User:Cullen328/sandbox

A wooden halibut hook, estimated to be 225 years old, is in the collection of the Andover Newton Theological School, and is stored at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachussets. David Katzeek, a leader of the Thunderbird Clan of the Tlingit, learned of the existence of the hook in 2015, and requested its return under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.

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https://accessgenealogy.com/california/biography-of-fenton-m-slaughter.htm

Requests for adminship/JohnnyCoal

WP:ANI

File:Reddy Kilowatt with wall outlet pose.jpg

a cook at McDonald's and at a local American Italian restaurant

Although I appreciate your frank reply, I believe that you have provided additional evidence that this topic ban is needed. According to Categorization, "Categorizations should generally be uncontroversial; if the category's topic is likely to spark controversy, then a list article (which can be annotated and referenced) is probably more appropriate." These Jewish heresy categorizations are profoundly controversial and you are seemingly having difficulty understanding why. It also says "A defining characteristic is one that reliable sources commonly and consistently define the subject as having". You can read hundreds of randomly selected articles published by reliable sources about Reform Judaism for example, without running across one that describes that denomination as heretical. It is simply not a defining characteristic of the Reform movement and it is tendentious and disruptive for you to categorize it that way or defend that category. This is a neutral encyclopedia not Hasidicpedia, and the category system cannot be used as a tool in endless faction fights among various Jewish denominations and dynasties.

Writing in The Atlantic, David Sims was critical of the "harsh and uncompromising" tone of the "classic revisionist western", describing the opening scenes as "gory, tough to watch, and short on dialogue, with Cooper intent on showing a world severely lacking in empathy."

Foster Farms is a California-based chicken and turkey processing company operating mainly on the west coast.

By April 20, four workers were diagnosed with Covid-19 at a Foster Farms plant in Kelso, Washington. Health officials in Cowlitz County, Washington described the cases as a "cluster".

https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/health/2020/04/17/tyson-foods-black-hawk-county-govonor-kim-reynolds/5151840002/

https://bringmethenews.com/minnesota-news/jbs-usa-announces-indefinite-closure-of-coronavirus-hit-worthington-plant

https://kstp.com/news/jbs-closes-worthington-pork-plant-indefinitely/5705865/

https://www.kiro7.com/news/trending/coronavirus-nearly-100-tyson-chicken-workers-test-positive-virus/5EO2W2HNG5G65FDQDGPFFNRH74/

In April, 2030, 130 workers at a Cargill meatpacking plant in Hazelton, Pennsylvania were diagnosed with coronavirus, and the plant closed.

The Weld County, Colorado Department of Public Health, where Greeley is located, reported that the JBS plant had a "work while sick" culture. The company denied that.

By April 15, 28 workers at the plant in Cudahy had tested positive for the coronavirus.

By April 17, the Sioux Falls outbreak had grown to 777 cases, of whom 634 were Smithfield employees and 143 were other people who got infected after contact with a Smithfield employee.

In April, 2020, a Tyson pork processing plant in Columbus Junction, Iowa closed down after 148 workers tested positive for coronavirus, and two workers died.

By April 15, 102 workers had tested positive for the coronavirus, and four had died.

Three days later on April 15, the company announced the closure of a plant in Cudahy, Wisconsin that makes bacon and sausage, and a plant in Martin City, Missouri that makes hams. Both plants were dependent on the Sioux City slaughterhouse. A small number of employees in both facilities had tested positive for coronavirus

At least 277 JBS USA workers at a plant in Greeley, Colorado were infected with coronavirus in April, 2020, leading to the closure of this large meat processing operation with over 3,000 employees.

By April 14, 438 workers in Smithfield's Rapid City plant were confirmed to be infected with the coronavirus.


 * Oppose The Teahouse name and imagery were created in a very thoughtful and careful process by the people who created this project, which has been successful every day since then. Their intention was to create a calm, welcoming, friendly space for new editors, and in my opinion, the connotations of the name are a powerful part of its success. I would be deeply disappointed if the name was changed to something banal and pedestrian, and would probably drift away. We

It is obvious that this new editor Is0811a does not understand how reference templates work, as this example of their work shows:


 * "last=me|2=first=“I can’t make a post about health care without someone telling|last2=home.'”|first2=‘you’re not American Go back"

The editor clearly does not understand that those fields are for the first and last names of two authors, and instead was trying to format a quote from the reference:


 * "I can’t make a post about health care without someone telling me you’re not American. Go back home."

Buzzards-Watch Me Work also clearly does not understand what is going on with this edit, and their notion that "last=me" is an acknowledgement that Is0811a is actually Ibraheem Samirah, is quite frankly ludicrous.

Throughout this thread, Buzzards-Watch Me Work has shown serious misunderstandings of BLP policy, and it is obvious that they have an axe to grind regarding Ibraheem Samirah. Accordingly, I support this topic ban, and advise the editor that continuing this type of conduct in other areas of the encyclopedia may result in stronger sanctions.

Dornacker was described as a "tall vivacious singer turned comedienne turned traffic reporter".

She had surgery at six weeks of age due to swollen glands, and as a result, had a very husky voice.

Anthony Bourdain filmed a segment of his show Parts Unknown at the bar in 2013.

Harvey Kurtzman, Al Feldstein, Mort Drucker, Dave Berg, Larry Siegel, Lou Silverstone, Al Jaffee


 * Support The examples presented above are evidence that Coffee has been editing disruptively in the area of Jewish categories and lists. Here is a example I discovered when I first started to look into this. Coffee went to Florence Meyer Blumenthal and removed Category:Jewish American philanthropists and Category:American people of French-Jewish descent from the article. Any editor who reads that biography and its first reference will recognize that the edit was egregiously wrong, so I reverted it. The expressed concerns are about BLP issues and contemporary anti-Semitism and the Holocaust, but this woman died in 1930, so that is spurious. I tend to be skeptical of calling people "philanthropists" but Blumenthal is notable precisely for that reason - funding worthy charitable causes for decades. There is something seriously wrong in all of this, and it needs to stop.

In the Los Angeles Review of Books, Stanford University historian Jessica Riskin summarizes the book as "a knot of Orwellian contradictions". She observes that Pinker believes that skepticism is a negative influence on society, but she points out that the very Enlightenment heroes he praises, such as Emmanuel Kant, David Hume, Denis Diderot and Adam Smith, were all advocates of skepticism. She concludes, "What we need in this time of political, environmental, and cultural crisis is precisely the value Pinker rejects but that his Enlightenment heroes embraced, whatever their differences of opinion on other matters: skepticism, and an attendant spirit of informed criticism."

The best way to demonstrate that a book is notable is to provide references to book reviews in reliable sources. I found four additional reviews, in The Sunday Times (London), in Kirkus Review, in Publishers Weekly, and in a book called The Best Novels of the Nineties: A Reader's Guide.

A very early recipe for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich appeared in Boston Cooking School Magazine in 1901. Julia Davis Chandler wrote that her recipe was "so far as I know original", and she called for "three very thin layers of bread and two of filling, one of peanut paste, whatever brand you prefer, and currant or crabapple jelly for the other".

In December, 2019, Tubbs endorsed the Democratic presidential campaign of Michael Bloomberg.

Glasser now writes for The Daily Caller, a right wing news and opinion website founded by Tucker Carlson.

In 2019, the group organized a cross country trip commemorating the 100th anniversary of the 1919 Motor Transport Corps convoy, which involved 81 Army vehicles traveling from Washington, DC to San Francisco. The re-enactment included over 40 classic military vehicles, and traveled from York, Pennsylvania to San Francisco. The group has completed five transcontinental convoys.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/may/10/mr-putin-operative-kremlin-review

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/reviews/capsule-review/mr-putin-operative-kremlin

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/book-party/wp/2017/03/31/trumps-new-russia-expert-wrote-a-psychological-profile-of-vladimir-putin-and-it-should-scare-trump/

https://www.ft.com/content/98ea22dc-9554-11e2-a4fa-00144feabdc0

https://www.economist.com/books-and-arts/2013/05/11/closing-doors

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/1060586X.2013.812381?scroll=top&needAccess=true

https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/csi-studies/studies/vol-57-no-4/the-man-without-a-face-the-unlikely-rise-of-vladimir-putin-and-mr-putin-operative-in-the-kremlin.html

https://books.google.com/books/about/Sleepyhead.html?id=dR8zDwAAQBAJ

https://books.google.com/books/about/Sleep_Medicine.html?id=89nbDgAAQBAJ

https://www.sleepfoundation.org/articles/past-present-and-future-cpap

https://books.google.com/books/about/Technology_on_Your_Time.html?id=R2b1ObGdR6AC

https://library.mtsu.edu/aero1020

https://aapt.scitation.org/doi/10.1119/1.19334

http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/style/2017/05/30/mexican-migrant-workers-came-to-california-to-pick-grapes-now-they-own-wineries/

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/salud-mexican-american-wine-revolution-180964217/

The group advocating for a California Veteran's Home was founded on March 7, 1882. On October 25, 1882, after a successful fundraising campaign and a thorough investigation of alternative sites, the committee purchased a 910 acre site near Yountville, California for $17,750. Since 1883, the State of California had provided partial funding of $15,000 per year, under the assumption that this allocation would support 100 veterans. The home opened to its first residents on April 1, 1884. The institution was governed by a 11 member board, two from the Association of Mexican War Veterans, and nine from the Grand Army of the Republic representing Union Civil War Veterans. The California Veteran's Home was recognized as an official state institution in 1889. There were 17 residents when the home opened, but by the end of 1891, the population had grown to 408 men.

When making a recommendation to keep an article, my decision is informed by the purposes of Wikipedia, by foundational principles, and by policies, guidelines and respected essays. My goal is always to improve the encyclopedia with every edit I make. According to WP:PURPOSE, "Wikipedia is intended to be the largest, most comprehensive, and most widely-available encyclopedia ever written," and Jimmy Wales has famously said, "Imagine a world in which every single person on the planet is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge. That's what we're doing." Notability is a guideline, not a policy, and the idea we must cite sources that are independent of the topic is also a guideline, not a policy. Source independence is sometimes not black and white, and requires interpretation and good judgement. Verifiability is a core content policy, but there is nothing in that policy that requires that the sources we cite be independent of the topic. WP:Independent sources, which makes a stringent argument for absolute source independence is an essay, not a policy nor a guideline. Ignore all rules is a policy, which says, "If a rule prevents you from improving or maintaining Wikipedia, ignore it." I am a strong supporter of Editorial discretion, which values intelligent human judgement over rote, mechanical application of rules and regulations.

Regarding the case at hand, I believe that an encyclopedia which strives to be "the largest, most comprehensive, and most widely-available encyclopedia ever written" ought to include verifiable biographies of members of the Mormon General authority, just as we include biographies of bishops of major religious denominations. Such biographies, in my view, are part of the "sum of all human knowledge" which should be freely accessible to all people

In conclusion, please do not insist that other editors base their arguments on policies, when your own argument is based only on guidelines. I am confident that my own argument is legitimate and worthy of consideration, though I am aware that some other editors may come to a different conclusion.