On 4/16/07, Thomas Dalton <thomas.dalton(a)gmail.com> wrote:
If you believe new information has come to light, then
you should
recreate the article and explain your point of view in the edit
summary of the creation and on the talk page. If any admin speedies
the article after that, then you go to the admin noticeboard and I'm
sure you'll find someone willing to undelete it. (A full DRV is not
required to undo a speedy deletion.)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Daniel_Bran…
seems to disagree with your view that a speedy can be undone by any
admin. In fact, it seems to suggest that a consensus is required to
undo any speedy which isn't "obviously out-of-process".
"While undeletion policy permits admins to reverse an obviously
out-of-process deletion, discussion is the more appropriate response
when there is disagreement. The proper venue for such discussion is
Wikipedia:Deletion review. As a general rule, articles listed there
are left deleted at least until a strong consensus begins to emerge in
favor of overturning the deletion of the article, or are marked as
"temporarily undeleted" if undeletion is necessary so that
participants in the review can see the article's contents. Where
consensus is unclear, the article should remain deleted until the
five-day comment period has elapsed."
Anthony