Jump to content

User talk:122141510

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 122141510 (talk | contribs) at 22:43, 10 June 2024 (Naming discussion). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Welcome AVNOJ1989!

Now that you've joined Wikipedia, there are 48,365,374 registered editors!
Hello, AVNOJ1989. Welcome to Wikipedia!

I'm S0091, one of the other editors here, and I hope you decide to stay and help contribute to this amazing repository of knowledge.

To help get you started, you may find these useful:
The Five Pillars (fundamental principles) of Wikipedia
A Primer for Newcomers
Introduction to Wikipedia
Wikipedia Training Modules
Simplified Manual of Style
Creating a new article via the Article Wizard
When editing, follow the 3 Core Content Policies:
1. Neutral point of view: represent significant views fairly
2. Verifiability: claims should cite reliable, published sources
3. No original research: no originality; reference published sources

Brochures: Editing Wikipedia & Illustrating Wikipedia
Ask a Question about How to Use Wikipedia
Help

Remember to always sign your posts on talk pages. You can do this either by clicking on the button on the edit toolbar or by typing four tildes ~~~~ at the end of your post. This will automatically insert your signature, a link to this (your talk) page, and a timestamp.


Naming discussion

Replying here as off-topic discussion often 'clogs up the arteries' of RfCs.

I am indeed defending the status quo name - or at least pointing out what needs to have happened and what needs to have changed (basically COMMONNAME) for a name change to occur. I don't in the least apologise for pointing out that UN resolutions and moral arguments (RGW if you like), in this context are so much fluff.

When you have lived with an article a long time (I have watched this one for quite a few years), it can be difficult to bring 'fresh eyes', so basically I've said I won't support or oppose the name change until evidence is provided. Yes, my default position is that there is nothing wrong with the present name and that the proposed name WAS, but may no longer be, primarily an 'advocacy' name. I don't apologise for any of that, neither do I take offence unless someone (as another editor did), seeks to impugn my motives as being that I am somehow denying the basic facts of a calculated, planned, cynically implemented mass-murder of around 8000+ men and boys at Srebrenica.

There are countless examples where commonname may not be optimum, for a variety of reasons. Pincrete (talk) 07:42, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

What is not being acknowledged here is this. Someone in the position of wanting to retain the title 'Srebrenica massacre' because they feel it downplays the severity and magnitude of the event is not to state that outright and declare their bias, but to take a subtler, more tactical approach. Admitting the event was a genocide in the talk pages is all good and well because most people do not read talk pages, and if that concession is part of a set of negotiations where playing at being a neutral third party on a talk page no one will read so that the title of the article (which people will read) which is currently preferable to someone with such a bias -- it is effectively losing a battle to win the war. Likewise, leading both the conversation on the talk page and then the rename proposal format and framing the conversation so that the proposed rename might be 'advocacy name' and the current name as simply the 'status quo' is an incredibly brilliant way of framing the matter so that no one considers that the existing name has not been and always has been a 'revisionist name' is, were I someone who wanted to downplay the event, exactly how I would approach it.
What the other editor you are alluding to overlooked, and I alluded to in my last reply to you on the proposal section, is that this is the effectiveness of this approach is that it makes it is nearly impossible to differentiate between an intelligent operator with a motive, and an entirely well-meaning editor without pre-existing bias. If you are the former, you are executing the job brilliantly. If you are the latter, then this could all sound like fantastical accusations bordering on paranoia. Of course, if you are the latter and you have been in the corner of Balkan Wikipedia as you have been for quite a while, you might appreciate there are individuals with a "pro-Serbian PoV" who have been far more effective operators than those in the other "camps". My observation has been that the latter is usually too quick to jump to emotional argument and believes that passion will make an impression on neutral or unaware third parties, whereas the former, again, has learned that the more effective approach is to 'weaponize the judiciary', if you like.
Whether you have a bias or not, I do not have enough information to determine, and to accuse you of motive without information is not going to get me very far. I cannot condone the other editors' actions, but I completely understand the underlying elements that created the dispute. Again, since you've been around, I'm surprised you wouldn't also be familiar with said elements? It's not like any of this is new to this corner of Wikipedia. --AVNOJ1989 (talk) 22:43, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]