The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was delete. A plain reading of the discussion sugegsts that while there are a lot of assertions of sources no sources discussing specifially the subject of the article have been presented in the discussion despite several requests. In the light of this the arguments that this is synth/OR without specific sources appears to be sufficiently compelling Spartaz Humbug! 17:24, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Hamas and the Taliban analogy[edit]

Hamas and the Taliban analogy (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log) • Afd statistics
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No such analogy has ever been claimed. This is clearly an article created to prove a point, as part of the longstanding attempt to disrupt Israel and the apartheid analogy; this article even copies the structure of the latter. RolandR (talk) 20:59, 31 October 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Your understanding of what a "primary source" is is curious, to say the least. Scholarly articles with citations are secondary sources, not primary sources. News articles based on interviews with other people are also secondary sources. Opinion articles are primary sources, but the policy clearly states that they are admissible as a source regarding opinions of the author. Marokwitz (talk) 06:05, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
It depends on how you use the source. They are secondary sources for what they actually are covering, but you arent using them like that. You invented a topic, this "analogy", and then used sources that are using the analogy, not covering it. The sources here are the subject of the article, not secondary sources covering the subject. And using the word "scholarly" for a source list that has the WND website cited 7 times and a book published by WND books also cited goes beyond absurd into just funny. nableezy - 13:30, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Is there a single source discussing the "analogy"? Just one source actually discussing it and not using it. nableezy - 12:58, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Clarification -- per Malik's statement in his !keep vote regarding "the value of the article", and per Sol's statement in his !keep vote that "there are a slim few scholarly papers on the topic (which the article might want to reference)" and that "there is some meat here".--Epeefleche (talk) 23:57, 3 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Name one of those sources you say exists. nableezy - 12:59, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
There are many given in the article, for example "Hamas, Taliban and the Jewish Underground: An Economist’s View of Radical Religious Militias", "The Talibanization of Gaza: A Liability for the Muslim Brotherhood", "The Hamas Enterprise and the Talibanization of Gaza", "Palestine: Taliban-like attempts to censor music", "The Fundamentalist City?: Religiosity and the Remaking of Urban Space", "HAMAS AND GLOBAL JIHAD: THE ISLAMIZATION OF THE PALESTINIAN CAUSE", " Fears of a Taliban-Style Emirate in Gaza", "Gaza turns into a Taliban state", In addition this article contains explicit uses of the analogy by Israeli, Palestinian, and other officials such as Dan Meridor, Benjamin Netanyahu, Mark Regev, Samir Mashharawi, Richard Kemp. More than enough to establish notability, far more so than 99% of the articles on Wikipedia. Marokwitz (talk) 13:07, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Ive read 3 of those, working on the rest. The problem is they dont discuss an analogy, they use it. To combine sources using the analogy into an article on an analogy is synthesis of primary sources. In other words, original research. nableezy - 13:25, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The sources provided discuss the analogy, list supporters of the analogy, rejections of the analogy, as well as voice opinions regarding the validity of the analogy. Marokwitz (talk) 14:50, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Could you quote a single source that actually discusses the analogy as opposed to just using it? nableezy - 21:45, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The notability guideline is "a topic has received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject". The topic is "Hamas and the Taliban analogy". Now let's see if we have significant coverage of the analogy by reliable sources independent Hamas or the Taliban. Let's take for example professor Nezar Alsayyad, who writes in her book "The Fundamentalist City?: Religiosity and the Remaking of Urban Space" that a growing number of analysts have denounced openly the "systematic, massive and explicit efforts" at Talibanization led by Hamas in the Gaza Strip. This is a direct reference to the fact that other scholars are making the analogy of the actions of Hamas and Taliban. Or take Berman, a world renown economist from UC San Diego National Bureau of Economic Research, who noted that both groups gained support by providing providing social welfare, and developed into effective and violent militias; both received subsidies from abroad; both underwent increases in stringency of practice as they gained power; both require members to undergo a costly initiation rite of personal sacrifice; and both changed their ideologies drastically and at great cost to members. Both of the above books are most certainly not primary sources, they are secondary scholarly sources based on dozens and hundreds of citations. Should I continue? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Marokwitz (talkcontribs) 06:01, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, you should, up until the point where you actually quote from a source covering the analogy and not just using it. The sources you mention re secondary sources for the article on Hamas, but here you are using them as primary sources. They are covering Hamas, not an analogy. nableezy - 13:02, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
No, sources "using" the analogy based on an what other sources say, are still secondary sources. They are directly discussing the analogy between Hamas and the Taliban. Berman is not affiliated with Hamas or Taliban and describes the similarities between them based on primary sources, in a scholarly article that was published in the peer reviewed Journal of Public Economics, and was widely cited in other works. The article is not covering Hamas, it's about an economic model for understanding the behavior violent miltias. Claiming that he is used as a "primary source" is simply ridiculous. And Alsayyad, (Who is the editor of the book) is clearly not "using" the analogy, she is discussing the increasing use of the analogy by other analysts. Marokwitz (talk) 14:16, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
not that it makes a difference really, but which one of the two do you consider "known terrorists" that the other may be "offended" by the analogy?--brewcrewer (yada, yada) 18:01, 1 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Nab -- you're just repeating yourself. Clearly, everyone else who has commented with a !vote here -- everyone -- sees it differently. I doubt your repeating yourself will sway the overwhelming consensus here to shift to your side.--Epeefleche (talk) 05:23, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Not "everyone". I certainly agree with Nableezy's comments, as should be obvious from what I wrote when I submitted this AfD: that this was a pointy article and that no such analogy had ever been claimed. RolandR (talk) 08:44, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Everyone who !voted. The response to your nom, absent his !vote, has been a 100 per cent, snow rejection.--Epeefleche (talk) 11:18, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
In my language, "everyone" means "every single person, without exception". Yoy clearly speak a different variant of English. RolandR (talk) 11:46, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I wonder what variant of English would read "everyone else who has commented with a !vote here" to include someone who did not in fact comment with a !vote. No More Mr Nice Guy (talk) 13:26, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Don't be ridiculous. This is not a vote, and it is abundantly clear that I have called for the deletion of this article. RolandR (talk) 14:00, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Roland -- again. You nominated the article. Others then !voted. In my variant of English we actually read the words "who !voted". We don't insert a period, where there is none, after "everyone". And ignore the words "who !voted", which are written in wiki's variant of English. Or substitute the words "called for deletion" for the words "!who voted". Hopefully that clarifies somewhat my use of this strange language called English, with which I am struggling to gain some measure of confidence.--Epeefleche (talk) 22:54, 3 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
That wasnt a repetition, that was an expansion. I covered a specific source used extensively in that article. I dont think what we have is a representative sampling of the community and I can only hope that those uninvolved in editing the topic who have yet to look at the AfD read the comments and then read the sources and make a determination as to whether or not this impressive looking article is actually entirely OR based on synthesis of what are effectively primary sources. I may do so the same for other references used. I might be less tempted to do so if I dont have to read half-assed questioning of motives. nableezy - 05:27, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Do not tempt Nableezy. Who knows what could happen! This place is so funny sometimes. No More Mr Nice Guy (talk) 13:26, 2 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
NOTE - This editor was subsequently blocked as a sockpuppet of banned user:Ledenierhomme.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 17:16, 6 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
If few secondary sources are available, one option is to merge this Hamas/Taliban material into Human rights in the Palestinian Territories. A precedent was set for such mergers in Summer 2007 when quite a few "Apartheid analogy" articles were created in response to Israel and the apartheid analogy. Those articles were all nominated for AfDs (a list is here... China, France, Jordan, etc.) It looks all were deleted, although a few were merged into "Human Rights in ..." articles. So that raises the question: should this Hamas/Taliban material be merged into Human rights in the Palestinian Territories? --Noleander (talk) 20:44, 3 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • And we treat articles as notable as AfDs based on sources such as Electronic Intifada. The fact that a source may have a "bent" does not mean, ipso facto, that it is not an RS. Even if the "bent" is other than yours or mine. And othercrapexists, as the guidance states clearly, indicates that such comparisons are fine to make, as long as they are not the sole reason proffered. Which is not the case here.--Epeefleche (talk) 07:18, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • Yes, this article is POV in the sense that it describes the different POVs on the topic. There are plenty reliable secondary sources in the article, perhaps take the time and check more thoroughly. Freemuse is an international human rights organisation, not a "forum". It's just as reliable as Human Rights Watch or Amnesty, as is - reliable for their own opinions. This article cites them for their opinion, not for factual material. Marokwitz (talk) 08:03, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • If the topic as framed is not POV, it should be possible to replace most of these sources with more neutral ones. There are lots of topics where one side of a divide choruses a theme without it (a) being properly represented in neutral sources or (b) meant to be a serious analysis, and these are precisely the kinds of articles we shouldn't have. When sourcing comes almost exclusively from one side, with a few independent looking non-experts (World Music Forum?) to cover one's blushes, it's a red flag. I have no idea what your reference to electronic intifada is about - it sounds like you're annoyed at something that happened somewhere else on wikipedia. Let's stick to this article.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 07:40, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • I apologize for not being sufficiently clear. Let me keep to one point. If the source is an RS, or an RS for it view, then that's that. We don't say: "Oh, it's a liberal rag -- no good on this issue". Or the opposite. We don't say -- the Village Voice is NG, the Wall Street Journal is NG, Al Jazeerah is NG, we need a blend between The New York Times and The Boston Globe. That's not how it works. --Epeefleche (talk) 07:55, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
  • reply to Marokwitz You've not got POV policy correct there. An article is never considered POV because it mentions various POVs. It is POV if it promotes a particular point of view that misrepresents consensus or is undue. This includes how we name articles. Unacceptable examples would be Similarities between Barack Obama and a communist, Welsh deviousness and Friends shot by Dick Cheney, all of which would have opinions cited in supposedly RS sources to back them up. There are lots of Wikipedia articles on insinuations about Palestinians, Israelis, Muslims and Jews out there waiting not to be written on the same grounds. I feel this article, as it is titled and currently sourced, is one of them.
You ask me to check the sources more thoroughly. I am, and have been, checking the sourcing thoroughly. Here is a survey of the first third or so: The first source is by an official of the Israeli anti-terrorism unit. The second is published by the Fatah Palestinian authority and compares Hamas to other Islamists in general, not particularly to the Taliban. The third is from Freemuse, which may do sterling work, but they're a minor human rights organisation, and they're not experts on shades of Islam, let alone Islamism. it would be no problem if it's cited once or twice, but the Freemuse piece, along with a piece from a right wing website by Aaron Klein, who thinks Obama, funnily enough, is a communist (is this what you meant by good secondary sourcing?), is the most cited in the entire article - seven times. The fourth is - hey presto - a book from a mainstream publisher. It is used to source statements that the analogy is false. The fifth is a congressional report - not bad. It sources a statement that the analogy is false. Sixth Xinhua - good source, stating opinion that Hamas will not be like the Taliban - that the analogy is false. Seventh is AP - good. Article covers the rejection of the analogy. Eighth is Bloomberg - very good. Nothing about the Taliban, only about Islamisation. Not a support. The next few are Haaretz and Jerusalem Post, all respectable RS, but which don't make any connection between Taliban and Hamas. Then there's HudsonNY, which isn't RS, frankly, and then an economist, who isn't an appropriate expert, and who doesn't make an analogy at all, but the stunning proposition that the Taliban and Hamas are both Islamist, and that as Islamists they may follow a similar logic. The list of people is a hodgepodge - it's OR to put them together and to say that they represent a significant, coherent body of opinion. We need secondary sources for that for this to be an independent article.
The academic books presented do not support the analogy at all. The book Crossovers only cites that well-known Hamas supporter Mahmoud Abbas; the writers themselves do not validate the comparison, and do not appear to consider the comparison noteworthy. The OUP book The Taliban Phenomenon is too old to be relevant to this debate. Hamas: The Islamic Resistance Movement does not make any comparison, but it cites a few people (Hamas supporters Netanyahu and Mark Regev) making the comparison, as well as academics disputing it, but most notably, does not have a section in the book at all making the comparison. The book The Fundamentalist City?: Religiosity and the Remaking of Urban Space appears to mention Hamas and the Taliban in the same breath once. It mentions both Hamas and the Taliban lots, but not together. Hamas in politics: democracy, religion, violence, from Columbia University Press makes no comparison. Indeed, it is used to source a denial of the comparison. In short, as far as I can see, not a single academic imprint presented makes any analytical attempt at an analogy, and barely any decent RS cited - just people quoted by them in passing. That should ring huge alarm bells to any genuinely interested in preserving NPOV.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 15:03, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
reply to Epeefleche You seem to be implying that if a source is RS, then it is as equally valid as any other RS. That is actually how it doesn't work. World Net Daily barely gets into RS (I personally wouldn't touch it), CBN News probably not, the Hudson Institute is only RS for its own views, not as a statement of academic opinion and so on, and the problems they present in terms of bias on this topic all lie in the same direction. It's simply not intellectually honest to ignore such an issue. This is how it actually works with RS: Time Magazine's opinion on Hamas is quite a good RS, but not as good as, say, the Professor of Middle Eastern Politics at Harvard's latest book. RS depends on context. I refer you to my reply to Marokwitz: the better RS doesn't go into the analogy or has people denying it as often if not more often than people asserting it, and the best RS doesn't seem to mention it at all, save for individual quotes someone can find on google books. This article assembles quotes (it's funny how all the books are available on google) and tries to turn it into an encyclopedic topic. POV and RS.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 15:17, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed, but highly notable. Offensiveness is not a guideline for inclusion/exclusion, but notability is.--Carwil (talk) 15:34, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I very much agree with the idea to have a Comparison of Islamist movements article as an aim, as a way of salvaging what material there is here. I also agree that Islamofascism is a good example of when controversial articles should exist because of conceptual notability. (As a pedant, I have to point out that Islamofascism is not an analogy, it's a portmanteau, and is not intended as a comparison, but as an identity.) VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 16:13, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I think this merge proposal is wrong for the following reasons:
  1. The analogy of Hamas and the Taliban has been done based on other factors unrelated to the Islamization or to the Gaza strip. For example the way they gained power, and similarity of tactics and strategy.
  2. The article about Islamization of the Gaza strip includes attempts of Islamization by groups unrelated to Hamas. Marokwitz (talk) 16:34, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The articles cover mainly the same topics, making this one a WP:CFORK. The forking is largely obtained by instantiating the Taliban as the reference fundamentalist Islamic movement. Tijfo098 (talk) 16:11, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
As I showed above, there are other similar comparisons on the same grounds, with Hezbollah in particular for warfare tactics and social plans. It would be silly to create an article for each pair of movements as you argue. Tijfo098 (talk) 18:55, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I don't see how the existence of that paper implies the topic cannot be adequately covered at Islamization of the Gaza Strip; 70 citations is not much. I can find papers with thousands of citations, which don't have separate articles. E.g.: Caspi, A.; Sugden, K.; Moffitt, T. E.; Taylor, A.; Craig, I. W.; Harrington, H.; McClay, J.; Mill, J.; Martin, J.; Braithwaite, A.; Poulton, R. (2003). "Influence of Life Stress on Depression: Moderation by a Polymorphism in the 5-HTT Gene". Science. 301 (5631): 386–389. Bibcode:2003Sci...301..386C. doi:10.1126/science.1083968. PMID 12869766. Tijfo098 (talk) 16:45, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The Hudson Institute paper is far more notable of an RS than those upon with many other articles upon which Wikipedia articles are based. The only difference here is the added element of being controversial. And did you think that establishment of notability stops at the first citation in the article? Seriously, I just laughed when reading your comment. It reads like “I don’t know why you say the Earth is ‘big’; just look at the Sun!” Goodbye; I’ve said all I need to say and your post just gave me an epiphany. Greg L (talk) 16:54, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
It's not more notable than Science (journal) in my view. (Hudson Institute, seriously?) You seem to imply we need a separate article for every topic that appears in a title of a paper from the Hudson Institute. Such a position would be clearly ridiculous. Tijfo098 (talk) 16:56, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Greg, your arguments don't add up. Sorry to be grim, but articles by David Irving have lots of citations. It doesn't make them good or reliable. The Hudson Institute is not some well respected independent organisation (where on Earth did you get that from?). It's a neoconservative think tank that is generously funded by benefactors verging on the radical right, like Richard Mellon Scaife, PNAC funders the John M. Olin Foundation, the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the Earhart Foundation and so on. It's not a great RS on this topic, no matter how many times editors claim it is. Just as being pro-Palestinian/ anti-Israeli is de rigeur for large parts of the European Left, pro-Israeli (and anti-Palestinian) views are part and parcel of the American neoconservative make-up, such that we should treat such sources with far greater care than is being done here. For people not to acknowledge even a speck of a problem in using such sources is puzzling, if not downright odd. For you to laud it as good RS, well... As for controversy, it's true that controversial articles exist on wikipedia, but being controversial is not a criterion for inclusion.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 17:06, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

I'm waiting for Why Republicans are climate skeptics based on Hudson Institute's latest paper [2]. Tijfo098 (talk) 16:56, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

By the way, "The Talibanization of Gaza" article is not in Google Scholar, and there are zero Google Books references to it. Where did you count the 70 citations? Tijfo098 (talk) 22:50, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
No, sources drawing comparisons between Hamas and the Taliban is not a justification for the title or existence of the article. It may be reason to include information on those comparisons in the articles on Hamas or the Taliban, but not for the making up of a topic. This comment demonstrates why this article is simply original research. The article takes as its sources articles making these comparisons and then says that the analogy itself is the topic of the article. There are not any sources discussing that topic, that is no source actually discussed such an analogy as a topic. This is why we have policies on original research, so these things dont happen. I suggest you carefully read WP:OR. nableezy - 23:12, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
"No, sources drawing comparisons between Hamas and the Taliban is not a justification for the title..." - Nableezy

Main Entry: comparison
Part of Speech: noun
Definition: contrasting; corresponding
Synonyms: allegory, analogizing, analogy, analyzing, association...


hence the title "Hamas and the Taliban analogy". WookieInHeat (talk) 23:45, 4 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
anyway, if your argument is that the title constitues WP:OR, why are you pushing solely for deletion instead of a name change or even a merge? a WP:COI with the subject couldn't be clouding the venerable nableezy's judgement, could it? WookieInHeat (talk) 00:09, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Wookie, please avoid such pointless personal attacks (it's the second I've seen you make in the space of a day on this topic area), and please do us all the courtesy read the policies you link to. Unless you are making the quite extraordinary claim that Nableezy is a member of the Hamas or Taliban leadership, COI simply does not apply here. Furthermore OR is perfectly acceptable as grounds for deletion; it happens all the time. Your arguments for keep misrepresent the objections. The point about sourcing is that the sources which are not questionable do not present the analogy in anything other than solitary quotes from Hamas' opponents in a sea of words saying something else. If you read the sources, there is a clear argument that Hamas is islamising in Gaza (I wouldn't be against the merge proposal above), but that is not the same as "Talibanising". Gathering random quotes from people who don't like Hamas and putting them together without any secondary source uniting them is original research, as is a side-by-side comparison of Hamas and the Taliban, without reliable secondary sources doing the same thing. I suggest you read WP:OR carefully and then come back and explain how this article is not original research, citing policy. VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 00:50, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
i've made no personal attacks, i think you are mistaking sarcasm for incivility. also, i am normally quite cordial, in fact i challenge you to find one other editor with a complaint about my civility in their dealings with me. nableezy is the exception, i merely feed the attitude he gives those he disagrees with right back to him; in this case his condescending remark that i "carefully read WP:OR".
secondly, you really should take your own advice and review wikipolicies before lecturing others on their content. WP:COI states right in its lede: "COI editing involves contributing to Wikipedia in order to promote your own interests or those of other individuals, companies, or groups." nableezy displays his affinity for the palestinian cause, and by association hamas, on his talk page.
finally, as to my comments not addressing the issues raised for deletion. the very first sentence in my very first post here says "per Malik Shabazz" which covers WP:POINT; the only issue raised by the nom. the rest of my comments have been about my reasoning for supporting "keep". cheers WookieInHeat (talk) 01:45, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
I dont care if I get blocked for this, the line nableezy displays his affinity for the palestinian cause, and by association hamas demonstrates that you are an idiot. nableezy - 01:49, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Wookie, did you make it through WP:COI to the part where it encourages people with political opinions on issues they edit to place them on their talk page?
Quite a few of us have raised WP:Notable as our central issue with this post, and suggested merging. However abrasive he may be, making the discussion into a one-on-one by asking, as you did, "why are you pushing solely for deletion instead of a name change or even a merge?" is neither necessary or appropriate. At least four of us have suggested a merge, and this is one collective discussion. I would invite you and others to either justify the analogy's notability by finding reliable secondary sources discussing the analogy's significance, or to address the issue of the merge.--Carwil (talk) 01:55, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
and being encourage to display your political affinities on your user page nullifies the COI? if i displayed an "i support the GOP" userbox on my userpage and went around trying to delete negative information about george bush, what would you call that? second, i am aware others have raised the "merge" suggestion. i wasn't talking about "the four of you" who suggested a merge, i was talking about nableezy. my curiosity about nableezy's motivations are not unfounded nor are they a personal attack. WookieInHeat (talk) 02:06, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Dear me Wookie, that's poor wikilawyering. "Interest" in Conflict of Interest is not the same as political belief. It is personal, material interest (personal repute, financial gain etc.), as the policy page makes abundantly clear. Activity on climate change, abortion or the Holocaust would be frozen if we took COI in your sense of the word. Furthermore, equating nableezy's affinity with "the Palestinian cause" with support for Hamas is just another deliberate personal attack. nableezy has indicated it was insulting; your indifference to this speaks volumes. Please show some respect to the editing community by focusing on arguments, not on editors.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 02:23, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

look guys, lets try to take it down a notch, we are getting distracted from the issue at hand. if you have a problem with something i've said, feel free to take official action. otherwise i think we should just let it go. cheers WookieInHeat (talk) 02:27, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]

More on sources: According to the blog that this article uses, the Hudson Institute piece is also a blog. Which clearly makes it not RS for anything other than the writer's opinion; it cannot be used to form any argument of notability for the analogy. Which this article does. Wookie, or any of the other editors apparently supremely content with the quality and use of sourcing, could you cite OR policy on how the singular lack of secondary academic analyses and the cobbling together of a list of "people who said X" without a secondary source discussing how people often say X does not cause OR problems for the article?VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 04:50, 5 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
There are times when "and" intersection articles are appropriate. The important factor is existence of secondary sources. For example, the Israel and Nazi Germany analogy has numerous secondary sources which provide context and analysis (including the ADL, Alan Dershowitz, the European Institute for the Study of Contemporary Antisemitism, Antony Loewenstein, Nur Masalha, Antony Lerman, Ron Rosenbaum, and Abraham H. Foxman). The lack of secondary sources on the Taliban/Hamas topic indicates that it is not quite ready for its own article (although it could be a section in Islamization of the Gaza Strip). Perhaps after a few years, there will be sufficient secondary sources, and then the Taliban/Hamas topic could be its own article. --Noleander (talk) 04:06, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Really? No secondary sources which provide context and analysis ? This article cites a wide array of reliable sources which discuss the validity of the analogy (some claiming it is true and some claiming that it is false) and report on it's use: the Journal of Current Trends in Islamist Ideology , The Journal of International Security Affairs, Inside Hamas: the untold story of militants, martyrs and spies, Palestinians: Background and U.S. Relations. By Jim Zanotti, Xinhua, the Associated press, Bloomberg, Haaretz, AFP, Jerusalem Post, the Hudson Institute, The Weekly Middle East Reporter, the Journal of Public Economics, Crossovers: Anti-Zionism and Anti-Semitism, The Australian, Circunstancia, Focus on terrorism, The Spectator, Al-Sharq Al-Awsat, The Washington Times, "Radical, religious, and violent: the new economics of terrorism", The Fundamentalist City?: Religiosity and the Remaking of Urban Space, Adkronos, National Review, Journal of Contemporary Islam, "Banned: a Rough Guide", The New Humanist, the Congressional Research Service (CRS), "Defense Update", "HAMAS and Israel: Conflicting Strategies of Group-Based Politics", "Hamas Rule in Gaza: Three Years On" - Crown Center for Middle East studies, Hamas: The Islamic Resistance Movement By Beverley Milton-Edwards, Stephen Farrell, "Hamas in politics: democracy, religion, violence" By Jeroen Gunning, The council of foreign affairs, The Daily Hurriyet, as well as Khaled Al-Hroub, one of the world's top experts on Hamas. Very few articles in Wikipedia have such high quality sources. Marokwitz (talk) 14:20, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Really. None of the academic texts analyses the comparison in any way whatsoever. That they typically contain a single quote (not from the authors themselves) in a whole book, and their textual availability on google books, suggests they were found in a hurried trawl without the compiler reading them (or worse, not giving a monkeys about what the sources actually say so long as a veneer of RS is provided, but I shall assume the former). The economics article is a modelling of Islamism, not an analogy between Hamas and the Taliban's current actions. The other RS (and the dodgily-funded Hudson blog is not RS) merely quote people who have asserted or rejected a comparison. Assembling a miscellany of quotes like this without secondary analysis either of the idea or of the phenomenon of people making the analogy is original research. No amount of repeating source titles will undo that. (And no, Aaron Klein, a conspiracy theorist and birther who believes Obama is a muslim "Manchurian candidate" (I kid you not) secretly plotting a communist takeover of America , is not RS either, except for his own rather exotic opinions, and I would argue by extension, World News Daily in general, which recycles such conspiracies also is not.) It's very important on Wikipedia not simply to give the appearance of having proper sourcing, but actually to have proper sourcing. Just looking at the titles reference list is not enough. One has to check what the sources on the list actually say. Your comment that "Very few articles in Wikipedia have such high quality sources." made me smile. At least you have a sense of humour about all of this.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 15:09, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
All the sources above are disussing the analogy directly, either positively (making the analogy) or negatively (criticizing the analogy). The requirement for notability is "significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject", and significant coverage was established. The notability guideline does NOT require that the topic of the article would be the main topic of the sources, though it is the topic of many of them. So for example Berman's economic model (which is not about Islamism, it is about extremism, and tries to create a unified model for the behaviors of Hamas, the Taliban and the Jewish Underground) which is an academic and widely cited work , is a fine source. None of the above sources were taken out of context or distorted in any way. WoldNetDaily is not used for citing any facts in this article, so it's reliability as a source is irrelevant. Sources quoting people who have asserted or rejected a comparison are also fine, this is why they are called "secondary sources". In fact, if both Benjamin Netanyahu and Mahmoud Abbas agreed on something important enough that Ahmed Yassin and Mahmoud al-Zahar needed to deny, then this makes the article notable on it's own (Joking of course).Marokwitz (talk) 16:29, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Really? No notable international figures? I must be looking at a different list.--Epeefleche (talk) 13:25, 7 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
No independent, third-party international figures. Israeli politicians and Fatah officials can hardly qualify as disinterested parties on the topic of Hamas. Gatoclass (talk) 04:45, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Oh -- I thought you said there were no comments from major international figures. Not that it matters. There is no such requirement that for the views to be notable, the party be "disinterested", as far as I can see.--Epeefleche (talk) 06:50, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
The views of such people can be notable, but they can't be used to establish the notability of a topic. Otherwise we would have countless articles on what politicians and political commentators said about their political opponents. Obama and the Marxist analogy, that sort of thing. Gatoclass (talk) 10:40, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed. And the material would not lack but what would lack are valuable secondary sources. This analogy would not be more acceptable than this one. Noisetier (talk) 12:30, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Omar - I see you're very new on wikipedia - welcome. The problem is that (a) it isn't discussed at all. It looks like someone went and trawled the internet for sources where "Hamas" and "Taliban" appear together, and then formatted the sources nicely. Alas, the content of those sources which pass muster (and quite a few don't) simply don't provide any analysis of the article subject. It's a bit like dressing up a dog in pink and insisting it's a barbie doll. (b) Collections of quotes might mean nothing at all (cf. confirmation bias), so wikipedia requires good secondary sources (real-life independent experts) that have analysed the pattern of such quotes - and such a source has not been found. We have a rule called no original research, which this article violates, amongst other violations.VsevolodKrolikov (talk) 14:59, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Doesn't Prof. Yezid Sayigh of Brandeis University count? Mahmoud Abbas? Khaled Abu Toameh? Chris McGreal reporting for The Guardian from Gaza City? Turkey's Hurriyet Daily News? Benjamin Netanyahu? Mark Regev? And whether or not this or other articles violate "Original Research" is I'm sure open to interpretation. Surely many Wikipedia articles are "original research", and it's just a case of "mob rule" as to which ones get designated as such. I just don't like the idea of such a huge swath of sourced content being removed is all. OmarKhayyam (talk) 16:28, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
You know the article very well but maybe not wikipeadia working principles. Yezid Sayigh, the first one you name, hasn't written an article about this analogy. The paper referenced in the article asks the question "Erdokan or Taliban" but he doesn't develop this thesis and just describes how Hamas manage Gaza strip. The question remains : where are the (reliable) secondary sources that develop this analogy thesis ? The article is currently an Original Research gathering numerous quotes from here and there. Noisetier (talk) 16:48, 8 November 2010 (UTC)[reply]
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