User talk:Rbfeldmanphd

Rorschach
I'm also a clinical psychologist. You might want to read the talk page (including the archives) for the controversy about the image that has been raging for over a year. It's a losing battle to remove the image. Believe me, I speak from experience. I have fought it tooth and nail for a very long time. Although the test as printed on the cards is trademarked, the images are not copyrighted; the copyright expired 70 years after H. Rorschach's death. And Wikipedia has no obligation to follow APA's ethical guidelines. All you're doing is fanning the flames to the controversy. There's also a concept on Wikipedia called consensus, which you just violated. Not a big deal, except if you keep violating you will be blocked from editing. But the worst part is this: if you remove the image where it is now, some zealot on the other side of the argument will post it at the top of the article. We had a compromise to hide the image so that a reader would have to click to see it, with a disclaimer that it could invalidate a test. It stayed that way for months, until someone started arguing to get rid of the image. The result of that effort was that the zealots got it back on the page without a click-to-see. I'm not telling you what to do. But I am telling you what will happen. If you remove the image again (because someone most assuredly will restore it), it will only make things worse. I applaud your attempt to follow professional ethics. I tried many times, but it's futile. Ward3001 (talk) 04:06, 13 March 2008 (UTC)