I put this already on that talk page, but am putting it here as you were the one who left comments there. If there was no consensus this article needs to be moved back to Nidhogg -- It had no consensus to be moved then either, and it was only through an editor moving it against consensus and then mucking with the redirect to prevent it from being moved back that necessitated a vote on the move request to begin with. He should have put in a move request tomove it here, but did not, therefore it should not stay here. The whole concept of needing a consensus to do something is completely turned on its head when someone does it without consensus and then demands consensus to undo it. The editor in question simply gamed the system and gets what he wants without consensus, going against the longstanding placement of the article at Nidhoogg -- this is fundamentally an abuse of the way things are supposed to work. Please move it back until such time as there is concensus to overrule the Use English rule, which will hopefully be never. DreamGuy04:29, 4 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I'm sorry, but no. My reasons for leaving the page at its current location and requesting that discussion take place instead of any moves remain valid regardless of where the article originally was or whether procedure was properly followed. Any other admin is free to override my decision, though I would be surprised if they disagreed.
That it had no consensus to be moved originally may very well be right. Wikipedia does not require consensus for many if not most things that can be done; this is not "turning things on their head" but business as usual. However, what the vote clearly established is that there is no consensus for any title; this is irrespective of exactly what moves and move requests were and were not properly handled to get the article there.
Much like The Wrong Version, it appears there is such a thing as The Wrong Title. In either case, consensus should be reached before anything more is done, regardless of what originally triggered the discussion and what the status quo is. This is especially true in light of the fact that, apart from an independent problem with how Wikipedia handles its indexes, the title is of little to no consequence to our readers. There is no problem with neutrality and redirects are in place.
If you have a particular problem with the way the editor who moved it originally acted, you should take it up on an RFC. The title of the page is not what should determine who is wrong and who is right in this. JRM · Talk05:47, 4 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Just wanted to drop you a note to say thanks for supporting me in my recent RFA. Now that I have admin access, I fully plan to become drunk with power, indulging in my merest whim, and lording it over the...
...but perhaps I've said too much.
In all seriousness, thanks for your confidence in someone you'd only known for a few days at the time of your vote. I shall endeavor to make sure that confidence is not misplaced.
[1] Do you know, I was actually quickly searching around trying to find out what happened. Sheesh! People seem to be leaving like crazy here, but that one came really out of the blue. :) Don't ever leave again. Or I'll call you a "germ." What's that smell...? Dmcdevit·t00:17, 11 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Well, sorry, but it all just was too much to handle. I honestly didn't know if I was coming back or not. Lucky for you, I reconsidered. JRM · Talk00:28, 11 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I unfortunately have to agree with your closing assessment that it contains "no suggestions or advice", but it does contain much truth, and indeed several important clues for those with the sense to notice.
I'm glad you found it useful. I was a little surprised that nobody commented on it so far, one way or the other, but it's in a fairly obscure corner of the wiki. Either that or it's too obvious to be interesting. :-) JRM · Talk22:56, 12 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
The Dihydrogen_monoxide_hoax is all about telling a one side truth about water only calling it something chemically sounding so people unthinkingly are against those bad chemically thingys. So I don't get why you single out one of those truths to point out yes it is true. So are the other items you didn't grace with a "oh, it's true" note. Will singling out that one from the others produce doubts about the veracity of the others??? I don't get why the article is better after your addition than before. WAS 4.25023:04, 13 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
No no no, you're misunderstanding the purpose of that note. I didn't single it out because it's true—I singled it out because most people, on reading it, will go "ha ha, that's funny, it's talking about peeing, of course water's harmless". In fact drinking excessive amounts of water is not harmless; this is what the note is talking about (and it's a note because this information is interesting, but not directly relevant to the topic.) JRM · Talk16:44, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
As near as I can tell, I failed at communicating. I also didn't know anyone thought "ingestion" meant peeing. In any case, I dealt with the problem with the addition of two sentences to the article. Cheers. WAS 4.25017:06, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
"Excessive ingestion may cause various unpleasant, though generally not life-threatening, effects;" The "unpleasant effects" alluded to doubtlessly include a full bladder. JRM · Talk17:08, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
"Doubtless" is inaccurate, as I not only have doubts, it in fact never occured to me that anyone would think "excessive" meant "not peeing". Drinking water WHILE peeing is not a circus stunt only performed by the amazing "I don't have to wait for a full bladder to pee man". i'm enjoying this conversation for some reason, even tho I feel I have been completly unsuccessful in communicationg! WAS 4.25017:20, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Curious, I've got the same feeling over here. :-) I'm slowly starting to have no idea what you're getting at. Drinking lots of water ("excessive ingestion") will fill up your bladder ("unpleasant, though generally not life threatening, effect") and that, we can suppose, will sooner or later make you pee (this ultimate consequence is itself not mentioned). I suppose we can agree on these basic facts of biology? I don't know why focusing on what "excessive" and "ingestion" mean is relevant; the meaning of the sentence as a whole is, and it seems pretty obvious to me. JRM · Talk17:30, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
*sigh* You're quite right. You want to explain this fine distinction to the creators of the hoax? Drinking lots of water will fill up your bladder faster than usual. Assuming a person pees only when their bladder is telling them to, it is reasonable if slightly inaccurate to claim drinking lots of water was the cause of their discomfort (it only caused it to occur sooner). Feel free to ask anyone you know if they think "drinking lots of water will make you pee" is a false or misleading statement, and more importantly, think about whether the creators of the hoax would have thought this. PS. If their is an award somewhere for weirdest talk page discussion, this one should at least get an honorable mention. JRM · Talk17:53, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I was ALWAYS under the impression the creators of "excessive (water) drinking can kill you" knew the medical facts and were not talking about a bladder. You, on the other hand seem to have just discovered this medical fact (fairly well known among those that care) and reasoned the creators did not know either hense they had to be referring to something like peeing, so you thought it useful to add what to you was an "unkown" perspective that hey this REALLY does kill. We know. We've known for decades. This is not news. ALL the items are factually literally true; not just almost true. WAS 4.25018:09, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
My head hurts. Now you're shifting focus again. We were talking about what the creators of the hoax were thinking when they wrote the effects of excessive ingestion where "unpleasant" but "generally not lethal". Did they mean:
"Usually drinking water won't kill you, but we know water intoxication can kill you", or
"Drinking water, even in large quantities, is harmless; at worst you'll have to go to the bathroom some more."
I'm now going to make the case they clearly meant #2, and could not have meant #1. If they had meant #1, they would have said so. In fact, they would have exaggerated the possibility of water intoxication, because the purpose of the hoax is to make water look as bad as possible. They would indeed have said "excessive drinking can kill you", not "the effects are unpleasant but generally harmless", since this doesn't serve the hoax as well.
Of course, the only thing that can really settle this pissant debate is if we ask the creators what they meant, but it's unlikely we'll get a response any time soon. We can hold a poll to see what other people think, if you really want. (I'm kidding. We are not going to do this. We will agree to disagree if must, but we will not hold a poll.) JRM · Talk18:23, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I believe we are at the point of understanding each other. "generally won't kill you" means sometimes it will kill you. This refers to what you put in the footnote. Some phrasing refering to "Drinking water, even in large quantities, is harmless; at worst you'll have to go to the bathroom some more." undoubtedly (that word again) played some role in someone's hoax until the known medical fact you point out in the footnote was brought up by the geeks involved in this hoax (the same geek conversations happen everywhere; everyone trying to prove they know more and the other was inaccurate) so the word "generally" had to be added. I'm sure someone wanted to put in "Drinking it can kill you" but as in wikipedia, compromises get worked out and in THIS example the compromise is the word "generally". The sentence clearly indicated drinking (water) can SOMETIMES kill, so "Drinking water, even in large quantities, is harmless; at worst you'll have to go to the bathroom some more." is neither true nor what it says. .... This conversation takes the cake! WAS 4.25018:39, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
"they would have exaggerated the possibility of water intoxication" None of the items are exagerations. You thought some were, apparently. So you point this actually is factually true - not an exageration. The others aren't either. WAS 4.25018:46, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
The items are not exaggerations, but the hoax as a whole exaggerates by leaving out context. Take "water is a major component of acid rain", for example. No exaggeration in that, water is a major component, but the implication is that because acid rain is bad and water is a major component, water is bad. Pile on a few of these things and behold the DHMO hoax, which exaggerates not in the statements themselves but what it chooses to draw attention to. The "excessive drinking has unpleasant effects" falls in the same category. My theory was that had the original hoaxers thought of water intoxication, they would have stressed the possible lethal effect more, in a statement that is still not exaggerated ("excessive ingestion of water can be lethal" is not exaggeration).
Here is an example before the fact in the footnote is revealed to the hoaxers forcing the word generally to be added. "unpleasant" due to pissing/bladder ... "generally" due to th footnoted item. I guess we were mostly focused on different parts of the sentence. WAS 4.25018:58, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, we're getting somewhere. Your theory sounds plausible: originally the hoaxers really did think excessive drinking caused no worse than a trip to the bathroom, then someone pointed out that's not true, and "generally" was added. The reason they didn't go all out and state "drinking extreme amounts of water can kill you" is probably because people who are ignorant of water intoxication would have considered this false after the hoax was revealed, which would have reduced its effectiveness. JRM · Talk19:09, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
We need something to properly finish this bizarre exchange. I nominate " I encourage women to retain urine in the bladder for a quick orgasm. Here is why? The urine in the bladder will produce a hydrostatic pressure against the Epicenter (the female prostate) and cervix, where the pressure (stress!) relays a signal to your brain for production of the orgasm hormone Oxytocin that can initiate the orgasm contraction in the uterus. That is why male and female wet dream occurs in the early morning (3-5 o'clock AM) when the bladder is full and the testosterone level is at it absolute maximum of the day. Under this situation, a small disturbance in the sympathetic nerves in the urethral, bladder, prostate (men) and Epicenter/Cervix/uterus can ignite the orgasm contraction." from [2] as a comment about the assertion a full bladder is "unpleasant". HA! This was soooo weird. Cheers. WAS 4.25019:18, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
JRM, The anon vandal adding biased commentary to Islamic terrorism is not performing ordinary editing but is pushing an agenda. I consider this to be vandalism in the absense of any other edits and in conjunction with his personal attacks on myself and others. I have reverted him three times and will take no further action on the article today. He has refused all discussion and I don't expect that to change. - Tεxτurε21:03, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
He is doubtlessly pushing an agenda, and he's doubtlessly calling people names. Neither of which warrants vandalism reverting, as you well know. Let's see if we can straighten this out a little more permanently than by blocking folks. JRM · Talk21:04, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
This is why I have asked for a review by another administrator. I was not involved until he began his personal attacks but I don't feel I should be the one to block him. - Tεxτurε21:06, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
(cur) (last) 16:55, 14 December 2005 129.7.35.213 (rv censormonger racist)
I'm not a vandal and the only thing I'm interested in is the truth.
I posted information regarding sourced articles, which is relevant to the page. This racist insists on reverting it and won't give any reason on the talk page. It follows that he's just another of the nonsensical cabal like LeeHunter and ANONYM and SVEST who hold that article and keep it an apologist nightmare with no basis in reality. 129.7.35.102 (talk ·contribs)
I was trying to attempt a cleanup, to get rid of the objectionable language, but it seems obvious this Yuber character (from a bit of research on his RFAR and history) is not going to be helpful.
I'll go to the talk page if you like.
Your removal of my link to information on a planned class action suit {Criticism of Wikipedia}
(cur) (last) 16:07, 12 December 2005 JRM (Not notable; come back when you actually sue) 70.50.254.191 (talk ·contribs)
I fail to see how this is not notable. Please explain.
Literally anyone can decide to start a class action suit against Wikipedia and put it up on a webpage. Putting a link to that on Wikipedia is nothing but promotion. Like I said: when you actually sue Wikipedia the link will be of interest. Until then it's a cheap way to get (part of) Wikipedia's bandwidth. Further discussion on this belongs on the article's talk page. JRM · Talk01:04, 15 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
As a matter of fact, I was trying to integrate that into my talk page in some pleasing way as we speak. I won't need a template, though. JRM · Talk00:09, 26 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
There. I don't need "edit" or "purge" links on my page, and I don't really need a parameter for the mood part either. Those who want to go crazy with templates are welcome to do so. JRM · Talk00:16, 26 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
While we're on the topic: do you have my sandbox on your watchlist, or are you just refreshing my contribution list every five seconds? And I'm the one stalking people? Uh huh. JRM · Talk00:18, 26 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
You have access to Britannica online; I asked you to post the first paragraphs of their article on Adolf Hitler in my sandbox to compare it to what we had, and you dutifully complied. Given this, I'm willing to overlook the traumatic invasion of my personal space rather than file a case for wiki-stalking, and consider the possibility that you were unaware of doing it. Your promise not to lapse into perfidy is likewise reassuring. JRM · Talk02:56, 26 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, JRM. I apologise in advance for the unsightly title; it sounds like a command in some strange Mongolian dialect. As for the 'nt in question: maybe it's just because I'm not particularly adroit with some parts of linguistics, but I never did consider 'couldn't' as monosyllabic: to me, the second syllable, not, was just replaced with a different, uglier syllable: kud`@nt. I guess that you could argue that the American 'coulda' is just one syllable with a final explosive d... but in the case of couldn't, I always thought that the schwa split it into two syllables. I'm probably missing something, though.
As for 'couldn't've', the only time that I could stomach that was 'Catcher in the Rye.' Strangely, over here, pupils are (or were; this government has some really daft in the head when it comes to education*) taught that one cannot use double contractions, but they do not teach that 'couldn't've' is wrong, so to speak; from this comes the ungodly and now far more prevalent 'couldn't of' as a written replacement. I think that I can still, just about, say 'bah humbug.'
(*) This government's idea to education reforms is to give schools new 'marketable' names, and maybe give a bit of money to them so that they can look a little better. They believe that, thus, they will magically improve children's learning; while, at the same time, forcing most people in poor areas away from tertiary education, and, by extension, from teaching. However, if one peers into Britain's politics over the last sixty years, it has all been about putting paper towels over a stain, rather than mopping it out...Iinag00:44, 02 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm probably missing something, though. If this is your way of saying "I could be wrong so don't hold it against me if you manage to bowl me over with some incredibly advanced phonetics", don't worry. I'm not even an amateur in these matters, but an "interested outsider", which is only slightly better than "guy who repeats the things that Everybody Knows™".
The problem here is that "syllable" is by no means an unambiguous thing, so when I say "couldn't" has one syllable and you say it has two, we're probably both right according to whatever school agrees with us. Dictionaries agree with you, in fact. I'll have to backpedal here and admit that I just gave you "how it seemed to me", behind which I can put no authority. If tomorrow I'm deluged with messages from linguists that start "how dare you", I would be only mildly surprised, and that only at the fact that they've bothered to write.
What is indisputable, though, is that "couldn't" and friends serve the same purpose as "I'm", which is definitely monosyllabic: they save time. You can say "I am" every time, taking care to properly separate the words, you can say "could not" every time, but the contractions to "I'm" and "couldn't" to facilitate speech are natural processes. I don't see how you could be unmoved by "I'm" and presumably "can't", "won't", "don't" and other contractions that really save some syllables, yet be wary of "couldn't", "wouldn't" and "shouldn't" that "merely" cut out a little time. I don't suppose you'd be a fan of "count", "wount" and "shount"? :-)
I wasn't actually aware of the prevalence of "couldn't of" until you mentioned it and I googled it. That's truly sad. If people want to use double contractions in writing, at least they could, you know, write those double contractions, rather than drag in an innocent word that has a similar sound. JRM · Talk12:52, 3 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your note on my talk page. It's nice to see a summary of this ongoing problem. If you have no objections, I'll copy it to the top of my AOL archive page -- although I doubt too many people I contact actually look there. I'll try and provide the admin(s) with more information next time the autoblocker kicks in -- but I do think telling administrators about the AOL/IP problem in some fashion is a good thing. So many of the new admins I talk to don't initially understand the problem. Perhaps your summary could be distributed to the newly elevated? Thanks again. WBardwin23:16, 12 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I cannot have any objections, since all my contributions are released under the GFDL and into the public domain, so anyone can do absolutely anything with them. :-)
Your suggestion of making this part of the reading material required for new admins is a good idea, though, although even this probably won't do much. I'll see what I can do. JRM · Talk16:12, 13 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Beste allemaal
Al enige tijd is er een Nederlandstalig chapter in oprichting, te vinden op http://nl.wikimedia.org . Dit wordt de Vereniging Wikimedia Nederland (VWN). Je kunt je interesse om lid te worden van deze vereniging hier aangeven.
Deze vereniging gaat eind augustus/begin september een Wikimedia Conferentie in Nederland (WCN) houden, volgend op Wikimania in Boston, gedeeltelijk erop inspelend middels een aantal discussiegroepen. Om iets dergelijks te organiseren is imput erg gewenst. Dus als je wilt meehelpen, of als je interesse hebt om bij een dergelijk evenement aanwezig te zijn, geef dat dan aan op nl.wikimedia. Ik hoop daar snel je imput tegemoet te zien!
Met vriendelijke groet, effeietsanders15:38, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I'm a thankless volunteer translator who is now translating civility to Japanese one. Do you remember the portion you've ever edited?. I'd like to beg your explanation about the sentence This makes praise and criticism of edits all the more pronounced when it does occur. What is the This? What does the it point to in when it does occur? I'm wondering how I should translate the sentence. Help me please.--ComSpex06:49, 10 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]