User talk:Serpentinite/Archive1

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Welcome to the Wikipedia![edit]

Hello, and Welcome to the Wikipedia, Daniel Bush! Thanks for the weighing in over on the Congressional Staffer Edits article discussion. Hope you enjoy editing here and becoming a Wikipedian! Here are a few perfunctory tips to hasten your acculturation into the Wikipedia experience:

And some odds and ends: Boilerplate text, Brilliant prose, Cite your sources, Civility, Conflict resolution, How to edit a page, How to write a great article, Pages needing attention, Peer review, Policy Library, Utilities, Verifiability, Village pump, Wikiquette, and you can sign your name on any page by typing 4 tildes: ~~~~.

Best of luck, Daniel Bush, and most importantly, have fun! Ombudsman 23:36, 6 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Congrats[edit]

Let me welcome you as well. You have been doing some good edits I see. Your Tennessee Commissioner of Financial Institutions article has been mentioned in the press release for almost being the 1,000,000th article on Wikipedia. Congrats. NoSeptember talk 00:20, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you. I had been preparing eight articles to create for 1,000,000th since last week, six being Tennessee-related, and the other two being related to chemistry and the U.S. Treasury Department. 1,000,001st article is more than enough for that. I aim on being here primarily to work on articles on every state department, state cabinet member, and crater and mountain on Mars. Daniel Bush 00:36, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Work on state government articles is a great area to fill in here. I've done a little with state supreme courts, so our interests are somewhat similar. NoSeptember talk 00:45, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Good Lord, how is this article to be maintained? We're not an almanac. I hope it wasn't as much work as it looks... the article can't stay, I don't think. It could be "frozen" as (say) "List of ambassadors to the United Nations as of 2006", but I don't see that flying either... I mean, man, this is great collection of data, but... damn. Herostratus 08:28, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

If I had the resources, I could redirect Sixtieth session of the United Nations General Assembly, the current session, to the list, archive it when the 60th session is over, and denote changes in ambassadors during that session if possible. We have articles on the membership of the U.S. House of Representatives with 435 members and manage to keep articles on every member, as well as an accurate list of every member, so I do not see how keeping track of an international body of less than 200 people should be more difficult. I came to Wikipedia looking for this list, and it wasn't there, so several months later I decided to spend a few hours tonight coding it myself. Daniel Bush 08:37, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • Right. I hope you're not offended by my AfD on the article, I genuinely am looking for community input on the best way to handle a list like this... Again let me say it's a good article and I appreciate your time and effort in making it... How about this: On the AfD page, I threw out the idea of renaming it to "List of ambassadors to the United Nations (sixtieth session)", that way it doesn't have to be maintained, it could later be copied to "List of ambassadors to the United Nations (sixty-first session)" and such changes as necessary made to that. I can see plusses and minuses to that... Herostratus 16:24, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'm thinking now it sould be kept at its current location. The situation is very similar to List of Canadian senators. There are no elections, so there cannot be multiple lists of "sessions." Instead, new senators are appointed by the Prime Minister whenever old ones die or retire. The only difference is that the United Nations is composed of approximately 192 members rather than 100, and each member is appointed by a different country. I'm going to link to the article from major U.N. pages where appropriate, too. Daniel Bush 17:48, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Daniel. As you created the List of ambassadors to the United Nations article, I thought you may be interested to know that, armed with the above new catagory, I am going to try and stub each and every one of these fellows. Feel free to lend a hand! :) Proto||type 13:36, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I'll get right on it after I finish writing articles on all current Members of the European Parliament. I have about three left. Daniel Bush 17:48, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Spotted a few you've made - good work! Proto||type 13:58, 21 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This article borrows heavily from the website of the U.S. Fleet Forces Command.

Can you confirm that the content there is licensed to permit its use on Wikipedia? I can't find a policy on the site. You can't just justify it by attribution. BigBlueFish 22:44, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

All information produced by the United States government falls into the public domain unless stated otherwise, in which case they are using information supplied by contractors that may have a copyright. There is no such notice in this case. Daniel Bush 22:48, 25 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The information is produced by the United States military, not the government. Does the same apply to them? Such a notice should at any rate be placed on the talk page; it's not really relevant on the main article. BigBlueFish 14:33, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
http://www.cffc.navy.mil/privacy.htm states, "The purpose is to provide information about the Commander, U.S. Fleet Forces Command to the general public. All information on this site is public domain and may distributed or copied unless otherwise specified. Use of appropriate byline/photo/image credits is requested." I put the notice at the bottom solely to warn the reader that this article, being produced by the military, may be POV for now, as is done with articles with content from the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica and other articles on Admirals and Generals in which the writer hadn't gone to any other sources. Daniel Bush 21:00, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Ah, that makes it clear now, thanks! Seems appropriate now. Sorry for the late reply ;) BigBlueFish 15:18, 21 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Nashville flag[edit]

Please see my response on Talk:Flag of Nashville, Tennessee. Kaldari 02:26, 26 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Tennessee Senate articles[edit]

Nice work on all the Tennessee Senate articles. I only have one suggestion for them: the preferred term is generally "Tennessee politician" rather than "Tennessean politician". For example, Category:Tennessee politician stubs. Other than that, they are great! Kaldari 23:15, 20 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Alright, then, I'll use that term from now on. I hope to get all Tennessee state legislator articles done by the November elections, as well as all current U.N. ambassadors one day from the list article I created. With entirely blue links for incumbents in those areas, I'm sure it will be less daunting for Wikipedians to maintain those categories so that blue links do not show up entirely.

The Tennessee General Assembly doesn't archive their state senator profiles like they do with their state representative profiles, unfortunately, and their website doesn't allow webcrawlers such as Internet Archive. After the November elections, then, state senators that didn't keep their seats will lose their profiles as well. Sourcing the General Assembly website is only temporary. I think maybe when I finish creating articles on all the state senators, I'll start looking for more sources, including some that mirror the website. Daniel Bush 00:47, 21 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Image:Mae Beavers.jpg listed for deletion[edit]

An image or media file that you uploaded, Image:Mae Beavers.jpg, has been listed at Wikipedia:Images and media for deletion. Please look there to see why this is (you may have to search for the title of the image to find its entry), if you are interested in it not being deleted. Thank you.

Government-related articles[edit]

After looking over your work on Diane Black, I went over some of your other contributions and am impressed by the amount of work you've put into creating and updating articles related to figures in government. In my book, you deserve a Tireless Contributor Barnstar. Thanks! Tijuana Brass¡Épa!-E@ 09:10, 3 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

DYK[edit]

Updated DYK query On May 25, Did you know? was updated with a fact from the article William Hawkins Polk, which you created. If you know of another interesting fact from a recently created article, then please suggest it on the "Did you know?" talk page.

Wikimania talk related to Congressional edits[edit]

Hi Daniel--I'd love to ask you some questions about the Wikinews response to Congressional edits, where you played a leading role. What was the event that brought it to your attention? Did you enlist collaborators, and if so, how? Did you come to any general conclusions about protecting Wikipedia from anonymous POV-pushers in the future? I'm giving a short talk at Wikimania about the Congressional edits, the "Swiftboating" edit war, and similar mass-arrivals of new edits. User Talk:Betsythedevine betsythedevine 18:39, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I first came across the Congressional edits in a Lowell Sun article on those done by Marty Meehan. Wikipedia had a list of edits by computers in the U.S. Senate, where I looked through all the contributions. I enlisted the help of Wayne Saewyc, whose Wikinews username is Amgine, through the #wikinews IRC channel. He found the edits from the office of Senator Feinstein and also called Senate offices before the Wikinews article was published.

I think most people with IP addresses that can be traced to a specific location are more cautious about editing articles relating to themselves, especially about removing valid content, because of the negative publicity that could occur. For political articles, I think it might be a good idea to sift through contributions from political IP addresses in October. The best thing to do, though, is for Wikipedians to simply add those articles to their watch lists. Daniel Bush 21:28, 2 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks so much, Daniel, for your quick and informative reply. I hope it's ok with you if I copy your response onto my own talk page, where I'm hoping to collect more people's feedback. All best, Betsy betsythedevine 02:03, 3 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Adminship[edit]

Congratulations, and good luck. Deleterious 04:39, 5 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

As I've made my concerns known on your nominator's talk page, I'll repeat them here. Right now the noms give an impression of bad-faith (due to the lack of nomination text, as well as the repeated additions to the RFA page despite proper procedures being very clear). If you intend to accept, I urge you to turn it into a self-nomination by describing yourself. NSLE (T+C) at 04:46 UTC (2006-06-05)

Say my name![edit]

Hey Daniel, you should probably know that my name has nothing to do with the Harry Potter series of books. I created that name long before Rowling put pen to paper on her first manuscript. Not everybody with their usernames containing "Phoenix" did so because of Harry Potter. --Deathphoenix ʕ 21:32, 12 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

List[edit]

List of pages I've created (unwikified):

  1. Abraham McClellan (Talk | History)
  2. ‎Abram Poindexter Maury (Talk | History)
  3. ‎Adam Huntsman (Talk | History)
  4. ‎Adam Rankin Alexander (Talk | History)
  5. ‎Albert Galiton Watkins (Talk | History)
  6. ‎Alvan Cullom (Talk | History)
  7. ‎Andrew Ewing (Talk | History)
  8. ‎Andrew Jackson Clements (Talk | History)
  9. ‎Andrey I. Denisov (Talk | History)
  10. ‎Andrzej Tomasz Zapałowski (Talk | History)
  11. ‎Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of African Affairs (Talk | History)
  12. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs (Talk | History)
  13. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs (Talk | History)
  14. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (Talk | History)
  15. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs (Talk | History)
  16. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for International Security and Nonproliferation (Talk | History)
  17. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs (Talk | History)
  18. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs (Talk | History)
  19. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs (Talk | History)
  20. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for Verification, Compliance, and Implementation (Talk | History)
  21. ‎Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (Talk | History)
  22. ‎Augustus Herman Pettibone (Talk | History)
  23. ‎Balie Peyton (Talk | History)
  24. ‎Barbour Lewis (Talk | History)
  25. ‎Barclay Martin (Talk | History)
  26. ‎Benjamin A. Enloe (Talk | History)
  27. ‎Bennett H. Henderson (Talk | History)
  28. ‎Bernard Piotr Wojciechowski (Talk | History)
  29. ‎Beverly Marrero (Talk | History)
  30. ‎Bill Ketron (Talk | History)
  31. ‎Brookins Campbell (Talk | History)
  32. ‎Bruce Stanton (Talk | History)
  33. ‎Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (Talk | History)
  34. ‎Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs (Talk | History)
  35. ‎Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs (Talk | History)
  36. ‎Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation (Talk | History)
  37. ‎Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs (Talk | History)
  38. ‎Bureau of Political-Military Affairs (Talk | History)
  39. ‎Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs (Talk | History)
  40. ‎Bureau of Verification, Compliance, and Implementation (Talk | History)
  41. ‎Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs (Talk | History)
  42. ‎Charles August Sulzer (Talk | History)
  43. ‎Charles Bryson Simonton (Talk | History)
  44. ‎Charles Edward Snodgrass (Talk | History)
  45. ‎Charles Ready (Talk | History)
  46. ‎Chief Clerk (Talk | History)
  47. ‎Christopher Harris Williams (Talk | History)
  48. ‎Clarence W. Turner (Talk | History)
  49. ‎Colin Mayes (Talk | History)
  50. ‎Counselor of the United States Department of State (Talk | History)
  51. ‎César Mayoral (Talk | History)
  52. ‎David Alexander Nunn (Talk | History)
  53. ‎David Davis (Tennessee politician) (Talk | History)
  54. ‎David Fowler (Talk | History)
  55. ‎David Hawk (Talk | History)
  56. ‎David W. Dickinson (Talk | History)
  57. ‎Dayton E. Phillips (Talk | History)
  58. ‎Diane Black (Talk | History)
  59. ‎Douglas Henry (Talk | History)
  60. ‎E. Riley Anderson (Talk | History)
  61. ‎Ebenezer J. Shields (Talk | History)
  62. ‎Ed Fast (Talk | History)
  63. ‎Edward Everett Eslick (Talk | History)
  64. ‎Edward Isaac Golladay (Talk | History)
  65. ‎Edwin Hickman Ewing (Talk | History)
  66. ‎Emerson Etheridge (Talk | History)
  67. ‎Enrique Berruga (Talk | History)
  68. ‎Ewin L. Davis (Talk | History)
  69. ‎Flag of Nashville, Tennessee (Talk | History)
  70. ‎Francis Jones (American politician) (Talk | History)
  71. ‎Frank Buck (politician) (Talk | History)
  72. ‎Frank Hinman Waskey (Talk | History)
  73. ‎Frank Killam (Talk | History)
  74. ‎Frederick Perry Stanton (Talk | History)
  75. ‎Gabriele Stauner (Talk | History)
  76. ‎Genichiro Sata (Talk | History)
  77. ‎George Barnes Grigsby (Talk | History)
  78. ‎George Gibbs Dibrell (Talk | History)
  79. ‎George Washington Bridges (Talk | History)
  80. ‎George Washington Jones (Talk | History)
  81. ‎George Washington Lent Marr (Talk | History)
  82. ‎Gerhard Pfanzelter (Talk | History)
  83. ‎Giovanni Procacci (Talk | History)
  84. ‎H. Casey Young (Talk | History)
  85. ‎Hanna Foltyn-Kubicka (Talk | History)
  86. ‎Harry J. Tindell (Talk | History)
  87. ‎Harumi Takahashi (Talk | History)
  88. ‎Harvey Magee Watterson (Talk | History)
  89. ‎Haya Rashed Al-Khalifa (Talk | History)
  90. ‎Haywood Yancey Riddle (Talk | History)
  91. ‎Henry C. Snodgrass (Talk | History)
  92. ‎Henry Hunter Bryan (Talk | History)
  93. ‎Henry R. Gibson (Talk | History)
  94. ‎Horace Harrison (Talk | History)
  95. ‎Horst Posdorf (Talk | History)
  96. ‎Howard Gentry, Jr. (Talk | History)
  97. ‎Hubert Fisher (Talk | History)
  98. ‎Hubert Pirker (Talk | History)
  99. ‎Hugh Cameron (Talk | History)
  100. ‎Hugh Lawson White Hill (Talk | History)
  101. ‎Iles Braghetto (Talk | History)
  102. ‎Isaac Roberts Hawkins (Talk | History)
  103. ‎Isaac Thomas (Talk | History)
  104. ‎Jacob C. Isacks (Talk | History)
  105. ‎Jacob Montgomery Thornburgh (Talk | History)
  106. ‎James B. Reynolds (Talk | History)
  107. ‎James C. McDearmon (Talk | History)
  108. ‎James Coffield Mitchell (Talk | History)
  109. ‎James Fraser Forbes (Talk | History)
  110. ‎James Henry Randolph (Talk | History)
  111. ‎James Houston Thomas (Talk | History)
  112. ‎James Israel Standifer (Talk | History)
  113. ‎James Minor Quarles (Talk | History)
  114. ‎James Mullins (Talk | History)
  115. ‎James T. Sandford (Talk | History)
  116. ‎Jamie Woodson (Talk | History)
  117. ‎Jason Mumpower (Talk | History)
  118. ‎Jean-Pierre Audy (Talk | History)
  119. ‎Jerome Cochran (Talk | History)
  120. ‎Jerry W. Cooper (Talk | History)
  121. ‎Jim Tracy (politician) (Talk | History)
  122. ‎Joe M. Haynes (Talk | History)
  123. ‎Joe McCord (Talk | History)
  124. ‎Joel Hasse Ferreira (Talk | History)
  125. ‎Johan C. Verbeke (Talk | History)
  126. ‎John A. Moon (Talk | History)
  127. ‎John Alexander Cocke (Talk | History)
  128. ‎John B. Forester (Talk | History)
  129. ‎John B. Nathman (Talk | History)
  130. ‎John Blair (Tennessee) (Talk | History)
  131. ‎John C. Houk (Talk | History)
  132. ‎John Costigan (Talk | History)
  133. ‎John DeWitt Clinton Atkins (Talk | History)
  134. ‎John E. McCall (Talk | History)
  135. ‎John Ford House (Talk | History)
  136. ‎John Goff Ballentine (Talk | History)
  137. ‎John Hartwell Marable (Talk | History)
  138. ‎John Henry Bowen (Talk | History)
  139. ‎John Hervey Crozier (Talk | History)
  140. ‎John Houston Savage (Talk | History)
  141. ‎John R. Neal (Talk | History)
  142. ‎John Rhea (Talk | History)
  143. ‎John Vines Wright (Talk | History)
  144. ‎John W. Gaines (Talk | History)
  145. ‎John W. Leftwich (Talk | History)
  146. ‎John Wesley Crockett (Talk | History)
  147. ‎Joseph E. Washington (Talk | History)
  148. ‎Joseph Hopkins Peyton (Talk | History)
  149. ‎Joseph Lanier Williams (Talk | History)
  150. ‎Josiah M. Anderson (Talk | History)
  151. ‎Josiah Patterson (Talk | History)
  152. ‎Julius W. Blackwell (Talk | History)
  153. ‎Jürgen Zimmerling (Talk | History)
  154. ‎Kathryn I. Bowers (Talk | History)
  155. ‎Kirsti Lintonen (Talk | History)
  156. ‎Lemuel P. Padgett (Talk | History)
  157. ‎Leonidas C. Houk (Talk | History)
  158. ‎Lewis Tillman (Talk | History)
  159. ‎List of ambassadors to the United Nations (Talk | History)
  160. ‎Lon A. Scott (Talk | History)
  161. ‎Luc Harvey (Talk | History)
  162. ‎Luc Malo (Talk | History)
  163. ‎Lucien Bonaparte Chase (Talk | History)
  164. ‎Lucy Goes to the Hospital (Talk | History)
  165. ‎Lynn Scarlett (Talk | History)
  166. ‎M. Javad Zarif (Talk | History)
  167. ‎Mae Beavers (Talk | History)
  168. ‎Marcel Lussier (Talk | History)
  169. ‎Marcello Spatafora (Talk | History)
  170. ‎Masatada Tsuchiya (Talk | History)
  171. ‎Matthew Hill (Talk | History)
  172. ‎Matthias Groote (Talk | History)
  173. ‎Meredith Poindexter Gentry (Talk | History)
  174. ‎Metropolitan Council (Davidson County) (Talk | History)
  175. ‎Michael Harrison (politician) (Talk | History)
  176. ‎Micheal R. Williams (Talk | History)
  177. ‎Ministry of Energy (Alberta) (Talk | History)
  178. ‎Ministry of Gaming (Alberta) (Talk | History)
  179. ‎Morgan Cassius Fitzpatrick (Talk | History)
  180. ‎Mounce Gore Butler (Talk | History)
  181. ‎Nathan Vaughn (Talk | History)
  182. ‎Nathan W. Hale (Talk | History)
  183. ‎Nathaniel Green Taylor (Talk | History)
  184. ‎Nicholas N. Cox (Talk | History)
  185. ‎Nirupam Sen (Talk | History)
  186. ‎Park M. Strader (Talk | History)
  187. ‎Parry Wayne Humphreys (Talk | History)
  188. ‎Patrick Power (Talk | History)
  189. ‎Pleasant Moorman Miller (Talk | History)
  190. ‎Presley T. Glass (Talk | History)
  191. ‎Randy McNally (Talk | History)
  192. ‎Raymond Finney (Talk | History)
  193. ‎Reese Bowen Brabson (Talk | History)
  194. ‎Rice Alexander Pierce (Talk | History)
  195. ‎Richard Cheatham (Talk | History)
  196. ‎Richard Montgomery (politician) (Talk | History)
  197. ‎Richard W. Austin (Talk | History)
  198. ‎Robert Desha (Talk | History)
  199. ‎Robert Malone Bugg (Talk | History)
  200. ‎Robert Porter Caldwell (Talk | History)
  201. ‎Robert Weakley (Talk | History)
  202. ‎Roderick R. Butler (Talk | History)
  203. ‎Roland Gewalt (Talk | History)
  204. ‎Ron Ramsey (Talk | History)
  205. ‎Ronald Lee Gilman (Talk | History)
  206. ‎Ronaldo Mota Sardenberg (Talk | History)
  207. ‎Roy Herron (Talk | History)
  208. ‎Rubidium bromide (Talk | History)
  209. ‎Rusty Crowe (Talk | History)
  210. ‎Sam D. McReynolds (Talk | History)
  211. ‎Sam R. Sells (Talk | History)
  212. ‎Samuel Axley Smith (Talk | History)
  213. ‎Samuel Bunch (Talk | History)
  214. ‎Samuel E. Hogg (Talk | History)
  215. ‎Samuel Mayes Arnell (Talk | History)
  216. ‎Samuel McClary Fite (Talk | History)
  217. ‎Samuel Powell (Talk | History)
  218. ‎Stauromedusae (Talk | History)
  219. ‎Steve Godsey (Talk | History)
  220. ‎Steve Southerland (Talk | History)
  221. ‎Tennessee Commissioner of Correction (Talk | History)
  222. ‎Tennessee Commissioner of Environment and Conservation (Talk | History)
  223. ‎Tennessee Commissioner of Financial Institutions (Talk | History)
  224. ‎Tennessee Commissioner of Tourist Development (Talk | History)
  225. ‎Tennessee Commissioner of Veterans Affairs (Talk | History)
  226. ‎Tennessee Department of Correction (Talk | History)
  227. ‎Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (Talk | History)
  228. ‎Tennessee Department of Financial Institutions (Talk | History)
  229. ‎Tennessee Department of Personnel (Talk | History)
  230. ‎Tennessee Department of Tourist Development (Talk | History)
  231. ‎Tennessee Department of Veterans Affairs (Talk | History)
  232. ‎Thelma Harper (politician) (Talk | History)
  233. ‎Thetus W. Sims (Talk | History)
  234. ‎Thomas Amos Rogers Nelson (Talk | History)
  235. ‎Thomas Cale (Talk | History)
  236. ‎Thomas Dickens Arnold (Talk | History)
  237. ‎Thomas Jefferson Campbell (Talk | History)
  238. ‎Thomas K. Harris (Talk | History)
  239. ‎Thomas Rivers (Talk | History)
  240. ‎Tommy Kilby (Talk | History)
  241. ‎Under Secretary for Arms Control and International Security (Talk | History)
  242. ‎Under Secretary for Democracy and Global Affairs (Talk | History)
  243. ‎Under Secretary for Domestic Finance (Talk | History)
  244. ‎Under Secretary for Economic, Business, and Agricultural Affairs (Talk | History)
  245. ‎Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services (Talk | History)
  246. ‎Under Secretary for Food Safety (Talk | History)
  247. ‎Under Secretary for International Affairs (Talk | History)
  248. ‎Under Secretary for Management (Department of State) (Talk | History)
  249. ‎Under Secretary for Marketing and Regulatory Programs (Talk | History)
  250. ‎Under Secretary for Memorial Affairs (Talk | History)
  251. ‎Under Secretary for Political Affairs (Talk | History)
  252. ‎Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs (Talk | History)
  253. ‎Under Secretary for Rural Development (Talk | History)
  254. ‎Under Secretary for Science (Talk | History)
  255. ‎Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (Talk | History)
  256. ‎Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property (Talk | History)
  257. ‎Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence (Talk | History)
  258. ‎Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness (Talk | History)
  259. ‎Under Secretary of State (Talk | History)
  260. ‎United States Associate Attorney General (Talk | History)
  261. ‎United States Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (Talk | History)
  262. ‎United States Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Talk | History)
  263. ‎United States Deputy Secretary of the Interior (Talk | History)
  264. ‎United States Deputy Secretary of the Treasury (Talk | History)
  265. ‎Vincenzo Lavarra (Talk | History)
  266. ‎Ward Crutchfield (Talk | History)
  267. ‎Washington Barrow (Talk | History)
  268. ‎William Blount Carter (Talk | History)
  269. ‎William Brickly Stokes (Talk | History)
  270. ‎William C. Houston (Talk | History)
  271. ‎William Charles Salmon (Talk | History)
  272. ‎William Claiborne Dunlap (Talk | History)
  273. ‎William Crutchfield (Talk | History)
  274. ‎William Cullom (Talk | History)
  275. ‎William Fitzgerald (Talk | History)
  276. ‎William Hawkins Polk (Talk | History)
  277. ‎William Henry Chipman (Talk | History)
  278. ‎William Henry Sneed (Talk | History)
  279. ‎William Marshall Inge (Talk | History)
  280. ‎William McFarland (Talk | History)
  281. ‎William Michael Cocke (Talk | History)
  282. ‎William Montgomery Churchwell (Talk | History)
  283. ‎William Parker Caldwell (Talk | History)
  284. ‎William T. Haskell (Talk | History)
  285. ‎William Tandy Senter (Talk | History)
  286. ‎William Tecumsah Avery (Talk | History)
  287. ‎William Wirt Vaughan (Talk | History)
  288. ‎Zachary D. Massey (Talk | History)

Thanks[edit]

Hi Daniel. Thanks for undoing the vandalism to the Bernard Haisch article. I have been travelling and just noticed this. There are, alas, some bona fide idiots in the world. Regards Haisch 00:30, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You're welcome. I reverted it as soon as I saw it. I'm now watching the article for any future cases of obvious vandalism. Daniel Bush 00:42, 1 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Elephant crowding[edit]

I was about one second away from reverting that in Elephant - looked like a Steven Colbert prank that MSNBC got taken by, till I saw the date on the citation. --Brat32 07:35, 9 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Gil Gutknecht[edit]

My problem main with the article is that both the issue from earlier this year and this current issue are mixed together, and was hard for me to seperate even knowing about both events. I am not sure what this is referring to either: "...who says he acted out of no malice for Gutknecht...". Malice in doing what? The blocker was Kungfu adam, and the reverters were others. -Ravedave 20:51, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The article referred to me contacting the Star Tribune about edits coming from Gutknecht's office. Daniel Bush 20:53, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ah ok so there was no malice in contacting the paper. Ok. Thanks for clearing that up, thanks for keeping the media informed. Hopefully this will help keep the politician articles NPOv. -Ravedave 21:18, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Wikipedia:Conflicts of interest‎[edit]

Please check out Wikipedia:Conflicts of interest‎ and make any comments you feel are useful. WAS 4.250 07:21, 22 August 2006 (UTC) Wikipedia:Conflicts of interest I don't get it. The first shows up red and the second blue.[reply]

It's a good proposal, but for the corporations that I've noticed editing Wikipedia, such as Zango, in which it appeared the founder had edited, it would seem that this would be little motive to continue subverting Wikipedia for marketing practices. There needs to be mention in this policy of the punishment that may result in its violation in the most extreme cases.

If edits from Zango continue to be for nothing but the purpose of promoting its adware, and alleged spyware, through editing Wikipedia articles on itself, and linkspamming in unrelated articles? They have been blocked temporarily, but this has not worked, so should it be blocked permanently? It seems that the founder of Zango may have even edited Wikipedia under the username Dtodd.

Zango has been warned several times under various IP addresses not to promote itself on Wikipedia, but because administrators don't see each others' warnings, they often just place another warning sticker on the user message page. Sometimes warnings of the highest degree, saying you will be blocked if you repeat your actions again, only result in yet another warning, because the administrator supposes it has been a couple of months since the last action, when this is not true. I think this is unfortunate leniency on Wikipedia's part.

Additionally, should organizations like Zango that have their IP address blocks have their IP addresses blocked individually, or blocked as a single entity? The answer to this question could be applied to other things, like the offices of members of the U.S. Senate, in the extremely unlikely event such an "edit war" would arise. Aside from that, I have no suggestions. Daniel Bush 08:16, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Other agencies sending representatives to Wikipedia[edit]

The "fiddling"? (I'm not sure what to call it) by Congressional staffers and campaign staffers with candidate bios on Wikipedia is well known, as is now the recent case of Gregory Kohs offering to be a Wikipedia "editor for hire" - but what is to be done with not-for-profit agencies making edits to the pages about their agencies with inside information that only THEY, internally, can verify, if they haven't been bothered to update their own website? If this is something you can take up, let me know, or if you know which (if any) admin I should take it to, let me know, and I'll provide the specifics. Thanks! --JohnDBuell 23:16, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Information that can only be verified with inside information should probably be removed under the "original research" rule, I think, unless it is made available publicly in writing. Daniel Bush 23:20, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

So any information added by User:Joanne H., who identifies herself on her user page as "Operations Manager YFU International Educational Services" to the Youth For Understanding page, with summaries in the edit history that her information is NOT yet available on the yfu.org website can be reverted under WP:V or WP:OR? --JohnDBuell 01:57, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You not only may but should delete on sight any addition that the contributor themselves admits can not be verified and that you yourself do not know to be true (Don't knowingly delete true information). WAS 4.250 02:19, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I built the article up based in part on yfu-usa.org, yfu.org (which she claims is out of date, but how is anyone OUTSIDE the organization supposed to know that?), PDF files downloadable from yfu-usa.org, and some information gleaned from their mailing lists (which I receive, being an alumnus of one of their programs). I'll see what I can do about finding duplicate information online for the stuff that came from mailing lists, but if their sites are primary sources and not updated, then that's all the article can reflect, right? --JohnDBuell 02:36, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

When a user makes an edit that changes information in a way that contradicts sources cited in an article, saying that the information is incorrect based on inside information, then the best actions available might be to revert the changes, citing those policies, especially if official website information contradicts the changes. Another option is for the information could simply be removed altogether, and the article could be composed of information solely from third-party sources.

The first option would prevent those with self-interest from trying to manipulate information they dislike being available to the public, but it may also be at the expense of accuracy. The impression I have is that Wikipedia information is based on verifiability by credible, third-party sources, rather than the ultimate truth. The second option would shorten the article while increasing accuracy, which might be best if the source is suspect. Which option is the best to go with might be an issue for a reform of Wikipedia:Verifiability.

If JoanneH is removing things because they are outdated, why not just label the entire section "as of this date, these were the conditions," unless the information has been inaccurate from the beginning? Has it?

Sorry, I've been in the middle of researching information for the articles on Court of Appeals judge Eric Clay and state senator Jerry W. Cooper, so my replies might be later than expected. I have little interest in being involved in the formulation of Wikipedia policy, and I'm being distracted by about five other tasks right now, so how long do I have to make a reply? Daniel Bush 02:50, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No this has all been very good and constructive. And I'm just an editor with no connections to anybody who shapes policy. I was just seeking other opinions, on a specific instance. Thanks to you both! --JohnDBuell 02:53, 23 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Great job with Cooper![edit]

That's just about what I wanted to do with Cooper. Well-referenced and hence likely to be factual; about as good as we are going to get based on public information. Time well spent IMO. Rlquall 19:59, 24 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Thank you. I tried to update it with more information about his past votes, bills, and political views, but as far as I've searched, there's more information available on the circumstances of his indictment than his actual career. Daniel Bush 20:08, 24 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Image:Edward Fast.jpg listed for deletion[edit]

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Image:Andrey Denisov.jpg[edit]

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IRC cloak request =[edit]

I am Daniel_Bush on freenode and I would like the cloak wikipedia/Daniel Bush. Thanks. 22:57, 18 January 2007 (UTC)

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Laundry[edit]

Wäsche is the word you were looking for. pschemp | talk 03:30, 24 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Replaceable fair use Image:Greg_Gonzales.jpg[edit]

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Your DYK nomination[edit]

I just wanted to make you aware of the fact that I have commented on your DYK nomination Buck Dozier. The entry is unlikely to be used until the issue has been addressed. Please note that the top of the T:TDYK page asks nominators to: "Please check back for comments on your nomination. Responding to reasonable objections will help ensure that your article is listed."--Carabinieri 04:13, 13 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]