Talk:China–Lithuania relations

Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment edit

  This article is or was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment.

Above undated message substituted from Template:Dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment by PrimeBOT (talk) 17:29, 16 January 2022 (UTC)Reply

Excessive POV-pushing discussion of Lithuanian-Taiwanese relations in the lede (removed) edit

I've noticed that an IP user edited the lede in October to add some POV-pushing commentary about Lithuanian-Taiwanese relations without providing many sources (they did provide an SCMP source I believe, upon closer inspection, for one part of their edits). Lithuania-Taiwan relations are covered by a distinct article on Wikipedia, and discussing them excessively in the lede of this particular article is disingenuous and misleading. I've restored the article to the state that it was in before these potentially problematic edits. Further discussion is welcome. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 21:48, 16 November 2021 (UTC) I've just inspected the edit history even more closely, and it seems that the SCMP citation was already in the article before the IP user's edits. So, actually, they didn't cite any sources. I was correct the first time. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 21:58, 16 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

"Lithuania-Taiwan relations are covered by a distinct article on Wikipedia, and discussing them excessively in the lede of this particular article is disingenuous and misleading." May I suggest a less-aggressive, non-accusatory tone towards other users ("disingenuous"). Lithuania-Taiwan relations should be covered in the present article to the extent that they caused breakdown in China-Lithuania relations, and how. It is hard to believe you having a fair stance on the issue (no POV) as you have deleted information in the present article but did not move it to the L-T relations article. "Potentially problematic" is not sufficient ground to go around deleting information. You have not established here on Talk how exactly that is problematic with certainty and with consensus from other users. The user stated that sources can be easily found, and my Google search brought a number of credible sources.139.47.34.245 (talk) 14:50, 4 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
I have no intention to engage with a bad faith user, let me begin with that. (1) What I've noticed here right off the bat is that you've manipulated my comments on this Talk page by increasing the indentation of one of them to look like a reply to you when it was in fact a reply to myself; this is malpractice and could be considered to be a mild form of vandalism. That is completely not on, and I will not tolerate such behaviour. I may even report you for this. (2) You have taken material from my own user page that dates back around a year ago in order to try and label me as "biased". Such an act can be considered a form of an ad hominem attack; there is no indication that I still hold these views, especially since my views have changed over that relatively long period of time (not that you'd know this, since you don't know me). Also, these comments made by me on my own user page are completely irrelevant to the discussions occurring on this talk page. Anyway, it doesn't take a genius to work out that citing a person's comments on their own user page is a bad faith manoeuvre... I've never even referred to my own user page, you are just trying to "gotcha" me. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 05:39, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Regarding your comment — The user stated that sources can be easily found... — You do realise that there were actually two distinct users involved before you, right? The first user who added all of the information in the first place hasn't returned to the article ever since they made those edits back in October. The user who restored those edits (and made comments in their own edit) was actually a different user. So, the user who made the comment ...a quick Google provides plenty of mainstream references to back up the text... is actually not the user who originally added the info, ergo, there is no direct continuity between these two distinct events. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 05:52, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Upon closer inspection, it seems that it was actually Intforce who re-arranged my comments, probably accidentally. This seemingly occurred because you inserted your comment in the middle of two of my comments, which confused Intforce. In light of this fact, I apologise for accusing you of doing this. With that being said, you are still not supposed to insert comments in between two of another user's comments (even on the same indentation level). I myself have been called out for doing this in the past. I advise that you don't do it as it can lead to much confusion. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 09:14, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
If I may respond to your above comment sincerely, I have these points to highlight. | When you say ...you have deleted information in the present article..., my rebuttal to that is that the information that I deleted was unsourced and hence invalid from the beginning. If I had deleted information that had included sources, then that would have been a different story. By all means, you have your own right to restore this information, but you need to provide appropriate sources, and I strongly advise that you try to avoid creating a "synthesis" of information that you have gathered from disparate sources (WP:NOR). If you are only interested in continuously brute-forcing information that I've already proven to be unsourced (I mean, just look in the article's history), then you are just beating a dead horse at this point, and we are getting nowhere. | When you say ...but did not move it to the L-T relations article., I must point out that the China-Lithuania relations and Lithuania-Taiwan relations articles are two entirely separate articles. Just because certain information has been removed from China-Lithuania relations due to being too fixated on Lithuania-Taiwan relations, that does not mean that it subsequently needs to be moved to the Lithuania-Taiwan relations article, especially given that the information was unsourced from the beginning. Each independent article should be researched and sourced independently. | When you say The user stated that sources can be easily found, and my Google search brought a number of credible sources., I have already pointed out in the segment below that you always need to provide sources or else risk your edits being reverted. A user's unsourced edits will not be reverted 100% of the time, but whenever they do happen to be reverted, that automatically means that a content dispute has taken place, and a relevant talk section must be opened up to discuss the dispute (which I have indeed done right from the very beginning). As far as I'm aware, I've followed through with all of the proper procedures, so I haven't exactly done anything wrong in that sense. The idea that certain unsourced content is "easily able to be sourced through a Google search" is dubious, to say the least. If the information was so easily able to be sourced from the beginning... then why wasn't it? That just simply doesn't make sense to me. Your content is either sourced or unsourced. You can't say that it "could be sourced but I was just too lazy to source it". That's just unsourced information, plain and simple. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 09:44, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

Further shenanigans edit

A second IP user has reverted my edit (which itself was a reversion), claiming that my reversion of the previous edits was pushing my own POV. For the record, at this point in time, I haven't actually added any new material to this article. In any case, the entire point of opening up this talk segment was to discuss the reverted edits. Reverting my own reversion, refusing to use this talk segment, and then denouncing the validity of this talk segment amounts to edit warring (WP:WAR). It goes without saying that the onus lies on the original editor who added new information to provide appropriate citations for this new information... It's not the responsibility of a subsequent editor to add citations for the previous editor's lazy edits. The information was clearly only recently added, so the argument of "consensus through time unchallenged" does not apply here. If you are adding bold (WP:BOLD) information, you always have to cite sources or else risk your edits being reverted (WP:BRD). It's that simple. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 09:59, 27 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

In case it needs to be spelt out for the blind, deaf and dumb, here are some examples of edits made by the first IP user that can be considered opinions rather than facts, disregarding whether the actual facts that they added were true or not. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 02:55, 28 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

  1. ...on unsubstantiated national security grounds.[1]
  2. ...an accusation that was not publicly substantiated.[2]
  3. ...spoke of unsubstantiated negotiations...[3]

These three comments in particular, which were added by the IP user without any citations, are evidently mere opinions. Who is the judge on whether claims made by the Lithuanian government or a Lithuanian businessman are "unsubstantiated"? Certainly not a random IP user, that's for sure. If anything was unsubstantiated, it was the IP user's own edits that didn't include citations of any kind. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 02:55, 28 November 2021 (UTC)Reply

I quote: "blind, deaf and dumb". Are you sure you are familiar with Wikipedia policies of behaviour toward other users? AND you deny having a POV on this article? Adding or non-adding information to the article is not a necessary condition to judge you pushing a POV - your overall edit behavior points to you having one.139.47.34.245 (talk) 14:50, 4 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
On Wikipedia we question governments and businessmen, and anybody else. I assume you have a POV that is aligned with the "claims made by the Lithuanian government or a Lithuanian businessman"? Are you editing Wikipedia on behalf of the Lithuanian government?
The answer you seek is in Wikipedia policies: an unsubstantiated claim is one that cannot be backed by further evidence. Any Wikipedia user can call out unsubstantiated claims from Lithuanian, Chinese, Taiwanese or any other government.139.47.34.245 (talk) 14:50, 4 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
The following is a quotation from your Wikipedia user page (emphasis mine):
(Personal attack removed)
Do you still claim to have no POV on the current subject?139.47.34.245 (talk) 14:50, 4 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
I'm not going to respond to your tirade in its entirety since doing so would only serve to further inflame this already messy situation. But I do have one comment, and I find this rather funny... You have specifically said AND you deny having a POV on this article?. In fact, I've never actually denied having a POV on this article. Instead, I've denied the idea that I'm pushing any kind of POV. It is possible to hold a POV on an article without actively pushing it. Anyway, I think you do need to pay closer attention to the things I've actually said, since you've essentially been putting words in my mouth, quoting things that I haven't actually said. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 06:21, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
I am actually really rather concerned about your behaviour above, specifically the fact that you've quoted material from my own user page, which seems to be a form of an ad hominem attack. According to this policy article on Wikipedia (WP:PA), your behaviour seemingly constitutes a violation of said policy. I don't know exactly how to respond to such behaviour, nor do I really want to further inflame this situation, but I think it is important to bring attention to this policy violation of yours. My advice is to please refrain from such behaviour, or else I might be forced to bring this behaviour to the attention of relevant individuals. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 06:57, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
This policy article on Wikipedia — WP:NPOV — clearly backs up my dissertation above about opinions versus facts. In the section of that article titled "Explanation of the neutral point of view", it clearly says that entries on Wikipedia must:

Avoid stating opinions as facts.

Jargo Nautilus (talk) 10:28, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
I might add that it was actually certain "trigger words" including (but not limited to) ...unsubstantiated... that initially inspired me to immediately delete the unsourced edits without hesitation. I am aware that another possible route would have been to improve the edits rather than delete them outright. However, at the outset, I made the judgement call that the edits were biased and hence completely untrustworthy upon seeing words like that, which, from what I could tell, were an indication of an intention to subtly push a certain POV (WP:NPOV). Notably, this Wikipedia MoS article — WP:WORDS — lists out various words or categories of words that might be regarded as subtly biased, even though they might be difficult to spot (hence "subtle"). | Regarding my own POV, I've actually never denied holding a certain POV, nor have I ever tried to conceal my POV. There's a reason that you were able to find "incriminating" evidence of me holding a POV on my user page... I wrote it out in the open. So, your accusation that I hold a certain POV is rather amusing since this is already blatantly obvious. Again, it's not a matter of whether I hold a certain POV but instead a matter of whether I am actively pushing a certain POV, which I'm not, given that I haven't actually added any new material to this article. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 15:30, 5 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
(Jargo Nautilus), please refrain from removing contributions by other users exposing your partiality to the subject under discussion, in your own words - this practice is well established and also explains why Wikipedia does not distinguish between registered and unregistered users (registered users may be biased, unregistered users may be not). This comment has been reviewed by another user, highlighted in green and not questioned. 195.135.49.168 (talk) 13:23, 7 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
May I also point out that you have edited this page and the article in a way that requires manual editing to revert; are you doing this on purpose, i.e. vandalism? 195.135.49.168 (talk) 13:23, 7 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

I have removed two paragraphs for being unsourced. The policy is clear here: unsourced content that is challenged is to be removed. You need to provide reliable sources. intforce (talk) 16:14, 4 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

Editing by David Gerard edit

I would like to draw other Wikipedians' attention to the recent edit(s) of this article by [Gerard]. On his Wiki hopepage the user confesses he has drawn flak in the past regarding his politically-biased editing. In my opinion, his edit of this topic was not sensitive to the best interests of Wikipedia readers (Neutral POV is more important than referencing a particular media source) and was biased (eliminated Neutral POV on the subject being addressed). — Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.135.49.168 (talk) 19:28, 8 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

If you continue with your personal attacks, as you have already on this talk page, you will be blocked. David Gerard's edit was fully supported by policy. Global Times is a deprecated source (see WP:GLOBALTIMES). intforce (talk) 20:19, 8 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Pointing out what David Gerard is pointing on his own Talk page is not a personal attack and fully pertains to the context of this article. I would appreciate if you refrained from baseless threats - I would like to remind you that there is such thing as recourse on Wikipedia.
Would you dare to explain why you removed link to Lithuania-Taiwan relations from the top of this page while that page IS linking to the China-Lithuania relations page?
Wikipedia already has a poor reputation for dubious allegiance (and alleged deep US ties) of its editors (especially the teams clearly hiding behind some single usernames); the governance of the Wikimedia Foundation; and the wholesale departure of the Chinese Wikipedia community from the Wikimedia Foundation umbrella. I would suggest you toe a finer line in the future.195.135.49.168 (talk) 22:02, 8 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Speaking only as an administrator here, I can confidently state that positing a conspiracy theory to explain edits you don't like is not an argument that has, historically, convinced other editors - David Gerard (talk) 00:09, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Man, you should really take peoples' advice sometimes. I specifically warned you over on your talk page not to confront David Gerard since he's an administrator, for crying out loud. You can confront me all you like, I'm just a civilian. But man... Well, that's your choice to make. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 03:24, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
In general, admins are totally confrontable and often should be, that bit's fine! - David Gerard (talk) 09:58, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
Well, I meant to confront in terms of throwing out personal attacks and behaving disruptively. It's like yelling out abuse at a police officer. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 11:32, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

Further excessive POV pushing of anti-Taiwanese views (borderline-racism) edit

I initially gave IP user 195.135.49.168 the benefit of the doubt both in terms of their disruptive edits on this talk page (including personal harassment against me) and their misleading content-based edits over at the main article corresponding to this talk page.

However, I've noticed in the recent edits (to China–Lithuania relations) by IP user 195.135.49.168 — which have since been reverted by Intforce — that they've not only been conducting blatant violations of Wikipedia policies (such as by removing properly-sourced content) but also spreading hatred and defamation against the Taiwanese people as a country and as a race.

I have already previously launched an administrators' incidents noticeboard case against IP user 195.135.49.168 purely in order to resolve their personal harassment against me; I wrote in that case that I only sought the removal of the personal harassment and that I did not seek specific charges against IP user 195.135.49.168 in terms of blocking them and such.

Given the recent obscene and disgusting behaviour on the part of IP user 195.135.49.168 in terms of their racism against Taiwanese people and their defamation of Taiwan as a country, I now intend to amend the conditions of my aforementioned case on the noticeboard. I am now seeking direct charges against the IP user 195.135.49.168.

There is still a chance for the user to redeem themself, and that involves their (1) immediate cessation of all disruptive behaviour, (2) immediate withdrawal from editing any and all articles relating to China or Taiwan or Lithuania, and (3) their immediate apology for their disruptive behaviour.

Note that none of these policies is enforceable by law... they are simply the conditions upon which I will expand my initial accusations against IP user 195.135.49.168 over at the noticeboard. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 07:55, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply

It should be noted that the original ANI case is technically against IP user 139.47.34.245, not against IP user 195.135.49.168. However, IP user 195.135.49.168 has been linked into the discussion anyway because they restored the personal attack that was originally conducted by IP user 139.47.34.245. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 11:26, 9 December 2021 (UTC)+Reply

Your previous Wikipedia ban and your Talk page populated almost entirely by complains over your disruptive editing speaks for itself. If you speak of someone's racism you should provide evidence, although I fail to see how that is related to the subject of this article where Taiwan is barely mentioned.139.47.34.245 (talk) 12:46, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply
It's extremely believable that you, IP user 139.47.34.245, and that other fellow, IP user 195.135.49.168, are two completely different people.| (Pinging David Gerard.) | As for evidence, the reason for not providing evidence right now is that I don't want to clog up this article's talk page with unnecessary info that is better suited for ANI or user talk pages. And there certainly is sufficient evidence, in my view. Jargo Nautilus (talk) 12:56, 9 December 2021 (UTC)Reply