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==== Category:Terrorists ====
==== Category:Terrorists ====
<div class="boilerplate metadata vfd" style="background:#bff9fc; margin:0 auto; padding:0 10px 0 10px; border:1px solid #AAAAAA;">
:''The following is an archived discussion concerning one or more categories. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on an appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review|deletion review]]). No further edits should be made to this section.''

:''The result of the discussion was:'' '''Delete''' - The discussion was fairly evenly balanced with good articulate discussion from both sides in this discussion, however there are compelling arguments provided by those wishing for these categories to be deleted, arguments that simply cannot be overlooked. There are several problems described below that are persuasive here - those people currently categorised as terrorists are normally very well categorised anyway, frequently by their cause, political affiliation or proscribed group to which they belong, so I find the argument that by removing the category terrorists, it will make finding articles on terrorists more complicated very strong, but ultimately, there are other, neutral categories that can be used to find terrorists. "Terrorists" can also be categorised under a neutral system if they are indicted or convicted of an offence under a Terrorism law in a specific country, so instead of Category:Terrorists, we could categorise people under something like [[Category:Persons convicted of Terrorism in the USA]] etc. Drifting slightly, but terrorism laws in many countries cover many different offences that would not be typically described as terrorism, such as taking a photo of a police officer in certain jurisdictions, so in BLPs, editors should be careful not to describe someone as a terrorist, rather, as someone convicted of an offence under, say, the Terrorism Act, 2008. The most persuasive argument for the deletion however is the absence of a neutral, unbiased, water-tight, non negotiable definition of who or what a terrorist actually is - that raises the spectre of legal action, edit wars, and perhaps as importantly, it makes the encyclopedia inherently biased in favour or against those who see a specific individual as a terrorist, but where they are, or are not categorised as one. [[User:Nick|Nick]] ([[User talk:Nick|talk]]) 20:22, 7 May 2009 (UTC)
:[[:Category:Terrorists]] - {{lc1|Terrorists}}<br />
:[[:Category:Terrorists]] - {{lc1|Terrorists}}<br />
:'''Nominator's rationale:''' While it was kept at CFD several months ago because it gave "a solid definition for terrorism", I still am not convinced that this category, and most of its subcategories, do more good than harm. For one, it's a libel ''landmine''. The old adage of one man's terrorist being another man's freedom fighter. But secondly, and most importantly, the category introduces its own definition of terrorism and applies that label to people. This is an original research problem too, and while you can argue that it doesn't have libel problems, it really does have OR problems. See also: [[Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2009_March_23#Category:Fictional_terrorists|CFD March 23: Fictional terrorists]]. However, the terrorism charges categories do serve purpose and ''are'' neutral, so should not be deleted but recategorised to [[:Category:Terrorism]]. '''[[User:Sceptre|Sceptre]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Sceptre|talk]])</sup> 19:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
:'''Nominator's rationale:''' While it was kept at CFD several months ago because it gave "a solid definition for terrorism", I still am not convinced that this category, and most of its subcategories, do more good than harm. For one, it's a libel ''landmine''. The old adage of one man's terrorist being another man's freedom fighter. But secondly, and most importantly, the category introduces its own definition of terrorism and applies that label to people. This is an original research problem too, and while you can argue that it doesn't have libel problems, it really does have OR problems. See also: [[Wikipedia:Categories_for_discussion/Log/2009_March_23#Category:Fictional_terrorists|CFD March 23: Fictional terrorists]]. However, the terrorism charges categories do serve purpose and ''are'' neutral, so should not be deleted but recategorised to [[:Category:Terrorism]]. '''[[User:Sceptre|Sceptre]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Sceptre|talk]])</sup> 19:21, 27 April 2009 (UTC)
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*:::::I went down that road months ago on [[Talk:Osama Bin Laden]]. The answer is that he tends to have a relatively good approval rating in Islamic countries; way more than Bush's in America at the same time. However, that doesn't matter because public opinion apparently isn't a RS for opinions. '''[[User:Sceptre|Sceptre]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Sceptre|talk]])</sup> 23:07, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
*:::::I went down that road months ago on [[Talk:Osama Bin Laden]]. The answer is that he tends to have a relatively good approval rating in Islamic countries; way more than Bush's in America at the same time. However, that doesn't matter because public opinion apparently isn't a RS for opinions. '''[[User:Sceptre|Sceptre]]''' <sup>([[User talk:Sceptre|talk]])</sup> 23:07, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Delete''' "Targeting civilians" civilian and non-combatant are not the same thing. For example if a soldier was building a [[sangar (fortification)|sangar]] in Northern Ireland, was he a legitimate target of the IRA? If so what if the work was contracted out to civilian builders did the man building a sangar suddenly stop being a legitimate target? What happen if the contractor was a part time soldier in the UDR was he only a legitimate target when on duty? Is there a difference between attacking armed police in NI and unarmed police in the rest of the UK? What about the IRA [[Mortar_(weapon)#Improvised_mortars|attack on Downing Street]], were ministers in a war cabinet although civilians a legitimate or illegitimate target? What about targeting civilian infastructure that has dual use. What about targeting the City of London so that costs of the damage was so high that the insurance companies would not pay forcing the British government to cover the costs as war damage, hence forcing a political recognition of the action as a war action and not a criminal action (since the end of internment something the IRA had been fighting for --that their cause was more than a criminal conspiracy) etc etc. --[[User:Philip Baird Shearer|PBS]] ([[User talk:Philip Baird Shearer|talk]]) 21:07, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
*'''Delete''' "Targeting civilians" civilian and non-combatant are not the same thing. For example if a soldier was building a [[sangar (fortification)|sangar]] in Northern Ireland, was he a legitimate target of the IRA? If so what if the work was contracted out to civilian builders did the man building a sangar suddenly stop being a legitimate target? What happen if the contractor was a part time soldier in the UDR was he only a legitimate target when on duty? Is there a difference between attacking armed police in NI and unarmed police in the rest of the UK? What about the IRA [[Mortar_(weapon)#Improvised_mortars|attack on Downing Street]], were ministers in a war cabinet although civilians a legitimate or illegitimate target? What about targeting civilian infastructure that has dual use. What about targeting the City of London so that costs of the damage was so high that the insurance companies would not pay forcing the British government to cover the costs as war damage, hence forcing a political recognition of the action as a war action and not a criminal action (since the end of internment something the IRA had been fighting for --that their cause was more than a criminal conspiracy) etc etc. --[[User:Philip Baird Shearer|PBS]] ([[User talk:Philip Baird Shearer|talk]]) 21:07, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
----
:''The above is preserved as an archive of the discussion. <span style="color:red">'''Please do not modify it.'''</span> Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the category's talk page or in a [[Wikipedia:Deletion review|deletion review]]). No further edits should be made to this section.''</div>


==== Category:Graph models (statistics) ====
==== Category:Graph models (statistics) ====

Revision as of 20:22, 7 May 2009

April 27

Category:Bosnian television actors

Category:Scottish MPs who Twitter

Category:Oxford student societies

Category:Number-one debut singles

Category:University of Oxford Rowing Clubs

Category:Belarus–Syria relations

Category:Facial moles

Sports broadcasters

Category:NBA Finals broadcasters
Category:Stanley Cup Championship Finals broadcasters
Category:World Series broadcasters
Category:Super Bowl broadcasters

Category:Terrorists

Category:Graph models (statistics)

Category:People from Geneva

Category:WHO people

Category:Medical disasters

Nominator's rationale: Medical disasters sounds like something that happens to an individual during surgery. A health disaster is something that affects the wider population which is what the articles in the category are about. -- Alan Liefting (talk) - 09:36, 27 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • I have added the (only) sub-cat to this nomination. Rename both per nom - "health" is clearly the more appropriate term to use for these categories. Notified creator with {{subst:cfd-notify}} Cgingold (talk) 12:40, 27 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • Delete both - in the absence of any possible objective standard of what constitutes a "health disaster". Similar to various "crises" categories that were discussed a month or so ago and deleted on the same grounds. Otto4711 (talk) 17:53, 27 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • Rename per nom (with some tidying up needed as the category has started to bloat) - Otto, the disaster categories have been around for many years (since September 2005 in this case). One of the misgivings I have about the way CfD operates is that it can take years for those active at CfD to turn their attention to a particular set of categories. Would it not be better to discuss the overall structure of a particular area of categories in one go, and sort out what should and shouldn't be categorised and how, rather than chipping away piecemeal years after something has been around and used by many readers for over three years? If you are set on deletion for this category, can you suggest where the articles go instead so that people browsing Category:Disasters can find things in logical places? Has anyone ever tried using the grok stats site to get an idea of how much certain categories are used - i.e. by the silent majority? For example, Category:Medical disasters has been viewed 1246 times in January 2009, 1460 times in February 2009 and 1364 times in March 2009. Now, we can't be sure why people clicked on the links, or where they arrived from, but surely that means something? Compare it to the traffic through Category:Disasters (1124 times in January 2009). Here's an interesting one: Category:Pandemics view stats for April 2009 - below 30 views per day for most of the month, then a sharp rise due to the news headlines about the 2009 swine flu outbreak - 319 views today alone. Of course, compared to the views of the article itself, that's peanuts. Three views yesterday (when it was created), and 6130 views today (actually, 319 compared to 6130 is pretty respectable - around 5%, which is probably a better ratio of article to category views than seen for some categories). Conclusion: categories are viewed much less than articles. But still, I hope I haven't gone too far off track. The medical disasters category structure as been around for a long time with no objections, and will likely be popular in the coming days, so whatever name it has, so the main category and its subcategories should, in my view, be kept. Carcharoth (talk) 21:59, 27 April 2009 (UTC) I haven't been active at CfD for ages, so if a vox populi argument like this is commonly made and has been rejected in the past, forgive me.[reply]
  • The problem remains that there is no objective criteria for what constitutes a "health disaster" which leads to the hodge-podge of stuff that's currently in the category. It's capturing everything from toxic waste sites which may or may not have had any effect on human health (which leads to questions of original research) to disease outbreaks to the 1982 Tylenol murders. There's no unifying theme here, because of the subjectivity issues. I think these articles can find better homes in other more specific categories, for instance 2006 North American E. coli outbreak in Category:2000s medical outbreaks, rather than the vague and subjective "disasters" structure. I haven't looked at the rest of the disaster category structures but whether they stay or go doesn't necessarily have any bearing on these categories. Otto4711 (talk) 02:03, 28 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • It's at times like this that I wish I could point to what the category looked like when I created it. Kind of click a "revert back to the nice tidy category that used to be there". Is it acceptable to clean up categories during a CfD? Carcharoth (talk) 02:38, 28 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Category:Sandboxes

Category:Universities and colleges in Australia

Category:Universities and colleges in Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina

Category:Independent Subway System (New York City)

Category:IND Culver Line stations