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List of surviving veterans of World War I |
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Jon Awbrey |
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Ï„á½° δΠμοι παθήματα μαθήματα γÎγονε
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Cedric |
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General Gato
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QUOTE(Jon Awbrey @ Tue 1st March 2011, 3:06pm) Probably some sort of Parimutuel Survivor's Club Stakes … *snip* And a lot of money riding on the outcome … Jon (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/ph34r.gif) That's called a "tontine", actually:
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Detective |
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QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Tue 1st March 2011, 8:23pm) The other day, the last American World War I veteran, Frank Buckles, died. Now, can anyone explain the point of all this for the rest of us? What are you asking, Eric? Are you suggesting that nobody cares about non-American veterans of World War I so now there are no Americans left the list is pointless?
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EricBarbour |
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blah
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QUOTE(Cedric @ Tue 1st March 2011, 2:12pm) That's called a "tontine", actually: You'll be no-doubt-pleased to know that said Archer episode is already listed in the WP article on "tontine". Wiki-Dorks do love their cartoons. QUOTE What are you asking, Eric? That AFD is a joke. I'm wondering why no one else can see that. This post has been edited by EricBarbour:
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Milton Roe |
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Known alias of J. Random Troll
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QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Tue 1st March 2011, 1:23pm) The other day, the last American World War I veteran, Frank Buckles, died. Now, can anyone explain the point of all this for the rest of us? And when you're done, this looks even more pointless. Context. There's been a history of gods-own warring between people who want to see bios of the world's couple hundred oldest people (those older than 110 or so, of which the names of fewer than a hundred are known and their ages verified), and people who don't think that a 110 year old person is notable just for being 110 years old. Some of the archives are up to 15 pages long. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_tal...s_Oldest_PeopleThe above gives only a taste. Ther was an astoundingly witch-trialish arbcom case that eventually resulted in one editor (a rather obscressive and nasty deletionist) being banned for a year, and another editor topic-banned from longevity articles. The last one was a world expert. Nobody wanted to leave HIM in charge. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Arb.../Case/LongevityFollowing which Arbcom put the question of what are "reliable sources" back into the hands of the people at the RS noticeboard, following which the argument continues THERE. This is amusing as the argument goes something like: The Struldbrug Website is not a reliable source, because it's self published! So are most newspapers and websites; selfpublished refers to blocks of single cranks. But they aren't academically peer reviewed! Neither is the Guinness Book of World Records. But the Guinness Book is notable, that's all we need. Well, the Struldbrug Website is notable: it's been used by Guinness in the past and many newspapers. But they shouldn't be doing that because it's not reliable. Neither are websites for high schools that post team scores. Yes, they are, yes they are! Who says so? I don't care who says so, you're just bringing up high schools, but it won't work because but OTHERSTUFFEXISTS. Yes, and also Pokemon. Pokemon are notable! And also dead minor royalty like the 7th Earl of Buttcrackovia who ided in infancy and his brother took the title. All royals are intrisically notable. You're trying to confuse this issue and edit warring about it. ==== And so on, into increasing WP:LAME ness. In the distant past, some admin named BrownHairedGirl (who should long have been a Dick of Distinction candidate) RfD's a bunch of longevity bios (most of them NOT BLPs) and got pwned. She's had her knives sharp ever since, even though she herself is a major WP:ROYAL bio freak on WP. The people who actually spend their spare time keeping track of the world's oldest WW I veterans, oldest people, and the like, are somewhat like people who keep track of Babylon 5 characters, but (unlike B5 addicts) for some reason have to fight a bunch of IDONTLIKEIT deletionists, who can't abide this topic of longevity, for some reason. The banned witchhunter, at least, was known to be a major biblical literalist, who apparently had decided that the life spans of Methuselah and Adam and other antedeluvans, were really as reported. Here's how bad it is: at one point the inclusionists noted that some data was published in the Journal of Longevity Research, and the deletionists then attacked that journals's academic standing. Consider this in the context of porn, Power Rangers, minor sports website data, and other stuff that actually makes up a large part of Wikipedia. At some point, somebody wanted to use US census data as a source of longevity figures. Somebody suggested it wasn't any more reliable than any self-reported data, and the only difference was that it had been published by the government, without any attempt to fact check it at all (true, BTW). No, came the response. It doesn't matter if census data is reliable-- it's verifiable. Publication by the government confers notablity. (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/hmmm.gif) (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/yak.gif) (IMG: smilys0b23ax56/default/yecch.gif) And here we go again.
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Milton Roe |
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QUOTE(Silver seren @ Tue 1st March 2011, 5:58pm) It's common practice to believe that stuff published by the government is notable. In a sense, I can understand why and I sorta agree. I mean, what makes other sources more notable than census-like data from government databases? The issue with arguing the notability of such is that it throws out the notability of anything else as well.
You miss the point. Some things WP has decided are intrinsically "notable" just because they have fond memores of them (their own high schools for example-- see WP:ILIKEIT). For the rest, WP has no way of judging "notability" except (usually) by pointing to it as being published in a verifiable source (often because somebody else LIKEDIT). That means something you can find and look up-- it has nothing to do with reliability per se. Verifiability is a "can I look it up someplace?" issue. Reliability (RS) is a TRUTH issue. There are reliable sources that aren't verifiable, like your birthday (like Jimbo's famous birthday). WP deprecates these because they can't be checked to see if they are "real" (not the same as "true") by third parties. If you tell the census worker an incorrect birthdate for your demented grandmother who lives with you, there's not going to be any fact checking-- the government simply takes that as data. Their publication of it (even if they wait a century to publish the details, like her name) doesn't make it any more reliable than it was in the first place. Anybody who knows the government doesn't fact-check census data (it would simply take too much effort) should realize this. If you're a historian, you find cases of people telling census workers in the late 19th-century stuff that isn't (wasn't) true, all the time. And is clearly a lie, like the state in which were born, how old they are, and who they are married to (sometimes they don't want anybody know the truth-- people living with people not their spouses, or who are older than they claimed, or fugitives on the lamb from some past). It doesn't match up with the facts from available birth certificates, death certificates (which have their own problems) and other vital statistics records. But we historians find that out, only long after they are dead. This turns out to be the same for people claiming to be 130 years-old. Some of these people are still drawing social security checks! The independent fact-checking by subject matter experts, in peer-reviewed scientific journals and even the best newsjournals, is what makes them reliable (ie, likely to print stuff that is true as per present consensus of experts). Not that they've been published. Newspapers don't fact check all of their data (most of what's in obituaries, for example), and even their AP stories aren't fact-checked as well as academic journals. Newspaper (or government) publication of non-fact-checked stuff, doesn't confer instant reliability on it! Nor should it. Paper isn't magic. Even if that obit of your granny gets published in the local newspaper, it's no more reliable than if you stuck it instead on your refrigerator. However, it does confer VERIFIABILITY on it, and thus Wikipedian NOTABILITY also. WP doesn't deal with these issues very well, even for those who understand the differences here. What the POLICY WP:V says in its RS section about "reliablity" (that you have to look at each field for its own standards) is actually wiser than what you read in the full WP:RS guideline--- a tortured screed which actually attempts to try to try to go partly down that RS path FOR you, in case you don't know what you're doing. Which last, in my view, is a sure sign that you shouldn't be writing in that area. But Wikipedia is famous for having a crew of people who don't know what they don't know, and (worse still) think it doesn't matter what they know, since their sources will fix that problem all up for them. Alas, figuring out what sources to use in the first place, takes expertise all by itself-- you can't just go and read WP:RS and come out knowing where to find out the likely truth. WP:RS won't tell you, largely because it wasn't written by knowledge-experts and librarians, either! A metaproblem which makes all this kind of amusing and ironic. But WP is nothing if not intrinsically amusing and ironic. It's an enterprise run by mental children, after all, so how could it not be amusing and ironic?
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A User |
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QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Wed 2nd March 2011, 7:23am) The other day, the last American World War I veteran, Frank Buckles, died. Now, can anyone explain the point of all this for the rest of us? And when you're done, this looks even more pointless. No doubt when the last veteran dies, some wikidiot will create List of World War I veterans who lived in the 21st century.
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Milton Roe |
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Known alias of J. Random Troll
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QUOTE(WikiWatch @ Thu 3rd March 2011, 7:53am) QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Wed 2nd March 2011, 7:23am) The other day, the last American World War I veteran, Frank Buckles, died. Now, can anyone explain the point of all this for the rest of us? And when you're done, this looks even more pointless. No doubt when the last veteran dies, some wikidiot will create List of World War I veterans who lived in the 21st century. So? It's a hell of a lot more interesting that lists of Power Rangers.
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Zoloft |
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May we all find solace in our dreams.
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QUOTE(thekohser @ Thu 3rd March 2011, 1:49pm) QUOTE(Text @ Thu 3rd March 2011, 11:43am) QUOTE Is she a fan of anime or manga? There are people over 100 years old who like those comics? I'll bet if there are, the Japanese have a word for them. And that Wikipedia would soon have an ill-sourced but finely illustrated article about them. Croaktaku?
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Peter Damian |
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I have as much free time as a Wikipedia admin!
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QUOTE(EricBarbour @ Fri 4th March 2011, 8:37am) They banned an actual academic expert in the field. I'll say this, when Wikipedia (and especially Arbcom) does stupid, they do it big. Very frustrating. As soon as I see a claim about 'Fringe Science' editing (which Young is accused of), I want to understand whether it is fringe science or not. I checked out what Young says on his user page, and I will check on his publications shortly. There are a number of basic checks I use, e.g. general coherence and consistency of the argument, publications in reliable sources, peer review, all that sort of stuff. Then I turn to the Arbcom case, and I learn nothing. All I see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Adm...XfD_discussions is allegations of sockpuppetry, meatpuppetry, off-side canvassing, incivility. Guys, this is irrelevant. What does this tell you about whether he is any good or not? Incredible.
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