Knowledge

:Move review/Log/2023 March - Knowledge

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1332:(involved). It is clear that Sceptre has very strong views on gender identity and related topics - there is nothing wrong with this in and of itself (I too have strong views) - and sometimes they let their views get in between them and (the appearance of) neutrality. I think this is another occasion where this comes into play - their comments on their talk page give the impression that they are not neutral (whether they are or not, the appearance of neutrality is as important as neutrality itself) so they should not have been the one to close this discussion, and should also not be closing other contested discussions in the topic area. Rather they should have contributed to the discussion with the full rebuttal of the contrary arguments they have made here and on their talk page. However, having said all that, on this occasion I believe that the right outcome has been reached, for basically the reasons they cite - whether Confait was or was not trans is irrelevant, what matters is that their gender "might be questioned" and that they have a clearly preferred name. That Confait's gender might be questioned is unarguable. The evidence presented in the article is that their preferred name was Michelle and nobody has presented any evidence that suggests otherwise. 1251:, both of whom use female names and personas when wearing female clothes as Confait did, for particularly well-known examples). This is purely a case of putting a 21st-century interpretation on and applying 21st-century assumptions to the life of someone who died fifty years ago. The nominator has apparently taken the edit at face value and the supporting votes have apparently followed them ("per nom"). Secondly, this is not an obscure case. It is a well-known murder case in the annals of British criminal history, covered in many sources. The victim is almost always referred to in these sources as Maxwell Confait. To change the title of the article based on modern sensibilities and insisting that all that matters is 2097:
it applies to them, whether they were or were not transgender. It can be discussed what their preferred name was, whether that is or is not the common name and if it isn't whether there is a reason GEDNERID should be overriden by COMMONNAME but you cannot continue to argue in good faith that GENDERID does not apply. In this case the sources that speak to their preferred name (as opposed to what name the legal system used, which is not the same thing) are clear that they preferred the name Michelle, the COMMONNAME is not as clear cut as you make out (given all recent sources presented use both names) and there has still been no reason given why a name other than the one they preferred should be used.
437:
the image of the decision making process, which may negatively affect future proposals. Also, more extremely, if one only narrowly looks at whether the bold move target is contested it may even be that there is rough consensus behind this name—while it is contested (by definition)—and despite there being rough consensus, the name may still revert back, so in that case consensus won't be respected. So, in my view, this isn't "procedural", it's just the wrong approach to determining consensus. (At the same time, coincidentally, I rather agree with the outcome as if it had been based on an actual determination of consensus .) —
1487:. A clearly unacceptable and unprovoked comment. You should know better. I was obviously referring to the RM "discussion" and its closure, which is what we're here to discuss. It is clearly not in the spirit of Knowledge for someone to close an RM discussion and then produce further "evidence" for that closure themselves in a far less open forum (their talkpage and/or a move review). Closure is supposed to be neutral and uninvolved following full discussion. If the nomination is challenged and good reasons are provided and not refuted then closing the RM without comment without even a relist is clearly a bit odd. -- 1715:. Which of these sources backs up your claims above, which appear to me to be pure supposition? Yes, most of the sources mention that Confait was also known as Michelle, but nobody is disputing this. However, all but one of those sources uses Maxwell as the primary name. We cannot possibly use any of this to prove GENDERID anywhere near sufficiently to overrule COMMONNAME, especially not in a very well-known murder case almost invariably referred to in sources, both contemporary and modern, using the victim's male name, even for the most part those that come at the subject from a gender ID perspective. -- 1362:
to Confait, and there is no evidence of dispute about what their preferred name was. I didn't see the opposing comments before the discussion closed, but as has been subsequently demonstrated they have fundamentally misunderstood the policy. As I explicitly said, Sceptre should have presented their refutation in the discussion not after closing it, but given that the only policy-compliant outcome has been reached I see no benefit in reopening or relisting the discussion. This is why I explicitly endorsed only the outcome.
2385:(in any way), so it takes a common-sense approach. With the amount of evidence that Confait preferred to be known as Michelle, and our general rule that we should refer to GNC people as they would prefer to be known as (either names, pronouns, gendered words), and the majority of people in the RM supporting that view, that's why I closed the RM the way I did. This is separate to questions of pronouns in the running text and the like; my view is that given the indeterminate nature of their gender identity, 2210:(uninvolved). Post-closure, to justify the outcome, editors have advanced a number of significant new pieces of evidence and points of policy interpretation, going beyond the contents of the RM discussion. This includes the closer's argument, e.g. highlighting certain sources and close-reading "might". Now that they have made these arguments, editors must be given the opportunity to respond and to evaluate which arguments they think are persuasive. The proper place is in the RM itself. 1394:
regarded as a supervote by a neutral party then you should not be closing a discussion you should be participating in it. This particularly includes feeling the need to refer to sources, etc. not brought up by anybody in the discussion. If you don't know whether your closing comments would be regarded as a supervote, then present your comments as an argument for one or other position in the discussion and leave closing it to someone else. I'm not sure you've grasped that I am
863:
mention unnecessary disambiguation, as was the case here). The last Oppose vote, which says that "These articles need to be distinguished", makes no sense. On the other hand, there was no dispute that the proposed title is the common name, and that it is more concise. The Support side thus made the best policy-based argument, and enjoyed a slight numerical majority, which results in a rough consensus to move. Several of the titles were also shown to be inaccurate.
673:. The move in question was rejected (with others) under a no-consensus close just a month previously which was quite well attended. Therefore a finding of no consensus is entirely defensible. However, since this only ran for a week, with no other participation, it would have been sensible to relist it. It would also be polite, albeit not mandatory, to notify everyone who voted at the last discussion.  — 900:. The previous RM isn't too far in the past that it should be entirely discarded. There wasn't any consensus in the previous RM, and I felt that the "slight numerical majority" Avilich mentions wasn't enough to depart from that. I'm happy to resist it for greater participation, of course, although preferably we shouldn't be spending all of our time on an RM merry-go-round. 1804:
when they go to the MRV, they will (hopefully) have at the top a link to the discussion on the closer's talk page. There is no reason to think that a closer, who is being questioned on their talk page and asked to give an explanation for their decision, would or should omit key facts in evidence just because those facts were not presented in the RM. What a gator's cousin
1285:. From that, the rest flows naturally. COMMONNAME allows for exceptions where the "most common name has problems"; the long-standing precedent on Knowledge is that, for people whom GENDERID applies to, their preferred name is the one we go with. Nobody argued that Confait did not prefer to be referred to as "Michelle". Finally, I must express my disappointment that 309:, despite careless news outlets occasionally mixing people up, which is to be expected, and participants had coalesced around this argument. When sources use the same name for two different things, it doesn't mean that this not the common name for either of those things, what matters is whether each of those things is called by a single common name. 1377:
dispute that they preferred to be referred to as Michelle (which is agreed upon in most RSes regardless of how they describe Confait); and the clear majority of the participants that agreed on those point. It honestly seemed open-and-shut to me. I imagine if it had been closed the other way, we'd be here complaining about SUPERVOTEs and the like.
1556:(uninvolved). No explanation in the closing statement. No evidence that the subject preferred the proposed name. No evidence that closer weighed the arguments. This looks like a super vote based on the unsubstantiated assumption that the subject used Michelle. I’ll also say that getting so many closures in review should give any closer pause. — 1281:: the question is simple – does MOS:GENDERID apply to Confait? Well, GENDERID applies to "any person whose gender might be questioned", whether they identify as trans or not. A majority of editors in the discussion agreed that MOS:GENDERID applies to Confait, and the minority didn't actually provide anything substantive that disproves the word 2451:(uninvolved) per SmokeyJoe. Ignoring the merits for a moment, but a case of a RM with several quick pile-on votes in one direction, followed by substantial objections later in the process, is basically a classic case of something that should be relisted for more input to see if the community agrees with the later objections. 2092:
guilty of not listening regarding some (but not all) aspects of the arguments presented. When someone quotes the exact wording of the relevant policy/guideline that shows in black and white that your argument is based on a misunderstanding (at best) and you continue to make the same argument based on
2073:
No, you and Sceptre (who should clearly not have closed this RM as they are very clearly not neutral on this subject) seem very keen on "pointing it out". However, you are not the final arbiters. Others very obviously do not agree with your "pointing out". As I have said, do not attempt to close down
1652:
unreliable sources presented here and on Sceptre's talk page that speak one way or the other about the name Michelle state that this is how they were known to friends and/or in the community. Not a single one speaks of it as a work name, an alter-ego, or anything of the sort - they went by "Michelle"
1625:
the name Michelle, just as Grayson Perry uses the name Claire. In addition, given Confait was a sex worker, the female persona may have appealed to clients. But do we actually have any evidence that Michelle was Confait's preferred persona in everyday life? There are existing photographs in both male
1446:
What "evidence" would that be, precisely? And what "discussion"? A brief nomination based on an unsourced edit followed by a load of "per nom" support votes with no expansion? The only two editors who provided any sort of evidence were ignored in the close and the RM was not left open long enough for
1427:
I don't think you can say "no consensus" would have been wrong in the same way that "not moved" would have been wrong, as it wouldn't have been inappropriate if relisting failed to generate more input, but that is a minor issue. The response to the dissent should have been provided in the discussion,
1393:
Well there was certainly no way it could have been closed as "not moved", but "no consensus" and "relist" would not have been egregiously wrong (no consensus without a relisting would not have been a beneficial outcome though). Generally, if it is likely that if you explained your closure it could be
1242:
First of all, the nomination, support votes and close were based on a false premise, that Confait identified as a "trans woman". This, as I pointed out, was based only on an unsourced edit that was added to the article a few years ago. Almost no reliable source refers to Confait as a trans woman, and
1093:
I would probably have relisted, but not doing so was not unreasonable especially as identical arguments also failed to reach a consensus in a better-attended discussion about 9 months previously. Given that even supporters of the move agreed nothing had changed, it would require a much stronger level
2058:
the IDHT is related to continuing to comment on whether or not Confait was trans when, with nearly every comment, it has been pointed out to you that this is irrelevant and nobody is debating that (most explicitly in Sceptre's most recent comment in this thread). I don't have time to comment further
1865:
Interesting your tendency to read things in my words that I never wrote. I never wrote nor implied that MRV was anything else but what you described. My chief concern is, for example, your coming to my talk page to ask for an explanation of my closure, and I have since found a community consensus to
1782:
Relist is required due to the early rush of perfunctory “support” !votes that do not respond in any way to the detail later “oppose” !votes. Consensus requires consideration and response to opposing views, it cannot work from a contested blind vote. The nomination was weak, posing the question not
1604:
As I said to Necrothesp on my talk page, I've got a suspicion that the "might be questioned" part of GENDERID is there to prevent rules-lawyering when it came to gender-non-conforming people in the late 20th century. Certainly, Confait – a mixed-race sex worker who cross-dressed – is in the category
1461:
If you are asking "what evidence?" after having been provided evidence on this page and on Sceptre's talk page then I am unsure whether you are participating here in good faith. Have you even looked at the links provided? This evidence was not presented in the RM (and I have not claimed it was, only
1361:
I do think that the case should not need explanation, because the nom was (obviously to me) correct. I was evidently wrong that it was obvious, but I didn't see that before the discussion was closed. The reasons why it is correct have been subsequently explained - MOS:GENDERID unquestionably applies
436:
The bold move can be contested but the stable title can be pretty bad and also not have received much support, and there may never have been explicit consensus behind it, but recording a simple "moved" strongly suggests that there is explicit consensus behind the stable title, potentially distorting
431:
was challenged immediately with an RM. Not so atypical to need any type of procedural anything as a remedy. If one doesn't actually assess consensus for the proposed name (the one to the right, not the one to the left) and only checks the RM against the binary logic of "bold move is validated / bold
2361:
throughout. Your interpretation is controversial at best, since if it were broadly accepted "name" would be explicitly spelled out, wouldn't it? What we typically do in such cases (of a subject's unclear gender identity and name) is to work around the issue, e.g. refer to them by the surname and/or
2096:
I know it would suit your argument better if GENDERID only applied to living people who are definitely transgender, but it doesn't. It explicitly applies to anyone whose gender "might be questioned". Given that there are multiple reliable sources that question Confait's gender it is unarguable that
1522:
Evidence on the closers talk page or an MR page is not a substitute for evidence on the article talk page. It needs to be relisted on the talk page, evidence processed on the talk page, not as bureaucracy, but for putting the discussion and records in the right place, for the benefit of the article
862:
The argument of the Oppose side was essentially an appeal to tradition fallacy: TITLECHANGES only applies to when "there is no good reason to change it", but the Support side gave policy-based (ie. good) reasons. CONSISTENT was also not very good since it explicitly excludes disambiguation (not to
2328:
of former names of living transgender people) as applying to the first (which talks about how we should generally talk about transgender people). Nobody is saying that the name "Maxwell" should be excised from the article. Even if the general principle only explicitly applied to living people, it
2310:), continued several perfunctory supports, and two well-argued opposes. And then, closed by an editor who has declared strong views on the topic, without an extended rationale. There are fair arguments for both names, but most of them have been put forward in this very discussions, not in the RM. 2119:
Sceptre should not have closed it. Sceptre has a miscalibration in their judgement of when and whether to close. An undisciplined closer undermines the integrity of the RM process. Their close needs to be overturned. How it is reclosed, or later closed, is for another, an uninvolved impartial
1946:
So, what is the false premise we're all working on? GENDERID obviously applies to Confait, and RSes are clear that they preferred to be called Michelle. Any other consideration is ultimately irrelevant. COMMONNAME explicitly allows for article titles to deviate from the most commonly used name if
1842:
The close as it stood is an obvious bad close. Participants assumptions of their obvious are accepted to have been faulty. The late new arguments, with detail far exceeding the nomination and “per nom” pile-ons, means that the early !voters need to be called back. Nothing here is an acceptable
1803:
per Thryduulf's extremely compelling arguments. A "chain of evidence" is still evidence. It is overly bureaucratic and rather nitpicky to demand that all evidence should be directly on the talk page of the requested move. Editors who want to follow the chain of events will begin with the RM. Then
1376:
The funny thing is, I've been criticised at MRV before for providing details in my closes; seems like sometimes you can't win :P. But, yeah, I closed it without comment because it seemed obvious to me that I didn't need to comment further: MOS:GENDERID obviously applies to Confait; it's not under
1060:
To relist would have been a borderline call in this case, because there was barely enough participation. The decision then was reasonable enough. As for the inconsistent title inaccuracies, perhaps it would be better to handle them separately from the other titles? Obviously, mixing them together
284:
One sympathises with the closer of such a discussion. There was a nomination, then a series of !votes agreeing with the nominator, and then a detailed counterargument with many links. Nobody engaged with the substantive counterargument (which was Malia Green's second post in the debate) or even
1995:
that Confait was trans) doesn't make it true. It is also blatantly ridiculous, as I have also pointed out, to use a name for this article on a well-known murder case that has never been used in reliable sources for that murder case. That would be taking GENDERID to extremes and going against all
1346:
Your “per nom” of the weak nomination, no source evidence cited, arguing their perception of a negative, is the sort of perfunctory !vote that should not be given weight. It suggests to me that you think the case is obvious, obvious beyond needing explanation. The late detailed “oppose” !votes
1749:
So, let me get this straight. You provide "evidence", I point out the holes in it, and you say "well, it doesn't matter anyway". Sounds like nothing is going to sway you from the decision you've made. But, with all due respect, I must also say that it doesn't really sound like you're altogether
1931:
As I have stated several times, the nomination was based on a false premise and the support voters supported that false premise without further comment, presumably because they believed it to to be true without doing any further digging. When more detailed oppose votes were provided the closer
2376:
The part of the "gender self-identification" that is under dispute is their, well, gender identity, not how they generally expressed themselves! This is an issue that crops up every so often when we're talking about gender-non-conforming people from this period of history; how they identified
1832:
Strongly disagree. MRV is for discussion the propriety of the close, or the process as a whole, it is not an extension of an RM. MRV is not RM2, it is not for relitigating the RM, continuing the litigation, or for correcting the litigation. MRV is for reviewing the close as it stood when
1866:
support my closure, but oh holy hell if I cite that policy since it wasn't included in the RM. So now we have a badnac supervoting after the fact? I don't think so. Nor should anybody else think so. This RM was closed reasonably, and I would have closed it exactly the same way Sceptre did.
1094:
of support than was present in this discussion for there to be a consensus in favour of the move. At this point I think its clear that this set of arguments will not result in a consensus and if there is still appetite to move the pages then different ones will need to be presented.
1243:
those that do are modern works that mostly come at the subject from a specific point of view. At the time, the term "homosexual transvestite" was used, but this cannot automatically be assumed to mean "trans woman". Not every cross-dresser even today identifies as trans (see
2100:
I do agree with you that Sceptre should not have closed this (and once again have to point out that I've said this repeatedly, but seemingly haven't been heard) but then the only person who seems to think otherwise is Sceptre themselves. However that does not mean that the
432:
move is contested", one preselects a slightly anomalous set of outcomes: If a bold move is validated, the page is not moved—that's fine. But if the bold move is contested, the page is moved (to the stable title) ... but then we may very well miss out on an important thing:
1412:
I think all of “moved”, “no consensus” and “not moved” would have been wrong. Six people joined in unanimity, then two made detailed counter arguments, that marks the end of the beginning of the discussion, not the end. A response to the dissent is required.
941:
To be fair, I did offer the option of relisting on my talk page, but Avilich chose MRV instead; presumably they thought there was a definite consensus to move already. Now there’s a MRV going on, I don’t really want to make it moot by doing it unilaterally!
1000:
This is move review, not a reopening or rehashing of the RM itself. It's not my place to come up with arguments that weren't made in the discussions. A good number of editors felt that consistency was important here, and consistency is a policy as part of
346:
I understand her reasoning and it was a good effort, but it didn't exactly propel the RM forward. Maybe have a discussion about all of the ostensibly ambiguous Al Thanis to harmonize the name length and review need for disambiguation, instead of moving to
1501:
Once again I am not disputing this was a bad close. However I do take exception to your characterisation of the subsequent discussions - evidence presented at the wrong time in the wrong place is still evidence, even if it doesn't support your position.
883:(involved) Editors can't argue TITLECHANGES when a policy-compliant reason to change the title has been made; if interpreted as being always applicable it would allow editors to stonewall changes when there is no good reason to maintain the status quo. 1950:
If there's any false premise here, it's the idea that Confait is comparable to Grayson Perry or Thomas Neuwirth, as GENDERID doesn't apply to either of them; there is no question that they're both cisgender men. Confait is much closer to
2120:
closer, and as MRV should not rehash RM arguments, MRV should not direct how it gets closed, and I refuse to comment on whether the outcome was right. Comments on whether the outcome was right are misdirection to the question at hand.
1462:
that it should have been) but this does not mean it does not exist. The close was wrong but the outcome was right - all the evidence available in the article and presented since makes the only two relevant factors unarguable: Not only
2253:
of a deadname. Even if it applied to dead people – and I agree that it doesn't (although it seems a bit churlish to not take it under adequate advisement) – Confait was notable enough as Maxwell to justify inclusion in the article.
922:
it if I were you; it's an interesting case for sure and there's a lot of possible arguments left to explore, and a lot of good points made by supporters that weren't really answered. But I don't think you were "out of line" at all.
2014:
territory here. It's up for debate whether Confait was trans – nobody is arguing definitively either way! – but it must be blindingly clear that there is enough ambiguity, both to a layman and in reliable sources, on the point.
2177:
guides us, "The closer of the page move under discussion should feel free to provide additional rationale as to why they closed the RM in the manner they did and why they believe the close followed the spirit and intent of
2033:
Sometimes, editors perpetuate disputes by sticking to an allegation or viewpoint long after the consensus of the community has decided that moving on to other topics would be more productive. Such behavior is disruptive to
1947:
there are problems; the long-standing and constantly reiterated consensus on the project is that where GENDERID applies, the least problematic course of action is to go with how the subject preferred to be referred to.
1905:
Agree to disagree, SmokeyJoe, because while opposition was fairly strong, support for the page move was fairly overwhelming. The closure was perhaps a little too terse; however, it was imho a reasonable decision.
1470:(reliable sources disagree about their gender identity - I can't think of how much clearer it can get) and that their preferred name was Michelle (every single source that mentions the name makes that clear). 1970:
To show that GENDERID doesn't apply in Confait's case, you either have to show that their gender isn't in question, or that they didn't prefer to be known as Michelle. You've still not done either of those.
1605:
of people where it's impossible to know definitively – either way – how they would have identified in 2023 terms. Hence, they fall under GENDERID, and we follow how they referred to themselves where we can.
652:- takes a lot of gall to close an unopposed move request as no consensus. That's a first for me. If you think it's inconsistent with other titles, the place to make that argument would be in the discussion. 2434:(uninvolved). The basis for moving the article in the original discussion was very weak, and enough good points have been brought in this review to justify a relisting for further discussion to take place. 985:
Rather than repeat the arguments uncritically, care to point out how consistency is a policy based argument since it explicitly excludes disambiguated and above all incorrect (1908, 1916 and 1920) titles?
221:
Endorse. A consensus to move (to undo a bold move) was reached among participants, and the closer correctly found so. The discussion was reasonably well-attended and thorough enough not to require further
2059:
now, or to refute (again) your arguments (although I hope to later, the non-Knowledge things have not allowed me much time here for a few days have not yet passed) but I could not let this go unanswered.
1932:
neither took them into consideration nor allowed the further time to discuss them that obviously should have been allowed. "Overwhelming" support based on a clearly false premise is no support at all. --
1568:
Regarding "unsubstantiated assumption that the subject used Michelle", I don't have time to determine which of these sources is the most reliable and to add to the article, but 2 minutes on google found
402:
My closure was an attempt to be procedural; I was treating it as a contested undiscussed move. I had expected a new RM to continue the discussion but it seems to have rubbed Malia off the wrong way. —
865:
The closing statement is also incorrect in implying that policies can be applied selectively in accordance with the participants' wishes, rather than be the standard with which to judge each vote.
80:
Realized my rationale was sloppy and it needed more input. But the draftification poses problems in relisting; feel free to technically fix the nomination when it ends up back in article space. —
285:
responded to it, so I would not agree that there was consensus to move. There are arguments and evidence that the community hasn't considered. If I had been the closer, I would have relisted.—
2169:
sez, "...and giving due consideration to the relevant consensus of the Knowledge community in general as reflected in applicable policy, guidelines and naming conventions." (noted that it does
1523:
editors and future talk page readers. This could all have happened promptly, and still could, if only the closer weren’t so stubborn and reverted their disputed close, as every NAC-er should.
2270:
Some are, some aren’t. Unless our policy is to use the preferred name of individuals whose gender might be questioned only if they have a gendered name, but otherwise use their common name,
360:
I don't think you're being bad, no. But I feel the nominator's reasoned arguments make a case that hasn't been answered, which means the community hasn't finished thinking about this RM.—
1653:
except for some legal purposes, likely because that was not something that was easy (or in most cases necessary) to do at the time. You need to provide evidence that there is some reason
1309:
No, RGW does not just apply to disruptive editing. It applies to any editing that may be seen as tendentious. That, I should have thought, is made quite clear by the title of the essay:
2249:
Are you saying that names, in general, aren't gendered? That seems to be splitting hairs a bit too fine against common sense. Also, the second paragraph of MOS:DEADNAME talks about the
1590:. Given that some of these sources use he/him and others use she/her and some describe them as transgender mean is more evidence that they are someone whose gender might be questioned. 624:
If no one has objected, go ahead and perform the move as requested unless it is out of keeping with naming conventions or is otherwise in conflict with applicable guidelines or policy
1783:
making the case, so implied “per nom” doesn’t work. I suspect the closer cares too much about these questions to be called impartial, and they should vote and with more detail. —
161: 2231:(second paragraph) only applies to living transgender and non-binary persons. It does not apply to dead people, nor people who prefer a different name for other reasons. 1213: 451:
Nom makes a good case to dispel ambiguity in the current title, which seems to have an obvious need for more precision. Assume this means the draft would be moved to
317:
suggests using parenthesized disambiguators in case of ambiguity, not such long name formats to the point where it's doubtful whether the name is even recognizable. —
2510: 2235:(first paragraph), which the close relies on, refers to the gendered words we use to describe an individual, and not the name by which we refer to the individual. 2031:
Please do not start accusing an experienced editor who is clearly acting in good faith of disruptive editing. That is very definitely not acceptable. IDHT says:
1729:
How other people refer to someone is irrelevant to GENDERID; in cases where GENDERID applies (and it clearly does apply in Confait's case), then we go with the
1836:
Closer talk page discussions are for resolving confusion, getting explanations, or prompting the closer to revert or alter their close, before formal review.
630:, so the guidelines warrant the move. The closer referred to a previous move request closed as “no consensus,” which is not a valid rationale to not move.  — 589: 380:
I think you're right after all. This 11-day old MR is somewhat stalling out, and could use more input, but then some extra input could be added to the RM. —
834: 1708: 1585: 167: 1428:
yes, which is why I'm not endorsing the close. However it has been provided after the discussion so it's clear the right outcome was reached so per
429:(that could have more easily been challenged through reversal rather than an RM, putting the burden on the editor who wants to move to start an RM) 37: 1219: 2357:
But their "expressed self-identification" has been questioned, and the policy does not state that we have to use their (possibly) preferred
967:. The close was entirely reasonable, given that policy arguments of consistency were made and previous RMs had also not found consensus.  — 47: 1839:
Ordinary editors, typically the IP editor, must never be assumed to be ready to skim through the arcane culture of user_talk or MRV pages.
452: 595: 2362:
singular they in the article. But we cannot do that in the title, and the subject has not been known as "Michelle" to the wider public.
1293:
as a snarl word; RGW applies to disruptive editing, not to the community's general desire to treat sensitive issues, well, sensitively.
1432:
I don't see a need to reopen the discussion just to provide all the same evidence again in a different place to reach the same result.
236:
In my opinion, the discussion was not well attended: Only the proposer of the discussion, two authors with no own arguments other than
2074:
debate by suggesting that an editor is guilty of disruptive editing when they are very obviously not. It really is not acceptable. --
840: 1005:, while the counter-arguments did not sufficiently rebut that for a closer to reasonably declare a consensus to move. That's it.  — 1263:
or to revise or interpret history but only to record the facts as they were and as they have been reported in reliable sources. --
371: 337: 296: 2227:(involved). In addition to the arguments I made during the RM which were not properly considered by the closer, I see now that 1231: 1183: 418: 96: 260:. I don't think you can read and close a discussion like this in such a short time. I changed the name because the old name 2324:
MOS:DEADNAME applies to all transgender people, living or dead; you're reading the second paragraph (which talks about the
1310: 179: 131: 42: 1621:
I should point out that almost all those sources refer to Confait primarily as Maxwell. Nobody is disputing that Confait
2329:
would be rather churlish to say "well, they're dead, so their wishes on this very sensitive topic don't matter at all".
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I had hoped that you didn't close with this logic. This was a slightly atypical process in the sense that a bold move
1963:
I posted on my talk page actually talks about how the transgender community of NYC in the early 2000s listed Confait
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neutral on this subject and therefore, as others have suggested, it probably wasn't a great RM for you to close. --
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the first is titled "Cases the changed us: Maxwell Confait", with photos of Confait in both female and male clothes
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in international media has referred to different people and caused confusion so that this name doesn't follow
1630:. And it clearly is most certainly the common name; I'm not sure anyone would (or could) challenge that. -- 1144: 759: 305:
But the long reply was not a substantive counterargument, in a policy-relevant sense, to how the name is a
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as reported in the most recent reliable sources, even if it does not match what is most common in sources.
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In my opinion, your close was reasonable, but there were really good arguments in favor of the move.
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In the move discussion I added many arguments, explanations and more than 50 sources that the name
1891:"This RM was closed reasonably"? That's a hard divergence there. It was not a reasonable close. 1676: 2456: 2409:
You obviously care too much to be an impartial closer in these issues. You should be !voting. —
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I was careful enough to quote it, so you should have done the same. Here's the first paragraph:
1681:(so clearly coming at the subject from a particular POV), which in any case uses Maxwell Confait 2036:
You must surely realise from contributions from other editors here that your point of view has
1032:. The title change should apply to all olympics or none. Disambiguation has no relevance here, 2475: 2460: 2443: 2418: 2404: 2400: 2371: 2363: 2340: 2336: 2319: 2311: 2298:(uninvolved). I don't see the consensus in a discussion that began with misapplying a policy ( 2286: 2265: 2261: 2244: 2219: 2211: 2201: 2129: 2114: 2083: 2068: 2049: 2026: 2022: 2005: 1982: 1978: 1956: 1941: 1925: 1900: 1885: 1852: 1826: 1792: 1759: 1744: 1740: 1724: 1670: 1639: 1616: 1612: 1599: 1563: 1532: 1511: 1496: 1479: 1456: 1441: 1429: 1422: 1407: 1388: 1384: 1371: 1356: 1341: 1322: 1304: 1300: 1272: 1235: 1152: 1103: 1080: 1049: 1014: 1010: 995: 991: 976: 972: 953: 949: 936: 911: 907: 892: 874: 870: 856: 773: 718: 702: 682: 678: 665: 640: 619: 528: 474: 441: 422: 384: 375: 355: 341: 321: 300: 277: 231: 214: 100: 1696: 1576: 1045: 635: 524: 314: 310: 269: 206: 2435: 2075: 2055: 2041: 1997: 1933: 1751: 1716: 1631: 1557: 1488: 1448: 1314: 1264: 1248: 361: 327: 286: 245: 1692: 1626:
and female clothes. Given all this, I do not think there is any good reason to overrule
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preferred name, not anybody else's. That's the long-standing consensus on Knowledge.
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and collapsed arguments with more than 20 of my sources cited. My second reply went
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say, "...unless that community consensus was not brought up in the move request.")
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Alphabet soup aside, the nominator here does make an arguable point, doesn't she.—
2093:
that same misunderstanding multiple times, that is very much I didn't hear that.
1398:
endorsing your closure of this discussion, even though the outcome was correct.
1041: 632: 520: 1255:(even when there is no evidence that this even applies) is going fully against 2277:
The examples provided also suggest that GENDERID does not apply to names.
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suggests "use the most common format of a name used in reliable sources";
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clunky writing that happens when people try to avoid using pronouns).
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Overturn (relist, ping all participants, minimum another seven days)
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doesn't have a 1-to-1 correspondence with how they would identify
626:. The current title is misspelled and the proposed title is clear 2308:
transgender or non-binary person, their birth name or former name
1259:
and not helping readers in any way. It is not Knowledge's job to
268:
and I also gave many sources that there was a lot of confusion.
1685:
the other which mentions Confait once, also as Maxwell Confait
1967:
in a list of murdered trans sex workers they were eulogising.
1485:
I am unsure whether you are participating here in good faith
2347:
Refer to any person whose gender might be questioned with
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is there or is there not consensus for the stable title?
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isn't the worst idea in the world (and it prevents the
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The RM was uncontested and so the move is warranted by
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the second does indeed use Michelle Confait throughout
519:, enough consensus below to speedy close and relist. 1657:
to follow GENDERID given that unequivocally applies
689:
I concur, actually--relisting makes the most sense.
453:
Draft:Jassim bin Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani
455:, while the needy article continues to "incubate"? 1061:tends to result in ambiguity and "no consensus". 1675:I see two sources cited on Sceptre's talkpage, 349:Jassim bin Hamad bin Jassim bin Jaber Al Thani 240:, and me. My first reply was only answered by 8: 256:cited was decided and closed by Mellohi! in 1697:the third uses "Maxwell (Michelle) Confait" 1162:The following is an archived debate of the 783:The following is an archived debate of the 538:The following is an archived debate of the 252:and then the discussion with much text and 110:The following is an archived debate of the 1128: 743: 500: 351:. Am I being bad when I think like this? — 65: 1701:the fourth is entitled "Maxwell Confait" 2040:achieved consensus. Not even close. -- 1991:that Confait was trans (or that others 203:define the topical scope of the article 2511:Knowledge move review monthly listings 2346: 2303: 2032: 1484: 898:Endorse as closer, but happy to relist 623: 7: 2353:expressed gender self-identification 1644:Once again I have to point out that 2489:of the page listed in the heading. 1447:any sort of further discussion. -- 1117:of the page listed in the heading. 732:of the page listed in the heading. 489:of the page listed in the heading. 2175:WP:MRV#Commenting in a move review 1466:Confait's gender be questioned it 28: 1661:explicitly overrules COMMONNAME. 2010:I feel like you're getting into 1713:the seventh uses Maxwell Confait 2485:The above is an archive of the 1113:The above is an archive of the 728:The above is an archive of the 485:The above is an archive of the 128:Draft:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani 78:Self-vacated and reverted move. 73:Draft:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani 1709:the sixth uses Maxwell Confait 1705:the fifth uses Maxwell Confait 205:. The closer didn't respond. 1: 2167:WP:RMCI#Determining consensus 1687:! Of the sources cited here, 1311:Knowledge:Tendentious editing 30: 2471:per SmokeyJoe. Premature. — 404:Ceso femmuin mbolgaig mbung 82:Ceso femmuin mbolgaig mbung 2527: 2476:18:08, 23 March 2023 (UTC) 2461:16:55, 22 March 2023 (UTC) 2444:18:35, 16 March 2023 (UTC) 2419:11:32, 11 March 2023 (UTC) 2405:15:39, 10 March 2023 (UTC) 2130:00:36, 14 March 2023 (UTC) 2115:11:53, 13 March 2023 (UTC) 2084:09:10, 13 March 2023 (UTC) 2069:15:13, 10 March 2023 (UTC) 1180:Murder of Michelle Confait 1153:21:47, 23 March 2023 (UTC) 1136:Murder of Michelle Confait 1104:16:21, 11 March 2023 (UTC) 1081:16:00, 11 March 2023 (UTC) 1015:15:35, 13 March 2023 (UTC) 774:12:36, 31 March 2023 (UTC) 475:05:15, 29 March 2023 (UTC) 442:21:03, 28 March 2023 (UTC) 423:00:41, 28 March 2023 (UTC) 385:14:22, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 376:14:02, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 356:13:13, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 342:13:08, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 322:12:06, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 301:07:37, 27 March 2023 (UTC) 278:12:03, 21 March 2023 (UTC) 232:15:58, 17 March 2023 (UTC) 215:15:09, 16 March 2023 (UTC) 101:13:15, 29 March 2023 (UTC) 2372:12:38, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 2341:10:57, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 2320:09:22, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 2287:22:50, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 2266:14:15, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 2245:07:28, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 2220:08:46, 6 March 2023 (UTC) 2202:20:11, 4 March 2023 (UTC) 2050:13:20, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 2027:14:15, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 2006:10:59, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 1983:17:43, 6 March 2023 (UTC) 1942:14:49, 6 March 2023 (UTC) 1926:10:16, 5 March 2023 (UTC) 1901:04:13, 5 March 2023 (UTC) 1886:19:36, 4 March 2023 (UTC) 1853:10:56, 4 March 2023 (UTC) 1827:05:57, 4 March 2023 (UTC) 1793:00:31, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1760:14:49, 6 March 2023 (UTC) 1745:22:17, 5 March 2023 (UTC) 1725:10:50, 3 March 2023 (UTC) 1677:one from a book entitled 1671:19:03, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1640:10:40, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1617:02:03, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1600:01:39, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1564:00:21, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1533:11:43, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1512:18:58, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1497:10:35, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1480:10:21, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1457:09:45, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1442:09:29, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1423:07:22, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1408:02:12, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1389:01:40, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1372:01:23, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1357:00:35, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1342:23:46, 1 March 2023 (UTC) 1323:09:40, 2 March 2023 (UTC) 1305:20:26, 1 March 2023 (UTC) 1273:14:50, 1 March 2023 (UTC) 1050:09:59, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 996:23:48, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 977:19:13, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 954:21:06, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 937:19:00, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 912:14:15, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 893:07:22, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 875:17:00, 6 March 2023 (UTC) 719:14:36, 9 March 2023 (UTC) 703:18:49, 8 March 2023 (UTC) 683:19:09, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 666:18:57, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 641:06:05, 7 March 2023 (UTC) 529:21:42, 9 March 2023 (UTC) 262:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani 192:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani 2492:Please do not modify it. 1169:Please do not modify it. 1120:Please do not modify it. 790:Please do not modify it. 735:Please do not modify it. 545:Please do not modify it. 492:Please do not modify it. 117:Please do not modify it. 1965:directly after Johnson 1236:Discussion with closer 857:Discussion with closer 612:Discussion with closer 556:Zhivopisnoye Obozrenye 508:Zhivopisnoye Obozrenye 227:per below discussion.— 184:Discussion with closer 1781:. <uninvolved: --> 258:less than 120 seconds 18:Knowledge:Move review 1843:substitute to that. 1038:2012 Summer Olympics 801:1896 Summer Olympics 751:1896 Summer Olympics 254:more than 50 sources 43:Move review archives 2449:Overturn and relist 2432:Overturn and relist 2296:Overturn and relist 2208:Overturn and relist 1801:<uninvolved: --> 1287:WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS 1261:WP:RIGHTGREATWRONGS 1166:of the page above. 1058:<uninvolved: --> 787:of the page above. 542:of the page above. 114:of the page above. 2165:Gentle reminders: 1961:one of the sources 1679:Reclaiming Genders 1347:prove that wrong. 1145:Extraordinary Writ 1028:(uninvolved), per 2499: 2498: 2467: 2204: 1996:common sense. -- 1957:Marsha P. Johnson 1928: 1888: 1829: 1802: 1279:Endorse as closer 1127: 1126: 1092: 1083: 1059: 742: 741: 499: 498: 477: 430: 374: 340: 299: 56: 55: 2518: 2494: 2465: 2200: 2196: 2188: 1924: 1920: 1912: 1884: 1880: 1872: 1825: 1821: 1813: 1800: 1229: 1209: 1201: 1193: 1171: 1129: 1122: 1090: 1079: 1075: 1067: 1057: 933: 927: 850: 830: 822: 814: 792: 744: 737: 699: 693: 662: 656: 605: 585: 577: 569: 547: 501: 494: 473: 469: 461: 428: 366: 332: 291: 177: 157: 149: 141: 119: 66: 52: 36: 31: 2526: 2525: 2521: 2520: 2519: 2517: 2516: 2515: 2501: 2500: 2490: 2194: 2186: 1918: 1910: 1878: 1870: 1819: 1811: 1330:Endorse outcome 1249:Thomas Neuwirth 1225: 1224: 1218: 1212: 1205: 1204: 1197: 1196: 1189: 1188: 1167: 1118: 1073: 1065: 931: 925: 846: 845: 839: 833: 826: 825: 818: 817: 810: 809: 788: 733: 697: 691: 660: 654: 601: 600: 594: 588: 581: 580: 573: 572: 565: 564: 543: 490: 467: 459: 173: 172: 166: 160: 153: 152: 145: 144: 137: 136: 115: 64: 57: 50: 34: 26: 25: 24: 12: 11: 5: 2524: 2522: 2514: 2513: 2503: 2502: 2497: 2496: 2481: 2480: 2479: 2478: 2463: 2446: 2429: 2428: 2427: 2426: 2425: 2424: 2423: 2422: 2421: 2349:gendered words 2304:the case of a 2302:only mentions 2293: 2292: 2291: 2290: 2289: 2275: 2274:doesn’t apply. 2222: 2205: 2187:P.I. Ellsworth 2159: 2158: 2157: 2156: 2155: 2154: 2153: 2152: 2151: 2150: 2149: 2148: 2147: 2146: 2145: 2144: 2143: 2142: 2141: 2140: 2139: 2138: 2137: 2136: 2135: 2134: 2133: 2132: 2098: 2094: 1968: 1948: 1911:P.I. Ellsworth 1871:P.I. Ellsworth 1858: 1857: 1856: 1855: 1840: 1837: 1834: 1812:P.I. Ellsworth 1795: 1775: 1774: 1773: 1772: 1771: 1770: 1769: 1768: 1767: 1766: 1765: 1764: 1763: 1762: 1619: 1550: 1549: 1548: 1547: 1546: 1545: 1544: 1543: 1542: 1541: 1540: 1539: 1538: 1537: 1536: 1535: 1520: 1519: 1518: 1517: 1516: 1515: 1514: 1327: 1326: 1325: 1289:is being used 1240: 1239: 1222: 1216: 1210: 1202: 1194: 1186: 1174: 1173: 1158: 1157: 1156: 1155: 1125: 1124: 1109: 1108: 1107: 1106: 1084: 1066:P.I. Ellsworth 1052: 1022: 1021: 1020: 1019: 1018: 1017: 980: 979: 961: 960: 959: 958: 957: 956: 919:I would relist 895: 861: 860: 843: 837: 831: 823: 815: 807: 795: 794: 779: 778: 777: 776: 740: 739: 724: 723: 722: 721: 709: 708: 707: 706: 705: 668: 616: 615: 598: 592: 586: 578: 570: 562: 550: 549: 534: 533: 532: 531: 497: 496: 481: 480: 479: 478: 460:P.I. Ellsworth 446: 445: 444: 400:Closer comment 397: 396: 395: 394: 393: 392: 391: 390: 389: 388: 387: 282: 281: 280: 264:didn't follow 188: 187: 170: 164: 158: 150: 142: 134: 122: 121: 106: 105: 104: 103: 63: 58: 54: 53: 45: 40: 29: 27: 15: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 2523: 2512: 2509: 2508: 2506: 2495: 2493: 2488: 2483: 2482: 2477: 2474: 2470: 2464: 2462: 2458: 2454: 2450: 2447: 2445: 2441: 2437: 2433: 2430: 2420: 2416: 2412: 2408: 2407: 2406: 2402: 2398: 2397: 2392: 2388: 2387:singular they 2384: 2380: 2375: 2374: 2373: 2369: 2365: 2360: 2356: 2354: 2350: 2344: 2343: 2342: 2338: 2334: 2333: 2327: 2323: 2322: 2321: 2317: 2313: 2309: 2307: 2301: 2297: 2294: 2288: 2284: 2280: 2276: 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1706: 1702: 1698: 1694: 1690: 1686: 1682: 1680: 1674: 1673: 1672: 1668: 1664: 1660: 1656: 1651: 1648:the reliable 1647: 1643: 1642: 1641: 1637: 1633: 1629: 1628:WP:COMMONNAME 1624: 1620: 1618: 1614: 1610: 1609: 1603: 1602: 1601: 1597: 1593: 1589: 1586: 1583: 1580: 1577: 1574: 1571: 1567: 1566: 1565: 1562: 1559: 1555: 1552: 1551: 1534: 1530: 1526: 1521: 1513: 1509: 1505: 1500: 1499: 1498: 1494: 1490: 1486: 1483: 1482: 1481: 1477: 1473: 1469: 1465: 1460: 1459: 1458: 1454: 1450: 1445: 1444: 1443: 1439: 1435: 1431: 1426: 1425: 1424: 1420: 1416: 1411: 1410: 1409: 1405: 1401: 1397: 1392: 1391: 1390: 1386: 1382: 1381: 1375: 1374: 1373: 1369: 1365: 1360: 1359: 1358: 1354: 1350: 1345: 1344: 1343: 1339: 1335: 1331: 1328: 1324: 1320: 1316: 1312: 1308: 1307: 1306: 1302: 1298: 1297: 1292: 1288: 1284: 1280: 1277: 1276: 1275: 1274: 1270: 1266: 1262: 1258: 1257:WP:COMMONNAME 1254: 1250: 1246: 1245:Grayson Perry 1237: 1233: 1228: 1221: 1215: 1208: 1200: 1192: 1185: 1181: 1178: 1177: 1176: 1175: 1172: 1170: 1165: 1160: 1159: 1154: 1150: 1146: 1142: 1138: 1137: 1133: 1132: 1131: 1130: 1123: 1121: 1116: 1111: 1110: 1105: 1101: 1097: 1088: 1085: 1082: 1078: 1076: 1070: 1069: 1068: 1056: 1053: 1051: 1047: 1043: 1040:for example. 1039: 1036:redirects to 1035: 1034:2012 Olympics 1031: 1030:WP:CONSISTENT 1027: 1024: 1023: 1016: 1012: 1008: 1004: 999: 998: 997: 993: 989: 984: 983: 982: 981: 978: 974: 970: 966: 963: 962: 955: 951: 947: 946: 940: 939: 938: 935: 934: 928: 921: 920: 915: 914: 913: 909: 905: 904: 899: 896: 894: 890: 886: 882: 879: 878: 877: 876: 872: 868: 858: 854: 849: 842: 836: 829: 821: 813: 806: 802: 799: 798: 797: 796: 793: 791: 786: 781: 780: 775: 772: 769: 768: 763: 762: 757: 753: 752: 748: 747: 746: 745: 738: 736: 731: 726: 725: 720: 717: 713: 710: 704: 701: 700: 694: 688: 687: 686: 685: 684: 680: 676: 672: 669: 667: 664: 663: 657: 651: 648: 645: 644: 643: 642: 639: 637: 634: 629: 628:WP:COMMONNAME 625: 621: 613: 609: 604: 597: 591: 584: 576: 568: 561: 557: 554: 553: 552: 551: 548: 546: 541: 536: 535: 530: 526: 522: 518: 514: 510: 509: 505: 504: 503: 502: 495: 493: 488: 483: 482: 476: 472: 470: 464: 463: 462: 454: 450: 447: 443: 440: 435: 426: 425: 424: 420: 416: 415: 411: 410: 405: 401: 398: 386: 383: 379: 378: 377: 373: 369: 365: 364: 359: 358: 357: 354: 350: 345: 344: 343: 339: 335: 331: 330: 325: 324: 323: 320: 316: 312: 308: 307:WP:COMMONNAME 304: 303: 302: 298: 294: 290: 289: 283: 279: 275: 271: 267: 263: 259: 255: 251: 247: 244:who violated 243: 239: 235: 234: 233: 230: 226: 223: 219: 218: 217: 216: 212: 208: 204: 202: 201:unambiguously 197: 193: 185: 181: 176: 169: 163: 156: 148: 140: 133: 129: 126: 125: 124: 123: 120: 118: 113: 108: 107: 102: 98: 94: 93: 89: 88: 83: 79: 75: 74: 70: 69: 68: 67: 62: 59: 49: 46: 44: 41: 39: 38:2023 February 33: 32: 23: 19: 2491: 2484: 2468: 2466:(uninvolved) 2448: 2431: 2394: 2390: 2382: 2378: 2364:No such user 2358: 2352: 2348: 2330: 2325: 2312:No such user 2305: 2300:MOS:DEADNAME 2295: 2279:BilledMammal 2272:MOS:GENDERID 2255: 2250: 2237:BilledMammal 2233:MOS:GENDERID 2229:MOS:DEADNAME 2224: 2212:Adumbrativus 2207: 2184: 2183: 2170: 2162: 2102: 2089: 2037: 2016: 1992: 1988: 1987:Continually 1972: 1964: 1908: 1907: 1868: 1867: 1809: 1808: 1805: 1797: 1778: 1734: 1730: 1678: 1658: 1654: 1649: 1645: 1622: 1606: 1553: 1467: 1463: 1395: 1378: 1329: 1294: 1290: 1282: 1278: 1253:MOS:GENDERID 1241: 1168: 1161: 1140: 1134: 1119: 1112: 1091:(uninvolved) 1086: 1063: 1062: 1054: 1025: 964: 943: 930: 918: 917: 901: 897: 885:BilledMammal 880: 864: 789: 782: 770: 766: 760: 755: 749: 734: 727: 714:per above. — 711: 696: 670: 659: 649: 646: 631: 617: 544: 537: 512: 506: 491: 484: 457: 456: 448: 433: 412: 407: 403: 399: 362: 348: 328: 287: 266:WP:PRECISION 261: 257: 253: 249: 241: 237: 224: 220: 200: 199: 196:WP:PRECISION 191: 189: 116: 109: 90: 85: 81: 77: 71: 60: 2487:move review 2105:was wrong. 2088:Except you 1164:move review 1115:move review 785:move review 730:move review 540:move review 487:move review 270:Malia Green 207:Malia Green 112:move review 2436:Rreagan007 2076:Necrothesp 2056:Necrothesp 2042:Necrothesp 2034:Knowledge. 1998:Necrothesp 1959:; indeed, 1934:Necrothesp 1752:Necrothesp 1717:Necrothesp 1632:Necrothesp 1489:Necrothesp 1449:Necrothesp 1430:WP:NOTBURO 1315:Necrothesp 1291:once again 1265:Necrothesp 767:Part of me 620:WP:RMNOMIN 363:S Marshall 329:S Marshall 288:S Marshall 250:unanswered 61:2023 March 48:2023 April 2473:Alalch E. 2411:SmokeyJoe 2326:inclusion 2251:inclusion 2122:SmokeyJoe 2107:Thryduulf 2061:Thryduulf 1893:SmokeyJoe 1845:SmokeyJoe 1785:SmokeyJoe 1731:subject's 1663:Thryduulf 1592:Thryduulf 1525:SmokeyJoe 1504:Thryduulf 1472:Thryduulf 1434:Thryduulf 1415:SmokeyJoe 1400:Thryduulf 1364:Thryduulf 1349:SmokeyJoe 1334:Thryduulf 1096:Thryduulf 756:Endorsed. 716:Alalch E. 449:Overturn. 439:Alalch E. 382:Alalch E. 353:Alalch E. 319:Alalch E. 315:WP:NCPDAB 311:WP:MIDDLE 238:"per nom" 229:Alalch E. 2505:Category 2453:SnowFire 2225:Overturn 2163:Comment. 1989:alleging 1578:(p124), 1554:Overturn 1468:has been 1141:Relisted 1055:Endorse. 881:Overturn 761:Madeline 647:Overturn 246:WP:TALKO 20:‎ | 2396:Sceptre 2332:Sceptre 2257:Sceptre 2180:WP:RMCI 2103:outcome 2018:Sceptre 2012:WP:IDHT 1993:alleged 1974:Sceptre 1833:closed. 1798:Endorse 1736:Sceptre 1608:Sceptre 1380:Sceptre 1296:Sceptre 1220:archive 1199:history 1087:Endorse 1026:Endorse 1007:Amakuru 988:Avilich 969:Amakuru 965:Endorse 945:Sceptre 903:Sceptre 867:Avilich 841:archive 820:history 675:Amakuru 633:Michael 596:archive 575:history 517:WP:SNOW 242:DeCausa 168:archive 147:history 2469:Relist 2391:really 2306:living 1711:, and 1683:, and 1042:Vpab15 712:Relist 671:Relist 650:Relist 521:Vpab15 515:. Per 513:Relist 225:Relist 222:input. 1464:might 1313:. -- 1283:might 1227:watch 1214:links 1003:WP:AT 932:Slash 848:watch 835:links 698:Slash 661:Slash 603:watch 590:links 409:mello 175:watch 162:links 87:mello 51:: --> 16:< 2457:talk 2440:talk 2415:talk 2401:talk 2379:then 2368:talk 2359:name 2337:talk 2316:talk 2283:talk 2262:talk 2241:talk 2216:talk 2126:talk 2111:talk 2080:talk 2065:talk 2046:talk 2023:talk 2002:talk 1979:talk 1955:and 1938:talk 1897:talk 1849:talk 1789:talk 1756:talk 1741:talk 1721:talk 1667:talk 1636:talk 1623:used 1613:talk 1596:talk 1529:talk 1508:talk 1493:talk 1476:talk 1453:talk 1438:talk 1419:talk 1404:talk 1385:talk 1368:talk 1353:talk 1338:talk 1319:talk 1301:talk 1269:talk 1247:and 1207:logs 1191:edit 1184:talk 1149:talk 1100:talk 1046:talk 1011:talk 992:talk 973:talk 950:talk 908:talk 889:talk 871:talk 828:logs 812:edit 805:talk 764:⇔ ∃ 758:■ ∃ 679:talk 583:logs 567:edit 560:talk 525:talk 274:talk 211:talk 155:logs 139:edit 132:talk 35:< 2383:now 2195:ed. 2182:." 2171:not 2090:are 2038:not 1919:ed. 1879:ed. 1820:ed. 1659:and 1655:not 1650:and 1646:all 1558:В²C 1396:not 1234:) ( 1230:) ( 1074:ed. 926:Red 855:) ( 851:) ( 692:Red 655:Red 610:) ( 606:) ( 468:ed. 414:hi! 182:) ( 178:) ( 92:hi! 22:Log 2507:: 2459:) 2442:) 2417:) 2403:) 2370:) 2339:) 2318:) 2285:) 2264:) 2243:) 2218:) 2192:, 2128:) 2113:) 2082:) 2067:) 2048:) 2025:) 2004:) 1981:) 1940:) 1916:, 1899:) 1876:, 1851:) 1817:, 1791:) 1758:) 1743:) 1723:) 1707:, 1703:, 1699:, 1695:, 1691:, 1669:) 1638:) 1615:) 1598:) 1587:, 1584:, 1581:, 1575:, 1572:, 1531:) 1510:) 1495:) 1478:) 1455:) 1440:) 1421:) 1406:) 1387:) 1370:) 1355:) 1340:) 1321:) 1303:) 1271:) 1232:RM 1151:) 1143:. 1139:– 1102:) 1089:. 1071:, 1048:) 1013:) 994:) 975:) 952:) 910:) 891:) 873:) 853:RM 754:– 681:) 622:: 608:RM 527:) 511:– 465:, 421:) 419:投稿 406:, 276:) 213:) 198:: 180:RM 99:) 97:投稿 84:, 76:– 2455:( 2438:( 2413:( 2399:( 2366:( 2335:( 2314:( 2281:( 2260:( 2239:( 2214:( 2124:( 2109:( 2078:( 2063:( 2054:@ 2044:( 2021:( 2000:( 1977:( 1936:( 1895:( 1847:( 1806:! 1787:( 1754:( 1739:( 1719:( 1665:( 1634:( 1611:( 1594:( 1561:☎ 1527:( 1506:( 1491:( 1474:( 1451:( 1436:( 1417:( 1402:( 1383:( 1366:( 1351:( 1336:( 1317:( 1299:( 1267:( 1238:) 1223:| 1217:| 1211:| 1203:| 1195:| 1187:| 1182:( 1147:( 1098:( 1044:( 1009:( 990:( 971:( 948:( 906:( 887:( 869:( 859:) 844:| 838:| 832:| 824:| 816:| 808:| 803:( 771:; 677:( 638:. 636:Z 614:) 599:| 593:| 587:| 579:| 571:| 563:| 558:( 523:( 417:( 372:C 370:/ 368:T 338:C 336:/ 334:T 297:C 295:/ 293:T 272:( 209:( 186:) 171:| 165:| 159:| 151:| 143:| 135:| 130:( 95:(

Index

Knowledge:Move review
Log
2023 February
Move review archives
2023 April
2023 March
Draft:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani
mello
hi!
投稿
13:15, 29 March 2023 (UTC)
move review
Draft:Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani
talk
edit
history
logs
links
archive
watch
RM
Discussion with closer
WP:PRECISION
Malia Green
talk
15:09, 16 March 2023 (UTC)
Alalch E.
15:58, 17 March 2023 (UTC)
WP:TALKO
WP:PRECISION

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