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Good articleNational Debt Clock has been listed as one of the Social sciences and society good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
October 29, 2009Good article nomineeListed
Did You Know
A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on October 11, 2008.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that the National Debt Clock in Manhattan ran out of digits on 30 September 2008, when the United States public debt passed the $10 trillion mark?

Adding the next digit

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I don't seem to find any source mentioning just why the Dursts didn't upgrade the clock when it became apparent that another digit would be needed soon (one source from May 2006 quotes as early a date as Christmas 2007[1]). It looks to me as if they deliberately decided to actually let the clock physically run out of digits, maybe for effect, but there's nothing whatsoever on their motivation to not upgrade the clock earlier. If anyone can find a reliable source that covers that, by all means please add it. I for one think it would give the article a much deeper scope. Everyme 17:32, 6 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Update: This source (already in the article) quotes Douglas Durst like this: "Come Double T Day, he promised, a new clock will be ready, perhaps emphasizing each family's share of the debt, now $89,518." So they did apparently change that plan later on, but there's still not a source for that. Everyme 22:31, 6 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Another item I'm having a hard time backing up with an RS is the location move when the clock was being restarted in July 2002. Everyme 17:51, 6 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

checkY Done. Everyme 07:42, 9 October 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Wrong coordinates

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The coordinates at the top of the page are in Germany. This needs to be changed

Hillshum|Talk 18:42, 3 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Done. I think it's still about five meters east of the correct location, but better than the wrong side of the ocean. Jim.henderson (talk) 03:28, 27 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:National Debt Clock/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Edge3 (talk) 23:57, 24 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

  • Looking for more material on similar projects to incorporate. I originally left the sentence about the online resources unreferenced as I deemed it uncontroversial / self-evident. A secondary source for that assertion may be hard to come by, but I'll see what I can do. For the time being I've added an explanatory footnote [2]. --78.34.110.166 (talk) 22:23, 26 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • Ok, thanks. Just a small update here: I've found several suitable sources for more on similar debt clocks and other projects inspired by the NDC. I'll drop a note once I've expanded the section with the help of those sources. --87.79.182.211 (talk) 13:36, 27 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • Done [3]. I've decided to focus on the AMD campaign as the most intriguing example because the comparison isn't reduced to "running total on a billboard of some kind". AMD imitated the NDC project to the extent that their ad campaign was thematically centered around "raising awareness on a critical issue". (AMD even put up one of their billboards near Times Square, which is also noted in the BusinessWeek article, but I left that detail out in order to avoid losing focus.) --87.79.182.211 (talk) 14:35, 27 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • "the clock was unplugged and covered with a red, white and blue curtain in September 2000, with the national debt standing at roughly 5.7 trillion dollars" - The details here aren't supported by the source. --Edge3 (talk) 23:03, 28 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • "the building has since made way for One Bryant Park. An updated model, which could run backwards, was installed one block away on a Durst building at 1133 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue)." - I can't find this info in the sources either. If I just missed the info when I skimmed the sources, let me know. --Edge3 (talk) 01:33, 29 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
    • A note on my sourcing concerns above: the Good article criteria require reliable sources only for "direct quotations, statistics, published opinion, counter-intuitive or controversial statements that are challenged or likely to be challenged, and contentious material relating to living persons". Since the statements listed above don't fall under any of these categories, I'm not requiring that you add new sources. However, I do ask that you remove sources that don't support the information provided. --Edge3 (talk) 01:41, 29 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]
  • "updated model, which could run backwards" -- That's in the China Daily article: "'It wasn't designed to run backwards,' Douglas Durst explained. [...] In 2004, the old clock was torn down and replaced with a newer model which had optimistically been modified to run backwards should such a happy necessity arise."
    "on a Durst building at 1133 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue)" -- That's in New York Times 2006: "It is perched these days on the side of a Durst building at 1133 Avenue of the Americas, near 44th Street."
    (The above are the same sources referenced in the article.)
    The bit about the building having been replaced by One Bryant Park is easily verifiable, although I haven't so far found it written down like that in an article. One Bryant Park is located on Sixth Avenue between 42nd and 43rd Street, opposite Bryant Park; that's the exact spot where the first clock was mounted on a different building, before it was replaced. However, it's also mere trivia and I wouldn't mind removing it. --78.34.205.234 (talk) 20:14, 29 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

I'm now passing the article. The sourcing issues, in my opinion, are very minor and don't violate the good article criteria. Keep up the good work!--Edge3 (talk) 21:39, 29 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

AMD clock

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The section describing the AMD promotion that includes the sentence "AMD used the increasing public awareness of green computing and related environmental issues to thematically center their comparative advertising campaign around "raising awareness on a critical issue," as AMD Senior Vice President Marty Sayer put it" is, in my opinion, neither relevant nor proportionate and makes a poor conclusion to the article. I would like to remove it. Having a source does not protect an addition from being WP:IRRELEVANT and of WP:UNDUE weight. Alistair Stevenson (talk) 22:58, 16 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Well, I wholeheartedly disagree; I refer you to my reasoning in the GA review discussion above. Along with GA reviewer Edge3 that makes two of us and one of you.
Also, while we're dropping P&G shortcuts, let me remind you of WP:BRD: You made a bold edit, I reverted, then we're supposed to discuss. You simply dropped this comment and didn't even wait two hours for a reply until you repeated your contested removal. Bad style, to say the least. I'm giving this another chance, by re-instated the consensus version and offering you another chance to enter actual, consensus-based discussion. If you simply want to get your way, please do it at an article that I didn't bring to GA standard. Thank you. --78.35.213.209 (talk) 21:21, 27 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]
I can only see two edits in your list of contributions, both of them from today. Between the start of this discussion and your response is a gap of 11 days, I'm sure you'll agree it is reasonable to conclude a discussion is over before such a span of time has elapsed. You are seriously misunderstanding GA status if you imagine it means that once it is agreed an article can no longer be changed. This very cycle of edits and reversions would most likely remove GA status in the event of a review. In any case, since my edit the article has been edited again by another user and so a new consensus has been established. You have not responded to my argument for cutting the section but in deference to your view, I offer a compromise edit that retains the AMD campaign as an example, but reduces detail that - while relevant to that particular campaign - is not relevant to an understanding of the National Debt Clock. Alistair Stevenson (talk) 22:27, 27 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]
"I can only see two edits in your list of contributions, both of them from today." -- Ever heard of dynamic IP addresses? If you whois-check all of the IP addresses on this talk page and 99.99% of those in the article history, they will turn out to be in the range of the same ISP.
"Between the start of this discussion and your response is a gap of 11 days, I'm sure you'll agree it is reasonable to conclude a discussion is over before such a span of time has elapsed." -- You left not two hours between your initial comment here and your revert. That is not a "reasonable" span of time.
"You are seriously misunderstanding GA status if you imagine it means that once it is agreed an article can no longer be changed." -- The GA version is a consensus version to which many people contributed (but first and foremost myself), contested --in such radical form-- by exactly one person: yourself. There have of course (as you no doubt must have noticed from a cursory glance at the article history) been many modifications since the GA discussion. But none as nonsensical and destructive as yours.
"In any case, since my edit the article has been edited again by another user and so a new consensus has been established."' -- Needless to say (or so I thought), we are talking specifically about the consensus to include or not include the AMD example. But ok, let me refute your logic: You say that since one guy edited the article since your removal, that means the version without the AMD example is now the consensus version. Bollocks. Consider that this article gets roughly 5,000 views per month, and since I wrote that paragraf, nobody saw anything wrong with it, let alone to the extent of seeing fit to remove it wholesale.
"You have not responded to my argument for cutting the section" -- Where did you discuss that proposal? But ok, that part: "AMD used the increasing public awareness of green computing and related environmental issues to thematically center their comparative advertising campaign around "raising awareness on a critical issue" illustrates that "the comparison in this case is based not merely on the fact that the campaign billboards show a running total of a certain sum of money". It is an important distinction since there have been a great many billboard projects with running totals of some kind which may to some extent or the other have been inspired by the National Debt Clock.
"I offer a compromise edit that retains the AMD campaign as an example, but reduces detail that - while relevant to that particular campaign - is not relevant to an understanding of the National Debt Clock."' -- You could have eased obvious tensions by not performing the edit on the article but proposing it here first. As noted above, the level of detail is relevant because there have been many billboards imitating the NDC, and the part you removed qualifies precisely why we mention the AMD campaign instead of others. That is also the reasoning you could have found, had you looked, in the GA discussion above. Let me quote it here for your convenience: "I've decided to focus on the AMD campaign as the most intriguing example because the comparison isn't reduced to "running total on a billboard of some kind". AMD imitated the NDC project to the extent that their ad campaign was thematically centered around "raising awareness on a critical issue". (AMD even put up one of their billboards near Times Square, which is also noted in the BusinessWeek article, but I left that detail out in order to avoid losing focus.)"
Having said all that, I do not take kindly to someone calling any part of my writing "irrelevant spam". And I do not agree with any part of your edit. As a courtesy, would you mind reverting yourself until we have reached a consensus here, be it between us or with the help of a third opinion or any other step of DR? Thank you. --87.78.170.245 (talk) 01:16, 28 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Your favoured edit suggests that the AMD advertisement bears remarkable similarities with the National Debt Clock because it is "raising awareness on a critical issue", "the increasing public awareness of green computing and related environmental issues". Thus, the AMD billboard is supposedly similar to the National Debt Clock because it records an objective figure to highlight an issue of general concern. In portraying AMD's marketing campaign as having the intention of raising environmental awareness you engage in WP:OR, WP:SYNTHESIS and abandon WP:NPOV; errors made plain by the source you quote which does not - as you do - accept and repeat AMD's assertions at face value but characterises them as part of the company's "marketing gimmicks" and "stunts". Rather than hedging AMD's claims by attributing them to the organisation (as the source does) your original edit asserted as a fact that the numbers promoted by AMD "[track the] amount of money spent on electricity bills by companies running Intel-based servers". This assertion has serious implications since in the very source you use Intel directly refutes AMD's claims, but the article as originally written merely allowed them as facts. This misrepresentation of your source is why I would never restore the original edit: it's fundamentally dishonest.
You see AMD's billboard as comparable with the non-partisan ideology of Douglas Durst; I, however, agree with the characterisation of your source and see it as a promotional trick, a short-lived satirical appropriation of the Clock's style. Thankfully, there is no need for the article to express an opinion on this point, any more than there is a need to add balance to AMD's claims by quoting Intel's counter-argument, because the substance of an advertising campaign that - while originally scheduled to run for 7 months - may have existed for less than a few weeks is not relevant to a reader's understanding of the article's subject. The AMD billboard appeared to be calculating an uncontested total in the same way as the National Debt Clock, but, as your source records, this appearance of neutrality was spurious and for marketing purposes only, so it deserves no more mention than any other steadily accumulating totaliser. The comparison you're trying to make does not stand up, and because it doesn't, there's no point trying to make it.
For the benefit of any third opinion, my case is that by drawing a false parallel between a relatively fleeting advertisement intended only to boost sales and the non-partisan, non-commercial aims of the National Debt Clock, the original edit misrepresents the source on which it depends. In promoting a viewpoint that reflects one particular commercial interest at the cost of another it misleads readers. Alistair Stevenson (talk) 07:29, 28 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"In portraying AMD's marketing campaign as having the intention of raising environmental awareness you engage in [...]" -- While it is correct that I apparently misread the source and thought that the discussed power-consumption issue is one of green computing, you should assume good faith and not personally attack me by insinuating that I intentionally misrepresented the source. By assuming bad faith with me and attacking me in this way, you are not helping this discussion.
"Intel directly refutes AMD's claims, but the article as originally written merely allowed them as facts." -- Erm, what. I am putting any quotes in quotation marks. Also, please do not pretend that your interest was in accuracy or in improving the paragraf at all. You simply wanted to remove it completely as "spam".
"accept and repeat AMD's assertions at face value" -- Again, (i) please do not assume that I did it intentionally, and (ii) what assertions are you talking about? A simple, openly sourced quote is not "presenting an opinion as fact" by any stretch.
"your original edit asserted as a fact that the numbers promoted by AMD "[track the] amount of money spent on electricity bills by companies running Intel-based servers"." -- No, it did not. You should maybe work on your text comprehension skills. The remark was put in quotation marks, with a reference attached and thereby most obviously not trying to pass off the source text as fact. Also, your concerns about the wording come across as slightly disingenious, considering that you didn't initially try to improve the wording but simply tried to remove the paragraf completely.
"You see AMD's billboard as comparable with the non-partisan ideology of Douglas Durst; I, however, agree with the characterisation of your source and see it as a promotional trick, a short-lived satirical appropriation of the Clock's style." -- Your attempt to ascribe personal views to me and intentions to my editing is sadly misguided but apparently representative of your style of "argumentation". I do of course not see any comparability between the two as being independent of AMD's marketing intentions. You are accusing me of not understanding or of deliberately ignoring/white-washing that AMD's advertising campaign is in fact an avertising campaign and nothing else. Why don't you just go ahead and accuse me of promoting AMD? That would at least be the intellectually honest move on your part. Seriously, dude: "I, however, agree with the characterisation of your source and see it as a promotional trick, a short-lived satirical appropriation of the Clock's style" -- Clearly implying that I do not see the AMD ad campaign as a promo trick etc is assuming so much bad faith and/or incompetence on my part that this is really a total conversation ender. You are saying that I am stupid and/or in AMD's pocket. And while clearly implying that, you are just using it as a dirty trick in your "argumentation", trying to bait me into a (well-deserved) personal attack of some kind or something. Sheesh.
"Thankfully, there is no need for the article to express an opinion on this point" -- The article never did "express an opinion", and even if it did, please stop pretending that your original intention was to improve the paragraf. It wasn't.
"this appearance of neutrality was spurious and for marketing purposes only, so it deserves no more mention than any other steadily accumulating totaliser" -- You are most welcome to replace the example with another, better fitting one. But, I have to note this yet again since you fail to do so, remember that your initial edit was not to improve the paragraf in any way but to just remove it wholesale.
In closing, while --again-- you are correct about the source, you have only now examined it and based your concerns around it. Your initial rationale was more along the lines of removing "spam", your concerns were not based on the source at all, and your intention was not to improve on what is there but to merely destroy it as "spam". Having re-assessed the sourced and witnessed your style of "argumentation", it is clear to me that you just want to get your way no matter what. I hereby give up. I give up the attempt to improve the destructive aspects of your edits, and I give up on my maintenance of this article which I held so dear until you came along. Shame. Be proud of yourself. --78.35.226.103 (talk) 18:13, 28 March 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Display type: 7-segment not dot matrix?

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The photograph of the Debt Clock looks like a 7-segment display, rather than a 5 x 7 dot matrix display. It is described as a dot matrix display in at least two places in the article, at the time that I write this comment. (Whereas dot matrix displays create imagery or alphanumerics with "pixels" that are usually arranged in a rectangular grid, a 7-segment display has luminous or light-modulating elements in a pattern that looks like an "8". LED clocks often use 7-segment displays.) I don't have any direct knowledge of this Clock - if I'm right, perhaps someone could update the article. Gregg Favalora (talk) 11:14, 2 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]

The first clock was definitely a 5x7 dot matrix display, as can clearly be seen in the image Nationaldebtclock.jpg. The numerals in the new clock are designed to resemble the customary 7-segment look, but the display is in fact also a dot matrix, which can be seen in US_Debt_Clock_15-09-2009.JPG (if you enlarge the image to full size, you can see that the "segments" are made up of dots). --87.78.20.199 (talk) 21:18, 9 August 2011 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, the first clock is not a 5 x 7 dot matrix display, as can clearly be seen in the image Nationaldebtclock.jpg. If you enlarge the image to full size, there are only 27, not the required 35 - note the 'black spaces' e.g. within the right-most numeral 7.
The new clock which can be seen in US_Debt_Clock_15-09-2009.JPG needs closer attention paid (and not just to the debt!) e.g. the very first numeral 1 - again note black space (typical of segment display).
The observation that each "segment" is made up of many dots (individual LEDs) does not constitute a dot matrix display. 121.200.234.61 (talk) 03:09, 26 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

New, updated image

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Despite having been editing around Wikipedia for a quite a few years (slacked off in more recent times, though), I've never had the opportunity to upload an image of any kind to the Commons, much less have it included in any article. That being said (please don't turn this into another debate similar to those already on here), I took a new photo of the clock on Tuesday, June 19 and the debt is substantially larger than in the 2009 photo currently in use (a good four trillion greater). I can probably figure it out, but failing that, could someone provide clear instructions? Also, the bit about an overhaul of the clock to include more digits is rather outdated; it's very clear that the clock now permits a debt up to the unfathomable $100 Trillion (one Dollar shy, of course), and a family share of up to $999,999. I'll happily edit that part, myself, and the photo, if it's fine with you guys, sans wikilawyering, I'd like to also contribute to replace the existing photo. Thanks. KirkCliff2 (talk) 16:13, 21 June 2012 (UTC)[reply]

The image does not need to reflect a recent value. The current image is highly evocative and unless your image approaches its overall quality, I'm decidedly leaning toward keeping the current image.
The bit about a planned upgrade is indeed outdated. The problem is finding sources for the abandonment of those plans. You're welcome to look for such sources; when I looked not too long ago, I couldn't find any and reluctantly decided to leave it as is until someone comes up with a source. --87.79.99.92 (talk) 12:16, 2 July 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Requested move

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The following discussion is an archived discussion of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on the talk page. Editors desiring to contest the closing decision should consider a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.

The result of the move request was: Move. There is consensus that adding "United States" is unnecessary; as there are no other currently existing articles on national debt clocks, it is not needed for disambiguation. Should another article be created, we can cross that bridge then. Cúchullain t/c 00:42, 2 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]



United States National Debt ClockNational Debt Clock – Requesting as potentially controversial although I believe that the move back to the original article name is really completely uncontroversial. However, the user who moved the article appears to have a different opinion. I've contacted the user, but s/he appears to not be a regular contributor and hasn't been active at all in almost two weeks. As I noted in my message to User:Gfcvoice, article titles are not supposed to be overly detailed, or to be descriptive where it isn't necessary to disambiguate or define the topic. There is absolutely no need for "United States" in the title since the clock is always and only ever called "National Debt Clock", and that is its actual name and it is fully sufficient to disambiguate and define the topic. I can see nothing in the naming criteria that would support the addition of "United States" in the article title. --85.197.13.202 (talk) 01:07, 14 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]

  • Just as a note, "National Debt Clock" is not a generically composed descriptive name (as in: "a national debt clock"), it's the proprietary name given to it by the owner, printed on its face (both the first clock and the second clock), and widely used in secondary sources. Afaik there isn't any other debt clock by that same proprietary name. So the current title mixes a generic descriptor ("United States") with the proprietary name. Even if there was another clock by that same name, we'd add the descriptor according to our disambiguation guideline, e.g. "National Debt Clock (United States)". Also, "United States National Debt Clock" creates the impression that it's a public project of the US government, which it isn't. --89.0.227.154 (talk) 00:27, 15 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • Oppose The precision is necessary. Just in case it needs repeating, the United States is not the only country on Earth. While I understand that in the US the clock is called the "National Debt Clock", it ignores national debt clocks of other countries. Just as an article about the Bund der Steuerzahler debt clock should not be called "National Debt Clock", the article about the United States National Debt Clock should not be called "National Debt Clock". Gfcvoice (talk) 12:17, 16 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • The precision is necessary -- No, it is not. What other entity might be confused with the National Debt Clock? Is there any other entity that has the same name, or is commonly referred to as "National Debt Clock" (or even just generically as "national debt clock")? If there isn't, then "National Debt Clock" is evidently fully sufficient to disambiguate the topic from any other. To the best of my knowledge, there isn't even any other article about another debt clock of any kind on Wikipedia.
    While I understand that in the US the clock is called the "National Debt Clock" -- Nope. It isn't called that only in the US. It is called that everywhere on earth, because it's the device's proprietary name, printed in large letters on its face.
    it ignores national debt clocks of other countries -- No, it doesn't. You appear to have problems understanding Wikipedia guidelines on disambiguation. We use disambiguation only when and where a certain topic might be confused with another topic. This is simply not the case here. There is no other entity called "National Debt Clock". Again: It's the proprietary name, not a generic title. It's not "national debt clock", but the one and only thing on earth called "National Debt Clock". The name "National Debt Clock" invariably refers to the entity discussed in this article, and nothing else anywhere on earth.
    the article about the United States National Debt Clock should not be called "National Debt Clock" -- Very true. But this article isn't about a (purely fictitious!) entity called "United States National Debt Clock", it's about the National Debt Clock, and therefore this article's correct title is "National Debt Clock". --85.197.25.92 (talk) 22:33, 16 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • This has evidently nothing whatsoever to do with "US centrism", but your allegation in that regard is very revealing of your personal bias. I am a principal author of this article, and I'm German btw. A disambiguator is not necessary and thus should be avoided. There is no other entity with the proprietary name or commonly referred to as "National Debt Clock". The name is unique and therefore entirely sufficient to disambiguate the topic from any other. If and when there is another entity called "National Debt Clock", which would make further disambiguation necessary, we can revisit the idea (although it stands to reason that even if there were another entity called "National Debt Clock", this article would still handily qualify as the primary topic and thus not have a disambiguator in its title). Until then, a disambiguator is absolutely unnecessary, unless you can point to any other entity which might even potentially be confused with the National Debt Clock and which might even remotely rival its notability. And just once more, because this appears to be the origin of part of your confusion: "National Debt Clock" is the proprietary name, not a generic title. It's not "a national debt clock", it's the (one and only) National Debt Clock. --85.197.25.92 (talk) 22:33, 16 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • As stated before, there is a national debt clock in Berlin, Germany. There is also one in Warsaw, Poland. That's just two that I am aware of - there could be more. Regardless of what they're called, this creates the need to differentiate between the National Debt Clock of the US and the clocks of other countries.
    While the clock may be called the National Debt Clock, I doubt you can prove that it is always referred to as such outside the US. Have you considered the possibility that in some countries, particularly those with their own national debt clocks, that "National Debt Clock" and/or "national debt clock" refers to a clock in Warsaw or Berlin?
    Your assertion "You appear to have problems understanding Wikipedia guidelines on disambiguation" is both untrue and unhelpful.
    Your assertion "your allegation in that regard is very revealing of your personal bias" is untrue - but in any case, what does an accusation of personal bias have to do with the discussion?
    Can I respectfully suggest that you are a bit more concise in your comments? Gfcvoice (talk) 05:53, 17 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • As stated before, there is a national debt clock in Berlin, Germany. -- Yes, exactly: "a national debt clock". However, there is only one National Debt Clock. Please try to understand the categorical difference between a proprietary name ("The National Debt Clock") and a generic description ("a national debt clock").
    Also, sorry for my assertion that you have problems understanding our disambiguation guideline. All I can say in my defense is that it was based on your inability to understand the first thing about how disambiguation works. Sorry again. --85.197.52.194 (talk) 06:53, 17 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
How do you know (and how can you prove) that there is only "National Debt Clock"? There may be a National Debt Clock in a country outside the US of which you are unaware. The fact there are multiple national debt clocks demonstrates the need to specify that the subject of this article is a clock in the US. Your implication that I don't understand "the categorical difference between a proprietary name ("The National Debt Clock") and a generic description (a national debt clock)" is incorrect. Your assertion that I have an "inability to understand the first thing about how disambiguation works" is incorrect. If you are going to apologize for an incorrect assertion, as you did previously, could I suggest that you do so in an unqualified manner, rather than qualifying it with another incorrect assertion? Gfcvoice (talk) 19:42, 17 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
How do you know (and how can you prove) that there is only "National Debt Clock"? -- The burden of proof rests firmly with you. Since you still ignore the most basic aspects of article titling and disambiguation, I'll break it down for you: For this article to merit a disambiguator, several conditions would have to be met: (1) There would have to be another National Debt Clock (which you would have to prove, and mind the capital letters National Debt Clock, not just a debt clock in another country which isn't actually called "National Debt Clock"), (2) that other National Debt Clock would have to be notable (which you would have to establish with reliable sources) and (3) it would have to have an article about it -- and (4) even if all of that were the case (where in actuality, none of it is the case), that other National Debt Clock would have to be somewhere near as notable as this one, because otherwise this one would qualify as the primary topic and still not have a disambiguator in its title.
Could you please understand this now? It's getting tiresome. Your proposition fails at the very first condition: You would have to prove that there even is another National Debt Clock (proprietary name!) out there. We don't work on assumptions of what "might" be the case. Present reliable sources proving that there is in fact another entity with the proprietary name "National Debt Clock" -- or alternatively please back slowly away from the horse carcass.
Could I understand this now? Sure, I already did before your previous post. You're mistaking my disagreement for your incorrect notion of misunderstanding.Gfcvoice (talk) 01:08, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
There is no leeway for agreeing or disagreeing. You can "disagree" that you need to present sources to make your case, but then you will be simply ignored. --85.197.15.227 (talk) 04:00, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Your implication that I don't understand "the categorical difference between a proprietary name ("The National Debt Clock") and a generic description (a national debt clock)" is incorrect. -- It would really help your case if you didn't prove yourself wrong in the sentence immediately preceding that one: The fact there are multiple national debt clocks demonstrates the need to specify that the subject of this article is a clock in the US. -- Yet again: "a national debt clock" / "The National Debt Clock". You have just proven yet again that you don't understand or accept the fact that there is a categorical difference. The fact that I'm forced to waste my time trying to educate you just to prevent you from doing harm is just unnerving. Just go away. You have zero arguments on your side. Zero, zilch, nada. --85.197.40.70 (talk) 21:06, 17 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
Again, my disagreement does not constitute misunderstanding. Your assertion that I have "zero arguments" is untrue: it's just that you disagree with the ones I have put forward. Gfcvoice (talk) 01:10, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
You disagree with how Wikipedia works. Wikipedia will treat you accordingly. --85.197.15.227 (talk) 04:00, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
  • First things first. Create an article, with reliable sources of course, about the general concept of "national debt clocks" (or, may I suggest, simply "debt clocks"), but that would --as I already explained-- still not merit a disambiguator for this article. That article would be located at Debt clock (or moved there eventually...), and both articles would have a hatnote notifying the reader of the other article. There's just no way, no how that this article merits a disambiguator: obviously not under the current circumstances, and not even if and when you or someone else writes an article about the general concept of debt clocks. --85.197.15.227 (talk) 04:00, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
+1 --BDD (talk) 05:06, 20 November 2013 (UTC)[reply]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of a requested move. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made in a new section on this talk page or in a move review. No further edits should be made to this section.

"Sixth Avenue" vs "Sixth Avenue – Avenue of the Americas"

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Is it really necessary to include "Avenue of the Americas" as the location where the clock is? "Sixth Avenue" will suffice, and is a more common name used by New Yorkers. Seldom do people use "Avenue of the Americas". Besides, the AotA name, appended to the Sixth Avenue name, is too long. Epicgenius (talk) 14:33, 23 December 2013 (UTC)[reply]

Are we on the third clock?

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The article says that the second clock ran out of digits in 2008 when the national debt exceeded $10 trillion, but the image at the top of the article shows a national debt clock displaying a national debt of over $11 trillion. The article currently states that an overhaul or replacement of the second clock is planned to add an additional digit. Jecowa (talk) 17:59, 1 March 2014 (UTC)[reply]

Should we subject this article to peer review? Lbertolotti (talk) 15:18, 12 August 2015 (UTC)[reply]


Clock Shut Down

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There is no source to support this and verifiable sources that show that the debt was never going down. Perhaps the clock was down for maintenance or whathaveyou, but the claim is not only unsupported by factually incorrect, easily verified - https://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/histdebt/histdebt_histo5.htm . Seola (talk) 23:52, 16 December 2016 (UTC)[reply]

A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion

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The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for speedy deletion:

You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —Community Tech bot (talk) 10:37, 9 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]