Pyramid (franchise) and User talk:SMP0328.: Difference between pages

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{{User:UBX/Twinkle2}}{{User en-N}}
{{articleissues
|cleanup=March 2008
|fansite=March 2008
|unreferenced=December 2007
}}
{{Infobox Television
| show_name = Pyramid
| image = [[Image:20kpyramid.jpg|250px]]
| caption = Title card from ''The $20,000 Pyramid''
| genre = Game show
| creator = [[Bob Stewart (television producer)|Bob Stewart]]
| starring = [[Dick Clark]]<br><small>(1973-1988)</small><br>[[Bill Cullen]]<br><small>(1974-1979)</small><br>[[John Davidson (entertainer)|John Davidson]]<br><small>(1991)</small><br>[[Donny Osmond]]<br><small>(2002-2004)</small>
| country = {{USA}}
| language = [[English language|English]]
| num_seasons =
| num_episodes = $10,000/$20,000 Pyramid: 1808 (CBS: approx. 225; ABC: 1582 + one primetime special)<br>$25,000 Pyramid (Bill Cullen): 150<br>$50,000 Pyramid: 95<br> $25,000 Pyramid (Dick Clark): 1404<br>$100,000 Pyramid (Dick Clark): 550 <br>$100,000 Pyramid (John Davidson): 170<br> Pyramid (Donny Osmond): 315<br>
| list_episodes =
| producer =
| executive_producer = Bob Stewart
| location =
| camera =
| runtime = approx. 22-26 minutes<!--runtimes don't include commercials-->
| network = [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]], [[CBS]] & [[Broadcast syndication|Syndicated]]
| picture_format =
| audio_format =
| first_run =
| first_aired = [[March 26]], [[1973]]
| last_aired = [[September 10]], [[2004]]
| preceded_by =
| followed_by =
| related =
| website =
| imdb_id =
| tv_com_id =
}}
'''''Pyramid''''' is the collective name of a series of [[United States|American]] television [[game show]]s where contestants tried to guess a series of words or phrases, based on descriptions that were given to them by their teammates. The title refers to the show's game board, featuring six categories arranged in a [[pyramid]]. Most different versions of the show included the various dollar values of their top prize in their titles, e.g., ''The $100,000 Pyramid''. As a whole, series won nine [[Daytime Emmy Award|Daytime Emmy]]s for Outstanding Game Show, second only to ''[[Jeopardy!]]'', which has won 11.


Thanks for visiting my talk page. Feel free to leave any comment. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 04:10, 7 January 2008 (UTC)
The original concept which creator [[Bob Stewart (television producer)|Bob Stewart]] presented to CBS was a rough pilot presentation titled ''Cash on the Line'' taped at CBS's [[Ed Sullivan Theater]] on [[February 2]], [[1973]]. It was said the programming executives at the network only liked the second part of the proposed program's format, and suggested that Stewart rework that part into another game. This would eventually become the main game portion of ''Pyramid'', featuring two celebrity-civilian partnered teams.


SMP, I think you might not be able to edit a semi-protected page because this specific account has not been active for 4 days. I think there is now a requirement to be "established."--[[User:Crossman33|Crossman33]] ([[User talk:Crossman33|talk]]) 00:45, 9 January 2008 (UTC)
Stewart then reworked the game and presented another version to CBS, with a bonus round that featured a giant pyramid board and a top $10,000 cash prize which could be won in one minute. He made the point that offering such a large amount of money in such a quick fashion had not been done before on television. There was no second pilot episode taped, but a run-through presentation was made in front of the network executives, with [[Peggy Cass]] and [[Bill Cullen]] as the celebrities demonstrating the new ''Pyramid'' game format.


==Incumbent infoboxes==
== Broadcast history ==
Incumbent infoboxes use ''Incumbent'' in the successor section. The Bush article shouldn't be made the exception. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 20:48, 21 January 2008 (UTC)


I like your idea, but that's not how the incumbent infoboxes are done. If you want to bring your idea up at [[Wikipedia: WikiProject Infoboxes]], I'll support it. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 20:54, 21 January 2008 (UTC)
{{main|Pyramid (game show) broadcast history}}


== politician ==
''The $10,000 Pyramid'', with host [[Dick Clark (entertainer)|Dick Clark]], made its network debut on [[March 26]], [[1973]] and was a ratings hit, sustaining its ratings even when episodes were delayed or preempted by the [[Watergate scandal|Watergate]] hearings. A year later, the ratings temporarily declined and CBS canceled it. The show was quickly picked up by ABC, and its run there began [[May 6]], [[1974]]. As per CBS custom at the time with celebrity game shows, three weeks of CBS' run were taped in [[Hollywood]]; not until 1982 would any version of ''Pyramid'' return to [[California]].


okay, but is President a job then?
The first thirty episodes (six weeks) which aired on ABC were taped at CBS's Ed Sullivan Theater while a replica set was built at ABC's smaller Elysee Theater, known also as Studio TV-15. One reason may have been the size of the set (including the giant Pyramid board itself), and ''Pyramid'' historian William Padron also states that the CBS union staff objected to seeing their creations moved to an ABC studio. The first episode taped at ABC was broadcast on [[June 17]], [[1974]] with [[June Lockhart]] and [[William Shatner]].


== Officeholder code ==
A weekly syndicated nighttime version, known as ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' and hosted by [[Bill Cullen]], made its debut in September 1974, seen mostly on network-affiliated stations during the prime access time slot. This edition lasted until September 1979.


*The page I sent you to was a copy of the template with my mods, to get the code you just had to click 'edit this page'. [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User:Philip_Stevens/Template:Infobox_Officeholder&action=edit Here's the link anyway]. --[[User:Philip Stevens|Philip Stevens]] ([[User talk:Philip Stevens|talk]]) 07:31, 26 January 2008 (UTC)
The network daytime version was a ratings success for ABC, usually ranked #3 among daytime game shows. On [[January 19]], [[1976]], the show increased its top prize and was renamed ''The $20,000 Pyramid.'' However, ratings later began to slide, and ABC canceled the show on [[June 27]], [[1980]].


== Politican vs. Senator ==
For a five-week period from [[October 1]] to [[November 9]], [[1979]], the series became ''Junior Partner Pyramid'', with the traditional celebrity-civilian pairings scrapped in favor of children playing with a parent or other adult relative.
Please see my response at [[Talk:Hillary Rodham Clinton]]. [[User:Wasted Time R|Wasted Time R]] ([[User talk:Wasted Time R|talk]]) 03:24, 27 January 2008 (UTC)


== January 2008 ==
From [[January 26]], [[1981]] to [[September 4]], [[1981]], the program returned to daily first-run syndication as ''The $50,000 Pyramid'', with Clark as host.


[[Image:Information.png|25px|left]] Hi, the <span class="plainlinks">[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Electoral_College?diff=187363883 recent edit]</span> you made to [[:United States Electoral College]] has been reverted, as it appears to be unconstructive. Use the [[Wikipedia:Sandbox|sandbox]] for testing; if you believe the edit was constructive, ensure that you provide an informative [[Help:Edit summary|edit summary]]. You may also wish to read the [[Wikipedia:Introduction|introduction to editing]]. Thanks. <!-- Template:uw-huggle1 --> <font style="color:Blue;">'' '''[[User:Compwhizii|Compwhiz II]]'''<sup>([[User_Talk:Compwhizii|Talk]])</sup><sub>([[Special:Contributions/Compwhizii|Contribs]])</sub> ''</font> 00:46, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
[[Image:$25,000 Pyramid.jpg|thumb|left|225px|Title card to the 1980s version of ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' (initially known as ''The New $25,000 Pyramid'')]]


:When you have a constant vandal on your hands do you stop and ask ''Why were you replacing pages with suck my cock?''. No. Sorry but its just standard policy.<font style="color:Blue;">'' '''[[User:Compwhizii|Compwhiz II]]'''<sup>([[User_Talk:Compwhizii|Talk]])</sup><sub>([[Special:Contributions/Compwhizii|Contribs]])</sub> ''</font> 01:02, 28 January 2008 (UTC)
In 1982, the series returned to the CBS daytime lineup as ''The $25,000 Pyramid'', again with Clark as host, but now taped in [[Los Angeles]]. The word 'New' was added to the title early on to prevent viewers from thinking the shows were reruns of Cullen's version, but was dropped in early 1985. It quickly became a hit, and a new nightly syndicated version, ''The $100,000 Pyramid'', also with Clark, was added in 1985. CBS canceled the daytime version on [[December 31]], [[1987]], but returned it for an additional 13 weeks of episodes in the spring of 1988 when its replacement, ''[[Blackout (game show)|Blackout]]'', failed. The $25,000 version ended on [[July 1]], [[1988]], and the $100,000 version on [[September 2]], [[1988]].


== Corwin Amendment ==
Later versions included a short-lived 1991 revival of ''The $100,000 Pyramid'', hosted by [[John Davidson (entertainer)|John Davidson]], and a 21st century version, the first to be simply be titled ''Pyramid'', hosted by [[Donny Osmond]], which ran from 2002 to 2004.


Hi,
Even on versions where he didn't host, Dick Clark was still involved. He appeared on the Cullen and Osmond versions as a celebrity player, and offered pre-taped well wishes to Davidson on his version's premiere episode. At the time, Clark was hosting ''[[The Challengers (game show)|The Challengers]]'', which prevented him from returning for this version.


I used [[WP:AWB]] to clean up the page.. it removed 2 line breaks from the external links section. Cheers. '''[[User:Sniperz11|Sniperz11]]<sup>[[User talk:Sniperz11|talk]]|[[Special:contributions/Sniperz11|edits]]</sup>''' 00:18, 31 January 2008 (UTC)
== Gameplay ==
===Front game===
The Pyramid's game boards, both in the main game and in the Winner's Circle bonus round, featured six categories arranged in a pyramid, with three categories on the bottom row, two on the middle row, and one on the top. In the main game, a category's position on the board was not an indicator of its difficulty. In the Winner's Circle, categories became progressively more difficult the higher they were on the board.


== refactoring other user's talk page commentary ==
The game featured two teams, each composed of a celebrity and a "civilian" contestant. At the beginning of the game, the teams were shown six categories, whose titles gave vague clues to their possible meaning (e.g., "I'm All Wet" might pertain to things found in the water). Once the category was chosen, its exact meaning was given (except in certain bonus situations where the meaning was not given and a cash bonus won for completing all the clues). For up to 30 seconds, one player would convey to the other clues to a series of items belonging to a category. One point was scored for each item correctly guessed. If a word was passed, the giver could not go back to that word, but if the receiver knew the word later on and guessed it, the team still earned a point. On the Osmond version, a team that passed on any words could return to them if time permitted.


please don't do it. see [[WP:TALK]], section 1.5.1. most users find it annoying having their commentary edited. thank you. [[User:Anastrophe.|Anastrophe]] ([[User talk:Anastrophe.|talk]]) 03:02, 1 February 2008 (UTC)
Originally, on the CBS version, there were eight possible items in a category. This was reduced to seven when the show moved to ABC, and reduced again to six (in 20 seconds) for the Osmond-hosted version. The short-lived ''Junior Partner Pyramid'' format kept the seven words, but increased the time limit to 35 seconds. Using any part of the answer in giving a clue resulting in the item being disqualified with a "cuckoo" (or a "burble" on the Osmond version) sound effect. Originally, the celebrity gave the clues in the first and third rounds, and the civilian contestant in the second round. Eventually, the team was given the opportunity to choose which player would give the clues in the third round. The teams alternated in the first two rounds, and the team with the lower score played first in the third round. Whoever had the higher score after three rounds played the "Winner's Circle" at center stage for a cash bonus.


==Texas v. White==
From 1976 to 1980, any player who scored a perfect 21 points received a $1,000 bonus on the daytime ''$20,000 Pyramid'' and a $2,100 bonus on the nighttime ''$25,000 Pyramid'' during the 1977-1978 season. Towards the end of the daytime edition, 21 points won a bonus prize (a color TV on the final episode).
You asked how ''Morgan v. United States'' overruled ''Texas v. White''. From pg. 496 of the report: "The position there taken [in ''Texas v. White''], that the legislature of Texas, while the state was owner of the bonds, could limit their negotiability by an act of legislation, of which all subsequent purchasers were charged with notice, although though the bonds on their face were payable to bearer, ''must be regarded as overruled''." Thus, as I noted in the citation in the article on the Preamble, ''White'' was overruled on other grounds than those for which it is cited. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 19:59, 1 February 2008 (UTC)


==[[Carl Albert]]==
If there was a tie score at the end of the third round, a tie breaking round was played. One team was given the chance to choose to use things that began with one of two letters of the alphabet (e.g. "Things that begin with the letter M or the letter G"). The other team would use whichever letter the first team did not pick. In the 1970s, the objective was to score as many words as possible within 30 seconds, with the score added onto the team's initial main game score and play continuing until the tie was broken, leading to rare occasions when a team's score passed the 40-point mark.
Hello SMP0328, you may want to check that article out. Its 'Mr Speaker' section seems confusing - it seems to suggest Albert would've become President, yet also to say he would've become Acting President. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 01:10, 2 February 2008 (UTC)


Thanks, we do make a good team. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 02:53, 2 February 2008 (UTC)
Later in the 1970s syndicated run and on all subsequent versions, a "best of seven" tiebreaker was used. The earlier main game score was erased, and if the first team guessed all seven words within their allotted time, the opposing team had to guess seven words within the time it took the first team to get all seven, which meant tiebreakers almost always took just one round to complete (if both teams tied with less than 7, the score was again wiped clean and a new tiebreaker was played, though this rarely happened). Beginning in mid-[[1984]], if the teams tied with a perfect score of 21-21, whoever broke the tie won a new car. By that fall, this bonus was changed to $5,000 cash, which also carried over to the first syndicated ''$100,000 Pyramid''.


====Bonus games====
==Multiple edits==
I've thought of that, but I make edits as they occur to me, and after seeing how it renders and re-reading it, I will fiddle with it. I see no real reason to try to do things in one shot other than (possibly) my own convenience, and it doesn't seem convenient to me. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 22:18, 9 February 2008 (UTC)
A number of bonus games were used during the front games, offering cash or a prize if the team correctly guessed all of the answers in a particular category. During the 1970s daytime version, one category each day hid the '''Big 7''', which was originally worth a trip, but soon changed to $500. The Cullen-hosted version originally used the Big 7 with a payoff of $1,000. This was replaced the following season with a '''Big Money Card''' worth a random amount from $1,000-$5,000. During the final season of this version, the Big 7 returned and was played for a new car.


== Second amendment intro ==
During the short-lived ''Junior Partner Pyramid'' format, there was no Big 7; rather, each team would choose one category during either of the day's two games to designate as their '''Bonus 7''', which otherwise worked the same way as the Big 7, right down to the $500 payoff. One notable difference, however, was that the bonus money counted towards a team's final total for the day, the only time in ''Pyramid'' history when that occurred.


I see your edit to the intro of the 2A article. Have you also seen the negotiation and development of the wording of the intro on the talk page? That consensus text was '''painstakingly''' negotiated, and if it needs more change, lets discuss on the talk page rather than making casual changes at whim. Thanks. [[User:SaltyBoatr|SaltyBoatr]] ([[User talk:SaltyBoatr|talk]]) 20:57, 13 February 2008 (UTC)
No bonuses were used on the ''$50,000 Pyramid'', however, a trip was given to the player who achieved the fastest main game time during the course of the week.


:You didn't answer my question: Have you also seen the negotiations and development of the consensus on the talk page? [[User:SaltyBoatr|SaltyBoatr]] ([[User talk:SaltyBoatr|talk]]) 21:16, 13 February 2008 (UTC)
Starting in the 1980s CBS version, a '''Mystery 7''' was played in game two and won the contestant a bonus prize for guessing all seven words without being told the category until the end. For the first two years, it was shown in plain view, but was later concealed behind one of the categories. Several months into its run, a '''7-11''' bonus debuted, played in game one for a cash bonus of $1,100 (originally, contestants could either go for the money or "play it safe" and take $50 per word. Few teams chose this option, and it was finally dropped in early 1985). Both bonuses were carried over to the syndicated "$100,000 Pyramid" show.


== Village pump talk page ==
For a time in early [[1983]], the '''Mystery 7''' was dropped in favor of a '''Player of the Week''' format, where a player who guessed all seven answers in the fastest time during the week received a trip to [[Greece]] (much like the $50,000 version). This was dropped after three weeks when it was realized a champion would have to be disqualified from this competition if their reign carried over from one week to another.


Per our earlier discussion, I've deleted the entire discussion including the image tagging notice, and also replaced the non-free image on the main page with a link. That image shouldn't have been on the main page to begin with per [[WP:NFCC]], which limits non-free images to mainspace. I figured that deletion of a random image someone added is not the concern of the Village Pump. Feel free to restore as much or little as you like, but it didn't seem like something worth keeping in the record there. Cheers. - [[User:Wikidemo|Wikidemo]] ([[User talk:Wikidemo|talk]]) 07:50, 14 February 2008 (UTC)
In the 1990s, a '''Double Trouble''' game was added, with contestants winning $500 for guessing seven two-word phrases in 45 seconds. In games where this appeared, there were two such categories in one game, and each team was required to play one of them. The 1990s version also included '''Gamble for a Grand''' (also played as ''Gamble for a Trip''), in which a contestant could choose to give up time in one round and try to guess all seven clues in only 25 seconds, for a $1,000 bonus or vacation if successful. The 2002 Osmond revival had a '''Super Six''' in each half of the show, with a bonus prize awarded for a successful round.


== Please stick to reliable sourcing. ==
===Winner's Circle===
The Winner's Circle included a larger pyramid, also composed of six boxes. Each box contained a category, such as "Things You Plan" or "Why You Exercise", and would be revealed one at a time. One player (usually the celebrity, though the contestant always had the option to give or receive, except in the first season of Donny Osmond's version) gave a list of items to the other player, who attempted to guess the category to which all of the described items belonged. Each category was worth a small amount of money. Correctly guessing all six categories in 60 seconds earned the cash bonus. An illegal clue would disqualify the category and end the player's chance to win the large bonus. However, if other categories remained in the game, the smaller amounts could still be won. Illegal clues in the Winner's circle included: "the essence of the answer" (i.e., the answer itself or a direct synonym), describing the category itself rather than naming items, answers that did not fit the category, and made-up expressions. When ''The $10,000 Pyramid'' moved to ABC, hand gestures became illegal (the clue giver had arm straps attached to his/her chair to discourage this). [[Adpositional phrase|Prepositional phrase]]s and overly descriptive sentences were legal clues until ''The New $25,000 Pyramid'' revised its rules in 1982.


I view your edit[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Yaf&curid=12245873&diff=191719374&oldid=191230024] as a personal attack, and as a declaration of your intent to push your personal point of view into the 2A article. Could you please avoid personal attacks and could you please use reliable sourcing instead of your personal views when making your edits. Thanks. [[User:SaltyBoatr|SaltyBoatr]] ([[User talk:SaltyBoatr|talk]]) 21:53, 15 February 2008 (UTC)
Each category on the Pyramid paid as follows:

{| class="wikitable" cellspacing="8"
== Rollback ==

{{ {{#ifeq:|{{void}}|void|Error:must be substituted}}|Rollbackgiven}}You have been [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Special%3ALog&type=rights&user=&page=User%3A{{PAGENAME}} granted] with the rollback permission on the basis of your recent effort on dealing with vandalism. The rollback is a revert tool which can lessens the strains that normal javascripts such as [[WP:TW|twinkle]] put on the Wikipedia servers. You will find that you will revert faster through the rollback than through the normal reversion tools such as [[WP:JS|javascripts]] and the undo feature, because the rollback feature does not require fetching the data from the page history and then sending article data back to the Wikipedia server as the javascript requires, therefore you could save time especially when reverting very large articles such as the [[George W. Bush]] page. To use it, simply click the link which should look like <nowiki>[</nowiki><span style="color:#002BB8">rollback</span><nowiki>]</nowiki> (which should appear unbolded if you have twinkle installed) on the lastest diff page. The rollback link will also appear on the history page beside the edit summary of the lastest edit. For more information, you may refer to this [[Wikipedia:Reverting#Rollback|page]], alternatively, you may also find this [[Wikipedia:New admin school/Rollback|tutorial on rollback]] helpful.[[User:Yamamoto_Ichiro|Yamamoto Ichiro]] [[User talk:Yamamoto Ichiro|会話]] 21:29, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

== [[Windows XP]] ==

Regarding [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Windows_XP&curid=33879&diff=193206760&oldid=193111590 this edit], why did you describe it as a "registry hack"? I'm aware of its colloquial use, but your source doesn't use this term, and it's an especially odd choice considering that this is a Microsoft-sanctioned settings change. <span style="color:blue;font-weight:bold;font-family: Monotype Corsiva;"> [[User talk:Warren|-/-]] [[User:Warren|Warren]]</span> 06:13, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

==Hans==
The selection you quoted refers to the ultimate sovereignty as superior to all legislatures! How could it possibly be referring to the States if the ultimate sovereignty is superior to all legislatures? What else is superior to all courts and all legislatures except "We the ''People''"? As I originally wrote it, the parenthetical said "(the people, speaking through the amendment process)". You eliminated the clause that followed, which I wasn't going to fight you on, but the very portion that you quoted to me demonstrates your position is wrong. The quoted portion of ''Hans'' is expressly invoking some authority ''higher than the States'', which is this notion that the Constitution comes from "the People." [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 19:58, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
:The Constitution was written by a Convention that met in Philadelphia; it was not drafted by "We the People," yet purports to speak in their name. It was not submitted to a referendum of the People, either nationally or in each State, but was instead ratified by special conventions for that purpose. Those ratifying conventions excluded enormous fractions of society that were considered part of "the People" (women, people without land). The ratifying conventions met in each State and ratified it as a unit by each State, notwithstanding that the Preamble purports to speak of "the People" as an undifferentiated whole. None of that is offered as proof of my parenthetical; it is, however, ''disproof'' of your position that it is some kind of "interpretation" on my part that the allusion in ''Hans'' is to the People because the ratification process proceeds through the State Legislatures. What else does the allusion in ''Hans'' refer to? It specifically excludes legislatures and courts, and the thrust of the article is that Supreme Court doctrine is that sovereignty is ''not'' derived from the States as separate sovereign political units that ceded it to the federal government, but from the People directly. It is particularly ludicrous that you would say that "if the Hans court was referring to the People, then such a reference was in error." Who are you to say that? The article is about the ''Supreme Court's'' position on the meaning of the Preamble. You offer that the Supreme Court may have been "referring to the State Legislatures' role within Article V, which is superior to any single legislature," but the Court in the quotation you offered specifically refers to "the ultimate sovereignty of the whole country, ''superior to all legislatures'' . . . ." Your own quotation refutes your position! I really am unclear on how you can possibly think that what you're saying is consistent with the other cases that are cited to and quoted from in note 10 of the article on the Preamble. Your position that the allusion in ''Hans'' ''could'' refer to the State Legislatures collectively is ''specifically'' refuted by the quotations from ''Martin v. Hunter's Lessee'' and ''M'Culloch v. Maryland''. In the absence of those quotes, which specifically reject a notion that the federal government's sovereignty proceeds from the State Governments, you would be right: it would be inconclusive what the Supreme Court in ''Hans'' is talking about. But by the time ''Hans'' was decided, the Supreme Court had already ''specifically rejected'' the alternative you're proposing. EDIT: In a sense, you're right that it's POV, but it's the POV ''of the Supreme Court'' that the parenthetical expresses, and the whole article is devoted to explicating the Supreme Court's point of view on these matters. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 20:52, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
::Your latest alternative makes no more sense than the last. "The Court could have meant the Constitution, specifically Article V." But the Constitution doesn't act for itself (it's an inanimate object!). The quote in the article on the Preamble says that "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the people)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court." You're suggesting it could be reworded to say "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the Constitution)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court," or that "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the States)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court", and that because there are these competing plausible interpretations, we shouldn't put anything there. But as I noted, the opinions in ''M'Culloch'' and ''Martin'' specifically refute the latter alternative (the States), and it just doesn't make any sense that the Constitution can disagree with the Supreme Court, it has no will of its own. The Supreme Court in ''Hans'' speaks of something having acted; if we know it isn't the States, how is there any alternative except that it is the "We the People" that the Preamble speaks of in the first person as having ordained and established the document? [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 21:09, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
:::As for why the Supreme Court didn't say it expressly, I can only speculate on that; I can only offer my point of view! My best guess is that they were going for the sort of poetic understatement that was once fashionable in legal writing. Judges once said things like "Not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive, is . . . the standard of behavior [for trustees]. . . . Conduct subject to that reproach does not receive from equity a healing benediction." ''Meinhard v. Salmon'', 164 N.E. 545 (N.Y. 1928). I am extremely confident that my parenthetical ''objectively'' expresses what the Court is talking about. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 21:16, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

==[[Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution]]==

Dear SMP0328: I reverted your addition of the citation to the "family guardian" website in this article. The textual statement is certainly correct, but the website in question ("famguardian") is a tax protester website that is in the process of being closed down by court order. Much of the material in that web site is fraudulent. I realize that your addition of that source was made in good faith, and in fact I have seen the many good edits you have been making to various tax-related articles.

I will try to locate a source for the statement in the article. Again, thanks for your help. Yours, [[User:Famspear|Famspear]] ([[User talk:Famspear|talk]]) 19:08, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
==Bush term end==
I don't see the need for the article header to mention the precise time at which his term ends, let alone to provide a reference for it. That level of detail is unnecessary. -- [[User:Zsero|Zsero]] ([[User talk:Zsero|talk]]) 21:42, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

== Protection of Second Amendment to the United States Constitution ==

I understand your concerns about protection locking out other editors. My initial reaction was to warn and block the edit warriors (see [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Requests_for_page_protection&oldid=194641373#Second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution_.28edit.7Ctalk.7Chistory.7Clinks.7Cwatch.7Clogs.29 here], [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:SaltyBoatr&diff=prev&oldid=194523570 here] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=User_talk:Yaf&diff=prev&oldid=194523699 here]) but when a third editor became involved, [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Second_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution&diff=194524291&oldid=194523265 thus], I didn't have many options. I would like to be able to lift the protection early, as I stated on the talk page, and your request that it be shortened adds extra impetus to that. However, too short a period of time has elapsed for me to decide whether to shorten the protection. Thus, I have watchlisted the article and will continue to follow matters on the talk page and will review the length of protection after the article has been protected for 48-72 hours. Most of all I am concerned to prevent future edit warring and as an interested editor of this article, you could perhaps try to expedite a resolution by mediating between the disputants. [[User:CIreland|CIreland]] ([[User talk:CIreland|talk]]) 12:45, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

== Vandalism? ==

You changed the caption if the image in the [[Netscape Navigator 9]] article. But the image is still the same! That is really serious, false information is something to avoid. Was this vandalism or did you just don't care about it? Please, why did you do this? If you do something like that again, I will tell an administrator. <tt><span style="background-color:#de0000">[[User talk:Helpsloose|<font color="#fcd115">Hel</font>]][[User:Helpsloose|<font color="white">pslo</font>]][[Special:Contributions/Helpsloose|<font color="#fcd115">ose</font>]]</span></tt> 15:32, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

:Learn to come down. I wasn't vandalizing the [[Netscape Navigator 9]] article. That browser was recently upgraded to version 9.0.0.6, so I decided to update that caption. I meant no harm. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 19:30, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

::OK, sorry. <tt><span style="background-color:#de0000">[[User talk:Helpsloose|<font color="#fcd115">Hel</font>]][[User:Helpsloose|<font color="white">pslo</font>]][[Special:Contributions/Helpsloose|<font color="#fcd115">ose</font>]]</span></tt> 19:48, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

== Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution ==
Your participation is requested for [[Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution]]. Thanks. [[User:Yaf|Yaf]] ([[User talk:Yaf|talk]]) 19:08, 4 March 2008 (UTC)


==Request for mediation accepted==
{| class="messagebox" style="width:90%"
|-
|-
|[[Image:Exquisite-folder5.png|75px]]
| style="text-align: center;" | '''Version'''
|A [[Wikipedia:Requests for mediation|Request for Mediation]] to which you were are a party has been [[Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Guide to accepted cases#Post-acceptance|accepted]].<br>You can find more information on the case subpage, [[Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution]].</center><br>
| style="text-align: center;" | '''1st'''
::''For the Mediation Committee,'' <font face="Verdana">[[User:WJBscribe|'''WjB''']][[User talk:WJBscribe|scribe]]</font> 20:30, 4 March 2008 (UTC)
| style="text-align: center;" | '''2nd'''
|}
| style="text-align: center;" | '''3rd'''
<small><center>This message delivered by [[User:MediationBot1|MediationBot]], an automated bot account [[Wikipedia:Mediation Committee#MediationBot|operated]] by the [[Wikipedia:Mediation Committee|Mediation Committee]] to perform case management.<br>If you have questions about this bot, please [[Wikipedia talk:Mediation Committee|contact the Mediation Committee directly]].</small></center>
| style="text-align: center;" | '''4th'''
| style="text-align: center;" | '''5th'''
| style="text-align: center;" | '''6th'''


==Preamble "Clarification"==
I am not certain that your clarification to the Preamble article is accurate, strictly speaking. A dissolution of the Union leaves nothing left; each State would be an independent country. Secession from the Union suggests that 1 or more States purport to withdraw, but that the remaining States are united. Your re-wording makes it sound like secession is a form of dissolution, but it doesn't strike me that this is the case. It seems to me at best it is a sort of "poetic" dissolution, but a less than totally natural use of the word. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 02:55, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
:What you describe is captured by the word "secession." The word "dissolution," unqualified by your phrase "''and the remaining states''," refers to the ''total'' dissolution of the Union; that is, there would be ''no Union at all''. The way it was originally worded captured this distinction, by making it clear that in ''this'' context, "secession" and "dissolution" mean different things. I don't dispute that what you say is true, but there is also the concept of ''total dissolution'', and that concept is ably set up by the prior wording, which recognizes a distinction between secession and dissolution. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 03:21, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
::There are two different unions that are being spoken of. There is the indissoluable union between any given State (or subgroup of States) and the overarching, independently existing Union. Dissolving that union is called "secession." There is also "the Union," that is, the concept of the states bound together as a greater cohesive whole (the "United States of America"). Speaking simply of dissolution of "the Union" would refer to the death of that larger political entity (the destruction of the United States of America). In the Civil War, for example, the United States of America was not dissolved and would not have been even if the C.S.A. had won; the Union would still have existed as between the non-seceding States. Your edit muddles the distinction between these two concepts. My point in wording it as it was worded initially is that the Courts have interpreted the Preamble to mean two things: (1) that the United States of America is intended to exist indefinitely ''and'' (2) that no single State or group of States may legally withdraw from that larger, overarching Union. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 03:52, 5 March 2008 (UTC)

== [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Citizen of the several states]] ==

Hi, please comment. Cheers! [[User:BD2412|<font style="background:gold">'''''bd2412'''''</font>]] [[User talk:BD2412|'''T''']] 09:36, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

== modifying other's comments ==

generally speaking, it's best not to modify another user's comments on a talk page, even to correct typos. from [[WP:TALK]]: "It is not necessary to bring talk pages to publishing standards, so there is no need to correct typing errors, grammar, etc. It tends to irritate the users whose comments you are correcting". [[User:Anastrophe.|Anastrophe]] ([[User talk:Anastrophe.|talk]]) 02:38, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

:I'm being a nice person. I doubt SaltyBoatr or Yaf object. I know you don't like it, so I never correct any spelling error made by you on a talk page. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:44, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

:okay. of coarse, i nevr mak speling errers in my commints, so yuve nevr had teh operatunity to ficks them. ;^). [[User:Anastrophe.|Anastrophe]] ([[User talk:Anastrophe.|talk]]) 02:57, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

::U R hilarious. :) [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 03:04, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

:::No, seriously, you really aren't supposed to correct people's spelling errors in the talk pages. It's just really frowned upon. --[[User:Jaysweet|Jaysweet]] ([[User talk:Jaysweet|talk]]) 21:21, 10 March 2008 (UTC)

::::I think it's a kind act. People make spelling errors. What's wrong with someone correcting that on a Talk page, so that person's comments look better? I never change the substance of what someone is saying. Only Anastrophe has told me not to correct his spelling, so I don't. Nobody else has had a problem with what I do. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 01:07, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

==Anon Editor==
The above anon has made a minor edit to the article.<ref>[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Preamble_to_the_United_States_Constitution&diff=198069504&oldid=197855039 The anon's edit.]</ref> I think that edit should not be reverted. Anons that make good faith edits that don't make an article less accurate, should not be left with the impression that they are not welcome. This anon's edit should be left in place, because it does not undermine the quality of the article and because the anon would hopefully then feel that his efforts at making good faith contributions to Wikipedia are welcome. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 23:05, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

:What about anonymous edits that make the article less well-written? Personally, I think edits like this ought to be disfavored; it is mere change for change's sake. However, since it isn't ''wrong'', I have no intention of making a fuss over it; there are a few other, more substantive additions I would like to make to the article. Perhaps sweep a revert under the rug by quietly amending it back in a few weeks? Or just leave it alone, I am not terribly passionate about it either way. I ''definitely'' wouldn't write it in this more casual-sounding fashion. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 23:37, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

::Obviously, if any edit lessens the quality of the article, that edit should be reverted. I have no objection to changing it back later. My point is simply that an anon who makes an edit that doesn't lessen the quality of the article, shouldn't have that edit reverted as if it were vandalism. Such anons should be encouraged to contribute, not discouraged as if they are unwelcome intruders. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 23:46, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

{{reflist}}

==Vandals==
The answer is that, unfortunately, there is never a low supply of idiots. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 03:07, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:Yeah I get that, but what is leading them to the article on the Preamble? If I was going to vandalize something, I don't think it'd be that. Then again, I suppose all the high-profile vandalism targets are protected. Even so, I don't get the steady stream. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 03:30, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::I thought about what you said. My guess is that at least of some of those vandals are anti-American and see vandalizing the Preamble article as a way (stupidity notwithstanding) to express how they feel. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 19:32, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::My first guess was bored high school civics students. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 20:22, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::::Probably a combination of both. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 20:30, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

==Arkansas Governors==
Hello SMP0328. I seen you comment & edits at [[Joseph Bruno]]. Could or would you explain to me ''why'' [[Jim Guy Tucker]] became Governor (instead of Acting Governor) in December 1992 & [[Mike Huckabee]] became Governor (instead of Acting Governor) in July 1996. Where's [[Bob C. Riley]] only became Acting Governor in 1975. When did Arkansas changes its gubernatorial succession act? I've asked [[Wikipedia: WikiProject US Governors]], as well as 'two' other editors this question; nobody has yet answered. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 15:45, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:Gubernatorial succession in Arkansas is governed by its State laws and State constitution. My changes to the Bruno article are based on the New York State Constitution. It certainly permissible for gubernatorial succession in Arkansas to function differently from how it functions in New York. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 17:40, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::I've no problem with the New York Governors & Lieutenant Governors. I'm just curious about the Arkansas Governors & Lieutenant Governors. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 17:42, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::I just wanted to know; has an amendment to the Arkansas Constitution (concerning gubernatorial succession) been adopted ''since'' 1975? [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 17:44, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::::Would you like me to look up the applicable Arkansas State constitutional provisions? --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 17:44, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::Yeah, would you look it up? [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 17:45, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::Here's a link to Article 6, Section 5 (as amended) of the Arkansas State constitution.[http://www.sos.arkansas.gov/ar-constitution/arcamend6/arcamend6-5.htm] It's similar to what is required by the New York State constitution. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 17:54, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::I've peeked at Article 6, section 4 (as well). According to that section? Tucker was ''Acting Governor'' from Bill Clinton's resignation in December 1992 'til his (Tucker's) inauguration as Governor in January 1995. Mike Huckabee was 'Acting Governor' from Tucker's resignation in July 1996 'til his (Huckabee's) inauguration as Governor in January 1999. Something doesn't add up here. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 17:59, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::::It appears that the Arkansas Constitution makes the Lt. Gov. Acting Governor when the Governor fails to finish his term, but says that the Acting Governor serves "for the residue of the term." This means that the Lt. Gov. becomes the ''[[de facto]]'' Governor. So technically those men were Acting Governors, but in reality they were Governors. The word "Acting" should only be used when (1) the powers of an office, but not the office, are bestowed upon a person, and (2) that person is not supposed to serve for the remainder of the term of that office. For example, the two occasions that Dick Cheney was Acting President he was not President, because he did not occupy the office of President and did not have the authority to possess the Presidential powers for the remainder of the current Presidential term. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 18:36, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::::OK, Riley completed a gubernatorial term (the same way Tucker & Huckabee did) ''yet'' he (and others before him) is called Acting Governor. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 19:12, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

::::::::::I can't speak to the terminology used in Arkansas. All I know is that, in Arkansas when a Governor can't finish his term, a Lieutenant Governor becomes Acting Governor, but is really simply the Governor, because he is to finish his predecessor's term. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 19:37, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::::::It sure is confusing. Huckabee was elected Lt Gov under Tucker ''before'' Tucker was elected Governor and Rockefeller was elected Lt Gov under Huckabee ''before'' Huckabee was elected Governor. In those scenarios Tucker & Huckabee were 'never' Acting Governor. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 19:43, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::::::I figuring things out further. Purcell, Riley, Tucker & Huckabee were Lt Gov succeeding to the Governorship. The office of Lieutenant Governor didn't exist during the previous 'gubernatorial successions' (in those cases, the Senate President assumed the gov powers & duties as [correctly] Acting Governor). Therefore the inconsistency problems pertains ''only'' to Purcell and Riley. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 19:56, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::::::::Better still, Huckabee was elected Lt Gov in 1993 (in a special election) under Tucker & Rockefeller was elected Lt Gov in 1996 (in a special election) under Huckabee. This gives the impression that Tucker & Huckabee became Governor in 1992 & 1996 respectively (not just Acting Governor). [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 15:22, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

::There's only one explanation, I can think of (concerning Riley & Purcell). In Arkansas the Lieutenant Governor succeeding to the Governorship ''is not'' automatic; but requires the taking of the gubernatorial oath. Seeing as Governors Bumpers & Pryor resigned with mere days left in their respective terms? Perhaps their Lt Gov's chose not to take the gubernatorial oath & therefore ''did not'' become Governors. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 16:39, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

:::I recommend that you look up the Arkansas Supreme Court decision in ''Bryant v. English'', 311 Ark. 187 (1992), which dealt with gubernatorial succession. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 18:18, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

::::I can't find a copy anywhere (on the internet). [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 18:31, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

:::::I couldn't either. The Arkansas Supreme Court's on-line records don't go back that far. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 18:40, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
::::It gets even better. Lt Gov [[Harvey Parnell]] 'apparently' became Governor ''upon'' his predecessor's resignation (in the same manner as [[Jim Guy Tucker]] & [[Mike Huckabee]]). But (again), Lt Govs Riley & Purcell don't succeed. Very inconsistent. [[User:GoodDay|GoodDay]] ([[User talk:GoodDay|talk]]) 18:56, 19 March 2008 (UTC)

==[[Joseph Bruno]]==

:As per Article IV §6 of the NYS constitution: "In case of vacancy in the office of lieutenant-governor alone, or if the lieutenant-governor shall be impeached, absent from the state or otherwise unable to discharge the duties of office, the temporary president of the senate shall perform all the duties of lieutenant governor during such vacancy or inability."
Therefore, Joe Bruno is the Acting LG. It has been acknowledged by all and he has moved into the LG's office in the Capitol. <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:Scanz851|Scanz851]] ([[User talk:Scanz851|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/Scanz851|contribs]]) 04:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

He is not "Acting Lieutenant Governor", because no such position exists. The New York State Constitution says that when there's no Lieutenant Governor, the temporary president of the senate "performs his duties." That means he presides over the State Senate. Referring to him as "Acting Lieutenant Governor" leads to the impression that he is like a Lieutenant Governor in all ways. He is not. If Governor Paterson fails to finish the current gubernatorial term, [[Joseph Bruno]] would only "act as governor" (be Acting Governor) pending a special election. He would not, like a Lieutenant Governor, become Governor for the remainder of that term. "Acting Lieutenant Governor" is less clear than "temporary president of the senate" and so it is not used in the article. Secondarily, "Acting Lieutenant Governor" is a form of [[Wikipedia: no original research|original research]]. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 04:38, 1 April 2008 (UTC)

That is quite correct. So, please stop the hair-splitting, SMP!. It appears the office is not vacant, Bruno has moved in! (see [[Wikipedia:POINT]] "Do not disrupt Wikipedia just to prove a point!") [[User:Kraxler|Kraxler]] ([[User talk:Kraxler|talk]]) 20:22, 3 April 2008 (UTC)

:*"The Senate majority leader — currently Republican Joseph Bruno — will act as lieutenant governor until after the 2010 elections." <ref>http://www.governing.com/news/0803paterson.htm</ref>
:*"Were Gov. Eliot Spitzer to resign and Lt. Gov. David Paterson to succeed him, the new acting lieutenant governor would be Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, a Republican." <ref>http://www.newsday.com/news/local/state/ny-stsucc115609410mar11,0,1010682.story</ref>
:*"Joe Bruno is now the lieutenant governor." <ref>http://dailygotham.com/blog/bouldin/yay_new_york</ref>
:*"And in a serious karmic slap to Spitzer, the governor's arch-nemesis, Joseph Bruno, would become acting Lt. Governor." <ref>http://news.yahoo.com/s/thenation/20080311/cm_thenation/4297149</ref>
:I think I have made my point. Kraxler is correct that Bruno has in fact moved into the LG's office in the state capital, I can't find that news report though b/c it was printed a few weeks ago. As someone that used to work for the state and still know people who are currently employed for the state, specifically in the state legislature and Bruno's office itself, Bruno is acting #2.[[User:Scanz851|Scanz851]] ([[User talk:Scanz851|talk]]) 22:13, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

The media is notorious for incorrectly stating the law. Here's [http://www.lohud.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080313/NEWS05/803130392/1021 an article] that says if [[David Paterson]] fails to finish the current gubernatorial term, then Bruno would become "governor until the end of 2010, since the state constitution doesn't call for a special election to pick a new lieutenant governor." That's clearly wrong. Bruno would "act as governor" until a new election for Governor and Lieutenant Governor was held either this year or next year. Many reporters don't read up on the law. We know more about the then they do.

As for Bruno moving into the Lt. Gov.'s office, he may simply like that office. [[Dick Cheney]] held an office in the House of Representatives, but that didn't make him a Representative or Speaker. My source is the State Constitution. The [[Joseph Bruno]] article clearly states that, as "temporary president of the senate", Bruno performs the Lt. Gov.'s duties. Relevant templates say "''vacant''" followed by a [[Lieutenant Governor of New York#2008_Vacancy|note]] that states that Bruno is performing the Lt. Gov.'s duties, because that office is vacant. So right now, the Bruno article, and related templates, have both of what we want. They say the office of Lieutenant Governor is vacant (as I want) and state that Bruno is temporarily performing the duties of that office (as you and Kraxler want), because of that vacancy. I think this is a good compromise. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 23:06, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

{{reflist}}

==References==
When I hover over a footnote call number, nothing happens at all; the pointer changes appropriately and invites me to click on it. I'm using a Mac and Safari 3.1, which may account for the difference. At any rate, I hadn't noticed. My footnotes are long enough that nobody wants to read them in a pop-up hover box anyway. Well, not many people want to read them at all, and ''nobody'' wants to read them like that! [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 00:27, 20 March 2008 (UTC)


==Comment by an anon==
In the article on District of Columbia Voting Rights at

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/District_of_Columbia_voting_rights

there was a section (actually two) setting out the Pros and Cons on the subject. User Meelar deleted both sections. I feel this is counterproductive. Certainly both sides' views should be represented equally, but there is nothing preventing either side from adding or augmenting their points of view. Deleting BOTH sides exposition of their points of view, however (particularly prior to any discussion) smacks of censorship, vandalism, or maybe both.

Before getting into a post and delete contest, it would be preferable to DISCUSS the issues.

==Preamble Cite check==
I see you recently flagged a sentence in the Preamble article for a fact/cite check or whatever it's called. It's my feeling that the sentiment being expressed there doesn't necessarily need a citation, although it perhaps should be reworded to better express that. I think the point is that, to some extent, people understand the Preamble to mean what they want it to mean (that it is something of a constitutional ink blot test). The comment to me only seems to be hedging on declaring that the Preamble must mean one thing, thereby asserting that the Preamble commits the Constitution to one theory of government. The comment to me is only there to "hedge," not to make a specific factual assertion. In this way, it doesn't seem to me to need a citation if the comment is just there out of modesty. Do you feel it could be reworded to better express this? [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 17:43, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

:Adding a footnote that is linked to an example having an alternative view of the Preamble would be a way to back up that sentence. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 17:50, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

::Why can't it just be a hedge, though? Why does it have to be referring to something specific? To me, it isn't making any actual assertion that needs support. And, my point was to come up with a way of wording it that doesn't need a citation at all, not come up with a specific competing theory. Anything that is produced would inevitably be, at the least, un-authoritative. Also, arguably the preceding discussion makes it clear that even the Supreme Court can't quite decide exactly what it means (oscillating between the "citizens" and "anyone under the jurisdiction of the United States" viewpoints). At any rate, I'm trying to come up with a way of wording it that ''demands no citation at all'' and I wanted your input on that. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 18:49, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

:::I changed the word "are" to "may be" in the sentence we are discussing. Now the sentence only refers to the possibility of alternative viewpoints about the Preamble, instead of claiming that such viewpoints exist. This makes it a hedge, rather than a statement of fact. With this change, I also removed the cite tag. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.|talk]]) 18:57, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

==Inquiry by an anon==
I don't know how this works but I just tried searching George W. Bush and all that came up was a long sentence. The sentence said how Bush swapped brains with hamsters and a bunch of other crazy stuff. The thing is, I was on that page for one minute (the article was how it should be), I linked to another page, went back to the Bush page, and it had changed!!! <small>—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/68.43.196.143|68.43.196.143]] ([[User talk:68.43.196.143|talk]]) 23:25, 27 March 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->

==How about a little acknowledgment for SMP0328? ==
{| style="border: 1px solid gray; background-color: #fdffe7;"
|rowspan="2" valign="middle" | [[Image:Original Barnstar.png|100px]]
|rowspan="2" |
|style="font-size: x-large; padding: 0; vertical-align: middle; height: 1.1em;" | '''The Original Barnstar'''
|-
|-
|style="vertical-align: middle; border-top: 1px solid gray;" | In grateful recognition of your fine work on Wikipedia's law articles, I award you this barnstar. Thank you for making wikipedia a better source of knowledge for people curious about law-related topics. [[User:Non Curat Lex|Non Curat Lex]] ([[User talk:Non Curat Lex|talk]]) 20:34, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
| ''The $10,000/$20,000/$50,000/Junior Pyramid''
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $50
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $100
| style="text-align: center;" | $200
|-
| ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' (1970s)
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $100
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $200
| style="text-align: center;" | $300
|-
| ''All-Star Junior Pyramid'' Special
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $100
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $250
| style="text-align: center;" | $500
|-
| ''Junior Partner Pyramid'' (1979)
| style="text-align: center;" | $100
| style="text-align: center;" | $125
| style="text-align: center;" | $150
| style="text-align: center;" | $175
| style="text-align: center;" | $200
| style="text-align: center;" | $250
|-
| ''The (New) $25,000/$100,000 Pyramid''
| style="text-align: center;" | $50
| style="text-align: center;" | $100
| style="text-align: center;" | $150
| style="text-align: center;" | $200
| style="text-align: center;" | $250
| style="text-align: center;" | $300
|-
| regular gameplay on ''Pyramid'' (2002-2004)
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $200
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $300
| style="text-align: center;" | $500
|-
| ''Pyramid'' six-player tournament/four-player semifinals
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $500
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $1,000
| style="text-align: center;" | $2,500
|-
| finals match of a four-player ''Pyramid'' tournament
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | $1,000
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | $2,500
| style="text-align: center;" | $5,000
|}
|}


== [[Template:NYStatewideOfficials]] ==
The cash bonus format for a successful trip to the Winner's Circle varied on different versions of the show. On ''The $10,000 Pyramid'', a successful player won that amount of money and retired from the game. On ''The $20,000 Pyramid'', a player's first trip to the Winner's Circle was for a possible $10,000, the second for $15,000, and third and subsequent trips for $20,000. A player who lost the main game left the show; thus, at least one new player would be introduced for the second game of each episode. A game with a Winner's Circle win in the first half would bring two new players to the show for the second half.

Yep, I was seeing an odd bug and then figured out it was coming from the template. If the article already had "<nowiki>{{reflist}}</nowiki>" then the whole list got repeated. If the article had "<nowiki>{{reflist|2}}</nowiki>" then just the one footnote got displayed below the box. Also searching "what links here" from the template page has a sorta bug where "'''NJ'''StatewideOfficials" matches "'''NY'''StatewideOfficials", but that's another issue. -[[User:Colfer2|Colfer2]] ([[User talk:Colfer2|talk]])

== [[George W. Bush]] ==

This is a fact [http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/12/01/AR2006120101509.html Bush the worst president ever] It is writen by Eric Foner a DeWitt Clinton professor of history at Columbia University. So I am going to rever the eidt and add this resource link. [[User:Igorberger|Igor Berger]] ([[User talk:Igorberger|talk]]) 23:42, 6 April 2008 (UTC)
:I agree to the clarification, but we should put "historians" not "by two people" Please read the two articles to see that it says so in them. Also I have no POV. Bush is a political figure to me, nothing more and nothing less. It is how hisotrians and the rest of the world sees him. Including America, based on his lowest popularity poll. So no individual opinions here. [[User:Igorberger|Igor Berger]] ([[User talk:Igorberger|talk]]) 00:12, 7 April 2008 (UTC)
:I have added "some historians" as to not to imply "all historians" [[User:Igorberger|Igor Berger]] ([[User talk:Igorberger|talk]]) 00:17, 7 April 2008 (UTC)

== George Bush Discussion ==

[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:George_W._Bush#What_was_someone_thinking.3F]

Please respond as soon as you can. Thanks! --[[User:DiamondElusive|DiamondElusive]] ([[User talk:DiamondElusive|talk]]) 01:50, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

:I did not commit that deletion. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:30, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

== Spelling correction ==

Thanks for the "constitutional" spell corrections :) --[[User:MaccabeeY|MaccabeeY]] ([[User talk:MaccabeeY|talk]]) 00:16, 17 April 2008 (UTC)

Ditto. [[User:Non Curat Lex|Non Curat Lex]] ([[User talk:Non Curat Lex|talk]]) 22:06, 22 April 2008 (UTC)

==Arbcom==
Your participation in Arbcom is requested [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration#User:SaltyBoatr here]. Thank you. 20:26, 29 April 2008 (UTC)

== OK, I'll date my "citation needed" tags from now on ==

Need I say any more? -- [[User:Yellowdesk|Yellowdesk]] ([[User talk:Yellowdesk|talk]]) 02:30, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
:No offense taken. I'll try to incorporate it in my future efforts. -- [[User:Yellowdesk|Yellowdesk]] ([[User talk:Yellowdesk|talk]]) 04:29, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
::Good catch. It was a double set of opening <nowiki><ref> tags, created when one opening tag was not closed, which stole all subsequent <ref>s. Fixed.</nowiki> -- [[User:Yellowdesk|Yellowdesk]] ([[User talk:Yellowdesk|talk]]) 05:05, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

== Reverting good faith edits ==

Please do not revert good faith edits without explanation. that section was previously removed with explanation and again removed as such. It was reintroduced without explanation or addressing the issues with that text.--[[Special:Contributions/137.186.84.54|137.186.84.54]] ([[User talk:137.186.84.54|talk]]) 16:29, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

== American Gladiators Ratings ==

SMP0328, I recently added the section for deletion banner for the Ratings section of American Gladiators, and it reads "An editor" and after seeing your post to the talk page was going to change it to "Multiple editors". I just wanted to make sure that you are in agreement with this before I go ahead. I think we should give it about a week for other editors to voice their opinion, but if there's nothing substantial, we should remove the section. - '''zachinthebox''' <sub>([[User talk:Zackinthebox|Talk]])</sub> 04:33, 18 May 2008 (UTC)

:Count me in. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 19:26, 18 May 2008 (UTC)

==Fourth Amendment to the Constitution==
No problem cutting or copying the relevant comments from my talk page to the article talk page. <s> By the way, I'd be happy to merge the 2 ''Terry'' sections together, but only when I get around to it – which might be a while, which is why I suggest somebody else do it, so that it gets done sooner. </s> [[Special:Contributions/69.140.152.55|69.140.152.55]] ([[User talk:69.140.152.55|talk]]) 01:07, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
<br/>
<p>
In the time it took me to write this
{{ambox| type = merge| image = [[Image:Emblem-question-yellow.svg|40px]]
| style = width: 400px; | text = It has been suggested that [[Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States#Stop and frisk|this section]] be merged with [[Fourth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States#Investigatory detentions, "Terry Stops"|this other section]]. Please see the [[Talk:Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution|talk page]] for details.}}
you actually completed the merger. All I can say is, nice job. [[Image:smiley.svg|16px]] [[Special:Contributions/69.140.152.55|69.140.152.55]] ([[User talk:69.140.152.55|talk]]) 01:29, 29 May 2008 (UTC)</p>

:No problem. [[Image:smiley.svg|16px]] It was mostly a [[cut, copy, and paste|cut and paste]] job. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 01:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

::Oh you did it the easy way. [[Image:smiley.svg|16px]] Well I guess if the easy way is the best way, who is to complain? (Actually, I did clean it up a little bit after you merged... did you notice?) [[Special:Contributions/69.140.152.55|69.140.152.55]] ([[User talk:69.140.152.55|talk]]) 02:21, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

:::Yes, I did. After that I added a one word clarification. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:27, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

== [[George W. Bush]] again ==

You made recently a change in wording about Bush's involvement misleading the public for "reasoning into war". I could search and "blame" the original author that put the footnote in without giving one or some page numbers but since you changed the wording I assume you read and found the quoted source and so I would really be appreciated if you would add them in the footnote so me and others don't have to search again. Thanks, --[[User:Floridianed|Floridianed]] ([[User talk:Floridianed|talk]]) 22:54, 10 June 2008 (UTC)

:I haven't fully read the report, because I've had [[Verizon Communications|no Internet connection]] for a week. The report doesn't accuse anyone of lying, but assert that the Bush Administration made mistakes regarding why we needed to invade Iraq. That's why I changed the wording as I did. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 23:09, 10 June 2008 (UTC)

== Just FYI ==

The original quotations from those "The[ Supreme Court]" looked like this:
:"Such are some of the deliverances of the highest judicial tribunal of the Union. They repudiate emphatically the mischievous heresy that the union of the states under the constitution is a mere league or compact, from which a state, or any number of states, may withdraw at pleasure, not only without the consent of the other states, but against their will. They deny the assumption that full and unqualified sovereignty still remains in the states or the people of a state . . . ."
Notice that it says "They repudiate" and "They deny," (the "they" being "the deliverances of the highest judicial tribunal in the Union"). Because I'm turning "They repudiate" into "The Supreme Court repudiated," I have to put the bracket at "The[ Supreme Court] repudiate[d]," because the word in the original quotation isn't "The" but "They." Just so you know why I undid what you did. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 02:45, 22 June 2008 (UTC)

==U.S. EC==
LOL at that guy editing about MN... buuuusted... [[User:Foofighter20x|Foofighter20x]] ([[User talk:Foofighter20x|talk]]) 02:11, 3 July 2008 (UTC) https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/statutes/?id=208.03 :D

== Welcome to the 2000 primary group ==

You were one of three other editors that encouraged me to re-write the 2000 Primaries section of the George W. Bush article after I commented that it was a disjointed section about Rove, church, polls and that a more historical and factual summary would be better. So far, there has been no opposition.

If we have a "2000 Primary Group" of us four, perhaps we could propose certain ideas to get a feel of how acceptable they might be to the Wikipedia community? It would just be like first discussing things among friends informally, with no binding decisions, just discussion among rational people (rational, judging from the 2000 Primaries discussion.).

The new question is that there is a "cultural and political image" section in several politicians articles. Some of these are better written than others. However, there's a philosophical problem that hasn't really been addressed much or at all.

viewpoint A:<br>
Should there be such a section at all? After all, it's just someone's opinion but that they have written it as a political commentator for a major news source (so it become sort of "reliable source" in Wikipedia terminology). Is it in the George W. Bush article? No. (retort could be "other crap exists").

If it is there, should all the major cultural and political images be reported, at least the most widely reported ones? (for example, Gerald Ford's image of being clumsy was very widely commented on). If not, isn't this subtle POV?

viewpoint B:<br>
Or should an encyclopedia have none of this subjective rubbish and only facts?

From a practical standpoint, viewpoint B is less contentious because there would be no debate to what is included after it's decided not to have it. On the other hand, viewpoint A would report on commonly reported images (opinions) of the person which does have some historical and biographical value.

Let me know what you think? [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 15:10, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

:I prefer "viewpoint B". I would remove all references to other people's viewpoints and all polls. To me, these are all subjective and are simply ways to POV push via sourced material. Because such material isn't OR, editor's and admins think it's proper. If you could implement "viewpoint B", I would be grateful. If you do make such an attempt, expect plenty of resistance. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 20:03, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

I was planning to make a proposal like B (but be nicer and not call things "rubbish"). I will only do it if we have a united front (of us 3 editors) agreeing to this common belief that such section is not suitable for wikipedia. So that it is not partisan, I was going to pick one Republican and one Democrat to do this. The choice of persons can come later (mutually agreed upon). Will you join me in this suggestion? [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 23:52, 24 July 2008 (UTC)

:I'm with you, just let me put on my bullet-proof vest first. :) BTW, I'm an [[Independent (voter)|Independent]]. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 00:38, 25 July 2008 (UTC)


(Why I meant by 1 Dem. and 1 Rep. is the articles we pick). What better articles than John McCain and Barack Obama? One from each party. Both senators. Both running for President. Both with that bad section. Let's do it early next week. Need time to think about the wording. We'll present it as a united consensus which means we'll think of wording that we all support. We'll not call anyone names, we'll be polite, and we'll have a big mountain to climb. If we are successful, WP will look more like an encyclopedia. By consulting each other first, we'll present a stronger front AND we'll benefit from pre-discussion to refine our position before using it. [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 21:45, 25 July 2008 (UTC)
During the ''Junior Partner Pyramid'' format, two teams competed in two games each day, with $2,500 being the payoff for winning the day's first Winner's Circle, and if the same team made it to the second one, it would be worth $5,000. The team with the highest total, including $500 for a successful ''Bonus 7'' category, were the champions and returned the next day. The ''All-Star Junior Pyramid'' special awarded $10,000 for clearing the Pyramid.


My new suggestion is that I plan to hold off for a few days and discuss possibilities with everyone in our group. If deleting the section is unsuccessful, should we consider making it fair and comprehensive? Or just be stubborn and say "no, no, no section"? I have purposely not looked at it for at least a week so I would not be biased. However, last time I looked, there were major cultural and political images that were missing. Some of these were positive and some negative. So should the backup plan be to figure out what are the 5-6 most common images and to add those and delete the obscure images (opinions, not photographs)? [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 16:39, 26 July 2008 (UTC)
On the short-lived ''$50,000 Pyramid'', two contestants also competed for the entire show. The first Winner's Circle was worth $5,000, and regardless of whether if it was won or not, if the same player made it to the day's second Winner's Circle, it would be worth $10,000.


== Cultural and political image ==
Originally, if there was no time for the second Winner's Circle, it would be played at the top of the next show. On the week-ending Friday episode, if the second game ended in a tie and time was running short, the celebrities would team up to play the Winner's Circle and if won, their contestant partners split $5,000 between them (this procedure may have been instituted following a Monday show that started with a Winner's Circle, in which the previous week's celebrity, [[Nipsey Russell]], returned just to play that round and then left). By the 1980s, games no longer straddled. Every episode contained two main games and two Winner's Circles.


So what do you think about suggesting the elimination of the section if/when it meets resistance. Should the less desirable alternative be to make that section a summary of the most common cultural and political images, whether good or bad? What's your opinion? I think flexibility is the key. To be stubborn and say "no such section, my way or the highway" is not very wikipedian. True, our idea is the best but how about an alternative? [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 17:40, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
On ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' from the 1970s, if time was running short after the second game, the winning contestant received an additional $2,500. By the final season, the aforementioned "best of 7" main game tiebreaker had been instituted, thus eliminating the need for that rule.


:I suggest you [[wikipedia:be bold|be bold]] by rewriting that section. Complete removal of the section would probably meet resistance. If resistance comes, we'll deal with it then. Don't assume it will come. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 17:47, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
===Returning champions and winnings limits===
On the 1970s daytime version, contestants were allowed to remain on the show until they were defeated or won the Winner's Circle. Under the $10,000 format, a player who won the Winner's Circle was allowed to keep all earlier winnings. Under the $20,000 format, the player's total was merely augmented to the amount won in the Winner's Circle. ABC's winnings limit at the time was $20,000. The syndicated versions featured no returning champions prior to 1985.


I thought you said you were ready to put on your bulletproof jacket and support option B, removal of the section. I think that is a very non-biased approach and also is much less confrontational. If we try to include the most common political and cultural images, then some of them will be negative. After all, isn't the image of a politician partially negative. See how that will play...the supporters will be very angry at the negative images. So why upset them when the better way is to eliminate the unencyclopedic section? [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 22:22, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
On the $25,000 and $100,000 versions of the show, the same two contestants competed for both halves of the episode. A player who won one of the two games on the episode played the Winner's Circle for $10,000. A player who won both games played the second Winner's Circle for a total of $25,000 (thus a second successful Winner's Circle trip actually added only $15,000 to the player's score). On all versions from 1982 to 1991, a player who won both games of an episode became the champion and returned on the next show. If each player won one game, the player with the higher total in the Winner's Circle became champion (cash won in the various front-game bonuses did not count). If the two players won equal amounts of money in the Winner's Circle, both returned on the next show.


:When I refer to "rewriting" I don't mean the rewritten section has to be anywhere as large as is the current version. In effect, you would delete the section and replace it with a few sentences regarding Bush's image. The result would be a section of three or four sentences. Sorry for any confusion. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 22:34, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
Contestants on all 1982-1991 versions were allowed to remain on the show until defeated, lasting the maximum of five shows or (on the daytime version) exceeding the CBS winnings limit. This was originally $25,000, increased to $50,000 in early 1984, and again to $75,000 in 1986. Players were allowed to keep all winnings in excess of the limit.


::I will consider your suggestion. I'll think of (in the most non-biased way) the cultural and political images of both Obama and McCain. My first thought is that McCain's image (image, not necessarily truth...and that's for both men) is a maverick and an independent or moderate Republican, POW, interested in foreign affairs, admits to know little about economics. Obama is a good speaker, has a Muslim image problem, is perceived to be weak in foreign affairs, is very hip. I will research it more...you see some images are + and some are - . [[User:Chergles|Chergles]] ([[User talk:Chergles|talk]]) 22:44, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
The 2000s revival featured no returning champions. Each trip to the Winner's Circle was for $10,000, unless a player completed the Winner's Circle in the first game and then won the second game. In that case, the second trip was for a total of $25,000, as well as a spot in the $100,000 tournament. Note that a player on versions prior to 2000 did not have to ''win'' the earlier attempt at the Winner's Circle to play for the larger bonus in the later game.


== George Bush Razzie ==
===Tournaments===


To avoid an [[edit war]], I'm going to talk about it here instead of [[Wikipedia:Do not disrupt Wikipedia to illustrate a point|disrupting Wikipedia]].
On ''The $50,000 Pyramid'', the player with the fastest time in the front game during that week qualified for the $50,000 tournament. The quarterfinals were played on Monday and Tuesday. The winner of each game would advance to the semifinals after playing the Pyramid for $5,000. On Wednesday and Thursday, each match would have two semifinalists playing two games against each other with players winning one game playing for $5,000, and players winning both games in the same show playing for $10,000. Whomever won the most money would compete in the finals. The losing players from the semifinals competed in a 'wild card' match. Starting the following Monday, two finalists played one game and the winner played the Winner's Circle for $50,000. If the grand prize was not won, that player played the next game against the finalist who sat out the previous game.


It's true that the Award is more of an insult, but it is a real award, and other recipients such as [[Sylvester Stallone]] include the category on their pages. Since the category exists, and he qualifies for it, shouldn't the category be added? --[[User:Ye Olde Luke|Ye Olde Luke]] ([[User talk:Ye Olde Luke|talk]]) 23:50, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
On both versions of ''The $100,000 Pyramid'', the three players who won the Winner's Circle in the shortest time during a given period of shows (usually 13 weeks) returned on later episodes to compete in a tournament. The players alternated in a round-robin, with two players competing each day and the third player replacing the loser of that episode in the next one, if neither player won the Winner's Circle that day (in the event of a tie, a coin toss was used to determine who returned on the next show). The first player to win the Winner's Circle won $100,000 and ended the tournament. If a $100,000 win happened in the first game of the show, the two remaining players played the second game for a possible $10,000. No bonus cards were in play during a tournament, although the $5,000 bonus for a 21-21 tie remained intact on the 1980s version.


:Political insults shouldn't be part of these types of articles. There's nothing notable about insults to President Bush. Many people have insulted Senator [[Barack Obama]]. Should those insults be added to his article? Political insults toward politicians do nothing to further any purpose of Wikipedia. As for the [[Sylvester Stallone]] article, I would remove from there as well. BTW, I'm glad we could talk this out. --[[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 23:58, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
On the recent Osmond version, the tournament was played between either four or six players who won $25,000 in their initial appearance, with two tournaments played each season. During a six-player tournament, each contestant's first attempt at the Winner's Circle was worth $25,000. If $25,000 was won in the first half and the same player returned to the Winner's Circle, that contestant played for an additional $75,000 and the tournament title. If the tournament ended with no players able to win both Winner's Circles in one show, either the contestant who won $25,000 in the fastest time or the player who won the most money would have his or her tournament winnings augmented to $100,000. In a four-player tournament, contested competed in a single elimination, with the first two semifinalists competing on day one and the other two semifinalists on day two. Each attempt at the Winner's Circle worth $25,000. The top two winners then returned to compete in the finals, where each Winner's Circle victory that day was worth an additional $50,000.
::I see your point. I agree. I think my political preference colored my motives more than my journalistic integrity on this one :) Thanks for being so civil. --[[User:Ye Olde Luke|Ye Olde Luke]] ([[User talk:Ye Olde Luke|talk]]) 00:49, 1 September 2008 (UTC)


== Reversion ==
==Clock and score displays==
[http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia%3AVillage_pump_(policy)&diff=238463564&oldid=238463430 This] was a bit hasty, or? [[User:Plrk|Plrk]] ([[User talk:Plrk|talk]]) 23:27, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
''The $50,000 Pyramid'' was unusual in that the clock in its main game counted ''up'', from 00 to 30 (to facilitate "Time of the Week" scoring). It was also the first ''Pyramid'' version to use a fully electronic display for the main-game clock (using a vane-display clock), rather than a [[chromakey]]ed [[Solari departure board|Solari board]] display. During regular game play, the Winner's Circle clock was also vane-display, with it starting at "1 00" and counting down from there. The Solari boards were used for the clock during tournament play, going as before (counting down from "30" and "60").


:Thought such a large, non-bot related, removal of material was Vandalism. I was wrong, sorry. I made a note in the Village pump's history log expressing my apologies. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 23:31, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
When ''Pyramid'' returned to CBS, the clock and score displays were all vane displays (each digit using seven flipper pieces to display numbers). However, during the Winner's Circle round, the player receiving the clues and host Dick Clark would see an eggcrate-display clock to indicate how much time is left. In close wins, home viewers were sometimes shown this eggcrate clock after the win to further prove how little time remained. Sometimes, when time ran short when the next to last subject or the last subject was being guessed, Clark would advise to the clue giver "Hurry!"


::Oh no worries, I was just wondering why you reverted my edit. Keep up the vandal fighting! [[User:Plrk|Plrk]] ([[User talk:Plrk|talk]]) 23:36, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
==Set Evolution==
When ''The $10,000 Pyramid'' debuted in 1973 on [[CBS]], the predominant color was orange, with small amounts of light blue on the background walls except behind the large pyramid. The background behind the large pyramid was accomplished with studio lights in a reddish hue. The large pyramid was a very dark brown. The pyramid originally had a giant orange wall covering it, which was raised during the show's original opening sequence (this was quickly removed when CBS changed the opening to a "recap of past winners" montage format, popular with 1970's era game shows). The Winner's Circle trilons had an orange color background on all sides of the trilons including the golden Pyramid symbol side. This color scheme was replicated when the show moved to ABC, as well as on the first couple seasons of ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' with Bill Cullen in syndication.


==Presidential Election of 1800==
The pyramid actually was built for '''ten''' categories (each of those four were believed to be worth $25 each.) Before the show's debut, plywood was nailed to the pyramid to cover up the unused categories.
My apologies; this is what I get from editing from memory; on the other hand, the fact that it was the original system should be retained, don't you think? [[User:Pmanderson|Septentrionalis]] <small>[[User talk:Pmanderson|PMAnderson]]</small> 02:33, 18 September 2008 (UTC)


== Federal Judges ==
The color scheme changed in late December 1975, shortly before the debut of ''The $20,000 Pyramid'', to a darker blue color. The category side and the dollar amount side on the Winner Circle trilons retained their orange color throughout the 1970s and on ''The $50,000 Pyramid''. The edges of the pylons behind the contestants in the front game changed to a sky blue color, while the background color behind the large pyramid changed to a lighter blue color and the shag carpet was changed to a golden color. By January 1980, the golden carpet would be removed to display white tile. ''The $50,000 Pyramid's'' set during 1981 kept many of the changes to ''The $20,000 Pyramid's'' set from its last few months in 1980.


US District Judge James C. Fox is NOT a tax protester. Why is the following quote not allowed on the IRS page? There is no article discussion as to why a federal judge or upholds our laws isn't allowed on the IRS website. Everytime I add it, it's immediately removed.
== Celebrities ==
[[June Lockhart]] and [[Rob Reiner]] were the first celebrity guests on the debut week of CBS' ''The $10,000 Pyramid'' in 1973. On the premiere episode, Reiner won his contestant $10,000 in the very first playing of the Winner's Circle, but a clip used of the show's second win (also done by Reiner) from the first week was seen in opening montages thereafter. Lockhart was frequently seen as a guest during the 1970s, and Reiner later appeared on two episodes of Cullen's show during its first season.


US District Judge James C. Fox stated in a 2003 ruling: "If you ... examined [the 16th Amendment] carefully, you would find that a sufficient number of states never ratified that amendment". <span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:RickyRob2|RickyRob2]] ([[User talk:RickyRob2|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/RickyRob2|contribs]]) 16:59, 18 September 2008 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
[[Valerie Bertinelli]] failed to win the main game even once during her week's appearance, and never playing the Winner's Circle as a result. At the time, Pyramid was airing on CBS, and she was one of the costars of the CBS sitcom [[One Day at a Time]]. It was CBS practice at the time to place second-tier performers in their [[prime time]] shows as celebrity players in network game shows.


:All references to claim that the Sixteenth Amendment wasn't legitimately adopted go [[Tax protester constitutional arguments#Sixteenth_Amendment_ratification_arguments|here]]. Also, the material you added had no source. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 17:52, 18 September 2008 (UTC)
Several game show hosts and future hosts appeared as panelists, including [[Bill Cullen]], [[Geoff Edwards]], [[Nipsey Russell]], [[Betty White]] and [[Henry Polic II]]. Clark and Cullen appeared as celebrity guests on each other's shows, and Clark also appeared on three episodes of the Osmond version.


== Biting User 98.221.247.88? ==
[[Billy Crystal]] holds the record for the fastest Winner's Circle win at 26 seconds, in an episode aired on [[December 2]], [[1977]]. Though the episode itself was destroyed, a clip of Crystal's entire record-breaking round was later shown on a 1979 episode that featured him and his [[Soap]] co-star, [[Sal Viscuso]]. The second fastest time was 27 seconds, held by two celebrities: Barry Jenner in 1987 (resulting in a $100,000 win), and Kelly Packard in 2002 (the fastest win in the Osmond era).


I have no tolerance for vandals, but inserting a smiley strikes me as the sort of edit that a clueless newbie could make and a deliberate vandal would likely not. Would you consider toning the warning down to [[Template:uw-test1]]? [[User:Robert A West|Robert A.West]] ([[User talk:Robert A West|Talk]]) 02:11, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
On one episode of ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' in 1986, [[Tom Poston]] and contestant Kris Mallory set a new record by winning no money in the Winner's Circle. Poston received the clues from Mallory.


:Those milder warnings are usually useless. Not all vandals are grandiose in their vandalism. Some blank an article or talk page. Some change the dates in articles. A small form of vandalism is still vandalism. When I revert a newbie who hasn't committed vandalism, I mark his edit as being in "good faith" in my edit summary. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:22, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Lois Nettleton]] and Bill Cullen were guests on the final episode of the ABC version on Friday, [[June 27]], [[1980]]. The episode also featured, during its closing segment, a joke Winner's Circle board featuring categories that might have been used if the producers "wanted to save the money". The "subjects" were as follows:
"Used Car Dealers You Can Trust"
"Hit Shows on NBC-TV" (NBC was the laughing stock of TV at the time being a distant third)
"Oil Companies in Bankruptcy"
"Famous Japanese Rabbis"
"Things Kissinger Did Not Foul Up"
"Famous Italian TV Directors" (They came up with Mike Gargiulo--the show's director)


::It is only vandalism if the person was clueful enough to realize that it was inappropriate. I agree that we give too many mild warnings, but I suspect that this person has grown up on social-networking sites and doesn't know the difference, yet. I think that AGF and BITE apply. [[User:Robert A West|Robert A.West]] ([[User talk:Robert A West|Talk]]) 02:48, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
[[William Shatner]] had played both the network and syndicated editions of ''Pyramid'' during the 1970's many times, with some very notable incidents. One occurrence was when he facetiously played the Winner's Circle by himself on an episode aired on [[June 27]], [[1975]], on the $10K version (he did not win the money, but the producers gave it to him anyway). Another notable incident occurred on the $20K version on an episode aired on [[September 14]], [[1977]], when he accidentally blurted "The blessed..." as a clue for "Things that are blessed," (costing his partner the $20,000 grand prize) and threw his chair out of the Winner's Circle in anger, breaking it. Dick then approached Shatner with the broken chair and showed a clip of the now-infamous incident the next day. Shatner rarely appeared on any version of the show after that.


== Writing for the public, highly informed and not ==
Several contestants later returned to the show after becoming celebrities. These include [[David Graf]] of the [[Police Academy (film series)|Police Academy]] film series, who won $10,000 with his partner, [[Patty Duke]], in 1979. When the two were reunited as celebrities for a week in 1985, a clip of the big win was shown.


Thanks for your good revision of my State ERA paragraph in [[Equal Rights Amendment]].
[[Constance McCashin]] of ''[[Knots Landing]]'' appeared as a contestant on the Cullen version. She later made frequent appearances on the show as a celebrity guest in the 1980s, including the debut week of the CBS version of ''The [New] $25,000 Pyramid'' with [[Robert Mandan]] in 1982.


Then, explaining your revision to revert a different revision of mine, you wrote approximately:
[[Mel Harris]] of ''[[Thirtysomething (TV series)|thirtysomething]]'' appeared on ''Pyramid'' as a contestant in 1979 on the ABC daytime version, and again in 1985 on the syndicated $100,000 version, before finding success as an actress. She later appeared as a celebrity on the Davidson version in 1991 (and a clip of her winning big on the mid-1980s version was shown during the Monday episode of that week).


Text sections in articles about Constitutional amendment are marked "Text."
[[Kathy Najimy]] appeared as a contestant in 1985 and later returned as a celebrity on the Osmond version. In a similar fashion, [[Pine-Sol]] spokeswoman [[Diane Amos]] was also a contestant in 1985 and returned as a celebrity (with [[Subway (restaurant)|Subway]] pitchman [[Jared Fogle]]) on a special "Commercial Stars" episode of the Osmond version.
You ignored my point that "Text" is a very broad word (that applies to the entire Internet except for the illustrations).


We are writing for the general public, not just people familiar with legal-political jargon. A headline with just the word text is confusing to some. Then they have to read further and figure out for themselves that you mean "text of the amendment".
=== Announcers ===
It's better just to tell them in the first place, so I'm putting that back, since you gave no justification. [[User:Korky Day|Korky Day]] ([[User talk:Korky Day|talk]]) 17:34, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
[[Bob Clayton]] was the show's main announcer until he died of cardiac arrest in 1979. Other New York-based announcers, usually filling in on occasion whenever Clayton was absent, were [[Alan Kalter]], [[Fred Foy]], John Causier, Dick Heatherton, Ed Jordan and [[Scott Vincent]]. By 1980, [[Steve O'Brien]] was hired as the show's principal announcer for the ABC network daytime edition (as ''The $20,000 Pyramid''), and O'Brien and Kalter then rotated announcing duties until 1981 when the last New York broadcast was produced and aired in syndication (as ''The $50,000 Pyramid'').


== Regarding my inquiries on the Presidential Succession pages ==
When the show moved to Los Angeles in 1982, [[Jack Clark (television personality)|Jack Clark]] announced until 1985, with [[Rod Roddy]], Jerry Bishop, and [[Charlie Tuna]] substituting on occasion. From then on, [[Johnny Gilbert]], [[Bob Hilton]], and [[Charlie O'Donnell]] rotated the announcing position, with [[Dean Goss]] also serving as occasional substitute. O'Donnell served as primary announcer for ''The $100,000 Pyramid'' after Clark's departure.


Hello. It is unwise for you to "suspect your now reverted edit was really merely a sexist commentary." Please, all you had to do was advise me the proper place to post my inquiry. To opine further only tells me something about you. I would have no problem whatsoever to Palin becoming VP. As a naturally inquisitive person, however, the article I mentioned by Jon Christian Ryter made me wonder if there's any substance to his statements. Forgive me for inquiring on the appropriate talk page, and leave it at that. In the future, I advise you to simply give good advise without adding your unsolicited opinion. [[Special:Contributions/24.247.170.144|24.247.170.144]] ([[User talk:24.247.170.144|talk]]) 21:58, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
Gilbert was the regular announcer on Davidson's version, although Goss and [[Henry Polic II]] both filled in for him for several weeks during the first season. [[John Cramer (entertainer)|John Cramer]] announced for all of Osmond's version.


:To suggest, or believe, for even a second that women are, or could be, prohibited from being in the Presidential line of succession, is beyond belief. There is no substance to that person's statements. BTW, I will give my opinion when I want to do so, even if it's "unsolicited"; just as you gave your above opinion with my solicitation. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 22:30, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
== Versions outside the USA ==


::Your response sounds as I expected it to. You ignore the possibility that Article II of the U.S. Constitution prohibits a woman from becoming POTUS, which '''I''' find to be a sexist commentary. Questions that arise from the very wording of the Constitution are not rare, and there are people who devote their lives to answering those questions legally and unequivocally. If you believe the lack of gender-inspecific pronouns means nothing, then by all means suggest that I am making a sexist commentary. However, be prepared to deal with that same accusation when you denounce the possibility that a woman would be prevented from becoming President through a strict reading of Article II. Strict readings of the Constitution are also not rare. Personally, I am going to pursue clarification on this unclear issue from a more qualified individual than yourself. [[Special:Contributions/24.247.170.144|24.247.170.144]] ([[User talk:24.247.170.144|talk]]) 17:36, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
Among foreign editions of the show have been:
*[[United Kingdom]]: ''[[The Pyramid Game]]'' for [[ITV]] (originally featured on the short-lived ''Bruce's Big Night'' as the ''£1000 Pyramid''), produced by [[London Weekend Television]] and hosted by Steve Jones, which aired from 1981-1984 and again from 1989-1990. [[Donny Osmond]], who hosted the 2002-2004 version in the US, hosted a new version called ''Donny's Pyramid Game'' on [[Challenge]] in 2007.
*[[France]]: ''Pyramide'' for [[France 2]], hosted by Patrice Laffont. It was aired from 1991 to 2003.
*[[Germany]]: ''Die Pyramide'', first on [[ZDF]] from 1978-1994, and hosted by Dieter Thomas Heck, then later called ''Hast Du Worte?'', and airing on [[Sat.1]] from 1996-1998, and hosted by Jörg Pilawa, then Thomas Koschwitz.
*[[Singapore]]: Aired on [[MediaCorp TV Channel 5|Channel 5]] in the late 1990s and hosted at various times by Samuel Chong, Benedict Goh and Darryl David. It had the same name as the [[The Pyramid Game|UK version]]. It also had a spin-off Malay version aired on [[Suria]], named Piramid.
*[[Estonia]]: Called ''Püramiid'' for [[TV3 (Estonia)|TV3]], airing since March 2006.
*[[Vietnam]]: A local version called ''Kim Tų Tháp'' and airing on [[HTV7]].
*[[Russia]]: Called ''Piramida''.
*[[Indonesia]]: The local version stands several years with title ''Kuis Piramida''.
*[[Chile]]: The show is called ''Contrareloj'', and the set is a dead ringer to the Donny Osmond-era set. It airs on [[Canal 13]] and is hosted by a female-- Esperanza Silva.
*[[Italy]]: [[Rai Due]] produces "Pyramid" since December 3, 2007.
*[[Turkey]]: ''Piramit'', airing on the Turkish channel [[ATV Turkey|aTV]], from 1994 to 1995.
*[[Canada]]: ''Pyramide'', airing on the French-language network [[Télévision de Radio-Canada|Radio-Canada]], since April 28, 2008, hosted by Sébastien Benoit. The set looks very similar to the Donny Osmond version of ''Pyramid,'' (likely because the show is also co-produced by Sony Pictures), while game play resembles that of Dick Clark versions, specifically ''The $20,000 Pyramid''.


== Home versions ==
== Notice ==


{{notice|header=Please accept this notice to join the [[WP:Wikiproject Good Article Collaboration Center|Good Article Collaboration Center]], a project aimed at improving five articles to GA status every month. We hope to see you there!--[[User:LAAFan|<font color="orange" face="Times New Roman">LAA</font>]][[User talk:LAAFan|<font color="black" face="Times New Roman">Fan</font>]]''<sup>[[User:LAAFan/Guestbook|sign]]</sup> <sub>[[Wikipedia:Editor review/LAAFan 2|review]]''</sub> 02:05, 6 October 2008 (UTC)}}
[[Milton Bradley Company|Milton Bradley]] made eight editions of the CBS/ABC versions starting in 1974. The dollar values in the MB editions changed over the years as the TV show did, with the eighth edition titled ''The $50,000 Pyramid'', which is now rare.


== Could use your support ==
The Winner's Circle portion of the Milton Bradley home versions was totally unlike the Winner's Circle on the TV show. In the home version, the Winner's Circle was almost exactly like the previous round, where one player would describe a single word to the other rather than the more familiar list of listing items in a category. Bob Stewart later said that this was because there were a limited number of categories - indeed, there are repeated categories in Winner's Circle games throughout the various Pyramid versions - and they didn't want potential contestants to practice with the home game and then see the same categories on the real show.
[[United States congressional apportionment]]. Anon editor/Dr*Whatever* is claiming a cited, independent link as original research and his unpublished numbers as the genuine deal. I think he has it backwards. Maybe you can help talk some sense to him. Thanks. [[User:Foofighter20x|Foofighter20x]] ([[User talk:Foofighter20x|talk]]) 05:08, 8 October 2008 (UTC)


== Preamble ==
Cardinal Games created the first ''$25,000 Pyramid'' game in 1986, with a picture of Dick Clark on the box. The game had the correct version of the "Winner's Circle" round in the game and also had the option of playing it as ''The $100,000 Pyramid''. Endless Games created a similar (to the Cardinal edition) version in 2000, still calling it ''The $25,000 Pyramid'' with a second edition based on Osmond's ''Pyramid'' in 2003.


I am not really "up" on the awards and whatnot but I just wanted to say that over the last several months you have performed what is, in my opinion, an unbelievable service in monitoring and protecting the Preamble article against vandalism. I don't mean to belittle any of your other contributions too, but that is such a tedious task that I thought it was worth particular recognition. Thanks. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 00:07, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
The first computer version of ''The $100,000 Pyramid'' was released in 1987 for [[MS-DOS]], [[Commodore 64]] and [[Apple II]] computers by Box Office Software. [[Sierra Entertainment]] released a version from 2001 for the PC, which is mostly based on the 1985 version with some elements of the 1991 version. In 2006, MGA Games released a [[DVD TV games|DVD game]] of ''The $100,000 Pyramid'' with gameplay different from the 80s version.


:Thank you for constantly adding valuable information to that article. OMG, I used ''that'' word! ;) [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 00:14, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
== Episode status and rights ==
Most daytime episodes prior to [[1978]] are believed to be [[Wiping|erased]]. Three episodes of the original CBS show exist in the [[UCLA]] Film & Television archives, and 14 episodes taped in 1973 originating from [[CBS Television City]] in Hollywood have been preserved and aired on [[Game Show Network|GSN]]. GSN has also aired the last two seasons of ''The $20,000 Pyramid'', approximately 350 of the 1,404 episodes of the CBS ''$25,000 Pyramid'', and all 550 episodes of the 1980s ''$100,000 Pyramid''. USA Network has also previously aired repeats of both 1980s versions.


::I hope it's valuable. At times I wonder whether it is too esoteric for a general interest piece. I sorta fear that I am writing a law review article instead of an encyclopedia entry. But, at the same time, I do think that the material I'm adding is probative and relevant, but I certainly don't get much feedback. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 02:32, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
[[CBS Television Distribution]] (originally [[Viacom]]) owns the rights to the versions hosted by Bill Cullen and John Davidson, the latter in partnership with [[StudioCanal]] via the latter's acquisition of syndicator [[Orbis Communications]]. Repeats of ''The $50,000 Pyramid'' aired in 1982 on the then-CBN Cable Network, shortly before the premiere of the CBS revival. None of these versions has aired on GSN. GSN airs the [[Donny Osmond]] ''Pyramid'' as of July 21, 2008.


:::If you make sure the wording you use is understandable by the average person, you'll be fine. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:50, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
The status of the Junior Pyramids is currently unknown.


::::As is apparent, you are one of the only other regular readers/editors of the article; I generally expect that if what I'm writing is comprehensible to you, that's at least one layer of review. [[User:MrArticleOne|MrArticleOne]] ([[User talk:MrArticleOne|talk]]) 02:55, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
== External links ==
* [http://www.xanfan.com/pyramid/index.htm SuperShow 8000: The Pyramid (an unofficial website)]
* [http://timstvshowcase.com/pyramid.html $10,000 PYRAMID] from Tim's TV Showcase - photos and links
* [http://gameshowutopia.net/25kpyramid.htm Game Show Utopia: ''The $25,000 Pyramid''] A page devoted to the 1970s syndicated version of the show starring Bill Cullen
*{{moby game|id=/100000-pyramid|name=''The $100,000 Pyramid''}}
* [http://www.fortunecity.com/lavendar/westbridge/448/50kpyr.htm# "The Short-Lived $50,000 Pyramid", an unofficial website]
* [http://www.radio-canada.ca/television/pyramide Pyramide web site in Quebec, Canada] (French)


:::::Anyone else, who isn't a vandal, likely reads it, possibly prints it, and then leaves. Lack of other editors doesn't mean there aren't other readers. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 03:17, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
== Daytime Emmy Award history ==
{{start box}}
{{succession box | before = [[Hollywood Squares]] | title = [[Daytime Emmy Awards|Daytime Emmy Award]] for Outstanding Game Show | years = 1976<br>as [[Pyramid (game show)|The $20,000 Pyramid]] | after = [[Family Feud]]}}
{{succession box | before = [[Hollywood Squares]] | title = [[Daytime Emmy Awards|Daytime Emmy Award]] for Outstanding Game Show | years = 1980 &ndash; 1981<br>as [[Pyramid (game show)|The $20,000 Pyramid]]<br>tie with [[Hollywood Squares]] in 1980 | after = [[Password Plus and Super Password|Password Plus]]}}
{{succession box | before = [[Password Plus and Super Password|Password Plus]] | title = [[Daytime Emmy Awards|Daytime Emmy Award]] for Outstanding Game Show | years = 1983 &ndash; 1987<br>as [[Pyramid (game show)|The $25,000 Pyramid]] | after = [[The Price Is Right (US game show)|The Price Is Right]]}}
{{succession box | before = [[The Price Is Right (US game show)|The Price Is Right]] | title = [[Daytime Emmy Awards|Daytime Emmy Award]] for Outstanding Game Show | years = 1989<br>as [[Pyramid (game show)|The $25,000 Pyramid]] | after = [[Jeopardy!]]}}
{{end box}}


== Huh...? ==


Something about [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_W._Bush&curid=3414021&diff=244896540&oldid=244895180 this edit summary] to [[George W. Bush]] doesn't quite jibe. Could it be that you misread the diff? [[User:Silly rabbit|<font color="#c00000">siℓℓy rabbit</font>]] ([[User talk:Silly rabbit|<span style="color:#FF823D;font-family:Monotype Corsiva;cursor:help"><font color="#c00000">talk</font></span>]]) 01:51, 13 October 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:American game shows]]
[[Category:TV word game shows]]
[[Category:French game shows]]
[[Category:Australian game shows]]
[[Category:Bob Stewart game shows]]
[[Category:USA Network shows]]
[[Category:American Broadcasting Company network shows]]
[[Category:CBS network shows]]
[[Category:First-run syndicated television programs in the United States]]
[[Category:Television series by Sony Pictures Television]]
[[Category:Television series by CBS Paramount Television]]
[[Category:1973 television series debuts]]
[[Category:2004 television series endings]]
[[Category:1970s American television series]]
[[Category:1980s American television series]]
[[Category:1990s American television series]]
[[Category:2000s American television series]]


:The previous edit was summarized as [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_W._Bush&diff=244895180&oldid=244626066 "Even more"]. I don't know what that summary means, so I reverted the edit and asked for a reason for that edit. [[User:SMP0328.|SMP0328.]] ([[User talk:SMP0328.#top|talk]]) 02:03, 13 October 2008 (UTC)
[[de:Pyramide (Spiel)]]
[[fr:Pyramide (jeu télévisé)]]
<span class="plainlinks"></span>

Revision as of 02:03, 13 October 2008

Wikipedia:TwinkleThis user reverts vandalism in the blink of an eye with Twinkle!
enThis user is a native speaker of the English language.

Thanks for visiting my talk page. Feel free to leave any comment. --SMP0328. (talk) 04:10, 7 January 2008 (UTC)

SMP, I think you might not be able to edit a semi-protected page because this specific account has not been active for 4 days. I think there is now a requirement to be "established."--Crossman33 (talk) 00:45, 9 January 2008 (UTC)

Incumbent infoboxes

Incumbent infoboxes use Incumbent in the successor section. The Bush article shouldn't be made the exception. GoodDay (talk) 20:48, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

I like your idea, but that's not how the incumbent infoboxes are done. If you want to bring your idea up at Wikipedia: WikiProject Infoboxes, I'll support it. GoodDay (talk) 20:54, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

politician

okay, but is President a job then?

Officeholder code

Politican vs. Senator

Please see my response at Talk:Hillary Rodham Clinton. Wasted Time R (talk) 03:24, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

January 2008

Hi, the recent edit you made to United States Electoral College has been reverted, as it appears to be unconstructive. Use the sandbox for testing; if you believe the edit was constructive, ensure that you provide an informative edit summary. You may also wish to read the introduction to editing. Thanks. Compwhiz II(Talk)(Contribs) 00:46, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

When you have a constant vandal on your hands do you stop and ask Why were you replacing pages with suck my cock?. No. Sorry but its just standard policy. Compwhiz II(Talk)(Contribs) 01:02, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

Corwin Amendment

Hi,

I used WP:AWB to clean up the page.. it removed 2 line breaks from the external links section. Cheers. Sniperz11talk|edits 00:18, 31 January 2008 (UTC)

refactoring other user's talk page commentary

please don't do it. see WP:TALK, section 1.5.1. most users find it annoying having their commentary edited. thank you. Anastrophe (talk) 03:02, 1 February 2008 (UTC)

Texas v. White

You asked how Morgan v. United States overruled Texas v. White. From pg. 496 of the report: "The position there taken [in Texas v. White], that the legislature of Texas, while the state was owner of the bonds, could limit their negotiability by an act of legislation, of which all subsequent purchasers were charged with notice, although though the bonds on their face were payable to bearer, must be regarded as overruled." Thus, as I noted in the citation in the article on the Preamble, White was overruled on other grounds than those for which it is cited. MrArticleOne (talk) 19:59, 1 February 2008 (UTC)

Hello SMP0328, you may want to check that article out. Its 'Mr Speaker' section seems confusing - it seems to suggest Albert would've become President, yet also to say he would've become Acting President. GoodDay (talk) 01:10, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

Thanks, we do make a good team. GoodDay (talk) 02:53, 2 February 2008 (UTC)

Multiple edits

I've thought of that, but I make edits as they occur to me, and after seeing how it renders and re-reading it, I will fiddle with it. I see no real reason to try to do things in one shot other than (possibly) my own convenience, and it doesn't seem convenient to me. MrArticleOne (talk) 22:18, 9 February 2008 (UTC)

Second amendment intro

I see your edit to the intro of the 2A article. Have you also seen the negotiation and development of the wording of the intro on the talk page? That consensus text was painstakingly negotiated, and if it needs more change, lets discuss on the talk page rather than making casual changes at whim. Thanks. SaltyBoatr (talk) 20:57, 13 February 2008 (UTC)

You didn't answer my question: Have you also seen the negotiations and development of the consensus on the talk page? SaltyBoatr (talk) 21:16, 13 February 2008 (UTC)

Village pump talk page

Per our earlier discussion, I've deleted the entire discussion including the image tagging notice, and also replaced the non-free image on the main page with a link. That image shouldn't have been on the main page to begin with per WP:NFCC, which limits non-free images to mainspace. I figured that deletion of a random image someone added is not the concern of the Village Pump. Feel free to restore as much or little as you like, but it didn't seem like something worth keeping in the record there. Cheers. - Wikidemo (talk) 07:50, 14 February 2008 (UTC)

Please stick to reliable sourcing.

I view your edit[1] as a personal attack, and as a declaration of your intent to push your personal point of view into the 2A article. Could you please avoid personal attacks and could you please use reliable sourcing instead of your personal views when making your edits. Thanks. SaltyBoatr (talk) 21:53, 15 February 2008 (UTC)

Rollback

You have been granted with the rollback permission on the basis of your recent effort on dealing with vandalism. The rollback is a revert tool which can lessens the strains that normal javascripts such as twinkle put on the Wikipedia servers. You will find that you will revert faster through the rollback than through the normal reversion tools such as javascripts and the undo feature, because the rollback feature does not require fetching the data from the page history and then sending article data back to the Wikipedia server as the javascript requires, therefore you could save time especially when reverting very large articles such as the George W. Bush page. To use it, simply click the link which should look like [rollback] (which should appear unbolded if you have twinkle installed) on the lastest diff page. The rollback link will also appear on the history page beside the edit summary of the lastest edit. For more information, you may refer to this page, alternatively, you may also find this tutorial on rollback helpful.Yamamoto Ichiro 会話 21:29, 17 February 2008 (UTC)

Regarding this edit, why did you describe it as a "registry hack"? I'm aware of its colloquial use, but your source doesn't use this term, and it's an especially odd choice considering that this is a Microsoft-sanctioned settings change. -/- Warren 06:13, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

Hans

The selection you quoted refers to the ultimate sovereignty as superior to all legislatures! How could it possibly be referring to the States if the ultimate sovereignty is superior to all legislatures? What else is superior to all courts and all legislatures except "We the People"? As I originally wrote it, the parenthetical said "(the people, speaking through the amendment process)". You eliminated the clause that followed, which I wasn't going to fight you on, but the very portion that you quoted to me demonstrates your position is wrong. The quoted portion of Hans is expressly invoking some authority higher than the States, which is this notion that the Constitution comes from "the People." MrArticleOne (talk) 19:58, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

The Constitution was written by a Convention that met in Philadelphia; it was not drafted by "We the People," yet purports to speak in their name. It was not submitted to a referendum of the People, either nationally or in each State, but was instead ratified by special conventions for that purpose. Those ratifying conventions excluded enormous fractions of society that were considered part of "the People" (women, people without land). The ratifying conventions met in each State and ratified it as a unit by each State, notwithstanding that the Preamble purports to speak of "the People" as an undifferentiated whole. None of that is offered as proof of my parenthetical; it is, however, disproof of your position that it is some kind of "interpretation" on my part that the allusion in Hans is to the People because the ratification process proceeds through the State Legislatures. What else does the allusion in Hans refer to? It specifically excludes legislatures and courts, and the thrust of the article is that Supreme Court doctrine is that sovereignty is not derived from the States as separate sovereign political units that ceded it to the federal government, but from the People directly. It is particularly ludicrous that you would say that "if the Hans court was referring to the People, then such a reference was in error." Who are you to say that? The article is about the Supreme Court's position on the meaning of the Preamble. You offer that the Supreme Court may have been "referring to the State Legislatures' role within Article V, which is superior to any single legislature," but the Court in the quotation you offered specifically refers to "the ultimate sovereignty of the whole country, superior to all legislatures . . . ." Your own quotation refutes your position! I really am unclear on how you can possibly think that what you're saying is consistent with the other cases that are cited to and quoted from in note 10 of the article on the Preamble. Your position that the allusion in Hans could refer to the State Legislatures collectively is specifically refuted by the quotations from Martin v. Hunter's Lessee and M'Culloch v. Maryland. In the absence of those quotes, which specifically reject a notion that the federal government's sovereignty proceeds from the State Governments, you would be right: it would be inconclusive what the Supreme Court in Hans is talking about. But by the time Hans was decided, the Supreme Court had already specifically rejected the alternative you're proposing. EDIT: In a sense, you're right that it's POV, but it's the POV of the Supreme Court that the parenthetical expresses, and the whole article is devoted to explicating the Supreme Court's point of view on these matters. MrArticleOne (talk) 20:52, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
Your latest alternative makes no more sense than the last. "The Court could have meant the Constitution, specifically Article V." But the Constitution doesn't act for itself (it's an inanimate object!). The quote in the article on the Preamble says that "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the people)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court." You're suggesting it could be reworded to say "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the Constitution)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court," or that "the highest authority of this country [(i.e., the States)] was in accord rather with the minority than with the majority of the court", and that because there are these competing plausible interpretations, we shouldn't put anything there. But as I noted, the opinions in M'Culloch and Martin specifically refute the latter alternative (the States), and it just doesn't make any sense that the Constitution can disagree with the Supreme Court, it has no will of its own. The Supreme Court in Hans speaks of something having acted; if we know it isn't the States, how is there any alternative except that it is the "We the People" that the Preamble speaks of in the first person as having ordained and established the document? MrArticleOne (talk) 21:09, 23 February 2008 (UTC)
As for why the Supreme Court didn't say it expressly, I can only speculate on that; I can only offer my point of view! My best guess is that they were going for the sort of poetic understatement that was once fashionable in legal writing. Judges once said things like "Not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive, is . . . the standard of behavior [for trustees]. . . . Conduct subject to that reproach does not receive from equity a healing benediction." Meinhard v. Salmon, 164 N.E. 545 (N.Y. 1928). I am extremely confident that my parenthetical objectively expresses what the Court is talking about. MrArticleOne (talk) 21:16, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

Dear SMP0328: I reverted your addition of the citation to the "family guardian" website in this article. The textual statement is certainly correct, but the website in question ("famguardian") is a tax protester website that is in the process of being closed down by court order. Much of the material in that web site is fraudulent. I realize that your addition of that source was made in good faith, and in fact I have seen the many good edits you have been making to various tax-related articles.

I will try to locate a source for the statement in the article. Again, thanks for your help. Yours, Famspear (talk) 19:08, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

Bush term end

I don't see the need for the article header to mention the precise time at which his term ends, let alone to provide a reference for it. That level of detail is unnecessary. -- Zsero (talk) 21:42, 24 February 2008 (UTC)

Protection of Second Amendment to the United States Constitution

I understand your concerns about protection locking out other editors. My initial reaction was to warn and block the edit warriors (see here, here and here) but when a third editor became involved, thus, I didn't have many options. I would like to be able to lift the protection early, as I stated on the talk page, and your request that it be shortened adds extra impetus to that. However, too short a period of time has elapsed for me to decide whether to shorten the protection. Thus, I have watchlisted the article and will continue to follow matters on the talk page and will review the length of protection after the article has been protected for 48-72 hours. Most of all I am concerned to prevent future edit warring and as an interested editor of this article, you could perhaps try to expedite a resolution by mediating between the disputants. CIreland (talk) 12:45, 28 February 2008 (UTC)

Vandalism?

You changed the caption if the image in the Netscape Navigator 9 article. But the image is still the same! That is really serious, false information is something to avoid. Was this vandalism or did you just don't care about it? Please, why did you do this? If you do something like that again, I will tell an administrator. Helpsloose 15:32, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

Learn to come down. I wasn't vandalizing the Netscape Navigator 9 article. That browser was recently upgraded to version 9.0.0.6, so I decided to update that caption. I meant no harm. --SMP0328. (talk) 19:30, 4 March 2008 (UTC)
OK, sorry. Helpsloose 19:48, 4 March 2008 (UTC)

Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution

Your participation is requested for Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution. Thanks. Yaf (talk) 19:08, 4 March 2008 (UTC)


Request for mediation accepted

A Request for Mediation to which you were are a party has been accepted.
You can find more information on the case subpage, Wikipedia:Requests for mediation/Second Amendment to the United States Constitution.
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Preamble "Clarification"

I am not certain that your clarification to the Preamble article is accurate, strictly speaking. A dissolution of the Union leaves nothing left; each State would be an independent country. Secession from the Union suggests that 1 or more States purport to withdraw, but that the remaining States are united. Your re-wording makes it sound like secession is a form of dissolution, but it doesn't strike me that this is the case. It seems to me at best it is a sort of "poetic" dissolution, but a less than totally natural use of the word. MrArticleOne (talk) 02:55, 5 March 2008 (UTC)

What you describe is captured by the word "secession." The word "dissolution," unqualified by your phrase "and the remaining states," refers to the total dissolution of the Union; that is, there would be no Union at all. The way it was originally worded captured this distinction, by making it clear that in this context, "secession" and "dissolution" mean different things. I don't dispute that what you say is true, but there is also the concept of total dissolution, and that concept is ably set up by the prior wording, which recognizes a distinction between secession and dissolution. MrArticleOne (talk) 03:21, 5 March 2008 (UTC)
There are two different unions that are being spoken of. There is the indissoluable union between any given State (or subgroup of States) and the overarching, independently existing Union. Dissolving that union is called "secession." There is also "the Union," that is, the concept of the states bound together as a greater cohesive whole (the "United States of America"). Speaking simply of dissolution of "the Union" would refer to the death of that larger political entity (the destruction of the United States of America). In the Civil War, for example, the United States of America was not dissolved and would not have been even if the C.S.A. had won; the Union would still have existed as between the non-seceding States. Your edit muddles the distinction between these two concepts. My point in wording it as it was worded initially is that the Courts have interpreted the Preamble to mean two things: (1) that the United States of America is intended to exist indefinitely and (2) that no single State or group of States may legally withdraw from that larger, overarching Union. MrArticleOne (talk) 03:52, 5 March 2008 (UTC)

Hi, please comment. Cheers! bd2412 T 09:36, 6 March 2008 (UTC)

modifying other's comments

generally speaking, it's best not to modify another user's comments on a talk page, even to correct typos. from WP:TALK: "It is not necessary to bring talk pages to publishing standards, so there is no need to correct typing errors, grammar, etc. It tends to irritate the users whose comments you are correcting". Anastrophe (talk) 02:38, 9 March 2008 (UTC)

I'm being a nice person. I doubt SaltyBoatr or Yaf object. I know you don't like it, so I never correct any spelling error made by you on a talk page. SMP0328. (talk) 02:44, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
okay. of coarse, i nevr mak speling errers in my commints, so yuve nevr had teh operatunity to ficks them. ;^). Anastrophe (talk) 02:57, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
U R hilarious. :) SMP0328. (talk) 03:04, 9 March 2008 (UTC)
No, seriously, you really aren't supposed to correct people's spelling errors in the talk pages. It's just really frowned upon. --Jaysweet (talk) 21:21, 10 March 2008 (UTC)
I think it's a kind act. People make spelling errors. What's wrong with someone correcting that on a Talk page, so that person's comments look better? I never change the substance of what someone is saying. Only Anastrophe has told me not to correct his spelling, so I don't. Nobody else has had a problem with what I do. SMP0328. (talk) 01:07, 11 March 2008 (UTC)

Anon Editor

The above anon has made a minor edit to the article.[1] I think that edit should not be reverted. Anons that make good faith edits that don't make an article less accurate, should not be left with the impression that they are not welcome. This anon's edit should be left in place, because it does not undermine the quality of the article and because the anon would hopefully then feel that his efforts at making good faith contributions to Wikipedia are welcome. --SMP0328. (talk) 23:05, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

What about anonymous edits that make the article less well-written? Personally, I think edits like this ought to be disfavored; it is mere change for change's sake. However, since it isn't wrong, I have no intention of making a fuss over it; there are a few other, more substantive additions I would like to make to the article. Perhaps sweep a revert under the rug by quietly amending it back in a few weeks? Or just leave it alone, I am not terribly passionate about it either way. I definitely wouldn't write it in this more casual-sounding fashion. MrArticleOne (talk) 23:37, 13 March 2008 (UTC)
Obviously, if any edit lessens the quality of the article, that edit should be reverted. I have no objection to changing it back later. My point is simply that an anon who makes an edit that doesn't lessen the quality of the article, shouldn't have that edit reverted as if it were vandalism. Such anons should be encouraged to contribute, not discouraged as if they are unwelcome intruders. --SMP0328. (talk) 23:46, 13 March 2008 (UTC)

Vandals

The answer is that, unfortunately, there is never a low supply of idiots. --SMP0328. (talk) 03:07, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

Yeah I get that, but what is leading them to the article on the Preamble? If I was going to vandalize something, I don't think it'd be that. Then again, I suppose all the high-profile vandalism targets are protected. Even so, I don't get the steady stream. MrArticleOne (talk) 03:30, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I thought about what you said. My guess is that at least of some of those vandals are anti-American and see vandalizing the Preamble article as a way (stupidity notwithstanding) to express how they feel. --SMP0328. (talk) 19:32, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
My first guess was bored high school civics students. MrArticleOne (talk) 20:22, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Probably a combination of both. --SMP0328. (talk) 20:30, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

Arkansas Governors

Hello SMP0328. I seen you comment & edits at Joseph Bruno. Could or would you explain to me why Jim Guy Tucker became Governor (instead of Acting Governor) in December 1992 & Mike Huckabee became Governor (instead of Acting Governor) in July 1996. Where's Bob C. Riley only became Acting Governor in 1975. When did Arkansas changes its gubernatorial succession act? I've asked Wikipedia: WikiProject US Governors, as well as 'two' other editors this question; nobody has yet answered. GoodDay (talk) 15:45, 18 March 2008 (UTC)

Gubernatorial succession in Arkansas is governed by its State laws and State constitution. My changes to the Bruno article are based on the New York State Constitution. It certainly permissible for gubernatorial succession in Arkansas to function differently from how it functions in New York. --SMP0328. (talk) 17:40, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I've no problem with the New York Governors & Lieutenant Governors. I'm just curious about the Arkansas Governors & Lieutenant Governors. GoodDay (talk) 17:42, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I just wanted to know; has an amendment to the Arkansas Constitution (concerning gubernatorial succession) been adopted since 1975? GoodDay (talk) 17:44, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Would you like me to look up the applicable Arkansas State constitutional provisions? --SMP0328. (talk) 17:44, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Yeah, would you look it up? GoodDay (talk) 17:45, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Here's a link to Article 6, Section 5 (as amended) of the Arkansas State constitution.[2] It's similar to what is required by the New York State constitution. --SMP0328. (talk) 17:54, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I've peeked at Article 6, section 4 (as well). According to that section? Tucker was Acting Governor from Bill Clinton's resignation in December 1992 'til his (Tucker's) inauguration as Governor in January 1995. Mike Huckabee was 'Acting Governor' from Tucker's resignation in July 1996 'til his (Huckabee's) inauguration as Governor in January 1999. Something doesn't add up here. GoodDay (talk) 17:59, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
It appears that the Arkansas Constitution makes the Lt. Gov. Acting Governor when the Governor fails to finish his term, but says that the Acting Governor serves "for the residue of the term." This means that the Lt. Gov. becomes the de facto Governor. So technically those men were Acting Governors, but in reality they were Governors. The word "Acting" should only be used when (1) the powers of an office, but not the office, are bestowed upon a person, and (2) that person is not supposed to serve for the remainder of the term of that office. For example, the two occasions that Dick Cheney was Acting President he was not President, because he did not occupy the office of President and did not have the authority to possess the Presidential powers for the remainder of the current Presidential term. --SMP0328. (talk) 18:36, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
OK, Riley completed a gubernatorial term (the same way Tucker & Huckabee did) yet he (and others before him) is called Acting Governor. GoodDay (talk) 19:12, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I can't speak to the terminology used in Arkansas. All I know is that, in Arkansas when a Governor can't finish his term, a Lieutenant Governor becomes Acting Governor, but is really simply the Governor, because he is to finish his predecessor's term. --SMP0328. (talk) 19:37, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
It sure is confusing. Huckabee was elected Lt Gov under Tucker before Tucker was elected Governor and Rockefeller was elected Lt Gov under Huckabee before Huckabee was elected Governor. In those scenarios Tucker & Huckabee were 'never' Acting Governor. GoodDay (talk) 19:43, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
I figuring things out further. Purcell, Riley, Tucker & Huckabee were Lt Gov succeeding to the Governorship. The office of Lieutenant Governor didn't exist during the previous 'gubernatorial successions' (in those cases, the Senate President assumed the gov powers & duties as [correctly] Acting Governor). Therefore the inconsistency problems pertains only to Purcell and Riley. GoodDay (talk) 19:56, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Better still, Huckabee was elected Lt Gov in 1993 (in a special election) under Tucker & Rockefeller was elected Lt Gov in 1996 (in a special election) under Huckabee. This gives the impression that Tucker & Huckabee became Governor in 1992 & 1996 respectively (not just Acting Governor). GoodDay (talk) 15:22, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
There's only one explanation, I can think of (concerning Riley & Purcell). In Arkansas the Lieutenant Governor succeeding to the Governorship is not automatic; but requires the taking of the gubernatorial oath. Seeing as Governors Bumpers & Pryor resigned with mere days left in their respective terms? Perhaps their Lt Gov's chose not to take the gubernatorial oath & therefore did not become Governors. GoodDay (talk) 16:39, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
I recommend that you look up the Arkansas Supreme Court decision in Bryant v. English, 311 Ark. 187 (1992), which dealt with gubernatorial succession. --SMP0328. (talk) 18:18, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
I can't find a copy anywhere (on the internet). GoodDay (talk) 18:31, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
I couldn't either. The Arkansas Supreme Court's on-line records don't go back that far. --SMP0328. (talk) 18:40, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
It gets even better. Lt Gov Harvey Parnell 'apparently' became Governor upon his predecessor's resignation (in the same manner as Jim Guy Tucker & Mike Huckabee). But (again), Lt Govs Riley & Purcell don't succeed. Very inconsistent. GoodDay (talk) 18:56, 19 March 2008 (UTC)
As per Article IV §6 of the NYS constitution: "In case of vacancy in the office of lieutenant-governor alone, or if the lieutenant-governor shall be impeached, absent from the state or otherwise unable to discharge the duties of office, the temporary president of the senate shall perform all the duties of lieutenant governor during such vacancy or inability."

Therefore, Joe Bruno is the Acting LG. It has been acknowledged by all and he has moved into the LG's office in the Capitol. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Scanz851 (talkcontribs) 04:05, 1 April 2008 (UTC)

He is not "Acting Lieutenant Governor", because no such position exists. The New York State Constitution says that when there's no Lieutenant Governor, the temporary president of the senate "performs his duties." That means he presides over the State Senate. Referring to him as "Acting Lieutenant Governor" leads to the impression that he is like a Lieutenant Governor in all ways. He is not. If Governor Paterson fails to finish the current gubernatorial term, Joseph Bruno would only "act as governor" (be Acting Governor) pending a special election. He would not, like a Lieutenant Governor, become Governor for the remainder of that term. "Acting Lieutenant Governor" is less clear than "temporary president of the senate" and so it is not used in the article. Secondarily, "Acting Lieutenant Governor" is a form of original research. --SMP0328. (talk) 04:38, 1 April 2008 (UTC)

That is quite correct. So, please stop the hair-splitting, SMP!. It appears the office is not vacant, Bruno has moved in! (see Wikipedia:POINT "Do not disrupt Wikipedia just to prove a point!") Kraxler (talk) 20:22, 3 April 2008 (UTC)

  • "The Senate majority leader — currently Republican Joseph Bruno — will act as lieutenant governor until after the 2010 elections." [1]
  • "Were Gov. Eliot Spitzer to resign and Lt. Gov. David Paterson to succeed him, the new acting lieutenant governor would be Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno, a Republican." [2]
  • "Joe Bruno is now the lieutenant governor." [3]
  • "And in a serious karmic slap to Spitzer, the governor's arch-nemesis, Joseph Bruno, would become acting Lt. Governor." [4]
I think I have made my point. Kraxler is correct that Bruno has in fact moved into the LG's office in the state capital, I can't find that news report though b/c it was printed a few weeks ago. As someone that used to work for the state and still know people who are currently employed for the state, specifically in the state legislature and Bruno's office itself, Bruno is acting #2.Scanz851 (talk) 22:13, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

The media is notorious for incorrectly stating the law. Here's an article that says if David Paterson fails to finish the current gubernatorial term, then Bruno would become "governor until the end of 2010, since the state constitution doesn't call for a special election to pick a new lieutenant governor." That's clearly wrong. Bruno would "act as governor" until a new election for Governor and Lieutenant Governor was held either this year or next year. Many reporters don't read up on the law. We know more about the then they do.

As for Bruno moving into the Lt. Gov.'s office, he may simply like that office. Dick Cheney held an office in the House of Representatives, but that didn't make him a Representative or Speaker. My source is the State Constitution. The Joseph Bruno article clearly states that, as "temporary president of the senate", Bruno performs the Lt. Gov.'s duties. Relevant templates say "vacant" followed by a note that states that Bruno is performing the Lt. Gov.'s duties, because that office is vacant. So right now, the Bruno article, and related templates, have both of what we want. They say the office of Lieutenant Governor is vacant (as I want) and state that Bruno is temporarily performing the duties of that office (as you and Kraxler want), because of that vacancy. I think this is a good compromise. --SMP0328. (talk) 23:06, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

References

When I hover over a footnote call number, nothing happens at all; the pointer changes appropriately and invites me to click on it. I'm using a Mac and Safari 3.1, which may account for the difference. At any rate, I hadn't noticed. My footnotes are long enough that nobody wants to read them in a pop-up hover box anyway. Well, not many people want to read them at all, and nobody wants to read them like that! MrArticleOne (talk) 00:27, 20 March 2008 (UTC)


Comment by an anon

In the article on District of Columbia Voting Rights at

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/District_of_Columbia_voting_rights

there was a section (actually two) setting out the Pros and Cons on the subject. User Meelar deleted both sections. I feel this is counterproductive. Certainly both sides' views should be represented equally, but there is nothing preventing either side from adding or augmenting their points of view. Deleting BOTH sides exposition of their points of view, however (particularly prior to any discussion) smacks of censorship, vandalism, or maybe both.

Before getting into a post and delete contest, it would be preferable to DISCUSS the issues.

Preamble Cite check

I see you recently flagged a sentence in the Preamble article for a fact/cite check or whatever it's called. It's my feeling that the sentiment being expressed there doesn't necessarily need a citation, although it perhaps should be reworded to better express that. I think the point is that, to some extent, people understand the Preamble to mean what they want it to mean (that it is something of a constitutional ink blot test). The comment to me only seems to be hedging on declaring that the Preamble must mean one thing, thereby asserting that the Preamble commits the Constitution to one theory of government. The comment to me is only there to "hedge," not to make a specific factual assertion. In this way, it doesn't seem to me to need a citation if the comment is just there out of modesty. Do you feel it could be reworded to better express this? MrArticleOne (talk) 17:43, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

Adding a footnote that is linked to an example having an alternative view of the Preamble would be a way to back up that sentence. --SMP0328. (talk) 17:50, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
Why can't it just be a hedge, though? Why does it have to be referring to something specific? To me, it isn't making any actual assertion that needs support. And, my point was to come up with a way of wording it that doesn't need a citation at all, not come up with a specific competing theory. Anything that is produced would inevitably be, at the least, un-authoritative. Also, arguably the preceding discussion makes it clear that even the Supreme Court can't quite decide exactly what it means (oscillating between the "citizens" and "anyone under the jurisdiction of the United States" viewpoints). At any rate, I'm trying to come up with a way of wording it that demands no citation at all and I wanted your input on that. MrArticleOne (talk) 18:49, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
I changed the word "are" to "may be" in the sentence we are discussing. Now the sentence only refers to the possibility of alternative viewpoints about the Preamble, instead of claiming that such viewpoints exist. This makes it a hedge, rather than a statement of fact. With this change, I also removed the cite tag. --SMP0328. (talk) 18:57, 26 March 2008 (UTC)

Inquiry by an anon

I don't know how this works but I just tried searching George W. Bush and all that came up was a long sentence. The sentence said how Bush swapped brains with hamsters and a bunch of other crazy stuff. The thing is, I was on that page for one minute (the article was how it should be), I linked to another page, went back to the Bush page, and it had changed!!! —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.43.196.143 (talk) 23:25, 27 March 2008 (UTC)

How about a little acknowledgment for SMP0328?

The Original Barnstar
In grateful recognition of your fine work on Wikipedia's law articles, I award you this barnstar. Thank you for making wikipedia a better source of knowledge for people curious about law-related topics. Non Curat Lex (talk) 20:34, 2 April 2008 (UTC)

Yep, I was seeing an odd bug and then figured out it was coming from the template. If the article already had "{{reflist}}" then the whole list got repeated. If the article had "{{reflist|2}}" then just the one footnote got displayed below the box. Also searching "what links here" from the template page has a sorta bug where "NJStatewideOfficials" matches "NYStatewideOfficials", but that's another issue. -Colfer2 (talk)

This is a fact Bush the worst president ever It is writen by Eric Foner a DeWitt Clinton professor of history at Columbia University. So I am going to rever the eidt and add this resource link. Igor Berger (talk) 23:42, 6 April 2008 (UTC)

I agree to the clarification, but we should put "historians" not "by two people" Please read the two articles to see that it says so in them. Also I have no POV. Bush is a political figure to me, nothing more and nothing less. It is how hisotrians and the rest of the world sees him. Including America, based on his lowest popularity poll. So no individual opinions here. Igor Berger (talk) 00:12, 7 April 2008 (UTC)
I have added "some historians" as to not to imply "all historians" Igor Berger (talk) 00:17, 7 April 2008 (UTC)

George Bush Discussion

[3]

Please respond as soon as you can. Thanks! --DiamondElusive (talk) 01:50, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

I did not commit that deletion. --SMP0328. (talk) 02:30, 15 April 2008 (UTC)

Spelling correction

Thanks for the "constitutional" spell corrections :) --MaccabeeY (talk) 00:16, 17 April 2008 (UTC)

Ditto. Non Curat Lex (talk) 22:06, 22 April 2008 (UTC)

Arbcom

Your participation in Arbcom is requested here. Thank you. 20:26, 29 April 2008 (UTC)

OK, I'll date my "citation needed" tags from now on

Need I say any more? -- Yellowdesk (talk) 02:30, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

No offense taken. I'll try to incorporate it in my future efforts. -- Yellowdesk (talk) 04:29, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
Good catch. It was a double set of opening <ref> tags, created when one opening tag was not closed, which stole all subsequent <ref>s. Fixed. -- Yellowdesk (talk) 05:05, 2 May 2008 (UTC)

Reverting good faith edits

Please do not revert good faith edits without explanation. that section was previously removed with explanation and again removed as such. It was reintroduced without explanation or addressing the issues with that text.--137.186.84.54 (talk) 16:29, 10 May 2008 (UTC)

American Gladiators Ratings

SMP0328, I recently added the section for deletion banner for the Ratings section of American Gladiators, and it reads "An editor" and after seeing your post to the talk page was going to change it to "Multiple editors". I just wanted to make sure that you are in agreement with this before I go ahead. I think we should give it about a week for other editors to voice their opinion, but if there's nothing substantial, we should remove the section. - zachinthebox (Talk) 04:33, 18 May 2008 (UTC)

Count me in. --SMP0328. (talk) 19:26, 18 May 2008 (UTC)

Fourth Amendment to the Constitution

No problem cutting or copying the relevant comments from my talk page to the article talk page. By the way, I'd be happy to merge the 2 Terry sections together, but only when I get around to it – which might be a while, which is why I suggest somebody else do it, so that it gets done sooner. 69.140.152.55 (talk) 01:07, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

In the time it took me to write this

you actually completed the merger. All I can say is, nice job. 69.140.152.55 (talk) 01:29, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

No problem. It was mostly a cut and paste job. --SMP0328. (talk) 01:34, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
Oh you did it the easy way. Well I guess if the easy way is the best way, who is to complain? (Actually, I did clean it up a little bit after you merged... did you notice?) 69.140.152.55 (talk) 02:21, 29 May 2008 (UTC)
Yes, I did. After that I added a one word clarification. --SMP0328. (talk) 02:27, 29 May 2008 (UTC)

You made recently a change in wording about Bush's involvement misleading the public for "reasoning into war". I could search and "blame" the original author that put the footnote in without giving one or some page numbers but since you changed the wording I assume you read and found the quoted source and so I would really be appreciated if you would add them in the footnote so me and others don't have to search again. Thanks, --Floridianed (talk) 22:54, 10 June 2008 (UTC)

I haven't fully read the report, because I've had no Internet connection for a week. The report doesn't accuse anyone of lying, but assert that the Bush Administration made mistakes regarding why we needed to invade Iraq. That's why I changed the wording as I did. --SMP0328. (talk) 23:09, 10 June 2008 (UTC)

Just FYI

The original quotations from those "The[ Supreme Court]" looked like this:

"Such are some of the deliverances of the highest judicial tribunal of the Union. They repudiate emphatically the mischievous heresy that the union of the states under the constitution is a mere league or compact, from which a state, or any number of states, may withdraw at pleasure, not only without the consent of the other states, but against their will. They deny the assumption that full and unqualified sovereignty still remains in the states or the people of a state . . . ."

Notice that it says "They repudiate" and "They deny," (the "they" being "the deliverances of the highest judicial tribunal in the Union"). Because I'm turning "They repudiate" into "The Supreme Court repudiated," I have to put the bracket at "The[ Supreme Court] repudiate[d]," because the word in the original quotation isn't "The" but "They." Just so you know why I undid what you did. MrArticleOne (talk) 02:45, 22 June 2008 (UTC)

U.S. EC

LOL at that guy editing about MN... buuuusted... Foofighter20x (talk) 02:11, 3 July 2008 (UTC) https://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/statutes/?id=208.03 :D

Welcome to the 2000 primary group

You were one of three other editors that encouraged me to re-write the 2000 Primaries section of the George W. Bush article after I commented that it was a disjointed section about Rove, church, polls and that a more historical and factual summary would be better. So far, there has been no opposition.

If we have a "2000 Primary Group" of us four, perhaps we could propose certain ideas to get a feel of how acceptable they might be to the Wikipedia community? It would just be like first discussing things among friends informally, with no binding decisions, just discussion among rational people (rational, judging from the 2000 Primaries discussion.).

The new question is that there is a "cultural and political image" section in several politicians articles. Some of these are better written than others. However, there's a philosophical problem that hasn't really been addressed much or at all.

viewpoint A:
Should there be such a section at all? After all, it's just someone's opinion but that they have written it as a political commentator for a major news source (so it become sort of "reliable source" in Wikipedia terminology). Is it in the George W. Bush article? No. (retort could be "other crap exists").

If it is there, should all the major cultural and political images be reported, at least the most widely reported ones? (for example, Gerald Ford's image of being clumsy was very widely commented on). If not, isn't this subtle POV?

viewpoint B:
Or should an encyclopedia have none of this subjective rubbish and only facts?

From a practical standpoint, viewpoint B is less contentious because there would be no debate to what is included after it's decided not to have it. On the other hand, viewpoint A would report on commonly reported images (opinions) of the person which does have some historical and biographical value.

Let me know what you think? Chergles (talk) 15:10, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

I prefer "viewpoint B". I would remove all references to other people's viewpoints and all polls. To me, these are all subjective and are simply ways to POV push via sourced material. Because such material isn't OR, editor's and admins think it's proper. If you could implement "viewpoint B", I would be grateful. If you do make such an attempt, expect plenty of resistance. --SMP0328. (talk) 20:03, 17 July 2008 (UTC)

I was planning to make a proposal like B (but be nicer and not call things "rubbish"). I will only do it if we have a united front (of us 3 editors) agreeing to this common belief that such section is not suitable for wikipedia. So that it is not partisan, I was going to pick one Republican and one Democrat to do this. The choice of persons can come later (mutually agreed upon). Will you join me in this suggestion? Chergles (talk) 23:52, 24 July 2008 (UTC)

I'm with you, just let me put on my bullet-proof vest first. :) BTW, I'm an Independent. --SMP0328. (talk) 00:38, 25 July 2008 (UTC)

(Why I meant by 1 Dem. and 1 Rep. is the articles we pick). What better articles than John McCain and Barack Obama? One from each party. Both senators. Both running for President. Both with that bad section. Let's do it early next week. Need time to think about the wording. We'll present it as a united consensus which means we'll think of wording that we all support. We'll not call anyone names, we'll be polite, and we'll have a big mountain to climb. If we are successful, WP will look more like an encyclopedia. By consulting each other first, we'll present a stronger front AND we'll benefit from pre-discussion to refine our position before using it. Chergles (talk) 21:45, 25 July 2008 (UTC)

My new suggestion is that I plan to hold off for a few days and discuss possibilities with everyone in our group. If deleting the section is unsuccessful, should we consider making it fair and comprehensive? Or just be stubborn and say "no, no, no section"? I have purposely not looked at it for at least a week so I would not be biased. However, last time I looked, there were major cultural and political images that were missing. Some of these were positive and some negative. So should the backup plan be to figure out what are the 5-6 most common images and to add those and delete the obscure images (opinions, not photographs)? Chergles (talk) 16:39, 26 July 2008 (UTC)

Cultural and political image

So what do you think about suggesting the elimination of the section if/when it meets resistance. Should the less desirable alternative be to make that section a summary of the most common cultural and political images, whether good or bad? What's your opinion? I think flexibility is the key. To be stubborn and say "no such section, my way or the highway" is not very wikipedian. True, our idea is the best but how about an alternative? Chergles (talk) 17:40, 28 July 2008 (UTC)

I suggest you be bold by rewriting that section. Complete removal of the section would probably meet resistance. If resistance comes, we'll deal with it then. Don't assume it will come. --SMP0328. (talk) 17:47, 28 July 2008 (UTC)

I thought you said you were ready to put on your bulletproof jacket and support option B, removal of the section. I think that is a very non-biased approach and also is much less confrontational. If we try to include the most common political and cultural images, then some of them will be negative. After all, isn't the image of a politician partially negative. See how that will play...the supporters will be very angry at the negative images. So why upset them when the better way is to eliminate the unencyclopedic section? Chergles (talk) 22:22, 28 July 2008 (UTC)

When I refer to "rewriting" I don't mean the rewritten section has to be anywhere as large as is the current version. In effect, you would delete the section and replace it with a few sentences regarding Bush's image. The result would be a section of three or four sentences. Sorry for any confusion. --SMP0328. (talk) 22:34, 28 July 2008 (UTC)
I will consider your suggestion. I'll think of (in the most non-biased way) the cultural and political images of both Obama and McCain. My first thought is that McCain's image (image, not necessarily truth...and that's for both men) is a maverick and an independent or moderate Republican, POW, interested in foreign affairs, admits to know little about economics. Obama is a good speaker, has a Muslim image problem, is perceived to be weak in foreign affairs, is very hip. I will research it more...you see some images are + and some are - . Chergles (talk) 22:44, 28 July 2008 (UTC)

George Bush Razzie

To avoid an edit war, I'm going to talk about it here instead of disrupting Wikipedia.

It's true that the Award is more of an insult, but it is a real award, and other recipients such as Sylvester Stallone include the category on their pages. Since the category exists, and he qualifies for it, shouldn't the category be added? --Ye Olde Luke (talk) 23:50, 31 August 2008 (UTC)

Political insults shouldn't be part of these types of articles. There's nothing notable about insults to President Bush. Many people have insulted Senator Barack Obama. Should those insults be added to his article? Political insults toward politicians do nothing to further any purpose of Wikipedia. As for the Sylvester Stallone article, I would remove from there as well. BTW, I'm glad we could talk this out. --SMP0328. (talk) 23:58, 31 August 2008 (UTC)
I see your point. I agree. I think my political preference colored my motives more than my journalistic integrity on this one :) Thanks for being so civil. --Ye Olde Luke (talk) 00:49, 1 September 2008 (UTC)

Reversion

This was a bit hasty, or? Plrk (talk) 23:27, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

Thought such a large, non-bot related, removal of material was Vandalism. I was wrong, sorry. I made a note in the Village pump's history log expressing my apologies. SMP0328. (talk) 23:31, 14 September 2008 (UTC)
Oh no worries, I was just wondering why you reverted my edit. Keep up the vandal fighting! Plrk (talk) 23:36, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

Presidential Election of 1800

My apologies; this is what I get from editing from memory; on the other hand, the fact that it was the original system should be retained, don't you think? Septentrionalis PMAnderson 02:33, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

Federal Judges

US District Judge James C. Fox is NOT a tax protester. Why is the following quote not allowed on the IRS page? There is no article discussion as to why a federal judge or upholds our laws isn't allowed on the IRS website. Everytime I add it, it's immediately removed.

US District Judge James C. Fox stated in a 2003 ruling: "If you ... examined [the 16th Amendment] carefully, you would find that a sufficient number of states never ratified that amendment". —Preceding unsigned comment added by RickyRob2 (talkcontribs) 16:59, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

All references to claim that the Sixteenth Amendment wasn't legitimately adopted go here. Also, the material you added had no source. SMP0328. (talk) 17:52, 18 September 2008 (UTC)

Biting User 98.221.247.88?

I have no tolerance for vandals, but inserting a smiley strikes me as the sort of edit that a clueless newbie could make and a deliberate vandal would likely not. Would you consider toning the warning down to Template:uw-test1? Robert A.West (Talk) 02:11, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

Those milder warnings are usually useless. Not all vandals are grandiose in their vandalism. Some blank an article or talk page. Some change the dates in articles. A small form of vandalism is still vandalism. When I revert a newbie who hasn't committed vandalism, I mark his edit as being in "good faith" in my edit summary. SMP0328. (talk) 02:22, 23 September 2008 (UTC)
It is only vandalism if the person was clueful enough to realize that it was inappropriate. I agree that we give too many mild warnings, but I suspect that this person has grown up on social-networking sites and doesn't know the difference, yet. I think that AGF and BITE apply. Robert A.West (Talk) 02:48, 23 September 2008 (UTC)

Writing for the public, highly informed and not

Thanks for your good revision of my State ERA paragraph in Equal Rights Amendment.

Then, explaining your revision to revert a different revision of mine, you wrote approximately:

Text sections in articles about Constitutional amendment are marked "Text." You ignored my point that "Text" is a very broad word (that applies to the entire Internet except for the illustrations).

We are writing for the general public, not just people familiar with legal-political jargon. A headline with just the word text is confusing to some. Then they have to read further and figure out for themselves that you mean "text of the amendment". It's better just to tell them in the first place, so I'm putting that back, since you gave no justification. Korky Day (talk) 17:34, 1 October 2008 (UTC)

Regarding my inquiries on the Presidential Succession pages

Hello. It is unwise for you to "suspect your now reverted edit was really merely a sexist commentary." Please, all you had to do was advise me the proper place to post my inquiry. To opine further only tells me something about you. I would have no problem whatsoever to Palin becoming VP. As a naturally inquisitive person, however, the article I mentioned by Jon Christian Ryter made me wonder if there's any substance to his statements. Forgive me for inquiring on the appropriate talk page, and leave it at that. In the future, I advise you to simply give good advise without adding your unsolicited opinion. 24.247.170.144 (talk) 21:58, 5 October 2008 (UTC)

To suggest, or believe, for even a second that women are, or could be, prohibited from being in the Presidential line of succession, is beyond belief. There is no substance to that person's statements. BTW, I will give my opinion when I want to do so, even if it's "unsolicited"; just as you gave your above opinion with my solicitation. SMP0328. (talk) 22:30, 5 October 2008 (UTC)
Your response sounds as I expected it to. You ignore the possibility that Article II of the U.S. Constitution prohibits a woman from becoming POTUS, which I find to be a sexist commentary. Questions that arise from the very wording of the Constitution are not rare, and there are people who devote their lives to answering those questions legally and unequivocally. If you believe the lack of gender-inspecific pronouns means nothing, then by all means suggest that I am making a sexist commentary. However, be prepared to deal with that same accusation when you denounce the possibility that a woman would be prevented from becoming President through a strict reading of Article II. Strict readings of the Constitution are also not rare. Personally, I am going to pursue clarification on this unclear issue from a more qualified individual than yourself. 24.247.170.144 (talk) 17:36, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Notice

Could use your support

United States congressional apportionment. Anon editor/Dr*Whatever* is claiming a cited, independent link as original research and his unpublished numbers as the genuine deal. I think he has it backwards. Maybe you can help talk some sense to him. Thanks. Foofighter20x (talk) 05:08, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Preamble

I am not really "up" on the awards and whatnot but I just wanted to say that over the last several months you have performed what is, in my opinion, an unbelievable service in monitoring and protecting the Preamble article against vandalism. I don't mean to belittle any of your other contributions too, but that is such a tedious task that I thought it was worth particular recognition. Thanks. MrArticleOne (talk) 00:07, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Thank you for constantly adding valuable information to that article. OMG, I used that word! ;) SMP0328. (talk) 00:14, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
I hope it's valuable. At times I wonder whether it is too esoteric for a general interest piece. I sorta fear that I am writing a law review article instead of an encyclopedia entry. But, at the same time, I do think that the material I'm adding is probative and relevant, but I certainly don't get much feedback. MrArticleOne (talk) 02:32, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
If you make sure the wording you use is understandable by the average person, you'll be fine. SMP0328. (talk) 02:50, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
As is apparent, you are one of the only other regular readers/editors of the article; I generally expect that if what I'm writing is comprehensible to you, that's at least one layer of review. MrArticleOne (talk) 02:55, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Anyone else, who isn't a vandal, likely reads it, possibly prints it, and then leaves. Lack of other editors doesn't mean there aren't other readers. SMP0328. (talk) 03:17, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Huh...?

Something about this edit summary to George W. Bush doesn't quite jibe. Could it be that you misread the diff? siℓℓy rabbit (talk) 01:51, 13 October 2008 (UTC)

The previous edit was summarized as "Even more". I don't know what that summary means, so I reverted the edit and asked for a reason for that edit. SMP0328. (talk) 02:03, 13 October 2008 (UTC)