Talk:Nick Cohen/Archive 2

Latest comment: 15 years ago by 86.143.158.149 in topic Over editing

Economic views

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Cohen rarely writes on economic issues, but there is some evidence that his views there have shifted right-wards. In January 2007 in the Evening Standard he argued that couples earning 100,000 GBP a year were finding it difficult to survive financially in London due to the pressures of school fees, house prices and council tax, and unless the governing Labour Party addressed their concerns it would lose the next general election.

I think there were several problems with this paragraph. First, he has actually written fairly extensively on economic issues, see for example Pretty Straight Guys chapters 8-11. Secondly, I am unconvinced that concern that Labour will lose ground in London if it fails to address the concerns of middle class voters is in itself evidence of a shift to the right. Third, the argument is particularly weak in the context of the article cited, which also includes statements like "the council tax is a regressive tax that caps the bills of the wealthiest as it falls with all its weight on the less fortunate". As it's a short article which is not particularly notable for any other reason than its alleged evidence of a rightwards shift, I don't think a reference to it is warranted, so I've removed the paragraph. Aretnap 22:09, 15 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Also the references given appear to be polemics from minor leftwing websites rather than books or from other leading figures. A lot of this article seems to be about trashing Cohen from a "hard-left" perspective, a tactic Cohen himself often writes about and despises. He has a lot of enemies on the self-perceived "left" and Wikipedia oughtn't be a slamsheet for them. 86.141.142.150 (talk) 09:42, 8 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Reply

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Apologies if I've not quite understood how to format this.

I've restored the paragraph is a modified form, but I have no intention of getting in a wikipedia war over this so delete if you wish. However, to reply to your points.

1. If he has written extensively about economic matters, and I agree he has, then it is absurd for the article not to mention them. So I suggest contributors work on improving this paragraph rather than deleting it. I have made a small start in that direction and will consult PSG to add some more.

2. We're not talking about 'middle class voters' here, but those on £100,000 or more a year. This puts them in the top 3% of London households. The idea that they are short of money is palpably absurd, and that Cohen believes they are, in part because they can't afford to send their children to public schools, is surely indicative of a right-wing bias? If not, it is certainly indicative of a shift in his views. I will check, but I can't believe he made similar comments in PSG.

3. Yes you are right he talks about council tax being regressive, but this is in itself not consistent with the concern on those being paid £100,000 a year. There is no way in which you could have a system of local taxation in which those on £100,000 a year would be paying less than under the current council tax system. The Lib Dems local income tax would raise their bills by three or four times.

80.177.168.152 11:52, 16 March 2007 (UTC) MatthewReply

if the price was right

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I have added the following paragraph to the end of the Domestic Politics section: 'In an article on the RCP's turn to the right, written in 2002, Cohen noted that "[f]ormer lefties can make a good living in the media by attacking their ex-comrades - I'd do it myself if the price was right." Critics of his recent change of heart believe that Cohen has found the right price.' I first came across the quote on the comments section of a blog -- can't remember which. I wasn't sure whether it was necessary to balance the last sentence and thought it best to leave it for someone else to rework. Or leave. I don't think it contentious -- but i must be clear on my own position, I do believe that Cohen's turn is partly motivated by the financial rewards of ex-leftism. I added the paragraph because I felt it relevant -- and because I was suprised the quote was not already in the article. -- james

This isn't factual or informative in any way and it's quite possibly libellous. It's just clumsy rhetoric that certainly isn't as clever as its author fancies. It doesn't even make any sense to the disinterested cynic. If Cohen really wanted to make money he would have found it easier, for example, to get a polemic against the Iraq war published than a rant about the decline of the Left.

[I should point out that, although I helped to write the Euston Manifesto, I am generally to the Right of Cohen and disagree strongly with him about many things, but I have no doubt that his views are genuinely held and unmotivated by financial concerns. Either way, it's not the business of an encyclopedia to speculate colourfully about people's private motivations.]

Counsell 19:17, 13 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

My paragraph was not libellous. I did not claim that Cohen's change of heart is merely financial. However, his book on the left is a bit shoddy and would be more appealing to the international market than the domestic one (I'm thinking of the USA here, Ann Coulter was a bestseller, after all). Who'd want to read another "iraq was a fuck-up" rant anyway? It's stating the obvious. Cohen has produced a more interesting commodity. He's a "leftist" who still supports the Iraq war! This is interesting!

I'll wait for your reply before I put the paragraph back. I hope you'll let me, because it really isn't libellous. Perhaps you could add something to the effect that Cohen's supporters insist he isn't interested in the money. -- james


The fundamental problem is that the paragraph in question was not factual or informative, merely sloganeering based on unsupported inference about Cohen's motives. Anyone coming to Wikipedia to learn more about Nick Cohen would gain nothing from the inclusion of this text. If there was independent evidence that Cohen had changed his views in exchange for money then that would be a matter of great interest, but there isn't. Those who want to read slurs against Cohen from his political opponents can browse the Web elsewhere for them. There's plenty to choose from.

It's the exact equivalent of inserting something like the following into an article about George W. Bush: "On the 10th October 2003 Bush said in a speech "We must fight for truth"; many of his opponents believe that he has lied again and again". It might make you feel righteous, but it's unsubstantiated opinion and rhetoric, completely out of place in a reference work. Assigning that opinion to unnamed others merely promotes it to unsubstantiated hearsay. Counsell 09:52, 17 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Gee, you're touchy about this, aren't you? I thought I was the one with nothing better to do -- you replied on the same fucking day! I take it you don't want the quote included in the article? Would I be permitted to include it at all? Does it not tell the reader something about Cohen's 360 turn? I think it does. The example you gave about Bush -- what's the problem? I think that'd be fine. If I claim something, then act in the opposite way, should this not be highlighted? Is it not relevant that I say one thing yet do another? Where's the hearsay -- he did write that article, didn't he? Am I mistaken? No?

The truth is, you don't want the quote by Cohen in the article because it *does* say something about him -- and his critics, perhaps. Would the reader not conclude the opposite? That Cohen's critics are cheeky bastards and hence, he comes off better? You don't believe this, do you? Obviously saying one thing and doing another... He's found his price all right. Et tu? -- james

Okay. That was a bit rude. Sorry. I don't write as well as you Counsell. If I could put it in a more erudite way, I would. Sorry for swearing. You know my motivation for inserting the quote, but does that make it a personal attack? Anyway, I must get back to watching the paint dry. -- james (again, I know!)

The contentious paragraph was added to the article minus the last sentence on two occasions and was removed, first by Chris Chittleborough, then by Slim Virgin. Chittleborough referred to its irrelevancy, and presumably Slim Virgin backs this up -- but niether deigned to comment further. The quote is extremely relevant and to leave it out of this article would be censorship. IF Chris and Slim do not like the wording of the paragraph or its position in the article then perhaps they would like to come up with their own version. - j

(First, a couple of hints. Please "sign" comments by typing "~~~~" at the end. Also, you can indent paragraphs by putting one or more ":" characters at the start; varying the indentation helps separate comments.)
I've seen cases like this before at Wikipedia: an accurate quote from someone's writings plus a little bit of commentary makes an interesting claim or suggestion. The problem is that Wikipedia's rules don't allow Wikipedia editors to put the quote and the commentary together. (That's called "Original Research" around here.) On the other hand, if someone who counts as a "Reliable Source" makes exactly the same point, we can cite that person. Furthermore, you then run into another important Wikipedia policy about Wikipedia:Biographies of living persons, which requires extra care about controversial claims about living people.
I called the quote without the final sentence "irrelevant" as a hurried shorthand. What I should have said is that the quote without the final sentence will not make sense to most readers. Since we cannot explain the possible significance of the quote without violating the "no 'original research'" rule, I say we should not mention it at all (unless someone who counts as a Reliable Source makes the same point).
The threshold for inclusion in Wikipedia is whether material is attributable to a reliable published source, not whether we think it is true.Wikipedia:Attribution
This sort of thing disappoints and surprises many (most?) new contributors here, but it's actually a key to Wikipedia's popularity. Please don't be put off by it. Cheers, CWC 11:53, 27 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

The original reason for my contentious paragraph being removed was purely personal -- a "comrade" of Cohen's who did not seem keen on reworking it. as you can see, he merely claimed it as a personal attack. You have at least made the point from Wikipedia policy. I'm not put off by the rules, I just think the quote in the context of the article will make sense to readers, considering the political trajectory of the individual concerned. It is highly cynical of me for bringing it up -- but i think that its relevant. Cohen has claimed to not getting much out of his defence of imperialist aggression, but I suspect that the US sales of What's Left? will reverse his financial situation somewhat. Thanks for clearing it up for me, anyway. Much appreciated, Chris. -- james 81.131.19.192 21:27, 27 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

This appears to be a slander; political books almost never make money, even those selling many more copies than Cohen such as ones by Naomi Klein or Noam Chomsky. Cohen's main income is from writing newspaper articles, he won't be getting rich from this book no matter how well it does in the US. Also, unless you have some supported and citable evidence for it's sales and revenues, these points are irrelevant to the article. 86.141.142.150 (talk) 09:58, 8 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Deporting terror suspects

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Chris, why did you remove the piece on Nick Cohen's views on deporting suspects to countries that practice torture, for being 'original research'? Surely the article linked to (not by me) is very clear.

85.210.176.45 20:07, 9 September 2007 (UTC)MattReply

Good question, Matt. Here's a long and belated answer.
The Wikipedia:No original research policy is confusing at first, especially because what we mean by "original research" is subtly different from the usual meaning of the term. Moreover, the way NOR works together with Wikipedia:Verifiability and Wikipedia:Neutral point of view can be hard to understand at first. However, these policies do produce good, encyclopedic articles when used properly.
Here's the text I deleted:
However, he has suggested terror suspects should be deported to countries where they will almost certainly be tortured, praising France for doing so.[http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/story/0,,1939959,00.html]
First, something I didn't mention in my edit summary: the "almost certainly be tortured" bit is not in Cohen's article, so the Verifiability rules says we need a Wikipedia:Reliable source ("RS") for it. Secondly, that "suggested ... where" link is not in Cohen's article, and so fails the WP:SYNTH part of the NOR policy.
On the other hand, if someone notable criticized this column, Wikipedia policies do allow us to report that criticism (as long as we're careful, report Cohen's response, etc). Wikipedia is not about "Telling our readers The Truth", it's about "Telling our readers what Reliable Sources say". This suprises many people.
(Now that I've read Cohen's article more carefully, I see him as predicting a policy change to deport terror suspects as long as their home countries give "strong promises that suspects won't be tortured on return". There's a strong implication that he approves of this policy, but he never explicitly says so. Also, I don't agree that Cohen is praising France. In fact, I'd say he's accusing the French government of unscrupulous hypocrisy.)
I hope this helps. (I've just noticed that I already wrote something about these policies a few lines above and several months earlier.) BTW, I recommend creating an account here. Cheers, CWC 02:17, 12 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Fair use rationale for Image:CruelBritanni.jpg

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Image:CruelBritanni.jpg is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in this Wikipedia article constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

Please go to the image description page and edit it to include a fair use rationale. Using one of the templates at Wikipedia:Fair use rationale guideline is an easy way to ensure that your image is in compliance with Wikipedia policy, but remember that you must complete the template. Do not simply insert a blank template on an image page.

If there is other fair use media, consider checking that you have specified the fair use rationale on the other images used on this page. Note that any fair use images lacking such an explanation can be deleted one week after being tagged, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. Thank you.

BetacommandBot (talk) 13:39, 25 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Nick Cohen is editing this entry himself.

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Thought it was worth pointing out. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.143.159.177 (talk) 01:56, 9 September 2008 (UTC)Reply

Should we separate out his hatred of liberals from his view on the war of terror

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Obviously they're related but I think that section is getting a bit long, and also hatred of liberals is now his main political philosophy and so is necessary in a biographical article.

80.177.168.152 (talk) 12:32, 12 September 2008 (UTC) MatthewReply

Reference to Standpoint magazine

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The opening paragraph of this article contains the following reference to Standpoint magazine:

"Since May 2008 he has been the television critic for Standpoint magazine, a magazine launched by a right-wing think tank committed to "the defence of Western Civilisation". [1]"

The "right-wing think tank" is the Social Affairs Unit, described in Wikipedia as "a right-leaning think tank in the United Kingdom." The term "right-wing" is considered pejorative by many conservatives. In general, Wikipedia articles on think-tanks, when locating them on the political spectrum, use terms such as "left-leaning", "conservative", "centre-right", "liberal", etc. The corresponding term "left-wing" is similarly offensive, and is avoided by many on the left in favor of "progressive." Both terms tend to be used by political opponents to suggest extremism.

The citation at the end of the quote links to a page on the socialaffairsunit.org website where "the defence of Western Civilisation" is nowhere to be found. I was unable to find that phrase anywhere on the SAU website. SAU describes its mission as follows: "The Social Affairs Unit addresses social, economic and cultural issues with an emphasis on the value of personal responsibility. We research, challenge and debate issues from welfare to warfare, always seeking to draw out the role of the individual's obligations." The closest thing I could find to a reference to "civilisation" comes from the Standpoint website: "Standpoint’s core mission is to celebrate our civilization, its arts and its values – in particular democracy, debate and freedom of speech – at a time when they are under threat." The phrase "defence of Western Civilisation" is at best a questionable paraphrase of the mission of the SAU.

In any case, Cohen writes for, or has written for a number of publications. None of the others mentioned in the article is characterized either by political orientation, or by affiliation with another organization that is so characterized. The reference to "right-wing" and the fictitious citation from the SAU are gratuitous. If the reader wants to know about either the magazine or its parent organization, there are links in the article.Stickiwik (talk) 19:17, 24 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

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This query is related to self-published criticism of Cohen, so might be of interest. CarolMooreDC (talk) 15:39, 11 April 2009 (UTC) (forgot to sign)Reply

Editors refused to reply on this in the Atzmon article so I included context in that article and suddenly, oh yeah, it is a BLP problem.
However, FYI, Notability was not the problem. Per BLP Self-published attack was. If the editors of The Independent had seen fit to print it, it would be notable and BLP-proper. FYI. CarolMooreDC (talk) 15:39, 11 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Biographical Standards

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Question: Are biographical pages supposed to include the birth date of the person described? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 202.46.136.140 (talk) 11:45, 9 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Yes, but it is not in the public domain. My suspicion would be c1961-62, as he apparently martriculated (went up) to Hertford College in 1980, but the evidence (on a blog) is inadmissable.[1] Philip Cross (talk) 13:37, 9 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Over editing

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I'm not sure how to proceed but one user has been making a large number of poor edits to this (Attyfurly), deleting large chunks of well written, sourced and footnoted text which has the upmost relevance (such as describing the subject's previous anti-Americanism and so on).

94.193.103.248 (talk) 15:47, 3 June 2009 (UTC)MatthewReply

It appears I have inadvertantly sustained the removal of material the user Attyfurly does not like. This was not my intention. Philip Cross (talk) 22:11, 3 June 2009 (UTC)Reply

Attafurly is now accusing people of being 'Johanna (sic) Hari's mates'. I certainly don't fit into this category but am seriously worried that this person is vandalising what was a good wikipedia entry. I'm not sure what the next step should be.

94.193.103.248 (talk) 11:19, 4 June 2009 (UTC)MattReply

Yeah - this guy this foreign-sounding names are funny. And let's refer to gay people as if they were women! That's be really hilarious too. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.143.158.149 (talk) 20:43, 16 June 2009 (UTC)Reply