnicity. About the question who do you identidy with. It's a tricky one and we should avoid it. Jews in America who dont know English, but know Russian, feel that the American Jews who are already simply American are foreigners while ethnic Russians they identify with. It's the same think with Russophone Ukrainians in Ukraine. Ukrainians in east Ukraine in a survey stated that they will have a Russian in their home, but wont have someone from west Ukraine their. Does that make them of Russian ethnicity? Again, no. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 22:10, 9 May 2008 (UTC)

::Why do you insist on strict segregation? [[Sergey Brin]] is a [[Russian American]] *and* a [[Jewish American]]. The problem between you and Marcus, as I see it, is how to define "Russian American": Marcus believes the English language definition (by self-identification) should be used. You believe that the Soviet passport definition (by genealogy) should be used. We know the exact numbers for the three definitions I listed above, and we don't know the numbers for the definition "ethnic Russians living in the USA" where "ethnic" is defined as in the soviet passport. (remember, your Harvard FAS curriculum defines "ethnic russian" as [http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~gstudies/russia/lessons.htm <b>born in Russia</b> or child/grandchild of someone born in Russia] - it counts Sergey Brin as "ethnic Russian"). --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 22:47, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
:This version is the clearest I saw in the logues: "Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the former Russian Empire, or the former Soviet Union. This means that 'Russian' does not necessarily refer to East Slavic ethnic Russians, but to the broader cultural area of Russia and the post-Soviet space. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th-century Russian settlements in northwestern America." If someone feels adding a section specifically on American ethnic-Russians is important, it might be prudent for some peoples understanding. [[User:Vyaiskaya|Vyaiskaya]] ([[User talk:Vyaiskaya|talk]]) 09:12, 26 December 2020 (UTC)
:::You didnt understand me. Brin is a Russian American, but his not an ethnic Russian. Thats what i say. I say that we need to have both numbers. Both Russian Americans, and both ethnic Russian Americans. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 23:00, 9 May 2008 (UTC)

::::Read that. Its the part in the discussion beetwen Marcus an me when i explained him how it all started and why i insist on that version: "Your father is Russian-American. Why? Because his nationality is Russian. But is his ethnicity Russian? Is he of the Slavic ethnic group called Russians? DNA. And thats why the whole argument started. Since there is such a group Jewish-Americans, many people started a few month ago deleting Judaism as relegion, and writing 300000 as the number of Russians in America. They said: "Jews from Russia are not Russian-Americans but Jewish-Americans". Another point which made the discussion harder is that in Russian, nationality means ethnicity. Just ask your father for his birth ID. In the Soviet Union it was written nationality:Jewish. Thats why when they were told that the Jews from Russia are Russians by nationality they answered: "No there not! There jews by nationality". Then it was understood that in the article it all should be explained. Thats why it's a concensus version. Jews from Russia were remained Russian Americans, and Judaism remaןned as one of the relegions here. But the whole thing was explained and alternative statistic were entered. That was the compromise back then".[[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 23:03, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::{{tq|Ukrainians often do identify as Russian Americans.}}
:::::Yeah but in the research i gave ethnicity actually means DNA, the biological creterea. And thats what i mean. But now you see that i dont support here segarigation but simply explaining and giving both of the number? If i would support segarigation i would delete everything that menations Jews, but that's not what i'm doing. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 23:05, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::::::Are you trying to say that Sergey Brin has no Russian DNA? His face certainly looks slavic, rather than middle-eastern. --[[User:Cubbi|Cubbi]] ([[User talk:Cubbi|talk]]) 23:12, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
::Heh. Wonder what they're up to now. [[User:Synotia|Synotia]] ([[User talk:Synotia|moan]]) 13:08, 27 February 2023 (UTC)

:::::::Haven't you known? Brin is in ethnic Jew. Your surfing into a different discussion. While living in Europe Jews mixed with others, Khmilnitsky's Cossacks worked hard on that. But they, ethnicaly at least? Identify themselves as Jewish. [[User:Shpakovich|Shpakovich]] ([[User talk:Shpakovich|talk]]) 23:15, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
==Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment==
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==Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment==
[[File:Sciences humaines.svg|40px]] This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between <span class="mw-formatted-date" title="2020-09-01">1 September 2020</span> and <span class="mw-formatted-date" title="2020-12-18">18 December 2020</span>. Further details are available [[Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/Columbia_College/The_History_of_Immigration_in_the_United_States_(Fall_2020)|on the course page]]. Student editor(s): [[User:Smgarfias1|Smgarfias1]].

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== Russian Americans vs American ethnic-Russians ==
So, scrolling through the logues, this seems to be a point of contention between the fourth wave ethnic Russians or maybe even Russians in Russia as well, and the Americans and Russian Americans of older and/or non-"ethnic Russian" decent.

The reality is, the term is used equivalent to Latin American. One can be both Italian/Spanish American and Latin American or Peruvian American. This is a dualistic identity. The term Russian in English is not as concise as in contemporary Russian, where there presently exists a difference between ruskii and rosiyanin.

In addressing this, I propose creation of a sub-section specficially entitled "American Ethnic-Russians" to address this subsection specifically while not ignoring the standard and established use. Hopefully a win-win. [[User:Vyaiskaya|Vyaiskaya]] ([[User talk:Vyaiskaya|talk]]) 09:51, 26 December 2020 (UTC)

== Numbers ==
What I would find interesting is a numerical clarification to the question: Who were immigrants from Russia to the United States? I believe that the bulk of them have been Jews but I see no data in this article to confirm or deny that hypothesis.

Moreover, the authors of this article seem uncertain of what a "Russian American" is, or rather has been throughout time. I'm pretty sure that if you went to Brooklyn in the 1900s and called the local Jews there Russians, they'd correct you at best. [[User:Synotia|Synotia]] ([[User talk:Synotia|moan]]) 13:12, 27 February 2023 (UTC)

:Searching in Russian I found [http://1543.su/VIVOVOCO/VV/JOURNAL/RUHIST/EMMI.HTM this]. A truly fascinating read! :) [[User:Synotia|Synotia]] ([[User talk:Synotia|moan]]) 13:48, 27 February 2023 (UTC)

== Russophobia and anti-slavic sentiment ==

So far, this doesn't have really any mention of the anti-Russian biases and prejudices that Russian Americans faced, especially at the height of the cold war. Perhaps that information should be added? [[User:BadFaithSourceRemover|BadFaithSourceRemover]] ([[User talk:BadFaithSourceRemover|talk]]) 08:16, 22 July 2023 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 17:58, 28 December 2023

Edit-warring over unsourced nonsense which has mutated over the years

[edit]

This unsourced nonsense started expanding since 2014. Note the use of the weasel-word "some" in its early manifestation. Now from the earliest form:

Some Rusyn Americans identify as Russian American.

it accreted to

Some Ukrainian Americans, Belarusian Americans, Russian Jewish Americans, Russian German Americans and Rusyn Americans identify as Russian American.

and then metastacised into:

The term "Russian American" may be restricted to people of ethnic Russian descent, but is often applied to any American with ancestors from its historic empire or Soviet Union, which might include Ukrainian Americans, Belarusian Americans, Jewish Americans, German Americans, Polish Americans, Georgian Americans, Azerbaijani Americans, Armenian Americans, and Rusyn Americans.

Please note the abundance of WP:WEASELWORDS supporting this unsourced speculation like "some", "might" and "often".

At the same time, "Russian German Americans" in the earlier version, has become "German Americans" in the latest, which is patent nonsense because since when German Americans are considered Russian? The same fate exactly befell "Jewish Americans" who having lost the descriptor "Russian" of the earlier version, now qualify en-masse as Russians just by virtue of being Jewish. If that is not ridiculous, I am hard-pressed to see what is. Please also note the creeping SYNTH as the verb of the first two versions "identify as" changes to "is often applied to" which radically changes the meaning of the paragraph, unsourced and SYNTH as it was.

It is unacceptable and even more so is the edit-warring supporting it. I know there are local editors here who feel that they have to discourage newcomers to this article like me coming in but this is ridiculous and discouraging. Especially when I get reverted using non-sequitur edit-summaries like Rv In which case, it has become WP:CON by virtue of being long-standing. Feel free to tag it for citations, but not remove it. I think removing such unsourced garbage is a duty. Dr. K. 03:37, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Instead of playing at semantics, please refresh your memory as to WP:EDITCONSENSUS and WP:TALKDONTREVERT. You've simply entered the arena declaring it to be nonsense and are now edit-warring with no apparent knowledge of the subject, but adamant that you are right. Just to give you a flavour of what is meant by confusion of ethnic identity (and not all of them are probably correct), read a few pages of this, plus this. The ethnicity of those coming from the Russian Empire was heavily confused and badly recorded. In fact, read the entire article before calling it nonsense. Conflation of ethnicity is already prevalent in the caption "Russian-speaking bankers in Chicago, 1916" [my emphasis], and in the "Russian American communities" section, with its 'see also' hatnote pointing to Russian Americans in New York City. You need to think carefully about what "Russian descent" actually means, because this article is unable to attribute the self-identification as 'Russian ethnic' until the post-Soviet influx into the USA. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 05:35, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Your heavy-handed reprimands about playing with semantics, consensus, lack of subject knowledge, and edit-warring are all misplaced and I AGF that they just lack an understanding of my arguments, rather than being deliberately designed to discourage my participation here by making the environment unpleasant. Especially the note about edit-warring, when you are currently at three reverts, is rather ironic. In any case, again, I repeat what I wrote above: Please also note the creeping SYNTH as the verb of the first two versions "identify as" changes to "is often applied to" which radically changes the meaning of the paragraph, unsourced and SYNTH as it was. If you can find an RS that the term "Russian American is often applied to German-Americans and Jewish Americans etc." then please supply it.
Otherwise, please stop the attempts to restore this patent SYNTH. According to the SYNTH criteria of the now-removed paragraph, any ethnicity, Greek, Italian, French etc. could be called Russian Americans, as long as they had an ancestor in the old Soviet Union. This very notion, makes including this long list at the lead untenable, not at least without using a suitable RS and replacing the explicit listing of the ethnicities with a much shorter generalisation and eliminating the sea-of-blue overlinking. Also, the thing is, when you use the phrase "often applied to", questions arise such as: How often is it applied? By whom is it applied? To whom is it applied? First, second, third-generation immigrants? How could this be applied to a segment of second, third-generation German, Pole, or Jewish immigrants when they would have assimilated fully into the American culture and they wouldn't have any external trace of their purported Russian background so noone external to them, from the wider American population, would know their background and would thus be unable to "apply" to them the label "Russian-American"? And why these Germans, Poles, Armenians etc. - the list is almost never-ending- would not be identified as simply Germans, Poles etc.? Dr. K. 06:17, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
The Soviet Union wasn't Russia even if many Americans believed so. Xx236 (talk) 07:53, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you Xx236. I fully agree with you. Dr. K. 12:02, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
@Dr.K.: It is you who started on this talk page in an aggressive manner, which is a clear demonstration of your lack of AGF. Is the title of this section AGF? Does repeating 'unsourced nonsense' suggest anything other than an aggressive position to any editors who believe the content to be correct? If you're going to invoke WP:WEASEL, make certain that it is WEASEL: "The examples given above are not automatically weasel words. They may also be used in the lead section of an article or in a topic sentence of a paragraph, and the article body or the rest of the paragraph can supply attribution." Those are the very words you are pointing to as being 'weasel'. The lead you've left behind is equally weasel: "Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the Russian Empire, and the former Soviet Union. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th century Russian settlements in northwestern America which includes today's US states of Alaska, California, Oregon and Washington." What is a Russian-American who "trace their ancestry to... the Russian Empire, and former Soviet Union..." mean? Does that make them "Russian"-American? The Russian Empire and former Soviet Union were not "Russia", nor were their denizens uniquely and exclusively Russian. The current lead is a terrible piece of unsupported WP:SYNTH which was previously balanced out by the paragraph you've removed and not restored despite being reverted by a couple of editors. Can you please meet WP:BURDEN and find RS demonstrating that the lead you've left is both sourced and realistic? I don't see anything in the body of the article that even begins to suggest that any source has defined Russian-Americans in that manner. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 09:18, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
It is you who started on this talk page in an aggressive manner, which is a clear demonstration of your lack of AGF. Sorry Iryna, but this is utter hogwash. I removed blatant, unsourced SYNTH and I have explained why multiple times and in painstaking detail and I called it for what it is: "Nonsense". What is so lacking AGF about that? What is a Russian-American who "trace their ancestry to... the Russian Empire, and former Soviet Union..." mean? Does that make them "Russian"-American? Are you asking me? I am an absolute newcomer to the article remember? I was blinded by the SYNTH of the second paragraph and I removed it. I didn't get to see the SYNTH of the first part of the lead so I could remove it too. Can you please meet WP:BURDEN and find RS demonstrating that the lead you've left is both sourced and realistic? Really? Seriously? I quote from BURDEN (thanks for the wikilink, but it was not necessary.):

The burden to demonstrate verifiability lies with the editor who adds or restores material,

I ask you: since when did I add or restore the material of the lead that pre-existed my arrival at this article for years? Is this how you want to encourage participation by uninvolved editors who remove crap from this article by BURDENing them to be responsible for material they have no idea about and they did not touch in any way?
The current lead is a terrible piece of unsupported WP:SYNTH which was previously balanced out by the paragraph you've removed... Since when a terrible piece of SYNTH is supposed to be supported by another "terrible piece of SYNTH"? Obviously both should be removed and the lead completely rewritten from scratch. At least, in an awkward way, we now both agree that the lead is garbage and should be completely rewritten. Hopefully, you will not accuse me of lack of AGF for saying that.
It is ironic that instead of thanking me for removing a "terrible piece of SYNTH" which had the added bonus of exposing yet another "terrible piece of SYNTH", you instead tell me that describing it as "nonsense" lacks AGF and, as a kind of weird bonus, you want to BURDEN me to support the remaining "terrible piece of SYNTH". This is getting unreal. Since I am an absolute newcomer to this article I have no idea how to fix the remaining garbage in the lead other than by completely removing it. I hope you can offer your considerable knowledge of the subject to fix it. In the meantime, perhaps we can stub the lead pending its rewrite. But I don't want to start an edit-war removing the remaining piece of crap so I ask you, what do you think about removing it? Dr. K. 11:53, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
@Dr.K.: Okay, agreed that the lead needs a rethink, so I'm going to think on it. Do you have any objections to my pinging a few other editors who have expertise in the area? I'll make it a balance of editors who don't necessarily agree with each other on the subject of what being "Russian" means - but know how to work in a collegial manner - in order to thrash it out for the best results in terms of content for the reader. Also, my apologies for being short with you. I know you to be a good editor, and it sets a terrible example to have a couple of experienced editors being curt with each other over content. I've actually thought the article to be a bit of a mess in terms of conflating actual historical Russian colonies with later immigration. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 21:19, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]
My job is done here Iryna. I am more than happy to leave this article in your capable and knowledgeable hands. TU-nor cleaned up my bit, so I am happy to leave things as they are. Please call any editor you choose from the regulars and thank you for offering to clean up the article. Thank you for your kind words, which are reciprocated fully on my part. I too regret that we had to exchange a few robust comments between us, despite our great past collaboration and respect for each other, which has not diminished even after this recent exchange. Problems were quickly resolved in any case, which befits two experienced editors who also happen to be friends. Take care. Dr. K. 21:35, 16 November 2016 (UTC)[reply]

Greetings all. I see that the argument has subsided, but the issues with the lead remain. I thought I'd add my two cents, as I'm responsible for transforming the offending passage from the second manifestation to the third quoted in Dr. K's original post. I'm a longtime but very occasional contributor of minor edits to Wikipedia, so I apologize wholeheartedly for not having been fully aware of all the proper rules. In retrospect I see that it was a bit heavy on weasel words, though as Iryna mentioned, they may to an extent be permissible in a lead if elaboration is provided in the article's body. At the time of making the edit I was totally unaware of the SYNTH rule, which I agree I may have been violating.

However, I maintain that my intentions were good and that what I wanted to do still needs to be done! The problem, reflected very clearly on this very talk page, is of course the tension between different definitions of "Russian American". All I wanted to do was, in the lead, make it clear to the uninformed reader that the term can be used in different ways, either restricted to ethnic Russians or encompassing people of other ethnicities, most notably Jews. What was there before my edit seemed to do more to confuse than to clarify and I think the same is true of the current version.

In response to Dr. K's claim that "[a]ccording to the SYNTH criteria of the now-removed paragraph, any ethnicity, Greek, Italian, French etc. could be called Russian Americans, as long as they had an ancestor in the old Soviet Union", I would like to say that it seems to me quite reasonable that, for example, someone of Greek ethnic ancestry who only speaks Russian and was born and raised somewhere like Stavropol would identify primarily as "Russian" and, in the US, would be identified as "Russian" by others and that his children, born and raised in the US, might identify as "Russian American". Obviously something seeming like it reasonably could be true isn't enough to get it included in Wikipedia, but it should serve to refute Dr. K's characterization of my contribution as "nonsense". The point as applied to Greeks is not particularly important, but it is highly pertinent in relation to Jews. Indeed, if this premise is rejected, a large part of the article's content, which deals with Jews, would need to be removed. However, in reality it is beyond reasonable dispute that the term "Russian American" is commonly applied to those descended from Russian-speaking Jews (whether from Saint Petersburg or Odessa). It would seem logical that the same is true of Americans descended from Tatars, Yakuts, Chechens, Mordvins and other stateless nations that the average American has never heard of, as well as descendants of Russia's ethnic Germans.

When I originally made the edit, I didn't think what I was doing was controversial, or adding any new information, just rephrasing to make the meaning clearer, which is why I (foolishly, lazily) didn't bother to find any sources. In light of the edit war and the discussion here, however, it's clear that reliable sources are needed. Rather than come wading in with my own clumsy edits, I'd rather leave the resolution of this apparently contentious issue to more experienced editors with a more in-depth knowledge of the issue. That said, I don't think it's acceptable to leave things as they are. The lead doesn't properly define the term at all, rendering the information below fairly meaningless. Static Sleepstorm (talk) 11:55, 6 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you, Static Sleepstorm. I have no doubt that your additions to the lead were AGF. Unfortunately, I've been caught up in so many other articles that this one has fallen so far back on my backburner/wishlist that it's actually slipped my mind. Currently, we've had a run of hot weather down under, and my thinking cap is more of a tired thinking blob than anything constructive. I'm amenable to discussing how to improve it. As many editors are taking a break IRL, I'm reticent to ping anyone until later in the month. --Iryna Harpy (talk) 20:41, 6 January 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Some unknown author added this, it was the most eloquent and accurate version (better than the updates I made by far), Russian American is a confusing term because it is equivalent to Latin American but also equivalent to say "Italian" which could be clarified as American ethnic-Russian, English does not disambiguate between the vague term ethnic Russian, and Russian citizen, hence the confusion, that said, the edit which was far clearer than mine or anyone elses edit:

"Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the former Russian Empire, or the former Soviet Union. This means that 'Russian' does not necessarily refer to East Slavic ethnic Russians, but to the broader cultural area of Russia and the post-Soviet space. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th-century Russian settlements in northwestern America." Vyaiskaya (talk) 09:09, 26 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

"Russian American" means an American of Russian ethnicity

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Poles, Jews, Volga Germans, Ukrainians, etc... don't belong in this article. When another term is put before the word American, it is a reference to the person's ethnic background. This article should only include people who are actually of Russian ethnicity. (e.g. Walter Afanasieff is Russian-American, Irving Berlin is not) Here is an essay written by a Jewish American, born in Poland, who makes it very clear that he is not Polish. Genealogizer (talk) 00:11, 24 April 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Ukrainians often do identify as Russian Americans. That doesn't mean all do to the same degree, but the term is and historically used much like latin americans, with reference to immigrants from post soviet space, the USSR, or Russian Empire, as well as ethnic Rusyns. It may be a double identity as well, Russian American and an ethnic _. Many Russian Jews are identified as Russian Americans. Poles, not usually... Ukrainians, yes. Buryat or Tatar, Yes. Jewish poles are another matter from Russian Jews. Things are complicated due to there being multple senses of the word Russian, and this is probably the heaat of the confusion, and this should be factored in and made note of, that Russian American, and American Ethnic-Russian are separate concepts. So, it's a complicated matter. Vyaiskaya (talk) 08:56, 26 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]
This version is the clearest I saw in the logues: "Russian Americans are Americans who trace their ancestry to Russia, the former Russian Empire, or the former Soviet Union. This means that 'Russian' does not necessarily refer to East Slavic ethnic Russians, but to the broader cultural area of Russia and the post-Soviet space. The definition can be applied to recent Russian immigrants to the United States, as well as to settlers of 19th-century Russian settlements in northwestern America." If someone feels adding a section specifically on American ethnic-Russians is important, it might be prudent for some peoples understanding. Vyaiskaya (talk) 09:12, 26 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]
Ukrainians often do identify as Russian Americans.
Heh. Wonder what they're up to now. Synotia (moan) 13:08, 27 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment

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This article is or was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Jeffersonvalladares. Peer reviewers: Jeffersonvalladares.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 08:27, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment

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This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 1 September 2020 and 18 December 2020. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Smgarfias1.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 08:27, 17 January 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Russian Americans vs American ethnic-Russians

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So, scrolling through the logues, this seems to be a point of contention between the fourth wave ethnic Russians or maybe even Russians in Russia as well, and the Americans and Russian Americans of older and/or non-"ethnic Russian" decent.

The reality is, the term is used equivalent to Latin American. One can be both Italian/Spanish American and Latin American or Peruvian American. This is a dualistic identity. The term Russian in English is not as concise as in contemporary Russian, where there presently exists a difference between ruskii and rosiyanin.

In addressing this, I propose creation of a sub-section specficially entitled "American Ethnic-Russians" to address this subsection specifically while not ignoring the standard and established use. Hopefully a win-win. Vyaiskaya (talk) 09:51, 26 December 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Numbers

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What I would find interesting is a numerical clarification to the question: Who were immigrants from Russia to the United States? I believe that the bulk of them have been Jews but I see no data in this article to confirm or deny that hypothesis.

Moreover, the authors of this article seem uncertain of what a "Russian American" is, or rather has been throughout time. I'm pretty sure that if you went to Brooklyn in the 1900s and called the local Jews there Russians, they'd correct you at best. Synotia (moan) 13:12, 27 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Searching in Russian I found this. A truly fascinating read! :) Synotia (moan) 13:48, 27 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

Russophobia and anti-slavic sentiment

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So far, this doesn't have really any mention of the anti-Russian biases and prejudices that Russian Americans faced, especially at the height of the cold war. Perhaps that information should be added? BadFaithSourceRemover (talk) 08:16, 22 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]