Talk:LGB Alliance: Difference between revisions
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:::::::::::I agree with Amanda here. The Council of Europe has long held the UK’s institutional transphobia as being on par with that of Poland, Hungary, and Turkey. We would not uncritically trust Hungarian news sources to determine our description of gensex topics, we shouldn’t be doing so here either. [[User:Snokalok|Snokalok]] ([[User talk:Snokalok|talk]]) 12:53, 20 July 2024 (UTC) |
:::::::::::I agree with Amanda here. The Council of Europe has long held the UK’s institutional transphobia as being on par with that of Poland, Hungary, and Turkey. We would not uncritically trust Hungarian news sources to determine our description of gensex topics, we shouldn’t be doing so here either. [[User:Snokalok|Snokalok]] ([[User talk:Snokalok|talk]]) 12:53, 20 July 2024 (UTC) |
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::::::::::::I suggest if you want to [[WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] you go and open RFCs on [[WP:RSN]] to deprecate The Times, The Telegraph, The BBC, The Independent and The Guardian on GENSEX based on a single political statement criticising the then-Tory government by a Green-led subcommittee in the Council of Europe, and until you do this comes under [[WP:SOURCEGOODFAITH]], and I very much suggest both you stop waving this partisan political declaration around like it is some sort of uber trump card that lets you selectively discount [[WP:RS]]. [[User:Void if removed|Void if removed]] ([[User talk:Void if removed|talk]]) 15:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC) |
::::::::::::I suggest if you want to [[WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS]] you go and open RFCs on [[WP:RSN]] to deprecate The Times, The Telegraph, The BBC, The Independent and The Guardian on GENSEX based on a single political statement criticising the then-Tory government by a Green-led subcommittee in the Council of Europe, and until you do this comes under [[WP:SOURCEGOODFAITH]], and I very much suggest both you stop waving this partisan political declaration around like it is some sort of uber trump card that lets you selectively discount [[WP:RS]]. [[User:Void if removed|Void if removed]] ([[User talk:Void if removed|talk]]) 15:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC) |
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:::::::::::Amanda, and Snokalok, would you both stop doing this. The Council of Europe has not "long held" anything. There was once a document published and a bunch of people in an obscure committee once signed off on it. Once. I don't know why you think trotting out this CoE stuff in order to say "Anything Wikipedia says about a British organisation cannot be sourced or based on material published by a British publication because, you know, Terf Island and all that, and can only be sourced to American trans activists" is doing anything other than earning yourselfs diffs for a topic ban. Suggesting that all of British media is as unusable as Putin's Russian propaganda is on-another-planet level of wasting all our time. Please please stop this now. -- [[User:Colin|Colin]]°[[User talk:Colin|<sup>Talk</sup>]] 18:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC) |
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Is there now agreement to change the wording, as proposed in my post of 19:54, 24 June 2024 above? [[User:Sweet6970|Sweet6970]] ([[User talk:Sweet6970|talk]]) 10:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC) |
Is there now agreement to change the wording, as proposed in my post of 19:54, 24 June 2024 above? [[User:Sweet6970|Sweet6970]] ([[User talk:Sweet6970|talk]]) 10:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC) |
Revision as of 18:26, 20 July 2024
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Description of group in lede
This section is pinned and will not be automatically archived. |
Please see Talk:LGB Alliance/Archive 6#RFC on opening sentence, where adding "hate group" as a descriptor in the lead was question 2. ... The first part of the RfC found clear consensus on describing the subject as an "advocacy group" in the opening sentence as a neutral term. The second part also found clear consensus against describing the subject as a "hate group" in the opening sentence.
History, Founders, Reliability of Pink News
There is now yet another high quality source (Amelia Gentleman in The Guardian) that describes the only two founders of LGB Alliance as Kate Harris and Bev Jackson.
- "LGB Alliance was founded in October 2019 to campaign for the rights of same-sex attracted people by two veteran lesbian activists: Bev Jackson, a founder member of the Gay Liberation Front in 1970, and Kate Harris, who was previously a volunteer fundraiser for the leading gay rights organisation Stonewall. They were concerned at the implications of Stonewall’s decision to alter its definition of sexual orientation in 2015 from “same-sex attracted” to “same-gender attracted”."
This could not be any clearer. It also corroborates - yet again - the information on their about page and their history page.
Pink News, on the other hand, has published a piece listing five founders, in the exact same non-alphabetic order as they first appeared in this wiki article:
"The LGB Alliance was formed by co-founders Bev Jackson, Kate Harris, Allison Bailey, Malcolm Clark and Ann Sinnott"
This is the second time they have done so, and if they haven't just copied and pasted this information from Wikipedia at some point it is quite the coincidence. No other source anywhere listed those five names in that specific order before this article did.
I would like editors to take seriously the fact that while Pink News may be an acceptable source for events or controversies, they are not a clearly reliable source for basic factual matters about LGB Alliance, such as who founded it. They should be used with caution.
We have multiple high quality sources to indicate there were only two founders, including the org itself. We need a clean out of all the numerous old, dubious, ambiguous and disputed sources and make this whole thing drastically simpler and less WP:SYNTH. It should not take five sources to establish the founders, and the only single sources for all five in one place post-date this wiki page.
We can cite their about page and this new Guardian article to establish the only two founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson. Any citation for founders beyond Kate Harris and Bev Jackson should be based on a high quality source that directly disputes who the founders are, not simply any passing mention that could at this stage be an error (such as OpenDemocracy's description of Eileen Gallagher as a 'founding member') or even WP:CITOGENESIS. Void if removed (talk) 09:31, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- Not this again. -- Colin°Talk 09:47, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- Yes, this again. New, high quality source, stating again, unambiguously only two founders. Recent sources are much clearer on this than the older ones and should be favoured, per WP:RSAGE.
- "newer secondary and tertiary sources may have done a better job of collecting more reports from primary sources and resolving conflicts, applying modern knowledge to correctly explain things that older sources could not have, or remaining free of bias that might affect sources written while any conflicts described were still active or strongly felt"
- As the org has got more serious press it has also got more accurate press. The outliers tend to be biased sources like Pink News, who are now printing information suspiciously identical to this Wiki page. Void if removed (talk) 10:01, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- Yes, this again. New, high quality source, stating again, unambiguously only two founders. Recent sources are much clearer on this than the older ones and should be favoured, per WP:RSAGE.
- First up, this is all an absolutely massive waste of time. Second up, I don't understand the desire to extrapolate from the sources who list two founders to infer only two founders. Third up, I don't understand the obsession with the word "founders" anyway. Does it really have such a specific meaning?
- If we can keep the peace by describing them as something like "founders and initial active members" or "founders and key early members" then I'd be happy with that but I don't see any argument to remove the five names. All five are key people in this tiny organisation and all five should be named in some significant capacity.
- I fully share Colin's exasperation here. We do not have any sources saying that the other three were not founders. As far as I know, none of them has objected to being described as "founders". If they have then somebody please say as that could well be relevant but, assuming that they haven't, this is all an absolutely massive waste of time. --DanielRigal (talk) 10:22, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- We've been over this lots - at least one (Malcolm Clark) directly disputed the label "founder", multiple times, with Pink News head of news, and this was never corrected.
- Multiple high quality sources say two and only two. It is not a waste of time - the history laid out in multiple sources is that the entire org was the brainchild of two lesbians, who worked for months to organise the initial meeting to launch their own organisation. Corroborated - again - in this column from today.
- This article cannot reflect that history, because in 2021 editors synthesised a list of five names from passing mentions in multiple sources and focused on The Times letter as a possible starting point. That's understandable given the paucity of coverage at the time, but high quality secondary sources are doing a better job, which should be reflected here.
- > We do not have any sources saying that the other three were not founders.
- Yes we do. We have multiple sources saying there were precisely two founders. We have multiple sources saying those two founders invited the others to the meeting to launch their organisation. We have zero sources saying there is any controversy about who founded it. We have statements from at least one of those listed explicitly denouncing coverage that says he is a founder. Are you expecting a piece in the Guardian saying this Wiki page is wrong? OpenDemocracy called Eileen Gallagher a founder - should we add her until The Guardian publish an article saying she isn't?
- We should follow what reliable sources say and we should not combine sources to reach conclusions that aren't clearly stated in a single source because that is WP:SYNTH. Void if removed (talk) 11:12, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- The "founders and key early members" approach or similar seems the right one here. There seems to be no ambiguity that two indiviudals, and only those two, started the process, but it's also clear that other people had significant involvement in the first formal stages: roughly speaking the distinction seems to be between "founders" and "founding directors", with some media reports unhelpfuly conflating the two. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 12:42, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- I think the lede and about box should say who the founders are, as they are very clear, and the others mentioned inline in the history. Same as the trustees. Void if removed (talk) 13:03, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- Fine with me. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 13:24, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- A "founders and key early members" approach would be unverifiable bordering on original research. We have many reliable sources, see the discussions from November 2022 and February 2023 that name founders other than Jackson and Harris. We do not, to my knowledge, have sources that describe those other individuals as "key early members" or some other synonym for the same meaning. Sideswipe9th (talk) 16:25, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- I think the lede and about box should say who the founders are, as they are very clear, and the others mentioned inline in the history. Same as the trustees. Void if removed (talk) 13:03, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- The "founders and key early members" approach or similar seems the right one here. There seems to be no ambiguity that two indiviudals, and only those two, started the process, but it's also clear that other people had significant involvement in the first formal stages: roughly speaking the distinction seems to be between "founders" and "founding directors", with some media reports unhelpfuly conflating the two. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 12:42, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- This has been discussed to death. The points you are making Void are no different to the points that you made in November 2022, and February 2023 that other editors did not find convincing. Would you please just drop this stick?
The outliers tend to be biased sources like Pink News
While The Times certainly has a bias in this area, it is a different bias to that of PinkNews and they are still considered by many to be a high quality source. Yet, in January 2023 they quite clearly saidClark, a co-founder of the LGB Alliance, a national advocacy group
. Sinnott appears to have been out of the news cycle for a while now, with the most recent article even mentioning her being over a year old. As for Bailey, CTV News in January 2023 saidAlliance co-founder Allison Bailey sued the LGBTQ+ charity Stonewall
. Sideswipe9th (talk) 16:22, 7 July 2023 (UTC)- Again, all of that is irrelevant because you are combining multiple sources to reach a combined conclusion not supported by any single one of them, which is WP:SYNTH.
- This comes up again, because - once again - we have an unambiguous, high quality source saying there are two founders. Not mentioning someone in passing in some Canadian article that isn't even about LGB Alliance at all, but actually saying very explicitly this is who founded the organisation, when and why. This is very different. This is a good secondary source for the founding of the organisation.
- If this were a new article, with none of the baggage of the synthesis that took place here in 2021, we would take their about page, and this latest article, and that would be it. It is obvious that titles have been misreported over the years, and the longer this is maintained here, the more WP:CITOGENESIS there will be.
- At this point you have to ask: what standard of evidence would it take? This is a serious question. It is unrealistic to expect all the past errors to be corrected - although some have - and that's why we should defer to WP:RSAGE. Void if removed (talk) 18:40, 7 July 2023 (UTC)
- Ok, firstly this cannot be a case of citogenesis. This article was created on 15 January 2021, however we have reliable sources predating the creation of the article that mention founders other than Jackson and Harris (The Times, October 2019, PinkNews, January 2020, The Times, January 2020, The Guardian, February 2020). So that argument straight up doesn't hold water.
we have an unambiguous, high quality source saying there are two founders
You are repeating the same arguments you made in November 2022 and February 2023. Those arguments were not found convincing by other editors present.If this were a new article, with none of the baggage of the synthesis that took place here in 2021, we would take their about page, and this latest article, and that would be it.
No. If this were a new article, we would report only what independent, reliable sources with a reputation for fact checking and corrections state about the organisation. In this case, those sources state that there were founders other than Jackson and Harris. They stated there were other founders prior to the creation of this article (see my list earlier in this reply), and newly published articles by the same sources continue to do so (see the lists when we discussed this previously, along with those from my last reply). Sideswipe9th (talk) 22:25, 7 July 2023 (UTC)- You have no HQ sources that list all five as founders, so you're still engaging in WP:SYNTH, and dragging up old, questionable sources (and aware of the issues with those four so no point hashing it out again) is exactly why WP:RSAGE exists, else ancient mistakes like this will live forever. A high quality recent secondary source should override editors interpretation of conflicting older sources.
- Every time a new high quality source comes out that so clearly states when and by whom the organisation was founded, this article looks more and more wrong and the risk of WP:CITOGENESIS increases (and I argue is already happening in the case of Pink News, which says something about their fact-checking on this subject).
- I'm not going to continue to argue the same points, but it is absolutely right that new sources like this receive consideration. Void if removed (talk) 09:12, 8 July 2023 (UTC)
- Companies House lists Malcolm Clark as a director from the same date as Bev Jackson. Likewise Anne Marie Sinnott and Katherine Rosemary Harris: https://find-and-update.company-information.service.gov.uk/company/12338881/officers. As @DanielRigal pointed out, "the 2 founders Bev Jackson and Kate Harris" does not mean there are only the 2 of them.
- With respect, @Void if removed, @Sideswipe9th provided links that show this can't be CITOGENESIS. In the UK, effectively all major news organs provide reporting has anti-trans bias; that Pink News is one of the few that does not does not make it unreliable. I'm inclined to agree that the problem here is more of a STICK than CITOGENESIS or SYNTH. — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 09:20, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- It's the classic problem of the distinction between "founders" (who had the original idea and called the first meeting) and "founding directors" or equivalent (who has roles when the organisation first took formal shape), with media reports using the word "founders" indicriminately for both. It's pretty clear here that Bev Jackson and Kate Harris were the original founders, with the rest following immediately afterwards, but you will struggle to find reliable sources formally confirming all that in one place. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 10:51, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Having been involved in the efforts of setting up non-profits itself, I'm not sure the distinction between "people who had the original idea" and "people who added expertise and effort to bring the organisation to fruition" is all that useful. And if we struggle to find RS confirming something, then I'm not sure it's all that clear. I don't believe the distinction is important here; we have plenty of sources dating before the article saying that all of them were involved in founding the organisation; we have none saying the others were not. I'd suggest it's RS to say that Clark, Sinnott, Bailey or Gallagher were not founders. — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 11:39, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Per WP:ABOUTSELF, as I have said many times, the fact that we have Malcolm Clark explicitly saying "I'm not a founder" to Ryan John Butcher, Pink News' head of news, should be enough to cast doubt on both the claim that he is, and also Pink News factual credibility as a source, given this has never been retracted or corrected. Void if removed (talk) 12:15, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Given that being involved with a group widely seen as being transphobic is, to say the least, controversial, a person's denial that they were a founder is not the same as them not being a founder.
- Given that Companies House says he was a director of the organisation from the date of its establishment, it might be said that that such a claim were exceptional.
- A person claiming a thing that a news organisation believes not to be true an thus does not correct or retract does not cast doubt on the credibility of the news organisation. — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 16:23, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- The idea that he's in any way embarrassed is absurd. There's not one shred of evidence to support that, and years of evidence that the opposite is true. What he has actually said is:
- "I don’t run @ALLIANCELGB. Two wonderful lesbians, for whom I’m full of admiration, founded it. I’m merely on the management team which is all LGB with a lesbian majority and overseen by a group of eminent trustees. You can find out more on our website."
- And also:
- "Yes I’m a director. Didn’t say I wasn’t. Two lesbians founded the organisation months before it was incorporated. They organised the launch event. It’s a lesbian led organisation."
- He wrote an opinion piece just this past weekend stating it is "an organization (transparency alert) which I have strongly supported".
- This article puts the founding at the launch meeting on October 22nd 2019. They became a limited company a month later in November 2019, which is not "from the date of its establishment". These are different things, again, you are engaging in WP:OR, and misinterpreting primary sources.
- And, once again, the response of Pink News' Head of News to Clark's insistence that he wasn't a founder was:
- "oh, fair. noted."
- I would say the claim that he is a founder when he and the organisation and recent secondary sources all corroborate that he is not is actually the one that is WP:EXCEPTIONAL. Void if removed (talk) 09:40, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- You might be right that he's not distancing himself from it because of transphobia allegations per se. But your quotations actually demonstrate that there seem to be clear marketing reasons why he and others prefers he's not listed as a founder. So we end up at the same point namely that sources after looking at the evidence, dispute his denials of being a founder. Nil Einne (talk) 07:24, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
- No sources dispute it and not a single one anywhere says anything about his denial being false. Editors here dispute it, and that's WP:OR.
- The continual assumption of bad faith as the first and most likely explanation with no evidence is really inappropriate. Perhaps it's just true? Void if removed (talk) 07:50, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
- You might be right that he's not distancing himself from it because of transphobia allegations per se. But your quotations actually demonstrate that there seem to be clear marketing reasons why he and others prefers he's not listed as a founder. So we end up at the same point namely that sources after looking at the evidence, dispute his denials of being a founder. Nil Einne (talk) 07:24, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
- Per WP:ABOUTSELF, as I have said many times, the fact that we have Malcolm Clark explicitly saying "I'm not a founder" to Ryan John Butcher, Pink News' head of news, should be enough to cast doubt on both the claim that he is, and also Pink News factual credibility as a source, given this has never been retracted or corrected. Void if removed (talk) 12:15, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Per WP:ABOUTSELF the charity's own "about" page should be sufficient, absent a source directly calling their story into question. Void if removed (talk) 12:10, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Just to note that WP:ABOUTSELF is a "may be used" permission in a section about "Sources that are usually not reliable". It's really a "if you have absolutely nothing better, and editors still think it is important information to include, then we'll accept that as a source". Not a rule that whatever an organisation says about itself is gospel. -- Colin°Talk 09:42, 17 July 2023 (UTC)
- Having been involved in the efforts of setting up non-profits itself, I'm not sure the distinction between "people who had the original idea" and "people who added expertise and effort to bring the organisation to fruition" is all that useful. And if we struggle to find RS confirming something, then I'm not sure it's all that clear. I don't believe the distinction is important here; we have plenty of sources dating before the article saying that all of them were involved in founding the organisation; we have none saying the others were not. I'd suggest it's RS to say that Clark, Sinnott, Bailey or Gallagher were not founders. — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 11:39, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- It's the classic problem of the distinction between "founders" (who had the original idea and called the first meeting) and "founding directors" or equivalent (who has roles when the organisation first took formal shape), with media reports using the word "founders" indicriminately for both. It's pretty clear here that Bev Jackson and Kate Harris were the original founders, with the rest following immediately afterwards, but you will struggle to find reliable sources formally confirming all that in one place. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 10:51, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
Here's my summary.
- "Bev Jackson and Kate Harris" are the "Founders of LGB Alliance" according to LGB Alliance,[1] and nobody disputes they organised the first meeting in October 2019.
- The incorporation at Companies House 26 November 2019 lists four directors.[2] "Beverly Ruth Jackson, Ann Marie Sinnott, Katherine Rosemary Harris, Malcom Clark".
- The court document in the recent Mermaids appeal[3] notes "LGB Alliance is incorporated as a company limited by guarantee. Its founding members and directors are (1) Beverley Jackson; (2) Ann Sinnott; (3) Kate Harris; (4) Malcolm Clark." These are "CHRONOLOGY AND AGREED FACTS".
- In the above case Dr Belinda Bell, Chair of Trustees of Mermaids, states[4] "LGB Alliance’s views can be found in its publications, on its Twitter account, and in communications by Beverley Jackson, Ann Sinnott, Katharine Harris and Malcolm Clark (the four founding directors of LGB Alliance) as well as Allison Bailey, who has acted as a co-founder and remains one of its main public-facing figures (she is credited by LGB Alliance for having “helped us set up” [BB1/7] and gave the keynote speech at its October 2021 conference)".
- Allison Bailey, the only one to have a Wikipedia article, is described literally everywhere as a co-founder of LGB Alliance, including in our own article on her.
- The term "founder" simply means someone who helped setup an organisation, but has no distinction between "had the initial idea", "first talked about it together on the phone", "organised the first meeting", "attended the first meeting", "gave money to help set it up", "was among the initial set of directors", "was one of the very first members". As noted in previous discussions, the term "founder member" has occasionally been used as an incentive for people to make an early donation and apply for membership, that they can then brag about ever after, but that doesn't seem to have occurred here. Sources could use the word "founder", "founded", "co-founded" and "founder member" to describe the same person. There's no accepted cut-off.
- As Void themselves has already noted, there is a narrative they are keen to promote that LGB Alliance is a lesbian-led organisation founded by two lesbians. One of the founders we list is heterosexual and resigned under a cloud, which fits better in the idea that LGB Alliance is a gender-critical (feminist) / anti-trans group, than that it is a group for lesbians, gays and bisexuals. Another founder we list is a man, and last time I checked, LGB Alliance were pretty keen on the idea that "lesbians" and "women" didn't have a penis. So he doesn't fit into their narrative that this is a lesbian led/founded organisation campaigning for women's rights.
- It is entirely possible there hierarchy of foundership at play here, with some being earlier or "more important" than others. It may also simply be an ego thing, with Jackson and Harris both wanting everyone to know it was their clever idea and everyone else had a lesser role. But we don't have sources that say as such. So we just simply lack the ability to explain the disagreement in our sources between two or four or five.
- We have excellent indisputable evidence for two founders (LGB Alliance) or four founding directors (companies house, court documents, etc) and Allison Baily is reported by countless sources as a co-founder.
- We have recent sources listing all five. Pink News is claimed by Void as simply copying the Wikipedia article. We can't know but as a newspaper covering LGBT matters and critical of LGB Alliance since the beginning, I'm not convinced their journalists need to read Wikipedia to get their facts.. The other source listing five is Bell in the Mermaids appeals. I don't have to hand a convenient link about Wikipedia's attitude to court documents as sources. However, for the purpose of us hammering things out on this page, this is a statement presented to a court and presumably under oath and the claim made is not under any dispute: those four were indeed founding directors and Bailey is indeed their most prominent figures and frequently referred to as a co-founder.
- Listing all five as founders is not wrong. They all helped found LGB Alliance. That this doesn't fit with the narrative LGB Alliance want to project (lesbian-led, lesbian founded, campaigning for women's rights) isn't Wikipedia's problem. They had a heterosexual woman and a man among their founding directors and Allison Bailey told the world she was a co-founder and provided the tweets to a court to prove it. Not our problem. -- Colin°Talk 16:24, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- Good summary. I'd also add that any falling out between the initial key players is not our problem unless Reliable Sources write about it in a non-trivial way. It is not for us to help them to de-emphasise people who they no longer wish to be associated with. So long as we are sure that the word "founder" lacks any precise legal meaning in the way that, say, "director" does, I'm more than happy that this is the correct approach. --DanielRigal (talk) 20:51, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- I agree with Colin and Daniel here. -sche (talk) 21:35, 9 July 2023 (UTC)
- I agree that 'founder' doesn't have a precise meaning and given the full facts, these people can all legitimately be referred to as 'founders' or 'founding directors', 'founding members' or whatever each one's role was. But why is this list in the second sentence of the lead? Only one of them (Bailey) has a linked article, so the general reader learns nothing from the naming. Those 'in the know' may know about each one's sexual orientation, but that isn't a very good reason for listing the names in the lead para IMO. Pincrete (talk) 05:00, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- I'm not fussed about where it appears in the lead. Bailey has an article because of their court case, and no other reason. They aren't notable for anything else. Jackson apparently co-founded UK's Gay Liberation Front in 1970. Harris was a volunteer fundraiser for Stonewall, from which this group split. Clark is a TV producer. Sinnott was a Labour councillor who quit her job because trans women were allowed to use female toilets.[5] We don't restrict our articles to mentioning only other people if they have articles on Wikipedia. As a young organisation that has "yet to get around to" doing much, being founded is pretty much the highlight of their achievements. -- Colin°Talk 07:57, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- What I should have said is that as most of the 5 founders are not notable, there really is no good reason to name them ANYWHERE in the lead. Doing so in the body would give the opportunity to clarify exact roles. Incidentally, if Jackson really was a significant part of the founding of the UK GLF, that actually makes her a very big fish, even if in a relatively small pond. UK GLF was an extremely 'in your face" campaigning group and probably the first of its kind in the UK, openly and unapologetically campaigning for LGB people. But notability isn't inherited and sources cover these historical connections fairly scantily in relation to LGBA.
- However, it really isn't very rational to paint these 5 as near-nobodies, in an near-insignificant org, but simultaneously insist on listing them in the lead. What useful info does naming them convey to the reader? Pincrete (talk) 10:38, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- Bev Jackson was not only a founding member of GLF, she was also the spokesperson at the first ever gay rights demo in the UK, in November 1970.
- The October 22nd launch of LGBA was - according to Bev Jackson's witness statement - precisely because of the cancellation of a GLF event at the LSE:
- "I had been invited to join the panel of a public-facing event at the London School of Economics on 22 October 2019 to mark the 49th anniversary of the formation of the UK Gay Liberation Front. This event was cancelled in July 2019 immediately following an email I sent to the moderator outlining my views on the problematic composition of the panel. My email is at [Exhibit BJ13]."
- "Kate Harris and I then decided to hold an event nearby LSE on the same date, which would focus on our concerns about the direction taken by the LGB rights movement. This became the meeting at which LGB Alliance was formed."
- Void if removed (talk) 10:51, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- I'm not fussed about where it appears in the lead. Bailey has an article because of their court case, and no other reason. They aren't notable for anything else. Jackson apparently co-founded UK's Gay Liberation Front in 1970. Harris was a volunteer fundraiser for Stonewall, from which this group split. Clark is a TV producer. Sinnott was a Labour councillor who quit her job because trans women were allowed to use female toilets.[5] We don't restrict our articles to mentioning only other people if they have articles on Wikipedia. As a young organisation that has "yet to get around to" doing much, being founded is pretty much the highlight of their achievements. -- Colin°Talk 07:57, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- I agree that 'founder' doesn't have a precise meaning and given the full facts, these people can all legitimately be referred to as 'founders' or 'founding directors', 'founding members' or whatever each one's role was. But why is this list in the second sentence of the lead? Only one of them (Bailey) has a linked article, so the general reader learns nothing from the naming. Those 'in the know' may know about each one's sexual orientation, but that isn't a very good reason for listing the names in the lead para IMO. Pincrete (talk) 05:00, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- Thank you, Colin; that's a very helpful and clear summary — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 06:40, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- "We have recent sources listing all five."
- The five are listed non-alphabetically and there is a less than 1% chance of producing them in that precise order by chance. Pink News and GPAHE however have both listed them in exactly this order, after they first appeared here. Nowhere lists those five as "founders" in any different order. Pink News also describes their founding as starting with the letter to The Times, as this article does (and not how they describe their own founding), and I pointed out in the archive how swathes of the GPAHE report seemed plagiarised from this wiki page. Put those together with the high odds against getting those names in that order and this all looks like quite blatant WP:CITOGENESIS.
- Also, aside but why doesn't this fall under WP:BLPGROUP? Void if removed (talk) 08:59, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- "presumably under oath and the claim made is not under any dispute"
- No, the tribunal was not under oath. Also, Bell's statements here were not part of the agreed facts. This is a wholly inappropriate primary source - a submission by someone actively attempting to shut down the organisation making unevidenced statements about how a person "acted" as co-founder, that wasn't even agreed by both parties? I urge you to reconsider suggesting this is in any way a viable source for a factual claim it doesn't even make (speculating from the outside whether someone was "acting as" something is not the same as being it).
- Especially since I gave Bev Jackson's witness statement here about a year ago to demonstrate that she and Kate Harris were the co-founders, and was rebuffed as it was an inappropriate source.
- But if we're talking about witness submissions, Bailey's evidence in her case against Stonewall/GCC was only that she attended the meeting, tweeted about it on the way home, and joined the steering group on October 23rd:
- "I met Kate Harris at a get-together in a Covent Garden flat. Later she would invite me to the launch of LGB Alliance. I met Bev Jackson for the first time at that launch on 22 October 2019"
- "I was not involved in setting up or preparing for the 22 October meeting."
- "I got the bus home from the meeting. While I was sitting on the bus, I sent out the tweet of 22 October 2019 (Bundle Page 2129). There was no prior plan for me to do so, and nobody knew or asked me to do it. It was spur of the moment that reflected my relief that something concrete was being done to challenge Stonewall and gender identity politics that had taken over lesbian and gay rights. In fact, I found out later that there had been a plan (or at least, the recognition of a need for a plan), which I was not aware of, to set up and announce the formation of LGB Alliance in a more formal and structured way. By sending that tweet I effectively launched LGB Alliance prematurely and by accident. From 23 October 2019, I worked with Kate, Bev, Malcolm Clarke and Ann Sinnott on the Steering Group, and continued to do so for the first 7 months of LGB Alliance’s existence."
- "During 2020, I decided to step back from LGB Alliance. I was very sad to do so. I am still a staunch supporter of theirs. I was delighted that they asked me to give the Key Note speech at their conference in November 2021."
- Bailey's own press release states "founding member". You say Allison Bailey "Allison Bailey told the world she was a co-founder and provided the tweets to a court to prove it", but I don't see that anywhere. In fact she said, on November 9th, 2019
- "On Tuesday 22nd October 2019, at Conway Hall, London; an historic institution committed to placing logic, reason & evidence before dogma & enforced thinking, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson, founded & announced the birth of the LGB Alliance. Hats off to you both, and thank you."
- It is obvious that Kate Harris and Bev Jackson worked together for several months to found LGB Alliance, organising the October 22nd meeting and inviting all the attendees and speakers, after which the other three joined to form an initial steering group, four of them going on to become directors of a ltd company a month later.
- Continually conflating early directorship, joining the steering group, a founding member and founder is inappropriate, and the amount of effort being poured into selectively highlighting primary sources to justify this WP:SYNTH over the clear objections of the named individuals, the org itself, and recent high-quality secondary sources is puzzling. Void if removed (talk) 10:35, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
"I am suing Stonewall Equality Limited to stop them policing free speech.
I am a barrister and I helped to set up a new organisation for lesbian, gay and bisexual people, the LGB Alliance, to provide an alternative to Stonewall. In retaliation, Stonewall had me investigated by my chambers, in an attempt to cost me my livelihood.
"The need for a new lesbian, gay and bisexual organisation: the birth of the LGB Alliance
In 2019, I helped to set up the LGB Alliance with other campaigners and activists who felt, like me, that organisations such as Stonewall had...
Then in October 2019, she was involved in setting up the Lesbian Gay Alliance to resist transwomen self-identifying as women."
Launch of LGB Alliance and Resulting Twitter Storm
On 22 October 2019 (tweet 3) the claimant sent the “launch tweet” that led to an avalanche of tweets in response, and to the Garden Court actions complained of as detriment. Commenting on the launch of LGB Alliance in London she said:
“this is an historic moment for the lesbian, gay and bisexual movements. The LGB Alliance launched in London tonight, and we mean business. Spread the word, gender extremism is about to meet its match”.
The claimant’s launch tweet generated a strong reaction on Twitter, some of which was specifically directed at Garden Court
The claimant has argued that her reference to “what we have endured getting LGB Alliance off the ground” included by implication Garden Court’s action against her.
Then in October 2019 the Claimant launched (with others) an organisation known as the LGB Alliance to campaign for LGB rights without the gender theory espoused by Stonewall, and made various tweets in connection with that launch.
There is also evidence that some members of Chambers, and some employees, were concerned about the Claimant’s launch of the LGB Alliance in October 2019, and the tweets that the Claimant sent around that time
"In 2019, Ms Bailey founded the LGB Alliance, a charity which argues ..."
"Allison Bailey, a barrister and founder of the LGB Alliance campaign group, brought a discrimination claim against Garden Court Chambers, where she worked"
"The decision, on Wednesday, that LGB Alliance founder and barrister Allison Bailey had suffered..."
"Ms Bailey founded the LGB Alliance group in 2019, which argues that..."
Such was Bailey’s disenchantment, she helped set up the LGB alliance which advocated for the rights of lesbians, gay men and bisexuals.
Bailey, a criminal law barrister, founded the LGB Alliance in 2019. The group argues that there is...
Allison Bailey, works as a criminal defence barrister at Garden Court Chambers in London. She is a founder of the charity and pressure group LGB Alliance and holds gender critical beliefs.
[Ms Bailey] founded the LGB Alliance group,
inaugural meeting of the LGB Alliance last week...I was at the meeting, ...Allison Bailey, a criminal defence barrister, who had sat just in front of me. Her apparent crime? To tweet:
“This is an historic moment for the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual movement. *LGB Alliance* launched in London tonight, and we mean business. Spread the word, gender extremism is about to meet its match.”
I could keep going. So we have Companies House and accepted court documents saying there are four founding directors. We have Bailey's own laywers in court saying that not only did Bailey help set up LGB Alliance but it was Bailey herself who launched it with their tweet. And Bailey's own fundraising page says she helped setup LGB Alliance. So you are telling me that Bell, in their court documents, deliberately lied about "Beverley Jackson, Ann Sinnott, Katharine Harris and Malcolm Clark" being founding directors and deliberately lied that "Allison Bailey, who has acted as a co-founder", because she's from Mermaids and so incapable of telling anything truthful about LGB Alliance in a court of law? The world and his dog says you are wrong and Bell is absolutely correct, Void. Please drop the stick. -- Colin°Talk 11:12, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- What you said was: "Allison Bailey told the world she was a co-founder and provided the tweets to a court to prove it".
- I note in this response you haven't provided evidence of Allison Bailey telling the world she was a co-founder.
- And don't say I'm accusing people of lying when I am not please. Void if removed (talk) 14:00, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- Ok, if they weren't lying, why did they write something you insist isn't true, to a court of law. You say she is "someone actively attempting to shut down the organisation making unevidenced statements" but in real life people don't put little [1] citations after everything they say. If I say Rishi Sunak is prime minister of the UK, you don't argue I'm making an unevidenced statement. What possible motivation would she have for getting those facts wrong? LGB Alliance agreed and accepted the court documents that listed the four "founders and directors". LGB Alliance on their own website says "She helped us set up LGB Alliance and publicised our launch with a tweet on 22 October 2019." Why are you trying to discredit Bell who is stating accurate and widely accepted facts, in a court. I'll tell you why, because you have run out of argument and are just randomly picking up something to fling.
- Only you seem to be stuck on the difference between "helped to setup" and "founded". A person who single-handedly launched it to the internet on Twitter after attending its inaugural meeting. Those are the tweets in the court. She got into problems with her employer for launching LGB Alliance. It doesn't get much more "foundery" than that. But really, Void, if LGBA's best mate Julie Bindel says Bailey founded the LGB Alliance, and the entire cross spectrum of the UK press says she founded the LGB alliance, why does do you keep making repeated requests that this widely accepted fact be removed from the article? -- Colin°Talk 15:58, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
- Since we know the distinct roles filled by each of these individuals, (and possibly others) why don't we record them? Simply lumping everyone into a list isn't very informative. On one level, the organisers of the initial meeting are clearly the key founders, on other levels everyone attending that meeting and voicing support is a founder - or founding member. Other names quickly became attached. Some people adopted legal roles following the meeting - usually an indication of legal and reputational 'standing' and experience, rather than their centrality. Bailey appears to have (informally and seemingly not wholly intentionally) 'launched' LGBA. What is the advantage of treating these people as "equal" founders? And why are they listed in the lead with no info attached to their names. We might as well be recording who answered the phone at the beginning in terms of info imparted IMO. Pincrete (talk) 08:33, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- While some of this information helps us discuss it on the talk page, we need to go with how sources describe the individuals, rather than extrapolate from who attended which meetings. All five of these people have at times been described by reliable sources as LGB Alliance founders or as someone who founded LGB Alliance. I don't think Void would accept your suggestion that everyone who was at the inaugural meeting is a founder or founder member. For example, Debbie Hayton above, describes being at the meeting, and I don't think anyone has suggested they founded LGB Alliance. One could attend out of interest but not be involved. Founder is a suitably encompassing term that includes anyone involved in setting up an organisation, and it is also a term used by our sources. We don't have sources that speak of two as "key founders" and at the same time speaking of the others as some kind of lesser founders, and we really do need such in order for us to state this distinction. I accept it isn't an ideal situation and there does appear to be that kind of distinction, but it simply isn't one that any source has described. I don't accept that our list "isn't informative". These people founded, setup, LGB Alliance, and they are important people in either its history or continue to be important to the organisation. Colin°Talk 09:30, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- I am absolutely fine with the other three being referred to in the body as founder members or early team members, or (in the case of Clark and Sinnott) the directors when it became a ltd company. None of those are disputed and can all be sourced. That is the approach I have advocated since I first foolishly raised this, thinking it would be a trivial change, many months ago.
- I merely maintain there is a distinction between founder (the two who instigated the org), and those who joined at the point of founding. The first two should be mentioned in the lede and the about box, the others described in the "history", along with all the current cruft that is attached to them.
- We don't have sources that speak of two as "key founders" and at the same time speaking of the others as some kind of lesser founders, and we really do need such in order for us to state this distinction
- So having synthesized a list of five from multiple separate sources, that cannot be undone except by a new source naming all five in one place, and stating three of them aren't founders? This is an unreasonable standard of evidence. We have never had any sources that speak of all five together in any capacity except the ones that are now 99% likely to have been copied from here. But we have a couple that name four in distinct fashion:
- Debbie Hayton in the Spectator:
- "Its founders Bev Jackson and Kate Harris were veteran lesbian campaigners. They were joined by filmmaker Malcolm Clark and barrister Allison Bailey"
- LGB Alliance - Who What Why When
- "LGB Alliance was founded at Conway Hall on 22 October 2019 by two lesbians -- Kate Harris and Bev Jackson."
- "But Kate and Bev – and the rapidly-assembled little team including Allison Bailey and Malcolm Clark" Void if removed (talk) 14:19, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- Just to be clear, it is not WP:SYNTH that we are doing. Synthesis is about a source for fact A and a source for fact B and concluding fact C without a source linking that conclusion. We have a source that A and B are an X and we have a source that C is an X and we can say A, B and C are all X's. It is actually synthesis that Void is doing. Because they are taking a source that says A and B are an X and concluding, without a source that says so, that C is not an X. And further more, doing so in the face of multiple sources that say C is an X. -- Colin°Talk 15:03, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- You can't just add these together like that, "founder" is not an adjective disconnected from surrounding events.
- It isn't like source A saying X is a company's director, and source B saying Y is a director, therefore X and Y are both directors. A straightforward job title like "director" doesn't relate to mutually exclusive claims about a particular event in time.
- "Founder" relates specifically to a single historical fact: who founded LGB Alliance? You are answering that question by combining multiple sources.
- Source A says only X and Y founded LGB Alliance.
- Source B implies Z founded LGB Alliance by calling them "founder", but without actually saying "X, Y and Z together founded LGB Alliance".
- Combining sources B and A to decide for yourself that "X, Y and Z together founded LGB Alliance", when no single source made that claim, is WP:SYNTH. Void if removed (talk) 09:57, 12 July 2023 (UTC)
- Just to be clear, it is not WP:SYNTH that we are doing. Synthesis is about a source for fact A and a source for fact B and concluding fact C without a source linking that conclusion. We have a source that A and B are an X and we have a source that C is an X and we can say A, B and C are all X's. It is actually synthesis that Void is doing. Because they are taking a source that says A and B are an X and concluding, without a source that says so, that C is not an X. And further more, doing so in the face of multiple sources that say C is an X. -- Colin°Talk 15:03, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- I was making the point that 'founder/founding member' etc are not precise terms. Since you outlined each person's role in order to justify inclusion as 'founders', why not simply include each person's role as outlined. Two women organised an initial meeting, other people came on board as directors, Bailey became involved and released a tweet that. This is more informative than a generic undifferentiated list, which is at least partially contradicted by more recent sources. Pincrete (talk) 15:43, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- There are no sources that "contradict" what we wrote. No source says Bailey wasn't a founder. No source says those four were not founding directors. No source, in fact, says there is any dispute over who should count as a founder. We don't really have good sources that go into the specifics of who did what. Most of that detail is coming from Twitter and what people said in court, etc. We've mentioned here as they are informative to our discussion, but they don't really have use as article sources. If all these extremely high quality sources say Bailey was a founder, who are we to say she is not, and just someone who got pre-emptively over excited on Twitter. -- Colin°Talk 18:48, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- To expect a source to explicitly say all the people who weren't founders is comical. When good, recent, neutral sources (such as the Gdn), consistently refer to the same two people, as having 'started the ball rolling' it effectively contradicts the broader list of 'founders'. No one has questioned that
those four were not founding directors
, it is reliably sourced that this was their role. So why should the article not say so, rather than the generic 'founder'? Bailey's role is similarly documented. What -of any value to the reader- is being defended by insisting on an amorphous blob 'list'? Pincrete (talk) 05:41, 12 July 2023 (UTC)- Of course I'm not expecting a source to list "all the people who weren't founders". But we have sources saying each of these five people "founded" LGB Alliance. To even being to consider that this is "contradicted", as you put it, we'd need sources disagreeing. Void appears to think that a source saying A & B founded LGB Alliance, and not mentioning C, is implying that only A & B founded LGB Alliance, and nobody else. If we take that interpretation of our sources, what are we going to do with all the sources saying C founded LGB Alliance. Go look at all the many top-tier sources above saying Bailey founded LGB Alliance, and not mentioning the two that Void is so keen we list alone. So the idea that "founded LGB Alliance" is without doubt a statement of a clearly restricted list of founders cannot be so. Instead, what many people here have taken, is these are not contradictory statements, and not all our sources are using the word "founder"/"founded" in a restrictive manner.
- Pincrete, when we have reliable sources all using the word "founder" for these five people, and no reliable sources, none at all, saying that this is wrong, why should we use an alternative word or attempt to give different roles just because an editor thinks they are wrong. And it seems only you are finding this list to be of no value. Clearly it is of value, as it has filled the talk pages of this article on several occasions. -- Colin°Talk 06:47, 12 July 2023 (UTC)
- Filling a talk page isn't my measure of 'value to the reader'. I regard discussion about whether someone was a 'founder' largely fruitless, since it clearly can have a number of uses. But the only 'universal' usage is attached to the two women who organised the initial meeting, but I'm not even stuck on using the term 'founder' for those two - that they organised the meeting is well documented, that others took on other roles is equally well documented, as is Bailey's involvement and actions. Why exclude reliably sourced detailed information about the genesis of LGBA in favour of an uncharacterised list? A list which is at least partially contradicted by other info. Pincrete (talk) 08:25, 12 July 2023 (UTC)
- "Void appears to think that a source saying A & B founded LGB Alliance"
- You seem to be saying that when we have at least half a dozen primary and secondary sources that say "this org was founded by two people, x and y" it is fine to interpret that as "but there could have been a dozen other people and we should add them in from any passing mention over the last 3-4 years".
- Even if your logic held, we also have HQ recent sources that say:
- "LGB Alliance was founded in 2019 by two lesbians, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson"
- Which would preclude there being any other lesbians, which would rule out Bailey. And Malcolm Clark has explicitly said he isn't a founder.
- What do you want? An investigative piece in The Times that says "only these two people, no-one else, and wikipedia is wrong"?
- "what are we going to do with all the sources saying C founded LGB Alliance"
- What we do is:
- Agree that unless someone is called "founder" , "co-founder" or explicitly stated that the org was "founded by" them, then they don't get called "founder" on this page, in the lede, or in the about box, but can be mentioned in whatever capacity we decide in the history section (ie. nothing that says "founding member" or "director" or "helped" or "was involved" or "acts as" or "helped start" equates to "founder"). Without that agreement, there's no point discussing sources.
- Take as a starting point the information on their website that is corroborated by The Guardian and The Times, unless there is a story specifically and directly disputing the founding of the organisation, per WP:ABOUTSELF
- Ignore older sources that don't specifically name all individuals together as founders, because assembling a composite list from individual mentions is WP:SYNTH and should never have been approached like this in the first place.
- Treat passing mentions of someone being a "founder" in headlines or in stories that aren't directly about the founding of the organisation or that are not backed up with a direct quote as less notable and reliable than a story that explicitly states eg. "the org was founded in 2019 by x, y and z".
- Treat older sources as less reliable than newer ones, per WP:RSAGE
- Once that's done, you are left with a conflict between what they say - backed up at a minimum by the Guardian and The Times - and what Pink News says. And what Pink News says is 99% likely to have been copied from here, and if we cite it is WP:CITOGENESIS Void if removed (talk) 08:39, 12 July 2023 (UTC)
- We have some options
- 1. Each time our sources say ".... founded LGB Alliance" we interpret this as fully definitive of who the founders were. This is Void's interpretation AFAICS. When we do that, we have sources saying one thing and sources saying entirely another. We have very high quality sources for each of these, especially Kate, Bev and Bailey. If we arbitrarily picked one (Kate and Bev, say), we have no reasonable way of telling the reader that we randomly decided Bailey wasn't a founder, even though many high quality sources says she was and even though our Wikipedia article says she was. If we picked another (Bailey, say) and stick 10 citations on the end of the sentence just to rub it in, we have no reasonable way of telling the reader that LGB Alliance themselves are mistaken or lying when they say Kate and Bev founded it. Void suggests picking the most recent source, because that suits their case today, but they'll be upset if Bailey gets into the news again. Because "recent high quality sources" will then describe, in their interpretation, Bailey as being the only founder of LGB Alliance. This path is madness.
- 2. Each time our sources say ".... founded LGB Alliance" we interpret this as non-limiting. If I say I saw two cats in my garden today, I'm not suggesting there weren't ever any others, or that the list of cats in my garden is infinite or uncountable should one pay attention. With this interpretation, our sources do not disagree. Indeed, to pick on your two lesbians comment, my comment about the two cats in my garden does not preclude there being a dog. This is the simplest option and no sources contradict.
- 3. Our sources might be doing either of these but have differing ideas of what it means to be a founder. For example, when LGB Alliance say Kate and Bev founded LGB Alliance, they are thinking about who had the original idea and organised the first meeting. But when countless sources are commenting on Bailey, mainly in the context of their court case, they are thinking about who helped setup and launch LGB Alliance, and Bailey certainly fits that role, being present at the first meeting, being the one who launched it on Twitter, and going on to offer further setup assistance. And the "founding directors" are certainly "founders" otherwise they wouldn't be "founding directors", and we have high quality sources for those four, which excludes Bailey, as she's not a director. This is a more complex option, and we can't get into their minds to know whether it is true, but it also allows us to agree that no sources contradict. Provided we use an encompassing adjective, we can draw our Venn diagram round them all.
- Really, Void, I think it best if you accept our sources have different interpretations of what it means to be a founder, and that most of them at least are not being definitive. I'm sure you'll agree that none of our sources, when they say Bailey founded LGB Alliance are telling us that Bev and Kate did not. It is best, surely, to find a way to live at peace with what other people wrote and thought, rather than demand that most of them are completely wrong. -- Colin°Talk 13:27, 13 July 2023 (UTC)
- For some reason, you have no difficulty outlining the roles played by each of these individuals - and sourcing that outlining - in order to justify lumping the together under the the generic 'founder', but object to recording in the article what the various roles were. I'm not hung up on the specific term 'founder', though the people who
had the original idea and organised the first meeting
, are obviously the people most often described thus. If people involved in the setting up are worthy of being named (in the body), why is what they did not worthy of being noted? The issue of whether person A or is a 'founder' to some sources, but not others becomes irrelevant if you outline their role. There is no need to say anyone wasn't a founder if you just say what their involvement was. Pincrete (talk) 15:35, 13 July 2023 (UTC)- The sourcing for the role detail is generally weaker than the sourcing for "founder". We can cite weak sources on this talk page in order to get a picture, and discuss, but we can't use them in the article. The people using the "generic 'founder'" are reliable sources. If we additionally want to elaborate on their roles, and we happen to have high quality sources to use for that, then I don't have a problem with adding that information. It does seem like our sources have different interpretations of the word "founder" but we can't just go with Pincrete's favourite interpretation, and ignore the sources that use another. That's a bit like rejecting sources saying someone is a rock musician because they don't fit with your own personal idea of what rock music is. -- Colin°Talk 16:14, 13 July 2023 (UTC)
- Have the sources specifically said that they're using "different interpretations of founder", or is this something users have interpreted on their behalf? Homeostasis07 (talk/contributions) 22:31, 13 July 2023 (UTC)
- Have the sources specifically said that they're all using the above users' restrictive interpretation of founder, or is that something users have interpreted on their behalf? (It's the latter; as far as I've seen, no reliable sources say the other people [who reliable sources say are founders] aren't founders.) -sche (talk) 02:14, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- None of our sources define the words they are using, which is not a common thing to do when writing. I proposed several options above; there may be more. We don't know whether our sources are being definitive in their list or partial, and we don't know precisely what each source means by "founder". But there are several options that do not require our sources to be mutually at odds with each other, which would be an odd situation to be in since many of the sources are highly reliable. The campaign by Void is dependent on multiple high quality sources to be talking out of their backsides, and it is also reliant on the most recent sources happening, just by chance, to agree with him. It isn't really tenable. -- Colin°Talk 06:35, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- In your examples:
- 1 - if this did happen, we'd have to report that sources disagreed. But there is not a single source that says "founded by" Bailey alone. There are multiple that say Jackson and Harris alone, and every other mention is lower strength ( ie, title in passing, not "here's how LGBA was founded"). In fact I propose that any source that doesn't explicitly say "LGBA was founded by..." or similar, should be discounted as irrelevant. We have good clear sources now, we don't need to go fishing through dozens of passing mentions and interpreting them.
- 2 - this is WP:SYNTH and if you truly believe this is appropriate, we should probably add Eileen Gallagher to the list, even though we can verify she only joined in 2021.
- 3 - this requires applying your own interpretation to conflicting sources. That's not how to go about this. Incorrect information about a small chaotic organisation must be superceded by better, later sources, once the dust settles and where there's no actual controversy.
- You keep ignoring the plain, longstanding denials of eg. Malcolm Clark, the fact that at least two original sources have been corrected since publication, and the increasing possibility of WP:CITOGENESIS over the last 2 years.
- Hypothetically, let's say I'm right: Jackson and Harris are co-founders, and the others recognise and endorse this. What evidence exactly do you think it would take to reflect that here and overturn the synth list? Void if removed (talk) 09:01, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- There are plenty sources that say Bailey founded LGB Alliance, without mentioning Jackson and Harris, and without saying "co-founder". I think you are stretching things to suggest such comments are "in passing". Her role wrt LGB Alliance is the entire reason she got into trouble with her employer and ultimately went to court, which is the only reason this person is in any way notable. That she "founded LGB Alliance" is not a passing remark in such articles. And I find it hard to think anyone would be impressed with your argument that you could only mention Muhammad founded Islam if the source was about Islam and not about Muhammad.
- This is English we are dealing with, not a computer program. We all have to work out what people meant by the words they wrote. You are determined to interpret a meaning for our sources that lead them to conflict with each other in the most fundamental way (i.e. every single source that says Bailey or Clark founded or co-founded LGB Alliance is dead wrong). I'm not ignoring Clark, though you only have a tweet for that. The best way to think about this problem really is #3 where each source and each person and each of us all have our own ideas of what it means to be a founder. So perhaps in Clark's view, he doesn't count as a founder. Whoopee do for him. Or maybe he was told to say that but is pissed off about it and has to toe the party line. Who knows and who cares. In the view of journalists writing about him, he is a co-founder. Bailey is clearly very proud of her role in setting up LGB Alliance and most sources writing about her describe her as a founder. Deal with it, Void. We are all different and thank the Lord we are. -- Colin°Talk 12:25, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- Have the sources specifically said that they're using "different interpretations of founder", or is this something users have interpreted on their behalf? Homeostasis07 (talk/contributions) 22:31, 13 July 2023 (UTC)
- The sourcing for the role detail is generally weaker than the sourcing for "founder". We can cite weak sources on this talk page in order to get a picture, and discuss, but we can't use them in the article. The people using the "generic 'founder'" are reliable sources. If we additionally want to elaborate on their roles, and we happen to have high quality sources to use for that, then I don't have a problem with adding that information. It does seem like our sources have different interpretations of the word "founder" but we can't just go with Pincrete's favourite interpretation, and ignore the sources that use another. That's a bit like rejecting sources saying someone is a rock musician because they don't fit with your own personal idea of what rock music is. -- Colin°Talk 16:14, 13 July 2023 (UTC)
- For some reason, you have no difficulty outlining the roles played by each of these individuals - and sourcing that outlining - in order to justify lumping the together under the the generic 'founder', but object to recording in the article what the various roles were. I'm not hung up on the specific term 'founder', though the people who
- To expect a source to explicitly say all the people who weren't founders is comical. When good, recent, neutral sources (such as the Gdn), consistently refer to the same two people, as having 'started the ball rolling' it effectively contradicts the broader list of 'founders'. No one has questioned that
- There are no sources that "contradict" what we wrote. No source says Bailey wasn't a founder. No source says those four were not founding directors. No source, in fact, says there is any dispute over who should count as a founder. We don't really have good sources that go into the specifics of who did what. Most of that detail is coming from Twitter and what people said in court, etc. We've mentioned here as they are informative to our discussion, but they don't really have use as article sources. If all these extremely high quality sources say Bailey was a founder, who are we to say she is not, and just someone who got pre-emptively over excited on Twitter. -- Colin°Talk 18:48, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- While some of this information helps us discuss it on the talk page, we need to go with how sources describe the individuals, rather than extrapolate from who attended which meetings. All five of these people have at times been described by reliable sources as LGB Alliance founders or as someone who founded LGB Alliance. I don't think Void would accept your suggestion that everyone who was at the inaugural meeting is a founder or founder member. For example, Debbie Hayton above, describes being at the meeting, and I don't think anyone has suggested they founded LGB Alliance. One could attend out of interest but not be involved. Founder is a suitably encompassing term that includes anyone involved in setting up an organisation, and it is also a term used by our sources. We don't have sources that speak of two as "key founders" and at the same time speaking of the others as some kind of lesser founders, and we really do need such in order for us to state this distinction. I accept it isn't an ideal situation and there does appear to be that kind of distinction, but it simply isn't one that any source has described. I don't accept that our list "isn't informative". These people founded, setup, LGB Alliance, and they are important people in either its history or continue to be important to the organisation. Colin°Talk 09:30, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- Since we know the distinct roles filled by each of these individuals, (and possibly others) why don't we record them? Simply lumping everyone into a list isn't very informative. On one level, the organisers of the initial meeting are clearly the key founders, on other levels everyone attending that meeting and voicing support is a founder - or founding member. Other names quickly became attached. Some people adopted legal roles following the meeting - usually an indication of legal and reputational 'standing' and experience, rather than their centrality. Bailey appears to have (informally and seemingly not wholly intentionally) 'launched' LGBA. What is the advantage of treating these people as "equal" founders? And why are they listed in the lead with no info attached to their names. We might as well be recording who answered the phone at the beginning in terms of info imparted IMO. Pincrete (talk) 08:33, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- "Only you seem to be stuck on the difference between "helped to setup" and "founded". "
- Founder has deeper implications than just being around to help in the beginning, or joining early. As I have said before: Bob Mellors and Aubrey Walter are recognised as the founders of the UK GLF by historians and by all of the founding members of the UK GLF, Bev Jackson included. Tesla went through a whole lawsuit after Martin Eberhard tried to sue Musk for calling himself "founder". I'm sure you can find lots of sources saying Patrick Moore was a co-founder of Greenpeace, but despite controversy stoked by Moore himself the wiki page doesn't say that because the org itself says he wasn't and reliable sources corroborate this. Given his stance on climate change, some have sought political advantage by inflating his importance, but HQ secondary sources have sorted out the truth of the matter and it is those that are relied upon, not a continual revisiting of ancient erroneous or partisan sources. Who an org considers its own founders is not for you to decide simply because you don't personally think it matters. Do you really think "who cares, call them a founder, it doesn't matter" would have been an adequate resolution to this actual controversy?
- In the case of LGBA there is absolutely no dispute except that created by editors on this page - there is not a single story anywhere expressing any controversy over who the founders of LGBA are. The org have published what they consider to be the truth, and HQ secondary sources corroborate that.
- From the timeline they have published there are four months between the July cancellation of the GLF panel event at the LSE and October 2019, during which Kate Harris and Bev Jackson worked together to prepare to launch this new org with a meeting on October 22nd. Bailey accidentally and unofficially announced the org on a bus on the way home. At least three of the invitees joined the management team after the meeting.
- That three early members among an unknown number in a tiny, accidentally-announced organisation sometimes got misreported as "founder" is exactly why WS:RSAGE exists. Some examples of misreporting will never be corrected and continually bringing them up cannot trump newer sources that have had the time to sift through contradictory reports.
- "What possible motivation would she have for getting those facts wrong?"
- Again - she said Bailey acts "as if". That's speculation, she's giving her opinion, with no evidence that it is actually true, and acting "as if" is not being. She said the other four were directors. That was agreed in the facts. Becoming a director in November is not "founder". You are applying your own novel interpretation to primary sources to override secondary ones.
- "Julie Bindel says Bailey founded the LGB Alliance"
- Julie Bindel said "helped set up". There is absolutely no point weighing up sources unless there is some agreement that "founder" and "helped set up" are not synonyms.
- I think "founder" requires a reference that explicitly says "founder", "co-founder" or "founded by", and I think a recent source describing the founding is stronger than an older source that simply labels an individual in passing.
- If we can't even agree that, then this is even more futile than the last time this came up. Void if removed (talk) 13:39, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- I accept Julie Bindel did not use the word "founder" but are you going to claim to me that the Daily Mail, The Times, the Law Gazette and the House of Commons library, to pick just a handful of sources, are so addled with gender ideology that they were mistaken when they explicitly state that Baily is a founder of the LGB Alliance.
- Bell did not say "as if". They said "who has acted as a co-founder". So she quacks like a duck.. And Bell did not say "the other four were directors". She said they were "the four founding directors of LGB Alliance". And the earlier agreed court document described all four as "Its founding members and directors". Anyway, I'm not arguing Bell should be a source, merely mentioning this is someone who ought to know what they are talking about, writing to a body that cares very much if you tell porkies, who disagrees with you.
- Wrt Greenpeace there are two differences. As you note, the dispute over who counts as a founder of Greenpeace is widely described in publications. We don't have that. If we had such a dispute in sources, we could say the list of founders is disputed and we might have a mechanism to group them in some hierarchy of foundership. The Greenpeace article does not say Moore is not a founder; it has no opinion on that. The BBC only corroborates that Greenpeace themselves dispute whether Moore was a founder. The BBC article does not have an opinion of who the founders were, only what X said and what Y said.
- But the second difference is that Greenpeace is a 50-year-old organisation with 1500 staff and a budget in 2011 of a quarter of a billion dollars. Legal difficulties and controversial posts on Twitter aside, LGB Alliance has done less than your average local scout group or parent-teacher association. Nobody is going to write "The controversy over who founded LGB Alliance" in the Times, because the Times is only interested in LGB Alliance while culture wars over trans people sells newspapers. If LGB Alliance actually became a small organisation in support of LGB people, nobody would write about them at all. -- 14:14, 11 July 2023 (UTC) Colin°Talk 14:14, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
- Please stop invoking WP:RSAGE as though the only sources we're discussing here are all from when the Alliance was newly formed. Earlier in this discussion I linked two sources published this year, a CTV News article that you dismissed for
mentioning someone in passing in some Canadian article that isn't even about LGB Alliance
, and an article published by The Times consisting almost entirely of content from Malcolm Clark that you've not acknowledged. Both of these articles were published within a day of each other in January 2023. - Also in the November 2022 discussion on this point that I'd linked to earlier, I provided a list of reliable sources in my comment at 21:56, 25 November 2022, covering a period between January 2020 through to November 2022.
- If we only had sources from say 2019/2020 when the organisation was formed, you might have a point. But when we have reliable sources that were published just a few months ago, the argument that this is something that only older and less reliable sources are doing fails entirely. Sideswipe9th (talk) 15:26, 11 July 2023 (UTC)
To what extent is this a question in the real world and to what extent is this just a question here on this page? If there is a genuine dispute out there about this then maybe we can document it by saying something like "Its founders have been variously reported as..." however if, as seems to be the case, this question only really exists in here (and maybe in the LGBA's tea room) then that isn't really worth ongoing discussion. It is not for Wikipedia to get involved in the LGBA's internal disputes even if one exists. If members of the LGBA really have fallen out, and are trying to rewrite their history accordingly, then that's extremely funny but it's not an issue for Wikipedia unless it gets significant coverage in Reliable Sources. If not, that sort of thing is best saved for Twitter.
The argument here is fairly close to being a WP:ONEAGAINSTMANY situation. I'm not going to report anybody but I would remind everybody that editors have been topic banned from GENSEX articles for bludgeoning Talk pages in the past and, in my understanding, maybe even for somewhat less than this. I really do think that it is time to drop the stick and back slowly away from the horse carcass. --DanielRigal (talk) 13:15, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- +1. — OwenBlacker (he/him; Talk) 18:07, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- Not helpful. The article does have issues. I recall someone here saying not too long ago that substantial portions of the article reads like a laundry list of (paraphrasing) "here is a collection of random things I found online about an organisation I dislike" (in the archives-on mobile, can't link now, will do later if requested). And I believe if that content was removed, a reasonable case could be made at AfD. That would arguably be the ideal outcome. Leove it all on Twitter and save us all the headache. I don't know... Aren't we all sick of the minutiae of this article (like the use of the word "founders") bursting out in to 20k+ disagreements at this point? Homeostasis07 (talk/contributions) 21:35, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- The article has already survived one AfD and it is incredibly unlikely to ever be deleted. Regrettably, "It has an exceptionally annoying Talk page" is not a valid criteria for deletion. ;-) If you want to raise any issues then please start another section. Of course, there is a risk that that discussion of that might also spiral out of control but if you try to raise the point in a clear, well defined and policy based way then maybe we can avoid it. Whatever you might come up with is unlikely to be any worse than this. --DanielRigal (talk) 22:07, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- No chance of me doing that. I've already invested what I consider to be too much of my on-Wiki time to this article/talk page. I'm genuinely not all that interested in any case, and my one attempt to correct what I considered to be unsourced material in the lead was reverted by a now-topic-banned user as "POV tag-bombing", despite that same user admitting on the resultant talk page discussion that the prose was not cited to the then-current sourcing, and that it was my responsibility to go through every other source on the article to fix the sourcing issues I identified. Thankfully, the issues I identified were eventually corrected by another editor after months of discussion, but the entire topic area is clearly toxic, and with ArbCom sanctions being what they are... what's the point? Discussions like this is what we're left with, where well-meaning users are deterred and/or banned from ever contributing to the topic area again. C'est la vie on Wikipedia c. 2023. Homeostasis07 (talk/contributions) 00:04, 15 July 2023 (UTC)
- The article has already survived one AfD and it is incredibly unlikely to ever be deleted. Regrettably, "It has an exceptionally annoying Talk page" is not a valid criteria for deletion. ;-) If you want to raise any issues then please start another section. Of course, there is a risk that that discussion of that might also spiral out of control but if you try to raise the point in a clear, well defined and policy based way then maybe we can avoid it. Whatever you might come up with is unlikely to be any worse than this. --DanielRigal (talk) 22:07, 14 July 2023 (UTC)
- While I agree the article has problems, and it was probably me who made the "here is a collection of random things I found online about an organisation I dislike" comment (which applies to both sides in the trans culture war). But I'm also realistic that while the culture war is ongoing in parts of the internet, newspapers and politics, there will continue to be a battle to include/remove/correct/paint articles according to activist positions. But I think we are all now quite sick of this "founders" dispute, and I don't see any movement towards a resolution. I think we should, at this point, simply agree to disagree and find something more useful to do. -- Colin°Talk 10:30, 16 July 2023 (UTC)
Revisiting this old chestnut with a compromise proposal after reading WP:WSAW. I collated all mentions I could find of LGBA's founders chronologically here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Void_if_removed/sandbox/LGB_Alliance_Founders I have noted that the current five were definitively WP:SYNTHed on this page between 2021/08/31 and 2021/09/16 from passing mentions. No single source mentions all five together as "founder" prior to that date, and this should never have been permitted in the first place, but we are where we are. I have 62 sources that state only Kate Harris and Bev Jackson were founders, including high quality reports explicitly stating they are the only two founders. This all accords with what they actually say about themselves. I have 29 that support some combination of others, 9 of which (including all 8 that claim there are 5 founders) post-date the WP:SYNTH here. I think that no source that mentions all five together after that date should be considered trustworthy, especially not when so suspiciously presented in the same non-alphabetic order as was WP:SYNTHed here, the fact this has been now copied verbatim off Wikipedia by Pink News is hard to deny IMO. I accept however there is no consensus for changing the current 5 "founders" to the 2 founders LGBA claim, despite the majority of sources supporting this, and I concede it is hardest to square with the widespread coverage of Allison Bailey's tribunal. However I still think there is a substantial error here and WP:SYNTH that has gone on here far too long and it should be addressed, per WP:WSAW The compromise I suggest:
- Removing "founders" from the sidebar.
- Removing mention of "founders" from the lede
- In History, say something like: "LGB Alliance state their founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson. Allison Bailey, who first launched the organisation on Twitter, has also been described as a co-founder by some reports, and both Malcolm Clark and Ann Sinnott initially served as directors.".
If we do that, then we can actually start to incorporate some of the history laid out in their history page, which starts from the meeting of Kate Harris and Bev Jackson in mid 2019, and inviting the others to the initial meeting at Conway Hall after the cancellation of a GLF event Bev Jackson was due to attend, rather than the current incomplete narrative. By removing the founders from lede and sidebar and making no claims in wikivoice, it makes it less contentious, we move away from making a wikivoice claim that I think is untenable and based on some longstanding improper WP:SYNTH, but by narratively incorporating all five we don't then have to change any of the body that refers to those five, or downplay their involvement. Is there any appetite for this compromise? Void if removed (talk) 08:14, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks for the careful work @Void if removed! I'd support your compromise proposal. AndyGordon (talk) 12:20, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I too support the wording now proposed by Void. -- Alarics (talk) 10:06, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- I'm sad to see this brought up again, in the absence of better sourcing. Given the long-standing consensus, I don't think a few new comments have shifted where we're at. Past participants have already refuted the SYNTH argument, and they've shown (as does your analysis) that there are sources predating the edits here that list the founders. This "compromise" does in fact downplay the involvement of multiple people. I've reverted. Should we ping prior participants? Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 04:05, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- Ping away. Feel free to check the sandbox page I linked above, where I've highlighted in green the recent corroborating sources, including Sexed by Susanna Rustin.
- Noone has ever refuted the SYNTH analysis. That's simply untrue, they've just argued it didn't matter. And what you've said about my own analysis is also untrue.
- I've offered a good faith compromise to fix this that doesn't downplay anything, that's also untrue. Void if removed (talk) 05:50, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Firefangledfeathers: I have no interest in this particular issue, but as far as I can see, the edit by Void if removedhad consensus. I think you should self-revert. Sweet6970 (talk) 11:54, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- @DanielRigal, Colin, Jonathan A Jones, Sideswipe9th, OwenBlacker, Nil Einne, -sche, Pincrete, and Homeostasis07: you've previously participated in this discussion about whom to include as founders of the LGB Alliance. We have some renewed discussion and could use your input. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 02:03, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- I think the main thing I see in the sandbox is that there are high quality sources supporting all five of the currently listed co-founders. Of the above refutations, I think the most convincing to me was Colin's point:
Just to be clear, it is not WP:SYNTH that we are doing. Synthesis is about a source for fact A and a source for fact B and concluding fact C without a source linking that conclusion. We have a source that A and B are an X and we have a source that C is an X and we can say A, B and C are all X's. It is actually synthesis that Void is doing. Because they are taking a source that says A and B are an X and concluding, without a source that says so, that C is not an X. And further more, doing so in the face of multiple sources that say C is an X.
- And I just don't buy your rebuttal. As for downplaying, I just don't understand. Would you say your proposal and the status quo both give equal prominence to Bailey, for example? Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 02:09, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not actively editing so won't significantly participate but will just note that if we're going to exclude or give lower priority to sources with 5 founders post inclusion in our article because of the possibility of WP:CITOGENESIS, I think we also have to consider suspect all sources which say there are 2 founders post-2022, and possibly before, when the two founders came to be heavily pushed by those involved. If we aren't trusting sources because they might simply be parroting us without much independent consideration or research should we doing the same for when they might simply parroting the official narrative without much independent consideration or research. (I mean realistically most sources are going to treat this is WGAF issue even if it's clear that the official narrative seems to be heavily pushed and there are reasons to suspect it might not simply because of accuracy but there PR reasons why it's preferred.) Nil Einne (talk) 02:34, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Are we going to throw a first birthday party for this accursed thread? If so, I'll bake a cake and flavour the icing with cyanide.
- My view remains that the word "founder" is not legally/technically/magically very significant. I genuinely do not understand why we are placing so much importance on this one word. All the major early players should be mentioned. We can say something like "founders and original key members" if we want to avoid calling them all "founders" or "co-founders". I understand that some of them seem to have fallen out and that maybe some are embarrassed by association with the others but that's not our problem. If they were notable at the outset then we should mention them, albeit not in an excessive way. --DanielRigal (talk) 02:50, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Please see the edit I made which FFF reverted, which I believe to be a reasonable compromise and which has language similar to what you suggest.
I understand that some of them seem to have fallen out and that maybe some are embarrassed by association with the others
- There is absolutely no evidence of that. Void if removed (talk) 12:24, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
I genuinely do not understand why we are placing so much importance
- So accept my offered compromise and move on.
the two founders came to be heavily pushed by those involved
- You are presuming bad faith that, again, is simply not true since the very very first source I gave in that list is a tweet thread from LGB Alliance stating their two founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson.
they might simply parroting the official narrative
- And - again - it is not the job of wikipedia to avoid "parroting the official narrative" (which is quite a WP:POV statement) it is what reliable sources say. If reliable sources "parrot the official narrative", then so be it.
- Sources which are so blatantly cribbing info from Wikipedia as Pink News has are questionable. Void if removed (talk) 12:13, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- @Void if removed: As I said, I'm not actively editing so this will be my final comment on this matter. But I will kindly ask you Void to please refrain from putting words into my mouth. I never said anything about "you" pushing a narrative. I am only referring to the founders pushing a narrative. Unless you are claiming to be one of the founders, then my comment clearly does not apply to you. And to be clear, WP:AGF has absolutely zero to do with assuming good faith from what other parties say about matters. In fact, that's completely against Wikipedia policy. We don't care whether Donald Trump keeps saying he's the the least racist person if sources say this is not true. We're inherently supposed to be suspicious of what self-interested parties say, since they very often have reasons to wish to present things in a certain way which they for whatever reason prefer, and often may even genuinely believe that what they are saying is correct and in some cases may even arguably be correct by some definitions (as others have noted this could very well apply here), when those who actually look at the history, evidence, facts, common understanding of words or terms, etc etc; from a reasonably impartial PoV will come to a different conclusion. It's why we instead generally rely on reliable secondary sources rather than what people or organisations say about themselves when there is any hint of contention. And you yourself have provided one strand of evidence that there is a certain PoV being relied with the "wonderful lesbians" and "lesbian led" quote which we can see on this very page. And if you're saying that they've been pushing this narrative from the beginning, then you haven't countered my comment, you've provided further evidence for my point. To be clear, I did not look in a great deal when the claim was first made and tried to indicate this ambigiouty in my first reply above precisely because it was largely irrelevant to my point. Whenever the narrative was first presented, whether in 2022 or 2020 or whatever, it's either unimportant in which case it doesn't even matter if sources have come to a different conclusion which the people involved disagree with; or it is important for some reason in which case we have to consider why it's important, and considering there seems to be reasons why that version may be preferred, it's even more important we trust reliable secondary sources to sort through this. Note I never intended to suggest we should not trust reliable secondary sources. Rather all I was trying to say is that you cannot on the one hand discount reliable secondary sources who have chosen like us to list 5 founders because you claim they have not done their work properly and are simply parroting what we are saying; while simultaneously claiming we should trust them when they may simply be parroting the official narrative. If you want to trust reliable secondary sources, then you need to trust them all unless we have very good reason to distrust them. Unproven allegations of citogenesis are clearly not it since if we go down that route then we should go down that route for sources which appear to be simply parroting the official narrative. The alternative is we simply trust sources to have done their job properly and decided for themselves which founders list is supported by the available evidence and facts, which is generally what we have to do unless there is good evidence to the contrary which AFAICT there is none. The weird stuff about non-alphabetical is simply not it. Especially since from what I understand, you have proven that pretty much all of the 5 founders have been called founders by reliable secondary sources independently at one time and predating us ever mentioning them indicating that in fact reliable secondary sources have for whatever reason, came to the conclusion that each of those 5 people can reasonably be considered a "founder". Nil Einne (talk) 15:29, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
I never said anything about "you" pushing a narrative.
- To be clear: I'm not saying you're accusing me of bad faith, I am saying you're suggesting LGBA are acting in bad faith, something for which you have no evidence at all. I did not invoke WP:AGF.
we instead generally rely on reliable secondary sources
- And what we have are mainstream press and now a book being really quite specific who exactly the two founders were, corroborating what they have said WP:ABOUTSELF since 2019, and Pink News cribbing from Wikipedia. Void if removed (talk) 15:31, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- @Void if removed: As I said, I'm not actively editing so this will be my final comment on this matter. But I will kindly ask you Void to please refrain from putting words into my mouth. I never said anything about "you" pushing a narrative. I am only referring to the founders pushing a narrative. Unless you are claiming to be one of the founders, then my comment clearly does not apply to you. And to be clear, WP:AGF has absolutely zero to do with assuming good faith from what other parties say about matters. In fact, that's completely against Wikipedia policy. We don't care whether Donald Trump keeps saying he's the the least racist person if sources say this is not true. We're inherently supposed to be suspicious of what self-interested parties say, since they very often have reasons to wish to present things in a certain way which they for whatever reason prefer, and often may even genuinely believe that what they are saying is correct and in some cases may even arguably be correct by some definitions (as others have noted this could very well apply here), when those who actually look at the history, evidence, facts, common understanding of words or terms, etc etc; from a reasonably impartial PoV will come to a different conclusion. It's why we instead generally rely on reliable secondary sources rather than what people or organisations say about themselves when there is any hint of contention. And you yourself have provided one strand of evidence that there is a certain PoV being relied with the "wonderful lesbians" and "lesbian led" quote which we can see on this very page. And if you're saying that they've been pushing this narrative from the beginning, then you haven't countered my comment, you've provided further evidence for my point. To be clear, I did not look in a great deal when the claim was first made and tried to indicate this ambigiouty in my first reply above precisely because it was largely irrelevant to my point. Whenever the narrative was first presented, whether in 2022 or 2020 or whatever, it's either unimportant in which case it doesn't even matter if sources have come to a different conclusion which the people involved disagree with; or it is important for some reason in which case we have to consider why it's important, and considering there seems to be reasons why that version may be preferred, it's even more important we trust reliable secondary sources to sort through this. Note I never intended to suggest we should not trust reliable secondary sources. Rather all I was trying to say is that you cannot on the one hand discount reliable secondary sources who have chosen like us to list 5 founders because you claim they have not done their work properly and are simply parroting what we are saying; while simultaneously claiming we should trust them when they may simply be parroting the official narrative. If you want to trust reliable secondary sources, then you need to trust them all unless we have very good reason to distrust them. Unproven allegations of citogenesis are clearly not it since if we go down that route then we should go down that route for sources which appear to be simply parroting the official narrative. The alternative is we simply trust sources to have done their job properly and decided for themselves which founders list is supported by the available evidence and facts, which is generally what we have to do unless there is good evidence to the contrary which AFAICT there is none. The weird stuff about non-alphabetical is simply not it. Especially since from what I understand, you have proven that pretty much all of the 5 founders have been called founders by reliable secondary sources independently at one time and predating us ever mentioning them indicating that in fact reliable secondary sources have for whatever reason, came to the conclusion that each of those 5 people can reasonably be considered a "founder". Nil Einne (talk) 15:29, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- I stand by my comment, quoted above, that we are not guilty of SYNTH. I think different people attach different importance and meaning to "founder", with some sources happy to consider this as someone who was there from around its beginnings. I think according to some definitions, perhaps favoured by LGBA, there were just the two who founded it. But other uses of that word permit more. I suspect Void hasn't found/listed all the sources claiming Bailey is a founder, so those are underrepresented. I accept their explanation that Bailey isn't as foundery as the other two, but it is really really hard to discount the numbers of reliable sources saying Bailey founded LGB Alliance. I think Void's listings assumes "co-founder" means "one of two" but the dictionary doesn't have that restriction, and once you lose that, I don't think we do have anything like a majority of sources explicitly saying there are just two.
- There's perhaps an analogy with how parties get described as "populist" or "far right". Different people draw the Venn diagram bubbles differently to include or exclude some parties. Is the same happening here. As a compromise I'd be ok with a footnote saying something like "LGB Alliance state their founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson; other sources include more". Colin°Talk 10:45, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- That is, essentially, the good faith compromise I offered here which FFF reverted.
- And I'll just explicitly add the quote here, but the recently released book "Sexed: A History Of British Feminism" by Susanna Rustin states:
- LGB Alliance was founded by two lesbians, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson, who felt that Stonewall, with its focus on gender identity, no longer represented gay, lesbian and bisexual interests.
- So I think the compromise is fair. Void if removed (talk) 11:59, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not seeing what part of diff was a compromise (it looks like just removing reliably sourced information about some of the founders), but if we were to keep the reliably sourced information about the various founders, and then merely add additional reliably sourced information in the form of the footnote Colin proposes, sure, whatever. -sche (talk) 14:50, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks (I suppose) to Firefangledfeathers for caling me back here. My willingness to spend time on this potentially endless debate is pretty limited, but for what it's worth I think that the "good faith compromise" from Void if removed is about as good as this is going to get, and if we can't agree on something like that then the next best thing would just be to take the whole paragraph out. Jonathan A Jones (talk) 14:55, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not seeing what part of diff was a compromise (it looks like just removing reliably sourced information about some of the founders), but if we were to keep the reliably sourced information about the various founders, and then merely add additional reliably sourced information in the form of the footnote Colin proposes, sure, whatever. -sche (talk) 14:50, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
I said above it will be my last comment but just noticed this. I agree with Colin that assuming co-founder means one of two is problematic. I'd note that our article Organisational founder itself says "If there are multiple founders, each can be referred to as a co-founder" and it has Henry Dunant's image as an example of a co-founder. His article also has him as a co-founder. Yet AFAICT, there are 5 people generally accepted the the co-founders of International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, and two of the other articles Gustave Moynier and Théodore Maunoir also list them as co-founded/ers meaning we have 3 articles with co-founders of the Red Cross. (Guillaume Henri Dufour and Louis Appia have different descriptions which don't refer to them as co-founded/rs.) I suspect if you search our articles, you will find many cases where someone is a co-founder despite no dispute they are one of 3 or more. And not it isn't because we've adopted a wording that the rest of the world doesn't uses. In fact you'd likely find many of the sources also use co-founded/r/s in cases where threer or more people were involved
And since that came up I might as well mention Reddit. There is a footnote at Aaron Swartz which notes the complexity of what "founded" means and some comment also at Reddit. And I've also liked what Wired noted [6] even if it doesn't apply here. Note our article also uses the word "co-founder" in reference to Swartz although AFAIK, there's no question there are two other people involved. I suspect this comes from the source, but in any case, you can definitely find sources referring to Swartz as a co-founder along with the other two.
Wikipedia itself is ironically another case where there has been historic dispute. In this case only involved two people however Jimmy Wales#Controversy regarding Wales's status as co-founder, History of Wikipedia#Early roles of Wales and Sanger and Larry Sanger#Status as Wikipedia co-founder all describe which this has been contentious but why it's now generally accepted Sanger should be accepted as a co-founder. (Frankly I think many Wikipedians nowadays would prefer he wasn't.)
The TLDR of all this besides not assuming co-founder means only two is that in some cases sources may very well come to different conclusions about who should be called a founder. If there are reliable secondary sources which indicate there is some dispute or contention or it's complicated, then we probably should say this somewhere. If there are none, then we just have to reflect what sources say are the founders. Like with many things on Wikipedia, it seems likely a big problem here is that this is something fairly new. If it's still an organisation people case about in 10 years, I suspect we'd have better sources on their history including their founders and their early roles etc, and whether there's any dispute and why. Until then we just have to go with what we have.
Like -sche and Colin, I'm fine with a footnote, or frankly even in article text noting who the LGB Alliance say are their founders. However I do not think this should take priority over the people reliable secondary sources list and am opposed to removing other founders supported by reliable secondary sources. Note since it's unlikely I will comment further, I'm fine with my views being largely discarded in deciding consensus.
Nil Einne (talk) 16:15, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- Okay real final comment as I just realised this is a good example of what I was saying above. There's nothing "bad faith" or against Wikipedia policy about being suspicious about what Wales, Sanger, or Ohanian or any of the other people involved say about who is a "co-founder". WP:AGF does not come in to it in any way. In fact, being suspicious of such claims is what editors should be doing, and so relying on reliable secondary sources to sort through the evidence etc and decide whether calling anyone co-/founders is reasonable or not. To be clear, while I have personal views on both Wales and Sanger, I have no real opinion of Ohanian. The reason to be suspicious of him is not because of any malice or dislike, it's simply reflective of how we need to treat statements from self-interested/conflicted parties. Nil Einne (talk) 16:32, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
assuming co-founder means one of two
- Please can you read the sources I'm citing. I'm not going off "co-founder" or any such thing, I'm citing recent, high quality sources explicitly saying there were two founders, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson. I've literally quoted from a book published last week just above this comment. In light of this I think my compromise is bending-over-backwards reasonable.
- The Red Cross example is meaningless since "the committee of the five" is not something cobbled together from multiple sources on Wikipedia, but something that actually existed in a single source first. It is also not directly cited in the text and the only citation for the sidebar is their own website, so this is actually singly-sourced per WP:ABOUTSELF which has been my point all along.
- The Reddit and Wikipedia examples are also not relevant because they refer to instances where an actual reported controversy exists and we are forced to recount the controversy.
- The only place this controversy has raged is on this talk page, for 3 years. There isn't a single article anywhere suggesting this is actually controversial. Void if removed (talk) 16:46, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
- In your table, under "Supports Kate Harris & Bev Jackson only".
- this mentions Harris (not Jackson) and calls them a "co-founder". We've established that "co-founder" could be one of many founders, not just two.
- this says "LGB Alliance founders Kate Harris and Bev Jackson" but that's no more "these are the only two" as the Telegraph saying "In 2019, Ms Bailey founded the LGB Alliance,..." is proof that Bailey actually founded it all on her very own.
- this says "Bev Jackson, co-founder of LGB Alliance, said" doesn't mention Harris and can't be used to argue there aren't 20 co-founders. I only clicked on a sample.
- I think your last point is why we shouldn't make an in-article-text fuss about our sources being variable about this. This is footnote level stuff. A comment about "some sources say" is only really justified in article body text, if we had a secondary source commenting itself about the dispute among sources.
- Is anyone objecting to the idea of the footnote I proposed? -- Colin°Talk 11:41, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- That's fair, TBH when I put this together it was mostly for my own interest and its now getting scrutiny, I'll take those questionable ones out. I've added a couple for Allison Bailey I'd previously missed too.
- But we simply shouldn't have to do any of this. I think:
- - Their website
- - The Guardian
- - The Times
- - Sexed: A History of British Feminism
- Ought to be ample to demonstrate it, but I accept there's never going to be consensus to definitively state this as fact my compromise per WP:WSAW is to make absolutely no wikivoice claim about any of it.
- I don't think stating all five in wikivoice with a footnote is enough. I think it is better to state none definitively, but ensure all five are narratively included in the history as important, as well as make any claim of who the founder is directly attributed to LGB Alliance only rather than a statement of fact, and thus the rest of the content continues to make sense.
- This then reduces the significance of who is or is not the founder, what founder means, is it important etc etc to irrelevance, and lets us introduce the earlier 2019 instigating actions of Harris and Jackson in a way that makes sense to the reader. Void if removed (talk) 12:06, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- I still disagree with your assessment of the WP:SYNTH that happened here in 2021. The fact at issue here is: "who are the founders of LGB Alliance". This is something we need to source to one reliable source which says "the founders of LGB Alliance are".
- After trimming some of the "co-founder" ones out, I find about 40 or so of varying quality spanning the entire history of the org (from initial social media posts and speeches to their website to witness statements ,reliable news coverage and now to a book of feminist history) that specifically name only Kate Harris and Bev Jackson are the founders, and by contrast only 7 that say it is the five named here, none which predate this article.
- The only reasonable quality RS which says all five is Pink News, which:
- Postdates the WP:SYNTH here
- Is suspiciously in the same order, strongly implying it was copied from here
- Is contradicted by their earlier report there are four founders (its pretty obvious they got that from Companies House)
- Is contradicted by their initial social media acknowledgement that Malcolm Clark is not a founder
- Has to be taken with the pinch of salt that they have a very strong editorial stance against LGB Alliance
- So if we only look at the best recent sources that say, explicitly, these exact people founded LGBA, we're left with Pink News as a WP:BIASED and unregulated outlier vs The Times, Guardian, LGBA themselves and a book by a Guardian journalist.
- Given that, I think my compromise of ditching the founders from the lede and sidebar and taking it all out of wikivoice in the history is more than appropriate. Void if removed (talk) 16:42, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- I think maybe there are a few styles and the difference is more one of emphasis rather than hard rule.
- A statement appears to definitively list the whole, complete and noteworthy founders. "LGB Alliance was founded in 2019 by two lesbians, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson"
- A statement describes one or more persons as founders, without suggesting this list is complete and definitive or even explicitly noting we aren't mentioning everyone: "was co-founded in 2019 by Allison Bailey", "LGB Alliance founder Malcolm Clark also", "Bev Jackson, co-founder of LGB Alliance"
- A statement that is probably misleading: "In 2019, Ms Bailey founded the LGB Alliance". (From that ever-reliable source, The Telegraph).
- If we had three sources, each saying "An Apple iPhone is smartphone" and "A Google Pixel is a smartphone" and "A Samsung Galaxy is a smartphone" then we can use all three to say "The Apple iPhone, Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy are all smartphones". That's not SYNTH. But we can't say "The smartphones are Apple iPhone, Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy" as though there aren't any others. That would be SYNTH (there are no sources claiming all three are the only smartphones) as well as wrong.
- Our current article text says "Its founders are ..." which I think is too close to "The smartphones are..." wording than "are smartphones". Void makes a case (which I haven't verified) that most sources listing all five names as though definitive post-date our Wikipedia article and follow the same ordering. While we can't be sure what source a journalist used it does weaken them as sources claiming to list a definitive five.
- I note that the wording used to be weaker. Before this edit it said "..is a British advocacy group founded in 2019 by Bev Jackson, Kate Harris, Allison Bailey, Malcolm Clark and Ann Sinnott in opposition to.." This was chopped per this discussion simply because the sentence was a long snake, and not because anyone wanted to change the emphasis. What form of "founder" wording could we use to say "these are the people who were there in the beginning and helped set it up" definition of "founder" rather than the "these are the two founders who we worship as gods and nobody else, especially that one who embarrassed us on Twitter, are to be mentioned, upon pain of death" definition of "Founder". I don't think we can drop the word "founder/founded" (too many reliable sources use that word) but is there a way to weaken the claim to better match what we can draw from our sources. -- Colin°Talk 20:06, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- That sort of wording tweak would be fine. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 20:13, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
If we had three sources, each saying "An Apple iPhone is smartphone" and "A Google Pixel is a smartphone" and "A Samsung Galaxy is a smartphone" then we can use all three to say "The Apple iPhone, Google Pixel and Samsung Galaxy are all smartphones".
- The problem with this analogy is that "smartphone" is an inherent property of a thing, independent of group membership, and the fact at issue here is precisely group membership.
- A different example would be:
- We have a source saying the original line up of The Sugababes is Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan and Siobhán Donaghy.
- We have another source saying Heidi Range is part of the original lineup.
- We have a third source that calls Amelle Berrabah an original member.
- We don't then add these together to say "The original lineup of the Sugababes is Amelle Berrabah, Heidi Range, Mutya Buena, Keisha Buchanan and Siobhán Donaghy."
- That is textbook WP:SYNTH, and exactly the sort of thing we don't do because sources can be wrong, and superceded by better, later sources, and if we treated them as additive like that we could never correct with better sources which gave a complete, exclusive list. Void if removed (talk) 20:48, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- The problem with your "example" is it doesn't exist. We have sources saying Range and Berrabah were not original members and replaced other original members. We don't have any sources claiming they were original members. I think we have to agree to disagree on the concept of "founders" being a tightly bounded one in all people's uses of the term. I don't think all sources are using it to describe group membership rather than as an attribute of a person. Some are and some are not. The term "original members" is tightly bounded around some point in time (e.g. first recording). All five of these people played a role in founding LGBA. All five have been named as founding or co-founding LGBA by reliable sources. It isn't so much a "when sources are wrong" but that, well, people do disagree about things because they disagree somewhat about what words mean or what context the words are used in and people can be inconsistent about how they use words. Colin°Talk 22:04, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- Sure it does. People argue about who is their "OG" lineup, and that the Sugababes wasn't "really" the Sugababes till Heidi joined. You can't take different people's subjective interpretations of what "original" means and add them together.
- https://www.digitalspy.com/music/a186687/ewen-heidi-is-an-original-sugababe/ Void if removed (talk) 22:23, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- But in any case, my point wasn't about whether this is actually in dispute, it's an analogy to demonstrate why it would be SYNTH in a way the smartphone example isn't because the fact pertains to the composition of a group.
- And when it comes to judging whether this was WP:SYNTH I think you really need to read the original talk page that constructed this list rather than getting derailed by different interpretations of words and subsequent sources. When you do that you can see that - based initially on a WP:PRIMARY source (Companies House filing of directors in November 2019) a discussion dominated by one editor starts by saying there are four founders, moves up to six, and settles on five, by combining multiple independent sources (some which should never have been used in the first place, one of which has since been corrected, and one which was directly refuted by the person named), none of which say "these five people founded LGBA". I would very much like to get agreement on this one single point. I don't want to get derailed by whether people think "founder" is a meaningful title or whether smartphones or terrible pop bands are a good analogy: what happened on this talk page in August-September 2021 was WP:SYNTH, because it improperly combined material from multiple sources to construct a fact about LGB Alliance (who founded it) not explicitly supported by any single source. Void if removed (talk) 22:47, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- The problem with your "example" is it doesn't exist. We have sources saying Range and Berrabah were not original members and replaced other original members. We don't have any sources claiming they were original members. I think we have to agree to disagree on the concept of "founders" being a tightly bounded one in all people's uses of the term. I don't think all sources are using it to describe group membership rather than as an attribute of a person. Some are and some are not. The term "original members" is tightly bounded around some point in time (e.g. first recording). All five of these people played a role in founding LGBA. All five have been named as founding or co-founding LGBA by reliable sources. It isn't so much a "when sources are wrong" but that, well, people do disagree about things because they disagree somewhat about what words mean or what context the words are used in and people can be inconsistent about how they use words. Colin°Talk 22:04, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- I think maybe there are a few styles and the difference is more one of emphasis rather than hard rule.
- Footnote is fine with me. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 12:14, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- So I count 4 in favour of my compromise, 3 in favour of Colin's, and some "I don't really care about this" type comments.
- There is clearly a consensus for something.
- Can someone propose exactly what this "footnote" change would be? And would it still involve removing the wikivoice claim from the lede and sidebar? Void if removed (talk) 10:59, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- How about Colin's suggested "LGB Alliance state their founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson; other sources include more"? This would be a footnote attached to the status quo language. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 12:36, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- Could you comment on whether or not you think the original process here was WP:SYNTH?
- Namely, the taking of multiple independent sources to produce a claim not actually stated in any of them?
- Ie: are "who founded LGB Alliance" and "how many people founded LGB Alliance" singular facts about LGB Alliance that require a single source.
- I think before considering a compromise there needs to be clarity on whether that original act was improper WP:SYNTH without getting distracted by other matters, because that I believe impacts what we do. Void if removed (talk) 09:14, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
- How about Colin's suggested "LGB Alliance state their founders are Kate Harris and Bev Jackson; other sources include more"? This would be a footnote attached to the status quo language. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 12:36, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- I think there's some confusion here as I apparently want as clear as I intended to be. I only brought up the Red Cross as one of I'm sure many examples to demonstrate that the idea co-founder means one of two is not supported by common usage of the term both on Wikipedia and out of Wikipedia I only used because our very own article on founder used co-founder when it was referring to 5 people and also made clear in the text that this was his the term is used. Therefore any argument that a source referring to someone as a co-founder means they only think there are two, is flawed. The source would need to make it clear in some other way that they believe there are only two co-founders. Anything else about the Red Cross is beside my point. I expect it also does show how the term founder can have different meanings. Still it's far weaker than the Reddit case and I'm sure plenty of other ones so I didn't bring it up regarding that earlier either. Nil Einne (talk) 07:46, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- Right, and there is some misunderstanding that I am attaching any significance at all to "co-founder" meaning two, which I am not.
- I care only about which names are included in which sources, together, and in what context.
- When a source says "LGB Alliance was founded by two lesbians, Kate Harris and Bev Jackson", that is unequivocal.
- When you take a source that says quite explicitly "there are exactly two founders, A and B" and find another source that says "C is a co-founder", you can't then combine them to infer there are three, because that is WP:SYNTH.
- You need a source that says "there are three, A, B and C". How many people founded an organisation and who they were is a fact about that organisation, and that is a fact we cannot derive ourselves from WP:SYNTH, and no amount of "well founder means different things to different people" gets around that. Void if removed (talk) 11:51, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- In your table, under "Supports Kate Harris & Bev Jackson only".
‘Claims’
@Sideswipe9th: You have reverted my change from ‘claims’ to ‘has said’ in the Conversion Therapy section, with the edit summary: this is actually an appropriate use of claim, as not only does the source states that it is a claim but the claim itself is demonstrably false). But you have not provided any ‘demonstration’ that the claim is false. So your revert of my edit is in breach of MOS:CLAIM. Please self-revert. Sweet6970 (talk) 18:44, 13 February 2024 (UTC)
- ...
- The claim in question is
affirmation-based therapy for transgender youth is gay conversion therapy and that campaigns to ban conversion therapy for transgender people are "being used as political cover to promote an affirmation-only approach to gender identity"
. - I have spent the last 5 minutes trying to figure out how to put this as nicely as possible: these claims are so ridiculously WP:FRINGE it's absurd. Please, provide an example of a single reputable medical organization that says "affirming trans kids is actually gay conversion therapy". Or a single reputable medical organization that says "conversion therapy bans shouldn't include trans->cis conversion attempts". None of them say that, they say the opposite, the only people who do make these ridiculous claims are LGBA and co. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 21:39, 13 February 2024 (UTC)
- To Your Friendly Neighbourhood Sociologist: This is not a medical article – whether LGBA’s view is correct or not is irrelevant. The purpose of this article is to give information about LGBA and its views. Therefore your remarks are irrelevant. Sweet6970 (talk) 21:19, 14 February 2024 (UTC)
- MOS:CLAIM doesn't require us to never use words like claimed in articles, it merely requires us to be careful when using it and other synonyms for said in articles. There are circumstances, like this one, where it can be appropriate to use the word claim in an article, especially when an article subject is expressing a demonstrable falsehood. There are, to my knowledge, no reputable medical organisations who support the assertion that gender-affirming healthcare is "gay conversion therapy". As Florence Ashley said in their paper a 2020 paper
The suggestion that gender affirmation and access to transition-related care are homophobic and tantamount to conversion therapy are groundless.
- If anything, per WP:EVALFRINGE we should probably be following that sentence with another one that
[refers] the reader to more accepted ideas
(ie, the mainstream point of view) on this issue. Otherwise we've likely got a WP:FRINGE and WP:NPOV violation here. In these circumstances however, I will not be self-reverting at this time. Sideswipe9th (talk) 22:19, 13 February 2024 (UTC)- To Sideswipe9th: You said in your edit summary that the view expressed by LBGA was ‘
demonstrably false
’.You have referred me to a paper by Florence Ashley, who is, according to Wikipedia, ‘an academic, activist and law professor at the University of Alberta
’. Therefore, nothing she has said could possibly ‘demonstrate’ anything other than her opinion on this matter. LGBA has another opinion. As with YFNS, you seem to be mistaking this article for a medical article, and you also seem to be mistaking a law professor and activist for a medical expert. Please self-revert. Sweet6970 (talk) 21:21, 14 February 2024 (UTC)- Per policy I will not be self-reverting.
- I cited Ashley here because it was a succinct way of proving the point, and as a reasonable alternative from citing a dozen or so other sources on this point. As for
mistaking a law professor and activist for a medical expert
, Ashley was going to be one of the 21 member panel developing the forthcoming WHO guidelines on trans and gender diverse healthcare as one of the experts in this field, but they had to withdraw due to a scheduling conflict. By a relevant body, Ashley is considered to be an expert in this field. In addition to being an assistant professor of law, they are also an adjunct assistant professor in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at University of Alberta. - You say that myself and YFNS are
mistaking this article for a medical article
, and no we are not. The article is very clearly about a highly controversial advocacy group from the United Kingdom. However included in the content in this article, we cover their views on a medical topic. The views they are espousing on this topic are considered fringe by mainstream medical bodies. When describing fringe claims in an article, policy requires that those claims are described in context to the mainstream view on the topic. As I said in my last reply, we should probably be following that sentence with another one that describes the mainstream point of view on this particular issue. Sideswipe9th (talk) 22:33, 14 February 2024 (UTC)- Sideswipe: The paper by Florence Ashley which you have referred to actually supports LGBA’s position. The argument is, to put it politely, somewhat confused, but she does give as an example of her reasoning:
The trans man who goes from being viewed as a Butch lesbian to affirming himself as a straight man is not changing the structure of his sexual attraction by transitioning, merely aligning its external expression with his internal schema. Just before he transitions, he’s already a straight man—others just don’t know it.
A more economical interpretation of this situation would be that the lesbian has undergone conversion from being same-sex attracted to being trans. The procedure may not be as overtly forced as is usually meant when speaking about ‘conversion therapy’, but the end result is the same. - Also, importantly, it says at the beginning
The scientific consensus is increasingly moving towards the affirmation of youth’s gender identities and access to medical transition.
So Ashley is admitting that there is currently no scientific consensus in favour of gender-affirming therapy. - Sweet6970 (talk) 14:38, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
- Your version of
a more economical interpretation
is just ignoring every point Ashley says to conclude the opposite of their argument... I'll also note, you're making the same FRINGE argument Kathleen Stock does (see Gender critical feminism#Conversion therapy) and conversion therapy#Gender exploratory therapy explicitly notes that the latest justification for trans->cis conversion therapy is saying "they're just saying they're trans because of internalized homophobia". The procedure may not be as overtly forced as is usually meant when speaking about ‘conversion therapy’, but the end result is the same
- is frankly just mind-bogglingly offensive.- Conversion therapy targeting sexual orientation means attempting to change who you're attracted to. If a butch lesbian underwent conversion therapy, that would entail trying to make them attracted to men (and usually more feminine too).
- If a trans man who previously identified as a butch lesbian wants to transition, who they are attracted to does not change, and nobody attempts to change it (The key point of Ashley's paper and the critique of Stock)
- Relatedly, if a trans man who previously identified as a butch lesbian wants to transition, and one insists they shouldn't because they're just lesbian and confused in their eyes, that is actually gender-identity conversion therapy. I'll note Ashley's paper touches on how over the last few decades, some conversion therapists moved to trying to prevent only being trans, not gay.
- In Ashley's example, a straight trans man previously was viewed as a butch lesbian then affirmed himself. You referring to them as
the lesbian
is refusing to engage with the example. It's like if somebody said "Bob used to be viewed as straight but affirmed himself as gay" and you respondedA more economical interpretation of this situation would be that the heterosexual has undergone conversion
.
- The majority of trans people are LGB (see Transgender sexuality) - ie, the majority of trans people by your definition of conversion therapy are undergoing straight->gay conversion therapy.
- Nobody has
undergone conversion
to be trans, and calling somebody identifying the way they're comfortable and transitioning thesame
end result
of conversion therapy is, again, just offensive. If you want to know how offensive, please reflect on whether you would tell a trans person to their face that "your transition is the same end result as conversion therapy".
- Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:21, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
- You have entirely missed my point and I do not think that there is any chance that this discussion is going to lead to a constructive outcome. Sweet6970 (talk) 20:11, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
- Can you distill your point down to a sentence or two then please? AFAICT you seem to be arguing one or both of the following points:
- the claim that "affirming trans peoples identities is a form of conversion therapy" is not a WP:FRINGE one - though it very much is
- regardless of whether it is fringe, WP: FRINGE doesn't apply because this isn't a medical article - though FRINGE repeatedly discusses how it applies to those known for advocating fringe positions and never says "this applies only to medical articles"
- Please correct me if I'm wrong. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 00:24, 16 February 2024 (UTC)
- Can you distill your point down to a sentence or two then please? AFAICT you seem to be arguing one or both of the following points:
- You have entirely missed my point and I do not think that there is any chance that this discussion is going to lead to a constructive outcome. Sweet6970 (talk) 20:11, 15 February 2024 (UTC)
- Your version of
- Sideswipe: The paper by Florence Ashley which you have referred to actually supports LGBA’s position. The argument is, to put it politely, somewhat confused, but she does give as an example of her reasoning:
- To Sideswipe9th: You said in your edit summary that the view expressed by LBGA was ‘
Support
There's a back and forth adding more representative supportive names to the lede but TBH I think the extensive listing is pretty redundant, and I'm generally in favour of cutting out a lot of the padding in this article. Also as it stands, the lede is not following the body.
I propose removing the sentence in the lede:
The group has received support from Labour politicians including Rosie Duffield and Tonia Antoniazzi as well as from conservative politicians, including MPs Ben Bradley, Jackie Doyle-Price, and Neale Hanvey, as well as support from The Spectator writer Brendan O'Neill.
And replacing it with something like:
However, the group has received support from a small number of politicians from most of the major UK political parties.
While at the same time expanding the relevant line in the body:
A number of other Conservative politicians, including MPs Ben Bradley and Jackie Doyle-Price have voiced support for the group.
To something like:
LGB Alliance has received support from politicians from most of the major UK political parties, including Boris Johnson (Conservative), Rosie Duffield (Labour), Baroness Sarah Ludford (Liberal Democrats), Joanna Cherry (SNP) and Neale Hanvey (Alba).
Each of those can be well sourced I believe, and its more straightforward than trying to list everyone as it will never be comprehensive and any incomplete listing will be WP:POV. But whatever happens to this section, I think Boris Johnson is by far the most notable Tory to weigh in for starters, and the omission of Joanna Cherry is glaring when she is the most vocally supportive, having written specifically in support.
Thoughts/objections to this approach or something like it? Void if removed (talk) 12:26, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- I agree with these proposed changes. We should certainly mention Johnson's support for the LGB Alliance, especially since he was Prime Minister at the time. Meanwhile it may be worth noting that both Ludford and Duffield are out of step with the official stance of their respective parties. Alarics (talk) 13:16, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- I support Void’s proposed changes to this article. Regarding Rosie Duffield’s position being out of step with the Labour Party – I’m not sure the Labour Party has a position on this issue, but Wes Streeting apologised to her last summer [7]. Sweet6970 (talk) 14:29, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- I’d argue the progressive (ie Corbyn) wing of labour is still pretty strongly against, but the liberal (Starmer) wing is either becoming more sympathetic or at least willing to position themselves as such [8] Snokalok (talk) 03:23, 20 March 2024 (UTC)
- As someone who hasn't really taken much part in discussions one way or another, I did think this was excess padding for the lead section and am in favour of the proposed changes. – GnocchiFan (talk) 15:33, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- “ LGB Alliance has received support from politicians from most of the major UK political parties”
- I’d change “from most” to “within most”, to indicate it’s not necessarily representative of the entire party, but that there are still supporters in every party.
- Otherwise though this looks fine. Snokalok (talk) 19:03, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- I agree; I think this wording would be best. GnocchiFan (talk) 19:15, 19 March 2024 (UTC)
- "However" is synthesis and can't be used in this manner unless sources specifically present this as a rebuttal / response to the previous point. Likewise, "most of the major political parties" strikes me as potential synthesis in the sense that it implies broad support in a way that the sources themselves don't really say. Truthfully, I would probably remove the list entirely - on reflection (and looking over the history) it looks like it was added to rebut the sentence before it in a similarly WP:SYNTH-y manner; even if the initial synthesis was fixed, they're still very different things. The prior sentence doesn't mention names for nose-counting, it attributes an important opinion about the group (one that has received significant coverage, and was stated by people important enough to matter, but which probably requires attribution.) Vague "it has supporters tho" isn't really meaningful, comparably. If we want to present an opposing opinion we'd need to state the actual opinion rather than "but some people support it." --Aquillion (talk) 14:58, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- Not quite sure why you reinstated a list of names in the lede while saying lists of names in the lede are problematic - this was exactly what I was trying to get away from. I replaced the existing weak list with a more representative one with stronger sourcing in the body, and trimmed this cruft from the lede. Plus the names currently cited are exceedingly minor figures, especially compared with a sitting PM.
- I think it is pretty fair to say there's support from figures within most major UK parties, but if that's contentiously WP:SYNTH-y I'm happy to take that out.
- In reverse order of notability, I would say the minimum names worth mentioning are:
- Boris Johnson
- Joanna Cherry
- Rosie Duffield
- And I'm pretty sure I discussed this first and got a fairly good consensus, so I've put the names back in the body, removed the part about "most UK parties", and now I think the line in the lede should be cut to just something like "LGB Alliance has received support from a number of UK politicians, including Boris Johnson" and leave it at that. Void if removed (talk) 15:49, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- Is the full extent of Johnson's known support that letter sent to them by an aide while he was Prime Minister, saying he is too busy to go to their conference? I guess at least some sources reported it as significant and maybe we should follow that - it seems pretty clear to me that it's a more or less a form letter, and not really comparable to the years of overt and specific support from people like Cherry and Duffield. TSP (talk) 16:26, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- I think the sitting PM approving a letter of congratulations in that climate is fairly significant, to the point it receives a whole article in the Times. Compare that to the current sourcing for Ben Bradley, which is a passing mention here, who's been cluttering up the lede for years yet isn't even quoted saying anything about LGB Alliance, based on a tweet. I agree the most significant support in terms of level is from Cherry and Duffield, probably along with Kemi Badenoch, Tonia Antoniazzi and Neale Hanvey, but the most notable figure is Johnson by far, and its also got a very clear source. Void if removed (talk) 16:55, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- The Times would clearly like it to be significant. I think I'd give it 50/50 whether he was actually aware he'd done it at all, or whether the person who wrote the letter had any idea anyone would find it significant. The letter reads like the standard "Thank you for writing to the Prime Minister, your event is clearly very important but sadly he can't attend" wording that I suspect they send to thousands of events. (And was clearly the letter the invitation was intended to elicit - if you actually want the Prime Minister to attend an event in 21 October, you don't invite him on 15 October!) But, it is reported - by both sides - as significant, so probably not our place to question it. I'm not sure I'd see it as enough to name him as the most significant political supporter, though, as we have nothing on the subject in his own words at all. TSP (talk) 17:35, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- I think the sitting PM approving a letter of congratulations in that climate is fairly significant, to the point it receives a whole article in the Times. Compare that to the current sourcing for Ben Bradley, which is a passing mention here, who's been cluttering up the lede for years yet isn't even quoted saying anything about LGB Alliance, based on a tweet. I agree the most significant support in terms of level is from Cherry and Duffield, probably along with Kemi Badenoch, Tonia Antoniazzi and Neale Hanvey, but the most notable figure is Johnson by far, and its also got a very clear source. Void if removed (talk) 16:55, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- No, I wasn't the one who reinstated anything in the lead; I only removed the recent addition of additional names, which had made it even more bloated. The person who originally added those names had already reverted you. I saw the revert, realized I didn't like either version for the reasons I mentioned, and just removed their recent additions. Your current version seems fine, though. --Aquillion (talk) 17:09, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- Ah, my apologies, I misunderstood. Void if removed (talk) 17:11, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
- Is the full extent of Johnson's known support that letter sent to them by an aide while he was Prime Minister, saying he is too busy to go to their conference? I guess at least some sources reported it as significant and maybe we should follow that - it seems pretty clear to me that it's a more or less a form letter, and not really comparable to the years of overt and specific support from people like Cherry and Duffield. TSP (talk) 16:26, 21 March 2024 (UTC)
Language bias on page
The "LGB" alliance, according to many LGBT people of all four letters, is considered a hate group run largely by far-right non-LGBT people in a "divide and conquer" manner of operation regarding transgender rights via hoping to convince gay and bisexual people to work against their shared interests of civil rights. Yet, the opening paragraph doesn't mention this and describes it as a legitimate organization, which is wildly irresponsible. The Westboro Baptist Church shouldn't be described as a "church with disagreements about gay rights," so it is strange another hate group such as the LGB alliance should be given this treatment anyway. 71.69.201.160 (talk) 15:28, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I know this can feel like a lot of work, Wikipedia:LEADFOLLOWSBODY Is a very relevent essay here. As well as this Wikipedia relies on what reliable sources say. I will note that in our 3rd paragraph do have a wide range of people and groups opinions on LGB alliance. I'll probably have a look at sources again and if there's anyway I can improve the article. LunaHasArrived (talk) 16:10, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I'm afraid you are mistaken, LGB Alliance are not a "hate group", but a registered charity campaigning for LGB rights, and this sort of strong WP:POV would be entirely inappropriate.
- Happy to reopen the question of how it is referred to in the lede. By my reckoning, now that the challenge to its charitable status has failed, the balance of current coverage favours something like "gay rights charity" or "gay rights organisation" or "charity supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights" based on reliable, neutral, mainstream coverage in The Times, The Guardian, The BBC and The Telegraph. Void if removed (talk) 17:06, 23 June 2024 (UTC)
- I would support a change in the wording of the lead. My preferred description of this group would be Void’s 3rd option: ‘charity supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights". Sweet6970 (talk) 12:06, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- That's very obviously not going to fly as it is a highly disputed claim that can not be stated in Wikivoice as a fact. It also borders on homophobia to conflate the actions of the LGB Alliance with the interests of lesbian, gay or bisexual people. DanielRigal (talk) 12:41, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- That the charity supports the rights of lesbian, gay and bisexual people is the reason that LGB Alliance has charitable status. It would be homophobic to suggest that supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights is somehow disreputable, and not a charitable purpose. Sweet6970 (talk) 12:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- If we are to change it at all, and I really don't think that we need to, we would need to find a wording that says what their stated aim is without either accepting it as their true aim, as this is plausibly contested, or saying or implying otherwise, because that is also contested. I think we should keep the current description but I would not object to also describing it as a "charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights", if that is the exact phrase used in their registration. That is a statement about what their registered purpose but it makes no claim in wikivoice as to whether they actually fulfil that purpose. It seems like a wording that is hard to object to regardless of one's own understanding of their activities. It helps lays the groundwork for the conflicting opinions to be described later in the article. DanielRigal (talk) 16:05, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- The current registration at the Charity Commission’s website [9] says under Activitities – how the charity spends its money :
To promote equality & diversity for the public benefit, in particular by: the elimination of discrimination on the grounds of sexual orientation; advancing education & raising awareness in equality & diversity in respect of lesbian, gay & bisexual people; conducting or commissioning research on equality & diversity issues and publishing the useful results to the public;
. There is more along the same lines further down the page under Charitable objects. I think it is reasonable to summarise this by the wording you have suggested:charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights
. I would have this in the first sentence of the lead, replacingnonprofit advocacy group
. This gives more precise information: a charity is regulated by the Charity Commission, whereas a nonprofit advocacy group would not be. The next sentence would then start:It was founded in opposition….
Sweet6970 (talk) 19:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)- The language there is authored by LGB Alliance, so it doesn't move the needle on how we should cover the group. It's not true that non-profit advocacy groups aren't regulated by the Charity Commission, which includes multiple advocacy groups in its register. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 20:01, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- If we use the language suggested by DanielRigal above, we are not saying in wikivoice that the organisation does anything – merely that it is registered as a charity for certain purposes. And a charity regulated by the Charity Commission is in a different legal position from a nonproft organisation. There may be advocacy groups which are registered as charities – but we should always make clear that any such group is a registered charity, because of the consequence that such a group is subject to regulation as a charity. Sweet6970 (talk) 20:23, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- The language there is authored by LGB Alliance, so it doesn't move the needle on how we should cover the group. It's not true that non-profit advocacy groups aren't regulated by the Charity Commission, which includes multiple advocacy groups in its register. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 20:01, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- The current registration at the Charity Commission’s website [9] says under Activitities – how the charity spends its money :
- If we are to change it at all, and I really don't think that we need to, we would need to find a wording that says what their stated aim is without either accepting it as their true aim, as this is plausibly contested, or saying or implying otherwise, because that is also contested. I think we should keep the current description but I would not object to also describing it as a "charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights", if that is the exact phrase used in their registration. That is a statement about what their registered purpose but it makes no claim in wikivoice as to whether they actually fulfil that purpose. It seems like a wording that is hard to object to regardless of one's own understanding of their activities. It helps lays the groundwork for the conflicting opinions to be described later in the article. DanielRigal (talk) 16:05, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- That is of course your opinion, but here we go off what reliable sources say, and how they refer to a subject.
- With an IP editor wanting to reopen a 2021 compromise with the absurd and inflammatory notion that it should be called a "hate group" I think it fair to sound caution of the wisdom of this in light of several recent mentions in reliable, mainstream, neutral sources that say something very different. Void if removed (talk) 13:04, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Yeah, we can't say that in wikivoice, at least not until a scholarly consensus emerges that this is the case, although we do need to cover that they have been described as such. It belongs in the lede but not in the the first sentence or in wikivoice. I think it is OK as currently placed. The current version seems more or less OK to me. If we can't agree a change that is widely agreed to be an improvement then let's leave it as it is. DanielRigal (talk) 16:10, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- That the charity supports the rights of lesbian, gay and bisexual people is the reason that LGB Alliance has charitable status. It would be homophobic to suggest that supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights is somehow disreputable, and not a charitable purpose. Sweet6970 (talk) 12:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- That is so intensely pov I think I need a geiger counter Snokalok (talk) 17:10, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- That's very obviously not going to fly as it is a highly disputed claim that can not be stated in Wikivoice as a fact. It also borders on homophobia to conflate the actions of the LGB Alliance with the interests of lesbian, gay or bisexual people. DanielRigal (talk) 12:41, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
- Now adding The Independent
- But LGB Alliance, a charity formed in recent years to support the rights of same-sex attracted people
- This is pretty much the entire spectrum of the British press who now call them a charity when referring to them, and mention their purpose. Void if removed (talk) 09:29, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
- LGB Alliance is and is widely described as an anti-trans group—indeed anti-trans activism is all they do—and is also widely described as a hate group. It is not a "charity formed in recent years to support the rights of same-sex attracted people" any more than KKK is a charity formed to support the "rights of white people." We cannot describe an anti-trans hate group in such a biased manner in Wikipedia's voice. "Pretty much the entire spectrum" of the Russian press also describe trans and other LGBTIQ+ people in a certain way, but that doesn't really matter—for us. It doesn't make transphobia a mainstream view that Wikipedia should accept. It doesn't change how this anti-trans group is seen by impartial observers, in scholarship, by scholars who also study transphobia and populism in British media. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 22:17, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
- I've given you five recent mainstream WP:RS, across the political spectrum. In terms of neutrally presenting a subject for a broad audience, this carries substantial WP:WEIGHT, and by this measure anyone saying different at this point is not presenting a mainstream view. I suggest you take your Russia comparisons to WP:RSN if you want to discount them. Void if removed (talk) 09:33, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- It really doesn't because those sources are themselves widely criticized for their transphobia and for being part of the "virulent attacks on the rights of LGBTI people"[10] in the UK (and Russia). I see that you include The Telegraph among those sources, a newspaper that is not "generally reliable" on transgender topics, plus The Times (a right-wing newspaper that publishes a steady stream of transphobia), The Guardian (known for extensive transphobia controversies [11][12]) and the BBC (owned by a government that has been condemned for its anti-trans policies, and that publishes such conspiracist hoaxes as ""We're being pressured into sex by some trans women"). While some of these media used to be considered quite respectable—like the Daily Mail was once a serious newspaper—they are no longer respected for their reporting on LGBTIQ+ rights/trans topics, especially internationally. The fact that they are big really doesn't matter; the Daily Mail is still a big newspaper too. They are increasingly studied as part of the UK's transphobia problem. What you have provided is a couple of highly biased British sources that are themselves widely considered transphobic, that describe another transphobic group whose sole focus is campaigning against trans people in a euphemistic manner that any impartial observer would find as laughable, biased and extreme as describing a white supremacist group in the US as a "charity formed to support the rights of white people", and that contradicts how the group is described by scholars and experts. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 11:30, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- I agree (again) with Void. It is clear to me that Amanda A Brant does not offer a neutral point of view. She keeps describing various sources as transphobic, even the BBC and The Guardian, which is absurd, and repeatedly uses weaselly phrases like "widely described as". The simple fact is that there are stark differences of opinion in the present society on the whole subject of gender identities and transsexualism. Wikipedia should reflect that. The article as it stands fails to meet the requirements of WP:NPOV. -- Alarics (talk) 12:07, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
owned by a government that has been condemned for its anti-trans policies
Are you aware that the government you keep referring to stopped existing a fortnight ago? 212.36.63.7 (talk) 14:19, 19 July 2024 (UTC)- The BBC has been criticized for promoting transphobia for several years. The British government has been criticized for its anti-trans policies by human rights bodies and organizations, scholars and LGBTIQ+ rights organizations. The UK was compared to Russia and a group of Eastern European countries by the Council of Europe, that's how bad their reputation is. It is correct that the increasingly far-right Tory party has now been ousted from power, but that doesn't magically change the BBC, its leadership or political direction overnight, nor has it changed the UK's abysmal record on LGBTIQ+ rights overnight. The new prime minister goes on about "gender ideology", a term linked to the anti-gender movement. He uses the same terminology and talking point as the Trump movement about "banning gender ideology" – i.e. diversity education and teaching the importance of respect for each other – in schools.[13] --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 14:47, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- When your position is that we should explicitly avoid using the language of The Independent, The Telegraph, The Guardian, The Times and The BBC because they are all biased against you, I'd say that's when you've entered Trump territory. Void if removed (talk) 15:32, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- Hear hear! -- Alarics (talk) 16:07, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- I'd say you entered Trump territory when you pick 5 news articles from one country (including the Telegraph, which you know was just found WP:MREL on trans topics, whose article How trans fanatics tore Pride apart you just linked is a barely veiled vitriolic rant) and argue it trumps the dozens of academic sources, the dozens more international newspapers, and the fact that every LGBT rights organization calls it an anti-trans grift that does nothing to help LGB rights in any way. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:07, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- MREL just means evaluate in context. When the Telegraph accords with the other four, there's no question of unreliability. So yes, I'd say the British press speaking with pretty much unanimity about a British charity is a good guide, and the objections so far are basically WP:IDONTLIKEIT Void if removed (talk) 18:16, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- No, they're per WP:RS and WP:NPOV. What policy says "a description used by some newspapers in one country has more weight than all scholarship on the organization and international reception among RS and human rights groups"? Your argument is WP:ILIKEIT, more RS question that description than endorse it and we cannot put such a contentious description in the lead. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:41, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- Per WP:RSAGE there's been a substantial shift in coverage since their successful tribunal ruling a year ago, and the WP:NPOV advanced by a cross section of the British media quite clearly reflects that. Do you actually have some comparably weighty sources? I've not seen any actually offered, just lots of editors insisting it is so, for reasons.
- In fact, in this entire discussion, I'm the only one offering sources actually backing up how people refer to LGBA.
- All I can see notably going the other way is Pink News doggedly referring to them as an "anti-trans campaign group" (which I have pointed out already) and an opinionated academic essay waffling on about political whiteness, which is so niche and unauthoritative the idea it trumps the entire mainstream British press is ludicrous, and even that doesn't actually support not referring to their charitable aims, it just disagrees with them on the author's, opinionated philosophical grounds. The remaining sources I find aren't terribly reliable, or are self-published screeds.
- Everything else in a WP:RS that says things like "anti-trans" in recent years is attributed opinion, and sometimes a subject of criticism in the same report.
- So please, stop alluding to some vast consensus and demonstrate it using actual WP:RS from since the time the matter of their charitable status was settled.
- Because right now, "how the British press refer to a subject on balance" is a very good guide to WP:NPOV. Void if removed (talk) 11:40, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- No, they're per WP:RS and WP:NPOV. What policy says "a description used by some newspapers in one country has more weight than all scholarship on the organization and international reception among RS and human rights groups"? Your argument is WP:ILIKEIT, more RS question that description than endorse it and we cannot put such a contentious description in the lead. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 18:41, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- "5 news articles from one country"... well, yeah, the country the group in question is located in; isn't that where you'd expect to find coverage of it? *Dan T.* (talk) 02:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- MREL just means evaluate in context. When the Telegraph accords with the other four, there's no question of unreliability. So yes, I'd say the British press speaking with pretty much unanimity about a British charity is a good guide, and the objections so far are basically WP:IDONTLIKEIT Void if removed (talk) 18:16, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- Activists call everything "transphobic" if it doesn't ask "how high?" when the activists say to jump. That's not a reliable indicator of an actual problem with news outlets covering the subject, which may just be providing balanced coverage instead of giving the activists what they want all the time. The New York Times has also been attacked as "transphobic", so it's not just in the UK. *Dan T.* (talk) 02:29, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- @Dtobias "these
minoritiesactivists call everything bigoted these days if you don't obey them" is not a policy based argument, it's what I'd expect a bigoted uncle to say at a holiday gathering. It's certainly not a statement that can be backed with RS and this is WP:NOTFORUM. - What does it have to do with the facts that 1) other uk papers call them anti-trans, 2) international papers call them anti-trans, 3) academic RS call them anti-trans, and 4) every other LGBT rights organization calls them anti-trans?
- Please, provide a policy based reason to ignore the majority of RS to put a contested claim in wikivoice in the lead. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 03:00, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- We are not going by how pretty much the entire press in "the country in question" treats various Russia-related topics. That the sources are British is not an argument in their favor. The UK in general[14] and the UK media have an abysmal reputation regarding LBGT+ issues, commented on by many observers and experts, so their media should be treated with the same caution we treat Russian newspapers as sources for the LGBT+ rights situation in Russia. There are many sources showing how this anti-trans group is entirely focused on anti-trans activism. There are many sources describing it as a hate group and anti-trans group. The radicalization and virulent transphobia of British media doesn't change that. The only thing it changes is the reliability of British media, especially regarding LGBT+ issues, in the same way that we treat Russian media with a fair degree of skepticism, especially regarding contentious topics. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 12:21, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- I agree with Amanda here. The Council of Europe has long held the UK’s institutional transphobia as being on par with that of Poland, Hungary, and Turkey. We would not uncritically trust Hungarian news sources to determine our description of gensex topics, we shouldn’t be doing so here either. Snokalok (talk) 12:53, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- I suggest if you want to WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS you go and open RFCs on WP:RSN to deprecate The Times, The Telegraph, The BBC, The Independent and The Guardian on GENSEX based on a single political statement criticising the then-Tory government by a Green-led subcommittee in the Council of Europe, and until you do this comes under WP:SOURCEGOODFAITH, and I very much suggest both you stop waving this partisan political declaration around like it is some sort of uber trump card that lets you selectively discount WP:RS. Void if removed (talk) 15:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- Amanda, and Snokalok, would you both stop doing this. The Council of Europe has not "long held" anything. There was once a document published and a bunch of people in an obscure committee once signed off on it. Once. I don't know why you think trotting out this CoE stuff in order to say "Anything Wikipedia says about a British organisation cannot be sourced or based on material published by a British publication because, you know, Terf Island and all that, and can only be sourced to American trans activists" is doing anything other than earning yourselfs diffs for a topic ban. Suggesting that all of British media is as unusable as Putin's Russian propaganda is on-another-planet level of wasting all our time. Please please stop this now. -- Colin°Talk 18:26, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- I agree with Amanda here. The Council of Europe has long held the UK’s institutional transphobia as being on par with that of Poland, Hungary, and Turkey. We would not uncritically trust Hungarian news sources to determine our description of gensex topics, we shouldn’t be doing so here either. Snokalok (talk) 12:53, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- We are not going by how pretty much the entire press in "the country in question" treats various Russia-related topics. That the sources are British is not an argument in their favor. The UK in general[14] and the UK media have an abysmal reputation regarding LBGT+ issues, commented on by many observers and experts, so their media should be treated with the same caution we treat Russian newspapers as sources for the LGBT+ rights situation in Russia. There are many sources showing how this anti-trans group is entirely focused on anti-trans activism. There are many sources describing it as a hate group and anti-trans group. The radicalization and virulent transphobia of British media doesn't change that. The only thing it changes is the reliability of British media, especially regarding LGBT+ issues, in the same way that we treat Russian media with a fair degree of skepticism, especially regarding contentious topics. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 12:21, 20 July 2024 (UTC)
- @Dtobias "these
- When your position is that we should explicitly avoid using the language of The Independent, The Telegraph, The Guardian, The Times and The BBC because they are all biased against you, I'd say that's when you've entered Trump territory. Void if removed (talk) 15:32, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- The BBC has been criticized for promoting transphobia for several years. The British government has been criticized for its anti-trans policies by human rights bodies and organizations, scholars and LGBTIQ+ rights organizations. The UK was compared to Russia and a group of Eastern European countries by the Council of Europe, that's how bad their reputation is. It is correct that the increasingly far-right Tory party has now been ousted from power, but that doesn't magically change the BBC, its leadership or political direction overnight, nor has it changed the UK's abysmal record on LGBTIQ+ rights overnight. The new prime minister goes on about "gender ideology", a term linked to the anti-gender movement. He uses the same terminology and talking point as the Trump movement about "banning gender ideology" – i.e. diversity education and teaching the importance of respect for each other – in schools.[13] --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 14:47, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- It really doesn't because those sources are themselves widely criticized for their transphobia and for being part of the "virulent attacks on the rights of LGBTI people"[10] in the UK (and Russia). I see that you include The Telegraph among those sources, a newspaper that is not "generally reliable" on transgender topics, plus The Times (a right-wing newspaper that publishes a steady stream of transphobia), The Guardian (known for extensive transphobia controversies [11][12]) and the BBC (owned by a government that has been condemned for its anti-trans policies, and that publishes such conspiracist hoaxes as ""We're being pressured into sex by some trans women"). While some of these media used to be considered quite respectable—like the Daily Mail was once a serious newspaper—they are no longer respected for their reporting on LGBTIQ+ rights/trans topics, especially internationally. The fact that they are big really doesn't matter; the Daily Mail is still a big newspaper too. They are increasingly studied as part of the UK's transphobia problem. What you have provided is a couple of highly biased British sources that are themselves widely considered transphobic, that describe another transphobic group whose sole focus is campaigning against trans people in a euphemistic manner that any impartial observer would find as laughable, biased and extreme as describing a white supremacist group in the US as a "charity formed to support the rights of white people", and that contradicts how the group is described by scholars and experts. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 11:30, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- I've given you five recent mainstream WP:RS, across the political spectrum. In terms of neutrally presenting a subject for a broad audience, this carries substantial WP:WEIGHT, and by this measure anyone saying different at this point is not presenting a mainstream view. I suggest you take your Russia comparisons to WP:RSN if you want to discount them. Void if removed (talk) 09:33, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
- LGB Alliance is and is widely described as an anti-trans group—indeed anti-trans activism is all they do—and is also widely described as a hate group. It is not a "charity formed in recent years to support the rights of same-sex attracted people" any more than KKK is a charity formed to support the "rights of white people." We cannot describe an anti-trans hate group in such a biased manner in Wikipedia's voice. "Pretty much the entire spectrum" of the Russian press also describe trans and other LGBTIQ+ people in a certain way, but that doesn't really matter—for us. It doesn't make transphobia a mainstream view that Wikipedia should accept. It doesn't change how this anti-trans group is seen by impartial observers, in scholarship, by scholars who also study transphobia and populism in British media. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 22:17, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
- I would support a change in the wording of the lead. My preferred description of this group would be Void’s 3rd option: ‘charity supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights". Sweet6970 (talk) 12:06, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
Is there now agreement to change the wording, as proposed in my post of 19:54, 24 June 2024 above? Sweet6970 (talk) 10:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
- I support
charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights
as this is both accurate, neutral and a reasonable reflection of the sources I gave upthread. Coverage of this charity has shifted significantly in recent sources (since their tribunal mainly), and the only source that calls them an "advocacy group" is this page, making it a bit of an anachronistic fudge that was justifiable at the time but not any more (though Pink News still insists on such things as "trans-exclusionary activist group"). - I think when The Times, The Guardian, The BBC and The Telegraph all broadly agree on language, that's a good indication we should follow suit. Void if removed (talk) 10:50, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have now made the change. Sweet6970 (talk) 10:35, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
- Jumping the gun I think. As far as I can tell, DanielRigal still opposes, as do I. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 04:16, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- @Firefangledfeathers:: I am baffled by your comment, and by your revert. (1) I used the wording suggested by DanielRigal, who I assume is watching this page. (2) I was not aware that you opposed this change – as far as I can see, you have not expressed opposition to the change, and have not given any reason for opposing the change.
- I asked in my edit of 10:30 26 June 2024 whether there was agreement to the proposed change, and received one reply, from Void if removed, who agreed. I then waited another 24 hours to see if there was any opposition to the change. There was none, so I made the change. I feel that your revert is unjustified – please self-revert.
- Sweet6970 (talk) 11:46, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- Clearly there has been a misunderstanding here. I objected to the specific wording "charity supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights", which would be an endorsement in Wikivoice, and suggested the minor variant "charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights", which says the same thing without endorsement. My intention was to help those who wanted to make a change to hone their proposed change towards acceptability, not to endorse the change itself. I also said that I was unconvinced by the need for change. I made no comment on any wider changes being discussed, beyond saying that I thought the status quo was OK and that I was unconvinced by the need for change.
- I see that most of it got reverted. The only remaining things that I object to is that the wording "charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights" has replaced "advocacy group" and that "advocacy organisation" has been removed from the infobox. I supported that as additional wording not as replacement. (On reading back my comments I realise that I didn't make that clear, so that's on me.) I think that we need to have both "advocacy" and "charity". They each express different elements of the nature of the subject here and we don't want to leave half of it out. The simplest way to resolve this would be to say something like "
...advocacy group. It is a charity registered for the purpose of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights
" in the body. I'd also like both in the infobox but that's less important. I think this makes sense and I hope it can keep everybody happy. It seems to me that both the supporters and opponents of the group could read this and not object to it. If anything, making sure to describe them as an "advocacy group" makes them sound less sus as the reader reads on. If we just call them a charity then a reader will wonder why all of their activities are advocacy and not more conventional charitable activities. If we point out that that is the whole point from the outset then readers will better understand what is going on and know to consider them in comparison with other advocacy groups that are also charities e.g. Liberty, Amnesty International, etc. --DanielRigal (talk) 14:51, 29 June 2024 (UTC)If we just call them a charity then a reader will wonder why all of their activities are advocacy and not more conventional charitable activities.
- I don't think that's relevant, since what we do is refer to them on balance in the way WP:RS do, and I don't think an overwhelming number of recent ones use "advocacy group" for them, compared to some variation of "charity". There's this in the Telegraph, but its an opinion piece. There's this which appears to be a copy & paste from the lede of this article so not terribly compelling and risks WP:CIRCULAR.
- Probably best source is this in the Telegraph, but that just means that coupled with the mention in my comment upthread, the Telegraph supports both.
- How about: "
advocacy group and charity registered for the purposes of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights
" in the lede? Void if removed (talk) 15:48, 29 June 2024 (UTC)- Sorry if this has been suggested before above. But the change to introduce current charitable status with the least change to status quo would seem to be something like "The LGB alliance is a British nonprofit advocacy group with charitable status. It was founded in 2019 in opposition to ...." I'm not sure if charitable status makes non-profit redundant, if it does nonprofit can easily be removed. This isn't to say this should be the change. It's just if the objective is to introduce the fact they have charitable status, this seems to be the way to do so with the least change. LunaHasArrived (talk) 00:35, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- I'm fine with mentioning their charitable status but I would oppose any attempt to disguise the aim of the organization as documented in many reliable sources.
- Even the current lead is less clear than I would like. We previously called them "anti-trans" in Wikivoice when now we describe the extensive sourcing behind the label. Well, if we have extensive sourcing for a fact that means we say the fact, not that we say we have such-and-such many articles that say the fact. Loki (talk) 01:23, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Thanks to DanielRigal for the clarification. Sorry, I slightly misunderstood. I would agree to
"advocacy group and charity registered for the purposes of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights"
which, as far as I can see from their posts above, would also satisfy DanielRigal and Void. This is a neutral factual statement: we are not making any statement which would ‘disguise the aim of the organization’. We would also mention in the infobox that they are an advocacy group with charitable status. Sweet6970 (talk) 11:45, 30 June 2024 (UTC)- Why do we have to mention the registered purpose at all in that first paragraph, it would be very repetitive considering the first sentence of paragraph 2. LunaHasArrived (talk) 12:10, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- We need to say what its charitable purposes are in the first sentence, because that is basic information about a charity. Sweet6970 (talk) 20:24, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- In fact my only problem with the current first paragraph would be it is too long if anything. Is the quote about lesbians facing extinction really so notable to be included above the info box instead of below with more similar quote. Is the list of founders necessary considering you have the information again in the info box. I'm not saying these are changes that should be made. Just that when considering the first paragraph and comparing it to other organisations (I did Mind, Stonewall and mermaids for a quick 1 minute summary) it seems a lot longer. LunaHasArrived (talk) 12:16, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- If you want to discuss a possible restructuring of the lead in general, I think it would be better to start a separate discussion section for this. Sweet6970 (talk) 20:26, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Why do we have to mention the registered purpose at all in that first paragraph, it would be very repetitive considering the first sentence of paragraph 2. LunaHasArrived (talk) 12:10, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry if this has been suggested before above. But the change to introduce current charitable status with the least change to status quo would seem to be something like "The LGB alliance is a British nonprofit advocacy group with charitable status. It was founded in 2019 in opposition to ...." I'm not sure if charitable status makes non-profit redundant, if it does nonprofit can easily be removed. This isn't to say this should be the change. It's just if the objective is to introduce the fact they have charitable status, this seems to be the way to do so with the least change. LunaHasArrived (talk) 00:35, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
- Jumping the gun I think. As far as I can tell, DanielRigal still opposes, as do I. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 04:16, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
- I have now made the change. Sweet6970 (talk) 10:35, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
- Absolutely not a consensus nor, even a majority. Hard oppose, per Amanda, FireFangledFeathers, Daniel, Loki, Sche, SilverSeren, and Luna. Snokalok (talk) 17:30, 19 July 2024 (UTC)
It looks to me that there is a majority for adding the wording "registered for the purposes of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights"
into the first sentence of the lead. The only actual objection seems to be based on an unsourced allegation that the purposes are somehow faked. But even if this was the case, that could not alter the objective fact that these are the purposes for which LGBA is registered. Sweet6970 (talk) 12:58, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- Can I ask where you get this majority from. I can only see you and void really wanting to add this to the first sentence. LunaHasArrived (talk) 13:08, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- The current text (
British advocacy group [...] founded in 2019 in opposition to the policies of LGBT rights charity Stonewall on transgender issues
) looks like a more accurate summary than the proposed rewrite, when considering how they're covered in sources (which in turn cover/reflect what they do, which is oppose trans rights while being conspicuously silent when gay rights are under attack). So, I would not support the proposed rewrite at this time. -sche (talk) 16:04, 2 July 2024 (UTC)- I am suggesting, as previously, to use the wording suggested by DanielRigal, which also has the support of Void and myself. Firefangledfeathers has not replied to my comment saying that I think this should be added. LunaHasArrived has not said she is opposed. Loki has said he is opposed, but has not answered my point that his reason is invalid. -sche has now said that they “
would not support the proposed rewrite at this time.
” . But I am not proposing a rewrite – merely the inclusion, in neutral language, of the basic encyclopaedic information of the registered purposes of the charity. I really do think that if anyone is opposed to including this information, they should provide reasons for this exclusion. Sweet6970 (talk) 17:11, 2 July 2024 (UTC)- DanielRigal suggested adding language to the body of the article. I'd support such a change. Firefangledfeathers (talk / contribs) 17:14, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- Sorry if I had not made this clear. I think it's unnecessary and out of step with other charities to include it's own description in the first sentence. We already include statements to the same effect in the 2nd paragraph of the lede and it would seem overly repetitive to put the same information within 3 sentences of eachother. LunaHasArrived (talk) 18:35, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
- Whereabouts in the body of the article is it suggested that the wording be added? Sweet6970 (talk) 12:58, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
- I'm not sure, did you mean to reply to fff? LunaHasArrived (talk) 13:05, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
I think it's unnecessary and out of step with other charities to include it's own description in the first sentence.
- Some comparisons:
- Lede:
Stonewall is a lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) rights charity in the United Kingdom
- Source:
Promoting equality and human rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans people.
- Lede:
Mermaids is a British charity and advocacy organisation that supports gender variant and transgender youth.
- Source:
supporting trans, non-binary and gender-questioning children and young people
- Lede:
Galop is an LGBT anti-abuse charity
- Source:
Galop is the UK’s LGBT+ anti-abuse charity.
- I struggle to see how what you're saying is supportable. The first sentence is absolutely where we should be summarizing a charity's aims and objects. The note that they formed in opposition to Stonewall actually belongs in a subsequent sentence, as it is part of their history, not their purpose. As written it sounds like their charitable aims are opposing stonewall, which is nonsense and wouldn't be permissable for a registered charity.
We already include statements to the same effect in the 2nd paragraph
- So take it out of the second paragraph. Void if removed (talk) 13:36, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
- The issue here is that it's widely documented in reliable sources that their stated purpose and their real purpose differ. Our job in the first sentence is to describe their true purpose, not their stated purpose. Their true purpose is to be an anti-trans campaign group, not a pro-LGB charity, so we should say that as clearly as possible, like we did in a previous version of the article. Failing that, at least saying that they oppose Stonewall gestures towards it; saying that they are a pro-LGB group is just false. Loki (talk) 01:01, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- I still don't have time to participate in the discussions but as far as I can tell the only articl of those 3 which actually uses the charity themselves or the charity commission documents to define the purpose seems to be Mermaids. Even that isn't actually necessary since there seems to be a secondary source albeit a weak one, a directory, with the same thing. Frankly I expect Mermaids can be improved. I think a key question is what secondary sources say about all these organisations. If secondary sources largely describe the purpose of the other charities in line with the charities official purpose for the other cases but don't for the LGB Alliance we need to reflect that in our articles. The fact the other articles say what they say doesn't therefore demonstrate that what a charity has said it their official purpose is the most important thing but rather reliable secondary sources say it's what's important. It's not our fault nor are we being unfair if we describe those other charities that way because that's how secondary sources do it but don't for LGB Alliance because that's what secondary sources do. Nil Einne (talk) 07:59, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
I think a key question is what secondary sources say about all these organisations. If secondary sources largely describe the purpose of the other charities in line with the charities official purpose for the other cases but don't for the LGB Alliance we need to reflect that in our articles.
- And as I've shown at the top of this discussion, WP:RS do refer to LGBA in those terms, so you've basically conceded my original point. Void if removed (talk) 11:30, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- Actually no, I have not looked into the sources and do not intend to, so it's unreasonable for me to concede anything. I apologise for the confusion as I was typing from a mobile device so didn't explain myself very well. What I'm saying is that I think it's largely irrelevant that the 3 articles you linked have text that happens to match what the organisations say about themselves, except perhaps for Mermaids which IMO demonstrates that the article needs improvement not what it's what we should do. If the vast majority of secondary sources say organisation A is a charity which does XYZ, and XYZ happens to match what the charity says about themselves, then it's reasonable this is what our articles do. It doesn't mean we are following what the organisation says, instead we are following what sources say. If a tiny minority of sources say organisation B, is a charity which does XYZ, again XYZ matching what the organisation says about themselves, a greater number says organisation B is a charity which does DEF, and DEF does not match what the organisation says about themselves and even more sources say something like organisation B is a charity which does DEF although they describe their official purpose as XYZ then clearly how we handle organisation B may very well be very different from organisation A. There may be merit to mention XYZ, or maybe not. It seems reasonable though to treat DEF as far more important than XYZ that's for sure. And the fact that this is different from what we do for organisation A doesn't indicate we are being unfair or treating organisation B different. In fact we're treating them both the same, going by what reliable secondary sources say about the organisation. Frankly if we only have 4 sources talking about LGB Alliance no matter if they're from different media organisations, I'm not sure we should even have an article, so those 4 sources are only a tiny part of the picture. We really need a more holistic look at the secondary sources, rather than concentrating on finding ones which happen to match what we feel the articles should say. And yes this applies in both directions. Definitely primary sources should basically be ignored, and the fact that other articles happen to match what primary sources say, but when they are based on secondary sources is irrelevant. Anyway again this is probably my final comment on the matter. I only said this because I felt the discussion had be come distracted from the key point namely it's what the preponderance of secondary sources do that matters for all articles, not whether something happens to match what primary sources say. It's ultimately not on us to decide what does and doesn't matter about an organisation but secondary sources. From what I can tell, Loki and possibly others are suggesting that most secondary sources do not in fact simply describe the organisation in terms of them being XYZ so it's why we should treat the organisations different. Again I have not and will not be looking at the sources so cannot comment if this is accurate but the existence of 4 sources which say something is largely irrelevant to counter the accuracy of this view. It requires a holistic look at the sources which talk about the LGB Alliance point blank, not looking for ones which happen to say XYZ or DEF. Nil Einne (talk) 08:52, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
- I still don't have time to participate in the discussions but as far as I can tell the only articl of those 3 which actually uses the charity themselves or the charity commission documents to define the purpose seems to be Mermaids. Even that isn't actually necessary since there seems to be a secondary source albeit a weak one, a directory, with the same thing. Frankly I expect Mermaids can be improved. I think a key question is what secondary sources say about all these organisations. If secondary sources largely describe the purpose of the other charities in line with the charities official purpose for the other cases but don't for the LGB Alliance we need to reflect that in our articles. The fact the other articles say what they say doesn't therefore demonstrate that what a charity has said it their official purpose is the most important thing but rather reliable secondary sources say it's what's important. It's not our fault nor are we being unfair if we describe those other charities that way because that's how secondary sources do it but don't for LGB Alliance because that's what secondary sources do. Nil Einne (talk) 07:59, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- The issue here is that it's widely documented in reliable sources that their stated purpose and their real purpose differ. Our job in the first sentence is to describe their true purpose, not their stated purpose. Their true purpose is to be an anti-trans campaign group, not a pro-LGB charity, so we should say that as clearly as possible, like we did in a previous version of the article. Failing that, at least saying that they oppose Stonewall gestures towards it; saying that they are a pro-LGB group is just false. Loki (talk) 01:01, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- Whereabouts in the body of the article is it suggested that the wording be added? Sweet6970 (talk) 12:58, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
- I am suggesting, as previously, to use the wording suggested by DanielRigal, which also has the support of Void and myself. Firefangledfeathers has not replied to my comment saying that I think this should be added. LunaHasArrived has not said she is opposed. Loki has said he is opposed, but has not answered my point that his reason is invalid. -sche has now said that they “
I thought we'd had this sort of topic discussion multiple times before? And in those times, the problem was that despite being a claimed charity, they don't have any actual charitable activities going on and never have. The policy page on their own website is entirely about anti-trans political stuff and nothing about doing any charitable work for LGB people. Hence why defining them as a charity didn't match up because there was nothing that could be put in the article on charitable works they do. Because they don't do anything. SilverserenC 01:21, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
they don't have any actual charitable activities going on and never have
- Which (aside from not being true) is just your opinion. As I've shown above, when WP:RS now refer to them as a charity (as they increasingly have done since this matter was settled in court), we should do. Judging the merits of their endeavours based on your own opinion is not how we settle these things. Void if removed (talk) 09:46, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- I mean at the very least, they've done no notable work whatsoever . LunaHasArrived (talk) 10:46, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- Agree they’re not notable as a charity any more than Bill Clinton is notable as a saxophonist. Dronebogus (talk) 07:56, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- This doesn't seem productive to me. Let's concentrate on what secondary sources say about the organisations. Nil Einne (talk) 08:00, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
- This discussion has gone off the rails. The wording under discussion is
"registered for the purposes of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights"
. This makes no assertion about what LGBA do – it is an objective fact about the charitable purposes for which they are registered. Sweet6970 (talk) 11:44, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- This discussion has gone off the rails. The wording under discussion is
- I mean at the very least, they've done no notable work whatsoever . LunaHasArrived (talk) 10:46, 5 July 2024 (UTC)
- It is widely regarded as one of the most famous anti-transgender groups and is commonly described as a hate group. It should be described as an anti-transgender organization in the first paragraph/sentence, and the first paragraph should also mention that it has been described by many as a hate group. It should not be described as "registered for the purposes of supporting lesbian, gay and bisexual rights" in the first sentence or paragraph. That's not how they are commonly seen or what they do. We can include their self-perception – which is quite fringe – somewhere below, preferably in the body. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 19:15, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- All of this is completely contrary to the high quality recent sources upthread, so no. Please try for WP:NPOV. Void if removed (talk) 19:18, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- No it's not. The material is already included in the lead. However, the most defining descriptors have been buried in the third paragraph, while the fringe views of this group have been given prominence in the first and second paragraphs. This should be reversed. It's first and foremost an anti-trans group, that is often labelled a hate group. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 19:24, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- That is not how WP:RS like The Times, The Guardian and The BBC describe them, and it is how balanced and non-partisan sources such as that refer to a subject which guides how we do. Void if removed (talk) 19:34, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- All of those sources have themselves faced extensive criticism for transphobia[15][16][17]. British media generally have an extremely poor reputation[18][19] as far as LGBT+/trans issues are concerned. We just decided that another of them, one of the sources used here to present a biased view of this anti-trans group, The Daily Telegraph, is not generally reliable as a source on trans-related issues or the extremist (as noted by UN Women[20]) gender-critical ideology, and I believe the same should apply to those you mentioned as well in light of a consistent pattern of transphobia and extremist content, including fabricated stories. We treat Russian media—even their equivalent of the BBC, i.e. state media—with a lot of skepticism when they "report" on the Russian invasion of Ukraine (or LGBT+ rights in Russia, for that sake), and the same caution is called for when it comes to the treatment of trans issues in British media, against the backdrop of international condemnation of "virulent attacks" on LGBT+ rights in the UK and international criticism of rampant transphobia in British media[21]. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 19:47, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- Trans activists are prone to throwing tantrums when they don't get their way; they insist that all media toe their ideological line without the slightest deviation, and issue fervent open letters denouncing them when they don't. The New York Times has also been a target for this. Increasingly, the media is showing journalistic backbone and ignoring the screams of activists and getting on with covering current events in a more balanced way. *Dan T.* (talk) 21:39, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- lol real subtle about showing why you're actually here, dude Iostn (talk) 23:11, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- Trans activists are prone to throwing tantrums when they don't get their way; they insist that all media toe their ideological line without the slightest deviation, and issue fervent open letters denouncing them when they don't. The New York Times has also been a target for this. Increasingly, the media is showing journalistic backbone and ignoring the screams of activists and getting on with covering current events in a more balanced way. *Dan T.* (talk) 21:39, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- All of those sources have themselves faced extensive criticism for transphobia[15][16][17]. British media generally have an extremely poor reputation[18][19] as far as LGBT+/trans issues are concerned. We just decided that another of them, one of the sources used here to present a biased view of this anti-trans group, The Daily Telegraph, is not generally reliable as a source on trans-related issues or the extremist (as noted by UN Women[20]) gender-critical ideology, and I believe the same should apply to those you mentioned as well in light of a consistent pattern of transphobia and extremist content, including fabricated stories. We treat Russian media—even their equivalent of the BBC, i.e. state media—with a lot of skepticism when they "report" on the Russian invasion of Ukraine (or LGBT+ rights in Russia, for that sake), and the same caution is called for when it comes to the treatment of trans issues in British media, against the backdrop of international condemnation of "virulent attacks" on LGBT+ rights in the UK and international criticism of rampant transphobia in British media[21]. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 19:47, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- That is not how WP:RS like The Times, The Guardian and The BBC describe them, and it is how balanced and non-partisan sources such as that refer to a subject which guides how we do. Void if removed (talk) 19:34, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- No it's not. The material is already included in the lead. However, the most defining descriptors have been buried in the third paragraph, while the fringe views of this group have been given prominence in the first and second paragraphs. This should be reversed. It's first and foremost an anti-trans group, that is often labelled a hate group. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 19:24, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- All of this is completely contrary to the high quality recent sources upthread, so no. Please try for WP:NPOV. Void if removed (talk) 19:18, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
Dubious source
The Daily Telegraph is not considered generally reliable (see Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources) on trans-related issues or issues related to the gender-critical ideology. Its use in the lead section here to support the biased description of this anti-trans group (see above) in the first paragraph is not appropriate. All the sources used to essentially whitewash this anti-trans group have faced similar criticism too. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 21:15, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- This was a "no consensus" close, you're way overstating the note. Void if removed (talk) 21:30, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- As I said, it is not considered "generally reliable". It no longer has that status in this area. The close was "reliability disputed", it's now yellow on Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources with the summary that
"In regards to transgender issues and gender-critical views, the reliability of The Daily Telegraph is disputed"
, and it is distinguished from The Daily Telegraph as a"generally reliable"
source in other fields. Hence, it's a dubious source, especially when it's used to promote a contentious narrative (e.g. by portraying this group as something else than an anti-trans group, in a way more positive light than other sources), in the first paragraph of the introduction to boot. We should use sources of higher quality there. There may be some situations where it's possible to use The Daily Telegraph as a source (e.g. for uncontroversial information or quotes, as opposed to promoting a gender-critical group and its narrative), but this is not one of them. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 21:37, 8 July 2024 (UTC)- After the lukewarm result for the Telegraph, are you going to try to get all those other news sources that have "faced extensive criticism for transphobia" as you noted above to be declared unreliable (or at least "disputed") on this topic as well? Maybe eventually the only "reliable sources" will be Pink News and academic papers on Queer Theory? *Dan T.* (talk) 22:36, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- There's a compelling case for treating these sources with the same level of caution, given their history of promoting anti-trans content, extremist views, and even fabricated stories. If The Daily Telegraph is not considered generally reliable in this area, it stands to reason that other British media outlets known for similar bigotry and extremism—and facing similar criticisms—should also be treated with skepticism. Perhaps we need a broader discussion about the reliability of British media sources on transgender issues[22][23], or separate discussions on some of those other newspapers/media organizations.[24][25] --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 01:42, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- The argument is rather circular. "Those newspapers are unreliable sources because they platform fringe stuff! Wait a minute, how can it be fringe if large mainstream newspapers are platforming it? They're fringe because none of the RELIABLE sources support it! But those newspapers have always been regarded as reliable! Not any more, now that they're platforming fringe beliefs!" *Dan T.* (talk) 05:49, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Climate change denial, racism, and absurd conspiracy theories have been promoted by large right-wing media and even the former US President. Still, they are not mainstream. They are fringe for our purposes. This is partially related to how scientists and scholars treat those topics. Transphobia, racism, climate change denial or the Pizzagate conspiracy theory can never be treated as "normal", "accepted" or "mainstream" on Wikipedia, regardless of whether such views are platformed by media in certain countries. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 13:45, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Is it possible to have a discussion in this area without someone making xenophobic comments about the British or supplying ancient sources complaining about opinion pieces by writers long gone or single events unrepresentative of an organisation. The Telegraph was especially bad with supposedly factual reporting, as it is on any topic it is engaged in culture warring (cyclists, heat pumps, etc). The same pattern is not true of other otherwise respected news organisations in the UK. Can we please stop having any trans article contaminated with the same old ancient activists links and offensive xenophobic nonsense someone read on a blog and thinks worth repeating ad nauseum here. -- Colin°Talk 21:13, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- The argument is rather circular. "Those newspapers are unreliable sources because they platform fringe stuff! Wait a minute, how can it be fringe if large mainstream newspapers are platforming it? They're fringe because none of the RELIABLE sources support it! But those newspapers have always been regarded as reliable! Not any more, now that they're platforming fringe beliefs!" *Dan T.* (talk) 05:49, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- There's a compelling case for treating these sources with the same level of caution, given their history of promoting anti-trans content, extremist views, and even fabricated stories. If The Daily Telegraph is not considered generally reliable in this area, it stands to reason that other British media outlets known for similar bigotry and extremism—and facing similar criticisms—should also be treated with skepticism. Perhaps we need a broader discussion about the reliability of British media sources on transgender issues[22][23], or separate discussions on some of those other newspapers/media organizations.[24][25] --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 01:42, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- After the lukewarm result for the Telegraph, are you going to try to get all those other news sources that have "faced extensive criticism for transphobia" as you noted above to be declared unreliable (or at least "disputed") on this topic as well? Maybe eventually the only "reliable sources" will be Pink News and academic papers on Queer Theory? *Dan T.* (talk) 22:36, 8 July 2024 (UTC)
- As I said, it is not considered "generally reliable". It no longer has that status in this area. The close was "reliability disputed", it's now yellow on Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Perennial sources with the summary that
- Setting aside the question of the other sources: the quote cited to the Telegraph should obviously not be in the lead, why on earth is it WP:DUE? WP:NOTPROMO - absent of evidence of secondary coverage of this very specific argument of theirs we shouldn't include it (though I think we have the sources for a general statement they argue that gay kids are supposedly being turned trans en masse) Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 02:30, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Why does the reliability of the Telegraph matter here? Is anyone claiming that the organisation has not said
that lesbians are facing "extinction" because of the "disproportionate" focus on transgender identities in schools
BilledMammal (talk) 15:23, 9 July 2024 (UTC)- Why is that due in the lead? Nobody has presented a policy based reason for it, per WP:LEADFOLLOWSBODY we should summarize the article, not cherry pick one quote that only one source has reported. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 16:06, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Then make that argument. Don’t argue that the source is unreliable when nobody disputes the accuracy of the claim. BilledMammal (talk) 16:14, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- I did, feel free to read it (I've commented on this issue twice, neither time mentioning the Telegraph's reliability)...
the quote cited to the Telegraph should obviously not be in the lead, why on earth is it WP:DUE? WP:NOTPROMO - absent of evidence of secondary coverage of this very specific argument of theirs we shouldn't include it
Why is that due in the lead? Nobody has presented a policy based reason for it, per WP:LEADFOLLOWSBODY we should summarize the article, not cherry pick one quote that only one source has reported.
- So, please answer, instead of evading, the question: Why on earth is a single quote of theirs in one source due in the lead? Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 16:29, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- I’m just here because people are misusing RSP. I’m not interested in joining the discussion beyond objecting to that. BilledMammal (talk) 16:50, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Do not reinstate the low-quality source—that is not considered generally reliable on this topic and that certainly doesn't belong in the lead and that cannot be used to promote a contentious narrative, and that also seems to be WP:UNDUE per the above concerns discussed by Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist—without consensus. Also, you are obliged to address the concerns by Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist as well if you continue your edit warring here, which you have not done. Please self-revert immediately. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 17:02, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- RSP doesn’t work that way. No consensus just means "be more careful", and in a circumstance like this where nobody disputes the factual accuracy, it is meaningless.
- See also WP:SATISFY and WP:EDITWAR. BilledMammal (talk) 17:24, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- You are required to obtain consensus for your changes and engage with the concerns above. See WP:EDITWAR. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 17:25, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- There is no consensus for your novel changes to the lede. Best just to leave it in the state it was. Void if removed (talk) 17:44, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- You have edit-warred instead of responding on this talk page. You are required to obtain consensus for the inclusion of this material, especially when 1) the source is no longer considered generally reliably on this topic, 2) there are concerns about WP:DUE, and 3) multiple editors, at least three, have agreed it doesn't belong in the lead for one of those reasons, and no editor has offered any kind of policy-based defense of the content in the discussion. I believe the most recent edit by User:Barnards.tar.gz that removed it from the lead (again) was a good solution that improved the lead. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:50, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Just to make it clear: Wikipedia:Edit warring is "edit war occurs when editors who disagree about the content of a page repeatedly override each other's contributions". Amanda began this section to discuss the reliability of the Telegraph as used in the lead of the article. After a single editor briefly disagreed, Amanda boldly removed longstanding text from the lead paragraph, citing a recent RFC. That was reverted by Void. Reverting a bold edit is perfectly normal and not considered edit warring. After a further editor disagreed with Amanda, they reverted their bold edit back. This is edit warring. That revert was in turn reverted by BilledMammal to restore the text. This is also edit warring. BilledMammal, you have been around long enough to know you don't fix an edit war by warring it back to whatever you think was the correct version. That text was then removed by Barnards.tar.gz though they also joined two paragraphs together. This minor tweak isn't enough to separate that edit from simply being further edit warring to remove longstanding text, particularly since Barnards.tar.gz hasn't participated in the talk page discussion nor is there any sign of editors reaching consensus on whether to include or exclude the text.
- The only editor who hasn't edit warred is the one being accused of it: Void.
- Could we perhaps find other sources for the 'lesbians are facing "extinction"' claim to establish its weight or accept it has insufficient weight for the lead paragraph. Meanwhile there is no rush. We can live with this sentence being or not being in the article. There's no need for anyone to earn themselves topic-ban diffs over this. -- Colin°Talk 22:19, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Going to say I agree with Barnard's edit, as the principal difference is the change of reasoning (proposed by YFNS). Ie, weigh the content, not point at RSN. Void if removed (talk) 06:23, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, but being RightTM doesn't justify edit warring. -- Colin°Talk 07:21, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- To expand, I don't think any editor here reached sanctions level edit warring, but it showed all the signs of editors determined to enforce their version of the article through repeated reverting. WP:BRD is a much misquoted and misreferred to essay (not at all a guideline) and one could argue Barnards edit was in the "cycle" spirit of trying a compromise or fixing edit. But it still completely removed the disputed text. My advice would be that making such an edit should be accompanied with a clear summary that it is an attempt to find a compromise/fix and that editors may revert if they disagree. That clearly signals the person is not warring but just wants to offer their proposed solution for examination on the page. An accompanying talk page post is also helpful in this case, to demonstrate one is in good faith participating in the "discussion" part of BRD rather than just joining in the war and not bothering to discuss at all. -- Colin°Talk 07:35, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- Yes, but being RightTM doesn't justify edit warring. -- Colin°Talk 07:21, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- Going to say I agree with Barnard's edit, as the principal difference is the change of reasoning (proposed by YFNS). Ie, weigh the content, not point at RSN. Void if removed (talk) 06:23, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- I should add that while editors are right in saying the issue is weight rather than reliability (the claim about lesbian extinction is not being disputed as having come from them) our measure of WP:WEIGHT concerns what has been published in reliable sources. I understand there is some dispute over whether the closure should have included "gender-critical views" along with "trans issues" but the closure is where it is right now. And regardless of the reliability, one newspaper isn't "sources" plural. -- Colin°Talk 22:29, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- I have not edit-warred at all. Void if removed reverted without offering a justification or engaging with the discussion in a meaningful way. That is edit warring. I have reverted exactly once with a detailed justification on the talk page. That is not edit warring. This is both a matter of whether this source is good enough in this specific context, of whether the material itself is WP:DUE and belongs in the first paragraph. It's a nuanced discussion, not black and white. The editors who edit-warred did not engage with this discussion. The Daily Telegraph is not "generally reliable" on this topic, it's widely agreed to be biased as well, but that's not the complete story or the whole reason for excluding this material from the first section. It is, however, relevant when we assess how the source is used. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 23:06, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Amanda, you reverted a revert of your bold edit. In other words, you edit warred to retain your edit that had been reverted. That is edit warring plain and simple. If you think otherwise, please take yourself to the nearest admin forum to ask for clarification and a million editors will enlighten you. -- Colin°Talk 07:24, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- I have not edit-warred at all. Void if removed reverted without offering a justification or engaging with the discussion in a meaningful way. That is edit warring. I have reverted exactly once with a detailed justification on the talk page. That is not edit warring. This is both a matter of whether this source is good enough in this specific context, of whether the material itself is WP:DUE and belongs in the first paragraph. It's a nuanced discussion, not black and white. The editors who edit-warred did not engage with this discussion. The Daily Telegraph is not "generally reliable" on this topic, it's widely agreed to be biased as well, but that's not the complete story or the whole reason for excluding this material from the first section. It is, however, relevant when we assess how the source is used. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 23:06, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- You have edit-warred instead of responding on this talk page. You are required to obtain consensus for the inclusion of this material, especially when 1) the source is no longer considered generally reliably on this topic, 2) there are concerns about WP:DUE, and 3) multiple editors, at least three, have agreed it doesn't belong in the lead for one of those reasons, and no editor has offered any kind of policy-based defense of the content in the discussion. I believe the most recent edit by User:Barnards.tar.gz that removed it from the lead (again) was a good solution that improved the lead. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:50, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- There is no consensus for your novel changes to the lede. Best just to leave it in the state it was. Void if removed (talk) 17:44, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- You are required to obtain consensus for your changes and engage with the concerns above. See WP:EDITWAR. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 17:25, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Do not reinstate the low-quality source—that is not considered generally reliable on this topic and that certainly doesn't belong in the lead and that cannot be used to promote a contentious narrative, and that also seems to be WP:UNDUE per the above concerns discussed by Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist—without consensus. Also, you are obliged to address the concerns by Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist as well if you continue your edit warring here, which you have not done. Please self-revert immediately. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 17:02, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- I’m just here because people are misusing RSP. I’m not interested in joining the discussion beyond objecting to that. BilledMammal (talk) 16:50, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- I did, feel free to read it (I've commented on this issue twice, neither time mentioning the Telegraph's reliability)...
- Then make that argument. Don’t argue that the source is unreliable when nobody disputes the accuracy of the claim. BilledMammal (talk) 16:14, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- Why is that due in the lead? Nobody has presented a policy based reason for it, per WP:LEADFOLLOWSBODY we should summarize the article, not cherry pick one quote that only one source has reported. Your Friendly Neighborhood Sociologist ⚧ Ⓐ (talk) 16:06, 9 July 2024 (UTC)
- On 21:30, 8 July 2024 (UTC) Void if removed posted half a sentence on this talk page that didn't really offer an argument. On 21:37, 8 July 2024 I posted a very detailed response addressing his concerns[26]. On 22:07, 8 July 2024 Void if removed reverted my edit without even offering a response (he did not respond on the talk page, he says nothing new in the edit summary and does not engage with my response at all). Then, and only because he had failed to justify his edit or even respond to my comment, did I reinstate my edit. That is not edit-warring. That was completely justified. The only person edit-warring was Void if removed. I also note that other editors agreed with me that the material shouldn't be in the first paragraph and that it has been removed again by others. Reverting once with a detailed justification on the talk page that the other party simply ignores is not edit-warring, it's the other way round. If Void if removed had at least made an effort to discuss his edits and responded before reverting I would not have reverted, at least not before we had discussed the matter. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 13:10, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- I said you were overstating the note on the source.
- You went ahead and made the change anyway, and I reverted, for the same reason as that which I'd stated on talk. You were overstating the strength of the note and its implications.
- YFNS has come up with a better reason. Barnards made the edit for that reason. I agree with this edit.
- The edit you wanted is now there, for a reason everyone here either agrees with or doesn't sufficiently care to dispute.
- There are enough intractable conflicts on this page without arguing about a change that now has consensus, just for a different reason than you originally proposed. Void if removed (talk) 14:10, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- On 21:30, 8 July 2024 (UTC) Void if removed posted half a sentence on this talk page that didn't really offer an argument. On 21:37, 8 July 2024 I posted a very detailed response addressing his concerns[26]. On 22:07, 8 July 2024 Void if removed reverted my edit without even offering a response (he did not respond on the talk page, he says nothing new in the edit summary and does not engage with my response at all). Then, and only because he had failed to justify his edit or even respond to my comment, did I reinstate my edit. That is not edit-warring. That was completely justified. The only person edit-warring was Void if removed. I also note that other editors agreed with me that the material shouldn't be in the first paragraph and that it has been removed again by others. Reverting once with a detailed justification on the talk page that the other party simply ignores is not edit-warring, it's the other way round. If Void if removed had at least made an effort to discuss his edits and responded before reverting I would not have reverted, at least not before we had discussed the matter. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 13:10, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- I don't disagree with that; we have more pressing issues to attend to. It was really editors from the "other side" who started harassing me with false claims of non-existent edit-warring for reverting exactly once with a detailed talk page justification (entirely normal editing) and who then engaged in egregious abuse of templates and personal attacks[27] against me in relation to that. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:25, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- They weren’t false, and you were (and still seem to be justifying continuing to) edit warring. If your change is reverted, you come to the talk page to discuss it, and do not reinstate it until a consensus is had. You don’t get to “change your reasoning” and then revert it again. -bɜ:ʳkənhɪmez (User/say hi!) 20:31, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- They were false and constituted harassment of me. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:38, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- They weren’t false. As another editor pointed out, you made a bold edit, as allowed. The edit was then reverted by another editor. Rather than come to the talk page or that editor’s talk page, you instead reinstated the edit. Regardless of the fact that you are now on the talk page trying to discuss, you have a history of reverting the revert. That is the definition of edit warring. You do not have some “first mover advantage” that your edit gets to stay in the article while it’s discussed - if it’s reverted, you wait for consensus and discuss on the talk page. Only after consensus comes do you make the edit again. Yet you instead wanted your disputed edit to appear while you discussed it.
- Ultimately, your best bet is to admit you messed up by reverting back and try to keep this discussion up. If you continue to act like you’ve done nothing wrong, I suspect another editor here will attempt to have you removed from this article (or perhaps the entire topic as a whole) as it is not constructive. -bɜ:ʳkənhɪmez (User/say hi!) 20:41, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- They were false and constituted harassment of me. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:38, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- They weren’t false, and you were (and still seem to be justifying continuing to) edit warring. If your change is reverted, you come to the talk page to discuss it, and do not reinstate it until a consensus is had. You don’t get to “change your reasoning” and then revert it again. -bɜ:ʳkənhɪmez (User/say hi!) 20:31, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
- I don't disagree with that; we have more pressing issues to attend to. It was really editors from the "other side" who started harassing me with false claims of non-existent edit-warring for reverting exactly once with a detailed talk page justification (entirely normal editing) and who then engaged in egregious abuse of templates and personal attacks[27] against me in relation to that. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:25, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
"you made a bold edit, as allowed. The edit was then reverted by another editor. Rather than come to the talk page or that editor’s talk page, you instead reinstated the edit"
: That is a complete misrepresentation of everything that happened. I have reverted exactly once, and only after offering a detailed rationale on the talk page that the other party did not respond to, after being given an opportunity to do so. That is not edit-warring. That is normal editing. I was the editor who came to the talk page, and who waited in vain for the other editor to engage in discussion. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 20:45, 10 July 2024 (UTC)- It was definitely edit warring, especially since you gave a very short time for responses before reverting to something which had clearly been disputed. You're an experienced editor so you really should know better, I suggest you seek feedback from someone you trust who I'm sure will disabuse you on your confusion over what constitutes edit warring. This is CTOP issue, so if you continue to be confused over what constitutes edit warring you're likely to find yourself topic banned or otherwise restricted sooner rather than later which will be unfortunate since you can provide valuable feedback on discussions in the area. Nil Einne (talk) 19:20, 12 July 2024 (UTC)
- I did not give "very short time for responses before reverting" because my response was posted before the revert by the other party. Hence, he was aware of, and did not reply to my response. The only editor engaging in discussion, and who has reverted exactly once with a detailed rationale that has received no response—when the other party reverts without responding, that means he had the opportunity to respond—is not the one engaged in edit warring; then all editors who reverted an article once would be involved in edit warring too. --Amanda A. Brant (talk) 22:56, 12 July 2024 (UTC)
- It was definitely edit warring, especially since you gave a very short time for responses before reverting to something which had clearly been disputed. You're an experienced editor so you really should know better, I suggest you seek feedback from someone you trust who I'm sure will disabuse you on your confusion over what constitutes edit warring. This is CTOP issue, so if you continue to be confused over what constitutes edit warring you're likely to find yourself topic banned or otherwise restricted sooner rather than later which will be unfortunate since you can provide valuable feedback on discussions in the area. Nil Einne (talk) 19:20, 12 July 2024 (UTC)
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