[WikiEN-l] Sep 11 (wasL User:LanceMurdoch)
Daniel Mayer
maveric149 at yahoo.com
Thu Jan 15 18:57:47 UTC 2004
tarquin
>Or call it "World Trade Center attack" ?
Uh, no. What about the Pentagon and Flight 93?
>At any rate, I agree with the removal of the term
>"terrorist" from the title.
Why? The term 'terrorist' is almost always in the title of the incident when
it is referred to in any place I've ever seen a reference (although it is
very often just called "9/11" or "September 11" in the USA but those titles
are not specific enough for us). The incident also perfectly fits the
definition of terrorism. So there is no reason not to use it unless it is
unreasonably offensive. I would, in fact, argue that *not* having the word
'terrorist' in the title would be unreasonably offensive (IMO, that would be
white-washing, or at lest sanitizing, the title).
>That is was an attack, at least, is undisputed :)
Taking out the word "terrorist" in light of the fact that the word is very
commonly used in the title and fits the definition, goes against our common
name naming convention and also creates a needlessly vague title. It also
supports the POV that the incident was not a terrorist act which is absurd
since it perfectly fits the definition.
So if something is commonly called something, fits the definition, is not
unreasonably offensive, then that term should be used.
More generally (meaning not directed toward Tarquin):
Blacklisting terms is a very bad idea and is more PC than NPOV. Let's not
forget that PC is in fact an extreme form of POV and is *not* akin to NPOV at
all (which really deals with article *content* and not titles - titles are
dealt with through our naming conventions).
PC = "politically correct" . Political correctness in the United States is a
political and social movement which aims to use changes in language to
prevent offending people who leftists think are offended by the use of
certain terms. PC also aims to help change the way other people think by
changing the use of certain terms (rather Orwellian if you ask me). This is
*not* at all NPOV and should *not* be associated with the 'unreasonable
offensiveness' clause of our common name naming convention (which is largely
agendaless, unlike PC).
Wikipedia needs to *follow* common usage, not try to change it!
-- Daniel Mayer (aka mav)
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