Wikipedia:Requests for comment/Darkstar1st

To remain listed at Requests for comment/User conduct, at least two people need to show that they tried to resolve a dispute with this user and have failed. This must involve the same dispute with a single user, not different disputes or multiple users. The persons complaining must provide evidence of their efforts, and each of them must certify it by signing this page with &#126;&#126;&#126;&#126;. If this does not happen within 48 hours of the creation of this dispute page (which was: 17:53, 19 November 2012 (UTC)), the page will be deleted. The current date and time is:, 30 July 2024 (UTC).



''Users should not edit other people's summaries or views, except to endorse them. All signed comments other than your own view or an endorsement should be directed to this page's discussion page.''

Statement of the dispute
''This is a summary written by users who dispute this user's conduct. Users signing other sections ("Response" or "Outside views") should not edit the "Statement of the dispute" section.''

This editor continually advocates changes to articles to support his view that nazism and fascism are forms of socialism and continues to argue for them, setting up multiple discussion threads, edit-warring and arguing long after other editors have shown no support for them. Often these discussions begin, "Is x a reliable source"?

Desired outcome
''This is a summary written by users who have initiated the request for comment. It should spell out exactly what the changes they'd like to see in the user, or what questions of behavior should be the focus.''

This editor should drop discussions when they appear to have no prospect of success. Also, when he proposes changes to articles, he should be clear on what they are, not begin with vague questions, and should not set up multiple discussion threads.

Description
''{Add summary here, but you must use the section below to certify or endorse it. Users who edit or endorse this summary should not edit the other summaries, other than to endorse them.}''

This editor has persisted in WP:IDHT over a range of articles related to nazism, fascism and socialism.

Evidence of disputed behavior
(Provide diffs. Links to entire articles aren't helpful unless the editor created the entire article. Edit histories also aren't helpful as they change as new edits are performed.)

Darkstar1st added to Nazism, without a source, "In 1936 price and wage controls were introduced, soon after came shortages and rationing." (07:45, 7 November 2012) Over the next several days, his edits were reverted by myself, RolandR, RJFF, DD2K, Kierzek, and Escape Orbit. Darkstar1st was then blocked 48 hours for edit-warring. He then opened a discussion thread Talk:Nazism, saying, "I would like to includes a few words about such in the economics section, without objection. (09:36, 10 November 2012)  The talk page discussion as of 15:12, 19 November 2012  can be found here.  Here other editors (Snowded, Dolescum, Bryon Morrigan) opposed his edit.  Yet Darkstar1st set up numerous discussion threads and is still arguing his point 12 days after his initial edit.

After a trolling IP began a discussion thread, Talk:Socialism (03:37, 13 September 2012), Darkstar1st argued in its favor for 5 days despite opposition from R-41, AnieHall and others. (Talk page as of 05:43, 15 November 2012 here.) He argued at length, in the face of all of the evidence, that an ancient text mentioned the word "socialist", and refused to recognise that, as shown by uploaded screenprints of the text in question and of the Oxford English Dictionary, the word used was "scholist", and that this is a recognised English word. This tediously tendentious behaviour, and his characteristic WP:IDHT, wasted many hours work of several editors, and it is the same behaviour which he is now displaying in Talk:Nazism.

Darkstar1st has also tenaciously argued this point, despite opposition, at Talk:National Socialism (disambiguation), Talk:State socialism, Talk:State Socialism (Germany) and various other articles and notice boards.

Applicable policies and guidelines
{list the policies and guidelines that apply to the disputed conduct}

Failure or refusal to "get the point": "In some cases, editors have perpetuated disputes by sticking to an allegation or viewpoint long after the consensus of the community has decided that moving on to other topics would be more productive. Such behavior is disruptive to Wikipedia."

Evidence of trying and failing to resolve the dispute
(provide diffs and links)
 * "...Neither the IP nor yourself have brought any sources, yet continue to argue your views which is trolling and stops editors from spending their time productively." The Four Deuces (TFD) 03:05, 15 September 2012
 * "Time wasting Darkstar1st, you are in a minority of one on this and you are either refusing to, or are incapable of understanding the points which are being put to you.  If you don't stop then I think the only option left is to seek a topic ban." Snowded 06:59, 12 November 2012
 * "And by now this has become tediously tendentious, and classic IDHT behaviour. Some 5000 words over the past three days, with one editor battling against at least seven others who are telling him the same thing. This has to stop." RolandR 19:02, 12 November 2012

Users certifying the basis for this dispute
{Users who tried and failed to resolve the dispute}


 * TFD (talk) 17:55, 19 November 2012 (UTC)
 * RolandR (talk) 18:47, 19 November 2012 (UTC)
 * While this discussion is still open, and without responding (except for continuing a content dispute in the wrong section below), Darkstar has continued with this disruptive behaviour at Talk:Socialism, where he again proposes edits based on selective misreading and misrepresentation of sources, while accusing other editors of being "confused" and implying that they are lying. This pattern of editing has gone way beyond disruptively tendentious, and has taken on the appearance of deliberate trolling. My patience, and assumption of good faith, are exhausted, and I now believe that he needs a topic ban from all politics articles. He is simply causing too many other editors to waste too much time, and his presence on those articles has become a net negative. RolandR (talk) 17:54, 21 December 2012 (UTC)
 * Bryon Morrigan --  Talk  18:50, 19 November 2012 (UTC)
 * Snowded TALK 03:11, 20 November 2012 (UTC)
 * Editor needs a topic ban. Dave Dial (talk) 18:08, 11 December 2012 (UTC)

Other users who endorse this summary

 * --R-41 (talk) 22:28, 23 November 2012 (UTC)
 * I concur. The editor in question needs to reflect on the writings and concerns put forth above. Continuing a disruptive pattern of editing will do no one, nor the project, any good. Kierzek (talk) 22:13, 11 December 2012 (UTC)
 * This makes for some mind-numbing reading. As much as I would like to AGF, it appears this editor is intentionally wasting everyone's time.  This is particularly supported by the repeated use of short cryptic responses which add nothing to the conversation, but require responses by other editors.  a13ean (talk) 16:55, 3 January 2013 (UTC)
 * With some reservations in detail (see my own statement below), I agree Darkstar1st has shown disruptive behaviour, possibly due in part to lack of competence, as evidenced by his tenacious and confused arguing about certain points (continued until right now [//en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia_talk:Requests_for_comment/Darkstar1st&curid=38148563&diff=532029431&oldid=532025959]). Fut.Perf. ☼ 22:48, 8 January 2013 (UTC)

Response
''This is a summary written by the user whose conduct is disputed, or by other users who think that the dispute is unjustified and that the above summary is biased or incomplete. Users signing other sections ("Statement of the dispute" and "Outside Views") should not edit the "Response" section.'' ''
 * here is an example of the current edit i proposed in talk and quotes from the RS i presented, none of which have been challenged:
 * the USSR was the first socialist state and the USSR was the first socialist society.
 * The First Socialist Society: A History of the Soviet Union from Within
 * For the first time in the history of mankind a socialist society(USSR) was created.
 * The Soviet Union was the first state to be based on Marxist socialism
 * Russia was not just another country, it was the world's first workers state and history's first socialist society
 * the establishment of the first socialist state in russia in 1917
 * Soviet...the first socialist society.
 * With their victory over the White Russians in 1920, Soviet leaders now could turn for the first time to the challenging task of building the first socialist society in a world dominated by their capitalist enemies.

Users who endorse this summary:
 * 1) Darkstar1st (talk) 22:49, 30 December 2012 (UTC)
 * 2) User:North8000 Mostly.    Once the it became disputed I would have recommended "attribution" type wording rather than the voice of Wikipedia.  But not only it is not-misbehavior to put something like that in, it is violation of wp:npov to keep it out.    Not that that was the exact question, (I have only skimmed the lengthy discussion there and did not participate) but a vote in that particular venue can't override wp:npov. North8000 (talk) 13:04, 9 January 2013 (UTC)

Outside views
''This is a summary written by users not directly involved with the dispute but who would like to add an outside view of the dispute. Users editing other sections ("Statement of the dispute" and "Response") should not edit the "Outside Views" section, except to endorse an outside view.''

Outside view by R-41
I have not been closely involved with all of Darkstar1st's editing episodes, but I have examined a problematic editing style by him, and this is my conclusion as well as my proposals on how it should be responded to.

Darkstar1st evidently has strongly anti-socialist political views, he associates all of socialism with totalitarianism, viewing Marxism-Leninism that he refers to in the generic term of "communism", as well as fascism as the major manifestations of what socialism is. Darkstar1st edits articles to promote this conception of socialism as being totalitarian. The most important evidence I can provide of this is a cynical remark recently made by Darkstar1st where he said "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was most certainly socialist and a shining example of the ideology in action." On his user page he identifies himself as an opponent of communism, and this taken with consideration to his description of the Soviet Union as "a shining example" of socialism "in action", he is clearly anti-socialist. His intentions on Wikipedia with regards to material related to socialism, is to present socialism as a whole as totalitarian and linked with Marxism-Leninism and fascism. This completely disregards socialists who rejected totalitarianism. One of the most well-known anti-totalitarian socialists being the author of the famous anti-totalitarian novel, 1984, George Orwell.

Darkstar1st puts original research forward repeatedly, and engages in tenacious long disputes when he has zero or next to no consensus in favour of his proposals.

If he continues to tenaciously engage in inserting intentionally anti-socialist POV material in articles, I believe a warning of a topic ban for the article Socialism and all related articles are principally topics involving socialism, communism, and fascism should be considered on the basis of tenacious editing and POV-pushing, should it continue. If he ceases this disruptive tenacious and POV-pushing behaviour, the warning and threat of imposing such a topic ban can be removed, if he continues in spite of the warning, the topic ban should be implemented.

If he wishes to engage in productive editing and discussion, I recommend, for his own benefit and for others, of taking some time to improve his knowledge on socialism prior to continuing editing, that he consider reading scholarly works on socialism by authors who are not anti-socialist. Particularly books that speak of the motivations of socialists. For instance I would advise that he read about the original socialists, called utopian socialism who advocated a decentralized form of socialism far different from the totalitarian Soviet Union; about social democracy that promotes its goals through parliamentary democratic means; as well as material on collectivist anarchism and anarcho-syndicalism that were socialist movements that completely rejected the state altogether and are staunchly anti-totalitarian. By reading and learning about such movements, Darkstar1st may from his own learning dispense with his inaccurate view of socialism being inherently totalitarian.--R-41 (talk) 22:40, 23 November 2012 (UTC)


 * Users who endorse this summary:
 * concur &#39;&#39;&#39;SPECIFICO&#39;&#39;&#39; (talk) 18:03, 11 December 2012 (UTC)
 * Needs to be worded more strongly. User takes up far too much time of too many editors. Needs topic ban. Dave Dial (talk) 18:11, 11 December 2012 (UTC)
 * Seems right. FurrySings (talk) 08:15, 5 January 2013 (UTC)
 * — SMcCandlish Talk⇒ ɖ⊝כ⊙þ Contrib.  21:00, 6 January 2013 (UTC)
 * Agree. TFD (talk) 23:14, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

Outside view by Collect
That an editor properly uses article talk pages is not a valid basis for an RfC/U. In the case at hand, the editor sought to provide sourcing for the editos he desired, which is precisely what Wikipedia policies and guidelines call for. inter alia show, in fact, that the Nazis instituted wage and prce controls. Especially in the wake of wage controls, wage cuts and freezes, as well as a hike in work hours and intensified demands on the work force, a “mood” had now taken hold in the factories, characterized by SOPADE editors in September 1937 as a “general discontent among the workers.” For one example of "shortages" see The Reichswerke were the direct beneficiary of the controls over investment, at the expense of the private steel users (particularly the car manufacturers, who complained vigorously of the shortages of sheet steel).

An RfC/U is precisely the wrong place to continue a content dispute - especially when the key dispute is ... reasonably disputed. Go after folks who make totally unsupportable claims - but this is not the example to use. Those being complainants above are substantially invested in the one content dispute, and seeking to ban "the other side" in a content dispute is contrary to Wikipedia policy. The real problem is an apparent dislike of reliable sources which contradict what the "consensus" of four editors knows to be the truth. Again RFC/U is the wrong place for such behaviour.


 * Users endorsing this summary
 * 1) Collect (talk) 13:57, 22 December 2012 (UTC)
 * 2) I don't even see a specific policy related behavioral complaint.  I'm not involved/knowledgeable on this, but to me it looks like Darkstar is trying to put in a well and heavily sourced point, and the main "complaint" seems to be "even though we outnumber Darkstar, they persist". That's not certainly not "misbehavior", it appears to be very proper behavior; and the policy violation (if it has significant coverage in sources in which case wp:npov  / wp:weight dictates inclusion) would be by those trying to keep it out. Possibly a boomerang is in order. North8000 (talk) 21:58, 31 December 2012 (UTC)
 * Collect is right that "An RfC/U is precisely the wrong place to continue a content dispute". Darkstar1st's edit was reversed by myself, RolandR, RJFF, DD2K, Kierzek, and Escape Orbit. Darkstar1st was then blocked 48 hours for edit-warring.  It may be that Darkstarist's edit represented the WP:TRUTH, but that is no excuse for disruptive editing.  TFD (talk) 07:37, 2 January 2013 (UTC)
 * 1) Nyttend (talk) 13:09, 2 January 2013 (UTC)
 * 2) This is a statement of the obvious, so, yes, I endorse it. But this RFC/U is not about a content dispute, it's about a disruptive editor behavior pattern. — SMcCandlish  Talk⇒ ɖ⊝כ⊙þ Contrib.  21:00, 6 January 2013 (UTC)
 * 3) --Shrike (talk)/WP:RX 11:38, 7 January 2013 (UTC)
 * 4) Well put.   No  unique  names  06:13, 9 January 2013 (UTC)

Brief outside note by Fut.Perf.
I notice that among the charges brought forward against Darkstar1st is a charge of filibustering and "didn't-hear-that" behaviour over a supposed early attestation of the word "socialist", where some other editors argued he was misrepresenting the source and that in reality it contained a different word (thread 1, [//en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Socialism&oldid=531629399#National_Socialism_should_be_included_here thread 2]). I have just posted on the article talk page something that I believe should help to clear up the misunderstanding [//en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Socialism&diff=531629399&oldid=531603656]. Darkstar1st was in fact partially right, insofar as some early print versions of the book in question do in fact contain the word "socialist" at that point. His opponents in those threads are to blame insofar as they were too rash to dismiss the possibility that there could be genuinely different original (18th-century) versions of the text, and, as a result, were too quick in essentially accusing Darkstar1st of lying and making that citation up [//en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Talk:Socialism&diff=513318574&oldid=513315773]. On the other hand, this is not to say that the original complaint about Darkstar1st's edits, i.e. that the inclusion of that citation constituted original research, wasn't correct (I believe it was.) Also, I have to agree that Darkstar1st's further conduct in the follow-up debates is not without blame. In particular, this edit by Darkstar1st strikes me as utterly confused (on more than one level) and certainly not conductive to a rational resolution of the issue. Fut.Perf. ☼ 15:53, 6 January 2013 (UTC)


 * Users endorsing this summary
 * 1) Collect (talk) 18:12, 6 January 2013 (UTC)  Noting that this boils down to a content issue - and one where there was no "perfect opinion"
 * 2) This does appear to be technically correct, but I reiterate that this RFC/U is not about whether Darkstar1st was coincidentally partly correct about some matter of trivia, it's about Darkstar1st's behavior: a consistent pattern of disruptive, willful tendentiousness, a battleground mentality, and POINTy manipulation of article text. — SMcCandlish  Talk⇒ ɖ⊝כ⊙þ Contrib.  21:18, 6 January 2013 (UTC)
 * 3) Good detailed analysis.....something that has been lacking in the warfare. North8000 (talk) 23:54, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

Request for closer and revert by User:RolandR
A request for a closer was made at by one of the certifiers atWP:AN and responded to - this close was reverted by the other certifier User:RolandR , see  - the reverted close is posted below for reference
 * - Administrators'_noticeboard


 * - Closing as .. without merit in regards to community opinion as only a couple of the involved in the disputes have commented, so there clearly is not community interest or assessment of the situation and as such this RFC should not be considered as a reason to allow escalation to Arbitration. please note I have not investigated any of the comments but am only closing on the lack of uninvolved interest and responses to the RFCuser - You  really  can  15:05, 3 January 2013 (UTC)

Outside view by SMcCandlish
I'm an entirely uninvolved editor looking at this from the outside. Darkstar1st's tendentiousness closely mirrors that of Apteva (topic-banned) and Wikid77 (pending) in an ongoing case at WP:AN, and that of LittleBenW (blocked for a while and topic-banned at WP:AN/I indefinitely last month), other than this is about content and all three of those were about style matters. Darkstar1st may be entirely correct in the facts (I doubt it, and it's clear that many of his edits are a form of sarcasm) but that does not give any editor the magical right disruptively browbeat everyone and forum-shop their pet obsession incessantly. Consensus does not support the changes that Darkstar1st insists "must" be made, but other editors have strongly questioned his sourcing as cherry-picking sources (some questionable or obsolete) that agree with him and ignoring all others. Nothing but disruption can result when genuine consensus runs into irrational, entrenched insistence on a contrarian point of view. That minority political theory be significant enough that it should be mentioned somewhere, but abusing WP as a platform for issue-based advocacy is not the way to do that. Also, the filers of this RfC did not adequately list the bases for it, which include more than TE/WP:IDIDNTHEARTHAT, namely at least all of the following: WP:DE, WP:V/WP:RS, WP:NPOV, WP:NOR, WP:SOAPBOX/WP:BATTLEGROUND and WP:POINT. The are too vague and wishy-washy. They include be something specific, like a topic ban on editing articles about and engaging in talk page debates about socialism, communism or fascism. I do not feel that a block is in order (absent evidence of personal attacks or something else block-worthy). — SMcCandlish Talk⇒ ɖ⊝כ⊙þ Contrib.  21:00, 6 January 2013 (UTC)

Outside view by North8000
I might be the one most familiar with Darkstar. Their approach is unusual, which many will tend to misread. Their edits tend to be well founded and well sourced, and in the context of a high level of knowledge. Their discussions tend to be very brief (although they used to be even briefer) Yes they can sometimes be "immune to input" as they calmly proceed. Many who don't know their style might easily mistake shortness for nastiness, but such is a misinterpretation. In my observations their choice of words in conversations (even when people are being nasty with them) is always calm and never nasty.

I would address the points of this RFC/U but I really don't see much to address. It appears that the complaints are (in my words), "didn't give in quick enough at 1 or 2 articles when they were outnumbered". Of course the persons making the complaint would not agree with my wording, but I think that few could argue that that isn't an accurate summary of the scope of the complaints. I don't see "didn't give in quick enough at 1 or 2 articles" to be RFC/U level material. Is there anything else? North8000 (talk) 17:27, 14 January 2013 (UTC)

Discussion
All signed comments and talk not related to an endorsement should be directed to this page's discussion page. Discussion should not be added below. Discussion should be posted on the talk page. Threaded replies to another user's vote, endorsement, evidence, response, or comment should be posted to the talk page.

Summary
This has been open for far too long, though it is not difficult to come to a conclusion of sorts. Unfortunately that conclusion is as limited as the scope of this RfC/U was narrow and partly malformed (or misguided). It appears to be the consensus that Darkstar has indeed been disruptive in their response to concerns about content, but while the content itself is pretty well covered in this RfC, the limited scope (behavior in regard to one episode) does not allow us to draw broad conclusions. Yes, Darkstar's style of communication needs improvement; yes, he has a tendency to refuse to let go--but North8000s assessment of the scope of this RfC is correct. How to move forward? That's hard to say, and considering that this started in November last year may well be water under the bridge. If editors feel (some do, but there is not enough evidence here to judge that) that Darkstar should stay away from articles on politics in the first place, perhaps be banned from those articles, they should take this up at AN, I suppose. Drmies (talk) 01:43, 16 March 2013 (UTC)