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The requirement for self identification was not mentioned in the closing. If it were, I would have requested a review for two reasons: Onluy a minority support such a criteria and it's not (WP:BLP) policy based anyway. Out of eight commenters, Collect explicitly supports self-identification and Tryptofish less-explicitly supports self-identification. Please correct me if I've miscounted.- MrX20:53, 1 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]
I have an open mind about the issue, and I'm also receptive to an intermediate wording. It seemed to me that you were the only editor in the discussion who advocated applying the category to persons who have said that they are not part of the movement, whereas there was wide sentiment that the category should not be applied too widely. I also think that both WP:BLP and the discretionary sanctions from ArbCom mean that we have to be very careful about applying the category when a source says that someone is part of the movement but other sources show the person denying such a relationship. As I said in the discussion, I also take your point about politicians who disingenuously deny association with the movement. I guess it hinges on the quality of sourcing that associates the person with the movement, and I think we need cautious language for this category, so that high quality sources, and not editors here, are what determine whether someone was disingenuous. --Tryptofish (talk) 21:03, 1 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]
You wrote: "It seemed to me that you were the only editor in the discussion who advocated applying the category to persons who have said that they are not part of the movement,"
I most definitely do not advocate applying the category to persons "who have said that they are not part of the movement". In other words, if someone has denied a TPM affiliation, they should not be categorized as such. On the other hand, if a subject has said nothing about it, but a preponderance of reliable sources have, then the subject is fair game for being included in the category.
I think we actually agree that we should rely on sources, unless a BLP subject publicly denies a TPM affiliation. I also think that would be in accord with the outcome of the Arbcom case. I think we just need to make sure that the wording on the cat page reflects those principles.- MrX22:56, 1 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, and I stand corrected about what you said. Yes, I think that we have plenty to work with here. Let me suggest changing "Therefore, this category should only be applied to pages about persons who have been identified in reliable sources as playing an active role in the movement." to "Therefore, this category should only be applied to pages about persons who have been identified by the preponderance of reliable sources as playing an active role on behalf of the movement." That change does two things. First, it requires a preponderance of sources, so editors should not base the categorization on a single source that is contradicted by other sources. Second, it uses more specific wording than "active role in the movement", because there can be too much subjectivity about the kinds of persons who might also have distanced themselves from the movement. --Tryptofish (talk) 23:51, 1 September 2014 (UTC)[reply]