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:Articles for deletion/State terrorism by the United States (sixth nomination) - Knowledge

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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was still no consensus to delete the article. AfD is and has shown not to be the solution - please find other editorial avenues (merge, rename, rewrite, cleanup, etc.) to sort out this mess. - Mailer Diablo 02:20, 1 July 2007 (UTC)

State terrorism by the United States (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log)

This page inherently violates WP:NPOV. Additionally, it has original research problems. The arguments made on the page rely heavily on the opinions of Noam Chomsky, who is not an expert in this field. Pablo Talk | Contributions 05:16, 25 June 2007 (UTC)

Note to closing admin Keep a look out for socks. Thank you. Kwsn 20:16, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Agreed... Beware of Socks I did a quick look at a few people who are involved, and found a few who have less than a handful of non-AFD anti-US debate edits... they definately appear to have been created specifically to participate in these debates. I'm not going to point fingers, but I have suspicions.Balloonman 05:58, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Further Agreed ... Those who spent more time on here should have their opinions weighed greater then all others, I mean what else are we spending time on here if its not to have our arguments, points and ideas held above all others, right? I think the closing admin will look at the points raised and make their decision based on that alone, this is not a vote, a million socks with no valid point will not trump good reasoning. Much like a million votes citing policy with no explanation, will not trump those who expand and explain. Anti-US debates? I guess it is more "patriotic" not to question your government? Damn those civil rights marchers questioning the law stating they are less then the white man, or those foolish abolitionists, those damn tea wasters throwing valuable tea into the ocean ... --SixOfDiamonds 16:02, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Interesting that you agree... your first post was on the 12th... and prior to this post over 2/3rds of your edits were on these AFD's.Balloonman 02:47, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
I am agreeing because you as someone with a larger edit pool is clearly more important then myself. Your views, opinions, and participation here is greater then everyone with a smaller edit pool. I do not even know why we have these AfD's when the person with the largest edit pool should just decide what is to be of the article, right? Since this is a discussion, as I stated above, I believe the admin will consider the points by arguement, not user edit pool. I would also love for this AfD to end so I can find something else to dedicate some time to on here, such as more warez articles. --74.73.16.230 03:05, 30 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 1

  • Delete after moving any non-duplicated content to Noam Chomsky, etc. No matter what the title, this article attracts POV and OR like a dead sheep attracts maggots. Article is currently rotten with unsourced claims, statements cited to nobodies, etc, and always will be.
    Second choice: move to "Allegations by Noam Chomksy of U.S. State Terrorism" and remove the non-Chomsky stuff.
    CWC 08:00, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment: Completely untrue. Care to support your claims with something specific? I've asked this and have yet to see a valid instance of it that was not fixed right away. And, yes it does attract POV pushing, as evidenced by this attempt to delete this valid article.Giovanni33 09:13, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Update: article is now rotten with shabbily-sourced claims, statements cited to nobodies, etc. Giovanni33, repeating your assertions about this article a zillion times does not make them true. CWC 17:15, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Commment. Invalid line of reasoning. If there are notable Allegations of Iranian state terrorism, and you have reliable sources, then create the article. Saying it does not exist and therefore this one that does stand up to this criteria should go, is nonsense. And, we already do have articles about allegations of state terrorism for other states. Regarding your comment about POV pushing, with that logic, we would end up deleting most of WP's articles. If something is not being reported with nuetral language and proper attribution, using reliable sources, then point it out.Giovanni33 09:10, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Note: This debate has been included in the list of United States of America-related deletions. -- Sefringle 08:11, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong and Speedy Keep There are no less than 93 references in this legitimate and important article. Even if we have a single reliable source which says that the U.S. has been accused of state terrorism, or has committed state terrorism--let alone having many reliable sources--then the article can not be thrown out. In fact, this is one of the better sourced articles I've seen; almost every statement is being sourced with a fine comb, due to POV warriors hating what it talks about, and wanting it deleted. But, I thank them since its improving the article. All the loud claims of OR have been proven to be false, no matter how much they are repeated. I ask again, name it. If it OR, then lets see an example. If its true, then lets fix it. So far all such claims have proven false. They just don't like the POV this article reports on, however neutral it does it. But, its our duty to see that important articles about notable subjects being talked about all over the world, gets reported on. WP credibility is at stake here.
  • Strong Keep I suppose some nationalists in Sri Lankan's would love to delete State terrorism in Sri Lanka. Fortunately, policies does not allow it. The U.S. Federal Government deserves no special treatment in this regard, either--esp not with plenty of reliable secondary sources to back up these allegations. Face it: Like it or not, the US has planned and/or committed many acts that some people consider to be state terrorism. These "allegations" are borne out by numerous verifiable sources, (CNN, NYTimes, BBC etc), admitted to by the perpetrators many times and regarded as fact by commentators and experts on the matter--not just Chomsky. There is just no legitimate basis that this article can even seriously be considered for deletion. To do so would be a an extreme violation of NPOV, by means of the suppression of a wealth of information on this very important and notable topic.Giovanni33 08:58, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
To claim that the majority of this article was created by anonymous Wikipedian editors is absurd, and even if it was true (which it isn't), anonymous editors can make valid contributions to wikipedia too. 69.150.51.11 18:22, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • An obvious keep. Notable subject and well referenced article. The alleged problems can be fixed if so needed. No point in deleting the article. As Knowledge:Articles for deletion says "For problems that do not require deletion, including duplicate articles, articles needing improvement, or POV problems, be bold and fix the problem or tag the article appropriately." // Liftarn
  • Comment It is truly depressing to see so many people who can sit at their computers and blithely accuse the USA of state terrorism. You guys are just idiots and I don't care if you think that's civil or not. Nick mallory 10:34, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete Violates wikipedia is not a soapbox...this article is a synthesis of opinions not agreed to by the UN or any other legislative body on an international scale. Violates WP:SYNTH Synthesis of published material serving to advance a position--MONGO 10:38, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
    Comment I am not understanding the link to WP:SYNTH. It states taking an item from source A, and combining it with an item from source B to make a new claim of C is not allowed. However Chomsky stating country A commited B in country C, would not be an issue from WP:SYNTH, as it all originates in one article. Other sources are then given to support that Chomsky did not make up anything out of thin air. For instance a source is given to prove country A had soldiers in country C, another source states country C felt the actions of country A were terrorism, another states thats B is often terrorism. However the additional sources are not making an original claim, they are supporting the claim in the very first source. I think people need to be careful when citing WP:SYNTH, as a precursor to doing so requires all sources be read, and possibly consulting with others as to why certain sources are given so there is no misunderstanding, not that I am stating you did not, just general advice. --SixOfDiamonds 17:33, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete This is the American wikipedia, even though the contents of this article are probably true, many Americans are offended by this article. Why continue deliberately offending the main contributors ? Even User:MONGO doesn't like it, and he has more contribs than everyone else on this page put together probably. I'm not saying this article is false or anything but it serves no purpose, of course we know the USA sponsors terrorism, it's hardly new, but why keep shoving it in the face of the wikipedians here ? Jackaranga 10:49, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment The CIA is releasing secret information in the next few weeks. Jackaranga 10:49, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment: This is NOT the 'American wikipedia'. It's Wikpedia in the English language. Sources and articles that are critical of America (or any other country), if they are credible, have a place here. Kim Dent-Brown 11:20, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment. Since when has offending people been a reason to delete an article? If it were, Knowledge would be a whole lot smaller. Let's get rid of Christianity because it offends Muslims, evolution because many Christians don't like it, etc. And just how does one article in a million "keep shoving it in the face of the wikipedians"? Clarityfiend 12:01, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment "This is the American wikipedia"? I think not. EliminatorJR 18:14, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Curious coming from an account currently trying to claim that suicide bombings are not terrorist acts. ] Dman727 20:11, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Speedy Keep - /sigh, yet another bad-faith nomination of an article that some, like others, are desperately trying to destroy. The subject is notable, most of the sources are reliable and verifiable. Tarc 13:26, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep - Article is well-referenced and is not just about Chomsky's writing. Article may well need work and/or a rename (it seems to move a lot!). Anyone who's read Chomsky knows that he includes extensive references. --Jack Merridew 13:45, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong Delete- Article would be offensive to many and it atracts POV ChrisLamb 14:22, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
    • Comment: This is not a popularity contest and those are not arguments for deletion.
      • Comment-True, that was my personal opinion that got the best of me and I withdraw it,but I stand by the delete because Allegations have no place in an encyclopedia only verifiable facts do. ChrisLamb 14:34, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
        • Comment: So basicly your vote is a WP:IDONTLIKEIT (or rather a WP:NOREASON)? // Liftarn
          • Comment- No I am voting to delete because it is because as the articles name states these are simply allegations and not proven facts and it is facts alone that belong in an encyclopedia, if any of these allegations could be proven I would vote to keep them, but as it stands now they are simply allegations. ChrisLamb 15:08, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
            • Comment: I believe the popular statement around here is that Knowledge is for verifiable information, not factual information. Sounds odd, but I guess this is what they had in mind. Also as for as proving some of the items in the article, it has already been proven by a court that convicted Posada of terrorism, by Posada himself that he was trained in explosives by the CIA etc. The Nicaragua sources go back to the court case, so again that has been proven. I am not sure what you are finding to not be factual. But please expand so other can understand. Thank you. --SixOfDiamonds 17:25, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • A neutral article cataloging allegations could in theory exist, and has briefly in the past, but will not again be stable under this or another title. The article is a magnet for editors who think the US is guilty of numerous acts of state terrorism, and are determined to record that Greater Truth, verifiable sources be damned. The name was changed from Allegations of ... to State terrorism by the United States without consensus, and is another example of the soap-box that this article will always be, under whatever title. I have voted keep in previous AfD. At this time the best thing is to delete the article and all redirects and start over with a section in some other actively-followed article. That section can be spun off if it grows, under a suitable title. The next best thing is to let people post their screeds without interference, stay off the talk page, and otherwise ignore it. At least that way the slant will be obvious to the reader. Tom Harrison 14:51, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment. If you voted keep in a previous AfD I did not see it. You did vote delete in this AfD and also this one as anyone can see. You apparently did not care for this article in August and December of 2006 either. Not that it matters, but I thought I would clarify that you were apparently not on the keep side in past debates (correct me if I'm wrong).--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 19:58, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Okay, you're wrong.  MortonDevonshire  Yo  · 06:36, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I stand corrected--kinda. I did not see that Tom Harrison had voted to keep this in late 2005. However the article was apparently completely different then, and was simply called "American Terrorism" (TH seemed to believe it should refer to domestic terrorism and hoped it would include "...Oklahoma City, the Klan, the abolitionists, maybe tar-and-feathering loyalists during the Revolution" and "native American raiding parties"--in other words he essentially voted to keep a completely different article). Harrison had voted to delete this article in its current (state terror) form twice in 2006, so I think my original point is still quite valid (albeit fairly trivial), but thanks for pointing out the earlier keep vote.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 16:32, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong and speedy keep. This is the sixth AfD nomination for goodness sake - it kind of begs the classic lightbulb question: "how many AfD nominations must an article endure before allegations of point making are clear?" I would normally say 3 or 4 at the most. Is this really going to be wheeled out to AfD every two months or so for this monumentally disruptive waste of time? Enough already, drop it and get on with collaboratively working to fix the elements of the article where you perceive the problems to be. I urge the closing Admin to speedyily close this as keep by virtue of WP:POINT and being a disruptive waste of time.
There are only two fundamental questions to be answered here:
  1. Is the article topic sufficiently encyclopaedic to warrant coverage in an encyclopaedia?
  2. Is the particular subject matter of this topic sufficiently notable to warrant its own separate encyclopaedia article?
Firstly, the topic is state terrorism; secondly, the subject matter of this article concerns allegations made that the USA, the dominant world superpower, has engaged in such activities in Latin America, the Middle East and Western Europe. I think even the most ardent deletionist would have to concede yes on both counts, and this article is clearly fundamentally encyclopaedic.
Sorry to say this, but all that the more rational deletion suporters can argue is that there are WP:POV, WP:OR or WP:SYNTH problems, or raise quibbles about the quality of the sources. This has long been accepted as inadequate reason for deletion if the topic and subject of the article are worthy of merit for inclusion in an encyclopaedia. I really do urge everybody to read the deletion policy more regularly, particularly if you're an AfD regular. As the policy nutshell states: "Pages that can be improved should be edited or tagged, not nominated for deletion". Hence {{sofixit}}.
Most of the other deletion arguments are really nothing more than huff, puff, bluster, hot air and anguished or irate cries of "IDONTLIKEIT" or "it's anti American". Sorry, that will not do as a deletion argument. And full marks to Jackaranga for quote of the week - gave me quite a Victor Meldrew moment :) There are plenty of activities that my particular government have engaged in in our recent (and distant) colonial past, and more recently in conflicts closer to home that cause me great discomfort, that I'm less than proud of. But I will fight to the death for their inclusion because, well, it's encyclopaedic content - that's what we're here for after all.
Jimbo went a bit overboard when he waxed lyrical about "the sum of all human knowledge" (hence we get to know what each Pokemon character eats for lunch, FFS), but this IS human knowledge which is unquestionably important, and will remain in the encyclopaedia. SO, let's stop the deletion nonsense forthwith, close this now and get on with work. --Cactus.man ✍ 15:24, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep - well referenced. If there are valid references naming the US as a state terrorist, what else is there to say? To negate what these sources say, however, would be OR and POV-pushing. Sfacets 05:27, 27 June 2007 (UTC)


  • Delete - from the article, "the definition of terrorism and state terrorism remains controversial." Great then at most we need an article on state terrorism, but certainly not an article on "State terrorism by...". Cedars 02:37, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Rename/Rewrite or Delete This article isn't presenting a case that US terrorism existed/exists, but the section about how the US may have violated its own definitions seems useful Keep I somehow missed this was a full AfD. This article needs a rewrite but it's valid. CredoFromStart 17:56, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong delete. Knowledge is not meant to be a soapbox for such blatantly POV material. An article called State terrorism would be encyclopaedic and could draw from material from different countries around the globe. This article is clearly OR and strays far from its sources. It's articles such as this that make wikipedia a laughingstock in some quarters. Let's get on a higher ground people. Anlace 01:12, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - per nom, and above comments by Anlace. This whole thing is just absurd. C'mon, get real -- it would be much better to simply write solid, well-researched articles on topics that bear on reality. Turgidson 18:26, 30 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 2

  • Strong Delete as this article violates WP:SYN and is only a soapbox for leftist propaganda copied from propaganda departments (albeit cited) of dictatorships (Cuba, et al). This article only demeans the value of Knowledge, reducing its acceptance by schools, and undoubtedly causing many schools even to install blocks for Knowledge. The sooner this propaganda is deleted, the better. Yaf 16:47, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
And it also makes baby Jesus cry, I assume. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 16:58, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
I love you Seabhcan. LOL. Seabhcan for president! 69.150.51.11 18:26, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Really? I thought that was a really mean spirited comment. But I'm not surprised. MoodyGroove 01:23, 1 July 2007 (UTC)MoodyGroove
  • Strong keep. I doubt that this article will ever stop being a flashpoint for those with strong views on the subject, but the endless string of deletion nominations is absurd. I don't think the community should entertain another WP:AfD debate unless a concerted effort to improve the article towards a consensus position fails. Those who think this article could never possible achieve WP:NPOV should examine their own neutrality. Clconway 17:05, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep. Don't be stupid. - David Gerard 17:09, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Please observe WP:NPA and avoid terms like "stupid" in AFD debates. Please read WP:AFD and see what constitutes valid arguments for keeping or deleting an article. Edison 16:00, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep per Cactus. Needs some editing of opinions, soapboxing or OR. But there are numerous instances of substantial coverage in reliable sources where the authors, (many besides Chomsky) characterized US efforts to maintain stability by support of repressive regimes, or to overthrow anti-US regimes by funding insurgents, as "state terrorism." A Proquest search for "state terrorism and United States" disclosed several sources not yet in the article, such as "'Iron Fists in Iron Gloves': The Political Economy of US Terrorocracy Promotion in Colombia" Doug Stokes. British Journal of Politics & International Relations. Oxford: Aug 2006. Vol.8, Iss. 3; pg. 368 which says "the US continues to back Colombian counter-insurgency efforts which essentially amount to a strategy of state terrorism under a democratic facade (terrorocracy)." There is "Review of Gareau, State Terrorism and the United States" by Donald K Gutierrez. Social Justice. San Francisco: 2006. Vol.33, Iss. 1; pg. 138, 9 pgs, which quotes Gareau classifying US government policy as state terrorism. The New York Times "Enter, Stage Left" by Zachary Pincus-Roth. Dec 18, 2005. pg. 2.4 quotes playwright Harold Pinter as saying when he accepted a Nobvel Prize that the US was engaged in state terrorism. "War and State Terrorism: The United States, Japan, and the Asia-Pacific in the Long Twentieth Century. Edited by MARK SELDEN and ALVIN Y. So. Lanham, Md.: Rowman and Littlefield, 2004 calls the actions of the US and Japan "state terrorism" and extends the criticism to the post 9/11 period as well as back to US actions agains civilians in the Phillipines from 1898 through the suppression of the insurgency there. The book was reviewed favorably by David Arase in The Journal of Asian Studies. Ann Arbor: May 2005. Vol.64, Iss. 2; pg. 476, 2 pgs and by Mark Wisniewski in Pacific Affairs. Vancouver: Winter 2004/2005. Vol.77, Iss. 4; pg. 718, 2 pgs. The term "state terrorism" rightly or wrongly has been applied to US policies at least back to the Reagan era, per "EX-C.I.A. MAN, CENSURED IN '79, RETURNS TO U.S." by Marvine Howe, New York Times. Jun 15, 1987. pg. B.7, in which ex-CIA man Philip Agee described the Reagan Administration's policies in Central America and Nicaragua as "state terrorism." Thus there are sufficient sources to have such an article, and it is up to editors to police the point of view or soapboxing, and to put balancing sources in the article. There are far better sources than Cuba, Saddam's Iraq, Iran, Libya etc and the lefty sources. Support rename to "Allegations.." Edison 17:13, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep per David Gerard. Gamaliel (Orwellian Cyber hell master) 17:24, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong and speedy keep; bad-faith nom and WP:POINT use of process to disrupt. Per User:Cactus.man above, the more attempts are made to delete this, the more I will fight for its retention. --John 17:25, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep The article is well documented with what appear to be major news articles and sources. The proper rehash should be that Noam Chomsky does not hold a degree in the field, however neither does Bill Gates in relation to computing, however I would not argue the basics of computing against him. The nominator also seems to ignore that Chomsky is not the only one quoted in the article. --SixOfDiamonds 17:28, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Obvious Delete. Violates WP:NPOV, WP:SYNTH, WP:NOR, WP:Verify, andWP:NPOV#Undue weight. Knowledge is not a soapbox for linguist Noam Chomsky's opinions about whether or not the US committed acts of state terrorism -- that's for WP:RS sources to decide, which don't seem to be present here unless you violate our rules against synthesis.  MortonDevonshire  Yo  · 17:35, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Please be specific. Per WP:JUSTAPOLICY#Just_a_policy_or_guideline - "Only slightly better than just a vote, this also does not provide other editors with specific reasoning why the article should be deleted. Although the article might be in violation of the policy or guideline referred to, no explanation is supplied on why the article violates that particular policy." The more specific you are, the more it helps others understand your side. Thank you. --SixOfDiamonds 17:56, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
    Pretty sophisticated talk for an editor with 10 edits to this username.  MortonDevonshire  Yo  · 19:30, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
    Followed by a pretty clever dodge of a very legitimate question (which remains unanswered). Incidentally, it doesn't take a rocket scientist or a seasoned editor to quote wiki-policy--lots of editors (myself included) actually read through some of the policies of Knowledge before or soon after they begin editing. That's actually a good thing, and not necessarily evidence of an SPA.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 20:08, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep Such an article is always going to attract cries of WP:NPOV, which is why it needs to be scrupulously sourced. And it is. The fact that Chomsky is referenced is certainly not a supportable reason for delete, he is only one of many, even if that was a reason in the first place. WP:IDONTLIKEIT, which most of the delete votes appear to be, can't trump verifiability and notability. EliminatorJR 18:14, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment - I received an email asking me to offer my opinion here ... so I'll offer it. Canvassing isn't the way we do business. To any parties doing it, please stop. --BigDT 18:22, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment about Canvassing. There appears to be a problem with WP:CANVASS on this and similar AfD's (i.e. attempts to delete articles which are somehow critical of the US government, particularly ones relating to 9/11 conspiracies), and I think people sending out e-mails to solicit "votes" on these things (a clear violation of the votestacking section of WP:CANVASS) need to be outed and cautioned about doing so in the future. It's a clever way to get around spamming talk pages of like-minded folks, but I think it is completely unacceptable. See Knowledge:Articles for deletion/Scholars for 9/11 Truth (5th nomination) and the comment by User:Stifle about receiving an e-mail from a particular user (who has also commented here) asking him to comment on that AfD. If editors participating in this AfD have been similarly canvassed via e-mail, I would hope they would acknowledge it as Stifle and BigDT have. If the e-mails were sent to everyone interested in this article, and not just those who have argued for deletion, then of course there is no problem.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 18:56, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong Keep. The repeated attempted AfD's of this thing are beyond ridiculous in my opinion--I hope this is the last one for a long time. State (or establishment) terrorism is a widely discussed concept--it is not only Chomsky who discusses this as anyone with an ounce of familiarity with the concept would know. Incidentally, Chomsky clearly does qualify as an expert in this field, even if some editors think he is an idiot and should only be cited on linguistic questions. I study the history of US foreign policy, and though diplomatic historians generally have little love for Chomsky's work (even those on the left) he is often referenced by them and therefore expert enough for our purposes (albeit a controversial expert). It would be very, very easy to provide even more sources for this article (thousands more really) but of course there are already more than enough. This type of virtual book-burning is unconscionable in my opinion, and will make Knowledge look ridiculous. We need more, not less, articles along these lines. I would fully support having similar articles about France, Iran, and any number of other states who have engaged in state terrorism (which is basically all of them). Ideally it would be part of a full series. Finally, I support re-changing the title to "allegations" rather than its current form.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 18:42, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep. The facts and allegations are well-sourced. If the article relies too heavily on opinions by Chomsky, as the nominator claims, then the solution is to remove material based on those opinions, not to delete the article. I suspect, however, that the nominator may be confusing the results of Chomsky's factual research with the opinions he draws from that research. Many people cite Chomsky for the facts he has reported, not for his opinions. —Psychonaut 19:17, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete this AfD immediately and Merge into the next shameless WP:POINT AfD. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 19:31, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong keep Knowledge is not censored. The nomination and support for it seem to be motivated by political considerations, not by the the facts or references. I propose the name with "Allegations", as it may help make Knowledge more NPOV. -- Petri Krohn 19:35, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete or at least rename. "State terrorism" is a painfully POV tag for this anyway (and yes, I think State Terrorism in Sri Lanka is a problem article name too). Lots of original research going on too, which explains why it is cited out the wazoo. Mangoe 19:59, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment I think it's clear that the article is "cited out the wazoo" to defend against charges of WP:NPOV, WP:VERIFY, and WP:RS violations. Clconway 20:11, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment/Question. Why is "state terrorism" POV? Is it less neutral than Christian terrorism, Communist terrorism, Eco-terrorism, or Islamist terrorism? If so, how? I'm sure there are many who would have some problem with one or more of the four varieties of terrorism just listed, but clearly we should discuss them. I think some editors here believe "state terrorism" is some loony left concept, and while it is often utilized by the left it is not a term which only leftists employ. For example look on the White House web page here where Dick Cheney says "Iran has been one of the foremost sponsors of state terrorism in recent years for a very long time." Instead of deleting this article, let's create articles on Iran and other countries as state terrorism is a widely discussed phenomenon that deserves coverage on Knowledge. Again, this article should be part of a series (after being renamed), and I think concerns about NPOV would probably be addressed if that were the case.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 20:25, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Rename to something less assumptive. This is not a mainstream theory, and it should be treated as others. --Merovingian (T, C, E) 20:08, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong DeleteChomsky is entitled to his opinions but that alone does not make the USA a terrorist state.Further Please do not make this forum for Communist or leftist no nation has accused the USA of being a Terrorist and almost all countries have normal economic ,diplomatic and political relations with the USA.Millions all over the want to go to USA for its freedom,Democracy ,Human Rights which even the worst is well reply is much better than most countries certainly Cuba,Iran and the Rule of Chavez.USA has a rule of law with a judical system hence to say USA is a Terrorist state is far fetched and is a full fledged democracy with the Army and CIA being accountable to the People through the Senate and House of Rep both controlled by the Democrats unlike other countries accused of terrorism.Harlowraman 20:13, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
    I believe the Cuban government has in relation to Posada and more recently the Venezuelan president, Hugo Chavez. To be specific, the Cuban government has accused the U.S. of harboring a terrorist. --SixOfDiamonds 20:33, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong Delete - This article is an insult to Knowledge. This article is nothing more than a POV'ist playground and the article a massive exercise in WP:SYN. Dman727 20:15, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Unsubstanciated claims, which I call out as false. Since you are making the claims you have the burden to specifically make your case. So far no one has been able to demonstrate where exactly this alleged SYN violation is (so we can fix it!). Censoring this subject is the real insult to Knowledge.Giovanni33 01:52, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
They are quite substantiated repeatedly on the talk page. There is no need to copy 20 pages of text here to my opinion here (nor yours for that matter). Go ahead and call it false if you wish(lol). As for the burden, the burden is on you to justify your content. While I agree with fixing the article though, however that is generally hopeless as anytime someoe makes a fix, point-of-view artist decend to defend the undefendable. Dman727 02:25, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Actually the one proposing the deletion, and those agreeing are suppose to state why. Again stating something specific here for the admin to read and understand would be more helpful then just posting random policy. I keep seeing WP:SYNTH, yet being someone who has read the article and the sources, I am not seeing it, and would like some examples posted so I can get to fixing them, and so the admin can see more then just policy articles, care to post some? --SixOfDiamonds 17:40, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Obvious keep. - Individual editors may not like it but the article clearly demarcates and dispassionately discusses a real issue. --The Cunctator 20:29, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • KeepThis article may need a complete rewrite, but its quality is not a sufficient reason for deletion. It is absolutely a notable topic in leftist political thought and discussion. VanTucky 20:39, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
If atrociously POV conservative ideological pet-projects such as the Marriage gap article are allowed to exist, this article is not a problem in the least. It at least acknowledges that there is significant and notable opposition to any accusations of state terror by the U.S. VanTucky 21:17, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I've now added Merge as my first choice because the sources used remain highly partisan and fringe, and thus collecting them all into an article under any name similar to this is undue weight and soapboxing. - Merzbow 06:41, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Note that no reason is given. This, I claim, is evidence that no VALID reason exsits per policy, and its a case of being politically driven desire to censor uncomfortable truths. This is not the Wiki way.Giovanni33 01:56, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Maybe he could have used David Gerard's reasoning above. Tom Harrison 02:08, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Yes, between that insight comment and Gamaliel's agreement with it, there is definitely no reason to delete this article.--MONGO 04:22, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • They can't discuss it because they have no valid reasons, except saying there are unspecified OR, SYN, to per someoen who says that--which while all untrue, are also not a valid reason PER POLICY for an AfD. This is just an attempt at book burning for uncomfortable truths.Giovanni33 22:15, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • For the victims of state terrorism, it certainly is quite a reality. Maybe you should do more traveling and learning about these realities. If you disagree about what these realities are, then you can't disagree with the fact that many reputable sources claim its real. And, that is all this article documents--those claims. Hence, no valid reason to suppress them yet has been argued.Giovanni33 01:58, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong keep and protect against a seventh nomination for deletion. Article is well sourced, notable, and of good quality. Six nominations for deletion is ridiculous and this sort of disruptive behavior on behalf of the current nominator should not be permitted. Badagnani 22:27, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep with some modifications. Regarding the whole article, I say keep as per other butchered points above: well referenced and a notable topic. It just needs to be worked a bit so it doesnt rely so much on Noam Chomsky's statements. I don't see why moving it back to Allegations of State terrorism by the United States is such a big deal either, the current title is pretty fucking POV if you ask me. Besides that, I also agree with Badagnani in the fact that six nominations for deletion is ridiculous. It seems to me that this nomination is just another try at stirring shit when a sixth nomination is likely to, yet again, result in a keep or a no consensus at the least. The nominator appears to be big on deleting articles that conspire and accuse the USA of wrong-doing, although I won't go as far as accusing them of violationg WP:POINT. Just something to take into consideration. Just like some believe that anti-Americanism creates and fuels this article, I believe American patriotism creates and fuels it's AfD nominations. It's a hell of a delicate balance, with such a touchy subject. But all measures must be taken to make this article as NPOV as possible, to prevent original research and unverified claims from making residence, and to prevent valid claims from going MIA. It needs work, not deletion. -- Reaper X 07:13, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Move and redirect to a list page or SS Keep article but move this section This section is long and redundant. WP:SS or a seperate page should be used. CredoFromStart 16:26, 28 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 3

  • Flase analogy since you cite events that happened in the context of WW2--wheras all the examples listed in this article avoid any war time acts. I actually advocate adding in some acts that occured in the context of war, which clearly are terroristic in nature, i.e. its effect, its argued, was not military targets for military purposes, but civilians for political reasons and to inflict terror (the US dropping of the Atomic bomb, for example)--however this was opposed because it still occured in the context of WW2. So your French analogy does not stand up. Now if you have real allegations of state-terrorism as we have for the article on the US, then by all means, there should be an article on it. However, as it stands France doesn't compare to the US for these crimes--not that it is not without them. See, for example: http://en.wikipedia.org/List_of_acts_labelled_as_state_terrorism_sorted_by_state#France If France were to become a super power and start acting like the US does with it foreign policy practices, then we'd better have a large article to report it. As it turns out its the US that fits the bill--like it or not! WP needs more articles like this, and will win it praise in the halls of academia, and around the world, which often discuss this important subject.Giovanni33 01:42, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I do not want to write State terrorism by France as it would be POV pushing, violating WP:OR, etc. That is the problem we have here, and I have shown that you can take any material relating to a country and push your own view. Also, I guess that since there are nations and people that hate Americans in general, I guess Knowledge would win praise for keeping such POV material over time. JungleCat Shiny!/Oohhh! 01:51, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I didn't think you would want to write an article on state terrorism. Apparently, you think the subject can't be discussed and reported on, no matter how true, no matter how well sourced and documented the article would be. But, it does not violate OR. OR means a NEW, ORIGINAL claim, doing our OWN research from primary sources, or personal eye witness, etc, and then publishing it here. That is OR. That is NOT what this article, or the section on Terrorism by France, entails. Either cite the policy on OR that shows I have a wrong understanding, or retract your claim. When we use published reliable sources that advances the claim, and report that, its not OR. Its what WP is supposed to do. All you've shown is that you can take any material and do your own OR, or SYN. That is very nice, but not very interesting. However, it has no connection to this article. For your argument to be valid, you must show how this article does that. It doesn't. Hating or not hating America is irrelevant. Clearly you seem to be rather sensitive about perceptions of who "hates Americans" but this has nothign to do with this article. I do think people hate the policies of the US govt, as I do--but this has nothign to do with hating Americans. Lets not confuse the two. In anycase, this issue has nothign to do with the merits of this article, even if it seems to be greatly clouding your reasoning on the matter of WP policy and your stance wanting it deleting. Thanks for at least explaining your reasoning, as it makes it clear its not a valid line of reasoning that can be used to support deletion. Therefore, we must default to KEEP, as to delete would be POV pushing, and your own OR.Giovanni33 02:36, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • No, unless you have sources that tie those private, individual actors to the govt. of Saudia Arabia, and you have lots of notable, published sources that use that example to advance an argument that its constitutes State Terrorism by Saudi Arabia. Even better if you have close to a hundred references as this article does.Giovanni33 02:53, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • France has committed state terrorism (see the SĂ©tif massacre for just one example). Writing an article about that would not be POV pushing, it would be improving the quality of the encyclopedia. To stay neutral it could be titled "Allegations of state terrorism by France" and of course include the views of the French government and others sympathetic to their views. The same applies to this article. This really isn't that complicated, and the idea that Knowledge can never write any article (never!) about nation states committing terrorist acts is one of the most ludicrous things I have seen in my time here. Unless delete voters believe that wikipedia should delete its articles on Islamist terrorism, Eco-terrorism, et. al. as hopelessly POV, then in my opinion they reveal a strong American/Western bias in assuming that the concept of "state terrorism" is weird and illegitimate while Islamist terrorism is a simple, non-controversial term. NPOV is extremely important, but I think it's the delete voters who are having trouble with it. Try to put yourself in the shoes of a 12 year old kid in Gaza, or Iraq, or Chechyna, or Darfur who watched family members killed by the armed forces of the Israeli, Iraqi, Russian, or Sudanese state and you might get more of a sense of why specific articles about state terrorism are worthwhile--even if (shock and horror!) there would be constant difficulties keeping the articles NPOV.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 02:13, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Allowing users to combine text from other articles and create their own thesis or essays is a bad idea. It becomes original research and Knowledge becomes a place where users can rant against anything they want. Since anyone can edit here, they do edit and put in what they feel is appropriate (compliance with rules or not). That is why WP:SYNTH must be enforced. JungleCat Shiny!/Oohhh! 02:30, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Sure, WP:SYNTH must be enforced. But if one can cite reliable third party source that accuse France (or the U.S.) of state terrorism then there is no synthesis going on. I'm fairly confident that one could do that for France (though one might have to look more to French sources) and it's obvious that one can do that for the United States, as there are numerous works describing certain actions of the U.S. as state terrorism (or accusing the U.S. of committing terrorist acts, or similar related wordings). Thus I don't think WP:SYNTH applies here--at least not to the whole article, though perhaps it does to certain sections but we can deal with that once this AfD is over.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 13:34, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Please, do make the article about Allegations of State Terrorism by France. It would be a good complement to this article. There are few better examples of state terrorism than France's behavior during the Algerian War of Independence, and its conduct in Indochina would almost certainly qualify as well. If you start that article, I'll try to make some contributions from the little bit I know. An article on France along these lines would be completely legitimate, though the debate about content would obviously be heated, and the same applies to this article.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 02:11, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
      • I say go ahead and write all of the 'allegations of superpower state terrorism.' It would make for a more complete encyclopedia. And if the evidence and references only show it in the past, great! if they show it ongoing, then people will know where to put their political will, and maybe take a bit of the pressure off here. Rocksanddirt 01:02, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • That's fine, go ahead and write it. If it's well sourced and written, then all the better. I'm not sure why it's relevant to whether this article should be kept, though. EliminatorJR 07:33, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - a bunch of allegations synthesized by cold warriors who are now turning WP into a battleground. JungleCat, well put! ←Humus sapiens 23:37, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete OR and NPOV --rogerd 00:03, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong Keep I wonder how those who argue to delete feel about lists of terrorist incidents? Is an article about 9/11 or 3/11 or 7/7 POV? We're upset, and rightfully so, about the deaths and maiming in the World Trade Center and the Pentagon... on the other hand, do we know or care about who got hurt in the dropping of bombs on Iraq, Vietnam, Serbia? Compare Pan Am Flight 103 to Iran Air Flight 655, both in 1988. Which one bothered you more, the terrorist bomb in the suitcase, or the Navy shooting down what it thought was a military plane? Was one less tragic than the other, and if so, why? Well sourced, survived six deletion attempts so far, and another one will happen again soon, I'm sure. It's important to see the other side of the coin, whether you like the tone of the article or not. Mandsford 00:16, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete. OR, badly sourced, violation of WP:NOT. SlimVirgin 00:21, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete My only caveat might be if there was a place to archive this article as a classic example of what Knowledge isn't. (Not a soapbox, for those playing at home.) IronDuke 00:46, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete. Even if it wasn't complete original research it would still be a complete violation of WP:pov.- Moshe Constantine Hassan Al-Silverburg | Talk 01:08, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep but Retitle - "Allegations of state sponsored terrorism by the United States" or some similar title. Possibly not only for this article, but all similarly named articles. John Carter 01:33, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete. Blatant WP:NPOV violation. Xihr 01:48, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Explain the POV violation. So far I only see unsubstanciated claims that lack any support. The blatant POV violation is the deletion of sourced material through the deletion of this article, which amounts to vandalism. But, if you have any valid claims, then please support them so we can address your argument.Giovanni33 02:02, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    • What is there to explain? The whole article is nothing but a laundry list of quotations from people who think that the US is a terrorist country. If I wrote an article about the Clinton presidency and my only sources were Rush Limbaugh and Newt Gingrich, even if I phrased everything in a matter-of-fact way, it would still be a horrible POV piece. --BigDT 04:41, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete NPOV violation that is a magnet for POV pushers that makes it impossible to fix. It attracts every anti-American conspiracy theorist on the internet and invites them to add whatever they feel this article should say without regard to NPOV or RS. Hopelessly irrecoverable. --Tbeatty 04:15, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - I've taken a look at the arguments here and I'm convinced by the delete reasoning. We are here to write an encyclopedia and this article doesn't belong. We are not here to be a sounding board for conspiracy theorists or for people with an ax to grind. This article is more like a term paper than an encyclopedia article. It starts out with a definition of terrorism and then sets out to prove its case that the US fits the definition. It doesn't belong here. If we want to be an encyclopedia, we need to start cleaning up these POV forks. Get rid of the Allegations of claims of ideas of state sponsored apartheid in Lower Outer Southeastern Michigan articles. --BigDT 04:27, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Conspiracy theorists? oh please! Accusations of state terrorism by the US government are so widespread in every major university in the US as to be practically clishe. Major figures such as Zinn and Chomsky are not be discredited as legitimizers of notability when in almost every book they allege state terror by the US, and Chomsky is one of the ten most-cited sources in all of academia. However much review for NPOV this article may need, it is simple willfull ignorance to say it is a fringe idea by leftist conspiracy theorists. VanTucky 04:37, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment: To continue this point I would like people to read the sources in the article, not just the article, since it seems many calling for deletion are attacking them. The sources presented are citing terrorism, the definition in the beginning is to introduce the reader to the idea of state terrorism. I ask you review the items and the sources presented, you will see the sources are stating terrorism took place, not that person X was killed, and the intro supports that as terrorism. --SixOfDiamonds 15:51, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete, and merge well researched material into the different articles on the subject. As it stands, the content may be sourced, but collected in such an article fails WP:OR. ≈ jossi ≈ (talk) 04:30, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Speedy Keep per Cactus.man above. Hobomojo 05:35, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Could we please not have "keep" comments asking that the page not be nominated for deletion in the future? consensus can change, as the Daniel Brandt and GNAA perennial AFDs have shown. I think this article might become the next perennial AFD, but that's a systemic flaw that really can't be fixed while standing on one foot. Shalom 05:59, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment The numerous accusations of bad faith made against me and my nomination are absurd. After I nominated the article, I made sure that all prior AfDs were listed at the top of the page (something an editor acting in bad faith certainly wouldn't do). As for the bogus accusations of my nomination violating WP:POINT, no one has provided any evidence suggesting that I am trying to make any such point (and I am not making any such point). My conclusion is that many of these people are making ad hominem arguments in order to avoid providing any valid reason to keep the article, because they know deep down that there is not a valid reason to keep the article. Pablo Talk | Contributions 06:57, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    • Comment: Well, you didn't give a proper reason for why you think it should be deleted (rather than improved). Is it a violation of copyright? No. Is it content that does not belong in an encyclopedia? Certanly not. Is the content not verifiable in a reliable source? No. Since it's not a biography of a living person that doesn't apply either. Please read Knowledge:Deletion policy and see if I missed anything. // Liftarn
If that even qualifies as an argument, it certainly isn't a rational one. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 15:37, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
The United States is not a living person. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 12:36, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
No, but the people being called terrorists are. --BigDT 12:43, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Who? Luis Posada Carriles was convicted in court of being a terrorist. There is no room for dispute and BLP doesn't apply. The only question was whether he did this terrorism on behalf of his employer, the CIA, or in his free time. However, the man is a terrorist. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 12:47, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Even if not by name ... alleged terrorist acts usually don't commit themselves. The "United States" as a political entity didn't allegedly commit terrorism - one or more people did. --BigDT 13:00, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I don't see anything in BLP about it applying to unnamed people. The whole point of that policy is that it applies to named living people. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 13:07, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Politically speaking that is not correct. Agents of the government, if he was one, are seen to act on behalf of it internationally. A CIA agent taking part in the bombing of a plane, would be seen as doing it on behalf of the U.S. That seems to be the question however, was he working for the CIA. Cuba has claimed he was, so at least "allegations" would be the correct terminology. This really is arguing over the specifics of the content and not appropriate for this page. As for BLP, he has been cited by many sources including in the article as a terrorist, and convicted of such. Removing the article, because a convicted terrorist is being labeled a terrorist, does not make much sense. I believe that would be on par with removing "convicted killer" or "convicted murder" from a series of serial killer articles. --SixOfDiamonds 13:09, 26 June 2007 (UTC)— SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.

Keep I think it's odd the way so many people here suggest that changing the name will somehow increase the quality of this article, or make it "more encyclopedic". The article as it now stands is a catalog of uncontested, uncontroversial historical events. It describes -- using equally dispassionate, easily verified facts -- the United States' relationship to those events. The reason the name is "State Terrorism by the United States" is for the simple reason that there are a very great many allegations of terrorist actions sponsored by the United States. We could start with Libya, go on to the Congo, there's also Rwanda, Syria, Uzbekistan, and a great many others. These are all rather silly allegations, and they don't have much point. Similarly, there are allegations against the United States made by political parties and private organizations.

It doesn't make much sense to think that changing the name from "State terrorism" to "Allegations of state terrorism" will in any way tighten the page up; changing the title opens up a veritable can of worms in terms of content and valid sourcing, and in fact increases the likelihood that this page will become an even greater point of contention than it already is.

As things are, the events recounted in the article are clearly admitted to by the U.S, widely understood because of extensive reportage, and clearly considered terrorist acts by at least some reliable authorities. Thus, i can imagine no justification to support the change of title to "allegations" -- unless, that is, some folks here would prefer to see the article turn into a jumbled, chaotic mess of unverifiable accusations and allegations. Stone put to sky 14:10, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

Perhaps we could have two articles, one Allegations of state terrorism by the United States and one Verified state terrorism by the United States... Well, perhaps not. // Liftarn
  • Keep. This is not original research, by synthesis or otherwise. There are about 90 sources, each attributing a specific fact or sentence in the article, and they have not been used to promote new positions. Using multiple sources to make an article is good old research, not original research, and is the common, even encouraged practice for making articles. Although there are some {{fact}} tags lying around, the sourcing status is not so dire as to requiring deletion of the entire article. The fact that the US is frequently accused of terrorism is clear, given all the sources. That these allegations are significant in international foreign relations is illustrated by Hugo Chavez, the president of Venezuela making such accusations at a UN assembly. In my opinion, allegations like this are usually overblown, inaccurate, blantantly false, or a result of extreme left-oriented propaganda (perhaps all of the above), but keeping or deleting this article has nothing to do with whether the allegations are true. The fact that they are prevalent makes them notable, and a valid subject for an encyclopedia article. Sjakkalle (Check!) 14:30, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep Professor Noam Chomsky's is an expert in multiple fields and he is a political activist, he doesn't have to be an expert in the field of terrorism to comment on what is common knowledge (links to an essay). He being a notable political activist qualifies him to comment on political activities of United States government. The article doesn't violate WP:NPOV, as all the claims have been cited. And violation of WP:NPOV alone is not a criteria for deletion. There is not a single exceptional claim that is not referenced! Then how would it fit the criteria of Original Research? NĂ«Ć§ÎœÇ’Ć„ÄŸer 14:31, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Criticism of Noam Chomsky is extensive, so none of his opinions should be considered common knowledge. In this case, it is his particular interpretation of events clearly represent his opinion. I think it would be hard to find any kind of expert consensus on characterizing any element of US military and foreign policy as "terrorist." --Leifern 15:12, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Certainly not if the expert in question wants to keep their job in a US university. However, such expert opinions are very common outside the US. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 15:23, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Absolutely false and libelous. There are countless academics in the U.S., many without tenure, who express radical views. There are several whose jobs are threatened because their academic work is crappy, and that's another matter. --Leifern 12:17, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Libel against whom? ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 12:46, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
I'll agree it's not libelous, but it's not true, either. In a typical academic situation, you're more likely to be fired for supporting the U.S. government than for challenging them (although neither is going to happen). However, there are a lot of professors whose jobs are threatened who don't do "crappy" academic work. I've known several who didn't get tenure despite doing excellent work. From what I can tell, the reason they didn't get tenure is because their work wasn't quite "excellent" enough in the ways that mattered to the committee making those decisions. In no way does that make their work "crappy", however. Benhocking 12:54, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - aside from the blatant, albeit implicit hypocricy of carefully avoiding the term "terrorist" for groups that blow up school buses while applying the term to the United States, there are many problems with this article:
    • It's about rhetoric, not reality. In other words, the term "terrorism" relies on a particular interpretation of events that one may or may not agree with, but that in any event can not find resolution by examination of facts. As a result, the title itself, even when prefaced with "allegations of..." begs the question and thereby commits a basic fallacy.
    • Further, it dilutes facts that should be highlighted by discrediting their context. Accusations against the US (or any other country) of war crimes, etc., should be taken seriously, but shrill denunciations about the motivation of such acts only drowns the gravity in a lot of noise.
    • Tying "terrorism" and states together is done unevenly in Knowledge. Sometimes it's about terrorism in the countries, sometimes by the regimes, sometimes both. I actually think the same principle applies to all of them - if we're going to use the term "terroris*" for some people and organizations, we have to apply them consistently. --Leifern 14:57, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep Not bad. Even if I think they people quoted are wrong CredoFromStart 16:27, 28 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 4

Keep and rework An encyclopaedia should contain articles about sytematic allegations made against superpowers. However it should also contain discussions of responses made to those allegations. At present the article seems largely to consist of the allegations. The criticisms re NPOV should be addressed by working on the article to include references to other POVs and the cycle of responses and counter-responses to the allegations made by Chomsky, not by removing the article altogether and pretending that no such criticisms have been made. --Peter cohen 17:10, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

Except when the criticisms are so fringe and absurd that reliable sources haven't even bothered to respond to many of them, in which case it's undue weight to present them. - Merzbow 17:26, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I note that the New York Times and the International Court of Justice are among the cited sources of those "fringe and absurd" criticisms. --Peter cohen 17:41, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
No international court has sentenced the US for terrorism or "state terrorism" That is an OR statement, as most of the rest of the article. Most of the sources do not mention "state terrorism" and usually not terrorism.Ultramarine 17:56, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
What Ultramarine said. These sources never accuse the United States of "state terrorism", only "unlawful acts" or the like. Part of the dispute is with tendentious editors who insist that this actually means "terrorism" when only fringe elements like Chomsky say so. This is WP:SYN and WP:OR. - Merzbow 17:58, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Would you then support a renaming to "Unlawful Acts by the United States"? It seems that would cover your worries and possibly that of others. --SixOfDiamonds 18:11, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.

Delete per violation of WP:OR. The article doesn't even give the definition of state terrorism and most sources used for this article are online sources of dubious reliability. -- Vision Thing -- 17:57, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

It leads directly to the article on state terrorism in its section State_terrorism_by_the_United_States#Definition_of_the_term_state_terrorism. As for dubious reliability, we have sources from CNN, New York Times, Znet, Washington Post, Christian Science Monitor, Granma, ABC News, The Guardian, BBC, ICJ, Intelligence Oversight Board, NSA Archive as well numerous books by influential people in the field of world politics such as Chomsky and Ganser. --SixOfDiamonds 18:16, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
Yes, and that article also doesn't give any sourced definition. Also, majority, if not most (I didn't checked them all), used sources don't talk about state terrorism but about something else and editors who had added them simply interpreted them in their own way. -- Vision Thing -- 18:22, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I explained this above. Many of the sources given are supporting something a few article stated. Such as articles stating that it was an act of terrorism that brought down the Cuban flight, stating that Posada was arrested, stating that the US arrested him and harbors him etc. These all then link back to one or two articles that are specifically calling the acts, that of state terrorism. So we have a few that make the allegation, and others that support the events. For instance, if you had an article that said the sun exploded, then had articles that provided context and support by stating the sun's max temperature, position, etc. They are not all supporting the complete idea, just supporting the facts that are being presented. A more relevant example is the branding of the US backing of Posada as state terrorism, then an article supporting he worked for the CIA, an article with his admission the CIA trained him, an article of the US letting him off on the charges, an article with Hugo Chavez stating the US is harboring a terrorist etc. Only the original articles presented need to directly state that, state terrorism took place, the rest are to support the facts of the situation and provide greater reading and context. --SixOfDiamonds 18:28, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
Which sources are branding US backing of Posada as state terrorism? -- Vision Thing -- 18:44, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

Agence France-Presse "At a press conference after his speech, Chavez said that the United States was a "terrorist state" because of its actions in Iraq, Robertson's assassination call and for harboring Luis Posada Carriles, who is wanted for the bombing of a Cuban airliner. "It is a terrorist state. It is a government that violates all rules and behaves shamelessly," he said. "The United States is the champion of double standards. The United States' government defends terrorism. They talk of the fight against the terrorism, but they commit terrorism, state terrorism," said Chavez.

Not sure if this what you were looking for. --SixOfDiamonds 13:21, 27 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
Found another:

Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Friday also paid tribute to the bombing victims, who he said were "martyrs of the Cuban revolution" killed by "state terrorism" perpetuated by the United States. He demanded the U.S. government "comply with its own laws, comply with international accords" and extradite Posada.

Hope that ends the hunt for the mysterious allegation. --SixOfDiamonds 14:19, 27 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
I'm not sure what you are looking for (e.g. if you want to see the phrase "this constituted state terrorism"), but I think Robert Scheer's comment that the U.S. was terrorizing Cuba, not the other way around, is a strong implicit accusation of state terrorism (see footnote 57). Ditto for the Cuban VP's comment about those that harbor terrorists (the U.S. in this case) being the same as the terrorists themselves.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 18:59, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Based on this kind of argumentation, which permeate the whole article, we should include a section on abortion, which has recently been condemned by the Vatican as terrorism.Ultramarine 19:38, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I'm afraid I don't follow your (odd) analogy. Why does the fact that the Vatican has labeled abortion terrorism warrant inclusion in this article on state terrorism committed by the U.S.? Maybe you could put it in the Definition of terrorism article, but obviously it would not be relevant here, whereas a prominent columnist like Scheer saying the U.S. terrorized Cuba clearly is worthy of inclusion in this article. You might try making your point in a less opaque fashion.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 19:53, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Using the logic of this article, I will quote "Parliaments of so-called civilised nations where laws contrary to the nature of the human being are being promulgated" as criticisms of United States policy regarding abortion, which he calls terrorism. I am sure I can find numerous pro-life sources arguing the same. How is the Vatican less important than a newspaper columnist? Ultramarine 20:00, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Then, of course, we must add the allegations of various far right and far left groups who feel threatened by the US government. I am sure they claim they are subjected to terrorism.Ultramarine 20:05, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
If the United States government had an official policy about aborting babies in the womb, and if agents of the federal government went out and performed abortions and/or hired people to help them do that, then maybe the Vatican information should be here. Of course abortions in the United States are conducted by private doctors, not the CIA or FBI, so I still don't see the point of the analogy. And we would only include allegations about state terrorism by far right or far left political groups in the U.S. if there was evidence that such allegations were true. It is obvious that Luis Posada is a terrorist and there is strong evidence that the U.S. government supported his activities. Journalist Scheer labeling that support a form of terrorism is thus significant because it is not some wild accusation, but rather merely applying a term to an event or state of affairs which is well documented. So I think the distinctions between the examples you provide and the discussion of Posada and the U.S. in this article are fairly obvious.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 21:20, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
I could equally well argue that the US allowing abortions to take place is obviously support for abortions. Regarding "truth", that is in the eye of the beholder, Knowledge uses verifiability. Posada would certainly not agree that he is terrorist and could maybe cause legal problems for Knowledge if it was added without qualifier to the page about him. The Vatican is a far more important source than a columnist. This is the problem with the OR on this page. Anyone can find some source describing some act labelled terrorism by someone and or not even that, as is true for most of the sources in this article, and claim that this is "state terrorism".Ultramarine 21:36, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Is your point then that if there are 30 sources that call someone a killer, we cannot say they are a murderer, since of course the 30 sources say killer, not murderer? Saying the US is terrorizing another country is state terrorism, when a state (entity) The United States, uses acts of terrorism on another country, hence terrorizing it. I think this shallow word play goes to show the lack of a deletion argument. --SixOfDiamonds 12:45, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Neither terrorism or state terrorism have any agreed on definitions. Thus, anyone can claim that something bad is terrorism. An article such as this one therefore becomes a dumping ground for every anonynmous editor who personally thinks that something bad is "state terrorism" or terrorism. This article could as well be called Very evil things done by the United States. Knowledge should avoid articles with very unclear and inherently POV words.Ultramarine 18:49, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Unfortunately here we are reporting what others have said, not what you believe is perfectly defined. God is not defined entirely, yet we do not remove articles containing the word God. Your argument that the lack of definition allows dumping is not based on the article, but your own misconceptions of the article and its sources. The sources permitted ni the article have to allege terrorism, which they do. You have already argued over those sources calling South American presidents and UN speeches to be "fringe sources". However the fact of the matter is those allegations do exist, Presidents of nations are not "fringe" sources of informations, nor are their embassy's or speeches given by them in the UN, nor are countries the US does not like. Your tangent of "evil things done ..." does not make any sense as the sources themselves state terrorism, not "bad bad naughty things" It may do you well to read the sources before continuing this debate as I have already provided two sources and a third on the talk page that cites Hugo Chavez and his embassy as citing the US for 'state terrorism' and others have provided additional sources. --SixOfDiamonds 20:13, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Unfortunately the article cites numerous sources not mentioning terrorism because some anonynmous editor personally think this is terrorism. (You confuse me with someone else, I have not made any of the claims you make.) Thus the article includes a flat-earth class conspiracy theory that the US was involved in the Algiers putsch and that this is U.S. state terrorism, citing some strange French source. A private attempt by exile Cubans to assassinate Castro in 2006, an attempt that the US stopped, is listed as state terrorism by the US. A long graphic description of a rape has been added because one the persons involved spoke American English, which is obviously strong evidence of State terrorism by the US. So, yes, a better name would be Very evil things maybe done by the United States.Ultramarine 21:05, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Hmm I can expand that section and will. What happened in the situation of La Esperanza as expressed by the sources, is the group (CANF) which was created by Reagan and supported by the government was attempting to plan an attack to assassinate Fidel Castro, their words not mine, yes they admitted it. On board the boat was a known CIA agent and the president of CANF as well as 2 others. Cuba deamed this act, that of terrorism . Thank you for bringing this up, it makes a good source that I found it, and negates one of your points. --74.73.16.230 23:55, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Material from the Cuban government is not a reliable source.Ultramarine 20:56, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Every controversial article on Knowledge is potentially a dumping ground for anonymous editors to put crap in, and we have numerous articles about subjects which lack precise or uncontested definitions as you well know. That does not mean we delete them. In order for something to be included in this article, reliable sources need to refer to a given act by the U.S. government (and/or their direct proxies) as "state terrorism" (or language along those lines). If an anon editor adds in some nonsense about how the U.S. committed state terrorism against the moon by sending Neil Armstrong to walk around up there, then we would do what we always do when crap creeps in--delete it. The scope of this article can and should be quite specific, and does not refer generally to "very evil things done by the U.S." as you suggest. The article could absolutely be improved and I think more objections to the classifications of these acts as state terrorism could and should be included. Finally, Knowledge will inevitably have article titles with unclear and POV words. Here's an example well removed from contemporary politics. Although you would not know it to look at the Knowledge article, the Second Great Awakening is an extremely controversial term among historians. Many historians think grouping early 19th century religious revivals under one neat "Second Awakening" framework is a terrible idea and that the term should therefore be discarded, while others think it is fine to use it. The solution is to keep the article and discuss the controversy, which I think also applies here. If the "U.S. has committed state terrorism" side is overly represented here, lets bring in more sources who advocate a different view.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 19:38, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • As much as I hate the subject, I have to support a SPEEDY KEEP. This nomination reaks with WP:POINT... and while I may not like the subject, it is a valid one of contention. People who are offended by this page are probably like me, proud Americans. But the reason behind our country's bill of rights is to protect the voices of people we disagree with. I do support renaming it to include "Alleged" or "Allegations" as that would be more NPOV.Balloonman 18:33, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

Comment The CIA is admitting to some of the allegations on their website now. ( Just started today. )Jackaranga 18:38, 26 June 2007 (UTC)

  • The bill of rights is not required, but the people who are oppsing this do so because they are offended by the idea. They don't like the idea of people being critical of the U.S. in such manner---heck I don't (you only have to check my contributions to see that I am pro-America.) But part of being pro-America is that we defend the right of people we disagree with to be able to share their position regardless of how offensive we find the position. People who want to shut down this discussion, should remember this... it's part of the American Heritage...Balloonman 05:52, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Yes, those are now relevations in documents are have been released today by the CIA. This is to be expected, and why this article will only get more information, becoming even more substanciated. Establishment terrorism (state and state-sponsored terrorism) is quite common but difficult to establish mainly because the state's support is always clandestine. It takes some time for the facts to come out, which is why most of the facts we have stem from the Cold War era, although allegations by academics and experts in the subject also contain more recent practices.Giovanni33 19:26, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Are you referring to this press release? VanTucky 19:25, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Yes. Also I believe the USA did sponsor terrorism, wether the CIA admits to it or not, but still think this article should be deleted, as it offends many here. Jackaranga 20:37, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete the title is inherently POV and attempts to draw conclusions before actually getting into the material of the article. Since it is comprised entirely of allegations and various peoples opinions, salvage useful facts only to Foreign relations of the United States and related articles.--snowolfD4 19:02, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete per WP:POV, WP:OR, WP:SYNT. This sort of article gives WP a black eye for its unobjectivity. Carlossuarez46 19:28, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep and rename to something like "Allegations of..." or "Accusations of ...". Despite the obvious bias and original research, I think the article should be kept and balanced. The allegations are noteworthy. If the article is going to be deleted, merging some content into Anti-Americanism and Noam Chomsky would seem reasonable. PCock 20:00, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong KEEP - Articles like this are essential to exposing the evil empire that Bush evil empire has created. Not just GWB of course, but his entire clan going back to the days of Prescott Bush and his support of Adolf Hitler. The more we can expose the naked aggression, empire building, world dominance and oppression of people worldwide by the United States and the Bush family evil empire, the more credibility Wiki will have. This article is a credit to wiki and deserves front page coverage, not deleted by facist Republicans. 70.220.23.63 20:01, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — 70.220.23.63 (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • Strong Speedy Keep not as evil as the above comment states bush is, but I think this article should stay.--trey 20:14, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment: For those interested the CIA has released a document titled "Family Jewels" in which they highlight an attempt to use the Mafia to assassinate Fidel Castro. If there is even a consideration to delete, I ask it be postponed shortly, as apparently much content is coming to light due to the FOIA CIA page. --SixOfDiamonds 20:31, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • There is no serious argument that its valid for deleting this well established topic, so I would not worry. Its more than anything just a means to vent by some who don't like it what it exposes. I guess some people feel they have a stake in imperialism and its crimes. Regarding the latest revelations/released documents, they also list illegal behavior modification experiments, including druging of "unwitting" U.S. citizens. Also, assassination plots against Castro, Lumumba, and Trujillo, and kidnapping. But, in order to report on this, we have to have a reputable source that makes the argument that these actions constitute incidents of state terrorism (like the rest of article documents). There is no OR or SYN in this article. All claims are backed up by sources that makes these allegations, and then additional sources can be added as filler to describe the incidents in question. This is, despite repeating it like a broken records, are not OR or Syn violations--which is why they can't support their argument and show otherwise.Giovanni33 21:24, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
CommentI don't think there is any discussion as to the truth of this article, but I just think that the US is not ready for this kind of article yet. Maybe in 50 years or so. I think freedom of speech ends when you start to offend so many of the readers, no point shoving their errors in their faces all the time. Nobody is perfect. We can just keep the individual articles, no need for a general "America suck because ..." kind of thing. Jackaranga 20:44, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I am American (Berkeley/San Francisco), and what is most offensive are the attempts to supress this information, so that people can remain ignorant. WP is not "American" and should not have a pro-US govt. political/ideological bias. Infact since most editors here are English speaking, we have to specifically counter any such systematic bias.Giovanni33 21:23, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment: WP:IDONTLIKEIT Is not a valid reason to delete an article. --SixOfDiamonds 20:50, 26 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • Comment - I think WP:NOR means the article is unsourced, but simply made up from one's own experience. This article is clearly well sourced. I have the feeling that a number of those presenting their opinions here haven't read straight through it before, because neither the sources nor the actual content of the article is ever mentioned. Badagnani 22:14, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Really? The policy has "Original research (OR) is a term used in Knowledge to refer to unpublished facts, arguments, concepts, statements, or theories. The term also applies to any unpublished analysis or synthesis of published material that appears to advance a position — or, in the words of Knowledge's co-founder Jimmy Wales, would amount to a "novel narrative or historical interpretation."" --John 22:24, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • CommentThis is not original research in way shape or form. Detailed accusations of illegal uses of force semantically called state terror are a primary subject of such notable authors as Howard Zinn and Noam Chomsky, among others. Just because you haven't read the associated literature on the subject doesn't make it an unpublished idea. VanTucky 22:41, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    Your opinion on this matter is noted; how could it not be, considering how many times you have stated it? Nevertheless it is wrong, despite being vehemently repeated in multiple places. Jayjg 22:45, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    It is not wrong, but you are. OR refers to an original claim, a new argument, which is not present in published reliable sources. This article's claims are supported by reliable source that establish that this claim is not original, nor are we using different sources to synthesize a new claim. On the contrary, the article cites those authors who argue the points presented. Its their claims we report on. There are no original claims invented by any editor here. We are only reporting the claims of various scholars who make these arguments. True, not every source says "state terrorism" but this is not OR because these sources are used only for background info on the topics---NOT to create any new claims relevant to allegations of state terrorism. In order for it to be listed, the claim is already established by a reliable source, and new sources are added to verify the facts of the background information that is needed (as requested by other editors). This is common practice. Therefore, since no new or original claims are being synthesized or established, there is by definition no OR or SYN violations in this article. If there are, please point it out, so it can be fixed. If there is not a good source that has been cited stating the incident in question is state terrorism, it is not in this article. I've challenged everyone who has made this false claim to back up what they say, and all have failed. That should say a lot about the merits of this unsubstanciated claim. Often, what I find out is that they have not even bothered to read the article and are very ignorant of the subject matter. These allegations are well founded by reliable sources.Giovanni33 22:57, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    Giovanni33, do you think that if you argue with every single person who disagrees with you, insist they are wrong, and imply they haven't read the article, it will somehow enhance your case? Because that's what you seem to be trying to do. Jayjg 23:00, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
    No, I don't think that, because that is only part of what I am doing. I am proving that the claims being made, lack substance. To show this I challenge those who make the claim to back it up with some kind of argument that proves that what they are saying has a basis in fact. So far, no one is wiling or able to (I think the latter). This is noteworthy. If only one side presents arugments, and the other only side only shouts the same claims over and over (its POV, its OR, its Syn)--and ignores the many requests to explain by exmaples, leaving their claims are unsubstanciated--despite being challenged and questioned to support them--then I think a reasonable person can conclude that the reason why this is so, is because the claims they are making lack merit, and should therefore be dismissed. Let the veractiy of a claim stand or fall on the strenghs of the arguments presented.Giovanni33 23:13, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Wow Jayjg, I'd have thought someone who'd been on ArbCom would know better than to get personal, and that attacking users for actually discussing AFD's instead of just voting on them was in poor taste. But as to issue, youre saying that this ENORMOUS ref list with just over 100 citations equals Original research? Seems a little self-defeating to me... VanTucky 22:53, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I haven't gotten personal; I said your opinion was incorrect. I'm sure you're a wonderful person. Regarding your point about references, I've already addressed that; original research can be filled with references. In a university setting original research filled with references is strongly encouraged. Here, however, it is forbidden. Jayjg 22:58, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I understand your point (and agree) that large amounts of "references" don't mean anything unless they are checked to acutally, literally refer to the accusation at hand (the extralegal use of force against foreign nations and their citizens). But that is exactly what the sources from the following references literally do: Reuters, Aljazeera, The NY Times, LA Times, Miami Herald, Democracy Now!, Chomsky, William Blum, Cornell Law, BBC, Robert Parry, George Washington University, CNN, ABC, and declassified Army and CIA records. All those sources used in the reference section of the article directly make reference to the illegal use of force against nations and citizens for political, ideological, or economic reasons by the U.S. government. They aren't combined to create a case for US state terror, they actually speak of it in their own content. VanTucky 23:18, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Exactly, why his statement is false. His line of reasoning is correct, ofcourse. That is policy. However, the claim he is making in relation to this article is false. Those sources establish the claims and hence there is no OR or SYN. Since has failed to give exmples of even ONE single violation of this, then I have to assume he has not bothered to look at article closely, at the references.Giovanni33 23:23, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Sigh. Aside from the fringe sources like Chomsky, these sources do not accuse the US of terrorism. It is original research to call something terrorism when the source does not do so. This is perhaps the twentieth time me and others have made this very simple point. You cannot take a NY Times article that says something different and leap to your own conclusions, despite how evil you think the U.S. is. - Merzbow 23:26, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Or, you shouldn't use Knowledge as your soapbox when you do. Here's a quote from the first non-Chomsky reference, "But individual terrorist acts by people living in hopeless despair cannot be compared to the State terrorism of the Israeli government, which has recently slaughtered hundreds of Palestinians." If the sources are biased, and you pick and chose only biased sources, and you write what you want from the sources, then the article winds up biased. I suspect a check through the list of sources will all be the same, they don't say what is claimed in the article, or the sources is so biased itself that it must be directly sourced as to its own suitability. Please, these are sources designed to designate "state terrorism" by the US and Israel, so they do what they intend. The topic could be written responsibly, but if you have no intention of doing so this article should be deleted. KP Botany 23:30, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Okay, let me give some literal examples from the ref list here: Blum, William (2003). Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions since World War II. Noida, India: Zed Books, 290. ISBN 1-84277-369-0. Terrorism Debacles in the Reagan Administration. The Future of Freedom Foundation. Retrieved on July 30, 2006. Michael Ratner. Civil Remedies for Gross Human Rights Violations Gareau, Frederick H. (2004). State Terrorism and the United States. London: Zed Books, pp22-25 and pp61-63. ISBN 1-84277-535-9. ^ "50 Years After the CIA’s First Overthrow of a Democratically Elected Foreign Government We Take a Look at the 1953 US Backed Coup in Iran", Democracy Now!, 08-25-2003. Shahrooz, Kaveh. "All The Shah’s Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror" (Stephen Kinzer), Harvard Human Rights Journal, 08-01-2005. (June 24 2000) "US 'supported anti-left terror in Italy'". The Guardian. (February 14 2005) "Chavez: US is a terrorist state". Aljazeera. (September 3 2003) "Indonesian VP: United States Is 'Terrorist King'". Reuters. (and BTW: Chomsky isn't a "fringe" source. He's one of the most cited academic sources in the country. Being an anarchist in personal political philosophy doesn't automatically make a figure "fringe") Once again, these all literlly reference either the exact phrase terrorism or it's equal. VanTucky 23:36, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Now we're getting somewhere. I see the most reliable sources like the NYTimes, CNN, ABC, and so on have all dropped off your now much-truncated list. We are left with Chomsky (a linguistics professor), an Indonesian VP, Hugo Chavez, a book published by an Indian press authored by a socialist activist with no academic credentials (Blum), and a couple remaining cites which you still haven't shown actually accuse the U.S. of state terror. Next? - Merzbow 23:59, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Um, you seem to forget that the truth of what these people say is not on trial here, and that it is a reliable reference to the notability of the topic when Reuters, Democracy Now!, published authors and many others report that the US is being accused of state terror. Furthermore, for you to just dismiss Chavez, an Indian press and a major Indonesian politician is xenophobia of foreign sources. It doesn't matter who said it, it matters that respected news organizations and book publishers (like Reuters) acutally found it notable enough to publish that people accuse the US of terror. And once again, Chomsky is not just a linguistics prof. He's published more books on US foriegn policy in the last ten years than anything else, and his assertions (though without a doubt controversial) are heard widely. No one just dismisses him and says, "oh that Chomksy, who cares what he says about the country cause, you know, he's just an MIT linguistics professor." VanTucky 00:15, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Your remaining sources are either fringe publications, or are reporting on the opinions of fringe or barely notable individuals. Some of the views are notable enough to be presented in the context of another article, certainly, but per policy we do not provide a soapbox for fringe views, for it would be undue weight. An entire article of this name is indeed a soapbox. - Merzbow 00:48, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Now you switched your argument, to one of "the sources dont say that, its OR!" to, "Its fringe!" Interesting. I think you should make up yoru mind which argument you want to use. If these allegations are not notable but only fringe, why would a fringe subject be taught and discussed in major universities? I've taken classes where this was assigned reading material. I also notice that you are not telling the truth, above, when you cherry pick and select only some sources to dismiss (which you have no basis to dismiss--are only "American" sources allowed? Who says? They are reliable). For instance, you ignore Dr. Frederick H. Gareau who holds a Ph.D. in international relations and organizations from American University, Washington, DC, as well as in political science from the University of Geneva. He is full professor at Florida State University and author of The United Nations and Other International Insitutions: A Critical Analysis as well as an extensive number of articles and conference reports. The book in particular that makes these claims supporting the Chomsky POV is entitled "STATE TERRORISM and the UNITED STATES".Is this OR, still? Oh, wait...new argument: Its Fringe! lol! An abstract of this book can be found here: . Some other writers expressing this POV for example: , entitled, Should the United States Renounce Terrorism? See: http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz/interventions.html; FROM WOUNDED KNEE TO IRAQ: A CENTURY OF U.S. MILITARY INTERVENTIONS, and http://www3.sympatico.ca/sr.gowans/foreign.html: Terrorism as Foreign Policy. Ignore all you like. The facts speak for themselves.Giovanni33 01:01, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
    • Here is another "fringe, unreliable source," for you--ABC NEWS. But, wait its a US news source! I think that makes it better for you, no? Let me quote it, to make it clear. David Ruppe, writes for ABC, on May 1st, 2001: "In the early 1960s, America's top military leaders reportedly drafted plans to kill innocent people and commit acts of terrorism in U.S. cities to create public support for a war against Cuba. Code named Operation Northwoods, the plans reportedly included the possible assassination of Cuban Ă©migrĂ©s, sinking boats of Cuban refugees on the high seas, hijacking planes, blowing up a U.S. ship, and even orchestrating violent terrorism in U.S. cities."Disagree all you want, but you can't deny what is the allegations staring you, in front of your eyes.Giovanni33 01:20, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
    • Yawn. My argument stands. No reliable, non-fringe source alleges that the US committed state terrorism, in those words. Allegations that some leaders once had some plans to do something does not "State terrorism by the United States" make. Go create "Allegations that the U.S. planned to commit state terrorism" and we'll talk about it in that AfD. - Merzbow 02:24, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Those plans are not allegations of plans, if you bothered to read the source--they are aditted to by the planners, which was approved by the higest leves of the Pentagon, the joint cheifs of staff, and only rejected by Kennedy. But, I see you ignore the many sources above which clearly articulate the POV of these academics who do indeed say it in that exact way: that the US has committed acts of state terrorism. I suggest you go back and read those sources. Professor Gareau recommends in his book that "a truth commission be established to investigate and to advertise Washington’s support for state terrorism so that the American public will know what has been done in its name."Its hard to see how you can deny the POV, and insist its all being made up by us editors. Talk about denial!Giovanni33 03:19, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Unindent--Hey, ya'll, don't be quite so harsh, you might not know this, but Blum is one of Chomsky's hero, and Chomsky does have academic credentials:) KP Botany 03:40, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong delete Poorly written, biased, unsalvagable. However, the subject could be written by a less biased party with some fairly neutral resources. It is a possible, even probable topic of an article. However, as written with the intention of gathering only sources on one side, and predominantly a single source, it simply doesn't cut it, or anywhere near it. KP Botany 22:33, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
Then please, start already to work on your proposed article by, of course, adding neutral sources to this article. SalvNaut 22:37, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
No, not interested. But, I'll be glad to add opposing sources to articles I do write. And, when I put up articles about controversial subjects--I'm writing one now--I will spend time researching the opposition viewpoints. The latter I am doing right now--it's a lot of work, but it's the responsible way to add a credible and useful article on a controversial subject to Knowledge. Throwing up only one side is not. KP Botany 22:44, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep: I don't exactly follow the main reason for deleting this article: is it about semantic, or reported facts not allegedly being facts, or NPOV, or...? NPOV issues can be solved by adding opposing relevant views, some of which are already in the article. The title of this article is of secondary concern. The sourced content stands for itself - there is the strong common denominator for all of the content, i.e. "unlawful use of force" (or "state terrorism" as others prefer to call it, but again it's just semantics). This looks to me like "I don't like it, so I delete it" type of nomination. SalvNaut 22:37, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment - Hence the seventh (or is it the eighth?) nomination. "If we didn't get rid of it next time, it's just a matter of time; round up the posse and we'll outvote them next time." The thing is, it's not a vote and if what you say is correct, that the article is factual and well sourced, this article will again survive the "delete" votes (all of which continue to avoid discussing the actual sourced facts of the article in their comments) of those who simply don't like the content of the article. That is, if the closing admin actually reads the article straight through, unlike so many of those commenting here. Badagnani 23:10, 26 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment -Why don't the rightwingers go to Conservapedia if they don't like the articles here? I've read all the comments of the people who are in favor of deletion, and I haven't seen a single valid reason to delete this article. Some of the people who voted to delete in this case have voted to keep similar articles if the subject was alledged terrorism by some other groups. Arguments for deletion of the same type were dismissed by them. Count Iblis 00:51, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I've noticed the same thing, which I find very disturbing as its antithetical to the goals of WP. I think all editors who behaving this way, need to be seriously looked at, as this major breach of a core WP value, going to the heart of what WP is about, calls into serious question their role in it.Giovanni33 01:39, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Interesting that neither of you are able to see how your analysis applies equally to the Keep votes or your own behaviour. Do you seriously believe that all the Delete votes are rightwingers? Do you seriously believe that your own personal viewpoint is representative of the entire goals of Knowledge? If you do, then I would propose you don't understand even the vaguest sense of WP core values. Your disagreement with the reasoning doesn't make the points invalid and your comments illustrate that fundamental ignorance of what Knowledge is. --Tbeatty 05:49, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Reply to Comment Articles are never deleted because of content dispute, NPOV problems or allegations that some parts are OR. Only in extreme cases where, say, someone writes up his personal theory of everything here on wikipedia do we delete articles. The people who have argued in favor of deletion of this article did not demonstrate that the wiki rules don't allow for this article to be kept. Instead they argued that because in their opinion the article has some problems the article should be deleted.
This is very much a "right wing" attitude, similar to the recent Supreme Court ruling in the Morse v. Frederick case. In that case the conservative judges basically said that despite the First Amendment, if a school doesn't like what a student says outside the school, the school may punish the student (this case was about drugs, but the next case may wel be about sex or some other issue the conservatives feel strongly about).
What is typical about these "right wing" opinions here on Knowledge or in the real world is that they are inconsistent. In other similar cases you may have a different opinion and then you'll twist the rules in a way to argue the opposite point of view. This attitude is not consistent with the spirit of Knowledge. Conservapedia may be more suitable for people with this attiude.
The wikipedia NPOV rules can only work if the editors have a NPOV attitude themselves. This can mean e.g. that you have to argue why an article you don't like at all (and has a lot of problems in your opinion) should be kept. This is exactly what I did in case of the first VFD for the pseudoscientific wiki article Heim Theory. That aricle was horrible, completely written from the perspective of the supporters of this theory who clearly don't understand much about fundamental physics. However, this theory is mentioned from time to time in the real world, so there is a place the article in wikipedia. After the article was kept, I put in some effort to correct some problems, but more work needs to be done.
The effect the right wing editors are having on wikipedia is very clear: Knowledge articles on political topics are often used by people as an example to demonstrate that wikipedia is a biased source for information. Contrast this with Knowledge articles on scientific topics. These are often used as reference by scientists  :) Count Iblis 17:33, 27 June 2007 (UTC)

We're getting into a general discussion here. Let's stick to discussing the deletion of the article please. VanTucky 19:07, 27 June 2007 (UTC)

  • Comment To me, most of those in favor of deletion are arguing mostly about how accusations of state terror are patently false. The issue is that the subject is a notable one, not just in fringe liberal academic circles, but in major news and publications detailing the statements of not only published works but foreign heads of state and politicians. There are all kinds of articles about viewpoints that are not only dubious, but have been proven wrong. But it is the job of Knowledge to give an account of what the published views on the subject are to provide a comprehensive encyclopedic resource. We keep articles on Holocaust denial to inform readers about what those who comment on the subject say in published sources. And yes, I absolutely equate the notability of accusations of US state terror with the amount of Holocaust denial in contemporary published sources. Sick and false as it all is. VanTucky 01:33, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comparisons to "Holocaust denial" by editors such as this one demonstrate what we have to deal with here. This editor in particular has been shown unable to produce a reliable, non-fringe source that makes accusations of U.S. state terrorism (see above discussion). Or even one that seriously discusses the phenomenon of "accusations of U.S. state terrorism". Comparing this to Holocaust denial is ludicrous, given the dozens of books written on that. I sense a desperation to construct notability out of whole cloth here. - Merzbow 02:27, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Merzbow, myself and several other editors have discussed at length every new criticism of the article you bring up. We have not simply dismissed your points as you seem so prone to do to anyone else's, we argue them. First, the sources are all OR. Then even the ones directly referencing state terror by the US (even sources such as notable published books included as sources, well-known academics, and news articles) are simply not good enough for you. You seem not to care for actually creating consensus (and I don't mean you changing your mind, I mean working towards creating a real, working consensus among differing viewpoints), only to sticking to your ambiguous and constantly shifting objection to any encyclopedic discussion of this topic in mainspace. You continue to assert that major published authors and internationally respected news organizations that comprise just a part of the large amount of sourcing (that, up until your tirade, went unchallenged even by critics of the article) are "fringe sources". That is ludicrous, not a comparison to what is most definitely a fringe view on the Holocaust in every developed nation the world over. VanTucky 06:13, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Sorry, I believe the "tirade" is on the part of those who would compare any element of this subject, pro or con, to "Holocaust denial". I'll let the act of comparing any element of this subject, pro or con, to the Holocaust speak to the motives of those who would bring it up in connection with this article. There's nothing more I will say here, you've just said it all. - Merzbow 06:36, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • The leader of a nation, speaking at the United Nations on behalf of his country, is a fringe source? The embassy of a government is a fringe source? I do not get this at all, is a fringe source anyone that does not agree with the US? Since when are South American leaders fringe sources for information? I am almost disgusted at this xenophobia being displayed. --SixOfDiamonds 16:07, 27 June 2007 (UTC) — SixOfDiamonds (talk ‱ contribs) has made few or no other edits outside this topic.
  • Keep There is no such thing as truth on wikipedia. There is only what others have said. Claiming that the commentators are "non-experts" is just like claiming that this reporter doesn't know what they are talking about because they are not employed by the US government. Chomsky as a case in point may be technically best known for being a linguist but in reality he has shown himself to be a good political commentator through his extensive research for his books in the area. Knowledge really is politicised if the comments that make up this debate count for anything. Quite a nice article btw, I may take a copy just to read the 108 references which wikipedians can't vote to destroy! Sounds like US government employees who have been caught out "reclassifying" publically available documents even though they have absolutely no conceivable security impact. Ansell 01:40, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep and Rename. I agree the name is POV. It really says "The United States engages in terrorism; details below". So let's change the name back to "Allegations of state terrorism by the United States". Then the reliable sources pro and con these allegations can be summarized in a fair and NPOV manner. Remove anything that's not properly sourced and any synthesis. I see at least one Christian Science Monitor article, a couple from the Guardian, a Reuters. If they are reporting that people allege the US engages in terror, then it's sufficiently notable for an article on the allegations, whether or not they are true. My 2 cents have been deposited. --Butseriouslyfolks 03:25, 27 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 5

  • Keep. "Many of us believe that the fact that some text is biased is not enough, in itself, to delete it". If there are published counter-arguments and additional points of view, cite them. --JWSchmidt 04:21, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep - Topic is notable. AfD is not for articles which should exist, but are not yet neutral. Fix the article, don't delete it. — Omegatron 05:59, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment: For those who would argue that there are no allegations of state terrorism against the US, here's an article from the Iranian press today . Quote: "The US-funded terrorist rings have launched tremendous attacks against Iran, including the assassination of Iranian officials on early days after the victory of the Islamic Revolution." ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 08:35, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
    • PS: Here's another one, also from today "US 'behind Baghdad hotel blast'" - "Because the gathering was supposed to be a step toward establishing national unity among Iraqi tribes, the US, through its terrorist operatives, tried to thwart the move. The Iraqi official said that Washington knows full well that if security and stability come into Iraq from one door, its troops have to leave from the other and have no more pretext to prolong their stay." These views are widespread outside of the western world. They may not be true, but the beliefs exist. If wikipedia censors them from its pages it only makes itself less credible. Better to meet them head on and deal with them. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 09:21, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep per David Bryant - Don't be stupid. --Servant Saber 11:14, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Please read WP:AFD under the section about giving reasons, and not just attacking those who have a different opinion. Even though I agree with keeping the article, as I said above. Edison 16:07, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong keep after 5 attempts to delete, you think people would get the point. Duh. 69.150.209.15 16:13, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Since the heart of the objection to this article seems to revolve around the use of the word terrorism, and the subsequent semantic debate surrounding such a loaded and ambiguous term, would it be possibly satisfying to both parties if we renamed the article to something along the lines of "Allegations of the illegal use of force by the United States government"? Or maybe even something more concrete, such as "Allegations of breaches of international law by the United States" (applying primarily to laws which the US is a willing party to, but including mentions of say, the ICC). This move would of course be accompanied by a removal of language discussing terrorism in specific, basically a complete rewrite utilizing many of (but not all) of the sources and subjects of the present article. The subsequent widening of content and clarification in terms might allow an expansion of opposing source material to make the article more balanced. VanTucky 16:14, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
    Excellent suggestion. I would suport your change, as it removes the synthesis and WP:NOR issues, which seem to be the heart of the objections.  MortonDevonshire  Yo  · 17:23, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment Awful suggestion for two reasons. 1 Without a doubt in 2 weeks we are back here on account of "breaches of international law." Clearly somebody is going to cry that we need some court ruling otherwise it is OR. 2 What is wrong with calling acts we see as terrorism when committed by Hamas also terrorism when committed by the US? I know the infamous OR dodge. Well it is becoming silly, pathetic and desperate to invoke OR for situations that clearly are terrorism.Nomen Nescio 21:44, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
Both of those naming options have problems of their own, aside from how unwieldly they are (for example international law has developed slowly over the years, so an action taken in the 1920s, for example, may not have been illegal at that time and thus could not be included, whereas it could be included under the "state terrorism" formulation), but I would certainly support a name change along these lines if it was a choice between that and deleting the artice. The title is going to be awkward no matter what, though I still think "Allegations of State Terrorism by the United States" is a good option and that other articles along the lines of this one should be written for other countries since the "state terrorism" concept has far, far more legitimacy than many editors seem to think. If consensus develops for a name change along the lines suggested by VanTucky, however, I would go along with that (obviously I have been an outspoken "keep" voter, just to make that clear).--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 17:37, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
I would like to hear from people, especially Jayjg and Merzbow, which sources they would be okay with including in the proposed article, keeping in mind that they would not have mention allegations of state terror explicitly. VanTucky 17:47, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong keep Well sourced article. No need to delete the article.Oh and the nomination is faulty. If it fails WP:NPOV then you should fix it and not try to delete it. For the comment about being "heavily" depending on a single person is a false alligation. If it did then it would have only one source. However, this article is well cited. On a side note: It's been nominated lots before and it has stayed put. Says a lot about how the article is. Watchdogb 22:58, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong keep and cleanup this decently-referenced piece to comply with WP:NPOV per Watchdogb and others. This is a WP:POINT-driven nomination made by someone with a "don't smack Uncle Sam" mentality that thinks it O.K. for the stars and stripes to be above the law. Though unlikely, this nomination could likely also violate WP:COI if it was made by someone employed by the U.S. government. The bottom line is that contrary to the nominator's beliefs, no government is perfect. OTOH, it would be more appropriate to move/rename this article to Accusations of state terrorism against the United States which would be far less POV than the current title... Ranma9617 03:28, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Reply I work for a software company. As for my "mentality," you don't know what in the hell you're talking about. This is the most egregious example of an editor attacking the motives behind my nomination and, even worse, my character, without really addressing any content issues. Pablo Talk | Contributions 04:23, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Hey, hey -- cool down, now. There's no reason for personal attacks and incivility. We're all supposed to assume good faith, remember? Stone put to sky 08:07, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment According to UN resolution 1267, only al-Qaeda and the Taliban are considered to be terrorist groups. Therefore, calling actions made by the U.S. terroristic is neither in keeping with the proposed defintions of terrorism as posted by the UN, nor of their own agreed to definition that only al-Qaeda and the Taliban are considered to be the only terroristic groups.. The rest of this article is just a load of bias, opinion and misinformation.--MONGO 09:42, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    It would be hard to use U.S. created lists since they are not internationally recognized.--MONGO 09:51, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    How about the European Union then? (another list). That is currently an international organisation (although many think that the new treaty will make it a federal state) ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 09:59, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    The UN has not posted a definition of terrorism. Also to correct the statement "nor of their own agreed to definition that only al-Qaeda and the Taliban are considered to be the only terroristic groups." The document you are reading is only looking at the Taliban and Al'Qeada, not terrorism as a whole. Please read sources before commenting on them. Thank you. --74.73.16.230 10:22, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    The UN has posted four proposals for a definition of terrorism and yes, al-Qaeda and the Taliban are the only two groups the UN has declared to be terrorists. Thank you IP.--MONGO 10:30, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Don't blame me, blame the UN. Is there a UN sponsored list in which the U.S. is shown to be a terrorist state, to have engaed in state sponsored terrorism...does the EU have the U.S. listed then? How about other groups, aside from the opinions of the radical left folks like Chavez, Castro etc. When you find that list which lists the U.S., do please let me know.--MONGO 10:59, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    You are invoking the UN so it is your argument. Again is your position the IRA is not a terrorist organisation? It is very simple. If you say it is not because of the UN you have a problem. If you say it is in spite of the UN you have a problem. In other words your argument is flawed. Of course the IRA, RAF, ETA, FARC, Tamil Tigers, PLO, Hamas, et cetera are terrorist organisations and we do not say differently because of any UN resolution not naming them. Further, you must have heard of the term politics. This might explain why no UN resolution or court ruling exists. For details I refer you to Belgium which was about to start legal proceedings against "innocent" political leaders around the world for war crimes but found out the hard way such actions are a big no-no in international politics.Nomen Nescio 12:14, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    My argument is flawed? I see no argument to support your case, aside from the opinions in books by nonprofessionals and by folks like Chomsky, Chavez and Castro that the U.S. has ever engaged in terrorism. I am still waiting for anyone to demonstrate where a neutral authority with international recognition has ever listed the U.S. as either being a terroristic state or has engaged in state sponsored terrorism. Thanks for admitting that no court ruling exists. I guess we can throw out the oft misinterpreted decision by the ICJ, which was retracted when Ortega left power anyway. Chomsky says the ruling was equivalent to calling the U.S. actions terrorism, yet the USSR and Cuba did no better when they supported the Sandanistas.--MONGO 12:31, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    So terrorism is ok so long as your enemies do it first? ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 12:38, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Odd, aside from Chomsky and others with similar OPINIONS, no neutral authority of international recognition has ever declared that the U.S. has ever engaged in terrorism or supported the terrorism actions of other groups. Let me know when you find the list in which a neutral authority of international recognition has the U.S. on it as a terrorist nation. Otherwise, all we have in this article is POV pushing, violations of WP:SYNTH and soapboxing to advance opinions.--MONGO 12:51, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Neutral, eh? So countries who've been attacked wouldn't be valid sources? Does that mean, by your logic, that the US isn't a valid source when declaring Al Qaide to be a terrorist group. You say they are a biased source? ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 12:55, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Was the Soviet Union ever on a UN list during the years the US accused it of terrorism? Might the veto in the security council have anything to do with that? ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 11:01, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    You evaded my question. Where is the list that has the U.S. on it? Please don't provide us with another link to the state run media of Iran, or of Chavez or Castro and expect that to suffice.--MONGO 11:12, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    We are not here to report what the UN says. We are here to report what reliable sources state. Furthermore your xenophobia is showing. --74.73.16.230 11:33, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Sorry but you are wrong. Here let me give you a quote and source to prove it: 'The only terrorist list the UN maintains was brought about by UN resolution 1267, and is devoted solely to individuals and organisations believed by the UN to be connected to al-Qaeda and the Taliban. If Hamas, Hezbollah, and Islamic Jihad are not listed by the UN, it isn't because they aren't terrorist groups; it's because the UN doesn't see sufficient linkage between them and terrorism's Big Two." --74.73.16.230 11:00, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Furthermore we are not here to report solely what the UN reports. We are here to report what reliable sources state. They state the US has participated in State Terrorism. Knowledge is not a mouth piece for the UN. --74.73.16.230 11:03, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Reliable sources? Thats a funny one...you mean from state run media such as that of Cuba and Venezuela or the notions of nonprofessionals such as Chomsky, who is self taught in international politics? I have to stop now...this is getting to be too funny.--MONGO 11:14, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    Yes those silly South Americans thinking they are equal to Americans lol. What are they thinking? Venezuela, who cares if they have a seat in the UN, we all know it was a pitty seat, South American leaders cant be taken seriously right? Did you know fo rthe last 10 years or so the UN has voted that the US must end the embargo against Cuba because its illegal? In the worlds eyes, its not Cuba that is being laughed at. --74.73.16.230 11:23, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    And sorry to inform you, but the source proving you wrong is a major Australian publication. haha ... wasn't time to laugh? --74.73.16.230 11:24, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
    MONGO, if any thing is funny here it is your points. The argument that since the UN has not accused the U.S. (or Hamas, or anyone except AQ and the Taliban) of terrorism we cannot even discuss it here on Knowledge is unbelievablly specious. This encyclopedia is not beholden to the dictates of the UN or anyone else, which is why the article on Hamas says that "Hamas is listed as a terrorist organization by Canada, the European Union, Israel, Japan, and the United States, and is banned in Jordan" (ah the Jordanian government--an exemplar of fairness and objectivity). As we strive for NPOV here, nothing makes Canada or the EU's characterization of Hamas as terroristic more legitimate than Iran or Cuba or Venezuela's characterization of the U.S. as terroristic. Obviously most of us find Canada and the EU much more appealing than the government of Iran or Cuba, but that's irrelevant. Accusations of terrorism about Hamas and the US can both be discussed and the opposing views presented--that's how things work here. You obviously only have a problem with the latter which is a very POV position--censoring the views of governments of which many US citizens do not approve (for good reasons I might add) will turn this into Jingoismpedia which is not our goal here. The Canadian and American governments have no doubt lied as much as the Iranian and Cuban ones, so either we can use all of them as sources or none of them. Also, you cannot cite any policy on wikipedia that says this article must be sourced with accusations from "a neutral authority of international recognition" (furthermore I doubt you can even tell anyone what that means) so your argument here is similarly specious. You may not consider Noam Chomsky and other scholars who accuse the U.S. of state terrorism to be "experts," but that is your opinion and many disagree with you. Sources I see in the article who accuse the US of some form of terrorism include Chomsky, Swiss academic Daniele Ganser, Peter Kornbluh of the National Security Archive, LA Times columnist Robert Scheer, the Guatemalan Truth Commission, Frederick Gareau, and the Italian Democratic Party of the Left (I may have missed some). I know you don't like those sources (though the Guatemalan Truth Commission may even count as "a neutral authority of international recognition") and think they are wrong, biased, leftist, whatever, but that is neither here nor there.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 17:03, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Thanks for pointing out that only radical left wing ideologues have concluded with your predisposed opinion, Bigtimepeace. Bye.--MONGO 19:53, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Hi. Peter Kornbluh is quite respected (regularly cited and discussed in very mainstream journals about U.S. foreign affairs--he and Mark Falcoff had a well covered argument about the 1973 coup in Chile), and obviously the Guatemalan Truth Commission was not left wing (unless you think the military juntas in that place should have been absolved, but I'm fairly certain that you don't think that). I know absolutely nothing about Ganser and Gareau (other than that they are academics with teaching positions and published books in their field, and therefore "experts" for our purposes), I was just listing out sources as you asked folks to do above. You did not address any of the issues I raised, and responded precisely as I predicted--basically you don't like these sources because you think they are "left wing" and "ideologues" and therefore they don't belong here. I think Paul Wolfowitz and George W. Bush and Bill Kristol and many others are right wing ideologues, but things that they say and arguments they make certainly warrant inclusion in any number of articles that we have. If no source which you think is "left" and which I think is "right" were allowed into this encyclopedia then it would be pretty difficult to write an encyclopedia. Maybe you're not really arguing that all sources that have a leftist bent (whatever that means exactly, since one man's leftist is another man's centrist) are invalid, but it sort of sounds like it.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 20:08, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
No. I'm arguing that no neutral authority of international recognition has ever decreed that the U.S. is a terrorist state or has engaged in state sponsored terrorism. Tossing a few names of a few people that have this opinion is no different that citing people who claim they have been abducted by aliens. The opinions of these few persons you mention are just that, opinions, and in the case of Chomsky at least, self taught opinions, with no earned degrees or academic credentials related to their opinions on the matter.--MONGO 20:35, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Can you explain exactly what a "neutral authority of international recognition" is and why that is the only kind of source you will accept? What part of WP:RS are you relying on here? Because I just don't see what Wiki policy you are invoking, or what would even constitute a "neutral authority of international recognition" as you see it (certainly not the UN, which many countries perceive to be non-neutral on many issues, including the U.S). Though Chomsky is arguably "self-taught" in this issue, he has published on it widely for decades and has been cited thousands and thousands of times (even by those who disagree with him). Thomas Friedman went to graduate school to study the Middle East, not globalization, but by virtue of work he has done since and books he has published he has clearly become a reliable source on the latter topic even though many passionately disagree with him. I think the situation with Chomsky and Friedman, from our perspective, is quite analogous and the refusal to accept that Chomsky is a valid (albeit highly controversial) source quite frankly mystifies me. Anyway there are many other sources here besides Chomsky as has been pointed out repeatedly.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 20:46, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Chomsky claims the ICJ findings were akin to a finding of terrorism, yet that is NOT at all what the ICJ stated, not in the least. He equates it with a finding of terrorism...it is his opinion, not shared by the UN or other entities of a neutral authority of international recognition. I guess if the UN or EU did declare the U.S. was a terrorist state, that would be the main source to cite by those who want to use Knowledge as a place to prove their a priori premises. The fact that none of these neutral authorirties have, all we can state is the opinions of others, most of which are not experts in their fields, but instead people who have some really radical opinions on such matters. I see the same radical opinions on pages related to 9/11, where people wish to POV push an unproven conspiracy theory based on their a priori premises.--MONGO 21:03, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Except the 9/11 conspiracy stuff is BS whereas there is pretty good evidence that the US has committed actions that constitute "state terrorism" (as has, I hasten to add, just about every nation in the world). But let's drop this since we're not getting anywhere. Just a quick question though--would you be more okay with this article if we went back to the "Allegations of State terrorism by the United States" title? I know myself and a number of other of keep voters are in favor of this, and I would think it would address some of your concerns about sources and show immediately that Chomsky et. al. are making allegations with which many others disagree. This is the only possible path which I can see us getting close to a consensus on so I'm wondering if you and other delete voters would be okay with this (I agree it should never have been moved to this title in the first place).--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 21:13, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I see a consensus to delete this article, not rename it. The reasons stated for keeping it are the same as I Like It. I have yet to read any keep vote that has stated that this article can ever conform with our policies which ensure we don't violate synthesis of sources to promote a position and Knowledge is not a soapbox. Instead, what we have are keep votes that state that Chomsky's opinions matter over the those that have never been decreed by any international body: that the U.S. is a state sponsor of terrorism. Has the U.S. committed questionable acts...of course they have...but none as capricious as what would, in the normal scheme of things, constitute terrorism. A name change to Allegations is worse because then it is an open door to cite every Tom, Dick and Harry with an allegation. If the article is kept, it is likely to continue to have a NPOV tag as well as other tags on the top of it, forever, and that is a bad way for Knowledge to go.--MONGO 21:49, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
We must be seeing radically different pictures. I see a consensus to keep, esp. given that most of the deletes simply faile to provide justifiable rationale; most are with no argument at all, and just throw up claims of OR, POV, SYN, that have been refuted, and thus shown to be false. They have failed to answer why this means the article should be deleted, too. According to policy this is NOT a valid readon to delete. Its clear they just don't like Chomsky or the many other scholars who express this quite valid POV, which this article documents very well. It seems they have confused their own POV about the merits of the reports with the reality of the reports itself. Because you don't agree with their arguments does not mean they don't exist, or that we WP editors are committed OR by citing them. Its a very notible POV, based up by volumes of published facts, and over a hundred references documenting the claims the article reports on (i.e. doesnt make up).I also point out that the arguments to keep have been explained, thus it does not amount to "I like it." Per WP policies on deletion, the side that wants to delete the article must prove the case, i.e. VALID reasons why the article must be deleted. No one has done this, and only expressed claims (that even if true), could be fixed in the article. Thus, the stance to delete has been shown to be false. Consensus is to keep--like before.Giovanni33 02:05, 29 June 2007 (UTC)

Giovanni33, this article will forever have a NPOV tag on it since edit warriors like yourself will never allow it to be anything other than a depository for every single weak and ridiculous comment made by every radical crackpot who "thinks" the U.S. has acted in a terroistic manner. They take a few incidents and extrpolate them as a form of terrorism. This article will never be able to present a neutral treatise on this subject. I have yet to see a single person demonstrate that the U.S. is on any list designating it as a terrorist state. When you can do that, let us know. The fact that this article needs 100 sources is clear demostration that it is a weak article, full of POV and hopelessly mired in its own cesspool of POVism. The only way this article could be kept is if the closing editor looks at just the number of keep votes and fails to examine the overt violations of SYNTH and NPOV. The arguments to keep have not been explained, with no less than three editors chiming in with such comments as "Don't be stupid". I see maybe three or four rationales to keep that have a small measure of merit, yet fail to address the policy violations this page represents.--MONGO 06:05, 29 June 2007 (UTC)

Your argument is very weak on a number of levels. First it consists of name calling: "POV warrior," and "radical crackpock." The claim itself by the name calling unsupported. Its just your unsubstanciated POV. But, besides it being an ad-hominin fallacy, these claims are easily dismissed as false when these so-called "crackpots" turn out to be in reality highly respected and internationally recognized scholars, who do a very throughough job at documenting an abundance of established facts which show that US has been been involved in state terrorism to varying degrees. And in many cases the perpetrators have admitted it. Many of the claims are supported by the US govts own documents which have been released. What your name calling really amounts to is: "I don't like what Chomsky says, so I'm going to call him a 'crackpot." Like I said, very weak.
But there's more. You claim that any alleged POV problems will never be fixed because I won't allow it? Wow, I never knew I had so much power! hehe By that logic, all of WP is doomed, since, by extension, I could very well "not allow" anything to be what you want it to be, and thus, by extension, everything is to be deleted? As you can see by my reducio ad absurdem, your argument is the real ridiculous thing being said here--not the claims that the US has been accused of state terrorism, nor that these accusations are notable.
The fact is that you disagree with consensus, and want the whole thing deleted, even though its well sourced. And, its really the WP community is not allowing you. Not just me. Its the WP policies that are not allowing you to make the changes you want. Welcome to the club! Now, if you have a real issue that needs to be fixed, then make your case on the talk page. Point out specifically what the problem is with reference to WP policies. Calling reputable scholars like Chomsky "crackpots" won't work. But, any reasonable objections, and real policy violations will be taken seriously, and will be addressed and fixed. I, like the other editors, agree and abide by WP policies of NPOV, V, and the rest. And, that is why this article can not be deleted. Again, address the particular problem, and prove your case. If you are right, you will win consensus. If you are wrong, and your arguments are just very weak and invalid (as your argument to delete is), then I can only say that you must respect consensus, must abide by WP policy, and that you may be too ideologically attached to accept the nuetrality and factual veracity of this articles claims, and therefore, unable to see that it violates no policies by reporting on these claims.Giovanni33 01:08, 30 June 2007 (UTC)


Okay, thanks for clarifying your view on that, I guess I see this heading more for a "no consensus" but we'll see.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 21:54, 28 June 2007 (UTC)

Delete per nom. I note that many of the keep votes are attacking people who vote delete, let's try to keep it civil here, people.

Having looked at some of the 'sources' of the article, I find the nom's reasoning compelling. I would also ask an admin to go through this and remove the arguing that has nothing to do with the deletion nomination, such as users sniping at each other and so forth. Jtrainor 12:56, 28 June 2007 (UTC)

  • keep I almost feel like making this a "per David Gerard" because it is a ridiculous nomination. Do the deleters deny there has been state sponsored terrorism by the US? I mean, what? You can find this stuff in textbooks - in fact, there are textbooks on this subject specifically. SchmuckyTheCat
    Indeed there are, and Lo and Behold... They are referenced in the article! These people would list gravity on AfD if Bush told them to. ... Kafkaesque Seabhcan 15:36, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I am not American, in fact I protested against the war in Iraq like many other people in Frace, I don't believe in the "Axis of evil" and yet I feel this article should be deleted, because it does not adress specific issues, and seems rather like a collection of misdeeds, sure they are true, but why keep this general blaming page. It's obvious many are offended, there is no denying that, why continue offending them. It's just easier to keep the individual articles. Everyone outside the US knows the USA has sponsered terrorism, maybe we should delete this page and make a category instead "Category:Terrorism by the USA", and put the individual articles in it. Is there an article called "Acts of racism by Germany" ? no, and yet you could write a whole book about them there are so many (and they are referenced in individual articles). Jackaranga 16:09, 28 June 2007 (UTC)

Section 6

  • Comment: In an ideal world, Knowledge could bring together a group of editors to calmly and dispassionately create and maintain an article about allegations people have made that the U.S. is a "terrorist state".
In the real world ... we're never going to get close to that ideal. Not even in the same Solar System.
Here's a few quotes from this AfD:
  • "no legitimate basis that this article can even seriously be considered for deletion. To do so would be a an extreme violation of NPOV ..."
  • "yet another bad-faith nomination"
  • "Keep and 24 hour block User:Pablothegreat85 for WP:POINT"
  • "Keep. Don't be stupid."
  • "this sort of disruptive behavior nominator should not be permitted"
  • "If that even qualifies as an argument, it certainly isn't a rational one."
  • "Articles like this are essential to exposing the evil empire that Bush evil empire has created ... deleted by facist Republicans"
  • "Why don't the rightwingers go to Conservapedia if they don't like the articles here?"
  • "I absolutely equate the notability of accusations of US state terror with ... Holocaust denial"
  • "I propose a permaban for every editor that starts another AfD within twelve months"
With attitudes like this, it's very hard to believe Knowledge will ever get acceptably close to NPOV in an article on this topic. Worse still, even if we did achieve NPOV, NOR, etc, it wouldn't last a day.
Knowledge should report accusations about the US by Noam Chomsky, Persian Kleptocrats, Latin American dictators etc ... but only in the articles about Anti-americanism, Noam Chomsky, the Khomenite regime, the Latin American dictators etc. Retaining this article guarantees (1) having a bad article and (2) a waste of lots of editors time on that article.
Oh, and to save all those POV-warriors an edit: I am neither an American nor an admirer of the U.S. government. (Also, I !voted in #Section 1.) Regards, CWC 17:38, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I fully agree, a lot of silly and nasty invective has been thrown around here, and although I have not looked through the whole AfD I would not be surprised if more of it came from the keep side which I support. But this AfD will not be judged based upon the rhetoric of those accusing deleted voters of being "facist (sic) Republicans", but rather by the reasonable issues/concerns that have been brought up by both sides. The admin closer will obviously know to ignore comments like those you've pulled out above, or comments from the other side calling the keep side "idiots." I don't see why rehashing over-the-top-rhetoric really helps us. Both sides need to turn down the rhetoric, but the AfD will be judged on the rational arguments presented by both sides--not on which side was more "calm" or "dispassionate."--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 18:59, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I think the reason for those comments was because it appears that this will be the sort of article that's nominated for deletion over and over, with the hopes that the audience will be more receptive to deletion each time. .V. 22:45, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Well said!Kukini 22:47, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Uh, that's not the point I was trying to make. I'll see if I can do better:
  1. The tone of this AfD discussion shows that lots of people have extremely strong feelings about this article.
  2. So lots of people with strong beliefs are going to edit the article to reflect those beliefs.
  3. Those strong feelings will almost certainly result in a cruddy article.
  4. That will suck up lots of time and energy that could be better used elsewhere at the project.
  5. The solution is to not have the article. Instead, we should cover this topic in Anti-americanism and the articles about those calling the US a terrorist state. (Maybe have a category named (say) "Allegations of US State Terrorism"?)
Cheers, CWC 17:46, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Except that the fact that an article is controversial and will always be edited by folks with strong points of view is simply not a reason to delete it--we have many articles like this, and with highly politicized topics it is often unavoidable. Sticking this in "anti-Americanism" is a really bad idea, and would provoke far greater POV problems than this article does. Criticizing U.S. foreign policy does not make one "anti-American." I have very large problems with much of US foreign policy over the 20th century and down to the present (including but not limited to some of the points mentioned in this article), but this does not make me "anti-American" as there are many other aspects of the U.S (where I live) which I think are great (see, for example, the Wu-Tang Clan). Anyhow constant POV disputes are not a reason for deletion, and this article does not fall under the category "anti-Americanism."--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 22:10, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete as I believe the marginal notability of this allegation (or what's left of it disregarding the parts that are OR) is outweighed by the POV nature of the subject. If it is not deleted, rename to the "Allegations of..." 6SJ7 21:12, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Agreed. If not deleted, it needs to be "allegations of..."--Sefringle 21:39, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
If there's any possibility of consensus here, I think it only lies with changing the title to "allegations of..." That seems to be the first choice of many keep voters and the second choice of many delete editors.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 21:51, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I don't agree with this proposed name change. All it would achieve is the insertion of weasel words into the title. The current title is fine, notwithstanding all the anguish it seems to cause some patriotic American editors. --John 13:56, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Can you say, Red herring? Take the Euro-blinders off for a moment, and consult WP:SYNTH.  MortonDevonshire  Yo  · 17:35, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
I know it's your favourite policy, and I know it almost by heart. Can you give an example of where the article currently breaches the policy, in your view? In my view WP:WEASEL is pretty important too; as others have said, we don't have Allegations of the existence of the Loch Ness Monster. Our readers are pretty smart and they don't, in my opinion, need to be spoon-fed (in the title!) your or my opinion on whether the subject of the article is in some sense "true" or not. --John 18:05, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep and cleanup. I find it sad that we can leave so many articles that shine light in a negative fashion on other countries, but when one is shined on the US, people freak out and want it deleted. Kukini 22:05, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Nope, that's not correct, I want it written correctly. And if you find any as crappy and one-sided as this written about any other country, please nominate it for deletion, too. KP Botany 22:10, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Sorry...then add to it...demonstrating a verifiable different perspective. Deleting something that you disagree with is not within wikipedia culture and standards. Kukini 22:12, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
To be fair, I don't see any article titled "State terrorism by Iran", "State terrorism by Libya". In fact, I'm not aware of any other "State terrorism" article, so I think Kukini's argument is more against the article than for it. Personally, I think "Alleged" makes more sense. I'm not really keen on having it deleted, either, because there is a lot of interesting information here. Benhocking 22:18, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
To increase your awareness...take a look at this article: State-sponsored terrorism. All articles like this need to go if this one goes, no? Kukini 22:19, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
First, thanks for the link. Now, why do you think the US merits an entire article of its own, but those other nations do not? Note that the US is also already mentioned in that list. Also, this article seems to have accumulated a lot of cruft that is arguably not terrorism (as in it does not seem to inspire terror). Benhocking 22:24, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I could see an article for each and every nation with verifiable sources, including the US. Likely the US should be removed from that list, with only a reference to the article y'all are trying to delete? Kukini 22:26, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
I suppose we're defining "article" differently, then. (Either that, or I'm missing seeing something again that actually is there - a real possibility.) When I say "article", I mean a page of its own, like the one we're talking about here. All I see for those other nations are "subarticles" that are short blurbs on the same page as the original "superarticle" (forgive me for using math-like terminology). Also, I am not trying to delete it. I'm merely pointing out the inconsistency that I see. I think there's a lot of good information here. However, I do question to what degree some of it qualifies as NPOV and I also question to what degree some of it qualifies as "terrorism". Benhocking 22:35, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Clearly, people have put much more time into the US article than the other subarticles. I see no reason to delete one article and leave all the subarticles using the same language regarding other countries standing. As for terrorism, if you look over that article, you will learn of many definitions that exist. I recall a leader referring to 9/11 as the "first terrorism on US soil" shortly after it happened, despite the fact that terrorism has occurred on US soil for a LONG time (note the Murrah Building, for a widely agreed-upon example). I feel that this article should stand or all articles that mention ANY form of "state terrorism" by any state should be deleted along with it. Kukini 22:42, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Well, I suppose one answer would be for people who feel this is an injustice to put effort into those other subarticles, perhaps expanding them into full-fledged articles. As for using Bush's definitions of "terrorism"... let's just say I'd rather stick with more traditional definitions. To that end, places where we've staged coups and no terror was intended would not seem to qualify as such. I would think they would belong in their own article. Benhocking 22:53, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
As pointed out above, see Allegations of state terrorism in Sri Lanka in particular but also Terrorism in Syria. There also apparently used to be an article on State terrorism by Guatemala which got redirected (I don't know the history of that). It's unsurprising to me that the biggest article along these lines is for the U.S., there's generally better coverage of U.S. (and British) concerns on the English wiki, even when it's about something negative.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 23:01, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Reading the above arguments, my leaning is for a the term "allegations" to be in front of all articles about state terrorism. The retitling should clean up some of this problem. Kukini 23:04, 28 June 2007 (UTC)
Renaming the article "allegations" will not change anything. Look at the 5 other votes for deletion, many of those were when the article had "allegations" in the article. (3 of the 6) Also look at the history of this article in the archives. The same massive deletions and edit wars were also there when the article was called "allegations". There was recently a straw poll about changing the title to "allegations", and there was no real consensus either way.
The bottom line is that a group of Americans and pro-American wikipedians will fight for this article to be removed--regardless of how many sources it provides and how encyclopedic the article is. If you look at the AfD history and edit history of many of the above wikipedians, a person can see a clear POV bias, which two words "allegations of" will never satisfy.
My God, the article has 117 sources right now, how many wikipedia articles have this many sources? I can't think of a single Knowledge article with this many sources. 68.90.165.237 00:27, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Whether or not it will "change anything", renaming the article to "allegations" might be the right thing to do. How can such a change not be seen as more neutral, and if we're striving for NPOV, then it sounds like a good idea. Also, as Kukini has pointed out, it would be a step towards providing consistency across articles of a similar nature. Benhocking 00:56, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - I believe Arbcom has stated this quite well: while Knowledge does look to include all points of view, we are an encyclopedia, and we're more interested in fact than POV-pushing by fringe groups (sorry, I can't find the case, but it had to do with 9-11 conspiracy theories). Seriously, this is ridiculous - we're out to write an encyclopedia. And if we're going to keep this horsehockey, then at least rename it to allegations of. The Evil Spartan 00:41, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • The problem here is that these allegations are very notable and in no way fringe. Nor are the many, over 100 sources, used to document these very well known facts, and the quite solid pov that the US has engaged in State Terrorism. Notice I said FACT. Yes, these facts speak for themselves and are the basis for the POV the article reports on. 9/11 conspiracy theories are fringe, but these allegations are of a completely different league.Giovanni33 02:11, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment The allegations are clearly notable--I think you are the first to raise the problem of notability here, and I think most would disagree with you. Also there is far too much material to merge to Foreign relations of the United States. The notability of this topic means that it obviously warrants its own article.--Bigtimepeace | talk | contribs 19:34, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Comment The allegations are not notable in and of themselves as the topic of a dedicated article; this article synthesizes published material to make it look like they are. Any useful material can be merged.--CĂșchullain /c 20:22, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete this OR synthesis - including citations to Chomsky et al does not actually make this conform to the pillars of WP. Tewfik 08:18, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment: First, there have been a gazillion demands using WP:OR WP:SYN and WP:NPOV as justification, but so far not a single bit of evidence to support the accusations. I find it unsurprising that yet another Me too! Delete, big poppa Wiki-Jesus! Delete because IDON'TLIKEIT! is sprouting up again. Lacking actual evidence or proof, these weak excuses -- which wikipolicy clearly states as inadequate for deletion -- seem to be the only thing these folks can resort to.
That said, i'd like to point out that the very furor over this article demonstrates beyond any reasonable doubt that this particular phrase -- "State Terrorism by the United States" -- is a hotly contested, passionately argued international issue of some fame and vigour.
Do we need anything else to demonstrate that an article by that name needs to exist? Of course not. The proof is already here, on this very AfD; people throwing words like "fascist", "idiot", "leftist" and "communist" at each other are not arguing over whether or not an issue is notable enough to be included, nor whether an issue has any basis in real-life events, but instead over the political and moral implications of those actions and events.
This page deals with the perceived moral standing of the United States in its war on terrorism; it speaks to the very heart of U.S. policy abroad, and consequently has become a sounding board for all who would like to propagandize and whitewash their favorite version of history, whether capitalist, socialist, rightist, leftist, fascist, communist or anarchist.
I have been a regular, contributing editor to this page, now, for some two or three years; for my part, i have worked to guarantee that actual ideological excesses -- from either side -- and silly radical diatribes -- from either side -- do not find a place there. That is in contrast to many of those who have voted here, who regularly appear on the page and have done nothing -- quite literally, nothing -- except delete material based upon petulant demands for sources.
It is they who have most shaped the evolution of this page, not me. I would be very happy for the page to appear "more encyclopedic", but the constraints and roadblocks that have been put in the contributors' ways have forced us into the current format, which is nothing more than a list of clearly enunciated cases where the United States is popularly condemned as having participated in acts of State Terrorism.
Perhaps the page could take a different direction; perhaps we could make it "more encyclopedic" if the artificial constraints on sources and rhetoric were lifted. I really don't know. I can testify, however, that changing the name will in no way alleviate these problems. I can further testify that the original name change -- from "State terrorism..." to "Allegations of..." -- was never a consensual agreement, and in fact was undertaken despite the loud and vocal opposition by close to half of the contributing editors of that time.
Changing it "Allegations...." did nothing to stop the AfDs or outcry against the page; the only thing it did achieve, in fact, was to introduce weasel-words into the title of the topic. As has been pointed out above: Knowledge does not have an "Allegations of Bigfoot"; nor does it have "Allegations of Islamist Terrorism" or "Allegations of Armenian Genocide", and both of these pages could, in the correct company, provoke precisely the sort of indignation and outrage that the "State Terrorism by the United States" page currently does.
Instead, on pages like "Armenian Genocide" and "Islamist Terrorism", competing viewpoints are introduced in the body of the article to balance the rhetoric. The title is taken as nothing more than the statement of a topic, and any controversy surrounding it is presented within the article's content. That is as it should be here, too.
Please believe me that i would be very happy, as a contributing editor, to allow such competing viewpoints to be included. Unfortunately, the page has currently reached an impasse: editors on the page who wish to expand the scope of the page to be more congenial to the U.S. are holding those who present evidence of US crimes to one set of standards while attempting to establish new rules for themselves.
I admit that the page would do well with a bit of re-working; however, after having been present on it for some two or more years, i can assure the wikipedia staff that such superficial alterations as changing the name will do little -- in fact, nothing -- to improve its quality or assuage the attacks against it.
The only effective remedy i can imagine would be if those who would like to see more balance to the page were to recruit spokespeople who were able to actually contribute, people who are more astute, familiar with standard research practices, and able in their grammar and writing than those who are currently working the page. As things stand, those editors on the page who would like to push for its deletion -- or for "more balance" as they would like to see it -- have only succeeded in painting themselves into a rhetorical corner: sources cannot be introduced unless they specifically mention "State Terrorism by the United States" or work to demonstrate evidence that is referenced in such a statement; only such citations as speak directly, specifically to such sources are allowed; and no extrapolation from events to established definitions -- no matter how widespread and mundane those definitions might be -- are allowed.
Obviously, if these standards are forced upon some contributors then they must be held strict for all. This consensus -- regardless of how messy it might seem -- has now been established there for at least a full year. Any attempt to deviate from it has been met with mass deletions by a small group of editors, each one of whom appears on this AfD with a vote to "delete".
From the very beginning of my presence on this "State Terrorism" page i have pushed for a re-examination of the standards used to guage material for inclusion and commentary; i have been repeatedly and unremittingly denied even a discussion, much less reform. For the moment, my suggestion to the Knowledge community is simply: let it be; and for those of you who feel like the page would do with a bit of elbow-grease and know-how, i would urge you to please come and contribute. Stone put to sky 08:26, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep As has been said many times, WP rests on verification, not facts. The article does not fail WP:VERIFY - to take one example, Chomsky:
  1. Can it be proved that he has accused the US of terrorism? Yes.
  2. Is he correct? Depends on your personal bias and definition of "terrorism".
  3. Is he reliable? As a barometer of opinion of the political left, probably.
  4. Does he have his own agenda? Hell, yes.
Rightly or wrongly, WP places most emphasis on (1) above. The article might benefit from a more in-depth analysis of motives for accusing the US of terrorism, but at worst that's a POV or COPYEDIT tag, not grounds for deletion. EyeSerene 11:21, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Stop the wikilawyering. POV essays are covered by WP:SOAP.--Mantanmoreland 18:32, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Comment Many of the most vociferous keepers here argue that our attribution policies are not being violated here. Well, here are some of the sources they have been edit-warring to include in the lead:
  1. http://www.globalresearch.ca - A personal site run by 9/11 conspiracy theorist Michel Chossudovsky.
Ridiculous. GlobalResearch is not a "personal site" by any means; it has a full staff of editors and web-admins. It is read on three different continents (Africa, Western Europe, and North America); among its contributors it counts former state department and CIA personnel; tenured professors of wide repute; published historians and political scientists; and widely regarded grassroots political activists. Stone put to sky 04:08, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Its proprietor peddles numerous 9/11 conspiracy articles prominently on the site. Knowledge is not a soapbox for conspiracy nuts, which is why Knowledge:Requests_for_arbitration/Lyndon_LaRouche was decided the way it was. Which mainstream news organizations have recognized this site for its accuracy and fact-checking, as WP:V requires? - Merzbow 23:59, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
He has been published so this isnt up for debate.
  • Self-published material may be acceptable when produced by a well-known, professional researcher in a relevant field. These may be acceptable so long as their work has been previously published by reliable third-party publications. However, exercise caution: if the information in question is really worth reporting, someone else is likely to have done so.
And here is your list:
  • Zed Books
  • Columbia University School of International Public Affairs
  • Institute for International Co-operation, University of Ottawa
  • University of Ottawa Press
  • Faculty of Social Sciences, Dept. of Economics, University of Ottawa
  • Universidad Catolica de Chile, Instituto de Economia
  • Madhyam Books
  • Palgrave Macmillan
All on international politics and economics. Further he is quoted in over 100+ other books by a variety of authors in a variety of languages on international politics and economics. Basic research would have showed you this.--74.73.16.230 00:16, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
An economics professor with a side job as a 9/11 conspiracy peddler. Notice that none of his work related to the subject of this article has been published in any major publication or by any major press. In fact, his new book, "America's "War on Terrorism"", appears to be completely self-published. This is the definition of a crank and the epitome of the type of junk we need to keep out of articles. - Merzbow 02:07, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  1. http://www3.sympatico.ca/sr.gowans - A non-notable political blog called "What's Left".
Gowans is a professional political journalist and published in several national publications. Blogs by professionals writing in their field of expertise are allowed. Stone put to sky 04:17, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
LOL. Sorry, that clause is interpreted very strictly, usually only for prominent academic researchers writing about their work. By your standard, every post by Markos Moulitsas ZĂșniga on the Daily Kos is reliable for inclusion anywhere. Why stop there? Let's include every post by Rush Limbaugh from his blog. They are all professional political journalists. - Merzbow 23:59, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
None of those are academics. You just wrote "usually only for prominent academic researchers writing about their work." Then you go and ignore the basis of what you wrote. Your love of tangents is amazing. However more rational arguments would be welcome, perhaps like those that actually adress you own points. --74.73.16.230 00:41, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Umm, I was illustrating the wrongness of Stone's argument by simply applying it to other bloggers aside from the one he's picked to support his side. Gowans is a "Canadian writer and political activist based in Ottawa" as far as I can find, which makes him as much of an academic as Rush and Markos. - Merzbow 02:07, 1 July 2007 (UTC)

\# http://academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossmaz/interventions.html - Personal website of a geography and Native American Studies professor nobody's ever heard of.

Once again: nonsense. The page has been published in a major publication (ZMag.org), translated into 10 different languages, lists its sources, and is compiled by a professional researcher in a related discipline. Stone put to sky 04:14, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Geography and Native American Studies. Sorry. And "Z Mag" is an amateur activist magazine subtitled "The Spirit of Resistance Lives". Nope. - Merzbow 23:59, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
The depth of people quoting Zmag for published works seems to disagree with your understanding of how well known they are. Again basic research would have shown you that articles published in Zmag are accepted on a variety of subjects by a wealth of sources, apparently over 100 authors. It is becoming tiring disputing everything you do not like or never heard of especially when it comes to things, you seem to not even research. Can you even name 10 organizations attached to the UN for their work? --74.73.16.230 00:46, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
Because every book on Amazon is a reliable source. Can I start quoting from Sean Hannity's books then? - Merzbow 02:07, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  1. http://www.cetim.ch/fr/interventions_details.php?iid=207 - Website of a French activist group nobody's ever heard of.
Once again, utter nonsense. Stone put to sky 04:14, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Indeed. At least we agree on something. - Merzbow 23:59, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Name 10 other French groups of this kind you have heard of and 3 pieces of work they have done. I mean, since you have not heard of it seems to be your rationaliztion, you must have a large knowledge of French activist groups that are attached to the United Nations. Please proceed with showing why groups you never heard of is valid. --74.73.16.230 00:38, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
French activist groups are not reliable sources for academic political analysis. Are you trying to get this article killed? On second thought, please proceed... - Merzbow 02:07, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  • If you vote keep on this article and it is kept (which it shouldn't be, the legit sources are few and far between, and as I voted above a merge is better), then you should feel an obligation to help those editors attempting to make the sourcing conform to policy, and help keep stuff from 9/11 conspiracy-pushers like Chossudovsky out. - Merzbow 18:38, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
    The Guardian, Reuters, Al Jazeera, BBC Radio, BBC, Granma International, The Moscow Times, George Washington University NSA Archives, Intelligence Oversight Board, ICJ-CJJ.Org (International Court of Justice), Miami Herald, CNN, New York Times, The Nation, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, United States Department of State, Znet.
    Not to mention that for some sections, such as that of Cuba, the perpetrators admitted to committing the crimes. The arguement that the country attacked cannot cite it as terrorism, not their allies, leaves who to cite it as terrorism? The US Government? Its allies? Luckily according WP:RS and WP:V we respect other governments to not shut out their voices. --74.73.16.230 00:53, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete First, I don't think I have voted in this yet, and glancing through it I don't see my name, but if I have please strike this. Too much OR and SYN. Merge into the state terrorism article at the very least. Arkon 19:07, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • I would like to poitn out, again, the characteristic "delete" vote comes down to the same thing: "too much OR and SYN." I note these--even if true--are not substancial reasons that would validate per WP policy, the deletion of this article. Of lesser import, but equally noteworthy, is the fact that these claims remain unsubstanciated, as well. The person making this claim has the burden of proof to support the claim. All such attempt to make such arguments have been shown to be false, and refuted. But, again, its moot because even IF true, they would not validate the deletion of this article per WP policies. This is a clear KEEP.Giovanni33 21:06, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Giovanni33, how many times are you going to vote here? Stop bolding your keep comments in some effort to filibuster this Afd.--MONGO 21:14, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Thats is not duplicate vote, as that is part of my commentaries that this Afd is a clear KEEP, per the explantion above. The bold's purpose is legitimate and not placed in front with a #. But, you should know this is not about voting. This Afd is not a vote and its not decided that way. Its about the arguments. Thats why its a clear, very clear KEEP.Giovanni33 21:20, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Giovanni33 - If you are so certain this article will be kept, then why badger people here? Is it because the article violates policy and you feel that your "keep" !vote comments will help the I like it! cause? At AfD, articles that are violators of policy typically get deleted. Therefore, it is very clear that the result will be an obvious DELETE. JungleCat Shiny!/Oohhh! 22:49, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Please do not attempt to silence the discussion, this is not a vote, its a discussion on the article. Asking someone to not discuss it is against the very point of this page. And please, stop the WP:XYZ stuff if you cannot even give an example, its old, the admins are not fools. --74.73.16.230 00:55, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong and Speedy Keep We have many articles with the word "terrorism" in the title. When reliable sources call an action terrorism then it is fair for Knowledge to say that the action has been called terrorism. Threshold for inclusion in Knowledge is verifiability, not truth. --Flamgirlant 22:19, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
Note - this account was created ten days ago. - Merzbow 16:11, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
Stop trying to discount this voice. If you look at her contributions, it is most definitiely not a SPA and thus her new user status has no bearing, especially considering she is using thoughtful arguments relating to policy and not just rambling on semantics like most newbies. VanTucky 18:31, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
  • weak delete - i wish to note that (1) it seems like an extremely long article with comparisment to the State terror one. (2) i have a hard time to believe that there is simply no similar article made on any Islamist country (see: Template:State terrorism .. at the very least six should be there, ever heard the term Fedayeen?). (3) i'm confused where it's prohibited to call terrorists by that name here on wiki, but now it's ok to do so to a country. *scratches head* (see linguist gymnatics done on Samir Kuntar so not to call him a terrorist) (4) i'm not sure that when a state supports a terrorist group to combat it's neighbours constitutes as "state terrorism".. more like shady politics if you ask me. (6) i'm keeping this "vote" on weak, because i think there is room for an article about allegations, but i'm puzzled on how this is supposed to be NPOV and not come out a soapbox libeleous piece while so many other known terrorist supporting countries are not on the radar and terrorists are not allowed to be dubbed terrorists. Jaakobou 22:41, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Strong and Speedy Keep Per User:Flamigrant. Knowledge's place is to report on the world, to write about what other reliable sources say, not to decide true or false, or right or wrong. Vert et Noir 03:47, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep -Specific problems aside, it's simply too well-sourced to claim it's OR. My suggestion would be to challenge individual sources first. Try to establish consensus either way on those. If you can successfully eliminate numerous sources that you don't feel are appropriate, then it may be possible to return to the topic of AfD. Bladestorm 04:16, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep, with rename to Allegations... The idea is out there, and needs to be described as such. I put this in the same category as this article - Is it true? more than likely not; but we need to report on it anyway. That said, the title of the article is POV, and seems to contradict the manual of style. - — Preceding unsigned comment added by Dchall1 (talk ‱ contribs)

Comment (entire article) - I think that the mere existence of this book, written by Prof. Dr. Frederick H. Gareau, who is clearly an expert in this topic, justifies keeping this article. In case of wiki science articles, we use more much more strict criteria than wiki politics articles. But even in these cases, we do not delete articles on controversial or disputed topics provided they are notable. If the topic is notable, then the way the material can be presented depends on the expertise of the people who have published on it.

Clearly it matters if we are talking about a notable topic that has no support whatsoever in the scientific community, or if there is some support or if there is a lot of support. A legitimate objection to this article could be that it is presented in a way that suggests that some conclusions have wide support while in fact it has not. But that's certainly not a ground on which one can delete this article.

We have wiki aticles on Homeopathy and Astrology. Climate science skeptics come here to write articles on the "great global warming swindle" documentary. We don't delete these articles just because they are 100% proven nonsense, so why would we delete articles on notable topics that are clearly not 100% nonsense? Count Iblis 15:42, 30 June 2007 (UTC)

  • Strong Keep - Well cited article. In fact it is better cited and more NPOV than many of the more controversial articles. From what I've read of the discussions in Talk I feel it comes down to whether WP wants to be an American Encyclopedia or a World Encyclopedia. If the former then delete would be more appropriate. Wayne 18:19, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
  • Keep, a NPOV article title is not reason to delete; there are plenty of well sourced credible opinions and undeniable facts in this article. It is not so full of NPOV that the article needs to be removed. It is very appropriate that there is an article dedicated to the U.S.A., as they receive a lot of focus at the moment (and Knowledge isnt a censored "American" encyclopedia). However there is a lot of room for state terrorism in other countries to be covered. List of acts labelled as state terrorism sorted by state needs expansion, and {{State terrorism‎}} is currently misleading due to omission (France's only case of state terrorism is Reign of Terror??) John Vandenberg 01:00, 1 July 2007 (UTC)
  • Delete - New low and hopeless violation of WP:NPOV WP:SYN WP:SOAP. MoodyGroove 01:20, 1 July 2007 (UTC)MoodyGroove
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