Stephen Adair wrote:
There is currently a vote underway on an article that was relisted for
VfD seventeen hours after the previous VfD was closed. I originally voted to delete based on content (IMO, non-notable autobiography), but now I am voting to keep based on principle. It just survived VfD. Community consensus means nothing if we only abide by it when things go our way.
This article was returned to VfD less than a day after the previous VfD
was closed. IMO, that showed a disregard for process, for community consensus, for the opinions of those who had voted, and for the spirit (if not the letter) of Wikipedia policy.
By relisting the article almost immediately, the lister unilaterally
forced an extension of the VfD debate, without regard to anyone else's wishes and without regard to standard practice (no consensus to delete means keep). If someone thinks an article should be deleted, they should not simply keep relisting it until it eventually gets deleted. I had originally voted to delete, but I draw the line at this.
Obviously, by drawing attention to this, I'm hoping that enough people
get involved and vote to keep on principle. How long do we respect a VfD result? Until the next time we log in?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Votes_for_deletion/Grant_Neufeld
If there is no consensus then a quick re-listing is fine. Of course theres re-listing vandalism, but that is dealt with.