Talk:VEISHEA

Latest comment: 1 year ago by CountMacula in topic History of days off

Neutrality edit

What this article needs is a balanced perspective. This one sounds like it was written by a student participant who wants to exculpate him- or herself and lay 100% of the blame at the feet of the local police. The students are described as "standing their ground" in the face of police who pepper sprayed "anyone who was present." One wonders what kinds of evidence might be offered to support the claim that every single participant in the riot was pepper sprayed, but that is beside the point. The author of this article seems to want to portray the police as jack-booted thugs and the student rioters as innocent victims; hardly a objective assessment of the riot. Contra the commenter below, while I agree that the student rioter perspective should be included in the article, the police/city government perspective is entirely lacking and that, if nothing else, makes this article imbalanced. The person who should be consulted in writing this article is David Schweingruber, a faculty member of Iowa State's Sociology department and a member of the Task Force that studied the 2004 Veishea riot. I was lucky enough to attend a presentation he gave on the 2004 riot--it was thorough, accurate, and, best of all, objective.

This article should be tagged as non-neutral. It's clearly heavily biased in favor of students. I'm not contesting its accuracy, but I've spoken with the Ames Chief of Police, who told me two independent studies he requested after the riots showed that the police acted appropriately. That really should be added for balance.

It's been my understanding it wasn't the students themselves that were so much the problem, it was people from outside the school traveling to the area to drink and to party who caused a lot of the problems.
JesseG 14:28, 19 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

About a week after the riot, during a public meeting, someone brought in a 50 or so point solution to the problems that caused the riot that had been compiled over 3 months. When asked how it was written over three months when the riot was last week, the person stated that it was written up by the taskforce that studied the last VEISHEA riots and that none of their recomendations had been implimented. That being said, It would be interesting to hear in this article past riots and the steps that the university took to deal with them. --User:Rayc

I agree that this page needs to be tagged as non-neutral. I just arrived at ISU and had no prior knowledge of the 2004 riot, so, like the user above, am not questioning the page's accuracy - merely noting that the summary provided here is obviously biased and does not present both sides of the issue. --kvanderlugt

I tried to clean up the neutrality of this article, and I think its much better than it was. When in doubt, I removed questionable material. Please comment on the changes before reverting. --stemperm 22:45, 6 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

The fact is, the news reports that this article is based on were not neutral in the first place. I was present at the riot, and it was one of the most shocking experiences in my life; the police did not respond to the situation well at all. The whole thing started with just a couple of guilty students, literally just a few, the ones that started the dumpster on fire. The police had already gotten themselves dressed up for a riot before anything had happened; it was very obvious they were looking for some sort of action and hoping they would get it, and they did. Aggressively breaking up the nearby parties while outfitted in riot gear doesn't seem to me like the best way to go about restoring order and that is clearly not what the result of their actions was; when you want to put out a fire it is usually better to use water instead of gas. Were the under age students at the parties breaking the law? Sure they were, but they were not hurting anyone or causing any problems. Should the police write them under age drinking tickets? Sure, they have every right to; the students were after all breaking the law, so why didn't they just do that? You people can dispute the neutrality of this article all you want, none of the articles on here or anywhere else are neutral, that's just the way it is. To try and act as though it is so wrong that it was written in the words of a witness doesn't make any sense though. Were you there? What gives you the right to dispute this? Why don't you leave it up to those who were present to write the article? The students didn't have a voice after the riot, and still they don't; people like you ensure this. I still love when I got up the day after the riot and watched the news, after having been a witness the night before; "the police do not know the cause of the riot." This was on CNN. What does that tell you? They don't know the cause... Wow, that tells everything to me, but you ignorant people side with the police because they are the police which apparently means they are unable to be wrong. Since the riot I have even witnessed policemen laugh and joke about the riot when confronted as though what they did was the funniest thing ever. The Ames police department is full of meatheads; they never pursued college degrees, they are not the smartest people in the world, but they put on that badge and they get to be tough and “bust” people. It is just another drunk student right? No rights for students, not in Ames anyway. I will not even attempt to edit the article, there is no need; it will never be neutral anyway. People really need to think a little though. It is so sad that the majority of our country simply accepts what they hear on the news as though it is truth with no bias at all and that only on sites such as Wikipedia are biases present. People hear testimonial from a witness and pass it off as garbage, and then take what they hear on the news as though it is 100% accurate and unbiased. Have people really lost all ability to think for themselves? Why when there were literally hundreds of students who witnessed this that feel the same way I do about how the police responded does no one listen? Imagine being in our shoes. This was possibly my biggest life lesson I have ever learned; it finally gave me confirmation that I really cannot trust anything I hear, ever. Unless I see things for myself I cannot believe them at all because our country is falling apart. Everything it was supposed to be when it was founded is no more. This country is brainwashed; people would rather take things as they come and accept them than think about the things and ask how and why. Why would students just lash out for no apparent reason without instigation? Any time fighting occurs; both parties are always guilty including this one. I would never try and say that there was zero guilt on the side of the students because there surely was, but it has been written as though this riot was caused by them 100%. Do the right thing, and let the students or anyone else who is being persecuted have a voice; it is their right as Americans. --131.156.91.49

I think the current version of the article does a good job of presenting what happening without bias. The article does say that the riot started after police dispersed tear gas into the crowd. The reason we try to maintain neutrality on Wikipedia is so that, as you say people don't lose the "ability to think think for themselves." It is not easy to give objective evidence, especially when most of the evidence comes from first-hand testimony. The fact remains that that this article was in no way near neutral. It still presents the facts: after police used tear gas, students reacted by destroy property. If you would like to add more material to the article, please do so, but also make sure it abides by Wikipedia guidelines. Stemperm 17:00, 28 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

This article is poorly written. It seems like someone wrote it trying to sound like an encyclopedia britannica. "Welch Ave. has been a flash point for violence in prior years" - Flash point refers to a time or temperature, not a location. "The tear gas infiltrated the building disturbing many of the residents" jeez. I think this should be tagged as needing cleanup. Williameis 05:50, 23 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

I wasn't there, but heard several eyewitness accounts afterwards. Granted they all came from students, but by all accounts the police did not act wisely at all. I heard numerous accounts of police indiscriminately using pepper spray. What this article does however need, is accounts of previous problems at VIESHEA. I remember a riot in the '80s where the rioters burned a police car and built a bonfire in the street and burned a 30' (diameter) hole in it. If there is a mitigating factor for the overzealous police enforcement it would be the previous history of the event. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Sawdustking (talkcontribs) 01:38, 30 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

NPOV Status edit

What do others think about removing the NPOV status? Personally, I am against it, because I think it could still be improve. Also, I think having the tag in the article indicates to the reader that this topic is controversial, and that they should be aware that not everyone agrees on its content. So, I guess that I vote keep the tag. Stemperm 17:08, 28 March 2007 (UTC)Reply

Too much time spent on Alcohol and Problems edit

I don't understand why more time is spent talking about the relatively problems that have happened relative to the rich traditions that VEISHEA has. Even the new edits for VEISHEA 2007 focus on the lousy Mike Jones concert and the number of alcohol citations rather than things that actually define the celebrations, like the parade, ISU's 150th celebration, the international food fair, VEISHEA Scholars... etc. etc. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by JayWilmont (talkcontribs) 21:37, 24 April 2007 (UTC).Reply

Feel free to add to the article. Unfortunately, I didn't make the parade but I was at the concert. --Ted 04:50, 25 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

"A lot more people were likely to have consumed at least one alcoholic beverage." What the hell is that about? It's both obvious and irrelevant, and doesn't contribute to the article at all. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.110.240.166 (talkcontribs)

Okay --Ted 00:58, 29 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

Unbalanced edit

I removed the POV tag in favor of a different one. I am not sure if the article is so much POV as it is more balanced towards the negatives regarding VEISHEA. If anyone has any *free* photos or images of the day-time festivities (i.e. parade, competitions, 5K race, lighting of the torch, etc.), then their inclusion could help offset the negatives presented in the article. --Ted 18:53, 20 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Wristband Controversy edit

There's a lot of high emotions going on right now about the decision by the Iowa State administration to use wristbands for concert entries at VEISHEA.

However, someone is reverting the edits to a version that violates the NPOV. I suggest we protect the page until the tension dies down. SkittlzAnKomboz (talk) 23:12, 5 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

2004 Riot was sparked from a non-VEISHEA event edit

I noticed the entry states that it was an off-campus party, but doesn't state that it was a non-VEISHEA event. The majority of the rioting happened in campus-town, which is, if I am not mistaken, part of Ames and not part of the Iowa State campus. While it was going on people weren't saying "VEISHEA Riot." That was a name quickly slapped on it by the media, which basically forced Iowa State University to take action by canceling VEISHEA 2005, even though the riot wasn't during or started at any VEISHEA event, just during VEISHEA week. That would be like there being a riot in Beijing this summer near the Olympics but not Olympic related... then being called the Olympic Riots. Im not saying all of this should be included, just state that it wasn't a VEISHEA event where the riot started and that it wasn't during any VEISHEA events. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.45.29.115 (talk) 02:39, 30 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

History of days off edit

The lede states that VEISHEA was a week long. In the mid '80s there were no classes on Thursday and Friday before VEISHEA weekend. After some riot, maybe in 1988 or 1992, that was reduced to Friday only. Then what, was it reduced to the weekend only? In what sense was it ever a week long? Tracing the history of practical school policies regarding VEISHEA, namely the number of school days off, would bring some objectivity. The details could be found in the Iowa State Daily, the DM Register, Associated Press, etc.CountMacula (talk) 20:22, 20 February 2023 (UTC)Reply