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Double jeopardy

Just thought I'd let you know I tweaked a change you made on the Double jeopardy article. You added a sentence mentioning res judicata. I changed it so that it talks about collateral estoppel. IANAL, but as I understand it, the two are similiar but not the same. I always thought that res judicata applies to decision of law made by a judge, while collateral estoppel applies to judgements of fact made by a jury. If that is the case, then collateral estoppel applies, not res judicata. [***] →Raul654 06:11, Jan 30, 2004 (UTC)

The three concepts have nothing to do with whether a judge or a jury made the decision--the effect is binding regardless as long as the judgment is final (the different degree of deference a judge or jury decision may receive under appeal is not relevant here). True, juries are typically the factfinders, but not always. Civil trials can be had under judge or jury (not all states guarantee the right, and the right in federal court only applies to cases at law, not in equity), and in the US, even a criminal defendant can always waive his right to a jury trial and be tried by a judge instead, and double jeopardy will apply the same.
Res judicata (L. "a thing adjudicated") includes both claim preclusion and collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion. Issue preclusion applies to whatever factual issues were necessarily resolved with the final judgment of a claim. You can have res judicata without collateral estoppel--when a judgment for the defendant could have been based on the failure to prove any or all of multiple elements, so that it is uncertain what issues were actually decided--but not the reverse. --Postdlf 30 Jan 2004, 3:22 am (EST)
Ok, thanks for clearing that up. →Raul654 09:07, Jan 30, 2004 (UTC)

I think it could be slightly edited to provide more clarity on when jeopardy attaches in U.S. law (particularly with regards to the dismissal -- with prejudice, without prejudice?). I don't know if you'd be interested in this. --Daniel C. Boyer 15:47, 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Someone with a little more knowledge of criminal law than I have will have to tackle that, at least for right now. But the whole meaning of prejudice, in a civil context (and I assume criminal is the same) means that the same claim can't be refiled against that defendant. Without prejudice means it can be refiled. In the federal civil court system, prejudice attaches, for example, after the second time the plaintiff has himself withdrawn the same claim, preventing him from refiling it a third time. A dismissal with prejudice acts as if the claim had been adjudicated in favor of the defendant (and so double jeopardy would follow), I just can't speak to the details of when exactly a judge would attach prejudice in a criminal context--that would likely be a matter of state and local law anyway. --Postdlf 18:19 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Capitalizing animal common names

Hi, welcome to Wikipedia. I hope you enjoy your stay. Re: capitalisation of species names... there is a long history behind the decision to capitalise species names.. if you are interested in hearing all the reasons behind the decision give me a shout and I'll dig 'em out. Til then best not to change articles on an ad hoc basis - often, like Orca they part of a whole series of articles and it'd be nice to have the capitalization the same across all of the them. Pete/Pcb21 (talk) 15:27, 1 Jan 2004 (UTC)


I assume you mean that there are wikipedia-specific reasons. I suppose I would like to know why animal names are being capitalized like proper nouns when they are common nouns. If there is inconsistency among the articles, it should be resolved in a grammatically correct manner. Thanks! --Postdlf 5:07, 2 Jan 2004 (EST)
See Wikipedia:Naming conventions (capitalization) and Wikipedia:Naming conventions (fauna). --mav 03:57, 3 Jan 2004 (UTC)

RESPONSE: I'll respect that convention if it is accepted on wikipedia--I don't wish to disregard established custom. I agree that it would avoid ambiguity with those particular species names that begin with common adjectives. However, the cons are that it's contrary to established english grammatical rules for capitalizing nouns, and I don't see it being used consistently at all from entry to entry. Do we then capitalize every occurrence and form of the common species name Human as well? --Postdlf 1:49, 3 Jan 2004 (EST)

Re your con: Actually it is common to find species names capitalized in books (and I include popular books as well as academic tomes in this). For example I have used the National Audobon Society Guide to Marine Mammals of the World and Mark Carwardine's Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises as sources for many of my cetacean articles - they always capitalize species names. In works specifically telling you about the animal the name is capitalized. This is not just a Wikipedia convention - there are manuals of style that confirm. However you are right in that more general articles are unlikely to use capitalized forms for common animal names. Thus we wouldn't expect to write "XYZ was famouse for owning Dogs" in article about person XYZ. This is also consistent with other established norms of writing. Thus we have the hybrid situation of capitalisation on rather scientific articles and no capitialisation on more general articles. This is perhaps not ideal but I see no way of having and enforcing a global policy. Pete/Pcb21 (talk) 22:50, 4 Jan 2004 (UTC)
I guess that sounds reasonable, and I did not know that it is a convention in use elsewhere. You don't have to worry about me lurking through the site and maliciously de-capitalizing every animal name I find (as much as I may be tempted...). --Postdlf 3:11, 5 Jan 2004 (EST)

Hi, just stubbled across this. Genus should be caps, species not. 1 exception, plants named in honor of a person, e.g. Livingstonii, or as a real example Encephalartos Woodii. signed, me. [editor's note: not Postdlf]

I think you are talking about the scientific name, over which there which there is no dispute. The discussion here is about the common name. I am not sure if the anonymous user and postdlf are the same person as you have both signed 'me'! Pete/Pcb21 (talk) 06:47, 5 Jan 2004 (UTC)
I figured that using "me" on my own talk page would be clear--I didn't count on anonymous imitators! I've changed the "me"s that are actually me to my nick. --Postdlf 3:12, 5 Jan 2004 (EST)

Re: Treaties. What I was getting at is that the treaty power allows the federal government to legislate in areas that it would normally be unable to do so under the division of power between the Federal government and the states.

Yes the Federal government can't use the treaty power to get around the explicit constitutional limits on the powers of the Federal government, but it can use the treaty power to exercise powers beyond those delegated to Congress in Article I.

The relevant case is is Missouri v. Holland 252 US 346 (1920). -- User:Roadrunner



Re: various chameleons : Thanks for including the taxonomies. Eventually I'll be doing each species for the genus... Rhymeless 04:10, 12 Apr 2004 (UTC)

MediaWiki:VfD-Daniel C. Boyer

Thank you for your insightful comments at Template:VfD-Daniel_C_Boyer. UninvitedCompany 15:46, 13 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Thanks for noticing my thoughts on the VFD page...I think there's a principle at play here that Mr. Boyer is missing. Please help me keep an eye on him, and take a look at the last couple edits on International Union of Mail Artists—full explanation now on the talk page. Postdlf 16:28 13 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I keep an eye on his contributions when things get slow, as he has added all manner of dubious material. Surrealism is another of his babies and is a frightful mess, and a look in any print encyclopedia, art survey, or book on surrealism will tell a very different story than our article does. I checked all the references at a regional library once for confirmation. His article has a revisionist POV held by a small school of thought: that surrealism is a dynamic movement continuing yet today; that surrealism is not a mere style, movement, period, or form (etc) of art but rather A Separate Entity In Its Own Right; that there is important, influential, highly regarded work being done in surrealism in the United States right now. Real world is that the surrealism movement in art and culture was largely over when abstract art took center stage in the 1960s.

But there's no point in trying to reason with Boyer, because he'll spout all manner of references that purport to show how surrealism has been misunderstood by the mainstream art movement. As you have found, he is adept at coming up with supporting references that are not really authoritative. The effort involved in refuting these is high, since it is so hard to "prove" the absence of something, or "prove" that something is unimportant. The right way would be to try to get, say, three college professors, at different institutions, to write a 1-2 page letter summarizing their views on the topic.

But they would have not to be art historians, as that would be begging the very question that is in dispute. --Daniel C. Boyer 15:07, 16 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Wikipedians may respond with apathy and even with such evidence an edit war could drag on.

Surrealism as an article is more important to Wikipedia than IUOMA or Natatoria, because people actually come to Wikipedia to read about Surrealism. It's too bad the article is so poor. I am not up to the challenge of improving it, however, since I don't have the background, and since MeatBall:FightingIsBoring.

As for IUOMA, it should just be deleted, since there is less to say about it than the Podunkton Methodist Church Women's Group, which at least holds a bake sale and a quilting day every year, and actually *has* a treasurer and a president.

UninvitedCompany 18:30, 13 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Despite your vendetta against surrealism, there is a term for this "revisionist POV": Surrealism. Check any primary source. Check Breton's Manifestoes of Surrealism, in which he provides the following definitions for surrealism:
"SURREALISM, n. Psychic automatism in its pure state, by which one proposes to express-verbally, by means of the written word, or in any other matter-the actual functioning of thought. Dictated by thought, in the absence of any control excercised by reason, exempt from any moral concern."
"ENCYCLOPEDIA. Philosophy. Surrealism is based on the belief in the superior reality of certain forms of neglected associations, in the omnipotence of dream, in the disinterested play of thought. It tends to ruin once and for all all other psychic mechanisms and to substitute itself for them in solving all the principal problems of life. The following have performed acts of ABSOLUTE SURREALISM: Aragon, Baron, Boiffard, Breton, Carrive, Crevel, Delteil, Desnos, Eluard, Gérard, Limbour, Malkine, Morise, Naville, Noll, Péret, Picon, Soupault, Vitrac."
Check the journal La Revolution Surrealiste, check the Chicago journal Arsenal: Surrealist Subversions, check the Surrealist Subversions anthology (this is reviewed, for example at http://eserver.org/bs/reviews/2002-10-28-2.43PM.html, and I would like to point out a quote therefrom: "Any art student who ever saw surrealism as a primarily artistic or intellectual movement rather than a political one should have no such conceptions after reading this book -- almost every essay underscores the intrinsically revolutionary and political nature of surrealism"); that is, check any surrealist source in addition to things just written about surrealism. In terms of it continuing after the 1960s not only might I point out the huge flood of surrealist publications coming out of not only Chicago but Paris, Portland, Prague &c., but -- would you be willing to accept it as a mainstream source -- this quote from the Grove Dictionary of Art: "Breton's death in 1966 left no heir who could impose cohesion, although some activity continued in Brussels (with Marcel Mariën and the painters Jane Graverol and Felix Labisse), Prague (with the artists Jiri Kolar, Josef Istler, Eva Svankmajerova and the film maker Jan Svankmajer) and Chicago (coordinated by Franklin Rosemont)." In my view "some activity" is an understatement (the 1976 World Surrealist Exhibition in Chicago (at which 31 countries were represented[1]) obviously postdated the 1960s, and it received substantial mainstream media coverage, as did the "Surrealism Here and Now" show at the Heartland Cafe in Chicago[2]), but it is at least a mainstream source showing surrealism continuing after the 1960s. --Daniel C. Boyer 20:38, 13 Apr 2004 (UTC)

line-item-VfD

I'm not aware of any line-item-VfD. Pretty much edit wars are the only way people use to prevent people including themselves in articles. Sad. A better way might be to ask for page protection. - Tεxτurε 16:32, 13 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Daniel C. Boyer

Please do not interpret what I am about to write as lobbying to keep Daniel C. Boyer; I have no position on this. Neither is it an attempt to control or alter any of the content of the article should it survive. I am just asking you to explain why you would say "Googling you, I couldn't find anything that you hadn't posted yourself, or that wasn't just a representation of wikipedia content" when this is not what the Google results would show, and by your own admission you hadn't actually examined all of the Google results (this is not an attempt to say that I am not an "aspiring artist," just to examine this claim on its own merits and nothing more); why you slightly shifted your claim that with one exception "everything I saw was on sites that either allow users to post profiles directly, or at least exclusively post unsolicited submissions", when this claim was based on again not examining the evidence; and what is the implication of "I've had art professors with work in the permanent collections of museums who I don't even think merit entries. If webzines and group shows were enough, everyone with a BFA would have their own article" when by examining Wikipedia you will see that my artwork has also been included in books and my articles and responses to inquiries have been included in (print) journals, and I am currently preparing for my seventh solo exhibition. This is not an argument as to my famousness or non-famousness, or whether there should be an article on me (I could still be obscure or "aspiring"), but I think you should confine your arguments to facts; otherwise, you should explain yourself. --Daniel C. Boyer 15:41, 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I said I didn't find anything else other than what I stated I did. One reason may have been that my search was for the single term "daniel c. boyer", not the occurence of "daniel" together with "boyer." As for the "facts", you presented the long list of links as all being examples of content you were not responsible for yourself, which clearly wasn't the case, and I honestly described what I found in what I did look through. If you actually look at what I said instead of interpreting my statements to be broader than what they were, I never pretended to take anything more than a sampling of your links, links that you misrepresented as ALL being something that, at the very least, not all of them were. And from my sampling, I only found one link that was of a different character than what I had first found.
Most of my listed links were for "Daniel C. Boyer," so I don't think that point is that significant. What I was questioning was whether you would characterise Wikipedia as being an objective academic project and then be inconsistent by being so casual about research and forming an opinion on that basis. I also, rightly or otherwise, took your original statement about content I had posted very literally (in none of the links did I actually physically post the material), but you then shifted gears to content I was reponsible for. However, most of the links I provided I wasn't responsible for the content of either; an example is the P.S. Rabel biography (I don't read German!). --Daniel C. Boyer 18:49, 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I don't have anything against your work--I actually liked some of the drawings that I saw online--and I'm not disputing that you apparently have had some success in your profession. As have many, many people, however. My point about art professors is that there are plenty of people that have been successful in art, in terms of getting their work shown, but that alone doesn't make them notable for mention in the content here.
I don't dispute this in the slightest. If you are going to say that I'm not notable enough for mention here, I won't dispute it. All I am asking for is that you refrain from making factually-inaccurate claims. I'll let this statement go to address what you claim my motives are as well. --Daniel C. Boyer 18:49, 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)
I think you're letting your ego about your work get the best of you, and I think your claim that you have no position on whether or not your titular article should be kept is a little disingenuous, considering the great lengths you've gone to in order to dispute comments about your significance. Perhaps you should have taken to heart the comment about your "disgusting self-promotion" posted in your talk page last year, from the very one whom you say started your article (under an anon IP, it appears), as well as the unanimous agreement, but for one vote last I saw, in the VfD page. Just ask yourself how appropriately you've handled this, in choosing not to stay out and let others who are disinterested argue for and against something in which you are personally invested. --Postdlf 18:15 14 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Beer ads

Thanks for the head's up, and for your vigilance! I've spared two articles that aren't as spamish; Mountain Crest Brewing Corp. and Mountain Crest Classic Lager (which seems to be the company's only noteworthy brand). I'm not sure if they can be NPOVed adequately; if you think not, by all means list them on VfD. We do have articles on other beer brands, but of course, they don't read like ads. Cheers, -- Hadal 19:23, 16 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Nicely done! I know how you feel, but thanks to your effort they're not getting the hyped plug the company desired. It's also odd that only the brother, and not the president, was originally mentioned. Sibling rivalry, perhaps (though that might be assuming too much about the submitter). -- Hadal 20:52, 16 Apr 2004 (UTC)

VfD-Electional astrology

I'm hoping your comment that you can't tell electional astrology apart from astronomy was a slip of the fingers. -- Cyrius|&#9998 20:08, Apr 18, 2004 (UTC)

Sorry if that sounded a bit snippy, it's just that it's really annoying when people don't know the difference. -- Cyrius|&#9998 20:17, Apr 18, 2004 (UTC)
No, I agree. I just feel so ashamed now...everyone's going to think I'm a regular Weekly World News reader or something. Postdlf 20:20 18 Apr 2004 (UTC)


VfD-Skull (mythology)

I hope you'll change your mind and discover some of the skull symbolism in Western art. How about Wolk (mythology)? Would you permit that? It's not as interesting as beer can labels I'll admit... Wetman 20:53, 18 Apr 2004 (UTC)

I hope you noticed that I said on VfD that I liked your prose--I just don't think it's of the right descriptive nature for a wikipedia article--it's too much of a meditation. (maybe wikibooks instead?) But more to the point, the reason why I listed it on VfD is that I have serious doubts as to whether there could be a full article on the topic (and by "mythology" I assume you mean to include symbolism and artistic uses...so "skull (symbolism)" would be a better title). I can't think of any skull symbolism beyond use as a proxy for death or the dead, and as a warning...also of death (i.e. on poison, pirate flags, etc.). I can think of two options that would be better: include a "cultural references" section in skull, or a page on death (symbolism) that would include skulls and everything else. As for wolves, I also think a cultural references section would be appropriate there in the main article...that's how it's done for apple. If I'm wrong about the varied and multiple uses of skulls in culture, myth, etc., then I'd love to see that reflected through expanded information in your article. Postdlf 22:16 18 Apr 2004 (UTC)
and I just noticed there is a small section on wolves in folklore in that main article, btw... Postdlf 22:18 18 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Speedy deletion candidates

I have deleted Growling Dog Productions since it was previously listed on vfd and deleted. Someone else has deleted Scott Ross Schaefer. The guidelines for speedy deletion candidates is located at Wikipedia:Candidates for speedy deletion. What does or does not need to be listed on vfd is a matter of some interpretation. Maximus Rex 21:37, 18 Apr 2004 (UTC)

This may provide some insight into Anthony DiPierro's voting. (Or maybe it won't.) Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Anthony DiPierro and Wikipedia:Requests for arbitration/Anthony DiPierro/Evidence. -- Maximus Rex 16:19, 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Thanks...I try to be objective in judging the behavior of other wikipedians--it helps to see that many others have had the same concerns that I have. It looks like those arbitration dialogues had concluded that he had stopped trolling on VfD...I think it's time to revisit that conclusion. Postdlf 18:23 20 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Hey, on Georgetown University Law Center, you mention, WRT the military-gay school issue, recent law changes that deny university funding to universities that refuse to discriminate. It would be really cool if you wrote an article on the particular law at hand, and linked it. Improv

I expanded the explanation of it on the GULC page (as well as on the Association of American Law Schools page I just started). Eventually I might create a separate article for the "Solomon Amendments", once I research it a little more. Until then, http://www.law.georgetown.edu/solomon/Index.html on the GULC official site has a lot more info about it. Postdlf 21:48 28 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Hi. I agree that Palestine in short should be deleted but it is not a candidate for speedy deletion - please list on Wikipedia:Votes for deletion if appropriate. - Tεxτurε 15:30, 29 Apr 2004 (UTC)

This also applies to Range and borders of Palestine. I can't find a reason under Wikipedia:Candidates for speedy deletion that allows me to speedy delete this article. Please list on VfD. - Tεxτurε 15:32, 29 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Yeah, I thought Palestine in short was at least borderline for speedy deletion, but I thought it was also clear that it was redundant content posted to avoid peer editing on the main article, after the creator had spurred an edit war seen by many as vandalism on his part. I didn't list the Range and borders one for speedy deletion, though I still think it's also a solid vfd candidate. Postdlf 7:20 29 Apr 2004 (UTC)

Dealing with redundant categories

If anyone's wondering why I have a lot of vandal-appearing edits relating to the variously named United States history categories, it's because I'm really confused and trying to fix it. Yeah. Redirects unfortunately don't seem to carry over the articles that link to them to the target category. Anyway...I'll sort it out. Postdlf 3:27 04 June 2004 (UTC)

Categories of Airports

I noticed you changed the category of Bolton Field Airport to Airports in Ohio. Just to let you know, I am categorizing every airport currently in Wikipedia. The topic of subdividing countries is still one under discussion. Please go to Wikipedia:WikiProject Airports/categorization and post a note there. Until then, I am reverting them to Category:Airports of the United States.

  • Secondary note, the current style is Transportation in * not * transportation. Burgundavia 04:17, 6 Jun 2004 (UTC)

New York City categories

I am not certain if you know, but the standard for naming, is * of * or * in *, not * *. Ie. Transportation in New York City, not New York City transportation. I moved most of the transportion categories to the standard style, but there remains: Category:New_York_City_history Category:New_York_City_neighborhoods Category:New_York_City_skyscrapers which should be moved to the the standard style, as well as Category:Manhattan neighborhoods. If you have any questions, give me a shout on my talk page. Burgundavia 00:15, Jun 9, 2004 (UTC)

  • As for conventions, most is just observing and asking. As for the moving, I did it all the hard way. Go to the deepest level and start there, then change each level as you. I really do hope they make categories expandable. Hope this helps. Burgundavia

You made seven edits in a row to this page, but you marked them all minor and didn't give edit summaries for any of them, so it's rather hard to figure out what you were trying to do. In any case, the overall effect of your edits in total was to:

  1. Categorize this article into Category:National Security Council and Category:Executive Office of the U.S. President
  2. Remove the See also section pointing to Category:United States National Security Advisors
  3. Categorize this article into Category:United States National Security Advisors

While no. 1 makes perfect sense, I'm not sure what your goal was with nos. 2 and 3. The article describes the office of National Security Advisor. The category lists people who were National Security Advisors. United States National Security Advisor isn't an example of one of the United States National Security Advisors. I've backed out those two changes. In the future, please mark down at least a word or two of edit summary to let people know what you're trying to accomplish when the purpose of your edits isn't self-evident. --TreyHarris 04:00, 11 Jun 2004 (UTC)

I think my point in putting it there was that it contained a list of National Security Advisors—perhaps a better alternative would've been for me to simply name the category for inclusion "National Security Advisor" so that way it would more sensibly contain the article describing the office as well as those who have held the title. As for as edit summaries, I knew that unfortunately someone along the way would be displeased by my omission of them, but when I go on my categorizing frenzies, I try to work very quickly. I think for the most part, my categorizations speak for themselves (at least in the end—sometimes it takes a few tries to fix them because they don't show up in previews). Postdlf 11 June 2004 4:06 (UTC)

Non-tariff barriers to trade

Hello to Manhattan, I very much like Krzysztof Kieslowski as well! I made a comment at the discussion of the article Non-tariff barriers to trade because you have the understandable perception that tariffs are tariffs, which, I am afraid, some economists try to pretend is not the case. Good luck with your studies! Please also check my page and let me know there in case you are interested in my learning project. Get-back-world-respect 17:37, 12 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Moving articles

Hello. Nice work with all the categorization. I noticed you moved a Supreme Court Case article recently by cutting and pasting the content. This is not recommended as the article history does not move with the content when you do this. Reccommended method is to use the Move function (tab) at the top of the article. Of course, if there was an article at the target name already, you'd have to ask and admin to delete it first, which is generally no problem if it is only a redirect. olderwiser 02:06, 13 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Yeah, that was the case...there was a redirect there. Thanks for noticing my work on the categorization...I've been quite pleased with how the organization has been coming along so far. ---Postdlf 2:09 13 June 2004 (UTC)

User:IZAK

I think IZAK isn't capable of being objective about anything related to religion. He's completely blinded by his ideology. See User talk:John Kenney#The VfD/Prof E-Mal, Talk:Jew, and User talk:Eequor#Objection to Jewish mythology. It's really a shame he can't understand and forces Wikipedia to his beliefs by his persistence. --Eequor 13:42, 23 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Robert Jackson

I decided to undertake the disambiguation of "Robert Jackson" since we had a lot of ridiculous links. I was working on the article about the NYC Councilmember. Then I saw that, at the same time, you'd created the disambiguation page. Was this just an amazing coincidence? It doesn't matter at all, but I can't help being curious! JamesMLane 19:04, 29 Jun 2004 (UTC)

  • I have the Barnette case on my watchlist, and saw that you had disambiguated the Jackson link in that article...then I noticed that Robert Jackson itself needed to be disambiguated. Tha's all. Postdlf 19:11, 30 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Thanks, I forgot I'd done that link first. It seemed like too much of a coincidence to be true. Anyway, thanks for doing the Robert Jackson page. JamesMLane 20:47, 30 Jun 2004 (UTC)

I see that you added a neutrality dispute tag to this article, noting that it was someone's personal critique of the case. The article is very stubby at the moment (no description of the case itself, for example!) but it seems accurate, so far as it goes. Do you see any errors in Mr. Cronin's analysis of the case? Do you think that the law does say that a request for permission is equivalent to stipulating that there is a valid copyright, or that use without permission is copyright infringement? Jamesday 18:54, 30 Jun 2004 (UTC)

I haven't had time to read the case, and your questions about what I thought about it are missing the point of what is wrong with the article. The stub may have sound criticism of the case, but at current it contains nothing but criticism without actually explaining what the opinion said or how the court's reasoning could be otherwise justified. That wouldn't necessarily be fatal, just a sign of a work in progress, but the choice of language furthermore treats the criticism as accepted fact—its very definition is that it is "a flawed US copyright infringement decision..." It is acceptable NPOV to point out that courts or legal scholars consider it flawed. It is unacceptable POV to say that it is flawed. Postdlf 19:04, 30 Jun 2004 (UTC)

Place categories

Thanks for your help with Louisiana places categories. -- Infrogmation 20:53, 1 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Columbus area FM stations

I must strongly disagree with your moving of Columbus FM stations from articles such as WNCI to WNCI-FM. This only introduces inaccuracies into the wikipedia and violates FCC naming conventions. Please use the FCC database to do station queries before moving articles to prevent these bad edits. Richardsur 04:05, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)

I have no idea what you're talking about—I've done no such thing. Postdlf 14:27, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)
My sincere apologies. I didn't do enough research before posting to your talk page. It was shortly after you added the category information that the articles were moved, so I figured you were moving them. Sorry. By the way, great job with the categories. --Richardsur 22:09, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Harvey v. Horan

I hope you don't think I've abandoned this article. I'm afraid it's taking a bit longer than I expected, as there's a lot of information in the appeal that I'm trying to incorporate into the new article.

Again, thanks for your help,

Acegikmo1 16:36, 6 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Towns category

You might want to be cautious about creating and populating categories for Towns in XX State. In many states, "towns" have no official meaning and the term was only used in Wikipedia articles because Rambot-generated articles used it for Census-designated places that were not cities, villages or other official entities. Of course, in some states, "town" does have an official status. olderwiser 02:26, 8 Jul 2004 (UTC)

If that's the case, then the categorization can be changed as the individual articles are corrected—otherwise, there is no way to categorize them now. I noticed under one state, someone had unthinkingly categorized all municipalities as "cities"; at least I'm using the terms currently present in the article. Postdlf 02:31, 8 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Category:Books that start with B

I read your message and if the category and sister categories are really such a problem then I'll allow an administrator to delete them if we could get ahold of one to remove them and the links to them. -- [[User:LGagnon|LGagnon Talk]] 20:00, 10 Jul 2004 (UTC)



Re your comments on User talk:Bryan Derksen. You're right about (Washington Metro), I just figured that could wait until those had actual pages (And I did it pre-emptively with a few, specifically Pentagon City (Washington Metro)). That is a worthy project, I could get on it. Leave the recategorization to him. ;) And you do have a good point with crowding out the category. --Golbez 08:08, 12 Jul 2004 (UTC)

County Categories

Please review the comment I put on Wikipedia talk:WikiProject U.S. Counties, and comment there. I'd like to get some other mids looking at the subject as well. If you think I'm out of line, feel free to use my talk page as an alternative. Thanks, Lou I 19:39, 12 Jul 2004 (UTC).

Still thinking about your update. Re: Category for colunial governors, I'd suggest the title if Category:American Colonial Governors with a sub-category of Massachusetts Colonial Governors, etc. This avoids some conflicts, since Nova Scotia Colonial Governors is no problem, but still leaves the otther naming problem of PROVINCE vs COLONY. The term province is a two plus century dead legal term. The British secretary of state and trade lords used it, but even in the eighteenth centry Americans only used it on legal documents and formalisms. I'll still have to thrash that one out with Jengod. Regards, Lou I 20:53, 12 Jul 2004 (UTC)
Did the difference in term between a "province" and a "colony" actually have any legal impact, or was it pretty much mere semantics as between "commonwealths" and states today? Postdlf 17:50, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Help, please

You have done a lot more with Categories than I have. I modiied the category entry for the American Revolution, hoping to make the Revolutionary War a subcategory, but not the other way around. Yet after my change, each category will refers to the other as a subcategory. If you could take a look, and let me know how or why I failed, I'd appreciate it. Thanks, Lou I 16:11, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC)

For some reason, the way the database works, changes to categories don't always update right away. If you look at Category:American Revolution, it's only a member of Category:United States history, so nothing more needs to be done except waiting for the system to refresh Category:American Revolutionary War so the changes will be visible there too. Postdlf 17:45, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC)

BTW, I've been pondering whether there should be a Category:Signers of the U.S. Declaration of Independence or a Category:Signers of the U.S. Constitution. I'm leaning against it right now so I've held off, but I don't yet have any conclusive reasons why or why not. Postdlf 17:48, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC)

You're the law guy, I'm not. Is it really universal to use "U.S." rather than "US" in legal citation? -- Jmabel 18:20, Jul 15, 2004 (UTC)

Yes—while not every jurisdiction uses the exact same citation forms (for example, some state courts put the case name, then year, then reporter rather than the standard Blue Book case name, then reporter, then year form used in federal courts and law schools), case reporter abbreviation is something in which there is total consistency. "U.S." refers specifically to the "United States Reports", the official Supreme Court case reporter, and is the only accepted way to refer to it.
Strictly speaking, I think "U.S." is probably the only right way to abbreviate "United States" in general anyway, despite the common use of "US". It isn't the same as state abbreviations such as "NY" or "DC" that are proper without periods because they have accepted use as postal codes. Postdlf 19:11, 15 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Article rewrite

Hello again Postdlf,

I have finally completely rewritten what was US Constitutional right of access to DNA testing. It is now located at Harvey v. Horan. It's about fifteen times as long as the original article and (I'm hoping) as many times more accurate. I would greatly appreciate it if you'd look over the article. I will graciously accept any corrections or suggestions you have.

Sincerely,

Acegikmo1 05:19, 16 Jul 2004 (UTC)


Experiments that Work and Ones that Don't

Are these necessary considering how we have categories now? They seem like unnecessary clutter. Postdlf 23:10, 17 Jul 2004 (UTC)

I think you're mostly right. It was practicable and (I think) helpful with Roman myth. It's clearly breaking down with Greek myth, where things are much more open-ended and complex. Where something like nymphs or the figures associated with a god are loosely defined and wide-ranging and potentially hierarchical, categories are much better. So I'm mostly dissatisfied with the experiment.

The only ones that I think might be worth keeping, in stripped-down form, are Template:Greek myth (Titan) and Template:Greek myth (Olympian) - maybe or maybe not (sea) and (Hades). At least the first two data sets are small, heterogeneous and closely interrelated enough where it could still work. Bacchiad 00:10, 18 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Fun with Religion

Thanks for the update regarding that "Aldism" article, or however it's spelled. Funny stuff. Oh, well...wouldn't be the first time I was quoted out of context!  :^)) Take care. - Lucky 6.9 16:12, 19 Jul 2004 (UTC)

FHM

Thanks for taking the time to deal with the FHM category. In the end, it just came down to the fact that MK wasnt happy with the idea of his 'hard work' going down the drain. Anyway, its not the last of it - a while back we went through and deleted a bunch of "Year in MTV" articles, which someone was going nuts over. The FHM lists are about the same thing, only they seem more acceptible given how fast things are moving around here, and the fact that policing thest articles would be impossible. It might require 3 people to do nothing but scour categories to prune them, without really the avaliable tools to do a good job. Category pruning ought be a system task for sysops, IMHO, but that would require some upgrades. Thanks again. -SV 18:38, 2004 Jul 20 (UTC)

User:Arevich

Have you seen the delightful message that has been left on my user talk page by this user? I'm glad I'm going away for two days, I can tell you... -- Graham ☺ | Talk 20:08, 20 Jul 2004 (UTC)

It gets even better—check out what he last wrote on his talk page. Postdlf 20:48, 20 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Check out what I wrote about him removing your text, etc. - UtherSRG 22:54, 20 Jul 2004 (UTC)

I suppose there are no more appropriate kudos for your contributions on this dialogue than: Rock on! *grins* - UtherSRG 20:19, 28 Jul 2004 (UTC)

My vate entry has been deleted, although it was posted in the undeletion list :( This discourages me to contribute in wikipedia. The lesson or others: It doesnt mean it doesn exist if you don't know it --Vate 16:45, 29 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Vate, your re-creating of the article was out of process. It was deleted back in Novemeber of 2003. Proper process to restore an article is to list it on Wikipedia:Votes for undeletion. Then, if concensus dictates that it should be restored, an admin will restore it. Since you decided to not follow this process, I deleted the article so as to restore correct process. - UtherSRG 16:53, 29 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Stubs

You asked me about stubs. I have little or no intention of expanding stubs. If you'd like to delete one or more of them, you're welcome to do so. —Vespristiano 02:34, 30 Jul 2004 (UTC)

  • It's fine to create stubs and rely on others to edit them, but make sure that even as stubs, that they aren't worthy of deletion—we shouldn't have to follow you around deleting stubs that you have given little time or thought to. With many of your stubs, it was impossible to see what was notable about the subject, or in some cases even what the subject was. At a minimum a stub should tell someone exactly why they would want to research the subject more and contribute to the article. Please see Wikipedia:Perfect stub article, and I hope you can incorporate some of those guidelines into your further work. Thanks! Postdlf 17:06, 30 Jul 2004 (UTC)

New Rome

Here's the NBC4 article on New Rome. http://www.nbc4columbus.com/news/3598592/detail.html

Senators

Thanks for the kind words. I have noticed some pages like that, but some states have an alphabetical list (which is useful) and some have a chart (which is almost made redundant by my charts, inspired by US Congressional Delegations from North Carolina). I figured I'd deal with that once my superior ;) tables were done. Am I missing anything?

Unfortunately, right now, I'm trying to figure out how to do California. :P I've finished half the districts and am wondering if it's best to split it up. Maybe you're a good person to ask - Should I split it into several 15-district-wide tables, or just do one, 54-district wide table, and make people scroll horizontally to read it? And I have noticed the alphabetizing issue, that's a simple fix. --Golbez 06:39, 31 Jul 2004 (UTC)

I just reread your comment. My tables are specificaly lists of the delegations; i.e. a horizontal reference for whom served in what year. There's still a place for a vertical reference, i.e. an alphabetical list of senators and representatives. Such a list, if not made wholly redundant by a category, probably does not belong on my delegations pages, since they aren't grouped by delegation. That's the whole point of the tables. Any suggestions? --Golbez 04:28, 10 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Art categories

Hi,

I noticed that you have recently created some sub-categories in the visual arts. Can I also encourage you to join the categorisation discussion at Category talk:Art -- Solipsist 20:53, 6 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Atlantium

I appreciate your response. My apologies concerning talk page deletions - that was a misunderstanding of etiquette on my part. --Gene_poole 07:02, 12 Aug 2004 (UTC)

listings on WP:CFD

Heya - I think it's a good idea to make the category listings subheadings. That way when the category is deleted and delisted, it can show up automatically in the edit summary. Keep up the good work! - UtherSRG 12:04, 13 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Ohio categorization

Just wanted to say that I've been watching your work on Ohio counties, etc. which some interest. (Actually I've been watching recent changes and noticing the frequent appearance of the word Ohio.) Good work - also, it makes me happy because I'm currently an out-of-state Ohioan and it reminds me of home. :) Aranel 18:16, 14 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Sympson the Joiner

  1. Sympson the Joiner survived VfD with two Del votes (including the nomination to VfD), three explicit Keep votes, and two arguable implicit Keeps (via mentions of Cleanup).
  2. In accord with severalWP:CU mentions, it
    1. went on,
    2. got a one-word M(inor) edit after 18 minutes, and
    3. was kicked off by one editor after 14 hours, with summary "nothing more is likely to turn up".
  3. Your comment at Talk:Sympson the Joiner#Should this be Merged? would assist me in determining what next.

--Jerzy(t) 04:25, 2004 Aug 16 (UTC)

I think you were very polite and appropriate in your notes to him. - UtherSRG 12:11, 19 Aug 2004 (UTC)

I started several threads on Category talk:Academic institutions, so we can clarify things there, rather than on scattered user pages... -- Beland 04:30, 20 Aug 2004 (UTC).

Grandes écoles

I note that you capitalized the É in Category:Grandes Écoles. Why this decision? École is a common name; you would not use "Universities and Colleges in France", would you? David.Monniaux 06:50, 21 Aug 2004 (UTC)

No problem. :-) Grammatically, it should definitely be a lowercase é, but, when referring to the full set of French grandes écoles as a whole, some people use capitals for added pompousness. It just means "great school". David.Monniaux 07:27, 21 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Dana Snyder

Good show old chap, link to Dana Snyder from Aqua Teen Hunger Force, which redirects back to Aqua Teen Hunger Force. Dana's page used to have useful info, mainly the fact that it wasnt a reflective wikilink (Link from a page that returns to the same page) before. I've made it back into the slighly informitive page, to prevent the reflect. As your User: page says, you need to stop smoking crack. --TIB (talk) 01:27, Aug 22, 2004 (UTC)

I believe you have me confused with someone else. It happens to me alot; I apparently have that kind of face. Postdlf 02:04, 22 Aug 2004 (UTC)
Ok, I know what you're talking about now. I did make Dana Snyder into a redirect, because all it said was that he was a voice actor on ATHF. I did not however link back to Dana Snyder from ATHF, but I should have removed the wikilink that was already there. If the article doesn't contain any additional information, then it isn't really a separate article. Postdlf 02:07, 22 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Viral categories

Ugh, I took one look and ran away in horror. Maybe if I get more energy ... RickK 20:20, Aug 22, 2004 (UTC)

Votes for deletion/European Union Olympic medals count for 2004

You may be interested in a last-ditch attempt to save User:Pgreenfinch's endangered article European Union Olympic medals count for 2004 which is on a subpage page of VfD at Wikipedia:Votes for deletion/European Union Olympic medals count for 2004. Because this is a subpage it may not be noticed by those scanning the regular VfD page. Recent votes to keep appear to be sock-puppets or people who have become users only to support this article. You may wish to add your vote or comments or both. Jallan 13:28, 23 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Towns in Pennsylvania

I recall from CfD that you had found one Town in Pennsylvania. What was it and what did you do with it? I think I may have found another McCandless, Pennsylvania. Seems that it used to be a township (and is still listed in Census data as a township) but has incorporated and has home rule powers. The elected representative and the Allegheny County web site both refer to it as a town. I found a note that there are 12 other such townships incorporated with home rule powers, so there may actually be a few more towns in PA. See [3] [4] [5] olderwiser 18:48, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC) And one more that you might find of interest: [6] olderwiser 18:55, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC) OK, I think that despite several quasi-official looking documents that refer to it as the Town of McCandeless, there are many more equally official looking docs that still call it a township. Unless I come across something to the contrary, I'm going to assume that it is a township with pretensions of being called a Town without the legal basis for doing so. olderwiser 20:08, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC)

    • The town was Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania—it was the only one listed as a town in the 2000 census data, so I only stuck it in its county category. That's great if you've found more recent info on what is incorporated in that manner—go ahead and recreate Category:Towns in Pennsylvania. Postdlf 22:48, 31 Aug 2004 (UTC)

Supreme Court Case Categorization

I just wanted to let you know that your categorization of the U.S. Supreme Court cases into relevant cases dealing with similar subjects is much appreciated. I am currently in the process of revamping the entire List of United States Supreme Court cases and every article on the list. I would like to make everything a little more uniform so that a person going from one case to another is not entirely confused by the context (assuming they are not a law student). I am doing this in waves. Currently I am simply revamping the citations on each case article's page. Once I am done that, I'll be revamping the citations and comments on the list itself. Any help you want to give in putting the proper categorization in the articles would be a very welcome contribution. Thanks! Skyler 13:44, Sep 1, 2004 (UTC)

Edit summaries / categories

Hello. I'm a little bemused. You clearly care a great deal that WP has a cogent categorisation scheme. Yet, according to your contribs and the attached page histories you regard changing the category people are in, deletion of categories applied to articles, addition of categories to articles as minor edits and undeserving of an edit summary.

The most miserable conclusion that might be drawn from this is that you're trying to do this stealthily. Perhaps you can tell me about your working methods and what you hope to achieve. --[[User:Bodnotbod|bodnotbod » .....TALKQuietly)]] 17:48, Sep 1, 2004 (UTC)

True, I don't always include in the edit summary that I have added or removed something from a category, but a lot of the time I do, and sometimes I do consider it a minor edit because I think the category change that I have made was done for a blatantly obvious reason. Do you really need an explanation as to why I would include a Supreme Court case dealing with free speech in Category:U.S. free speech case law? Or to explain why I would remove a clearly redundant category? If I think there will be controversy because of the nature of the category and related dialogue, I will likely explain why I removed a category, such as several that I have removed from Category:Gay, lesbian or bisexual people because their articles have contained absolutely no information about their sexuality one way or another. Why would you think I'd want to work "stealthily"? Is there actually a specific edit that bothered you? Postdlf 22:00, 1 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I feel that even if it's a blatantly obvious reason, it helps to include it in the edit summary so that it shows up on Recent Changes and in the history (Not to describe your reasons, merely paste the edit in the summary box).
It's not that I need an explanation...
OK. Let me come entirely clean here (and this also addresses your question about a specific edit).
It is clear to me, looking at your edits and talk page etc, that you're putting a lot of good work into Wikipedia, and that your aim is to do what you can to make it an even better resource. I'm the same way.
I think we have different thoughts and feelings about categories, however. You appear to have very definite ideas about categories, whereas I think I'm a bit more laissez-faire and willing to see what evolves - very much less proscriptive than your good self.
At the moment - and you'll have gathered this from stuff I've said elsewhere - I'm getting the feeling that your forthrightness and sense of direction is in danger of overpowering or steamrolling consensus on categories. For my part I'm trying to drum up interest in the page and get more people involved in the voting.
I guess, in the meantime... ech! I hate the way this sounds, but it's the truth, so gulp, here goes... I'm inclined to look at your contributions to see what is happening with categories, as I'm fearful that you're moving too fast and too determinedly. Obviously, if you were to fill out edit summaries I would then be able to make sense of your contributions more quickly.
Aside from all that, I do feel that any category change (moves, removals, additions) are not minor edits. I guess my reasoning is that I would class minor edits as something nobody would argue with (fixing typos, formatting etc). Whereas a category edit is always going to be putting you in conflict with a previous editor: you are either saying:
  • No, you (Mr Previous Editor) have put someone in the wrong category.
  • No, you have created a category that shouldn't exist.
  • Or, in general No, you have done something I disagree with, which I am now changing --[[User:Bodnotbod|bodnotbod » .....TALKQuietly)]] 12:21, Sep 2, 2004 (UTC)
To mark such things as minor seems dismissive of the editor who made the contribution you disagree with.
All I can do is ask that you not mark category edits as minor and that you paste the initial cat. -> and then your new cat into edit summary (or put "del. cat..." or "+cat...).
Phew, sorry to be so long-winded. Regards, --[[User:Bodnotbod|bodnotbod » .....TALKQuietly)]] 12:21, Sep 2, 2004 (UTC)
The silence is deafening, but you appear to be using edit summaries, so I appreciate that. --[[User:Bodnotbod|bodnotbod » .....TALKQuietly)]] 01:12, Sep 9, 2004 (UTC)

Good evening, Postdlf. On 30 Aug, you voted to delete the article about the Bradley Amendment because it was a POV rant. Even though the discussion period has run out, no one's acted on that thread yet. I've completely rewritten the article. I'd appreciate it if you'd take a read through and see if it's now worthy of a keep. Rossami 01:20, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Case citations

I refer you to Talk:List of United States Supreme Court cases where I explained my way of formatting case citations. I am trying to keep a uniform style for all supreme court case articles. I'm aware that normally citations do not have the case reporter volume and page number underlined, but I found (for the sake of readability) that it would be better to underline them rather than bold them as many contributors have done on the List page. I announced my intention and have since gotten through reformatting around half the case articles on the list with my proposed format without objection. I am changing the citations in Chisholm v. Georgia back to my proposed format and would appreciate any argument you have against this to go on the List Talk Page for debate among other contributors to supreme court case articles rather than changing the format unilaterally.

Thank you, Skyler 03:08, Sep 9, 2004 (UTC)

Categorization -- a specific question

I left a comment on Talk:Arlo Guthrie about your de-categorization there. You haven't responded, so I mention it here in case you aren't following the page. JamesMLane 14:26, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Cabinet

That sounds good to me as to making a new subcategory. As to whether CIA and FBI directors are politicians, I'd say "probably," although I'm not sure. Judges should only count if they also held a political post, I think. For instance, Charles Evans Hughes wouldn't count for his time as a judge, but he would count for his time as Governor of New York. john k 15:19, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Categories: Atheists, Atheist Thinkers & Activists, Atheist scientists

Hi Postdlf,

I'm a great believer in Falsifiability, so I took the liberty of crash-testing the new (& still experimental) wikipedia:categorization of people, with one of the controversial issues from the past.

So, although the test I intend is primarily about whether or not "categorization of people" will stand for the time being or whether it still needs further refinement, I still also felt the need for a good device for categorizing people for whom their atheist approach had a major effect on the things they were most known about, and that were neither thinkers that publicised atheist philosophies, nor were atheist activists.

(The atheist category CfD procedure was from before I ever visited that page; many of the problems raised against that category at that time are maybe not longer in place today, e.g. "atheists" is now only a "supercategory", not intended for immediate use on "people" articles, only its subcategories)

The sentence "Dieu? Sire, je n'ai pas besoin de cette hypothèse" kept jingling through my mind (which I learnt very long ago). After an extended search I found back whom it came from (Laplace), discovered this was an Age of Enlightenment Scientist, and set to work. (Eventually also adding a third subcategory to the Category:Age of Enlightenment.

Could you please check whether content-wise there is something wrong with what I did?

And of course: what your personal views are on the present procedure proposals (The "Categorization of people" page maybe also gives some insight in what way I am presently trying to de-problematise the atheists category issue).

--Francis Schonken 21:29, 12 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Michigan politicians

I notice that you've been removing articles on individual politicians from Category:Michigan politicians. Any particular reason?

Because they fit into an applicable subcategory, such as Category:Members of the Michigan House of Representatives. As for those holding federal office who never held state office, see below discussion. Postdlf 01:43, 17 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Other politicians

A related question to above: What's the threshhold? You changed the cats on Alfred P. Swineford from Governors of Alaska, Alaska Politicians and Michigan Politicians to just Governors of Alaska and Members of the Michigan House. Don't get me wrong; I like the change. But I wanted to know the threshhold. For example, if someone was a governor from Alaska AND a senator, and there is currently no category only for Alaska senators, should the person remain in Alaska Politicians? (Example: Frank Murkowski) Or, should I be bold and make categories for all the offices that I come across? And what if they are a Governor, and were also mayor of Fairbanks? Do they stay in Alaska Politicians, or make a category for Mayors of Fairbanks, or maybe just Alaskan Mayors? Thanks. --Golbez 01:21, Sep 17, 2004 (UTC)

I'd say make the categories. I haven't really come up with a coherent theory yet on when someone should just be included in the parent (state) politician categories, though I've tended to leave individuals there when they are (or have been) merely candidates for office. I figure if there is an office to put them into, put them in it. As for Fairbanks mayors, do we have articles on enough of them to make a category for it? Many city mayors we do (Category:Mayors of New York City, Category:Mayors of Chicago, etc.). I suppose if there aren't enough to substantiate a category for a particular office, leave them in the parent politicians category. Postdlf 01:42, 17 Sep 2004 (UTC)
But...if by "senator" above, you meant a U.S. Senator representing Alaska rather than an Alaska state senator, please don't make a Senators subcategory for the particular state. I think it's a great thing to have all the U.S. Senators in one category, and we have list articles that break them down by state that are included in the state politicians categories. At least for right now, I'm leaning away from (but not totally opposed to) including a U.S. Senator from Alaska who never served in a state-level office in Alaska politicians. That may end up being the best solution for such individuals, however, to make sure that the category can be navigated to directly from their article, but I'd like us to think of another if possible. Postdlf 01:47, 17 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I did mean US Senate, yes... and a US Senator (or US House member) from Alaska is still an Alaskan politician. And there we run into a problem. You're right about not needing to split up the categories; there's only so many US Senators. And yes, if they want to find the senators from Alaska, there are the list pages... but they might seem conspicuously absent from the Alaska Politicians category. --Golbez 02:52, Sep 17, 2004 (UTC)

First sale doctrine

Why did you move the article to first-sale doctrine? While there have been a handful of court opinions that have implanted the hyphen, this is the exception—the overwhelming majority of courts do not use a hyphen, including all Supreme Court cases I could find. The same appears to be true in the academic literature. The article should be moved back to the most common usage (as well as the more authoritative one). Postdlf 00:33, 18 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Because it already used that phrase, with the hyphen, in the article, and because I think the more traditional way of using hyphens makes sense. Michael Hardy 01:31, 18 Sep 2004 (UTC)

You might want to look at the article titled hyphen. The traditional way of using hyphens has been very slowly dying out for a half-century or more, but it's still generally followed magazines and newspapers. Michael Hardy 21:09, 18 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Fair dealing

I based my change mostly on Canadian law of fair dealing. While in some areas it is more restrictive than fair use, in other areas it is more liberal. For instance copying and selling an entire book, under certain conditions, has been judged fair use under Canadian law. Recent rulings allowing peer to peer file sharing have also, in part, been based on fair dealing laws. In general Canadian fair dealing allows greater use of materials for purely private collections, while American fair use is far more open to the public use of works. - SimonP 20:58, Sep 18, 2004 (UTC)

Patty

Hi Postdlf,

I read your message. I thank you for your correction so I can work better in english wikipedia. Ciao from Monza Italy --Patrizia 17:47, 20 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Art museums, galleries, etc.

Thanks for fixing these categories. It was nice to come back to see everything neat and tidy after being distracted from Wikipedia for a while. 8) -- Beland 03:53, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Nomination for Adminship

Hey, would you be interested if I were to nominate you for adminship? --Improv 18:13, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Certainly, thank you! Postdlf 20:15, 22 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Union Navy categories

You may want to see my notes on these categories at Categories_for_deletion#Category:Union_Navy_officers. Please don't depopulate them again until a decision has been made. I think they are useful, even though the overlap with another category. Jinian 17:43, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC)

You're a sysop!

I'm pleased to let you know that, consensus being reached, you are now an administrator. Congratulations!. You should read the relevant policies and other pages linked to from the administrators' reading list before carrying out tasks like deletion, protection, banning users, and editing protected pages such as the Main Page. Most of what you do is easily reversible by other sysops, apart from page history merges and image deletion, so please be especially careful with those. You might find the new administrators' how-to guide helpful. Cheers! -- Cecropia | Talk 20:50, 29 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Yay! Thanks! Postdlf 13:05, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)

AAAAA is trying to impose his personal label on Lori Berenson, despite the fact that the (category description page says that the label is only for people who "personally used terrorist tactics" and "have admitted to or endorsed violence against civilians...the use of terrorist tactics should be well-documented and undisputed." I consider this a case of vandalism, not an edit dispute. [[User:Neutrality|Neutrality (talk)]] 14:54, Sep 30, 2004 (UTC) Lori Berenson

  • I noticed that you've been conflicting with User:Neutrality as to whether this article should be included under Category:Terrorists. Is it just this particular inclusion that you disagree on? You've already reverted from the removal of the category several times, so it would be great if you could instead resolve this on the article's talk page. Please let's try to avoid edit wars, and not violate the three-per-day reversion rule. Thanks! Postdlf 14:49, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
    • I agree with you. This should be resolved on the article's talk page. However, User:Neutrality has made NO ATTEMPT to respond to my personal messages or the postings I have made in the article talk page.--AAAAA 15:08, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
    • Furthermore, I just read the "Terrorists" category page and I have to agree with Neutrality in that the category is not suited for Lori Berenson. Maybe there should be a category for "Non-Violent Terrorists" or "People associated with terrorists" or something like that. In the meantime, I will not revert the article. What I do think though, is that Neutrality has acted like a Vandal. I have posted my reasons in each edit, in his Talk page and in the article's talk page. And he DID NOT CARE to respond to any. That is NOT RIGHT.--AAAAA 15:18, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)
      • No, it's not proper to keep on reverting edits without discussing it, but let's not all throw the "vandal" label around. Terrorism is obviously an emotional topic, but you've had a legitimate difference of opinion on this article, and I can see both your points regarding the content. Category:Terrorists is a problematic but needed category, because obviously there are many individuals that would not have articles but for their violent acts. So what to do about those are convicted of terrorism in what seems to have been a kangaroo court? Maybe we could all work together on a solution? Postdlf 23:35, 30 Sep 2004 (UTC)