Talk:September 11 attacks/Archive 39

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archive 38

Archive 38 has a few pieces which are still relevant for the active discussion. I am listing them here.

  1. 1. Talk:September_11,_2001_attacks/Archive_38#NFSM
  2. 2. Talk:September_11,_2001_attacks/Archive_38#list

— Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 16:13, 18 February 2008 (UTC)   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 00:58, 12 March 2008 (UTC)

passport issue (2)

Following apparant consensus, I inserted the text:

A passport of one of the hijackers was reported found intact near the WTC.[1] Rescue workers sifting through the tons of rubble discovered the passport, belonging to one of the suspected hijackers, a few blocks from where the World Trade Center's twin towers once stood.[2]; a passerby picked it up and gave it to a NYPD detective shortly before the World Trade Center towers collapsed.[3]
 — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 00:44, 19 February 2008 (UTC)

Xiutwel - Please stop with this. There is no consensus for the change to include the factoid about the hijacker's passport. This article is a summary of the many subarticles relating to 9/11. The detail about the passport is too detailed and too specific for this article. It seems there is something mysterious about how a passport could survive the crash and end up a few blocks away? Here, here, here, here, and here are pictures showing the various debris (much of it pieces of paper) that ended up on the streets after Flight 11 crashed. Landing gear from the plane was also found blocks away. That a passport also ended up blocks away isn't particularly important detail for the main article. --Aude (talk) 00:25, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Precisely...it's a tidbid of info often cited by the CT crowd to make their fantasy story more plausible.--MONGO 00:33, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Also, it was reported all over the world on September 16. The section I'm inserting it in is very small, it can be a little bigger. This fact is important to people. It should not be burried in some sub-article. If you're blocking edits, would you please engage in the disussion here on how to mend the neutrality of this article. PS I do not see any pictures of passenger belongings, these are just papers that were in the offices.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 00:44, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Here is the bank card belonging to Waleed J. Iskandar, a passenger on Flight 11. The bank card was found in the Ground Zero debris. We don't need factoids about passports or other specific items of debris in the main article. --Aude (talk) 00:51, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Exactly. This one fact in the light of what happened that day does not seem notable enough for here, especially considering that it is given adequate mention in an article with a more detailed focus on the subject. This particular article serves as the overall summary, after all. On another note, I don't see how this factoid aids the c/t crowd, anyway. It's not inconceivable that objects in the cockpit could have made it through the building intact -- jet fuel is stored in the wings, behind the cockpit. The velocity of the plane was sufficient (if only for a second or so) for some items to be carried through and out before they would have been incinerated in the following explosion. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 00:56, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Besides, by the point where you proposed this Xiutwel, you had (as noted in that section) already created 22 separate subsections. I'm not surprised there were no further replies, what with how convoluted this talk page has become it was inevitable something would get lost in the fray. For future reference, don't take lack of response as a sign of consensus, especially when a discussion has become as confused as this one. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 00:59, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
It might have been your edit regarding 22 subsections directly below my question, which misled me...  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 01:02, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Please note that according to Ms. Susan Ginsburg, who directed part of the investigation, before the 911 Commission, the passport was found before the towers collapsed.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 01:00, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
So what? New York is home to a lot of people, and that leaves a timeframe of several hours following the crash in which the passport may have been found before the tower collapsed. Now, if it had been found before the crash, you would definitely have a case, but this alone means nothing. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 18:39, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
Pete Burke's pictures (linked above) were taken before the towers collapsed and before Flight 175 crashed into the second tower. There was quite a lot of debris on the ground from the first crash. That a passerby found the passport amongst all the debris, picked it up and gave it to a police officer, is not surprising. --Aude (talk) 01:09, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
It does not matter what you or I think about it; it is significant to a lot of people. A lot of hits in google. Why is it so important to you to block this info? And please, engage in the neutrality debate above. I want to know whether you think this article is neutral.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 01:33, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Who finds it significant? And is this the most significant thing not in the article? How does it improve the article? Why should we include this fact above thousands of other facts that are not in the article? RxS (talk) 01:41, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
  • Suqami passport - 46 hits in the Google News archive, compared to other details, such as Atta's last will and testament - 3,520 hits on Google News. Suqami's passport is more of a minor detail, one not worth including here. We don't have space for everything in a summary article. As for other threads on this talk page, I'm not interested in repeating myself here, when you can read the talk page archives to see my previous comments. Nor do I have the time to keep up with all the new threads. --Aude (talk) 01:44, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
  • If you are counting google hits in NEWS, you are following hits in RS to establish notability of a fact. This is exactly what I mean by Narrative based Fact Selection, #NFSM, which leads to a-neutrality.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 18:51, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
  • repeated question: Who finds it significant? And is this the most significant thing not in the article? How does it improve the article? Why should we include this fact above thousands of other facts that are not in the article? RxS (talk) 01:41, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
  • Sorry for not replying sooner, RxS. If one does not google in NEWS but in plain google, you find a lot of conspiracy sites. So, these people have not forgotten this little fact, and do not deem it an insignificant chance coincidence. They may be looney in doing so, but Commons sense tells us it is likely relevant to view B, and therefore it helps in making the article a bit more neutral. If other wikipedians would want to balance this (dis)info with statements such as above, that is also possible. I predict the biggest hurdle will be for us to determine: what is: "balanced"? When is this balance achieved? (And yes, I know that a google search is not a RS to warrent a statement, it is OR.)  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 20:24, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
There is no hurdle. You are merely fundamentally ignorant of our policies. There is no "view B" to be discussed here. We have one view: The view that is supported by reliable sources. We simply do not make distinctions between viewpoints by any other standard. If anything, the term "view B" signifies any view unsupported by reliable sources, and asking us to give it creedence it would violate half of our policies, not the least of which: WP:NPOV. The passport information is not relevant to this article, and your Google test, which does not determine notability, is mistaken. If you simply type hijacker passport you will receive every page that has those two words in any combination. Adding quotation marks around a specific phrase will narrow it. Okiefromokla questions? 22:09, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
"If you are counting google hits in NEWS, you are following hits in RS to establish notability of a fact. This is exactly what I mean by Narrative based Fact Selection, #NFSM, which leads to a-neutrality."
This is the crux of the problem that we have with the alterations you are trying to make to this article. Wikipedia is built on reliable sources. It's one of the founding policies of the entire project. If reliable sources do not exist for the content you are trying to add, then it simply cannot be added. What more is there to say about this? ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 18:39, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
  • I am happy that the passport issue is at least in a subarticle of this main article. However, information in subarticles does not balance this article. We need more issues to add to this article to make it less POV, suggestions? (Or, we might remove all the not-agreed-upon material from this article, but that would not be my preference.)   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 22:11, 27 February 2008 (UTC)
  • I propose to include a trimmed down version of this, a single sentence, into the Responsibility paragraph.   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 17:35, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
At best, it shows an individual was at the crime scene (along with 50 000 others). Peter Grey (talk) 01:09, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
was --> might have been. It also shows that it might make sense to have a paper black box on board every plane, because there are instances where the black box is not recovered (4x) and a passport is. Seriously though: I think you should not judge everything whether it is important in your view of the world. There are other views, I would like it when you respected that. Or, is there only 1 WP:TRUTH in your perception?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 02:22, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

NPOV

I re-added the tag - obvious dispute in the talk page.--Striver - talk 06:48, 19 February 2008 (UTC)

One person does not a dispute make; nor does a dispute with Wikipedia's fundamental guidelines make an article non-neutral. An argument on the talk page does not indicate that an article is non-neutral, especially when the argument being made for changes violates our fundamental guidelines and policies. There is a lot of sound and fury here, but no substance; please do not add the tag. It's disruptive. --Haemo (talk) 06:55, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Haemo, I would like to go back to our discussion on WP:SYNTH. Just below "#good editing" before, you made a claim that what I proposed would by in violation of that guideline, quoting the guideline partially. I then provided a more full quote, and you did not comment on that further, and you put the section into archived mode. (I am assuming good faith, it is a complex discussion with a lot of participants who each defend narrative A in their own way.) So, would you please explain why you would think that: -
  • when I were to add a RS-based fact which appears to weaken narrative A in my eyes, but not in yours, without drawing conclusions, it would be SYNTH? The essence of the guideline here is: "when put together". I am not synthesizing facts or implicit conclusions, I am just adding facts on one big heap to make it neutral.
  • the sources cited are related directly to the article, agree?
  • you wrote: there [should be] reliable sources asserting which facts "narrative B" in this situation uses, or their relevance. Without reliable sources, the determination of which facts fall into this category is original research. I agree that, when claiming in the article that narrative B uses fact X, I should have a RS to demonstrate it. To include fact X, however, wikipedians can use their own judgement. The RS are not committed to being WP:NEUTRAL, but we are.
  • I am not aware of wanting to violate any guideline. If you disagree, could you provide a quote of mine and a quote of a guideline which it conflicts with?
  • adding bias to a neutral article makes it biased. Adding bias to a biased article is inevitable in making it neutral.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 19:51, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
The problem is that you're adding facts which do not appear to have any significance or relevance to the topic . Indeed, you've explicitly endorsed adding facts which no reliable source ties to the event, or gives them any significance. In other words, you're taking sources which report something, but which do not tie them to this event in any meaningful or significant way, and trying to include them because you think they're relevant. Relevance does not come from my opinion, or your opinion, and it doesn't come from whether or not I think they undermine anything. Synthesis is explicitly "if the sources cited are not directly related to the subject of the article" if you are citing sources which include facts, but are not directly related to the subject of the article, you are engaging in original research. Wikipedia is not a fact grab bag, where we go about (as you say "use [our] own judgment") to decide which facts are, or are not relevant to an issue on our own. I might think it's super-freaking relevant to the terrorist attacks that on September 10th 2001 a crazy guy went on a shooting rampage; however, no reliable sources would back up that relevance, so it shouldn't be included. The same goes for the POV you are trying to push here you don't seem to understand that Wikipedians are not supposed to be deciding what, and is not, relevant to an article's subject. That's what researchers in the field do historians, experts, journalists, etc. We are a tertiary source, and thus defer to them accepting relevance if (and only if) they assert it first.
Again, I ask that you think about what you're arguing you have a very strong POV on this issue, and are explicitly trying to bias the article. You say as much above. Think about applying your argument, and what you seek to do here, anywhere else it opens the door for everyone with a theory and some facts which they can source to reliable sources to add whackjobs of unrelated facts to any article? Think the Sun is inhabited by an ancient race of Machine-Gods? Well, start adding facts about how certain alloys can survive near the suns surface, how "anomalous readings" have been held by some to indicate life, how some futurists have speculated about an inhabited sun, or whatever else you want. Perhaps this is why it's prohibited by our guidelines? I explicitly gave you an argument earlier which was exactly the same, but for Hitler's death and vegetarianism you rejected your own suggestions when the issue was something you did not believe strongly about. That should tell you something about its validity, and your motivations here. --Haemo (talk) 20:45, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
I do not understand how you think your example of veggy Hitler to be the same, or even similar.
The sun machine gods would not be against policy, when this view was nontiny.
For 9/11, there exists a notable, 9/11-B view. Its existence is backed by RS. Its merit is not (to the contrary). B is nontiny. Thus it should be included fairly in a neutral article.
Let's distinguish 2 concepts: related means: connected, the same subject. relevant means the same, but stronger: additionally it also means: significant or important. SYNTH mentions related, not relevant or significant, sou could you please explain how adding facts would violate SYNTH?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 21:45, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
You missed the intensifier "directly". The semantic difference between a source being "directly related" to a subject, and the facts outlined in the source being "relevant" to a subject is nil. This is Wikilawyering in the extreme. If you look at the Hitler argument, it has exactly the same structure as your argument yet you opposed it! You also seem to misunderstand, or are confused about the Sun example I gave suppose it was not "tiny" in your terms. You claim adding all of those facts to the article would be acceptable however, at no point are any of the source give "directly related" or "relevant" to the article! It's textbook synthesis you just explicitly endorsed synthesis, again, as you have been repeatedly doing so. --Haemo (talk) 21:50, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Xiutwel, there are two kinds of notability, and you are mistaking them. If a large portion of the population believes in the sun machine gods, there can be an article about the social movement of believing in them. The article about the sun will not mention the possibility of machine sun gods living there or select otherwise unimportant facts to hint at their existence. Likewise, we have an article about the social phenomenon of 9/11 conspiracy theories, but for the same reason, we do not balance the conspiracy theories with the actual account, which is based on available reliable sources, in this article. I do not know how many times you need to be given this information for it to sink in. Okiefromokla questions? 22:19, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
Okie, we can have an article about the phenomenon of a social movement which has some belief that most of us don't share. I agree. And there should be an article on the 9/11 Truth Movement as such. But, when such a social group is nontiny, it is therefore a group we must consider. Perhaps the first question is: are we talking about a tiny, or a significant minority? When we agree on that, I will think about the synthesis bit, because now I must go and catch my train. Thx  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 14:34, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
04:53, 21 February 2008 (UTC) I am thinking about the synthesis bit, and I am not sure I get what you are saying. On Hitler: one could add the vegetarian bit in "death of..." if and only if there is a significant minority view which (acc. to RS) claims that the two are related. And, that claim should be made explicit, and attributed to some holder of that view. In the machine god example: I must apologize for not thinking it thru. I concentrated on the facts, not on which article you wanted to put it in. The article of the Sun should i.m.o. then have a single line saying that some believe it is inhabited, and the rest goes in a seperate article. Whether the Sun is inhabited or not has little bearing on its other properties, like heat, rotation etc. Likewise, I wouldn't dream of adding the "passport issue" to United States.
In retrospect, I think your hypothetical examples are creative, but are only confusing in the end. There is no good parallel between them and the reality of Wikipedia at hand. For instance, the passport: the 9/11 article is supposed to be a summary of its subarticles. The 911/Responsibility article has the passport bit. Therefore it could be in the main article. It's a WP:WEIGHT issue, then. It makes sense the event/fact is related to the guilt of the perpetrators. The fact can be (and is) interpreted in two main ways: (a) it is a plausible coincidence that it survived and was found, and it proves the hijacker was on board; (b) it is an unlikely event that it could have survived, and therefore "indicates" it was planted. The fact in itself is rather neutral. I am amazed at the strong objections, since it was originally promoted by the White House as proof for Al Qaida's involvement. Would you please answer me one question:
would you agree to calling adherents to
   the "view", that: from the facts around 9/11 a LIHOP-scenario is likely, or at least well possible and nees further investigation
would you agree to calling them a significant minority?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 04:53, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
Again, I reference the Global Warming example. Are we to group the individual scientists who oppose the IPCC consensus as if they were a single movement when their opinions are varied and often contradictory? The same is the case here. In my talk, you yourself said that the only constant among the conspiracy theorists is the belief that "A cannot be true": who, how, when, why, and to what extent the government had a role are all points of contention among them. Is this general assertion alone binding enough to warrant treating "group B" as if it were a consolidated movement? ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 16:34, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
Xiutwel, it makes no difference how big the group is. If what they believe is not supported by reliable sources, it cannot be included. Prevalence of the belief does not translate to plausibility of the belief. Take a look at Wikipedia:Notability#General_notability_guideline, as your logic violates nearly every point on this list. Okiefromokla questions? 20:23, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
  • Okie, would you please specify/explain what you mean by "supported"? It is ambiguous: it could mean that RS are saying a belief is or might be true; it might mean that RS are stating that some people have such a belief.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 02:35, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
  • Jc-S0CO: Any individual is unique. Whether two individuals are in the same group, depends on the criterium we choose. If we choose "supporters of a specific view Bx", then no doubt there will be many tiny minorities, and only a few significant minorities. (We could go and do that, when necessary, but it would be a hell of a job.) If we chose "opposers of view A, in the sense that they hold possible a government LIHOP scenario", then we would have a clearly defined subset, for which I have no doubt they have a lot of prominent adherents. I think we do not need to assume a consolidated movement to define a view B this way. How do you feel about that?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 02:35, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

As an Arab Muslim, I find this article very bias. In order to make it a neutral point of view, they must have some sort of evidence that an Arab Muslim hijacked the aircraft. No evidence exists. If someone knows of any evidence explicitly proving that an Arab Muslim did in fact hijack each aircraft please post the sources on this article. Until then, please remove the "Al Queda" references which only further the misconception that terrorists are Arab Muslims and vice versa. There were no Arabs on Flight 77 or 11 according to multiple passenger lists: http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/trade.center/victims/AA77.victims.html http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2001/trade.center/victims/AA11.victims.html —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.76.96.16 (talk) 18:42, 2 March 2008 (UTC)

This point has been raised (and answered) before. Those are not passenger lists, but victim lists - the difference being that they do not include the names of the hijackers. Contrary to what the above poster implies, the sources merely state that there were no Arab Muslim victims on the flights in question. Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 15:01, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
It still feels strange to me that the names of the hijackers were not mentioned in these articles. They were not victims, but they were passengers before they became hijackers. Also, how can we be so certain they did this? I would still like to see the original passenger lists, including their names; anyone?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 17:41, 6 March 2008 (UTC)
Agree (with user Xiutwel): However, I think it is important that anyone exploring the addition of this information ensure that a credible reliable source is used... I find it highly unlikely that the names of the passenger will be published somewhere... but who knows? --CyclePat (talk) 22:56, 10 March 2008 (UTC)

Hmm...

"The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States."

Am I the only one that finds the strongly one-sided opening statement of this article f*cking ridiculous? Excuse my French, but this is clearly a biased article. There's no proof or factual evidence relating Al-Qaeda or any terrorist group to 9/11 past what the super foolproof "official" 9/11 Commission Report claims. The problem I have with this is that when people look up 9/11 on say, Google, the very first result is the wiki article. Then, when they continue on to this article, the first thing they read is a "this is what happened and we're totally sure of it" statement. Honestly, it's very irritating. I'm not trying to stir up conspiracy talk here, even though what the press, media, and commission report tells us happened clearly didn't, but that opening line is just too... full of itself. I find it misleading at best, and really want something to be done about it, whether it be removed, changed, or made much less biased. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Dominatrixdave (talkcontribs) 23:37, 20 February 2008 (UTC)

No, you are not the only one who finds this statement biased. But in stead of making, in your indignation, biased claims to the contrary is not the best you can do in creating consensus. So, if you have a good, neutral suggestion, I would welcome it !  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 02:49, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
You claim that you are not pushing conspiracy talk, then go on to assert that "what the press, media, and commission report tells us happened clearly didn't." I find this lack of subtlety amusing... ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 01:29, 21 February 2008 (UTC)
The opening of the article is the result of many long discussions. You might want to skim through the archives. OhNoitsJamie Talk 23:48, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
I believe the only thing full of itself is Dominatrixdave. Timneu22 (talk) 02:02, 21 February 2008 (UTC)

[nonpolite bit deleted /Xiutwel] ... who locked it from edit? BBC.com says 7 of the supposed hi-jackers are alive and well! http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/1559151.stm —Preceding unsigned comment added by 85.229.25.221 (talk) 04:14, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

The article is only semi-locked, you can edit it when you register an account. The article you quote is very old, I am not sure anno 2008 the supposed hijackers are still believed to be identical to living persons. If you have recent verifiable information on this, I would welcome it !  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 12:33, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

I agree no nondisputable evidence proves the attacks were performed by arab muslims. Of the 19 official FBI alleged hijackers (http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel01/092701hjpic.htm), several are still alive (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/1559151.stm). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.76.96.16 (talk) 18:24, 2 March 2008 (UTC)

What about this: "The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated attacks upon the United States." —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.76.96.16 (talk) 18:27, 2 March 2008 (UTC)

I agree that all allegations should be removed from the lead, or made explicit, saying "the US government stated as fact that the hijackings were done by 19 Al Qaeda hijackers." or something like that.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 17:43, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

Considering the Administrations handling of 9/11, Iraq, Katrina, and everything else, how can we trust their list alleged hijackers/institutions? Its still arguable whether or not Al Qaeda is funded by the US government simply because the CIA will not release records disproving their financing of Osama Bin Laden since before the Gulf War. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 130.76.96.16 (talk) 18:29, 2 March 2008 (UTC)


To be in your shoes...

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


disclaimer: I am going to make a good faith effort to voice the debate from the other side as best as I can. Please assume no demagogous or rethoric intentions. Xiutwel


" If were to have a certain view, and I would feel confident and sure it was correct, I would expect this view to be in line with what I would find in any encyclopedia. If there were to exist some little sect Church then, which held a view completely opposed to my view, I would not want their view to be in Wikipedia. Now, if some prominent film stars and celabrities were to become member of this church, it might gain a lot of media attention. Who cares... even a lot of the general population might be infected by the philospohies of such a church. Something does not get more true because more people believe it. I should not have to argue that the Earth might be flat because such a church claims so, and has notable supporters. I would become a member of what I, for brevities sake, would like to respectfully call: "The A-team". Saying: the earth is round, and it is anyone's right to believe otherwise, but we need not include such nonsense in our article about the Earth. Just a single mention to the historical flat Earth believe is appropriate and suffices.

I can imagine any editor believing this to be right and just, and the purpose of wikipedia. We can respect their view, allow them to have it, but we need not honor their view. No need to be neutral, because the argument is silly.

But, should I not take a step back when 10% of the world population would have the view that the Earth is flat (view B)? It's alright for me to know that the Earth is NOT flat, but they do not know that. Should we then change the Earth article, making it say: a majority believes it is round, and a minority believes it is flat? I would feel very, very awkward about that. Because I bloody KNOW it is round, don't I?

And if some notable Professor were to adhere this view B, and perform experiments: place a floater device on the surface of a calm Sea, and note that the floater does not move sideways "as one would expect when the Earth was round", would I want to allow this experiment in the "Earth" article? And all the other crazy arguments which exist? This debate should belong in a seperate article! "


I repeat I am not trying to use some cheap trick here, I genuinely see the problem. I hope we can now jointly work to a decision for this, a hypothetical matter: what course of action should be chosen that is likely to satisfy the most persons (rather than merely the majority)?

It is hard.


" I find it difficult to simply assume the neutral position here, on wikipedia, describing this flat Earth debate, because the notion is ridiculous in my eyes. Yet I think wikipedia policy would prescribe me to do so: assume neutrality, and give each side plenty of fair space for their view - where one is the truth and the other, demonstrably, a delusion. Contrary to the neutrality-policy I would be inclined to discard this bit of policy, because it seems silly now. It's more of a disease than a viewpoint to me! Yet also I believe in the wisdom of all the policies combined, being the result of seven years of co-working between thousands of people in perhaps the biggest single collaborative intellectual effort that has ever been undertaken. So, now I am genuinely confused: neither solution seems to be the right one. " I end my role play here. (1) (2)


(taking time to become me again)

(endulging in a little rant) Looking at all the facts, even when hoping or believing there is a simple explanation for them, is the only thing which has ever advanced science. If a scientific theory is correct, it will stand, regardless of how fiercly it is attacked. If it is flawed, it will be replaced after a few or after a few thousand years. Access to this complete information can speed up this process. Wikpedia should provide acces to knowledge, neutrally. And that means(!): displaying a lot of nonsense in the process.
In most cases where there exist a view A and a view B, most likely both of them are partly false, and the truth, view T, can be discovered the fastest if enough parties begin to use perspective C: i.e. beholding both views, and their related facts and arguments, from a neutral perspective. I feel relief, having put all this into words. I feel enthousiastic thinking this contribution could turn out to help us reach consensus on how to apply wikipedia policy in this article! Xiutwel and Sockrates dual 12:33-13:51, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

Am I the only one sick of Xiutwel saying the same thing over and over again, ignoring everything we've said, and presenting the same 'debate' each time? Can we put an end to this and say "No, Xiutwel, you are wrong based on Wikipedia Principles. Do not bring it up again"? I think this is the ONLY way we are going to move on, since he refuses to understand. --Tarage (talk) 04:56, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
Am I the only one...? No. Peter Grey (talk) 11:26, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
I'm starting to think at this point that his intent is to ignore us to the point that we stop wasting our breath fighting him, then to interpret the ensuing silence as a green light to add his content. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 05:44, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
If this is the case(Not saying it is), can we get a moderator or two in here to put an end to this? --Tarage (talk) 05:54, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
  • I am disappointed that your reaction is one of frustration, in stead of moving forward. I too am working very hard here to improve wikipedia, as are you. True: Perhaps I have not responded to every individual claim raised by others, when (and only when) I thought that the other matters I did address would sufficiently answer and deal with these other points raised. If I am wrong, which you are saying, and there are still claims of yours you want answered, I promise I will. Name them. I am trying to pinpoint the core of our dissensus, not ignoring your points. My opinion is: (a) Articles have to be neutral. (b) There exist two nonsignificant viewpoints on 9/11 responsibility: (c) One of them being the majority view. (d) In such a case, guidelines are instructing to write neutrally, not engaging in this debate. (e) We should have RS for any fact or claim, but (f) notability is not temporary: if RS stop reporting on facts and using them, in their analyses, we need not erase them from Wikipedia afterwards, nor should we be forbidden to include them. They are still valid. (g) It is not OR or SYNTHESIS to include facts which are supportive to view B, and seem unsupportive of view A. On the contrary: it is our task, being neutral, to include them, duely. (h) The only thing open to debate, is the amount of what is due: what do proportionate, and prominence mean? My preference would be to say: ideally, 80% of the article neutral, 15% pro view A, 5% pro view B. (i) Currently, I would say the article is 50% neutral, 49% view A, and the redirect to the conspiracy theories article seems the only treatment of view B (1%). This is too biased for my taste.
    Please answer the unanswered questions I raised in previous sections requesting quotations from guidelines, when you disagree with me.
    The fastest way to get out of this debate is to find out what it is exacty that we are disagreeing on (which interpretation of which policy); after that we can discuss how to create consensus. I suspect there will be two points: (a) should we still be neutral if we know one of the views to be nonsense? and (b) is it Synthesis to include a fact which is not supportive of a view of any RS? Or need the fact only be supportive of any nontiny view to be relevant enough for inclusion?   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 07:16, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
I stoped reading at "I too am working very hard here to improve wikipedia". If this were even remotly true, you would have stoped arguing with Wikipedia policy for the past... how many months? Your argument is state, and you don't seem to understand that your problem isn't here, it's with Wikipedia's policy, which I am 99% sure you won't be changing. I get the feeling giving you a long winded explination is moot because you've ignored the rest of the ones above. --Tarage (talk) 07:45, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
I hear you cannot give me any recognition for my efforts. So be it; I consider working for consensus and discussing matters of improving the article to be "working" as well as working directly on the article. You are right that I believe that you are misinterpreting policy, not I. You are also right, that a long winded explanation is probably not what is useful now: so better not give me a new explanation. Simply quoting the things you think I have ignored earlier will do; then we can see if I have overlooked something, ... or that it is you who is doing the overlooking. OK?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 11:23, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
Your above comment makes it clear that you have no intent to listen to anything we have to say, as you have already come to the unmovable conclusion that as long as we disagree with you we are, irrevocably, wrong. I must admit that your persistence in this discussion is impressive, but although now you claim your motive to be balance and neutrality, this stands in sharp contrast to some of the comments you made at the very beginning. However you dress it now, through your past actions I still have a very hard time believing that your intent is any other than to post a list of reliably-sourced factoids in a way which synthesizes a conclusion which does not meet the same standards. That was the point of the Ronald Reagan analogy I made before: even reliably-sourced facts can be strung together to form a fallacious conclusion. That is why the policy exists to begin with.
I can barely stomach this debate at this point, but I have to make this one point clear: Achieving consensus and driving away all editors with differing viewpoints through a relentless filibuster are not the same thing. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 19:06, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
But he was not replying to someone that was just "disagreeing with him", he was replying to someone that explicitly said that he decided to just ignore what he wrote ("I stoped reading at...").--Pokipsy76 (talk) 09:27, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
Thanks, Pokipsy76 !  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 10:45, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
  • You poor editors. Let him be. You've pointed out the flaws in his contribution and he denies your points. It is not your responsibility to guard WP from misguided editors. If your arguments against his edits are valid, others will come along and improve or remove them. While he may be trying to interject a certain POV, he's also adding at least some information - even if it is only that there are some people who believe some things that are whacked out. Now, on to review his edits for myself! Dscotese (talk) 22:43, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
The problem is, someone is always going to have to be on guard with his edits, making sure he doesn't put something in because he takes some comment as consensus. I think it would be FAR more productive to simply give a flat out no and move on. --Tarage (talk) 23:03, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
So this dispute is about whether or not to include the "factoid" that one of the hijacker's passports was found - in the section describing the fact that the hijackers were "well-educated...". Think about this: why would you call it a "factoid" instead of a "fact"? Also, I noted that some editors are concerned that certain "factoids" are being used by "the CT crowd" to promote the conspiracy theories. Oh no! Not evidence that people who disagree with me can use! I am firmly on Xiutwel's side in this debate - at least for that edit.
I resolved this by adding the facts that Xiutwel wished to include to the subpage for "Organizers of the 9/11 attacks" or whatever it's called. It seemed the right place for this information.
Dscotese (talk) 04:17, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
And I have no problem with this; again it is a reliably sourced factoid which I do not see to particularly benefit either side of this debate. But what Xiutwel was attempting to do was add it here, to the main page. My main opposition to this was that in the full summary context of what happened that day, something like this is really was too minor IMO to include on the main page. Hence the use of the term "factoid". ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 09:14, 24 February 2008 (UTC)


Neutral P.O.V. is an oxymoron. Neutral is oblivious to point of view. Facts cannot be edited. Editing is subjective as is point of view. To ignore a fact for any reason, bias, fear of reprisal, is to pick a side, therefore it's not neutral. The whole premise is absurd. Like calling a piece of information a a factoid. Lay out the evidence. Be neutral, nd let readers decide what is real based on the evidence. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Deminizer13 (talkcontribs) 02:24, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
Lay out the RELIVANT evidence. We don't support synthesis, but you don't seem to understand that. Listing off random facts does NOT help the article at all. The ONLY thing it does is push one POV. Unless you can use RS to put all of these facts together, they don't belong here. THAT is what we have been trying to tell you, and THAT is what you continue to ignore, to the point where I just want to call a moderation and get this argument banned for being frivelous. --Tarage (talk) 09:55, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

ceasefire? / pledge 2

Because the discussion is going off-topic, and becoming personal, I've explained my motives at my own talk page: User_talk:Xiutwel#my_intentions.
I think the debate is stuck. Other editors accuse me of ignoring their arguments, where I would say I do not ignore them but disagree. When I ask to point to which arguments I would have ignored that need addressing, there comes no response. On the other hand, I've repeatedly asked for quotations of policy. I got one once, but when I replied that that quotation was i.m.o. out of context, and despite repeating my call for quotations, it remained unanswered.
So both sides are accusing the other of not listening, now. I can only conclude that this debate has become stuck, and indeed needs outside help, or just a bit of rest. I will now go and prepare some content to be added, in my userspace. That may take a while.
Another pledge: I will not presume consensus silently. When I want to claim consensus, I promise to announce it on the talk page that I am assuming it, 24 hrs before editing the article accordingly. Because I know how annoying it is when you do not trust a "hostile" editor (mark the quotes) to leave your hard work be. (Remember the cruft deletion campaign?) So, you need not reply to my arguments for fear of me concluding consensus in stealth. Please only reply to help Wikipedia.
I still would like to reach consensus on this topic, and naturally I would still very much like this discussion to continue and develop into consensus. But I would agree with a pause for a couple of days or weeks, and if all agree we can put the above debates in archive-mode, as far as I'm concerned.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 10:43, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
I'd like an indefinite pause forever. By all means, please stop introducing proposals that violate policy so blatantly, especially when you’ve been informed of their violations by all experienced editors and administrators who are familiar with policy and involved in this page. In fact, your incessant (often epic poem-length) proposals have driven people away. Many involved in this talk page have simply ignored you the last couple of weeks, and don't expect that to stop if you return with these proposals, your good intentions aside. Unwillingness to adhere to policy is unlikely to garner much respect for your proposals in the future, and may prompt editors to revert such comments based on your pattern of disruptive behavior. Okiefromokla questions? 19:13, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
On another note: I, personally, have repeatedly told you of policy violations and advised you to review specific policy pages. Others have done the same at every turn. You have been anything but deprived of opportunity to be made aware of policy. Okiefromokla questions? 19:34, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
I've always reread the policy when you linked to it. However I could not find it supporting your approach. That's why I was asking for quotations. Why didn't you give them?  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 20:55, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
No. It has been explained to you more times than I can count. Litterally, over and over. Policy has also been quoted to you directly more than once. Your behavior has become disruptive and you will be reported if you continue. If you truly do not understand policy, ask questions on the pages of the respective policies. First, you may want to re-read the archives to find what other editors have told you about policy. Okiefromokla questions? 21:50, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
Okiefromokla, thank you for your message on my talk page! I've replied there.  — Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 22:41, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Note: further additions should be made outside of the archived section.   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 22:13, 27 February 2008 (UTC)

Norman Mineta testimony issue

Florida Executive Order No. 01-262

Al Qaeda?

Where are the links?

"not including the 19 hijackers"

Andreas von Bülow issue

removal of POV tags - again

details in the conspiracy theories section, yes or no?

reverse method

Protection status, 3 March NPOV revert war

molten metal issue

March 10 changes

March 10 POV tags edit war???

Fahrenheit 9/11

9/11 by Noam Chomsky

March 11 edit war on Fahrenheit 9/11

partial issue: Michael Meacher

"Statements by others"

Structure

Edit please

Can we add a link?

Soapboxing

valid discussion

Video Tapes Handed

warning template at the top of the page?

9-11 Conspiracy Evidence Sub-section Proposal

Proposed text for Conspiracy theories section

Notification: Arbitration in progress

9/11

proposal: Bush - Cheney testimony to 9/11 Commission

WTC 7

The Appropriateness Of Subject Heading "Conspiracy Theories."

Does this article belong to a wiki-project?

Can we move towards unprotection?

Please edit this:

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


  • NOTE: I've archived this so we don't get the same discussion in two places. --Haemo (talk) 22:19, 30 March 2008 (UTC)


"The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States." to: The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of violent destructive events which, by their similar nature and timing, have been presumed to be intentional and coordinated attacks.

I think we need to go through this article, sentence by sentence and change any statement of opinion or theory into one of fact. User:Pedant (talk) 21:27, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
The sentence is fine, the fact is that reliable sources say 9/11 was a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States...so we're good. RxS (talk) 21:41, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
Ignore him RxS. I can't tell if he is trolling or simply back for another round of soap boxing, but neither are productive and helpful. --Tarage (talk) 21:52, 29 March 2008 (UTC)
No, you are not assuming good faith. I'm neither a troll nor a soapboxer, I am an editor in good standing. This sentence, and many others in the article do not have reliable sources. We need a source for:
The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States.
what's the reliable source that says they were coordinated suicide attacks...what's the reliable source that says they were 'by "al-Qaeda" and what is the source that says it was "the United States" that was attacked?.
If this article is ever going to be worthy of featured article status, we need to systematically remove everything that is not sourced, or which has equally reliable sources contradicting it. And don't call me a troll. And don't imply by "back for another round of soap boxing" that I not only am soap boxing now, but that I have done it before. Civil, AGF, DICK, etc... User:Pedant (talk) 02:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I have no reason to assume good faith with you, because I've delt with you before, and this entire debate has drained my good mood. You have cited no sources, you have provided no new arguments, and you only speak of your oppinion. I have no time to waste on arguments such as these. --Tarage (talk) 05:26, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
The reason you have to assume good faith is that you are required to do so. I insist that you do so. Your mood is not relevant to the facts. I have not as you claim, made any reference to my opinion. I have not provided new arguments, I am merely starting at the top of the article and attempting to bring it into line with our community policy. I'm not having an argument with you, if you have citations for the 3 points I have requested, provide them. If not, stay out of it, and let someone else provide them if they exist. We're not here to express opinions or argue with each other, we are here to work together toward the common goal of writing an encyclopedia. I would also point out that it would be more benefit to the community to not limit yourself to one pet topic, as your contributions seem to indicate that you do. If you are able, maybe you should find some other article to work on while this one is locked, because you are not being useful in this discussion. Just because you feel you own this article, doesn't make it your responsibility to get in an argument with me. User:Pedant (talk) 07:10, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Oho! Now who isn't assuming good faith? Pet article nothing. I just happened across it one day, and found it littered with those who would do damage to it. Even then, I don't exactially edit all that often. The most I've ever done is revert vandalism. You are right though, you have not provided new arguments. You aren't even re-hashing old ones. You are all but carbon copying them. One look into the archives would show you that this needless nitpicking of wording has been debated to death. You want sources? That's the problem. Almost all of the sources we have claim this. We've already said that to include all of them, we would have to have a refrence page double the size of the article. No, the burden of proof is on you. If you want the article to change, show us some refrences. Show us some reliable sources that can rightfully overlap all those that claim this to be true. Then again, we've had this argument before. With you, if I remember correctly. Please, before you go any further with this crusade, check the archives. I'm 100% positive you will find this exact argument. --Tarage (talk) 07:32, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
There are multiple reliable sources for both those points. Just because you don't agree with them is not a reason to disregard our policies. --Haemo (talk) 03:10, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Three points actually:
1)coordinated suicide attacks
2)by al Qaeda
3)the target of the attacks was "The United States"
These don't seem to be cited in the article. Would you care to point out the citations from any of the 'multiple reliable sources' you say we have? As an editor, whether I disagree or agree with a fact is not relevant. Please don't accuse me of violating Wikipedia policies. I don't. User:Pedant (talk) 04:57, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
The best solution here is for those who claim to have a source to state it and put an end to this. Note Pedant, you too have not provided any sources.Bless sins (talk) 04:59, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I haven't provided sources because I haven't made any claims. It does seem strange to me that someone intent on suicide would pack their will intending to take it with them into the explosion. I don't claim to know who was flying the planes, or why, or what affiliation they had, or who or what the attack was directed at. I don't know. User:Pedant (talk) 06:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
It's sourced multiple times. It's a summary of the article. The reason this article has 181 sources is because people insist on sourcing statements multiple times. Heck, check EB for it. --Haemo (talk) 06:06, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
As far as I can see, Encyclopedia Brittanica doesn't cite sources for that information either. That link you provided was a commercial website, it will cost me money to get more than a quick glance. Without reference, Encyclopedia Brittanica is acting as a primary source. Encyclopedia Brittanica was not a witness, they need a source as well.
Regardless, if there is a source for this information, I do not see the citation. That is what I am asking for... what authoritative source, which can be reasonably expected to be correct, based on evidence, is there for
1)coordinated suicide attacks
2)by al Qaeda
3)the target of the attacks was "The United States"
? ...if there is none, then it is clearly against policy to include the assertions. If there is a source, what is it? This isn't a difficult point, on any other article, an "unreferenced fact" would be removed and replaced with unambiguously unquestionable actual facts. This article should be no different. I've asked for references and not gotten any. Do they in fact exist? User:Pedant (talk) 06:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Now you are just being absurd. If you honestly think that we have absolutly no sources to back up this claim, after this many years, then you think far too lightly of us. Again, burden of proof is on you. Go find reliable sources to the contrary, and we will debate then. --Tarage (talk) 07:34, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
"If your viewpoint is in the majority, then it should be easy to substantiate it with reference to commonly accepted reference texts. " -- Jimbo Wales User:Pedant (talk) 08:31, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I refuse to take part in a redundant argument for your sake. Read the logs, and don't make me assume bad faith in thinking you are too lazy to do so. --Tarage (talk) 09:45, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

OUTDENT The burden of proof is upon you to show how this is not referenced. Sources are not required in the lead (debate in Wikipedia seems to waffle on application of references in the lead, but hovers around 50/50), but the information contained must be referenced somewhere; indeed, it is: the first two sources cover the information you requested. IAW Wikipedia policy this is sufficient and need not be primary sources; in fact, policy states the opposite...that secondary sources are preferred.  BQZip01  talk 07:54, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Exactly my point: secondary or tertiary sources are preferred. Brittanica is acting as a primary source but they are not a primary source and do not cite a source. Neither of the first two sources even contains the word "suicide" ... where in these sources is the reference to "suicide attacks" (to start with the very first unreferenced "fact")? By what reasoning do you claim that I have the burden of proof? I'm not offering to prove anything, I simply want to know where the data comes from that leads to us using the first sentence in the article. User:Pedant (talk) 08:34, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Additionally, one need not assume good faith when behavior clearly points to a recursion of bad behavior...  BQZip01  talk 07:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

What policy are you going by there? What bad behaviour are you alluding to? Accusing me of bad behaviour and further of a recursion to bad behaviour is essentially wikislander. I insist that I am acting in good faith, and that you assume good faith on my part as required by policy.
I am not "behaving badly" at all.
I didn't start this. I haven't edit warred on this article. I haven't edited the article this year even. It is not my fault it is protected. I didn't ask for it to be protected. I didn't protect it. I have nothing to do with it being protected. It is not customary for us to have protected articles, "anyone can edit" is one of the founding principles and core policies of wikipedia. I support this policy and all other wikipedia policies.
All I am asking for is a citation for the claims of fact in the first sentence of this article. If we remove all the nonsense (unsupported claims are nonsense in this context) from this article, then we will not have edit wars. There does exist a subset of all claims re 9/11 which are indisputable, because clear evidence exists. The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of violent destructive events which, by their similar nature and timing, have been presumed to be intentional and coordinated attacks. This is an uncontentious statement that can be readily supported by the available data and witnesses and investigation. That is a good lead to the article. As the lead sentence stands now, it is not uncontentious and is not supported by the references provided. User:Pedant (talk) 08:31, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
  1. I never said you were behaving badly, I merely said that the policy you cite states that I do not have to assume good faith where no good faith is present. I didn't say it applied to you personally, but that your statement simply isn't true.
  2. I showed you that all of the above claims were cited using the first two references.
  3. You certainly did start this discussion.
 BQZip01  talk 18:47, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Fine... if it will get you to stop this redundant argument... the NIST interim report. I'm sure you'll find some way to poke a hole in it, reguardless of how small and insignificant, but atleast it's a start. It's far too late at night to scour the archives(Which you refuse to read) for the extremly long list of sources that were posted last time this argument was used... --Tarage (talk) 09:50, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Stop telling me I am doing something for which you have no evidence. Don't say I refuse to read the archives. I've been reading the archives for the last 8 hours. You seem to crop up quite a bit in the discussions, but I haven't noticed one time where you did anything to facilitate progress on this article, and have seen what seems to me to be a general obstructive trend to your comments discussing the article. So stop adopting a superior tone. Stop accusing me of 'bad behavior'. What is in the archives has nothing to do with whether the article cites references or not. The reference is in the article, or it isn't. If it is, point it out, if it isn't, don't pound on me for it. You're the one who spends 90% of his time on this article not me. I've read the NIST report. Nowhere does it state anything about:
1)coordinated suicide attacks (the word "suicide" does not occur in the report)
2)by al Qaeda ("al Qaeda" does not occur in the report)
3)the target of the attacks was "The United States" ("United States" does not occur in the report)

Stop trying to characterise this as me arguing. I'm only requesting citations for unsupported assertions in the lead sentence. Something is definitely wrong if we can't have a stable uncontroversial and not-protected article about events that happened 7 years ago. Don't blame this mess on me, you are the one who has been fiddling with this article for 4 years. And now it sucks. An article that needs to be protected isn't a stable article with good factual data. Either help fix it or go away. This isn't a fight. It's a collaboration. User:Pedant (talk) 10:47, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

This has been discussed many times. The principle reason we don't list a specific source is that we could list thousands of reliable sources, but each of them, individually would provide undue weight toward that source and would allow the implication that there is some dispute about those facts, which also would be undue weight. Arthur Rubin (talk) 18:33, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
"If your viewpoint is in the majority, then it should be easy to substantiate it with reference to commonly accepted reference texts. " -- Jimbo Wales User:Pedant (talk) 18:52, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
All of the above claims are substantiated in the first two references already in the article. No need to duplicate information.  BQZip01  talk 18:47, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
No, neither source substantiates any of the three assertions. I have read them. User:Pedant (talk) 18:52, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


Edit declined - no consensus Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 20:31, 1 April 2008 (UTC)

Proposed edit

{{editprotected}}I have discussed the following change, and am suggesting that "The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States."

be changed to: The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of violent destructive events in the Northeastern United States, which, by their similar nature and timing, have been presumed to be intentional and coordinated attacks.

which is the same statement with the unreferenced "facts" removed. I have unsuccessfully attempted to obtain references for the following:

  • suicide attacks
  • by al Qaeda
  • upon the United States

there appears to be no consensus for my proposed edit, but it is a true statement, and it is what is left over after the unsupported assertions are removed. User:Pedant (talk) 11:02, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

The attacks were clearly co-ordinated, they were clearly suicide attacks and the target was clearly the United States. Suggesting otherwise (at least without some compelling evidence) is not a good-faith suggestion. The consensus is that al Qaeda is responsible - this is what should be reflected in the introduction, though verifiable criticism of this conclusion could be included elsewhere. Peter Grey (talk) 11:18, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
What is "clearly" the case is in the realm of Wikipedia:Common knowledge -- please see that policy page...
It is not up to us as editors to decide what conclusions can be drawn from common knowledge nor are we entitled to synthesize conclusions based on elements that have been published by reliable sources, as that would amount to original research.
All I am asking for is the references to a reliable source for those three assertions in the lead sentence. Do they exist? Without reliable verifiable sources, these assertions are not acceptable additions to wikipedia. Sure, anyone can see that the events were coordinated, everyone knows al-Qaeda did it, it happened in the USA so it must have been directed AT the USA. Obviously anyone onboard a plane who is flying a plane into a building is intending to commit suicide. It's Common knowledge.
Problem is that common knowledge is not enough to include "obvious facts" in an encyclopedia. These are all conclusions someone has drawn. But is there a reliable secondary or tertiary source for these conclusions? Because it's just as "obvious" to someone that "it's an inside job, that nobody could have flown planes like that unless they were experts, so they were remote controlled, so it wasn't suicide because the pilots were in Nebraska at Stratcom HQ, and it wasn't an attack by foreign terrorists but by criminals bent on gaming the Stock Market and the insurance companies".
We aren't the arbiters of whose 'obvious' gets respect and whose gets ridicule... it isn't up to us to decide what is a fact, because doing so is original research. This essay might be of some use if you just don't get it. There's a reason we have policies, and it's a good reason. This is n't an anarchy, a democracy, a chatroom, or a soapbox. It's an encyclopedia. We work together as a team, not against each other. That's a rule.
Still need those citations. With all the folk who edit this article, I would have thought someone could have pointed out a reliable source for these 'facts' that have been in the article for so long. Don't waste your time telling me I'm not acting in good faith, just show me I'm wrong. If not, don't waste the community's resources by dragging this out. Go find a reference or agree that our policies require us to remove those assertions. Then we can move on. If we work systematically we can reach a stable article, and build from there. (I propose that the most straightforward technique is to start at the beginning, go on until we reach the end and then stop -- with all due respect to the reverend Dodgson) As it stands, this article is a mass of policy violations. Don't let your personal belief interfere with the task, personal beliefs have no place here. User:Pedant (talk) 13:18, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Hi Pedant, in the past I also asked to have the statement sourced or attributed instead of expressed as a fact. You can note that the article Responsibility for the September 11, 2001 attacks says correctly that
The United States government identified 19 hijackers as being responsible for the September 11, 2001 attacks, and linked the attacks to Osama bin Laden.
this article instead says that it is just so.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 13:47, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
We don't use Wikipedia as a source. "The United States government" is also not a source, it is vague. We might as well use "every right-thinking red-blooded American" or "the whole world" or "everyone" or "left-handers" as a source. Who says suicide attacks/by al Qaeda/upon the United States? Where, in what reliable reference? User:Pedant (talk)
No one is using Wikipedia as a source. Please note the first two cited texts. They cite the information you request.  BQZip01  talk 18:51, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I have read the texts you cite. As far as I can see they don't even mention these three assertions. Do you mind pointing out where you see this information in the texts you are citing? Please? User:Pedant (talk) 19:11, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Maybe you have misinterpreted me. My point is: we actually shouldn't assert as a fact that the attacks were made by Al Qaeda, we should instead attribute the claim to the US government like we do in the page about the responsabilities.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 19:20, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Might be that I did misinterpret you. We can't use the "US government as a source", but I would not be opposed at all to mentioning a specific US Government source... "the government" is not really specific enough, I think, but if there were like a Congressional proclamation that it is the official position of the United States government, or something like that. I know that there are congresspersons who don't profess to believe al Qaeda did it... there are certainly others in the govt. who don't... But I won't be opposed to the inclusion of any fact that has a reliable source and is verifiable.
While we try to assume good faith, there is no sense is discussing whether four hijackings occurred at the same time by random chance, that the pilots of deliberately crashed aeroplanes believed they were going to survive, or that the attacks occurred in a different country. This sort of silliness only makes it harder for legitimate criticisms to be discussed. Peter Grey (talk) 14:57, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
We don't "try to" assume good faith. We "must" assume good faith in order to work together as collaborators, which is why we have a specific firm policy that we do so. You are arguing against a position I don't hold, and I never asserted that there was anything random about the events of that horrendous day. I can see that the attacks were "obviously connected". I'm not a source. What is "obvious" is the same thing as "common knowledge". If it's obvious, and true, is irrelevant. To use a statement, there must be some reliable source that states it. I'm not asking for discussion just a reference for those three assertions. Your statement begs the question. It assumes that the planes were piloted by "the hijackers", that they did indeed deliberately crash the planes. It also assumes that an attack in the US is an attack upon the US.User:Pedant (talk) 18:07, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Well beyond the assumption of good faith, but no doubt the wording Pedant suggests is weasel wording and unnecessary when we have plenty of reliable references throughout the article.--MONGO 15:58, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
There is nothing 'weasel' about the suggested statement. Without the references, we don't use the assertions. If there are 'plenty of references' it shouldn't be hard to provide one of them. Without references for 3 major statements of fact in the lead sentence, I don't see how anyone can expect this article to move forward. It's a simple request, what are the reliable sources for those three assertions? User:Pedant (talk) 18:07, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I have provided two references, which you seem to ignore.  BQZip01  talk 18:51, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Seem to ignore? I have read them. Neither source contains references to any of these 3 claims, unless I have overlooked something. Just exactly what portion of the texts seems to you to be substantiation of one of the 3 claims of fact suicide/by al Qaeda/upon the United States ? User:Pedant (talk) 19:06, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Remember, I didn't put this article in this state. However, at this point, it contains 3 specific unsourced claims of fact in the lead -- which is manifestly not according to wikipedia policy. I'm not arguing whether the sentence is true, I am asking for a reliable source for the 3 unsourced statements of fact it contains. Our rules require sources, it's as simple as that. We simply cannot expect to have an unprotected article which contains unreferenced statements of fact, as every wikipedian is compelled by the rules to remove such. User:Pedant (talk) 18:21, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

No one is saying you put it "in this state", but hostile/misleading/erroneous discussions like this led to the article being protected in the first place. Changing the text to read what you personally wish violates consensus and is rejected. You are entitled to believe what you wish, but that doesn't mean it should be in Wikipedia.  BQZip01  talk 18:51, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I'm not at all being hostile, I am urging the editors to collaborate on improving the article. My beliefs are irrelevant to this discussion and to the project as a whole. I'm not 'Changing the text to read what I personally wish', I'm not changing anything. Obviously if the article needs to be protected, then there is no consensus. Consensus is how we arrived at the policies that require reliable secondary or tertiary sources for claims of fact, which is particularly important in controversial, or for controversial statements in otherwise non-controversial articles. The policies are there for a reason, and the more difficult an article is or the more controversial, the more important it is that we strictly adhere to those policies.User:Pedant (talk) 19:06, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
What was wrong with the Encyclopedia Brittanica? Are they not a reliable source? --Haemo (talk) 20:31, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I don't know, it is a commercial website and I could only grab a select-all-and-copy of the page. What I was able to read did not mention suicide. Without access to the whole article, I can't judge it. Perhaps you could copy the relevant text to this discussion if you have access to it. User:Pedant (talk) 03:08, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
I believe WP:IDIDNTHEARTHAT applies here...
...but since you insist...
That one doesn't mention suicide, nor does it say the attacks were 'upon the USA', neither still does it state that the al Qaeda did it. User:Pedant (talk) 03:08, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
The title says CONDEMNS IN STRONGEST TERMS TERRORIST ATTACKS ON UNITED STATES, yes. It does refer to the attacks as being upon the US, it does not say that the attacks were targeted at the US, or the attacks were attacks upon the US...
consider this example: a clown opens up a condom, and inflates it like a balloon... the Portrzebie Chronicle, a local newspaper features a caption that reads "clown holding a balloon", but it does not say "the object in the clown's hand is a balloon". The object is in fact a condom. It would be incorrect to say "according to the Portrzebie Chronicle, the clown did not inflate a condom, but a balloon". That would be synthesis which is forbidden by policy, in a similar way that original research is forbidden.
It would be an entirely different matter if the United Nations resolved: that the attacks of 9/11 were attacks by foreign terrorists targeting the United States. We need references for the claims we make, not for some closely related claim from which we draw the conclusion that the claim could be made.
Because the subject matter of the article is so controversial, it behooves us to be particularly careful, precise and diligent, if we are to ever have a hope of successfully producing a stable article which does not need protection.
If this isn't clear, find another Wikipedian who can explain it to you. I'm more interested in just moving forward with the edit the article to make it a stable compilation of well-referenced fact. User:Pedant (talk) 03:55, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
You can look through all the other articles for more information to corroborate this information if you wish.  BQZip01  talk 22:41, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
No. I have requested a citation for an assertion of fact. Without the citation, it should be removed. User:Pedant (talk) 03:22, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

Laughing ... Well if we did include this edit the media would inevitably report on it anyone watch Stephen Colbert? The angle would be "Look at this! Wikipedia is saying that 9/11 was just a bizarre coincidence! Well that's a relief."

In reality, we do have sources, as others have been saying here. This may very well be the most amusing attempt to soften the mainstream view this month. I do applaud it for creativity. Okiefromokla questions? 21:00, 30 March 2008 (UTC)

Ps: I mean no disrespect in the above comment. Okiefromokla questions? 21:15, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
This is a plain WP:BITE to a newcomer who has been civil and a bad faith assumption. Are you just trying to make him angry in order to cite WP:CIVIL and try to make him ban like you are doing with irenesusband?--Pokipsy76 (talk) 21:55, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Redundency and a refusal to read the archives is not excusable under WP:BITE. --Tarage (talk) 22:00, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
You are still biting and assuming bad faith, you should stop.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 22:09, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
I told you he was a troll. --Tarage (talk) 21:06, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
EDIT: I don't mind being the 'bad guy' here Okie, if it will end this redundant debate. --Tarage (talk) 21:37, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
0:-) Okiefromokla questions? 21:40, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
This is not a debate, wikipedia is not a soapbox, debate club, community forum or chat room. I am attempting to bring this article back to featured article status, which can't be done if it is protected, and there is no point in unprotecting it if it is meant to include unreferenced and unverifiable assertions as fact. I have requested citations. I have received numerous unresponsive comments, accusing me of acting in bad faith, debating, being a troll and even a newbie. I have received insults and ridicule. I have not received citations for the 3 unsupported claims in the lead. This is going to take a long long time if everyone is just going to pile on me and bash at me, rather than as policy dictates behaving as colleagues with a common goal. User:Pedant (talk) 03:22, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Please keep your comments on topic a meta discussion about who is, and is not, a troll is not helpful, nor are arguments about whether said discussion is a ploy to get people banned. This suggestion has no traction, and all of the sniping is making a speedy resolution more difficult because it's derailing the discussion. --Haemo (talk) 22:15, 30 March 2008 (UTC)
Thank you. I see we were not wrong in giving you the keys to the mop bucket. Please, can we just get started working out some sort of plan for fixing this sad and broken article that was once a featured article? Can we set aside our deeply held beliefs and just get to work? Please? User:Pedant (talk) 03:22, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

Please be aware that WP:BITE actually says "do not bite the newbies". It should really only be used in conversations involving newbies. Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 01:42, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

I'm no newbie, the last I checked (2006?) I had well over 5000 edits, I'm a good faith editor, in good standing, and I make productive contributions across a wide spectrum of articles. BITE me all you want, we still need references for all facts. If a fact has a reference it follows that removing the fact is outside of policy, conversely, if we don't have references, policy demands the unsupported assertions of fact be removed.
Again, I demand that you assume good faith on my behalf, in accordance with our policy, and that you recognise that I have been civil and patient in this discussion, in which over a meter of discussion following yesterday's request for references has not produced a reference for 3 simple facts. We just don't state as fact, those assertions which are not readily obtained from reliable sources that are verifiable. It is not our way of doing things.
This article is protected. Protected articles by definition have problems. One way to fix the problems is to pare this down to just the facts and nothing more. Then we ban the vandals who remove facts, and ban the vandals that add nonfacts if necessary. Problem solved.
When I work on an article. I tend to start at the beginning and work my way through one statement at a time. I think that is a good way, and I understand it is not the only way. But that's how I intend to work. The first sentence has, as seems to me and I have not been shown otherwise, unsupported claims. I am proposing to remove them. Or to reference them. Can someone show me where this can reasonably be claimed to be the wrong thing to do?
Further, it is my position that anyone trying to obstruct the removal of unsourced claims and the addition of facts which have reliable verifiable sources is acting to the detriment of Wikipedia and in violation of policies by which we all, by editing articles, have implicitly agreed to abide. Such persons should not be allowed to continue editing, and if they are admins, they should be deadmin'ed if they persist in obstructing the wikipedia mission.
If anything I've said in this comment is out of line, let me know. Otherwise, roll up your sleeves and let's fix this article, so that we can unprotect it without endless edit wars. User:Pedant (talk) 03:08, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Okay, so what was wrong with the Encyclopedia Brittanica source presented earlier? Or how about this Encarta source? (And, yea, if only it were as easy as "banning the vandals"). --Haemo (talk) 03:19, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
I can't read the Brittanica article (it's a membership site) what I could read wa swhat I quickly grabbed with control-a/control-c before the login screen popped up. That text didn't reference the assertions in question. I'd be very grateful if someone emailed me the full text, or copied it into this discussion or whatever is appropriate and convenient. The Encarta text states in part "the fact that the hijackings were so clearly coordinated suggested they were the work of a highly organized terrorist group with vast resources, and bin Laden’s al-Qaeda network met that description" which is startlingly similar to my proposed edit. Additional information is attributed to "investigators"... also "Bush suggested that the top priority of his administration would be a campaign to end terrorism. He affirmed that all the evidence collected at that point indicated that al-Qaeda was the organization responsible for the September 11 attacks, and he promised that a U.S.-led war on terrorism"
to me that amounts to "According to GW Bush and other investigators" ... do you propose that as an appropriate citation? Generally Encarta doesn't cite sources for its information, are you proposing we treat Encarta as a primary source? Because without attribution of their sources, it seems to me that Encarta is acting as a primary source.
If you feel that those citing "GW Bush and other investigators" or citing Encarta as a primary source is appropriate, I won't oppose including the cites, but as was pointed out before, which I agree with, we shouldn't state it as fact without a source. I personally don't feel comfortable with those citations, I think they are kinda wimpy compared with the facts they are intended to support... the identity of the perpetrators of one of the very worst violent crimes of all time, which was a substatantial reason for the US entering one of the longest and most expensive military conflicts in US History. That's just my opinion. I'd really prefer to work up from an unquestionably true lead sentence, and go into painstaking detail in the body of the article, so that the scholarship of the article is unassailable. This might be the most visible of all of our articles for some time to come, and I think it requires a very high degree of diligence and meticulous attention to the precise origin of anything in the article. User:Pedant (talk) 04:22, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
We're not citing them as a primary source; they're not a primary source at all they're a tertiary source. You seem to be under the incorrect impression that the sources we cite need to cite their sources in return this is incorrect; they need only be reliable sources. Indeed, the Encarta article has, as its lead September 11 Attacks, coordinated terrorist strike on the United States in 2001 that killed about 3,000 people and shook the nation to its core. It then follows with The 19 men who carried out the hijackings [...] were affiliated with the al-Qaeda. This doesn't resemble your edit at all; it is, in fact, exactly what our lead says. --Haemo (talk) 04:29, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Also, I would point out that this article is protected not because it is "bad" that is not a reason to protect things but because there was an edit war. --Haemo (talk) 03:25, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Edit wars are caused by people allowing their beliefs to influence their editing, one reason I recommend that people don't edit articles that they feel strongly about. I do understand that it's not as simple as I made it out to be. But consider the effect it would have on an edit war if everyone worked toward editing, rather than focus on being right. What is right is only what our policy demands we do, and what is wrong is anything against policy. And if we don't like the policy, the place to work that out is on the talk pages for the policy in question and not in the discussion about an article... as you pointed out Haemo,
"sniping is making a speedy resolution more difficult".
Let's just get to work. Really, line by line, step by step, forward progress, collaboration, teamwork. I have an enormous faith in our ability to resolve this if we just actually work toward it. User:Pedant (talk) 03:55, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Not sure what the brouhaha is all about here, BQZip01 provided a couple of refs above that say everything that needs to be said. RxS (talk) 04:02, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Pedant, yes, "edit wars are caused by people allowing their beliefs to influence their editing"...so if you can put aside your beliefs, then maybe there is hope we can get this article back to featured level. However, so far, none of your suggestions are worth taking seriously.--MONGO 04:04, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Well MONGO, since we are talking about beliefs, I believe I have had several unproductive encounters with you before. I encourage everyone to check that link and see my funny beliefs... beliefs that I keep on my user page, and try to avoid allowing my beliefs to interfere with my work. If you have a problem with my edits in the article namespace, those would be more relevant to your attempt to discredit me. As I recall, MONGO and I don't work as well together as I would consider desirable, but that shouldn't prevent us from trying. Am I remembering correctly that at one point you (MONGO) claimed to be working for the Federal Government and editing Wikipedia as part of your job? At any rate, maybe we can work alongside each other without being provocative or confrontational? On my part I hope you will understand that I will pretty much be ignoring you unless your comments are of substance. Don't take offense if I don't respond to your jabs, but only to productive discourse. User:Pedant (talk) 04:36, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
You brought up what we editors do outside of this article, and now you are crying fowl? I still claim you are a troll. --Tarage (talk) 05:52, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
I brought up what? What do you mean? I am crying fowl? (Do birds even have that ability?) What are you talking about? I won't tolerate your incivility. I'm not a troll. If I were a troll, conventional wisdom holds that you shouldn't 'feed me'. Your comment has nothing to do with the article and is nothing at all except a personal attack. I suggest you desist. Can we get back to the article? 9/11? Horrific loss of life? Caused a major military engagement? 8000 plus Americans and unknown number of others dead? Ring a bell? User:Pedant (talk) 06:19, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Fine. Lets then get back to the reason why you are ignoring the RS being provided to you. --Tarage (talk) 06:43, 31 March 2008 (UTC)


(deindent)

Wow! What a lengthy discussion on one sentence... Let me repeat it for clarity:

I have discussed the following change, and am suggesting that

"The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States."

be changed to:

The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of violent destructive events in the Northeastern United States, which, by their similar nature and timing, have been presumed to be intentional and coordinated attacks.

which is the same statement with the unreferenced "facts" removed. I have unsuccessfully attempted to obtain references for the following:

  • suicide attacks
  • by al Qaeda
  • upon the United States

Pedant, I agree with your analysis that we cannot take for certain they were either suicide attacks, or by Al Qaida. They were however nodoubt "intentional" and "coordinated" - by whomever. Also, hitting both the Pentagon and the WTC, assuming America was the target seems undisputed as well, to me.

I therefore have new proposal:

The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11) were a series of coordinated destructive attacks in the Northeastern United States involving four hijacked airline planes.

Any suggestions? I feel that editors which want to preserve the "suicide" and "Al Qaida" claims should give references, not the editors who want it out. Also, by WP:NPOV, mentioning Al Qaida as the culprite would require to also mention the SigMinView that Al Qaida was used or even uninvolved.

  Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 12:45, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

The sentence is fine the way it is. There's plenty of RS that show Al Qaida as the responsible party and as suicide attacks .
This suggestion is without merit, and to avoid wasting any more time on this I'd like to close this as well. Any objections? RxS (talk) 15:20, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Check the voice Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to see how a neutral page must be written: the page says:
  • is a prisoner in U.S. custody for alleged acts of terrorism, including mass murder of civilians
  • According to the 9/11 Commission Report he was "the principal architect of the 9/11 attacks".
  • He is also thought to have had, or has confessed to, a role in many of the most significant terrorist plots over the last twenty years, including the World Trade Center 1993 bombings,
it doesn't say
  • he planned the 9/11 attacks
Now can we try to make neutral also the introduction of this article?--Pokipsy76 (talk) 16:25, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Except that:
Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden appeared in a new message aired on an Arabic TV station Friday night, for the first time claiming direct responsibility for the 2001 attacks against the United States.
"Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the brains behind the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, was surprised by the scale of destruction wrought by the tragedy"
"I was responsible for the 9/11 operation, from A to Z,",
"Bin Laden claims responsibility for 9/11"
So yeah, we're good. RxS (talk) 16:35, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
I don't understand how this reply could be tought to have any meaningful relation to my bjection above, can you explain?--Pokipsy76 (talk) 17:18, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
You said: it doesn't say he planned the 9/11 attacks
I gave a reliable source that quoted him as saying "I was responsible for the 9/11 operation, from A to Z"
If you don't get it then that's kind of your problem. RxS (talk) 17:37, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Well you just completely misread my comment. What I wrote is "Check the voice Khalid Sheikh Mohammed to see how a neutral page must be written": the neutral way is to not give facts for granted and attribute them to the relevant people who claim them.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 18:30, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

☒N Edit declined. There is no consensus for making the proposed change. Sandstein (talk) 18:23, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

arbitrary subsection to make editing easier for all (Proposed edit)

I agree with Sandstein that there is no consensus. Sadly, I do not see any chance of consensus on any najor change. I commend Haemo for proposing to unprotect the article. Unprotecting it, however, will not enable consensus either. We should get to terms with each other regarding several aspects of policy. I tried naming some proposed principles on the arbcom page here. Hope we manage to get out of this misery, somehow....   Xiutwel ♫☺♥♪ (speech has the power to bind the absolute) 21:38, 31 March 2008 (UTC)

The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


The United Nations Resolution

The United Nations Resolution

[This] has been offered to me as a source for "the attacks were attacks upon the United States" but it does not say that. The title of the abstract of the resolution is " SECURITY COUNCIL CONDEMNS, ‘IN STRONGEST TERMS’, TERRORIST ATTACKS ON UNITED STATES", but the actual text of the resolution doesn't make it as cut-and-dried as the title would seem to imply. Within the resolution we have:

  • ""horrifying terrorist attacks" in New York, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania"
  • "any act of international terrorism was a threat to international peace and security
  • "Many agreed that the whole world, and not just one country, had been plunged into an unprecedented time of peril, fear and uncertainty."
  • "an assault not just on the United States, but on all who supported peace and democracy"
  • "such acts, like any act of international terrorism, as a threat to international peace and security"
  • "The United States, the host country, and New York, the host city, had been subjected to a terrorist attack which had horrified all."
  • "A terrorist attack on one country was an attack on humanity as a whole."
  • "Yesterday’s act was a global issue, an attack on modern civilization "
  • "targeting the United States was also aimed at democracy and the free world"
  • "That crime had been primarily directed against civilians, but was a direct challenge to the entire civilized world."
  • "The attack was an affront to humanity"
  • "the attack yesterday was a barbaric and evil one that had been committed against innocent people. It was also an attack against all humanity"
  • "Yesterday’s attacks, which stunned the world, took place in the United States, but represented an open challenge to the international community as a whole."
  • "Yesterday's attacks were not only directed against the United States but at freedom and democracy as well. "
  • "It was an attack against all of us"
  • "the attacks yesterday were not only against the United States, but against the entire community of civilized people"
  • "In the face of what constituted an attack upon all mankind and against the values and principles embodied in the United Nations Charter,"
  • "It had been an assault not just on the United States, but on all who supported peace and democracy and the values for which the United Nations stood."
...so it seems to me that if we are using the UN Resolution as a source, we need something other than to flatly state that the attacks were "upon the US". comments? User:Pedant (talk) 06:11, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
This is rediculous. Are you still trying to claim you need more sources that say the attack was against the US? I'd ask you who, if not the US, the attacks were directed against, but I have a feeling that would be an open invitation for soapboxing. --Tarage (talk) 06:45, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
The UN is just taking for granted what the US Goverment and investigators said. The only relevant source which could legitimately say what was the porpose of the attack is the terrorist organization who was behind them. So we should say that *according to the alleged perpetrators* the attack was against the US.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 09:47, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
It clearly states, several times, that the attacks were on the United States. It qualifies this by providing more context and clarity your reading that it does not is, frankly, bizarre. No source is ever just going to say "on the United States" without going into detail. When I say, "this is an attack on not just me, but on all people of my kind", I am not implying that this is not an attack on me. --Haemo (talk) 07:05, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
I agree with Haemo. The source repeatedly says that the attacks were upon the United States. It also contains statements of solidarity by "all who supported peace and democracy", which should not be misinterpreted as claims that they were also attacked. Funny that when Bin Laden recorded his well-publicised video discussing this, he did not claim to be attacking peace and democracy, but the US. Sheffield Steeltalkstalk 13:33, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Obviously to say that the porpose of an attack is X you cannot cite the UN: you need the claim of the terrorists who are thought to be the resposible. Even when you have it you can just talk of the "alleged" porpose of the attack.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 16:33, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Who's talking about purpose?? The sentence reads "a series of coordinated suicide attacks by al-Qaeda upon the United States." It's a statement of the events of that day, not of intent or purpose. Can I close this now?RxS (talk) 16:51, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
To say "upon the US" is to say what is the intended target i.e. the porpose of the attack.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 17:21, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
So you're saying that the U.S. might not have been the target? Of course we have them saying that it was the intended target. RxS (talk) 17:40, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Exactly: this is why we should specify that it is what this people say, not what wikipedia say.--Pokipsy76 (talk) 18:32, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
What are you talking about? We have both a senior member of al-Qaeda and bin Laden saying the US was the target. RxS (talk) 18:42, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Yes, indeed I don't see what's the problem if we attribute the claim to them?--Pokipsy76 (talk) 18:46, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Yes it does, there's no point in carrying this on, anyone mind if I close this section? RxS (talk) 14:36, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
That's fine by me. This is a classic example of WP:IDIDNTHEARTHAT, and no good can come of it. ~ S0CO(talk|contribs) 16:37, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
Yes, close it. This is ridiculous. Okiefromokla questions? 18:20, 31 March 2008 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

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