Talk:Tea Party movement/Archive 4: Difference between revisions

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imported>Aleta Curry
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz
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[[User:Aleta Curry|Aleta Curry]] 22:44, 1 October 2010 (UTC)
[[User:Aleta Curry|Aleta Curry]] 22:44, 1 October 2010 (UTC)
:I disagree that I had not yet been able to urge Mary, the original author, toward the conclusion a merge was necessary. If one takes the role that an Editor first guides before acting firmly, I believe that was the right thing to do.
:One of my questions was whether she could demonstrate that the Tea Party, on any significant basis, had acted to become a [[political party]]. I don't think she can, but if she can do so, then that would be justification not to merge.  As a longtime teacher, I'd rather try to get someone to see why their logic is in error. In this case, [[political party]], [[influence group]], and [[nonpartisan]] all have accepted definitions in political science.
:Once the experts/Editors are involved, major changes to an article can be discussed on the Talk page, but the matter, as a matter of at least my EC platform, is '''not''' a situation where every opinion must be respected and everyone can take on Editorial duties. If you don't like that, don't vote for me. I won't take it personally, but I have to disagree with  your complaint of ''my-jurisdiction-overrides-yours-and-if-you-don't-agree-it-means-you-don't-respect-my-expertise''. Had I accepted that, I would have deleted homeopathy years ago.
:I'm going grocery shopping and then making dinner. [[User:Howard C. Berkowitz|Howard C. Berkowitz]] 22:51, 1 October 2010 (UTC)

Revision as of 17:51, 1 October 2010

As a Politics Editor who was actively working with the Author, I removed the Speedydelete by a Citizen who is not an editor in the relevant workgroup. While I do believe this article has no justification separate from the preexisting Tea Party Movement article, let the Editor(s) resolve it.

Howard, I did not ask for a speedydelete of the page or any content. I moved the page to a talk page archive of Tea Party Movement from where the merging of content can be done and only asked for deletion of those pages (redirects and empty pages) that therefore are no longer needed. --Peter Schmitt 18:31, 1 October 2010 (UTC)
Speaking as a Politics Editor who was actively working with the primary Author, I believe your moves, without consensus and/or Politics Editor, were inappropriate. Yes, the articles may indeed be merged -- but that decision had not been reached. Other Politics Editors and the Constabulary have been notified.
It is no more appropriate to make massive moves than massive deletes, unless they are being done under CZ controls. While it's entirely possible I will rule that the articles must merge, even then, I'd subject the procedure to the checks and balances of the Constabulary. In this case, my discussion with the author is temporarily disrupted until I find all the text, and I really don't want to play forensic detective at the moment.
While I have had many disagreements with the author, this wasn't fair to her. Even if this article was in a Workgroup where you are an Editor, I still recommend working with the Constables before making such significant changes. Peter, I speak from experience, where other Citizens were incensed by unilateral moves, renaming articles (not the case here), etc. Let the process work.
I have put Peter's redirect into nowikis, so I can be sure the discussion above is seen. #REDIRECT [[Talk:Tea Party Movement/Archive 2]] Howard C. Berkowitz 18:43, 1 October 2010 (UTC)

Not at all sure what the fuss is about

My only problem with this is that I no longer know which discussion lives where, and so I'm not sure of the best page on which to leave my comments.

Clearly a merge was needed. Does anyone disagree with that?

Peter took steps to actually move towards a merge, and moved the duplicate article to a subpage of the existing article, is that right? Peter then requested deletion of the old article cluster, is that right?

This doesn't seem to me to be terribly disastrous or improper.

Surely an established principle of a wiki environment is that no one 'owns' any article, and anyone can edit with impunity?

Now, if Howard, Jim or Joe, as Politics Editors feel that a better course of action should be taken, I think Peter, as a mathematician, should yield to them with respect to the subject. This does NOT mean that Peter is not entitled to have an opinion with respect to the wiki, and this is something our experts all need to get clear, and something the new EC needs to address, as it's causing too much time-wasting, sapping too much energy, and causing my-jurisdiction-overrides-yours-and-if-you-don't-agree-it-means-you-don't-respect-my-expertise type arguments.

Aleta Curry 22:44, 1 October 2010 (UTC)

I disagree that I had not yet been able to urge Mary, the original author, toward the conclusion a merge was necessary. If one takes the role that an Editor first guides before acting firmly, I believe that was the right thing to do.
One of my questions was whether she could demonstrate that the Tea Party, on any significant basis, had acted to become a political party. I don't think she can, but if she can do so, then that would be justification not to merge. As a longtime teacher, I'd rather try to get someone to see why their logic is in error. In this case, political party, influence group, and nonpartisan all have accepted definitions in political science.
Once the experts/Editors are involved, major changes to an article can be discussed on the Talk page, but the matter, as a matter of at least my EC platform, is not a situation where every opinion must be respected and everyone can take on Editorial duties. If you don't like that, don't vote for me. I won't take it personally, but I have to disagree with your complaint of my-jurisdiction-overrides-yours-and-if-you-don't-agree-it-means-you-don't-respect-my-expertise. Had I accepted that, I would have deleted homeopathy years ago.
I'm going grocery shopping and then making dinner. Howard C. Berkowitz 22:51, 1 October 2010 (UTC)