Haukur Þorgeirsson wrote:
When people challenge your
ignoring of established process you have to sit down and discuss things
with them - not just keep reverting to the version you think is
better and
say that discussion is a waste of time. This goes even when you think
your
view is "common sense" or "obviously correct". If it really is, you
will
be able to convince other Wikipedians of it. Our hobby is building an
encyclopedia - many of us are quite reasonable people :)
Process is basically a way of facilitating discussion and cooperation in
this large collaborative project. That's why some of us think it's
important, not for its own sake.
While process should never *ever* get in the way of common sense, once
people acting in good faith start reverting your actions, it's time
for process to step in. Process acts as a way to limit the anarchy of
IAR. It may be evil, but it's very much a necessary evil. Also bear in
mind that undermining one process often indirectly erodes other
processes. If an admin wheel wars over the deletion of an article with
other admins acting in good faith and gets away with it, pretty soon
new admins will figure, "Why not apply to this to blocking wheel
wars?" And so on.
Tony has been arguing that the deletion process is borked. That, I
think we can all agree on, even if we disagree on how it's broken.
However, that's not licence to wholly ignore it, unless you have no
respect for the establishment of process at all. If you seek the
replacement of this borked process by something better, once this goal
is achieved, your actions in ignoring process will eventually be used
as an excuse by other admins (no matter how well-meaning) to ignore
the process you support because in their opinion, it's borked. And if
you don't seek the replacement of this process, then you're just
disrupting Wikipedia to illustrate a point (or no point at all, maybe).
When process must be the basis for a decision it must do the least harm;
it should give the best opportunity for a real resolution. In
situations where sysops differ process shouold favour keeping in the
general case. A least harm approach could still favouur deletion in
cases where legal problems such as copyvios, libel or privacy are a
major factor. When the only issue is notability we are talking abour a
highly subjective concept; that explains why it has been such a
perennial problem. When undeletion depends almost completely on whether
the deletion process was followed correctly rather than on content it's
clear that process has become overly dominant.
John's argument is like that of any other politicians who like things
the way they are. I don't think that Tony is wholly ignoring the
process; it's more like civil disobedience. Civil disobedience is a
perfectly acceptable way of opposing unjust laws. I realize that the
sophistry in John's arguments is more subtle than that. He doesn't
complain of disrespect of the process, but of disrespect of the
establishment. An establishment needs to repeatedly earn respect, or
expect to be challenged. There is also a black and white aspect to how
John views process; it's either the way it is, or some completely
different proces from what now exists. In that view, just as the
current process is something to be defended so too the hypothetical
different process becomes a goal that would need defending if it were to
succeed. So, yes, others will ignore that new process just as much as
they are ignoring the present process; that's a good thing.
Dealing with a single article should not need to involve a person in a
broad unending discussion of general process. If a person feels that a
particular corporation is notable, that needs to be discussed on its own
merits. Falling back on general process ignores the fact that the
financial pages form a larger part of daily newspapers than comic strips.
Ec