Diego Suárez (footballer, born 1992) and Talk:The Man Who Would Be Queen: Difference between pages

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{{Football player infobox| playername= Diego Suarez
{{LGBTProject | class=B}}
| fullname = Diego Orlando Suárez Saucedo
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| cityofbirth = [[Santa Ana del Yacuma]]
|counter = 3
| countryofbirth = [[Bolivia]]
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| currentclub = [[FC Dynamo Kyiv]]
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| position = Midfielder
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| years = 2006-2007</br>2007-present
| clubs = [[Club Blooming]]</br>[[FC Dynamo Kyiv]]
| caps(goals) =? (?) <br> 0 (0)
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| nationalcaps(goals) = 65 (11)
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{{archive box|[[/Archive 1]] (through 2007)<br>[[/Archive 2]] (through May 2008)<br>[[/Archive 3]] controversy discussion<br>[[/Archive 4]] (proposed controversy revisions}}


==Post-publication summary, proposal 1==
'''Diego Orlando Suárez Saucedo''' (born [[October 7]], [[1992]] in [[Santa Ana del Yacuma]], [[Beni Department|Beni]]) is a [[Bolivia]]n professional football player for [[FC Dynamo Kyiv]]. Suárez is the youngest ever footballer to play in the [[Copa Libertadores]] when he came on as sub in a fixture in January 2007 against [[Santos Futebol Clube|Santos]].


I decided to take a crack at summarizing events from fall 2003 to present. I have the information presented in chronological order. I presented peer commentaries alphabetically by everyone with a Wikipedia article.
In late [[March]] [[2007]] the Bolivian media claimed that Diego was about to be given a trial by famous English football club, [[Chelsea F.C.|Chelsea]]. These rumors were quashed that any contact was made by Chelsea giving him a trial.<ref>[http://www.fifa.com/worldfootball/clubfootball/news/newsid=113995.html] fifa.com, [[23 March]] [[2007]]. Retrieved [[23 November]] [[2007]]</ref> The young [[Bolivia|Bolivian]] did make his way to [[Europe]] and in late November was signed by [[Ukraine|Ukrainian]] club [[FC Dynamo Kyiv|Dynamo Kyiv]].<ref>[http://football.ua/ukraine/news/27336/page10.html] football.ua, [[24 November]] [[2007]]. Retrieved [[24 November]] [[2007]] {{languageicon|uk|Ukrainian}} </ref> <ref> [http://64.233.179.104/translate_c?hl=en&u=http://www.eldiario.net/noticias/nt071124/7_10dep.php&prev=/search%3Fq%3DEl%2BDiario%2BDiego%2BSuarez%2BKiev%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26hs%3DKqN%26sa%3DG] eldiario.net, [[24 November]] [[2007]]. Retrieved [[24 November]] [[2007]] {{languageicon|en|English}} '''(translated from Spanish)''' </ref>


:Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.<ref name=”becker2003”>Becker, Robert (November 18, 2003). NU investigates charges over book. ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''</ref> In late 2003, the [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] broke the story that key figures involved in promoting the book (including [[J. Michael Bailey|Bailey]], [[Ray Blanchard|Blanchard]], [[David Buss|Buss]], [[John Derbyshire|Derbyshire]], [[Steven Pinker|Pinker]], [[Steve Sailer|Sailer]], and [[Dan Seligman|Seligman]]) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-[[eugenics]] outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”<ref name=”beirich2003”> Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=96 Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race.] ''[[Intelligence Report]]''</ref> <ref name="sailer1999">Sailer, Steve (july 20, 1999). [http://web.archive.org/web/20030106100249/http://members.aol.com/steveslr/roster.htm Roster of Human Biodiversity Discussion Group Members.]</ref>Northwestern did not investigate allegations that Bailey had a sexual encounter with a trans sex worker described in his book, a charge he denied.<ref name=”wilson>Wilson, Robin (December 12, 2003). [http://chronicle.com/weekly/v50/i17/17a01702.htm Northwestern U. Psychologist Accused of Having Sex With Research Subject.] ''[[The Chronicle of Higher Education]]''</ref>


:In February 2004, the [[Lambda Literary Foundation]] nominated the book as a finalist in their [[transgender]] award category. In the wake of a protest, the judges found that it was [[transphobia|transphobic]], and Lambda Literary Foundation removed it from their list of finalists in March.<ref>{{cite web | last = Letellier | first = Patrick | title = Group rescinds honor for disputed book | publisher = gay.com | date = 2004-03-16 | url = http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2004/03/16/3 | accessdate = 2007-03-16}}</ref> Northwestern concluded their investigation in November 2004. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,<ref>Wilson, R. (2004, Dec. 10). "[http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i16/16a01001.htm Northwestern U. Will Not Reveal Results of Investigation Into Sex Researcher]." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education,'' p. 10.</ref> Northwestern’s Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."<ref name="dreger2008"/>
==Notes==
<div class="references-small">
<references />
</div>


:The free online version of the book was among a number of free books removed from the publisher's site in February 2006.<ref name="nappdf">National Academies Press (February 2006). [http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?isbn=0309084180 OpenBook version of The Man Who Would Be Queen.]</ref> The controversy was resurrected that same month after Northwestern professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully tried to suppress an invited speech given at Northwestern by Bailey critic Andrea James.<ref name="lane2008">Lane R (2008). Truth, Lies, and Trans Science. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Dreger released a pre-publication paper about the controversy in August 2007, to coincide with the annual [[International Academy of Sex Research]] conference. In it, Dreger, argued that Bailey’s critics were trying to suppress his [[academic freedom]].<ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict (August 21, 2007). [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege.] ''[[New York Times]]''</ref> The paper was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'', including comments from [[John Bancroft]],<ref name="bancroft2008">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.426-428.</ref> [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="barres2008">Barres B (2008). A Response to Dreger's Defense of the Bailey Book. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.429.</ref> [[Ray Blanchard]],<ref name="blanchard2008">Blanchard R (2008). Deconstructing the Feminine Essence Narrative. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> [[John Gagnon]],<ref name="gagnon2008">Gagnon J (2008). Is This a Work of Science? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.444-447.</ref> [[Richard Green (sexologist)|Richard Green]],<ref name="green2008">Green R (2008). Lighten Up, Ladies. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2008">McCloskey D (2008). [http://www.deirdremccloskey.org/docs/dreger.pdf Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger's Assault on the Critics of Bailey.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Charles Moser]],<ref name="moser2008">Moser C (2008). A Different Perspective. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Seth Roberts]],<ref name="roberts2008">Roberts S (2008). McCloskey and Me: A Back-and-Forth. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Julia Serano]],<ref name="serano2008">Serano J (2008). [http://www.juliaserano.com/av/Serano_DregerCommentary.pdf A Matter of Perspective: A Transsexual Woman-Centric Critique of Dreger's "Scholarly History" of the Bailey Controversy.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.491-494.</ref> and [[Ken Zucker]],<ref name="zucker2008">Zucker K (2008). Introduction to Dreger (2008) and Peer Commentaries. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.365.</ref> That month, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.<ref name=''minshall2007''>Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (October 25, 2007). [http://www.gaywired.com/article.cfm?section=73&id=17029 A TransAmazon Takes on 'The Man'.] ''GayWired''</ref> ''The Man Who Would Be Queen'' went out of print in 2008 but remained available for purchase as a PDF on the National Academies Press website.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Suarez, Diego Orlando}}

[[Category:1992 births]]
Comments welcome. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 19:06, 27 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Living people]]

[[Category:Bolivian footballers]]
:Just added a couple of additional sources and shortened a few sentences. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:27, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Club Blooming players]]
::The part played by Lynn Conway and yourself is conspicuously absent. :-? Is there a reason for that? I would say that without you gals the complaints would have gone relatively unnoticed. If they were made at all. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 19:52, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Dynamo Kyiv players]]
:::Please provide text for your suggested revision with proper citations. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 20:19, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
[[Category:Football (soccer) midfielders]]
::Hfarmer's observation is astute. By Jokestress' leaving out her own and Conway's role in the controversy, she makes the events seem like some sort of spontaneous reaction rather than a coordinated smear campaign. Jokestress' nonsequitur in response to Hfarmer above similarly speaks loudest in its silence.
::[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 23:38, 29 September 2008 (UTC)

:::Astute? nonsequitur? Jokestress has invited Hfarmer to turn her observation into sourced article text; this is entirely appropriate. But what she came up with (below) is not: for "A furore was raised by Lynn Conway, Diedre McCloskey, and Andrea James" she cited Conway's site, which says nothing of the sort, and an article that says, ''Such well known and respected transsexual women as Professor Lynn Conway, University of Michigan; Professor Joan Roughgarden; Stanford University Biology Department, Dr. Becky Allison, MD; and Christine Burns, Vice President of Britain’s Press for Change organization, decry the simplistic Blanchard theory posited as truth by Bailey based largely on his observations of transsexual prostitutes and others who frequent gay bars in Chicago, including Circuit bar.'' Did they raise a furore? Perhaps so, but where's the source? I haven't checked the next bits, but this is a pretty bad start. And then she follows by a personal insult ("It took allot of effrontery and lack of respect for your readers intelligence to try and pull that one"); Hfarmer could at least PRETEND to be cooperating with other editors; maybe some civil discourse would lead to progress. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 03:10, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

They have expressed concern over the treatment transsexuals could expect if the Blanchard-Bailey position were taught as fact. Conway, Roughgarden and Burns have called on the National Academy of Science to investigate Bailey’s work and to remove the book from under the imprimatur of the national Academies.

OK It would begin like so...

A furore was raised by Lynn Conway, Diedre McCloskey, and Andrea James.<ref name="conway2003"/> <ref name="wct2003"/> This caused Lynn Conway and Andrea James to create websites slamming the book.<ref name="conway2003"/> Then travel to Chicago to find and speak with the subjects of the book.<ref name="conway2003"/> Conway and James helped with the filing of two complaints from people named in the book (as well as two from persons unknown who claim they were interviewed by Bailey but left out of the book because they did not fit Blanchards theory. <ref name="conway2003"/>


Following those complaints from Anjelica Kieltyka and 'Maria' described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigati....

From there on like your version. No mention of your role or Dr. Conway's role is not in the spirit of the WP or it's mission. It took allot of effrontery and lack of respect for your readers intelligence to try and pull that one. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 00:45, 30 September 2008 (UTC)


:::I also think that it's very strange to ignore the central figures. The Dreger paper addresses it directly and will be a sufficient source for this undisputed fact: <blockquote>"Largely under the leadership of three prominent transwomen—Lynn Conway (a world-renowned computer scientist at the University of Michigan), Andrea James (a Hollywood-based trans-consumer advocate and an entrepreneurial consultant on trans issues), and Deirdre McCloskey (a Distinguished Professor of Economics, History, English, and Communication at the University of Illinois at Chicago)—they organized charges of scientific misconduct against Bailey, including charges that he lacked informed consent from research subjects, that he failed to obtain Institutional Review Board (IRB) permission for human subjects research, and that he had sexual relations with a transsexual research subject. They successfully pushed for a top-level investigation of these charges at Northwestern University and for numerous press reports about Bailey’s alleged misdeeds. They successfully arranged a protest against the book’s nomination for a Lambda Literary Foundation (LLF) award and tried to get Bailey’s colleagues (including his closest departmental colleagues) to turn against him or at least distance themselves from him. They devoted elaborate Websites to criticizing and mocking him and his book and anyone with any positive relationship with him. One activist in particular, namely Andrea James, also used the Web to publicly harass Bailey’s children, his ex-wife, his girlfriend, and his friends."</blockquote>
:::I think that the stuff about HBI is overblown and unimportant. Next thing you know, we'll be smearing people for reading the same blogs as the terrorist ''du jour''. Is there actually any evidence that this book in particular was discussed on this e-mail list? For that matter, is there any evidence that ''anything'' was discussed on this e-mail list? It's easy to put up a webpage that lists your favorite hundred celebrities and claim that they're supporters working with you.
:::In fact, that's not very different from what happened to Alice Dreger, is it? I seem to recall that her name had been listed as a supporter on someone's website without her knowledge or consent.
:::At minimum the "broke the story" language has to go. It implies not just that there really is a story there, but also that it's an important one. [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 01:08, 30 September 2008 (UTC)


==Post-publication summary, proposal 2==

Jokestress' version is entirely unacceptable, for reasons others have pointed out and more. It would be a waste of my time to work on it. So I offer this version instead, which is much more balanced. It is quite detailed. I am not opposed to reducing detail, but it should be reduced on both sides:

:Originally, the [[Lambda Literary Foundation]] nominated the book as a finalist in the [[transgender]] award category for 2003. Due to ensuing controversy, the Foundation reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list. After transpeople protested the nomination with an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists. According to the LLF director, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was [[transphobia|transphobic]].<ref>{{cite web | last = Letellier | first = Patrick | title = Group rescinds honor for disputed book | publisher = gay.com | date = 2004-03-16 | url = http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2004/03/16/3 | accessdate = 2007-03-16}}</ref>

:Besides criticizing the book, some transgender women alleged that Bailey had breached professional ethics.<ref>[http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/LynnsReviewOfBaileysBook.html#Complaints]</ref><ref name="dreger2008"/> These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without proper permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license. Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,<ref>Wilson, R. (2004, Dec. 10). "[http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i16/16a01001.htm Northwestern U. Will Not Reveal Results of Investigation Into Sex Researcher]." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education,'' p. 10.</ref> Northwestern’s Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."<ref name="dreger2008"/>

:Some transgender critics of Bailey attacked him in more personal ways. For example, Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's young children (obtained from his webiste) and placing sexually offensive captions beside them.<ref>[http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/faculty/bailey/Andrea%20James.pdf]</ref><ref name="carey2007"/><ref name="dreger2008"/> (James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.) She constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend)<ref name="dreger2008"/>, questioned Bailey's sexuality<ref>[http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/simon-levay.html]</ref>, asserted that he hand "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."<ref name="dreger2008"/>

:The [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] published an online report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including [[J. Michael Bailey|Bailey]], [[Ray Blanchard|Blanchard]], [[David Buss|Buss]], [[John Derbyshire|Derbyshire]], [[Steven Pinker|Pinker]], [[Steve Sailer|Sailer]], and [[Dan Seligman|Seligman]]) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-[[eugenics]] outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”<ref name=”beirich2003”> Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=96 Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race.] ''[[Intelligence Report]]''</ref>

:In 2008 Northwestern University professor and intersex activist Alice Dreger published a historical investigation of the controversy, in the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. Dreger concluded that Bailey was "essentially blameless." <ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict. ([[2007]]-[[08-21]].) [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege."] ''New York Times'' via nytimes.com. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-19]].</ref> Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Insittute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.<ref name="dreger2008"/> Moreover, Dreger concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey’s book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."<ref>Dreger, A. (2008). Response to the commentaries on Dreger (2008). ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37'' 503-510.</ref> Dreger's paper was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'', including comments from [[John Bancroft]],<ref name="bancroft2008">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.426-428.</ref> [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="barres2008">Barres B (2008). A Response to Dreger's Defense of the Bailey Book. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.429.</ref> [[Ray Blanchard]],<ref name="blanchard2008">Blanchard R (2008). Deconstructing the Feminine Essence Narrative. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> [[John Gagnon]],<ref name="gagnon2008">Gagnon J (2008). Is This a Work of Science? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.444-447.</ref> [[Richard Green (sexologist)|Richard Green]],<ref name="green2008">Green R (2008). Lighten Up, Ladies. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2008">McCloskey D (2008). Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger's Assault on the Critics of Bailey. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Charles Moser]],<ref name="moser2008">Moser C (2008). A Different Perspective. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Seth Roberts]],<ref name="roberts2008">Roberts S (2008). McCloskey and Me: A Back-and-Forth. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Julia Serano]],<ref name="serano2008">Serano J (2008). A Matter of Perspective: A Transsexual Woman-Centric Critique of Dreger’s ‘‘Scholarly History’’ of the Bailey Controversy. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.491-494.</ref> and [[Ken Zucker]],<ref name="zucker2008">Zucker K (2008). Introduction to Dreger (2008) and Peer Commentaries. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.365.</ref> Conway has responded that Dreger's piece was a "bizarrely one-sided history of the Bailey book investigation"<ref name="urlKenneth Zucker attacks critics">{{cite web |url=http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/Dreger/ASB%20paper/Zucker/Zucker%20subverts%20ASB.html |title= Zucker subverts his scientific journal in a vendetta against women who exposed his reparatist treatment of gender-variant children |author=Conway, Lynn |authorlink=Lynn Conway |date=2007-08-14 |work= persoonal website |quote= In a highly prejudicial and scientifically unethical action, Zucker and his editorial board have widely pre-published Alice Dreger's bizarrely one-sided history of the Bailey book investigation in the journal which they themselves control, and then posed it as if it were an independent scholarly work. |accessdate=2008-08-25}}</ref> and a "hit piece", <ref name="ConwayNews">{{cite web | url = http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/News/News.html | date = July-27-2008 | title = Trans News Updates | work=personal website | author=Lynn Conway}}</ref> and that its publication in ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'' and coverage by ''[[The New York Times]]'' reflected pro-Bailey bias by the journal's editor and by a science journalist at the newspaper, respectively.<ref name="ConwayNews"/> James attributed Dreger's article to a "personal feud" between James and Dreger.<ref>[http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/alice-dreger/hermaphrodite-monger.html</ref>
[[User:ProudAGP|ProudAGP]] ([[User talk:ProudAGP|talk]]) 06:10, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

:The Jokestress version seems like a much better-sourced starting place. Why do you try to replace it with one with unsourced recollections of history like "Due to ensuing controversy, the Foundation reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list. After transpeople protested the nomination with an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists."? If this is the way it came down, at least a citation or two would be in order. The rest seems to be similarly crafted from a single POV, with no attempt at balance. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 14:49, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

::Yes, it seems less balanced to remove all the facts about the book's publication history (which seems relevant to the article on the book) and to add a lot of stuff reinforcing the Dreger mythology of three "activists" masterminding a conspiracy to "ruin" a beleaguered "scientist under siege." It seems to overfocus on Bailey's points of narcissistic injury: the reciprocated mockery of his own core identity, etc. If we are to have that, we should balance it with Bailey's mockery of "Juanita" in the book and after she came forward, and his mockery of others throughout the controversy. Several of the commentaries on Dreger address this tendency by Bailey and Dreger (whose own narcissistic injury was the impetus for her self-aggrandizing narrative in the first place). I'll incorporate some of your stuff, but I plan to add back some of the material you removed, with proper sourcing. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 15:30, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

It does not surprise me that both Jokestress and Lynn Conway's representative, Dicklyon, prefer Jokestress' version to mine. Or that both seek to minimize discussion of Dreger's peer reviewed and objectively important article (3 page article in the ''New York Times'' and a Guggenheim for a related book proposal, which needs also to be mentioned). But let me assure them that they will not succeed. Jokestress, you are playing games that you believe are clever, e.g.: "It seems to overfocus on Bailey's points of narcissistic injury: the reciprocated mockery of his own core identity, etc."--which phrasing comes from Anne Lawrence's article interpreting autogynephilic rage. But I find it tedious and time-wasting. I suspect that others (including less involved people such as WhatamIdoing) will find my draft much preferable to Jokestress'. If you proceed with a new draft, you should do a much better job than you did on the first one. [[User:ProudAGP|ProudAGP]] ([[User talk:ProudAGP|talk]]) 16:34, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

:::Oh brother. Did any of you bother to read what I wrote in the section above about the interpretation of facts. You are all arguing over the interpretation of facts. Just add in the simple fact that James and Conway had something to do with this controversy. It was preposterous and ridiculous to leave them out. It's like writing about WWII and not mentioning the role of Japan and the Soviet Union!--[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 21:32, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

::::I agree; verifiable facts, to be even more clear. If you think something is a fact because it's obvious to you after reading some primary source like a website, that doesn't really qualify; report what others have reported in reliable secondary sources, and we won't have so much to argue about. ProudAGP, you should also review [[WP:NPA]]. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 03:51, 1 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::Perhaps we can write this long and then reach consensus on how to tighten it. If we are going to have this level of detail, we need to include the published viewpoints on exactly why Team Bailey wants to spin this as some sort of unprovoked assault on "science" and "truth" and focus on his injuries. I'll work on revision 3 later today. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 15:47, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
::::::Does one have to be on Team Bailey to get the t-shirt?
::::::[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 16:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
::::::For the record I'm not saying that either. Just stick to sentences of the form... Person A (said, did, wrote) Fact B <cite verifiable source> and no one can argue. Yes there are plenty of sources that say TMWWBQ was offensive. Other sources say you and Conway did instigate and/or draw attention to the controversy. M/S/J says she had sex with Bailey, Bailey says they didn't. Some say that Bailey formulated the model based on "Interviewing some uneducated Hispanic drag queens and prostitutes" (practically a quote from the ''illustrious'' McCloskey.) Bailey says it was Blanchard's work and he only used their stories as illustrations, dramatizeations of what Blanchard was saying (he says almost exactly this I just don't recall where). Those are all facts. Things that are likley in the "collected References" already. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 16:08, 1 October 2008 (UTC)

==Post-publication summary, proposal 3==

Not sure why version 2 has all the publication history of the book removed, and takes events out of chronological order. As I mentioned, this version is long but includes more reliable sources and a more representative POV on matters. The first paragraph below should probably be added in the existing paragraph after the Ettner quotation.

:Psychiatrist [[Vernon Rosario]] wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"<ref name="rosario2003">Rosario, Vernon (November 2003). [http://web.archive.org/web/20050920214319/http://www.lambdalit.org/Lammy/BaileyBook/RosarioonBailey.html New gene theory rests on bad science.] ''The Gay & Lesbian Review''</ref>A commenter summarized the transgender portion of the conflict as such: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist [[pseudoscience]] that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."<ref name="lane2008">Lane R (2008). Truth, Lies, and Trans Science. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref>

:Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.<ref name=”becker2003”>Becker, Robert (November 18, 2003). NU investigates charges over book. ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''</ref> The [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including [[J. Michael Bailey|Bailey]], [[Ray Blanchard|Blanchard]], [[David Buss|Buss]], [[John Derbyshire|Derbyshire]], [[Steven Pinker|Pinker]], [[Steve Sailer|Sailer]], and [[Dan Seligman|Seligman]]) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-[[eugenics]] outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”<ref name=”beirich2003”> Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=96 Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race.] ''[[Intelligence Report]]''</ref> Psychologist and sex therapist [[Margaret Nichols]] wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”<ref name=”nichols2008”>Nichols 2008</ref>

:The [[Lambda Literary Foundation]] nominated the book as a finalist in the [[transgender]] award category for 2003.<ref name=”marks2004”>Marks, Jim (13 February 2004). A letter from the publisher about the Lambda Literary Awards. ‘’Lambda Book Report’’</ref><ref name=”nangeroni2004”>Nangeroni N, MackKenzie GO (March 15, 2004). [http://www.gendertalk.com/radio/programs/450/gt452.shtml Interview with Jim Marks.] ‘’GenderTalk’’ Program # 452</ref> The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.<ref name=”grubb2004”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). Lambda keeps controversial book as finalist for award. ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.<ref name=”grubb2004b”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). On second thought... ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> According to LLF Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was [[transphobia|transphobic]].<ref>{{cite web | last = Letellier | first = Patrick | title = Group rescinds honor for disputed book | publisher = gay.com | date = 2004-03-16 | url = http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2004/03/16/3 | accessdate = 2007-03-16}}</ref> After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”<ref name=”flowers2007”> Flowers, Charles (Sept 20, 2007) [http://www.lambdaliterary.org/archives/archives.html Letter to New York Times.] [[Lambda Literary Foundation]]</ref>

:Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached [[Clinical psychology#Professional_ethics|professional ethics]].<ref name="mccain2003">McCain RS (November 24, 2003). University investigates ethics of sex researcher. ''[[Washington Times]]''</ref> These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without [[institutional review board]] permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.<ref name=”ap2003”>Associated Press (July 25, 2003). Transsexuals accuse professor of research misconduct.</ref> Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,<ref name="wilson2004b">>Wilson, R. (2004, Dec. 10). "[http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i16/16a01001.htm Northwestern U. Will Not Reveal Results of Investigation Into Sex Researcher]." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education,'' p. 10.</ref> Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of [[scientific misconduct]] made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."<ref name="dreger2008"/> Physician [[Charles Moser]] wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."<ref name="moser2008">Moser C (2008). A Different Perspective. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref>

:Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."<ref name="rosario2003"/> Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.<ref>[http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/faculty/bailey/Andrea%20James.pdf]</ref><ref name="dreger2008"/> James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.<ref name="carey2007"/> James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."<ref name="dreger2008"/>

:In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."<ref name="lane2008"/> In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. ''New York Times'' reporter [[Benedict Carey]] reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." <ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict. ([[2007]]-[[08-21]].) [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege."] ''New York Times'' via nytimes.com. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-19]].</ref> Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.<ref name="dreger2008"/> Dreger concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."<ref>Dreger, A. (2008). Response to the commentaries on Dreger (2008). ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37'' 503-510.</ref>

:Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. Commenters included [[John Bancroft]],<ref name="bancroft2008">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.426-428.</ref> [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="barres2008">Barres B (2008). A Response to Dreger's Defense of the Bailey Book. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.429.</ref> [[Ray Blanchard]],<ref name="blanchard2008">Blanchard R (2008). Deconstructing the Feminine Essence Narrative. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> [[John Gagnon]],<ref name="gagnon2008">Gagnon J (2008). Is This a Work of Science? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.444-447.</ref> [[Richard Green (sexologist)|Richard Green]],<ref name="green2008">Green R (2008). Lighten Up, Ladies. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2008">McCloskey D (2008). Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger's Assault on the Critics of Bailey. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Charles Moser]],<ref name="moser2008"/> [[Seth Roberts]],<ref name="roberts2008">Roberts S (2008). McCloskey and Me: A Back-and-Forth. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Julia Serano]],<ref name="serano2008">Serano J (2008). A Matter of Perspective: A Transsexual Woman-Centric Critique of Dreger’s ‘‘Scholarly History’’ of the Bailey Controversy. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.491-494.</ref> and [[Ken Zucker]].<ref name="zucker2008">Zucker K (2008). Introduction to Dreger (2008) and Peer Commentaries. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.365.</ref> Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."<ref name="green2008"/> Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."<ref name+"caretto2008">Caretto A (2008). Dreger’s Adventures. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of [[narcissism (psychology)|narcissistic]] rage."<ref name="lawrence2008">Lawrence AA (2008). Shame and Narcissistic Rage in Autogynephilic Transsexualism. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Dreger received a [[Guggenheim Fellowship]] to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."<ref name="mathy2008">Mathy RM (2008). Cowboys, Sheepherders, and The Man Who Would
‘‘I Know’’ vs. First-Order Lived Experience. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."<ref name="windsor2008">Windsor E (2008). Accounting for Power and Academic Responsibility. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from [[Jamison Green]]), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."<ref name="clarkson2008">Clarkson NL (2008). Trans Victims, Trans Zealots: A Critique of Dreger’s History of the Bailey Controversy. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Biologist [[Julia Serano]] wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.<ref name="serano2008"/> The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.<ref name=''minshall2007''>Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (October 25, 2007). [http://www.gaywired.com/article.cfm?section=73&id=17029 A TransAmazon Takes on 'The Man'.] ''GayWired''</ref><ref name="hendrick2008">Hendrick E (2008). [http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/News/US/NWSA/Papers/Quiet_Down_There.pdf Quiet Down There! The Discourse of Academic Freedom as Defence of Hierarchy in the Aftermath of J. Michael Bailey's ''The Man Who Would Be Queen''.] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref><ref name="james2008">James A (2008). [http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/alice-dreger/fair-comment.pdf Fair comment, foul play: Populist responses to J. Michael Bailey's exploitative "controversies."] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref>
:''The Man Who Would Be Queen'' went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

We may also want to combine the professional ethics paragraph with the existing info already in the article. Comments welcome. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 20:22, 6 October 2008 (UTC)

:As a follow-up, that was very cumbersome and time-consuming to edit in one piece. Maybe we can split out the Dreger part and deliberate that sub-controversy separately if this seems too unwieldy. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 20:35, 6 October 2008 (UTC)

==Picture Question==
I am a big supporter of the concept that pictures make a huge difference. I think a picture of the dust jacket would say allot about this book and the controversey. I did buy and read a copy of the book... then gave it away. I think I kept the dust cover somewhere.

The question is IF I took a picture of it could I release that picture as a GFDL'd pic and put it on WP. Or would there still be a copyright issue? I am thinking no. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 02:43, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

:Definitely not GFDL, as cover art is copyrighted. But fair use would be OK. See [[Wikipedia:Fair_Use#Images]]. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 03:26, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

::This may be academic since I cannot find the jacket. If it's a issue of "fair use" I would think that an image we could use on a fair use basis must exist somewhere on the net.--[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 14:00, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

:::It's all over the web. How about Bailey's copy [http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/faculty/bailey/book.html]? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 15:58, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

::::Bailey's copy is a pre-publication mock-up (old subtitle, no [[Simon LeVay]] blurb). The one in the article is the as-published cover from the out-of-print edition. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 17:12, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::The one I used is the jacket from my copy (which I read a couple times then gave away). Cropped so that only the cover is visible. I think it adds allot of context to the article. As I have said before; It's one thing to describe an elephant (to someone who has never seen one) and another to show them a picture. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 01:39, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

::::::Will we ever know just who's legs those are? If that is a transwoman how must she feel about all of our opinions of her legs? lol. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 03:35, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::::This is not a forum for general discussion of The Man Who Would Be Queen. Any such messages will be deleted. Please limit discussion to improvement of this article. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 07:50, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Ahhh but that was about the book and improving the article. It seems to me that being the sleuth that you are you would have tried to figure out just who that was, or who the cover artist was. The answers to the above questions could be quite illuminating. Since much of the impact of and reaction to this book was based on a.) the cover art, and b.) second or third hand reports of what was in the book. There could be some reliable source somewhere that will tell who did the cover art. I have not been able to find that (perhaps if I had my copy of the book and hand't given it away. That's what I am talking about. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 13:21, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

:Speculation about the existence of reliable sources discussing cover credits or the identity of the cover model are not appropriate here. If you have a reliable source, please provide it. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 14:45, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

We don't have enough to argue about without this strange tangent? [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 15:44, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
::Hardly a "strange tangent". The cliché a "A picture is worth 1000 words," is so often repeated because it is true. That picture of that cover says allot about why this book was recieved the way it was.
::Look at the template for the book info box on this page. It has a space for the cover artist. For the sake of completeness it would be nice to fill that in. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 20:41, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

==Post-publication summary, proposal 4==

This version better identifies who each quoted person is and includes more links to texts.

:Psychiatrist [[Vernon Rosario]] wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"<ref name="rosario2003">Rosario, Vernon (November 2003). [http://web.archive.org/web/20050920214319/http://www.lambdalit.org/Lammy/BaileyBook/RosarioonBailey.html New gene theory rests on bad science.] ''The Gay & Lesbian Review''</ref> Ph.D. student Riki Lane summarized the transgender portion of the conflict: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist [[pseudoscience]] that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."<ref name="lane2008">Lane R (2008). Truth, Lies, and Trans Science. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Philosophy professor Talia Mae Bettcher wrote, “Because Bailey believes transsexual women tend to lie or misrepresent, nothing a transwoman can say contests this theory.”<ref name=”bettcher2008”>Bettcher TM (2008). [http:// www.calstatela.edu/faculty/tbettch/BettcherDreger.pdf Pretenders to the Throne.] Archives of Sexual Behavior, Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.430-433. </ref>

:Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.<ref name=”becker2003”>Becker, Robert (November 18, 2003). NU investigates charges over book. ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''</ref> The [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including [[J. Michael Bailey|Bailey]], [[Ray Blanchard|Blanchard]], [[David Buss|Buss]], [[John Derbyshire|Derbyshire]], [[Steven Pinker|Pinker]], [[Steve Sailer|Sailer]], and [[Dan Seligman|Seligman]]) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-[[eugenics]] outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”<ref name=”beirich2003”> Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=96 Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race.] ''[[Intelligence Report]]''</ref> Psychologist and sex therapist [[Margaret Nichols]] wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”<ref name=”nichols2008”>Nichols 2008</ref>

:The [[Lambda Literary Foundation]] nominated the book as a finalist in the [[transgender]] award category for 2003.<ref name=”marks2004”>Marks, Jim (13 February 2004). A letter from the publisher about the Lambda Literary Awards. ‘’Lambda Book Report’’</ref><ref name=”nangeroni2004”>Nangeroni N, MackKenzie GO (March 15, 2004). [http://www.gendertalk.com/radio/programs/450/gt452.shtml Interview with Jim Marks.] ‘’GenderTalk’’ Program # 452</ref> The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.<ref name=”grubb2004”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). Lambda keeps controversial book as finalist for award. ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.<ref name=”grubb2004b”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). On second thought... ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> According to Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was [[transphobia|transphobic]].<ref>{{cite web | last = Letellier | first = Patrick | title = Group rescinds honor for disputed book | publisher = gay.com | date = 2004-03-16 | url = http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2004/03/16/3 | accessdate = 2007-03-16}}</ref> After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”<ref name=”flowers2007”> Flowers, Charles (Sept 20, 2007) [http://www.lambdaliterary.org/archives/archives.html Letter to New York Times.] [[Lambda Literary Foundation]]</ref>

:Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached [[Clinical psychology#Professional_ethics|professional ethics]].<ref name="mccain2003">McCain RS (November 24, 2003). University investigates ethics of sex researcher. ''[[Washington Times]]''</ref> These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without [[institutional review board]] permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.<ref name=”ap2003”>Associated Press (July 25, 2003). Transsexuals accuse professor of research misconduct.</ref> Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,<ref name="wilson2004b">>Wilson, R. (2004, Dec. 10). "[http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i16/16a01001.htm Northwestern U. Will Not Reveal Results of Investigation Into Sex Researcher]." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education,'' p. 10.</ref> Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of [[scientific misconduct]] made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."<ref name="dreger2008"/> Physician [[Charles Moser]] wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."<ref name="moser2008">Moser C (2008). A Different Perspective. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref>

:Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."<ref name="rosario2003"/> Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.<ref>[http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/faculty/bailey/Andrea%20James.pdf]</ref><ref name="dreger2008"/> James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.<ref name="carey2007"/> James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."<ref name="dreger2008"/>

:In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: Lane wrote, "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."<ref name="lane2008"/> In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. ''New York Times'' reporter [[Benedict Carey]] reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." <ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict. ([[2007]]-[[08-21]].) [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege."] ''New York Times'' via nytimes.com. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-19]].</ref> Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.<ref name="dreger2008"/> Dreger described the controversy as suppression of [[academic freedom]] and concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."<ref>Dreger, A. (2008). Response to the commentaries on Dreger (2008). ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37'' 503-510.</ref>

:Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. Commenters included [[John Bancroft]],<ref name="bancroft2008">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.426-428.</ref> [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="barres2008">Barres B (2008). A Response to Dreger's Defense of the Bailey Book. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.429.</ref> [[Ray Blanchard]],<ref name="blanchard2008">Blanchard R (2008). Deconstructing the Feminine Essence Narrative. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> [[John Gagnon]],<ref name="gagnon2008">Gagnon J (2008). Is This a Work of Science? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.444-447.</ref> [[Richard Green (sexologist)|Richard Green]],<ref name="green2008">Green R (2008). Lighten Up, Ladies. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2008">McCloskey D (2008). [http://deirdremccloskey.org/docs/dreger.pdf Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger's Assault on the Critics of Bailey.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Charles Moser]],<ref name="moser2008"/> [[Seth Roberts]],<ref name="roberts2008">Roberts S (2008). McCloskey and Me: A Back-and-Forth. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Julia Serano]],<ref name="serano2008">Serano J (2008). [http://www.juliaserano.com/av/Serano_DregerCommentary.pdf A Matter of Perspective: A Transsexual Woman-Centric Critique of Dreger’s ‘‘Scholarly History’’ of the Bailey Controversy.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.491-494.</ref> and [[Ken Zucker]].<ref name="zucker2008">Zucker K (2008). Introduction to Dreger (2008) and Peer Commentaries. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.365.</ref> Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."<ref name="green2008"/> Psychologist Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."<ref name+"caretto2008">Caretto A (2008). Dreger’s Adventures. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of [[narcissism (psychology)|narcissistic]] rage."<ref name="lawrence2008">Lawrence AA (2008). [http://www.annelawrence.com/twr/shame_&_narcissistic_rage.pdf Shame and Narcissistic Rage in Autogynephilic Transsexualism.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Dreger received a [[Guggenheim Fellowship]] to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Anthropologist Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."<ref name="mathy2008">Mathy RM (2008). Cowboys, Sheepherders, and The Man Who Would
‘‘I Know’’ vs. First-Order Lived Experience. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Sociologist Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."<ref name="windsor2008">Windsor E (2008). Accounting for Power and Academic Responsibility. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from [[Jamison Green]]), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."<ref name="clarkson2008">Clarkson NL (2008). Trans Victims, Trans Zealots: A Critique of Dreger’s History of the Bailey Controversy. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Biologist [[Julia Serano]] wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.<ref name="serano2008"/> The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.<ref name=''minshall2007''>Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (October 25, 2007). [http://www.gaywired.com/article.cfm?section=73&id=17029 A TransAmazon Takes on 'The Man'.] ''GayWired''</ref><ref name="hendrick2008">Hendrick E (2008). [http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/News/US/NWSA/Papers/Quiet_Down_There.pdf Quiet Down There! The Discourse of Academic Freedom as Defence of Hierarchy in the Aftermath of J. Michael Bailey's ''The Man Who Would Be Queen''.] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref><ref name="james2008">James A (2008). [http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/alice-dreger/fair-comment.pdf Fair comment, foul play: Populist responses to J. Michael Bailey's exploitative "controversies."] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref>
:''The Man Who Would Be Queen'' went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

Comments welcome. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:01, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

::Where to begin?

::*You leave Dr. Conway's role completely out of the story. In particular when it comes to making the initial complaints to NU.
::*You seem to have, by what quotes you choose, shaded the subject just a bit (that's me being charitable).
::**You do not mention any of the initial good reviews of the book.
::**The opening two quotes are both negative quotes with out any context.
::*The structure of the compositon is a bit confused. I cannot say weather it is topically organized certainly not chronologically organized.

::On the plus side.
::*You remembered my golden rule : quote qoute qoute cite cite cite.
::*You did mention your own role in the controversy

Try to put more about Dr. Conway's role into it. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 20:51, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

:The materials already edited by consensus and added to the article last month address your concerns. This section would replace the part of the current article from the LLF nomination to the end. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 22:43, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

::Consensus by who ? The article should be kept concise as this is not a courtroom and there is not enough space . If you delete one of my comments from this discussion page there will be problems. If we cannot have neutrality in this article I suggest reducing it down to the absolute minimum. I am transsexual and while I disagree with Dr Bailey I agree to his right to speak and publish books . Academic consequences are his own responsibility and unless there is factual verification of a conspiracy then I suggest you stop trying to create them . "Do no harm " is in play here for both sides. No matter how offensive or wrong I feel his ideas are Bailey has a right to speak them . [[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 23:36, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

:::Consensus by the editors who have been working on this since you yourself participated in August, including James Cantor, me, WhatamIdoing, Hfarmer, Dicklyon, etc. No one is deleting your comments. No one is denying Bailey's right to speak, and no one is denying his critics' right to speak. Can you explain what you mean by "factual verification of a conspiracy"? Conspiracy by whom? I am not going to revert the changes you made to the article again, but your re-emergence after several weeks' absence and the edits and comments you are making are disrupting what has been a relatively calm discussion toward reaching consensus. I apologize if reverting your edits to the article upset you, but we are trying to find a balanced version that everyone can live with, and your changes tip that balance. Removing information we all agreed on last month is going to derail the discussion. You are welcome to discuss this on my talk page if you prefer. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 00:00, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

::::::::::A comment was deleted here whether by accident or intention. I see no discussion here other than you few and I see no agreement . Is consensus an "assumed" conclusion ? And even then just your collection of comments on the book and sketchy assumptions of timeline . When does opinion become fact ? This article, as I understand it is to present the basis of the book , to present the facts , not defend or besmirch Baileys career or his critics through multiple sources of "opinion" . For example , we can include Dregers comments as a professor but to include "as quoted in the NYT's" is little but trying to add some credibility to an otherwise weightless opinion (equal to all Baileys supporters and critics ) . The viewer is put in the position of trying to wade through a sea of opinions rather than investigate themselves. This again, is not a court room, the article is about his book , not about Bailey and the NWU's investigation was closed door so we can't answer those questions.

Personally I don't like Bailey , I do not agree with his conclusions , his research methods are incomprehensible as are his ethical standards , but all these things are best kept to proper articles with better research than we can do. As this article sits now, it outlines the books premise, covers the basic chapters , defines the basis of the controversy and gives Dreger her chance to defend Bailey's right intellectual freedom . Do we really need to go and pull all the rebuttal articles to Dreger's statements ? I would love to but it makes this article harder to read. If we can't have a clear statement, lets have a simple one. [[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 09:32, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

==Complete proposed controversy/academic freedom section, version 1==

To make it clear what the whole controversy section would look like, I have compiled the previously-agreed part with the proposed revision. The "Academic freedom" section would be folded into this.

:'''Controversy'''

:The book elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses. [[Kirkus Reviews]] concluded: "Despite its provocative title, a scientific yet superbly compassionate exposition."<ref name="napsales">[http://www.nap.edu/catalog.php?record_id=10530 The Man Who Would Be Queen] via [[National Academies Press]]. Retrieved 6 September 2008.</ref> The book received praise from gay sexual behavior scientists James Cantor<ref name="dreger2008">Dreger, A. D. (2008). The controversy surrounding ''The man who would be queen:'' A case history of the politics of science, identity, and sex in the Internet age. ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37,'' 366-421.</ref> and [[Simon LeVay]],<ref name="napsales"/> from sex-differences expert [[David Buss]],<ref name="dreger2008"/> and from research psychologist [[Steven Pinker]], who wrote: "With a mixture of science, humanity, and fine writing, J. Michael Bailey illuminates the mysteries of sexual orientation and identity in the best book yet written on the subject. The Man Who Would Be Queen may upset the guardians of political correctness on both the left and the right, but it will be welcomed by intellectually curious people of all sexes and sexual orientations. A truly fascinating book."<ref name="pinker2003">Pinker, Steven (June 28, 2003). [http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2003/jun/28/summerreading.bestbooks Pages for pleasure.] ''[[The Guardian]]''</ref> It also received praise from journalists [[John Derbyshire]],<ref name="derbyshire2003">Derbyshire, John (June 30, 2003). [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-103135856.html Lost in the Male.] ''[[National Review]]''</ref> [[Steve Sailer]],<ref name="napsales"/> [[Daniel Seligman]],<ref name="seligman2003">Seligman, Dan (October 13, 2003). [http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2003/1013/068.html Transsexuals And the Law.] ''[[Forbes]]''</ref> and Mark Henderson.<ref name="henderson2003">Henderson, Mark (December 6, 2003). [http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/article1028954.ece Who’s got the brains in this relationship?] ''[[The Times]]''</ref>

:Some reviews in the LGBT press were positive, such as from writers Ethan Boatner<ref name="napsales"/> for ''Lavender Magazine'' and Duncan Osborne for ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]''.<ref name="osborne2003">Osborne, Duncan (March 2003). 'The Man Who Would Be Queen' (review). ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]'', March 2003, Vol. 11 Issue 9, pp. 54-54.</ref> Those in the transgender community who agreed with Blanchard's taxonomy also reviewed the book positively. Anne Lawrence, a physician and sexologist whose work on autogynephilia is featured in the book, wrote "This is a wonderful book on an important subject,"<ref name="napsales"/> and autogynephilia support group founder Willow Arune wrote, "Blanchard, Bailey, Lawrence and <nowiki>[Blanchard colleague Maxine]</nowiki> Petersen have done more to help transsexuals over years of service than perhaps any other four people in the world."<ref name="arune2004">Arune, Willow (2004). [http://www.autogynephilia.org/I%20AM%20ARUNE.htm I *AM* Arune!] ''Transgender Tapestry'' 1(85):65–68.</ref>

:The public response of the transgender community was almost entirely negative. Among other things, they opposed the book's endorsement of [[Blanchard, Bailey, and Lawrence theory|Blanchard's taxonomy of male-to-female transsexualism]],<ref name="klein2004">Klein, Julie M. (May 2004). [http://web.archive.org/web/20040614034224/http://www.seedmagazine.com/?p=article&n=above&id=130 Ethical minefields: The sex that would be science.] ''Seed Magazine'', May/June 2004</ref> its publication by the [[National Academies Press]], by whom it was "advertised as science"<ref name="krasny2007">Krasny, Michael (Aug 22, 2007). [http://www.kqed.org/epArchive/R708221000 Transgender Theories.] Forum with Michael Krasny, KQED</ref> and marketed as "scientifically accurate,"<ref name="roughgarden2003"/> which they argued was untrue. They also claimed the book exploited children with [[gender dysphoria]].<ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict. ([[2007]]-[[08-21]].) [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege."] ''New York Times'' via nytimes.com. Retrieved on 2007-09-19.</ref> Among those criticizing the book were computer scientist [[Lynn Conway]],<ref name="marcus2003">Marcus, Jon (August 1, 2003). Transsexuals Protest. ''[[Times Higher Education]]'', p. 13</ref> biologists [[Joan Roughgarden]]<ref name="roughgarden2003">Roughgarden, Joan (June 4, 2004). [http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/story.asp?storyCode=189098&sectioncode=26 Twist In The Tale Of Two Genders.] ''[[Times Higher Education]]'' No.1643; Pg. 20</ref> and [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="holden2003">Holden, Constance (July 18, 2003). [http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/citation/2003/718/2 Transsexuality Treatise Triggers Furor.] ScienceNOW/Science (AAAS)</ref> physician [[Rebecca Allison]],<ref name="wct2003">Staff report (June 25, 2003). [http://www.windycitymediagroup.com/gay/lesbian/news/ARTICLE.php?AID=3363 Trans Group Attacks New Book on 'Queens.'] ''Windy City Times''</ref> economist [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2003">McCloskey, Deirdre (November 2003). [http://www.reason.com/news/show/28928.html Queer Science: A data-bending psychologist confirms what he already knew about gays and transsexuals.] ''[[Reason (magazine)|Reason]]'', November 2003</ref> psychologist Madeline Wyndzen,<ref name="james2006">James, Andrea (Fall 2006). [http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/gender-identity.pdf A Defining Moment in Our History.] ''Transgender Tapestry'', Fall 2006, Issue 110, pp. 18-23.</ref> writers Dallas Denny,<ref name="denny2004">Denny, Dallas (December 13, 2004). [http://www.ifge.org/Article244.phtml Viewpoint: Why the Bailey Controversy Is Important.] ''Transgender Tapestry'' #104, Winter 2004</ref> [[Pauline Park]],<ref name="park2003">Park, Pauline (May 30, 2003). [http://gaycitynews.com/site/index.cfm?newsid=17003198&BRD=2729&PAG=461&dept_id=568864&rfi=8 Sympathy, But Finding Pathology.] ''Gay City News''</ref> [[Jamison Green]] <ref name="green2003">Green J (2003). [http://www.planetout.com/people/columns/green/archive/20031014.html Bailey’s wick.] ''[[PlanetOut]]''</ref> Gwen Smith,<ref name="smith2003">Smith, Gwen (June 13, 2003). [http://www.sovo.com/2003/6-13/view/columns/notaman.cfm Not a man.] ''[[Southern Voice]]''</ref> and [[Andrea James]],<ref name="surkan2007">Surkan, K (2007). Transsexuals Protest Academic Exploitation. In Lillian Faderman, Yolanda Retter, Horacio Roque Ramírez, eds. ''Great Events From History: Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Events, 1848-2006.'' pages 111-114. Salem Press ISBN 978-1-58765-263-9</ref> as well as [[Christine Burns]] of [[Press for Change]], Karen Gurney of the Australian W-O-M-A-N Network, and Executive Director Monica Casper of the [[Intersex Society of North America]].<ref name="tapestry2004">The Ups and Downs of J. Michael Bailey. ''Transgender Tapestry'' #104, Winter 2004, pp. 53-54.</ref>

:Negative responses came from outside the transgender community as well. Liza Mundy in the ''[[Washington Post]]'' wrote, "I got so bored that I began recreationally underlining passages to decide which was the dullest."<ref name="mundy2003">Mundy, Liza (March 23, 2003). Codes of Behavior. ''[[Washington Post]]''</ref> Psychologist [[Eli Coleman]] referred to the book as "an unfortunate setback in feelings of trust between the transgender community and sex researchers,"<ref name="dreger2008"/> and his colleague, Walter Bockting, wrote that it was "yet another blow to the delicate relationship between clinicians, scholars, and the transgender community."<ref name="bockting2005">Bockting, Walter O. (2005). Biological reductionism meets gender diversity in human sexuality. [Review of the book The Man Who Would Be Queen.] ''Journal of Sex Research'', 42, 267-270.</ref> [[Kinsey Institute]] Director [[John Bancroft]] referred to the book as "not science," later clarifying that "it promoted a very derogatory explanation of transgender identity which most TG people would find extremely hurtful and humiliating….Whether based on science or not we have a responsibility to present scientific ideas, particularly in the public arena, in ways which are not blatantly hurtful. But in addition to that, [Bailey] did not support his analysis in a scientific manner—hence my comment."<ref name="dreger2008"/> Psychologist [[Randi Ettner]] said of Bailey, "He's set back the field 100 years, as far as I'm concerned."<ref name="klein2004">Klein, Julia (May 2004). [http://web.archive.org/web/20040614034224/http://www.seedmagazine.com/?p=article&n=above&id=130 Ethical Minefields: The Sex That Would Be Science.] ''Seed''</ref> Psychiatrist [[Vernon Rosario]] wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"<ref name="rosario2003">Rosario, Vernon (November 2003). [http://web.archive.org/web/20050920214319/http://www.lambdalit.org/Lammy/BaileyBook/RosarioonBailey.html New gene theory rests on bad science.] ''The Gay & Lesbian Review''</ref> Ph.D. student Riki Lane summarized the transgender portion of the conflict: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist [[pseudoscience]] that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."<ref name="lane2008">Lane R (2008). Truth, Lies, and Trans Science. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Philosophy professor Talia Mae Bettcher wrote, “Because Bailey believes transsexual women tend to lie or misrepresent, nothing a transwoman can say contests this theory.”<ref name=”bettcher2008”>Bettcher TM (2008). [http:// www.calstatela.edu/faculty/tbettch/BettcherDreger.pdf Pretenders to the Throne.] Archives of Sexual Behavior, Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.430-433. </ref>


:Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.<ref name=”becker2003”>Becker, Robert (November 18, 2003). NU investigates charges over book. ''[[Chicago Tribune]]''</ref> The [[Southern Poverty Law Center]] printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including [[J. Michael Bailey|Bailey]], [[Ray Blanchard|Blanchard]], [[David Buss|Buss]], [[John Derbyshire|Derbyshire]], [[Steven Pinker|Pinker]], [[Steve Sailer|Sailer]], and [[Dan Seligman|Seligman]]) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-[[eugenics]] outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”<ref name=”beirich2003”> Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). [http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?sid=96 Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race.] ''[[Intelligence Report]]''</ref> Psychologist and sex therapist [[Margaret Nichols]] wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”<ref name=”nichols2008”>Nichols 2008</ref>

:The [[Lambda Literary Foundation]] nominated the book as a finalist in the [[transgender]] award category for 2003.<ref name=”marks2004”>Marks, Jim (13 February 2004). A letter from the publisher about the Lambda Literary Awards. ‘’Lambda Book Report’’</ref><ref name=”nangeroni2004”>Nangeroni N, MackKenzie GO (March 15, 2004). [http://www.gendertalk.com/radio/programs/450/gt452.shtml Interview with Jim Marks.] ‘’GenderTalk’’ Program # 452</ref> The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.<ref name=”grubb2004”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). Lambda keeps controversial book as finalist for award. ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.<ref name=”grubb2004b”>Grubb, R.J. (March 4, 2004). On second thought... ‘’Bay Windows’’</ref> According to Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was [[transphobia|transphobic]].<ref>{{cite web | last = Letellier | first = Patrick | title = Group rescinds honor for disputed book | publisher = gay.com | date = 2004-03-16 | url = http://www.gay.com/news/article.html?2004/03/16/3 | accessdate = 2007-03-16}}</ref> After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”<ref name=”flowers2007”> Flowers, Charles (Sept 20, 2007) [http://www.lambdaliterary.org/archives/archives.html Letter to New York Times.] [[Lambda Literary Foundation]]</ref>

:Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached [[Clinical psychology#Professional_ethics|professional ethics]].<ref name="mccain2003">McCain RS (November 24, 2003). University investigates ethics of sex researcher. ''[[Washington Times]]''</ref> These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without [[institutional review board]] permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.<ref name=”ap2003”>Associated Press (July 25, 2003). Transsexuals accuse professor of research misconduct.</ref> Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,<ref name="wilson2004b">>Wilson, R. (2004, Dec. 10). "[http://chronicle.com/weekly/v51/i16/16a01001.htm Northwestern U. Will Not Reveal Results of Investigation Into Sex Researcher]." ''The Chronicle of Higher Education,'' p. 10.</ref> Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of [[scientific misconduct]] made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."<ref name="dreger2008"/> Physician [[Charles Moser]] wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."<ref name="moser2008">Moser C (2008). A Different Perspective. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref>

:Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."<ref name="rosario2003"/> Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.<ref>[http://www.psych.northwestern.edu/psych/people/faculty/bailey/Andrea%20James.pdf]</ref><ref name="dreger2008"/> James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.<ref name="carey2007"/> James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."<ref name="dreger2008"/>


:In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: Lane wrote, "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."<ref name="lane2008"/> In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. ''New York Times'' reporter [[Benedict Carey]] reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." <ref name="carey2007">Carey, Benedict. ([[2007]]-[[08-21]].) [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/21/health/psychology/21gender.html "Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege."] ''New York Times'' via nytimes.com. Retrieved on [[2007]]-[[09-19]].</ref> Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.<ref name="dreger2008"/> Dreger described the controversy as suppression of [[academic freedom]] and concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."<ref>Dreger, A. (2008). Response to the commentaries on Dreger (2008). ''Archives of Sexual Behavior, 37'' 503-510.</ref>

:Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]''. Commenters included [[John Bancroft]],<ref name="bancroft2008">Bancroft J (2008). Lust or Identity? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.426-428.</ref> [[Ben Barres]],<ref name="barres2008">Barres B (2008). A Response to Dreger's Defense of the Bailey Book. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.429.</ref> [[Ray Blanchard]],<ref name="blanchard2008">Blanchard R (2008). Deconstructing the Feminine Essence Narrative. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> [[John Gagnon]],<ref name="gagnon2008">Gagnon J (2008). Is This a Work of Science? ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.444-447.</ref> [[Richard Green (sexologist)|Richard Green]],<ref name="green2008">Green R (2008). Lighten Up, Ladies. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Deirdre McCloskey]],<ref name="mccloskey2008">McCloskey D (2008). [http://deirdremccloskey.org/docs/dreger.pdf Politics in Scholarly Drag: Dreger's Assault on the Critics of Bailey.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.451-452.</ref> [[Charles Moser]],<ref name="moser2008"/> [[Seth Roberts]],<ref name="roberts2008">Roberts S (2008). McCloskey and Me: A Back-and-Forth. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.472-475.</ref> [[Julia Serano]],<ref name="serano2008">Serano J (2008). [http://www.juliaserano.com/av/Serano_DregerCommentary.pdf A Matter of Perspective: A Transsexual Woman-Centric Critique of Dreger’s ‘‘Scholarly History’’ of the Bailey Controversy.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.491-494.</ref> and [[Ken Zucker]].<ref name="zucker2008">Zucker K (2008). Introduction to Dreger (2008) and Peer Commentaries. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008, p.365.</ref> Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."<ref name="green2008"/> Psychologist Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."<ref name+"caretto2008">Caretto A (2008). Dreger’s Adventures. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of [[narcissism (psychology)|narcissistic]] rage."<ref name="lawrence2008">Lawrence AA (2008). [http://www.annelawrence.com/twr/shame_&_narcissistic_rage.pdf Shame and Narcissistic Rage in Autogynephilic Transsexualism.] ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Dreger received a [[Guggenheim Fellowship]] to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Anthropologist Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."<ref name="mathy2008">Mathy RM (2008). Cowboys, Sheepherders, and The Man Who Would
‘‘I Know’’ vs. First-Order Lived Experience. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Sociologist Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."<ref name="windsor2008">Windsor E (2008). Accounting for Power and Academic Responsibility. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008</ref> Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from [[Jamison Green]]), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."<ref name="clarkson2008">Clarkson NL (2008). Trans Victims, Trans Zealots: A Critique of Dreger’s History of the Bailey Controversy. ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' Vol.37, No.3, June 2008.</ref> Biologist [[Julia Serano]] wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.<ref name="serano2008"/> The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.<ref name=''minshall2007''>Anderson-Minshall, Jacob (October 25, 2007). [http://www.gaywired.com/article.cfm?section=73&id=17029 A TransAmazon Takes on 'The Man'.] ''GayWired''</ref><ref name="hendrick2008">Hendrick E (2008). [http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/News/US/NWSA/Papers/Quiet_Down_There.pdf Quiet Down There! The Discourse of Academic Freedom as Defence of Hierarchy in the Aftermath of J. Michael Bailey's ''The Man Who Would Be Queen''.] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref><ref name="james2008">James A (2008). [http://www.tsroadmap.com/info/alice-dreger/fair-comment.pdf Fair comment, foul play: Populist responses to J. Michael Bailey's exploitative "controversies."] NWSA panel, June 21, 2008.</ref>
:''The Man Who Would Be Queen'' went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

As I mentioned, this is going to be very difficult to discuss all in one piece, so I propose we split it into three parts for discussion: The initial response, the response starting with the investigation, and the Dreger sub-controversy (split here by hard returns). Since [[Wikipedia:ISNOT#Wikipedia_is_not_a_paper_encyclopedia|Wikipedia is not constrained to specific lengths for articles]], we can make this as long as necessary to cover the topic in a balanced and neutral manner. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 00:17, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

::This satisfies me. This right here right now is good enough that I think that the top or bottom half of the controversy article could be replaced by it. This hit's basically all the bases. It's long but this is a complicated mess. Good work. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 00:41, 9 October 2008 (UTC)


::::::::::::::I must be honest, it's ponderous and boring. It has nothing to do with the controversy . I reduced it back down to identifying Baileys critics and the controversy. Do we need to get everyones opinion on the planet , gay or straight to comment on it ? Unless this has DIRECT bearing on the controversy there is no point. KISS [[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 09:43, 9 October 2008 (UTC)


==My summary and reasoning for keeping this concise==

Baileys book is a one source experiment to verify some of Blanchard's theories. It was "researched " at a gay fetish/pick up bar and what he observed was real but only in one sense. To explain that statement let us imagine this was an article on heterosexuals and was researched at heterosexual sex/fetish club . Can we assume that observations made at such a club validates sweeping observations that could be applied to all heterosexuals ? Can they be divided into just two categories ? Of course not, yet Bailey said that there were only two classifications of transsexual and if any transsexual disagrees with his theories they must be lying. It's not a scientific statement so no matter who argues pro or con what remains is merely opinion. <small><span class="autosigned">—Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]] • [[Special:Contributions/DarlieB|contribs]]) [[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 11:28, 9 October 2008 (UTC)</small>

:The problem is that Team Bailey have been trying to establish a simple revisionist master narrative where three "rage"-filled transsexuals masterminded a conspiracy to "ruin" a "scientist under siege," concluding that Bailey is some sort of brave Gallileo-type martyr speaking "scientific truth" in the face of "identity politics." They ignore Bailey's many personal attacks on the people he wrote about and focus on his own narcissistic injuries, when the tables were turned and his own identity was examined by gay and trans critics in academia and beyond. They seem to believe it's "science" when he attacks vulnerable communities and people, and "rage" when done to him. The story is much more complicated than their version of things, which is why this draft is written long. We are in the process of editing this down to a summary right now. I hope you will join us in the discussion. I believe each of the three sections above can be made into one paragraph each, per [[Wikipedia:Summary style]]. I'd like to include references with all the reliable sources listed, so anyone interested can look it all up themselves. The main reason this is so detailed is because a couple of editors here seem to think Dreger's hatchet job is some sort of authoritative final word on the matter, when she merely repeats the same tactics and strategies as Bailey in his problematic book. This kind of nonsense will always play well to people in positions of institutional power with little knowledge on the topic, because it is written in a style that is familiar to them, and uses buzzwords that get them all tingly.
:I agree the multi-month debate process is ponderous and boring (as is the draft above), but I believe it will ultimately lead to a better article, by gathering all the facts and POVs (including those ignored/suppressed by Dreger) and then summarizing them, versus heavy reliance on the version profferred by Bailey's supporters. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 17:03, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

:::I totally understand the need to balance by and that it was not a " 3 person conspiracy" as alleged by Dreger . Across the board the reaction from the entire transsexual community was totally negative and I left the other names in simply because they were were well respected activists who made publicly sourced statements on the book. I think that will be clear to the reader but here is our problem , we cannot allow Baileys personal attacks to become an issue or it opens the door to members of our communities emotional attacks on him. Objectivity can't be reached by posting the heated words of someone simply because they are an intellectual on either side , it must have more than just an entertainment value and deal with real issues in the controversy . The Andrea James section, in real context , portrays Bailey badly so they were not going to challenge it's deletion . Dr Bailey has responded like a spoiled child who was punished for stealing cookies and Dreger has been defending the right to publish silly assumption without any consequences. This never was an "intellectual freedom " issue because every academic that proposes theory will suffer these social/academic consequences or rewards due to it . And while I've removed at least 4 of the five hidden Dreger quotes she needs to be mentioned simply for her single handed revival of the issue in the public eye .

And yes, I noted that the Bailey Forces had made this article completely bias. At first I worked hard simply to put balance in it , but once I had the original editor chopped it all down to near nothing , threw on the neutrality tag and walked away in a huff . Now you know me as someone who never shies from argument or debate so know that this is incredibly hard for me to be neutral but I have. My hope is that whatever summary you create is "balanced". It serves no ones purpose and especially not ours to deal with the hostile reaction to an obviously imbalanced or bias article. We need to walk a higher road here so lets start with a tight , concise and neutral view.I look forward ton the summary. Yes, I will participate.--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 20:55, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
::Ok I understand Darlie. Consider this.
::Over a decade ago there was a crisis in lebanon. You had these factions all fighting mainly Christian VS Muslim. This american diplomat went over there to mediate the dispute. A news reporter informed him that both sides think he is biased against them. He said "In a situation like this....If both sides think you are working for their opposition then it means you are neutral. He was latter kidnapped and killed by one of the factions.
::What this has to do with the current dispute is that this controversy while non violent is just as passionate. Both sides hold entrenched viewpoints and will not budge. In a truly neutral light (like tht found in the article I wrote about the controvrsy) you can see everyone's warts. Such, I suppose, is why neither side likes it and wants it to go away. As soon as their summary is done. The other moral of that story is that anyone, like me, who tries to be neutral and listens to both sides will get branded as working for the other team, or have one team think I am working for them. Let me say publically I have yet to get my monogrammed "Team Bailey" starter jacket and cap yet so I am not in team Bailey yet. :-?
::Basically what I am trying to get ALL of you to understnd is that no writing of this will be satisfactory to both sides. One side or the other will feel slighted in some way. Jokestress is doing good work here. If she were not I would post a notice on the COI notice board about her. She has been reasonably neutral in her edits and proposals so I do not do that. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 02:43, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::Believe it or not I agree with you even though I am branded "anti-Bailey". Jokestress is actually a a dear friend and as you notice she could be branded "Team Bailey" herself , yet she is not. This is a person I highly respect and admire and yet our dispute is merely this, I feel that we are including pointless positive reviews for the sake of the "appearance" of balance when NONE address the issues of the controversy. If we are short of direct rebuttal on an academic scale then include Baileys own defense if you must but not reviews of moms "book of the month " club. Does that make sense ? I've worked on this edit since way back to get it to neutral ground and was uninformed of the "consensus "poll . I wonder why ? The unfortunate thing is that even if we create "pretend" neutral ground it will be just that if they aren't equal peer reviews. Again, what is the " controversy to you" ? Please define it ? The alleged conspiracy or the negative reviews ? If it is the former then direct rebuttal to the "conspirators" charges are the only respnse from credible sources. If it is the latter and merely the fact the responses were negative then Alice Dreger's charges should be removed as well because those are supposedly a direct response to charges of an alledged "conspiracy". This artical DIRECTLY charges three academic transsexuals with "conspiracy" . I would like our new Mod to directly answer that and to judge whether that allegation violates "Do no harm ". --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 15:10, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

==Need to archive==
At almost 400K, this may be the longest talk page on Wikipedia. Can we set up autoarchiving to remove old materials? [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 19:20, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

:I hand-archived materials up through the last response by ProudAGP. I will archive the remainder once we hear back about the latest version. [[Talk:The_Man_Who_Would_Be_Queen#Post-publication_summary.2C_proposal_2|Proposal 2]] outlines ProudAGP's objections and suggestion, so I didn't want to archive that until we hear back about the latest proposal. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 20:14, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

==WhatamIdoing's Reversion==

What is the intent, to post every "opinion" one can on this article ? How has that anything to do with the contraversy and why do these reviews carry any weight whatsaoever ? I'm totally fine with putting this up for review because I've read what you discussed and STILL see no reason for including it. Please, one by one of you would , what would reviews like Kirkus have to do with anything when the issues were solely the reaction of the transsexual community ? How exactly does a book reviewers "opinion" mean anything. The Witches Hammer in it's time was a very well reviewed I'm sure!--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 21:42, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

:Since your involvement in August, we have been working toward consensus by writing a detailed account of the controversy that contains a well-sourced survey of all the responses and key events. From this, the intent is to condense all of it into a summary. Various editors have claimed that this or that event was not relevant, so we have been adding citations from reliable sources to back up the relevance. Once we have an unabridged version that includes everything people consider relevant, the plan is to use that as a starting point for a tight version. For instance, I think the Kirkus review is worthless because it is anonymous and for all we know written by one of Bailey's pals. But in order to reach consensus, we are leaving it in for discussion. Another editor thinks Bailey's involvement with the human biodiversity group is unimportant, so we've included a quotation from a psychologist who considered it very important. It's critical to take our time and make sure everyone is OK at each step when reaching consensus on touchy topics. I have had many similar negotiations, such as the [[race and intelligence]] article which involves some of the same academics. I support WhatamIdoing's revision of your changes to the article, because it's important that we respect the process and negotiate changes here first. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 23:50, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

::My point is we can wipe every single reference to the positive out. The "controversy" has nothing to do with balanced reviews. It has to do with charges made by the transsexual community the books methods of sales, methodology and conclusions were poor. Bailey was attacked in an academic forum for it by high profile members of that community. The main reason for the resistance to criticism seems to be that they are the victims of Baileys book. In fact I think I can state without reservation that if it were not for their gender issues people would take the criticism at face value. Posting positive opinions doesn't address those charges so they are completely irrelevant. The balance is Dreger is allowed to state her ridiculous theory that Bailey should be protected from academic and economic repercussion of statements unlike every other academic out there. Example Steven Jones who was fired in the same method as Bailey for a controversial theory. Why should anyone have to negotiate the truth ? If WhatamIdoing can't post a response directly related to the controversy charges then no response is appropriate .--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 02:39, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::No, DarlieB, we cannot just "wipe every single reference to the positive out". We cannot say that "[a]cross the board the reaction from the entire transsexual community was totally negative". We ''can't'' say these things because '''they are not true'''. ''Most'' transsexuals object. ''Some'' do not. Silencing the minority view is a violation of [[WP:NPOV|Wikipedia's policies on a neutral point of view]].
:::It is perfectly obvious to everyone that ''you personally'' disagree with the Blanchard taxonomy. That is very different from ''every single transsexual on the planet'' having the same opinion.
:::The reason I reverted your earlier changes was solely because you carelessly and completely disregarded the hours of work on this talk page that were put into them. I assume that you did this through ignorance of that work, but now you know that each sentence has been carefully discussed half a dozen times by half a dozen editors. You are welcome to join the discussion, but you are not welcome to impose your own version over the objections over everyone else. [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 02:56, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::::I agree with WhatamIdoing. A controversy by definition is a dispute involving strong disagreement. It's not fair to present just one side in a controversy in the article, and we are working hard to present both sides in a manner that is representative and neutral, per policy. We welcome your input on the proposed controversy section, but it's necessary to represent all points of view proportionally. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 03:05, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::Yes you can wipe out every positive review if they are unrelated to the controversy (which by the way is the alleged "conspiracy of transsexuals" trying to destroy Bailey, not the reviews). Virtually every transsexual I know saw Baileys book as the opportunistic exploitation of an unrepresented minority. What transsexuals do you know WhatamIdoing ? I live in the community so you saying because Anne Lawrence was happy about her own theory is ridiculous. The transsexual community reacted negatively PERIOD. Yes, I disagree with the "taxonomy" but that doesn't mean you should be prefacing the controversy discussion with babble like anonymous reviews from Kirkus ! Reviews that don't even deal with the controversy !. What is that ? Academics and PhDs vs webnerds ? So lets see your "transsexual support" .--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 03:49, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::::::Again WAID, show me your transsexual support ? You made this statement "We can't say these things because they are not true". Lets have it. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 20:09, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
::::::Could you try reading what's already on this page on that subject? Look at several of the proposals above. No, that's probably too hard for you. Read this: <blockquote>Some reviews in the LGBT press were positive, such as from writers Ethan Boatner<ref name="napsales"/> for ''Lavender Magazine'' and Duncan Osborne for ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]''.<ref name="osborne2003">Osborne, Duncan (March 2003). 'The Man Who Would Be Queen' (review). ''[[Out (magazine)|Out]]'', March 2003, Vol. 11 Issue 9, pp. 54-54.</ref> Those in the transgender community who agreed with Blanchard's taxonomy also reviewed the book positively. Anne Lawrence, a physician and sexologist whose work on autogynephilia is featured in the book, wrote "This is a wonderful book on an important subject,"<ref name="napsales"/> and autogynephilia support group founder Willow Arune wrote, "Blanchard, Bailey, Lawrence and <nowiki>[Blanchard colleague Maxine]</nowiki> Petersen have done more to help transsexuals over years of service than perhaps any other four people in the world."<ref name="arune2004">Arune, Willow (2004). [http://www.autogynephilia.org/I%20AM%20ARUNE.htm I *AM* Arune!] ''Transgender Tapestry'' 1(85):65–68.</ref></blockquote>
::::::The fact that your personal friends dislike the idea is not just unimportant, it's a violation of [[WP:NOR|the No Original Research policy]]. Positive reviews by people that publicly identify as transsexual have been published. The unanimity of "the transsexual community" on this issue is a myth. The transsexual community is made up of many individuals. It's just as offensive to stereotype "all transsexuals" as thinking alike as it is to say that "all black people" or "all Latinos" think alike. [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 00:37, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::::You just named two GAY men and the ONLY transsexual you mention is again Anne Lawrence ! THAT GIVES YOU ONE TRANSSEXUAL AND SHES AN ASSOCIATE ! You made an accusation yet you have absolutely no proof of ANY transsexual support ! I was not speaking of my "friends " . The community is far larger than my immediate circle ands I saw NO SUPPORT FOR BAILEY WHATSOEVER ! What the heck do you know about MY community ???? You don't even know single transsexual ! You can't even name any other ! My point is proved and you are making baseless statements to support a subject you are completely ignorant of. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 05:28, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

::::::::DarlieB, you are being very inflammatory and disruptive in your comments, which is making it difficult to discuss these issues in a calm and productive manner. Setting aside whether Anne Lawrence is a transsexual (under other nosologies Lawrence is not), we need to focus on content, not on other editors. Please do not make personal attacks on WhatamIdoing. That style of interaction is not allowed here. Writing in all caps and using exclamation points is not necessary. Please review the following policies: [[WP:AGF]], [[WP:NPA]] and [[WP:NPOV]]. We have to work to make sure articles summarize all views proportionally, and WhatamIdoing is simply trying to work with others toward that end. Many people here have very different points of view, but we need to work together on reaching consensus. Thanks again for offering to share your views on this article. I hope we can stay [[WP:CALM]] and get back on track. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 06:09, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::::::::::We can stay calm but the accusations aren't one sided Jokestress. I was told by WAID that I was bias, that it was opinion and that what I said was untrue so I repeatedly asked for proof of that there was any "support" from the transsexual community beyond Lawrence. That has not materialized I think the point has been made that transsexual community reacted negatively. Please feel free to move on to the summary. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 07:22, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

== Keeping calm ==

Hello folks! An editor involved in this article has asked me to help resolve any disputes. It seems as though the major issue is [[WP:UNDUE|undue weight]] may be given to controversy, or more specifically, criticism of the book. Is my summary correct? Are there any favorable reviews extant? I seem to recall that [[Quality Paperback Book Club]] offered this an an option. [[User:Bearian|Bearian]] ([[User talk:Bearian|talk]]) 22:19, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

:This long version has two paragraphs of positive reviews and two paragraphs of negative reviews. As far as [[WP:UNDUE]], in terms of politics, negative response was proportionally higher than positive response. I asked you to take a look because of the revert war in article space, which removes a lot of information negotiated by consensus. I believe WhatamIdoing's revert was correct and appropriate, but do not want to revert it myself a second time. Thanks! [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 23:57, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

::::I believe it was incorrect to add as the positive reviews have nothing to do with the actual controversy. None of these "positive" reviews even deal with the issues raised. None ! Jokestress is trying to compromise to overcome WhatamIdoing's obsessive compulsive need to defend Bailey ( notice I do not say the book ) no matter how unrelated his support material. This article is about the book and not a courtroom defense of it's author . Neutrality does not mean you have to toss in ANY material to balance.--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 02:55, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:Lets start Bearian by clearly identifying the controversy because rebuttal in this article depends on what is being discussed. Is it the negative critical response by the transsexual community or the "alleged" conspiracy of a few transsexual academics to destroy Baileys career as Alice Dreger claimed ? By the way, have you read The Man Who Would Be Queen ? --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 05:38, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::My own opinion is that the ''negative'' reviews are ''over''weighed. Specifically, it is the reviews that appear in high-end sources that merit mention in WP articles, not blogs and opinions in non-RS's. This is particularly the case for controversial topics, such as this one. The high-end reviews of this book have been much more positive than those in non-professional sources. (For the record, my own review of the book appeared in a non-RS.)<br>
::[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 13:14, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::Please post a link to your review Cantor and support of your assertion "the high-end reviews of this book have been much more positive" . Thanks. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 14:35, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::Oh and WhatamIdoing , please stop editing in Bearian's name unless he directs you to. The point of having him here is to settle the disputed text. Oh and could you please stop lying in your reversion explanations ? You were not restoring "Bearian's" edits because none of "Bearian's" edits were changed. In fact , you actually "reverted" the things he had just corrected ! --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 14:40, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::::@James Cantor: Your glowing book review is used in the publisher's marketing materials and has been mentioned in other published sources, so your prominent involvement as a major stakeholder in this has been well-established since the earliest days of the controversy. In fact, your review is also notable because the National Academies changed the attribution from "American Psychology Association" to your name in the wake of complaints. Your ongoing attempts to downplay your significant role in promoting the book and attacking its critics fly in the face of the published record and your edit history on Wikipedia. Your attempts to eliminate the extensive published criticism by claiming it's not "high-end" are part of the pattern of intimidation and suppression of opposing views that you and Dreger are well-known for in this debate. You and your employers are notorious for casting a chill on open discussion, where psychologists and sexologists and former patients are afraid to use their real names for justifiable fear of retribution from CAMH-affiliated psychologists. If you have concerns about a source in the article, please specify so we can discuss its merits. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 15:12, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:For the record I disagree with Dr. Cantor on this one. Those "non-RS" "low end" reviews come from people like professors Conway and McCloskey. They are both academics, they are both transsexuals. They (and jokestress, Darlie and I) know more about actually being a transsexual than any of those so called high end reviewers can ever know. As I recall Conway and McCloskey raised some legit points. The book reduces all of the complexity of being a transsexual down to a one or two dimensional map. That alone tells you it's at least a grave oversimplification. (McCloskey also had to take a swipe at those individuals who in the book were labeld "homosexual transsexuals" As if they were not or could not also have been directly injured by what's in the book. I digress..) For those reasons I believe and will argue at length that the concerns of the likes of Conway and McCloskey should be here if the reviews of James Cantor and such are here. --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 16:16, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::DarlieB, I made no edits in Bearian's name. I reverted your anti-consensus change, and because of the limitations of Wikipedia's software, which couldn't remove your massive deletion without deleting Bearian's recent changes as well, I manually retyped Bearian's recent changes. You are being offensive and making unfounded accusations. I would appreciate it if you at least pretended to show respect for the other editors working on this article. [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 18:51, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

::::Hardly unfounded WAID ." DarlieB's anti-consensus changes again; restore Bearian's edits"-WhatamIdoing. You reverted a mods revisions ! Who are you to do that ? Bearian being here was entirely to sort the dispute. Once he is up to speed on the issues I'm fine with him deciding what's to be included. As for "consensus" I was not told or informed of any changes by wiki even though this is watched so to say it was "consensus" is just sneaky. By majority , if the KKK decides they want to edit Barrack Obama's profile here is that ok ? I mean , they would have a "consensus right ? And that's the point of having a mod here. This already has neutrality tags so it was never finished. I agree on Hfarmer's "middle east war " scenario , where no one will be happy in the end but we will reach a proper compromise. If there is such an issue it can;'t be resolved then I suggest removing the entire controversy section and Dregers accusations. I feel the structure of that controversy section was compromised from the beginning. Since when do you identify positive reviews before you even discuss the "controversy" the section is about ?!. Is that some new age right wing Fox Propaganda defensive measure ? Let the mod do his job and stop doing it for him !And just so you know, that massive deletion was first done by another editor , the same person who put the neutrality tags on this article. Not that you have been right yet. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 20:01, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Click [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Man_Who_Would_Be_Queen&diff=244235541&oldid=244227356 here] to see Bearian's edits. They were:
* Removal of wikilinking to one instance of the word ''autogynephilia''
* Wikilink ''transpeople'' to the [[Transgenderism]] article.
* Add a comma, followed by the words ", which may have amounted to [[sexual exploitation]]" to an existing sentence.

That's it. If you look at the changes I made, I removed ''just'' your edits, and manually re-typed all three of Bearian's changes. The evidence plainly shows that I did not revert Bearian's changes; I carefully preserved them. I removed your edits because they were contrary to the carefully worked out consensus on this page. It is hardly my, or any other editor's, fault if you didn't manage to notice the many thousands of words in discussion on this page over the last couple of weeks.

I suggest that you take your own advice, and quit reverting to your preferred version. If you really believed in allowing the moderator to take the lead, then you would have left that decision to Bearian. [[User:WhatamIdoing|WhatamIdoing]] ([[User talk:WhatamIdoing|talk]]) 00:44, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


::::::::IT WAS HIS ! You altered his edit! I don't care if you polished his shoes and wiped his bottom the last edit was his AND YOU* REVERTED* IT! There was NO consensus because it was only you Dr Dreger and Bailey doing the editing ! Oh I've been back many times to check the responses. These are recent . And since you feel that way about my not noticing I'm here now so lets get to that consensus. Stop your stalling anprovide proof of "transsexual support " for this book or apologize for saying otherwise.--[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 05:13, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


----
*Liking a book and saying so in a newsletter does not give one "prominent involvement as a major stakeholder." I neither expected nor received any benefit from expressing my opinion. Filing actual complaints against Bailey (as Jokestress has) gives one prominent involvement as a major stakeholder.
*Regarding whether my review is notable: Jokestress, like everyone else is entitled to their opinion. I point out only the WP policies, which (in my opinion) restricts page content to reviews that appear in high-end outlets, which my review did not.
*To correct an error of Jokestress': The National Academies did ''not'' change their attribution in "a wake of complaints." They changed their attribution because '''*I*''' asked them to use my name instead of the name of the groups that published my review. I have no idea on what basis Jokestress thinks that it was complaints that had any effect...except that Jokestress was one of the complainers.
*My expressing my interpretation that WP policy is for using high-end sources in the discussion of controversial issues is not an "attempt to eliminate the extensive published criticism." To the contrary, it is more than plausible that Jokestress is pushing for the ''inclusion'' in WP of low-end reviews because those are the ones she agrees with. Regardless of which of those explanations is correct, the question for WP and Bearian is: Which course of action best meets WP's needs and policy, including or excluding reviews in non-professional sources?
*As for Dreger, me, or anyone else trying to intimidate anyone, one can always tell when Jokestress is making things up by when she says things like "are well-known for," etc. but provides no actual evidence beyond 'someone said so'. I can recommend to Bearian only to read the New York Times coverage of Jokestress (Andrea James) posting on her website photos of other people's children with obscene captions and ''then'' deciding if it is actually Jokestress to uses intimidation as a political tactic. (Incidentally, I have no idea what power Jokestress thinks I have that I could use against anyone.)
*I appreciate Hfarmer's desire to deem Conway's and McCloskey's opinions relevant, because those two people are highly educated and openly transsexual; however, neither of those criteria pertain to whether their comments should appear on a WP page. That is, WP policy does not say that greater weight should be given to opinions from people just because they are members of a relevant demographic group or because they have a PhD in a non-relevant field (Conway is an eletrical engineer and McCloskey is an economist). (Incidentally, I appreciate Hfarmer's willingness to disagree; I have never met two people who agree on everything.)
*I agree with Hfarmer that the reviews by Conway and McCloskey have no greater qualification to be on this page than mine does. I am saying only that the standard for including reviews here should be the same as the standard for including reviews anywhere else...those that were published in high-end, professional outlets by a person with relevant knowledge of the topic.
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 21:00, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::Dr Cantor- ". Psychologist -"His clinical activities focus primarily on the assessment of persons dealing with illegal or clinically significant sexual behaviours and interests." Your work is in PEDOPHILES ! Not transgendered or transsexuals ? And Ray Blanchard associate and collaborator ! No bias huh ? Tell me Dr, was using the name "MarionTheLibrarian" your way of experiencing the transsexual world or was it merely to invoke the empathy in critics that a woman would ? =) It would be embarrassing if this book was discredited wouldn't it since you are one of the people used to promote it's wholesome goodness and value . You have been editing this from the day I got here sir and now I know why. It's seems to me I am virtually the only one here without direct ties , well, I'm gender variant so I must be one of two kinds of transsexual right ? Guess which wont you Dr,? . By the way , have you ever cured anyone ? Ever ? --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 20:40, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

#Yes, my clinical activities are as described in the bio of mine that you have quoted; and yes, at the moment, I am in a clinic with specialized expertise in pedophilia.
#Yes, I do some clinical work with people with gender dysphoria, but not as much I have in the past.
#Yes, Blanchard and I work together on several projects. I have never said anything of Blanchard that is not already part of some public record where anyone may check it.
#No, I used the name "MarionTheLibrarian" because (1) a lot of my editing was about adding sources from medical libraries that most people don't have access to, (2) "Marian The Librarian" is from a famous Broadway musical (I am a fan), and (3) I changed the spelling of "Marian" to "Marion" in order to masculinize it without losing the rhyme.
#I publish professionally on several topics in sexology on a regular basis. It is unlikely that every word that any scientist writes will be correct. I have no issue whatsoever with anyone disagreeing with anything I say or think. However, people should disagree only with what I ''actually'' say or think rather than disagree with some misinterpreted version of what I say or think, but don't.
#You are not the only one here without ties. Moreover, there is no rule against editors having opinions; it is our edits that must remain neutral. If you have a particular edit of mine you would like to discuss, you have not referred to it.
#I have no idea who you are. Your next sentence is too agrammatical for me to interpret.
#Finally, neither transexuality nor paraphilias change after any known intervention. People who have come to me with other concerns, however, have had those concerns alleviated over the course of treatment. However, I do very little treatment. As it says in your quote from my bio, most of my clinical work is in assessment, not treatment.
:[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 21:24, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

:::::::Alleviation of symptoms isn't isn't a "cure" , correct Dr ? Though , yes , I note you mostly do assessment . So what would be your area of expertise in gender dysphoria that makes your review noteworthy ? Have you established some relationship between pedophiles and transgenders ? Yes, I'm familiar with The Music Man and that Shirley Jones was the character you changed the gender on. Fascinating with so many male names to choose from you chose to gender change a known female character =) It's ok, I simply asked you to guess which of the two Bailey/Blanchard type transsexuals I was =) Humor , you wrote a positive review after all. I find nothing wrong with you having an opinion , nothing at all. Could you post a link , or could someone post a link to Dr Cantors review ? I'm not that smart Dr, I'm a cartoon animator so I'll have to struggle with the terminology I'm sure. Please WAID , post those positive reviews by transsexuals. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 21:49, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Let's leave it at this. Anyone who wants to read about James Cantor's tactics can do so [http://www.trans-health.com/displayarticle.php?aid=86 here], or they can email Dr. Madeline Wyndzen or call up Kyle Scanlon at the 519 in Toronto. Or look at his Wikipedia contributions under each of his three names. They all promote the work of his employers and attack their critics. Every single one of them. Or just ask around among psychologists you know to get the scoop. Anyone who wants to read about Dreger's tactics can read the Anderson-Minshall and Hendrick reports sourced in the proposal above, or pretty much any commentary on her paper. Bailey has been replaying his narcissistic injuries on his site since 2003, so anyone who wants to read about my tactics can go there for his take on things. To read about Bailey's tactics, I recommend the reports on his 2003 Emory and Stanford lectures, his mockery of "Juanita" in his book, and his various threats to critics. I think that covers all the accusations, etc.

Now that that is out of the way, does anyone have comments on the proposed draft while we await ProudAGP? I'd love to get this back on track and focused on improving the article. If anyone has a counterproposal, please put it up for discussion. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 01:03, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:Dr Cantor. "Cantor refers to transsexuals based on their birth gender. Therefore, what any modern, reasonable person would refer to as a transsexual woman (a woman who was assigned the gender "male" at birth), Cantor and the CAMH refers to as a "transsexual man", or even, later, a "male homosexual transsexual.""

:My my Dr. you are a little devil aren't you !I find it to be ridiculous to be here editing this with a Dr who intentionally misgenders me and my community. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 07:41, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

::DarlieB, many of the comments above are violations of our policies here. Please keep comments focused on improving the article. If you wish to share your opinions or have a debate about James Cantor, there are all kinds of public and private places online where you can find others doing just that. I really want to get this discussion back on track so we can move on to some of the other problematic articles on this site. Thanks! [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 06:25, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:::Then do it Jokestress . I'll opt out and let you all post uninformed opinions as "balance" , innuendo and fabrication as fact and anything else to please the agenda's of the battling sides. --[[User:DarlieB|DarlieB]] ([[User talk:DarlieB|talk]]) 07:26, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
::::That could have been said in a calmer way. :-/ To be honest perhaps both Jokestress, and James_Cantor should step away. This isn't a "policy" but [[WP:COI]] does say...
::::{{nutshell|Do not edit Wikipedia to promote your own interests, or those of other individuals, companies, or groups, unless you are certain that the interests of Wikipedia remain paramount.}}
::::A good thing to keep in mind.--[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 11:42, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
:::::Several editors here have already had formal COI complaints made regarding this. Everyone here except WAID has stated their interest in this topic. Most editors here are quite knowledgeable about the details, and I believe that is when articles improve fastest: when people with differing views and high levels of expertise in a topic work to negotiate a version based on consensus. ProudAGP and I are the two most directly involved editors, followed by Hfarmer and James Cantor. I feel it's important we all contribute to the discussion, even though we all have a clear stake in the outcome. We have been making good progress until things got a little far afield this week. If we can all agree on the key elements of the controversy, I believe we can take the unabridged version and condense it into a clear explanation of the issues. If we invoke COI on everyone, this whole series of articles will sit here as a hopeless mess for a long time, which is not in the interest of the project. Though people have strong points of view, it seems that we are all trying to keep the interests of Wikipedia ahead of our own interests. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:14, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

To keep an eye on the ball, I've intended my prior comments to review for Bearian the relevant long-standing issues here, and not to recapitulate the oft-repeated arguments. So, unless Bearian thinks it would be useful, I hesitate to repeat the demonstrations that Jokestress' claims are mere rumor-mongering (and that she is actually a primary source of the rumors). Of course, I am also aware that silence on my part after a volley of her insinuations might suggest to new readers that there is merit to them. So, unless Bearian says that more information would be helpful, I'll instead point out that Jokestress' comments follow the pattern I already described:
*As I wrote, when asked, Jokestress produces no evidence in support of her claims. In this particular case, I asked her for evidence that it was "in the wake of criticism" that the National Academies of Science changed their attribution of my review, and Jokestress remained entirely silent, while changing the subject with a volley of new claims.
*As I wrote, what Jokestress claims to be evidence is merely some unverified or unverifiable statements from someone else. In this case, that was "email Dr. Madeline Wyndzen", "call up Kyle Scanlon at the 519", "ask around among psychologists" and so on. This, of course, is not evidence; basing opinion on an opinion and having no evidence at the base is rumor-mongering, and it has no place in WP.<br>
The way to separate rumor from substance is, of course, to restrict WP pages to content that appears in RS's. Jokestress continues to push for information contained in non-RS's Jokestress' claims will appear to have merit (at least, superficially) only when one drops the bar low enough to allow rumor into WP. Despite that Jokestress refers to non-RS's with peacock terms such as "reports" or "investigations," they remain non-RS claims, without evidence, reiterating what Jokestress keeps on her personal website. Incidentally, although Jokestress refers Bearian to a variety of "sources" (making the claims seem independently verified), they are all contained on her personal website (tsroadmap.com). Refering Bearian to her own website, however, would have revealed her own level involvement in spreading the rumors that she now wants included in WP (but without mentioning herself as the source).<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 16:23, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:OK, you win; you are faultless in every way and above reproach in all that you do. Any future discussions of you can happen offsite. Now, do you have any comments on the combined proposal 1 above or on the proposed key elements below? Do you have a counter-proposal? [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:37, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Empty words of sarcasm are hardly going to help.

Regarding the proposal, Jokestress is doing exactly what editors should not. She provides a list of topics you want covered and then search for sources to support them (looking to unqualified sources when necessary). That is exactly the reverse of good editing. Instead, one should >start< with a list of what the RS’s are and then summarize what >they< say, not what any one editor wants the article to say.

In my opinion, the only RS’s here are the book itself, the reviews of it published in professional outlets for such reviews, the NYTimes coverage of the controversy, the articles in the Chronicle of Higher Education (although I believe they made several factual errors, it still is generally considered an RS), Dreger’s article about the controversy (although Dicklyon and others believe that it is biased, it is still an RS), and comments about the book or controversy made by its author or publisher (including SPS’s for those, as if we were writing a bio about them themselves).

That the opinions that Jokestress wants included do not largely appear in any of the above is not relevant to WP. In fact, one would reasonable ask why, despite that it’s been over 5 years since the publication of the book, that none of these allegedly many and highly educated people have ever published their comments in any outlet professional enough to be an RS.

The WP thing to do is write the article on the basis of the existing RS’s, and should any other RS’s with other points of view merit high-end publication, then the WP page can be modified as needed.<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 18:29, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:You and Dreger do not seem to comprehend that this is not an academic dispute. It's a dispute '''about''' academia, specifically academic exploitation of oppressed minorites. By trying to limit the citations to "academic" responses and reports on the academic angle of things, you are trying to limit the article to just one side of the dispute, thus repeating the original problem. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 22:10, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Actually, this is ''neither'' an academic dispute ''nor'' a dispute about academia. It is a wikipedia page about a book. It is inappropriate for Jokestress to use WP as a battleground for whatever type of dispute she thinks this is. Jokestress and I can go around in circles endlessly about what she supposes my motives to be and why I think her suppositions are wrong, but none of that changes the actual content of WP:RS. (Ditto for what I suppose her motives to be.)<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 03:59, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

:Again we agree. As long as you don't try to draw the line that defines [[WP:RS]] in between the different articles in the Archives based on which ones are so-called "peer reviewed," as that would be way too biased. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 05:31, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

That Dicklyon and I both recognize this as a pivotal issue is certainly progress. I hope that others will agree as well.<br>
Distinguishing whether I am 'trying to draw a line' (in Dicklyon's opinion) or merely 'applying WP policy to tell me where the line is' (in my own opinion) is not a question likely to resolved; however, I do not believe that that question needs to be answered in order to obey WP:RS.<br>
I have already summarized why I interpret WP:RS to say that the commentaries should be out and why you believe the commentaries should be in. I agree with Jokestress that asking for input from uninvolved editors (such as Bearian or the RS noticeboard) is a logical way to go. If others here agree, I would be happy to draft a question for RS/N that we can modify and come to consensus on before posting it on RS/N.<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 14:20, 12 October 2008 (UTC)


==The key issues==

Below are what I believe are key points that should be covered:

*TMWWBQ reviews (pro and con)
*LGBT political response (pro and con)
*NAP/JHP marketing and response
*CAMH employees and colleagues/supporters
*IASR incident 2003
*NU response and investigation
*HBI connection of reviewers (SPLC commentary)
*WPATH response and counter-response (letter to NU, resignations, etc.)
*LLF nomination and recission
*ASB involvement in Dreger sub-controversy (NYT, commentaries)
*Bailey's response
*Publication status of the book

That's what I tried to cover [[Talk:The_Man_Who_Would_Be_Queen#Complete_proposed_controversy.2Facademic_freedom_section.2C_version_1|in the proposal]] so that we might condense it. Comments welcome. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 01:03, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:I think the real key issue is what sources we can build the article on, and what kind of statements each source can support. Primary sources can be used to support the opinion of the author, and not much more. Good secondary sources are hard to come by in this controversy. And the big mess is the Dreger piece, which is a so-called "peer-reviewed" opinion piece, while the 23 responses to it in the same journal are argued (by her friends) to be not in that same category and thus less suitable; the key issue for me has always been this bias, that based on a few casual words from Kenneth Zucker we can put more weight on the Dreger opinion than on others, or treat hers as if it's fact or a secondary source. In other words, the key issues in getting to a good article hinge on a settlement here; otherwise we'll continually fight it out on each detail. That said, I have to agree with Cantor that Jokestress does go pretty far the other way in incorporating her own interpretations where plain sourced facts is where we should stop; I wouldn't call it rumour mongering, and I'm not saying it's wrong, but we need to stick to reliable sources or we're not going to converge. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 16:36, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


Although Dicklyon and I disagree on much, I am glad we agree on using RS's as the basis for WP articles. To fill Bearian in on the Dreger article and Dicklyon's concerns about it as an RS:
*Alice Dreger published a summary of the whole controversy in the ''Archives of Sexual Behavior.''
*The ''Archives'' is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology, the editor-in-chief of which is Ken Zucker.
*Zucker issued an open call for commentaries on the Dreger article, all of which were published in same issue of the ''Archives'' together with the Dreger article.
*In the Dreger article, Dreger says she was initially ill-disposed towards Bailey and his book, but after going through all of the relevant material she could find, came to the conclusion that Bailey was, for the most part, in the right.
*In total, 23 commentaries were published along with it. Their opinions varied from quite positive to quite negative, and others made comments about the issue without explicitly taking any side. Some people want to suggest that the proportion of positive versus negative comentaries is evidence that that side is more valid, but, of course, there is no way to know to what extent the people who wrote in are representative of anyone else.
*In Zucker's editorial introducing that issue of the ''Archives'', Zucker said that the Dreger article was peer-reviewed, but that the commentaries were not; specifically, all commentaries that were submitted were published (except for one which did not actually address the issue at hand).
*Finally, Zucker (editor of the ''Archives''), Blanchard (whose work is given high praise in Bailey's book), and I all work in the same hospital. Blanchard, Bailey, and I (and 60-70 other sexologists) are on the editorial board of ''Archives''. Most sexologists tend to know each other, through involvements in things like that, conferences, and email.
To me, Dreger's article is peer-reviewed (and therefore is an RS), because that is what the editor of the peer-reviewed journal said. To Dicklyon, Dreger's article got a free ride into ''Archives'' because: Dregert said good things about Bailey, and Bailey said good things about Blanchard, and Blanchard is a friend of Zucker's (and Bailey's).<br>
To me, the commentaries were not peer reviewed (and therefore not RS's) because that is what the editor of the journal said. To Dicklyon, the commentaries appeared in a peer-reviewed journal (regardless of whether they themselves underwent peer-review) and therefore have the same standing as the Dreger article.<br>
Personally, I believe that Dicklyon has every right to believe whatever he wants about the editorial process for any article in any journal anywhere, but that without any substantial evidence of actual wrong-doing, his belief does not outweigh[[WP:RS]]. To Dicklyon (a long-time friend of Lynn Conway, another prolific anti-Bailey blogger), my reasoning is merely because I am a colleague of the sexologists involved.<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 17:38, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:::'''The real key issues:''' When considering his respect for reliable sources, it should also be noted that James Cantor originally hid his identity and affiliation, and editted as [[User:MarionTheLibrarian]], inserting vicious attacks against [[Andrea James]] and [[Lynn Conway]] in their biographies. Like inserting untrue and unsourced claims like ''Some scholars have likened James to "the Al Sharpton rather than the ML King sort" of activist'': [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Andrea_James&diff=next&oldid=213978826 here] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Lynn_Conway&diff=prev&oldid=214251614 here] – he tried to attribute that to Dreger, but even she says nothing of the sort; rather she repeats, with attribution, a statement sent to her by – wait for it – James Cantor!. The [http://alicedreger.com/informed_dissent.html Dreger blog] makes it very clear that both Alice Dreger and James Cantor are principals in the arguments with Andrea James and Lynn Conway, so keep that in mind when interpreting his wikilawyering and comments on policy, contents, and other articles. When he says "The ''Archives'' is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology" he means well regarded among his friends and peers, the insiders who take one side in these issues. When he says "To me, Dreger's article is peer-reviewed (and therefore is an RS), because that is what the editor of the peer-reviewed journal said," he relies on a person on one side of these issues to reinforce his desire to suppress opinions from the other side. In fact, the article may have been "peer reviewed" in some sense, and if the argument was within that community of peers that might carry some weight; but since it's between that community of peers and others mostly outside of that community, it makes no sense to rely on that distinction as a way to filter the argument. The commentaries in the journal must at least be given some status as reliable representation of opinions on the other side of the issues. More than half of them blast Dreger for her hack analysis, whether they take a position on the underlying issues or not. Any attempt to hold up Dreger's piece as a "history" while suppressing those responses must be seen for what it is: biased POV editing. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 21:14, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

::Yes, it's my opinion that the attempts to dismiss criticism in verifiable sources because it's not "high-end" are a reflection of the institutional power imbalances that led to the controversy in the first place. This, in my opinion, comes down to one group of people (CAMH employees and supporters) using every means available to them to assert their power and authority and identity, and an opposing group (most of the LGBT community and non-CAMH academics) doing the same. The means each group has at their disposal are different. One group controls a number of academic instruments of power. The other group primarily had to appeal to systems in place to curb abuses of that power, as well as to a populist political movement.
::I believe citations in the combined proposal above meet requirements for [[WP:V]] and [[WP:RS]]. They were published in third-party sources and can be confirmed by any reader or editor. If you or anyone has specific concerns about a citation above, please list them. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:52, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Jokestress is entitled to that opinion. However, for better or for worse, her opinion does not change WP policy. We can argue until the cows come home over whether academics are abusing their/our power. But, no conclusion to that changes WP policy. Even if Jokestress were correct in her characterization of this discussion being a fight between powerful academics and the oppressed (which it is not), it would ''still'' not change WP policy. WP is not a battleground.<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 17:51, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:It seems very odd to argue that one of Dreger's articles is reliable and the other one appearing in the same issue of the same journal is not. Both are verifiable (available for purchase) and in a reliable source. Dreger did not write a scientific paper. It's her interpretation of what happened. The commentaries on her interpretation and her rejoinder all sell for $32.00 each, so the publisher considers them all to have the same weight and value. They are all listed the same way in PubMed and other databases of academic output. If the ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'' is a reliable source (which I think it is), then any articles appearing in it are reliable as well. Many are papers written by pretty prominent people, so the attempt to disinclude them here seems directly linked to other attempts to suppress or discredit criticism made by CAMH critics. Claiming that LGBT news outlets are low-end or that the Haworth Press will publish anything (and is thus not worthy of inclusion) speaks to the very power imbalance and attempts at control that caused this controversy in the first place. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 18:44, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

::Everything Jokestress says above is either irrelevant, an incomplete telling of the truth, or an unsubstantiated supposition. I am perfectly happy to provide the specific rejoinders to each of her claims. However, because I am providing information for the benefit of Bearian (who has just come into all of this) and not for Jokestress (who has already read them in previous rounds of this debate), I will await Bearian's input regarding whether such rejoinders would be helpful in coming to an assessment about the current issues. (I suppose it need not be Bearian; I'd be happy to summarize what Jokestress has left out for anyone who asks, but there is little point to my typing it out for the folks who have seen it already.)<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 20:04, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

:::It's quite simple: publishing a target article is a common practice in academia, undertaken for the express purpose of soliciting commentaries to be published with that target article. That's what happened in this case, the fourth such issue of ''Archives of Sexual Behavior''. To claim that the solicited commentaries that comprise the rest of the issue are somehow invalid for citation on Wikipedia because they are not reliable sources defies reason. We can open up a discussion on the noticeboard, but it seems pretty clear what's going on here. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 20:49, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

==Proposed question for RS noticeboard==

'''Peer commentaries on target article in Archives of Sexual Behavior'''<br>
The ''[[Archives of Sexual Behavior]]'' (ASB) is a prominent academic journal on sexology. ASB recently published the fourth issue in their history containing a target article and numerous peer commentaries on that article. The June 2008 ASB issue is devoted to the controversy surrounding the 2003 book ''[[The Man Who Would Be Queen]]'' (TMWWBQ). The target article is by Alice Dreger and the peer commentaries discuss Dreger's target article. A dispute has arisen here involving two points of view. One is arguing for exclusion of the peer commentaries from Wikipedia, arguing they are not reliable sources under Wikipedia policies. The other is arguing that both the target article and the peer commentaries should be considered reliable sources. The involved editors are seeking outside opinions on this dispute.<br>
'''Arguments for including peer commentaries'''
*Target articles are published with the express purpose of generating peer commentaries.
*Peer commentaries are verifiable (published and available for purchase in print and online)
*Peer commentaries are in a reliable source (Archives of Sexual Behavior) alongside the target article.
*The target article and each peer commentary separately sell for $32.00 each, so the publisher considers them all to have the same value.
*The target article and peer commentaries are all listed individually the same way in PubMed, as well as other databases of academic output.
*Peer commentaries are written by notable people, including [[John Bancroft]], [[Ben Barres]], [[Ray Blanchard]], [[John Gagnon]], [[Richard Green]], [[Deirdre McCloskey]], [[Charles Moser]], [[Seth Roberts]], [[Julia Serano]], and ASB Editor-in-Chief [[Ken Zucker]].
*The attempt to exclude the peer commentaries on Wikipedia appears to be based on their content, which is frequently critical of the target article and the book TMWWBQ.
*By the argument to exclude the peer commentaries, Dreger's target article is reliable, but Dreger's reply to the peer commentaries in the same issue is not.

'''Arguments for excluding peer commentaries'''
*They are not peer-reviewed, where the target article is.
*reason 2
*reason 3
*reason 4
*reason 5
*reason 6
*reason 7
*reason 8

We would appreciate your input, and an explanation of how you came to your conclusion.

<br>Comments welcome. Anyone is welcome to make changes to the draft proposal above. I'd like to work it out here before posting it to the noticeboard. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 16:50, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

:My comments: where you say "One is arguing for exclusion of the peer commentaries from Wikipedia, arguing they are not reliable sources under Wikipedia policies. The other is arguing that both the target article and the peer commentaries should be considered reliable sources." I'm not sure that completely captures the alternatives accurately. I think [[WP:RS]] is too crude a concept here. The issue is one of symmetry. All of these (Dreger's and the commentaries on it) are opinion pieces, and need to be treated as such; that is, they should be fine reliable sources for the opinions of their authors (is there any dispute on that point? I'm not sure). The contention comes in when Dreger's opinion are treated as ''more'' reliable in some sense, as in treating her paper as a history and citing her findings as if they are facts. If we're going to seek opinions on the RS noticeboards, we probably ought to make it more clear that people on Dreger's side of the argument (naturally) want to treat her article as "more reliable" in some sense, using [[WP:RS]] as their tool of wikilawyering, while people on the other side (naturally) want to give Dreger's opponents equal voice. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 17:19, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

::I see your point, but I am trying to keep this as simple as possible for the noticeboard. I doubt any reputable history journal would have published Dreger's opinion piece as is. At least one professional historian (McCloskey) was not allowed to review the draft upon request. Another professional historian called the draft "misguided and misframed" and urged major revisions which did not occur. For a bunch of sexologists to claim Dreger was subject to appropriate peer review is about as believable as the claims that Bailey's book was subject to formal peer review. In both cases, a bunch of cronies just logrolled for each other. I am sure every single reviewer in both cases is a stakeholder in this debate. But how can we explain that in the information above? Is that too much information? I'd appreciate any suggested language changes for discussion. [[User:Jokestress|Jokestress]] ([[User talk:Jokestress|talk]]) 17:39, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

:::OK, probably starting simple is best. We can add these other subtleities and viewpoints in the ensueing discussion. [[User:Dicklyon|Dicklyon]] ([[User talk:Dicklyon|talk]]) 17:43, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

::Putting this up on the notice board sounds like a good idea. I disagree with Dicklyon there really are two (or three alternatives) include both the article and commentaries, exclude the whole issue of ASB, or exclude the commentaries. It's likely that the Admins will come up with something on their own. I'll bet they would say well the peer reviewed academic article can speak to the facts while the commentaries can only be a source for what was in the commentaries themselves (or some such).

::Dicklyon the seeds of this dispute run deep through academia. Wikipedia reflects this. Read the pages here about citing sources and they lay out a hierarchy of sources with peer reviewed academic publications, newspaper articles from reputable newspapers as being the gold standard and with personal websites, blogs, etc being almost always unacceptable. A similar hierarchy exist throughout academia. This has lead to the condition we have now. People who may have more direct first hand information on the matter aren't listened to while academics get to write their versions. Usually the system works but in this case it is really broken.

::I hardly think that a review by the ''illustrious'' McCloskey would have made any difference. Perhaps it would have given her the opportunity to dismiss Bailey's various informants and nothing but hispanic drag queens and prostitutes.
::Let me digress for a bit. What would have been better in the place of dreger's work would have been to have a totally neutral third party, or a team thereof com in, interview EVERYONE involved, then produce a historical record. Just the fact that dreger worked for NU cast suspicion on her work. :-/ --[[User:Hfarmer|Hfarmer]] ([[User talk:Hfarmer|talk]]) 17:54, 12 October 2008 (UTC)


I believe the question proposed above is too long and unfocussed for the very specific purpose for which we need it. I propose instead:

::A small group of editors has come to an impasse regarding whether a group of published commentaries meet WP:RS and should therefore be summarized in the article we are working on, or fail to meet [[WP:RS]] and therefore should not be included on the page. We are hoping to have the input from otherwise uninvolved editors to help us resolve the issue. (In the interests of disclosure, the editors most involved in the disagreement are [[user:Dicklyon]], [[user:DarlieB]], [[user:Hfarmer]], [[user:James Cantor]], [[user:Jokestress]], [[user:ProudAGP]], and [[user:WhatamIdoing]].)

::The agreed upon facts are:

::*Alice Dreger published in the ''Archives of Sexual Behavior'' an article about a controversy.
::*The ''Archives'' is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology, the editor-in-chief of which is Ken Zucker.
::*Zucker issued an open call for commentaries on the Dreger article, all of which were published in same issue of the ''Archives'' together with the Dreger article itself.
::*In Zucker's editorial introducing that issue of the ''Archives'', Zucker wrote the Dreger article underwent peer-review, but that all commentaries submitted were published (except for one which did not pertain to the topic).

::The disagreement is:
::*To some editors, the commentaries meet [[WP:RS]], because they appear in a peer-reviewed journal. That is, these commentaries should be treated as peer-reviewed articles.<br>
::*To some editors, the commentaries do ''not'' meet [[WP:RS]], because they themselves did not undergo peer review, according to what the editor of the journal wrote. That is, these commentaries should be treated as letters-to-the-editor.

::So, our question is:
::*Do we treat the commentaries as reliable sources?

::Any input would be appreciated.

I recognize that I am not asking about whether the Dreger article itself meets [[WP:RS]]. If that question needs to be posed, I suggest doing it in a separate post to RS/N, after this one has had time to receive input. If all the various disagreements are rolled into a single entry on RS/N, we will wind up recapitulating the whole series of arguments again ourselves, with no real input from the uninvolved editors from whom we are hoping to receive guidance.<br>
[[User:James Cantor |— James Cantor]] ([[User talk:James Cantor|talk]]) 17:57, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

==Collected references==
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 17:57, 12 October 2008

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Post-publication summary, proposal 1

I decided to take a crack at summarizing events from fall 2003 to present. I have the information presented in chronological order. I presented peer commentaries alphabetically by everyone with a Wikipedia article.

Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.[1] In late 2003, the Southern Poverty Law Center broke the story that key figures involved in promoting the book (including Bailey, Blanchard, Buss, Derbyshire, Pinker, Sailer, and Seligman) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-eugenics outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”[2] [3]Northwestern did not investigate allegations that Bailey had a sexual encounter with a trans sex worker described in his book, a charge he denied.[4]
In February 2004, the Lambda Literary Foundation nominated the book as a finalist in their transgender award category. In the wake of a protest, the judges found that it was transphobic, and Lambda Literary Foundation removed it from their list of finalists in March.[5] Northwestern concluded their investigation in November 2004. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,[6] Northwestern’s Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."[7]
The free online version of the book was among a number of free books removed from the publisher's site in February 2006.[8] The controversy was resurrected that same month after Northwestern professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully tried to suppress an invited speech given at Northwestern by Bailey critic Andrea James.[9] Dreger released a pre-publication paper about the controversy in August 2007, to coincide with the annual International Academy of Sex Research conference. In it, Dreger, argued that Bailey’s critics were trying to suppress his academic freedom.[10] The paper was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior, including comments from John Bancroft,[11] Ben Barres,[12] Ray Blanchard,[13] John Gagnon,[14] Richard Green,[15] Deirdre McCloskey,[16] Charles Moser,[17] Seth Roberts,[18] Julia Serano,[19] and Ken Zucker,[20] That month, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.[21] The Man Who Would Be Queen went out of print in 2008 but remained available for purchase as a PDF on the National Academies Press website.

Comments welcome. Jokestress (talk) 19:06, 27 September 2008 (UTC)

Just added a couple of additional sources and shortened a few sentences. Jokestress (talk) 16:27, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
The part played by Lynn Conway and yourself is conspicuously absent.  :-? Is there a reason for that? I would say that without you gals the complaints would have gone relatively unnoticed. If they were made at all. --Hfarmer (talk) 19:52, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
Please provide text for your suggested revision with proper citations. Jokestress (talk) 20:19, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
Hfarmer's observation is astute. By Jokestress' leaving out her own and Conway's role in the controversy, she makes the events seem like some sort of spontaneous reaction rather than a coordinated smear campaign. Jokestress' nonsequitur in response to Hfarmer above similarly speaks loudest in its silence.
— James Cantor (talk) 23:38, 29 September 2008 (UTC)
Astute? nonsequitur? Jokestress has invited Hfarmer to turn her observation into sourced article text; this is entirely appropriate. But what she came up with (below) is not: for "A furore was raised by Lynn Conway, Diedre McCloskey, and Andrea James" she cited Conway's site, which says nothing of the sort, and an article that says, Such well known and respected transsexual women as Professor Lynn Conway, University of Michigan; Professor Joan Roughgarden; Stanford University Biology Department, Dr. Becky Allison, MD; and Christine Burns, Vice President of Britain’s Press for Change organization, decry the simplistic Blanchard theory posited as truth by Bailey based largely on his observations of transsexual prostitutes and others who frequent gay bars in Chicago, including Circuit bar. Did they raise a furore? Perhaps so, but where's the source? I haven't checked the next bits, but this is a pretty bad start. And then she follows by a personal insult ("It took allot of effrontery and lack of respect for your readers intelligence to try and pull that one"); Hfarmer could at least PRETEND to be cooperating with other editors; maybe some civil discourse would lead to progress. Dicklyon (talk) 03:10, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

They have expressed concern over the treatment transsexuals could expect if the Blanchard-Bailey position were taught as fact. Conway, Roughgarden and Burns have called on the National Academy of Science to investigate Bailey’s work and to remove the book from under the imprimatur of the national Academies.

OK  It would begin like so...

A furore was raised by Lynn Conway, Diedre McCloskey, and Andrea James.[22] [23] This caused Lynn Conway and Andrea James to create websites slamming the book.[22] Then travel to Chicago to find and speak with the subjects of the book.[22] Conway and James helped with the filing of two complaints from people named in the book (as well as two from persons unknown who claim they were interviewed by Bailey but left out of the book because they did not fit Blanchards theory. [22]


Following those complaints from Anjelica Kieltyka and 'Maria' described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigati....

From there on like your version. No mention of your role or Dr. Conway's role is not in the spirit of the WP or it's mission. It took allot of effrontery and lack of respect for your readers intelligence to try and pull that one. --Hfarmer (talk) 00:45, 30 September 2008 (UTC)


I also think that it's very strange to ignore the central figures. The Dreger paper addresses it directly and will be a sufficient source for this undisputed fact:

"Largely under the leadership of three prominent transwomen—Lynn Conway (a world-renowned computer scientist at the University of Michigan), Andrea James (a Hollywood-based trans-consumer advocate and an entrepreneurial consultant on trans issues), and Deirdre McCloskey (a Distinguished Professor of Economics, History, English, and Communication at the University of Illinois at Chicago)—they organized charges of scientific misconduct against Bailey, including charges that he lacked informed consent from research subjects, that he failed to obtain Institutional Review Board (IRB) permission for human subjects research, and that he had sexual relations with a transsexual research subject. They successfully pushed for a top-level investigation of these charges at Northwestern University and for numerous press reports about Bailey’s alleged misdeeds. They successfully arranged a protest against the book’s nomination for a Lambda Literary Foundation (LLF) award and tried to get Bailey’s colleagues (including his closest departmental colleagues) to turn against him or at least distance themselves from him. They devoted elaborate Websites to criticizing and mocking him and his book and anyone with any positive relationship with him. One activist in particular, namely Andrea James, also used the Web to publicly harass Bailey’s children, his ex-wife, his girlfriend, and his friends."

I think that the stuff about HBI is overblown and unimportant. Next thing you know, we'll be smearing people for reading the same blogs as the terrorist du jour. Is there actually any evidence that this book in particular was discussed on this e-mail list? For that matter, is there any evidence that anything was discussed on this e-mail list? It's easy to put up a webpage that lists your favorite hundred celebrities and claim that they're supporters working with you.
In fact, that's not very different from what happened to Alice Dreger, is it? I seem to recall that her name had been listed as a supporter on someone's website without her knowledge or consent.
At minimum the "broke the story" language has to go. It implies not just that there really is a story there, but also that it's an important one. WhatamIdoing (talk) 01:08, 30 September 2008 (UTC)


Post-publication summary, proposal 2

Jokestress' version is entirely unacceptable, for reasons others have pointed out and more. It would be a waste of my time to work on it. So I offer this version instead, which is much more balanced. It is quite detailed. I am not opposed to reducing detail, but it should be reduced on both sides:

Originally, the Lambda Literary Foundation nominated the book as a finalist in the transgender award category for 2003. Due to ensuing controversy, the Foundation reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list. After transpeople protested the nomination with an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists. According to the LLF director, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was transphobic.[24]
Besides criticizing the book, some transgender women alleged that Bailey had breached professional ethics.[25][7] These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without proper permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license. Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,[26] Northwestern’s Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."[7]
Some transgender critics of Bailey attacked him in more personal ways. For example, Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's young children (obtained from his webiste) and placing sexually offensive captions beside them.[27][10][7] (James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.) She constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend)[7], questioned Bailey's sexuality[28], asserted that he hand "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."[7]
The Southern Poverty Law Center published an online report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including Bailey, Blanchard, Buss, Derbyshire, Pinker, Sailer, and Seligman) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-eugenics outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”[2]
In 2008 Northwestern University professor and intersex activist Alice Dreger published a historical investigation of the controversy, in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. Dreger concluded that Bailey was "essentially blameless." [10] Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Insittute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.[7] Moreover, Dreger concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey’s book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."[29] Dreger's paper was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior, including comments from John Bancroft,[11] Ben Barres,[12] Ray Blanchard,[13] John Gagnon,[14] Richard Green,[15] Deirdre McCloskey,[16] Charles Moser,[17] Seth Roberts,[18] Julia Serano,[19] and Ken Zucker,[20] Conway has responded that Dreger's piece was a "bizarrely one-sided history of the Bailey book investigation"[30] and a "hit piece", [31] and that its publication in Archives of Sexual Behavior and coverage by The New York Times reflected pro-Bailey bias by the journal's editor and by a science journalist at the newspaper, respectively.[31] James attributed Dreger's article to a "personal feud" between James and Dreger.[32]

ProudAGP (talk) 06:10, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

The Jokestress version seems like a much better-sourced starting place. Why do you try to replace it with one with unsourced recollections of history like "Due to ensuing controversy, the Foundation reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list. After transpeople protested the nomination with an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists."? If this is the way it came down, at least a citation or two would be in order. The rest seems to be similarly crafted from a single POV, with no attempt at balance. Dicklyon (talk) 14:49, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
Yes, it seems less balanced to remove all the facts about the book's publication history (which seems relevant to the article on the book) and to add a lot of stuff reinforcing the Dreger mythology of three "activists" masterminding a conspiracy to "ruin" a beleaguered "scientist under siege." It seems to overfocus on Bailey's points of narcissistic injury: the reciprocated mockery of his own core identity, etc. If we are to have that, we should balance it with Bailey's mockery of "Juanita" in the book and after she came forward, and his mockery of others throughout the controversy. Several of the commentaries on Dreger address this tendency by Bailey and Dreger (whose own narcissistic injury was the impetus for her self-aggrandizing narrative in the first place). I'll incorporate some of your stuff, but I plan to add back some of the material you removed, with proper sourcing. Jokestress (talk) 15:30, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

It does not surprise me that both Jokestress and Lynn Conway's representative, Dicklyon, prefer Jokestress' version to mine. Or that both seek to minimize discussion of Dreger's peer reviewed and objectively important article (3 page article in the New York Times and a Guggenheim for a related book proposal, which needs also to be mentioned). But let me assure them that they will not succeed. Jokestress, you are playing games that you believe are clever, e.g.: "It seems to overfocus on Bailey's points of narcissistic injury: the reciprocated mockery of his own core identity, etc."--which phrasing comes from Anne Lawrence's article interpreting autogynephilic rage. But I find it tedious and time-wasting. I suspect that others (including less involved people such as WhatamIdoing) will find my draft much preferable to Jokestress'. If you proceed with a new draft, you should do a much better job than you did on the first one. ProudAGP (talk) 16:34, 30 September 2008 (UTC)

Oh brother. Did any of you bother to read what I wrote in the section above about the interpretation of facts. You are all arguing over the interpretation of facts. Just add in the simple fact that James and Conway had something to do with this controversy. It was preposterous and ridiculous to leave them out. It's like writing about WWII and not mentioning the role of Japan and the Soviet Union!--Hfarmer (talk) 21:32, 30 September 2008 (UTC)
I agree; verifiable facts, to be even more clear. If you think something is a fact because it's obvious to you after reading some primary source like a website, that doesn't really qualify; report what others have reported in reliable secondary sources, and we won't have so much to argue about. ProudAGP, you should also review WP:NPA. Dicklyon (talk) 03:51, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
Perhaps we can write this long and then reach consensus on how to tighten it. If we are going to have this level of detail, we need to include the published viewpoints on exactly why Team Bailey wants to spin this as some sort of unprovoked assault on "science" and "truth" and focus on his injuries. I'll work on revision 3 later today. Jokestress (talk) 15:47, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
Does one have to be on Team Bailey to get the t-shirt?
— James Cantor (talk) 16:53, 1 October 2008 (UTC)
For the record I'm not saying that either. Just stick to sentences of the form... Person A (said, did, wrote) Fact B and no one can argue. Yes there are plenty of sources that say TMWWBQ was offensive. Other sources say you and Conway did instigate and/or draw attention to the controversy. M/S/J says she had sex with Bailey, Bailey says they didn't. Some say that Bailey formulated the model based on "Interviewing some uneducated Hispanic drag queens and prostitutes" (practically a quote from the illustrious McCloskey.) Bailey says it was Blanchard's work and he only used their stories as illustrations, dramatizeations of what Blanchard was saying (he says almost exactly this I just don't recall where). Those are all facts. Things that are likley in the "collected References" already. --Hfarmer (talk) 16:08, 1 October 2008 (UTC)

Post-publication summary, proposal 3

Not sure why version 2 has all the publication history of the book removed, and takes events out of chronological order. As I mentioned, this version is long but includes more reliable sources and a more representative POV on matters. The first paragraph below should probably be added in the existing paragraph after the Ettner quotation.

Psychiatrist Vernon Rosario wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"[33]A commenter summarized the transgender portion of the conflict as such: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist pseudoscience that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."[9]
Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.[1] The Southern Poverty Law Center printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including Bailey, Blanchard, Buss, Derbyshire, Pinker, Sailer, and Seligman) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-eugenics outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”[2] Psychologist and sex therapist Margaret Nichols wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”[34]
The Lambda Literary Foundation nominated the book as a finalist in the transgender award category for 2003.[35][36] The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.[37] After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.[38] According to LLF Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was transphobic.[39] After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”[40]
Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached professional ethics.[41] These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without institutional review board permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.[42] Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,[43] Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."[7] Physician Charles Moser wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."[17]
Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."[33] Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.[44][7] James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.[10] James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."[7]
In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."[9] In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. New York Times reporter Benedict Carey reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." [10] Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.[7] Dreger concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."[45]
Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior. Commenters included John Bancroft,[11] Ben Barres,[12] Ray Blanchard,[13] John Gagnon,[14] Richard Green,[15] Deirdre McCloskey,[16] Charles Moser,[17] Seth Roberts,[18] Julia Serano,[19] and Ken Zucker.[20] Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."[15] Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."[46] Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of narcissistic rage."[47] Dreger received a Guggenheim Fellowship to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."[48] Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."[49] Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from Jamison Green), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."[50] Biologist Julia Serano wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.[19] The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.[51][52][53]
The Man Who Would Be Queen went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

We may also want to combine the professional ethics paragraph with the existing info already in the article. Comments welcome. Jokestress (talk) 20:22, 6 October 2008 (UTC)

As a follow-up, that was very cumbersome and time-consuming to edit in one piece. Maybe we can split out the Dreger part and deliberate that sub-controversy separately if this seems too unwieldy. Jokestress (talk) 20:35, 6 October 2008 (UTC)

Picture Question

I am a big supporter of the concept that pictures make a huge difference. I think a picture of the dust jacket would say allot about this book and the controversey. I did buy and read a copy of the book... then gave it away. I think I kept the dust cover somewhere.

The question is IF I took a picture of it could I release that picture as a GFDL'd pic and put it on WP. Or would there still be a copyright issue? I am thinking no. --Hfarmer (talk) 02:43, 7 October 2008 (UTC)

Definitely not GFDL, as cover art is copyrighted. But fair use would be OK. See Wikipedia:Fair_Use#Images. Dicklyon (talk) 03:26, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
This may be academic since I cannot find the jacket. If it's a issue of "fair use" I would think that an image we could use on a fair use basis must exist somewhere on the net.--Hfarmer (talk) 14:00, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
It's all over the web. How about Bailey's copy [7]? Dicklyon (talk) 15:58, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
Bailey's copy is a pre-publication mock-up (old subtitle, no Simon LeVay blurb). The one in the article is the as-published cover from the out-of-print edition. Jokestress (talk) 17:12, 7 October 2008 (UTC)
The one I used is the jacket from my copy (which I read a couple times then gave away). Cropped so that only the cover is visible. I think it adds allot of context to the article. As I have said before; It's one thing to describe an elephant (to someone who has never seen one) and another to show them a picture. --Hfarmer (talk) 01:39, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
Will we ever know just who's legs those are? If that is a transwoman how must she feel about all of our opinions of her legs? lol. --Hfarmer (talk) 03:35, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
This is not a forum for general discussion of The Man Who Would Be Queen. Any such messages will be deleted. Please limit discussion to improvement of this article. Jokestress (talk) 07:50, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Ahhh but that was about the book and improving the article. It seems to me that being the sleuth that you are you would have tried to figure out just who that was, or who the cover artist was. The answers to the above questions could be quite illuminating. Since much of the impact of and reaction to this book was based on a.) the cover art, and b.) second or third hand reports of what was in the book. There could be some reliable source somewhere that will tell who did the cover art. I have not been able to find that (perhaps if I had my copy of the book and hand't given it away. That's what I am talking about. --Hfarmer (talk) 13:21, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Speculation about the existence of reliable sources discussing cover credits or the identity of the cover model are not appropriate here. If you have a reliable source, please provide it. Jokestress (talk) 14:45, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

We don't have enough to argue about without this strange tangent? Dicklyon (talk) 15:44, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Hardly a "strange tangent". The cliché a "A picture is worth 1000 words," is so often repeated because it is true. That picture of that cover says allot about why this book was recieved the way it was.
Look at the template for the book info box on this page. It has a space for the cover artist. For the sake of completeness it would be nice to fill that in. --Hfarmer (talk) 20:41, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Post-publication summary, proposal 4

This version better identifies who each quoted person is and includes more links to texts.

Psychiatrist Vernon Rosario wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"[33] Ph.D. student Riki Lane summarized the transgender portion of the conflict: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist pseudoscience that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."[9] Philosophy professor Talia Mae Bettcher wrote, “Because Bailey believes transsexual women tend to lie or misrepresent, nothing a transwoman can say contests this theory.”[54]
Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.[1] The Southern Poverty Law Center printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including Bailey, Blanchard, Buss, Derbyshire, Pinker, Sailer, and Seligman) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-eugenics outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”[2] Psychologist and sex therapist Margaret Nichols wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”[34]
The Lambda Literary Foundation nominated the book as a finalist in the transgender award category for 2003.[35][36] The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.[37] After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.[38] According to Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was transphobic.[55] After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”[40]
Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached professional ethics.[41] These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without institutional review board permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.[42] Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,[43] Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."[7] Physician Charles Moser wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."[17]
Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."[33] Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.[56][7] James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.[10] James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."[7]
In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: Lane wrote, "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."[9] In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. New York Times reporter Benedict Carey reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." [10] Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.[7] Dreger described the controversy as suppression of academic freedom and concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."[57]
Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior. Commenters included John Bancroft,[11] Ben Barres,[12] Ray Blanchard,[13] John Gagnon,[14] Richard Green,[15] Deirdre McCloskey,[16] Charles Moser,[17] Seth Roberts,[18] Julia Serano,[19] and Ken Zucker.[20] Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."[15] Psychologist Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."[58] Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of narcissistic rage."[47] Dreger received a Guggenheim Fellowship to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Anthropologist Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."[48] Sociologist Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."[49] Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from Jamison Green), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."[50] Biologist Julia Serano wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.[19] The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.[59][52][53]
The Man Who Would Be Queen went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

Comments welcome. Jokestress (talk) 16:01, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

Where to begin?
  • You leave Dr. Conway's role completely out of the story. In particular when it comes to making the initial complaints to NU.
  • You seem to have, by what quotes you choose, shaded the subject just a bit (that's me being charitable).
    • You do not mention any of the initial good reviews of the book.
    • The opening two quotes are both negative quotes with out any context.
  • The structure of the compositon is a bit confused. I cannot say weather it is topically organized certainly not chronologically organized.
On the plus side.
  • You remembered my golden rule : quote qoute qoute cite cite cite.
  • You did mention your own role in the controversy

Try to put more about Dr. Conway's role into it. --Hfarmer (talk) 20:51, 8 October 2008 (UTC)

The materials already edited by consensus and added to the article last month address your concerns. This section would replace the part of the current article from the LLF nomination to the end. Jokestress (talk) 22:43, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
Consensus by who ? The article should be kept concise as this is not a courtroom and there is not enough space . If you delete one of my comments from this discussion page there will be problems. If we cannot have neutrality in this article I suggest reducing it down to the absolute minimum. I am transsexual and while I disagree with Dr Bailey I agree to his right to speak and publish books . Academic consequences are his own responsibility and unless there is factual verification of a conspiracy then I suggest you stop trying to create them . "Do no harm " is in play here for both sides. No matter how offensive or wrong I feel his ideas are Bailey has a right to speak them . DarlieB (talk) 23:36, 8 October 2008 (UTC)
Consensus by the editors who have been working on this since you yourself participated in August, including James Cantor, me, WhatamIdoing, Hfarmer, Dicklyon, etc. No one is deleting your comments. No one is denying Bailey's right to speak, and no one is denying his critics' right to speak. Can you explain what you mean by "factual verification of a conspiracy"? Conspiracy by whom? I am not going to revert the changes you made to the article again, but your re-emergence after several weeks' absence and the edits and comments you are making are disrupting what has been a relatively calm discussion toward reaching consensus. I apologize if reverting your edits to the article upset you, but we are trying to find a balanced version that everyone can live with, and your changes tip that balance. Removing information we all agreed on last month is going to derail the discussion. You are welcome to discuss this on my talk page if you prefer. Jokestress (talk) 00:00, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
A comment was deleted here whether by accident or intention. I see no discussion here other than you few and I see no agreement . Is consensus an "assumed" conclusion ? And even then just your collection of comments on the book and sketchy assumptions of timeline . When does opinion become fact ? This article, as I understand it is to present the basis of the book , to present the facts , not defend or besmirch Baileys career or his critics through multiple sources of "opinion" . For example , we can include Dregers comments as a professor but to include "as quoted in the NYT's" is little but trying to add some credibility to an otherwise weightless opinion (equal to all Baileys supporters and critics ) . The viewer is put in the position of trying to wade through a sea of opinions rather than investigate themselves. This again, is not a court room, the article is about his book , not about Bailey and the NWU's investigation was closed door so we can't answer those questions.

Personally I don't like Bailey , I do not agree with his conclusions , his research methods are incomprehensible as are his ethical standards , but all these things are best kept to proper articles with better research than we can do. As this article sits now, it outlines the books premise, covers the basic chapters , defines the basis of the controversy and gives Dreger her chance to defend Bailey's right intellectual freedom . Do we really need to go and pull all the rebuttal articles to Dreger's statements ? I would love to but it makes this article harder to read. If we can't have a clear statement, lets have a simple one. DarlieB (talk) 09:32, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

Complete proposed controversy/academic freedom section, version 1

To make it clear what the whole controversy section would look like, I have compiled the previously-agreed part with the proposed revision. The "Academic freedom" section would be folded into this.

Controversy
The book elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses. Kirkus Reviews concluded: "Despite its provocative title, a scientific yet superbly compassionate exposition."[60] The book received praise from gay sexual behavior scientists James Cantor[7] and Simon LeVay,[60] from sex-differences expert David Buss,[7] and from research psychologist Steven Pinker, who wrote: "With a mixture of science, humanity, and fine writing, J. Michael Bailey illuminates the mysteries of sexual orientation and identity in the best book yet written on the subject. The Man Who Would Be Queen may upset the guardians of political correctness on both the left and the right, but it will be welcomed by intellectually curious people of all sexes and sexual orientations. A truly fascinating book."[61] It also received praise from journalists John Derbyshire,[62] Steve Sailer,[60] Daniel Seligman,[63] and Mark Henderson.[64]
Some reviews in the LGBT press were positive, such as from writers Ethan Boatner[60] for Lavender Magazine and Duncan Osborne for Out.[65] Those in the transgender community who agreed with Blanchard's taxonomy also reviewed the book positively. Anne Lawrence, a physician and sexologist whose work on autogynephilia is featured in the book, wrote "This is a wonderful book on an important subject,"[60] and autogynephilia support group founder Willow Arune wrote, "Blanchard, Bailey, Lawrence and [Blanchard colleague Maxine] Petersen have done more to help transsexuals over years of service than perhaps any other four people in the world."[66]
The public response of the transgender community was almost entirely negative. Among other things, they opposed the book's endorsement of Blanchard's taxonomy of male-to-female transsexualism,[67] its publication by the National Academies Press, by whom it was "advertised as science"[68] and marketed as "scientifically accurate,"[69] which they argued was untrue. They also claimed the book exploited children with gender dysphoria.[10] Among those criticizing the book were computer scientist Lynn Conway,[70] biologists Joan Roughgarden[69] and Ben Barres,[71] physician Rebecca Allison,[23] economist Deirdre McCloskey,[72] psychologist Madeline Wyndzen,[73] writers Dallas Denny,[74] Pauline Park,[75] Jamison Green [76] Gwen Smith,[77] and Andrea James,[78] as well as Christine Burns of Press for Change, Karen Gurney of the Australian W-O-M-A-N Network, and Executive Director Monica Casper of the Intersex Society of North America.[79]
Negative responses came from outside the transgender community as well. Liza Mundy in the Washington Post wrote, "I got so bored that I began recreationally underlining passages to decide which was the dullest."[80] Psychologist Eli Coleman referred to the book as "an unfortunate setback in feelings of trust between the transgender community and sex researchers,"[7] and his colleague, Walter Bockting, wrote that it was "yet another blow to the delicate relationship between clinicians, scholars, and the transgender community."[81] Kinsey Institute Director John Bancroft referred to the book as "not science," later clarifying that "it promoted a very derogatory explanation of transgender identity which most TG people would find extremely hurtful and humiliating….Whether based on science or not we have a responsibility to present scientific ideas, particularly in the public arena, in ways which are not blatantly hurtful. But in addition to that, [Bailey] did not support his analysis in a scientific manner—hence my comment."[7] Psychologist Randi Ettner said of Bailey, "He's set back the field 100 years, as far as I'm concerned."[67] Psychiatrist Vernon Rosario wrote, "The problem with Bailey is his simplistic approach to forcing people into his classification system. This is nowhere more evident than in his repeated dismissal of people’s experiences that do not conform to his model… Whenever a subject reports something different, Bailey just says, 'I doubt that.'"[33] Ph.D. student Riki Lane summarized the transgender portion of the conflict: "Bailey's supporters see themselves as defending unpopular scientific 'truth' against people who won't face a reality that is politically unpalatable and destructive to their self image. Bailey's opponents see themselves as defending their community from sensationalist pseudoscience that sexualizes them as sex starved gay men or neurotic straight men with a sexual obsession."[9] Philosophy professor Talia Mae Bettcher wrote, “Because Bailey believes transsexual women tend to lie or misrepresent, nothing a transwoman can say contests this theory.”[54]


Following complaints from trans women described in the book, Northwestern University opened a full investigation into Bailey’s research activities in November 2003.[1] The Southern Poverty Law Center printed a report that key figures involved in promoting the book (including Bailey, Blanchard, Buss, Derbyshire, Pinker, Sailer, and Seligman) “belong to a private cyber-discussion group of a neo-eugenics outfit, the Human Biodiversity Institute (HBI).”[2] Psychologist and sex therapist Margaret Nichols wrote, “Bailey’s connection to HBI belies his politics and has important bearing on his research in the areas of sex and gender diversity. In my opinion, the HBI connection alone makes Bailey an enemy of queer people.”[34]
The Lambda Literary Foundation nominated the book as a finalist in the transgender award category for 2003.[35][36] The Foundation then reconsidered the nomination but decided to keep it on the list.[37] After protest of the nomination intensified via an internet petition, a second reconsideration led to the book's removal from its award finalists.[38] According to Executive Director Jim Marks, removal was due to the belated decision that the book was transphobic.[82] After Marks resigned, his successor Charles Flowers stated, “[T]he Bailey incident revealed flaws in our awards nomination process… With the help of the transgender community, we have improved the integrity of our awards, by making them more inclusive and our methods more transparent.”[40]
Besides criticizing the book, some critics alleged that Bailey had breached professional ethics.[41] These included the accusations that Bailey had conducted scientific research without institutional review board permission, that he had sex with a research subject (a transsexual sex worker called "Juanita" in the book), and that he had practiced psychology without a license.[42] Northwestern University conducted a formal investigation of the charge that he had conducted research without proper oversight; there is no evidence the other charges were investigated. Although the findings of that investigation were not released,[43] Northwestern's Vice President for Research, C. Bradley Moore, said, "The allegations of scientific misconduct made against Professor J. Michael Bailey do not fall under the federal definition of scientific misconduct."[7] Physician Charles Moser wrote, "the allegations were basically true; they just did not constitute any formal misconduct."[17]
Some critics attacked Bailey in more personal ways. Some gay academics made "sarcastic comments about Bailey's own masculinity and sartorial style."[33] Andrea James constructed a page of "satire" by taking pictures of Bailey's children and placing sexually offensive captions beside them, one of which was a quotation from Bailey's book.[83][7] James has said that she was echoing the disrespect that Bailey's work shows for vulnerable people, including children.[10] James also constructed webpages attacking or mocking Bailey's supporters, colleagues, and friends (including an ex-girlfriend), questioned Bailey's sexuality, asserted that he had "abandoned" his family, and sent a message to his colleagues that he suffered from "alcohol abuse and dependence."[7]


In 2006 Northwestern University professor Alice Dreger unsuccessfully attempted to suppress a speech given at Northwestern by James: Lane wrote, "her actions to 'no-platform' James are similar to the tactics she ascribes to Bailey's opponents in their attempts to shut down discussion of Blanchard’s theories."[9] In response, Dreger released her account of the controversy in 2007, a year before it was published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior. New York Times reporter Benedict Carey reported that Dreger found Bailey "essentially blameless." [10] Addressing the specific accusations against Bailey, she argued that he did not conduct scientific research without required supervision, that he probably did not have sex with "Juanita" (and even if he had, there is nothing wrong with it), that he did not illegally practice clinical psychology without a license, and that his membership in the "Human Biodiversity Institute" merely constituted being a member of an email listserv that included some conservative members.[7] Dreger described the controversy as suppression of academic freedom and concluded: "the historical evidence indicates that Conway, James, and [Deirdre] McCloskey tried to destroy Bailey's book and his reputation through these truly extraordinary measures because they didn’t like what he had to say."[84]
Dreger's paper also elicited both strongly positive and strongly negative responses when it was published in 2008 with 23 commentaries in the same issue of the Archives of Sexual Behavior. Commenters included John Bancroft,[11] Ben Barres,[12] Ray Blanchard,[13] John Gagnon,[14] Richard Green,[15] Deirdre McCloskey,[16] Charles Moser,[17] Seth Roberts,[18] Julia Serano,[19] and Ken Zucker.[20] Green said her "meticulously detailed and documented essay is on remarkably even terrain," and told Bailey's critics to "lighten up."[15] Psychologist Antonia Caretto called it a "thorough review."[85] Lawrence said Dreger's paper gives evidence that the backlash was "a manifestation of narcissistic rage."[47] Dreger received a Guggenheim Fellowship to expand the article into a book. Several critics wrote that Dreger's paper lacked balance, objectivity, and context. Anthropologist Robin Mathy wrote that the trans community response "had nothing to do with Conway, James, or any other high-profile transwomen. They had everything to do with TMWWBQ and Bailey."[48] Sociologist Elroi Windsor wrote, "Dreger faults these critics for targeting the messenger and not his messages, yet the imbalance within her article suggests that she does the same. This imbalance colors Dreger's conclusions regarding Bailey's infractions."[49] Gender studies scholar Nicholas Clarkson wrote, "By focusing on the complaints of Conway, McCloskey, and James as representative of critiques of Bailey’s book, interspersed far too infrequently by more measured critiques (e.g., from Jamison Green), Dreger represents trans people as a lunatic fringe and marginalizes legitimate trans critiques of Bailey’s book. Indeed, she buries these critiques in short paragraphs, most of which come at the end of her article, thus effectively silencing those legitimate trans challenges."[50] Biologist Julia Serano wrote: "Dreger seems to attribute this [backlash] to a calculated attempt by three trans activists, Conway, James, and McCloskey (CJM), to personally "ruin" Bailey. In Dreger’s article, CJM are portrayed as singlehandedly initiating and orchestrating the entire backlash against the book via personal attacks on Bailey. I would argue that this is a rather myopic view, as it both overstates these activists’ influence within the community and underplays the broad consensus of trans activists, allies, and advocates who found the book to be unapologetically arrogant, crass, stigmatizing, sensationalizing, and a distortion of both trans people’s lives and the scientific literature on the subject. If CJM did not become involved, and if no personal attacks were carried out against Bailey, the backlash still would have occurred and it would likely have been just as contentious.[19] The month Dreger's paper was published, an academic panel on trans perspectives about "the Bailey brouhaha" convened despite Dreger's attempt to suppress it by attacking the graduate student who proposed it.[86][52][53]
The Man Who Would Be Queen went out of print in 2008 but remained available for sale as a PDF on the National Academies website.

As I mentioned, this is going to be very difficult to discuss all in one piece, so I propose we split it into three parts for discussion: The initial response, the response starting with the investigation, and the Dreger sub-controversy (split here by hard returns). Since Wikipedia is not constrained to specific lengths for articles, we can make this as long as necessary to cover the topic in a balanced and neutral manner. Jokestress (talk) 00:17, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

This satisfies me. This right here right now is good enough that I think that the top or bottom half of the controversy article could be replaced by it. This hit's basically all the bases. It's long but this is a complicated mess. Good work. --Hfarmer (talk) 00:41, 9 October 2008 (UTC)


I must be honest, it's ponderous and boring. It has nothing to do with the controversy . I reduced it back down to identifying Baileys critics and the controversy. Do we need to get everyones opinion on the planet , gay or straight to comment on it ? Unless this has DIRECT bearing on the controversy there is no point. KISS DarlieB (talk) 09:43, 9 October 2008 (UTC)


My summary and reasoning for keeping this concise

Baileys book is a one source experiment to verify some of Blanchard's theories. It was "researched " at a gay fetish/pick up bar and what he observed was real but only in one sense. To explain that statement let us imagine this was an article on heterosexuals and was researched at heterosexual sex/fetish club . Can we assume that observations made at such a club validates sweeping observations that could be applied to all heterosexuals ? Can they be divided into just two categories ? Of course not, yet Bailey said that there were only two classifications of transsexual and if any transsexual disagrees with his theories they must be lying. It's not a scientific statement so no matter who argues pro or con what remains is merely opinion. —Preceding unsigned comment added by DarlieB (talkcontribs) DarlieB (talk) 11:28, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

The problem is that Team Bailey have been trying to establish a simple revisionist master narrative where three "rage"-filled transsexuals masterminded a conspiracy to "ruin" a "scientist under siege," concluding that Bailey is some sort of brave Gallileo-type martyr speaking "scientific truth" in the face of "identity politics." They ignore Bailey's many personal attacks on the people he wrote about and focus on his own narcissistic injuries, when the tables were turned and his own identity was examined by gay and trans critics in academia and beyond. They seem to believe it's "science" when he attacks vulnerable communities and people, and "rage" when done to him. The story is much more complicated than their version of things, which is why this draft is written long. We are in the process of editing this down to a summary right now. I hope you will join us in the discussion. I believe each of the three sections above can be made into one paragraph each, per Wikipedia:Summary style. I'd like to include references with all the reliable sources listed, so anyone interested can look it all up themselves. The main reason this is so detailed is because a couple of editors here seem to think Dreger's hatchet job is some sort of authoritative final word on the matter, when she merely repeats the same tactics and strategies as Bailey in his problematic book. This kind of nonsense will always play well to people in positions of institutional power with little knowledge on the topic, because it is written in a style that is familiar to them, and uses buzzwords that get them all tingly.
I agree the multi-month debate process is ponderous and boring (as is the draft above), but I believe it will ultimately lead to a better article, by gathering all the facts and POVs (including those ignored/suppressed by Dreger) and then summarizing them, versus heavy reliance on the version profferred by Bailey's supporters. Jokestress (talk) 17:03, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
I totally understand the need to balance by and that it was not a " 3 person conspiracy" as alleged by Dreger . Across the board the reaction from the entire transsexual community was totally negative and I left the other names in simply because they were were well respected activists who made publicly sourced statements on the book. I think that will be clear to the reader but here is our problem , we cannot allow Baileys personal attacks to become an issue or it opens the door to members of our communities emotional attacks on him. Objectivity can't be reached by posting the heated words of someone simply because they are an intellectual on either side , it must have more than just an entertainment value and deal with real issues in the controversy . The Andrea James section, in real context , portrays Bailey badly so they were not going to challenge it's deletion . Dr Bailey has responded like a spoiled child who was punished for stealing cookies and Dreger has been defending the right to publish silly assumption without any consequences. This never was an "intellectual freedom " issue because every academic that proposes theory will suffer these social/academic consequences or rewards due to it . And while I've removed at least 4 of the five hidden Dreger quotes she needs to be mentioned simply for her single handed revival of the issue in the public eye .

And yes, I noted that the Bailey Forces had made this article completely bias. At first I worked hard simply to put balance in it , but once I had the original editor chopped it all down to near nothing , threw on the neutrality tag and walked away in a huff . Now you know me as someone who never shies from argument or debate so know that this is incredibly hard for me to be neutral but I have. My hope is that whatever summary you create is "balanced". It serves no ones purpose and especially not ours to deal with the hostile reaction to an obviously imbalanced or bias article. We need to walk a higher road here so lets start with a tight , concise and neutral view.I look forward ton the summary. Yes, I will participate.--DarlieB (talk) 20:55, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

Ok I understand Darlie. Consider this.
Over a decade ago there was a crisis in lebanon. You had these factions all fighting mainly Christian VS Muslim. This american diplomat went over there to mediate the dispute. A news reporter informed him that both sides think he is biased against them. He said "In a situation like this....If both sides think you are working for their opposition then it means you are neutral. He was latter kidnapped and killed by one of the factions.
What this has to do with the current dispute is that this controversy while non violent is just as passionate. Both sides hold entrenched viewpoints and will not budge. In a truly neutral light (like tht found in the article I wrote about the controvrsy) you can see everyone's warts. Such, I suppose, is why neither side likes it and wants it to go away. As soon as their summary is done. The other moral of that story is that anyone, like me, who tries to be neutral and listens to both sides will get branded as working for the other team, or have one team think I am working for them. Let me say publically I have yet to get my monogrammed "Team Bailey" starter jacket and cap yet so I am not in team Bailey yet. :-?
Basically what I am trying to get ALL of you to understnd is that no writing of this will be satisfactory to both sides. One side or the other will feel slighted in some way. Jokestress is doing good work here. If she were not I would post a notice on the COI notice board about her. She has been reasonably neutral in her edits and proposals so I do not do that. --Hfarmer (talk) 02:43, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Believe it or not I agree with you even though I am branded "anti-Bailey". Jokestress is actually a a dear friend and as you notice she could be branded "Team Bailey" herself , yet she is not. This is a person I highly respect and admire and yet our dispute is merely this, I feel that we are including pointless positive reviews for the sake of the "appearance" of balance when NONE address the issues of the controversy. If we are short of direct rebuttal on an academic scale then include Baileys own defense if you must but not reviews of moms "book of the month " club. Does that make sense ? I've worked on this edit since way back to get it to neutral ground and was uninformed of the "consensus "poll . I wonder why ? The unfortunate thing is that even if we create "pretend" neutral ground it will be just that if they aren't equal peer reviews. Again, what is the " controversy to you" ? Please define it ? The alleged conspiracy or the negative reviews ? If it is the former then direct rebuttal to the "conspirators" charges are the only respnse from credible sources. If it is the latter and merely the fact the responses were negative then Alice Dreger's charges should be removed as well because those are supposedly a direct response to charges of an alledged "conspiracy". This artical DIRECTLY charges three academic transsexuals with "conspiracy" . I would like our new Mod to directly answer that and to judge whether that allegation violates "Do no harm ". --DarlieB (talk) 15:10, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Need to archive

At almost 400K, this may be the longest talk page on Wikipedia. Can we set up autoarchiving to remove old materials? WhatamIdoing (talk) 19:20, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

I hand-archived materials up through the last response by ProudAGP. I will archive the remainder once we hear back about the latest version. Proposal 2 outlines ProudAGP's objections and suggestion, so I didn't want to archive that until we hear back about the latest proposal. Jokestress (talk) 20:14, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

WhatamIdoing's Reversion

What is the intent, to post every "opinion" one can on this article ? How has that anything to do with the contraversy and why do these reviews carry any weight whatsaoever  ? I'm totally fine with putting this up for review because I've read what you discussed and STILL see no reason for including it. Please, one by one of you would , what would reviews like Kirkus have to do with anything when the issues were solely the reaction of the transsexual community ? How exactly does a book reviewers "opinion" mean anything. The Witches Hammer in it's time was a very well reviewed I'm sure!--DarlieB (talk) 21:42, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

Since your involvement in August, we have been working toward consensus by writing a detailed account of the controversy that contains a well-sourced survey of all the responses and key events. From this, the intent is to condense all of it into a summary. Various editors have claimed that this or that event was not relevant, so we have been adding citations from reliable sources to back up the relevance. Once we have an unabridged version that includes everything people consider relevant, the plan is to use that as a starting point for a tight version. For instance, I think the Kirkus review is worthless because it is anonymous and for all we know written by one of Bailey's pals. But in order to reach consensus, we are leaving it in for discussion. Another editor thinks Bailey's involvement with the human biodiversity group is unimportant, so we've included a quotation from a psychologist who considered it very important. It's critical to take our time and make sure everyone is OK at each step when reaching consensus on touchy topics. I have had many similar negotiations, such as the race and intelligence article which involves some of the same academics. I support WhatamIdoing's revision of your changes to the article, because it's important that we respect the process and negotiate changes here first. Jokestress (talk) 23:50, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
My point is we can wipe every single reference to the positive out. The "controversy" has nothing to do with balanced reviews. It has to do with charges made by the transsexual community the books methods of sales, methodology and conclusions were poor. Bailey was attacked in an academic forum for it by high profile members of that community. The main reason for the resistance to criticism seems to be that they are the victims of Baileys book. In fact I think I can state without reservation that if it were not for their gender issues people would take the criticism at face value. Posting positive opinions doesn't address those charges so they are completely irrelevant. The balance is Dreger is allowed to state her ridiculous theory that Bailey should be protected from academic and economic repercussion of statements unlike every other academic out there. Example Steven Jones who was fired in the same method as Bailey for a controversial theory. Why should anyone have to negotiate the truth ? If WhatamIdoing can't post a response directly related to the controversy charges then no response is appropriate .--DarlieB (talk) 02:39, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
No, DarlieB, we cannot just "wipe every single reference to the positive out". We cannot say that "[a]cross the board the reaction from the entire transsexual community was totally negative". We can't say these things because they are not true. Most transsexuals object. Some do not. Silencing the minority view is a violation of Wikipedia's policies on a neutral point of view.
It is perfectly obvious to everyone that you personally disagree with the Blanchard taxonomy. That is very different from every single transsexual on the planet having the same opinion.
The reason I reverted your earlier changes was solely because you carelessly and completely disregarded the hours of work on this talk page that were put into them. I assume that you did this through ignorance of that work, but now you know that each sentence has been carefully discussed half a dozen times by half a dozen editors. You are welcome to join the discussion, but you are not welcome to impose your own version over the objections over everyone else. WhatamIdoing (talk) 02:56, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
I agree with WhatamIdoing. A controversy by definition is a dispute involving strong disagreement. It's not fair to present just one side in a controversy in the article, and we are working hard to present both sides in a manner that is representative and neutral, per policy. We welcome your input on the proposed controversy section, but it's necessary to represent all points of view proportionally. Jokestress (talk) 03:05, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Yes you can wipe out every positive review if they are unrelated to the controversy (which by the way is the alleged "conspiracy of transsexuals" trying to destroy Bailey, not the reviews). Virtually every transsexual I know saw Baileys book as the opportunistic exploitation of an unrepresented minority. What transsexuals do you know WhatamIdoing ? I live in the community so you saying because Anne Lawrence was happy about her own theory is ridiculous. The transsexual community reacted negatively PERIOD. Yes, I disagree with the "taxonomy" but that doesn't mean you should be prefacing the controversy discussion with babble like anonymous reviews from Kirkus ! Reviews that don't even deal with the controversy !. What is that ? Academics and PhDs vs webnerds ? So lets see your "transsexual support" .--DarlieB (talk) 03:49, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Again WAID, show me your transsexual support ? You made this statement "We can't say these things because they are not true". Lets have it. --DarlieB (talk) 20:09, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Could you try reading what's already on this page on that subject? Look at several of the proposals above. No, that's probably too hard for you. Read this:

Some reviews in the LGBT press were positive, such as from writers Ethan Boatner[60] for Lavender Magazine and Duncan Osborne for Out.[65] Those in the transgender community who agreed with Blanchard's taxonomy also reviewed the book positively. Anne Lawrence, a physician and sexologist whose work on autogynephilia is featured in the book, wrote "This is a wonderful book on an important subject,"[60] and autogynephilia support group founder Willow Arune wrote, "Blanchard, Bailey, Lawrence and [Blanchard colleague Maxine] Petersen have done more to help transsexuals over years of service than perhaps any other four people in the world."[66]

The fact that your personal friends dislike the idea is not just unimportant, it's a violation of the No Original Research policy. Positive reviews by people that publicly identify as transsexual have been published. The unanimity of "the transsexual community" on this issue is a myth. The transsexual community is made up of many individuals. It's just as offensive to stereotype "all transsexuals" as thinking alike as it is to say that "all black people" or "all Latinos" think alike. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:37, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
You just named two GAY men and the ONLY transsexual you mention is again Anne Lawrence  ! THAT GIVES YOU ONE TRANSSEXUAL AND SHES AN ASSOCIATE ! You made an accusation yet you have absolutely no proof of ANY transsexual support ! I was not speaking of my "friends " . The community is far larger than my immediate circle ands I saw NO SUPPORT FOR BAILEY WHATSOEVER ! What the heck do you know about MY community ???? You don't even know single transsexual ! You can't even name any other ! My point is proved and you are making baseless statements to support a subject you are completely ignorant of. --DarlieB (talk) 05:28, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
DarlieB, you are being very inflammatory and disruptive in your comments, which is making it difficult to discuss these issues in a calm and productive manner. Setting aside whether Anne Lawrence is a transsexual (under other nosologies Lawrence is not), we need to focus on content, not on other editors. Please do not make personal attacks on WhatamIdoing. That style of interaction is not allowed here. Writing in all caps and using exclamation points is not necessary. Please review the following policies: WP:AGF, WP:NPA and WP:NPOV. We have to work to make sure articles summarize all views proportionally, and WhatamIdoing is simply trying to work with others toward that end. Many people here have very different points of view, but we need to work together on reaching consensus. Thanks again for offering to share your views on this article. I hope we can stay WP:CALM and get back on track. Jokestress (talk) 06:09, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
We can stay calm but the accusations aren't one sided Jokestress. I was told by WAID that I was bias, that it was opinion and that what I said was untrue so I repeatedly asked for proof of that there was any "support" from the transsexual community beyond Lawrence. That has not materialized I think the point has been made that transsexual community reacted negatively. Please feel free to move on to the summary. --DarlieB (talk) 07:22, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Keeping calm

Hello folks! An editor involved in this article has asked me to help resolve any disputes. It seems as though the major issue is undue weight may be given to controversy, or more specifically, criticism of the book. Is my summary correct? Are there any favorable reviews extant? I seem to recall that Quality Paperback Book Club offered this an an option. Bearian (talk) 22:19, 9 October 2008 (UTC)

This long version has two paragraphs of positive reviews and two paragraphs of negative reviews. As far as WP:UNDUE, in terms of politics, negative response was proportionally higher than positive response. I asked you to take a look because of the revert war in article space, which removes a lot of information negotiated by consensus. I believe WhatamIdoing's revert was correct and appropriate, but do not want to revert it myself a second time. Thanks! Jokestress (talk) 23:57, 9 October 2008 (UTC)
I believe it was incorrect to add as the positive reviews have nothing to do with the actual controversy. None of these "positive" reviews even deal with the issues raised. None ! Jokestress is trying to compromise to overcome WhatamIdoing's obsessive compulsive need to defend Bailey ( notice I do not say the book ) no matter how unrelated his support material. This article is about the book and not a courtroom defense of it's author . Neutrality does not mean you have to toss in ANY material to balance.--DarlieB (talk) 02:55, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Lets start Bearian by clearly identifying the controversy because rebuttal in this article depends on what is being discussed. Is it the negative critical response by the transsexual community or the "alleged" conspiracy of a few transsexual academics to destroy Baileys career as Alice Dreger claimed ? By the way, have you read The Man Who Would Be Queen  ? --DarlieB (talk) 05:38, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
My own opinion is that the negative reviews are overweighed. Specifically, it is the reviews that appear in high-end sources that merit mention in WP articles, not blogs and opinions in non-RS's. This is particularly the case for controversial topics, such as this one. The high-end reviews of this book have been much more positive than those in non-professional sources. (For the record, my own review of the book appeared in a non-RS.)
— James Cantor (talk) 13:14, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Please post a link to your review Cantor and support of your assertion "the high-end reviews of this book have been much more positive" . Thanks. --DarlieB (talk) 14:35, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Oh and WhatamIdoing , please stop editing in Bearian's name unless he directs you to. The point of having him here is to settle the disputed text. Oh and could you please stop lying in your reversion explanations ? You were not restoring "Bearian's" edits because none of "Bearian's" edits were changed. In fact , you actually "reverted" the things he had just corrected ! --DarlieB (talk) 14:40, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
@James Cantor: Your glowing book review is used in the publisher's marketing materials and has been mentioned in other published sources, so your prominent involvement as a major stakeholder in this has been well-established since the earliest days of the controversy. In fact, your review is also notable because the National Academies changed the attribution from "American Psychology Association" to your name in the wake of complaints. Your ongoing attempts to downplay your significant role in promoting the book and attacking its critics fly in the face of the published record and your edit history on Wikipedia. Your attempts to eliminate the extensive published criticism by claiming it's not "high-end" are part of the pattern of intimidation and suppression of opposing views that you and Dreger are well-known for in this debate. You and your employers are notorious for casting a chill on open discussion, where psychologists and sexologists and former patients are afraid to use their real names for justifiable fear of retribution from CAMH-affiliated psychologists. If you have concerns about a source in the article, please specify so we can discuss its merits. Jokestress (talk) 15:12, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
For the record I disagree with Dr. Cantor on this one. Those "non-RS" "low end" reviews come from people like professors Conway and McCloskey. They are both academics, they are both transsexuals. They (and jokestress, Darlie and I) know more about actually being a transsexual than any of those so called high end reviewers can ever know. As I recall Conway and McCloskey raised some legit points. The book reduces all of the complexity of being a transsexual down to a one or two dimensional map. That alone tells you it's at least a grave oversimplification. (McCloskey also had to take a swipe at those individuals who in the book were labeld "homosexual transsexuals" As if they were not or could not also have been directly injured by what's in the book. I digress..) For those reasons I believe and will argue at length that the concerns of the likes of Conway and McCloskey should be here if the reviews of James Cantor and such are here. --Hfarmer (talk) 16:16, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
DarlieB, I made no edits in Bearian's name. I reverted your anti-consensus change, and because of the limitations of Wikipedia's software, which couldn't remove your massive deletion without deleting Bearian's recent changes as well, I manually retyped Bearian's recent changes. You are being offensive and making unfounded accusations. I would appreciate it if you at least pretended to show respect for the other editors working on this article. WhatamIdoing (talk) 18:51, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Hardly unfounded WAID ." DarlieB's anti-consensus changes again; restore Bearian's edits"-WhatamIdoing. You reverted a mods revisions ! Who are you to do that ? Bearian being here was entirely to sort the dispute. Once he is up to speed on the issues I'm fine with him deciding what's to be included. As for "consensus" I was not told or informed of any changes by wiki even though this is watched so to say it was "consensus" is just sneaky. By majority , if the KKK decides they want to edit Barrack Obama's profile here is that ok ? I mean , they would have a "consensus right ? And that's the point of having a mod here. This already has neutrality tags so it was never finished. I agree on Hfarmer's "middle east war " scenario , where no one will be happy in the end but we will reach a proper compromise. If there is such an issue it can;'t be resolved then I suggest removing the entire controversy section and Dregers accusations. I feel the structure of that controversy section was compromised from the beginning. Since when do you identify positive reviews before you even discuss the "controversy" the section is about ?!. Is that some new age right wing Fox Propaganda defensive measure ? Let the mod do his job and stop doing it for him !And just so you know, that massive deletion was first done by another editor , the same person who put the neutrality tags on this article. Not that you have been right yet. --DarlieB (talk) 20:01, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Click here to see Bearian's edits. They were:

  • Removal of wikilinking to one instance of the word autogynephilia
  • Wikilink transpeople to the Transgenderism article.
  • Add a comma, followed by the words ", which may have amounted to sexual exploitation" to an existing sentence.

That's it. If you look at the changes I made, I removed just your edits, and manually re-typed all three of Bearian's changes. The evidence plainly shows that I did not revert Bearian's changes; I carefully preserved them. I removed your edits because they were contrary to the carefully worked out consensus on this page. It is hardly my, or any other editor's, fault if you didn't manage to notice the many thousands of words in discussion on this page over the last couple of weeks.

I suggest that you take your own advice, and quit reverting to your preferred version. If you really believed in allowing the moderator to take the lead, then you would have left that decision to Bearian. WhatamIdoing (talk) 00:44, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


IT WAS HIS ! You altered his edit! I don't care if you polished his shoes and wiped his bottom the last edit was his AND YOU* REVERTED* IT! There was NO consensus because it was only you Dr Dreger and Bailey doing the editing ! Oh I've been back many times to check the responses. These are recent . And since you feel that way about my not noticing I'm here now so lets get to that consensus. Stop your stalling anprovide proof of "transsexual support " for this book or apologize for saying otherwise.--DarlieB (talk) 05:13, 11 October 2008 (UTC)



  • Liking a book and saying so in a newsletter does not give one "prominent involvement as a major stakeholder." I neither expected nor received any benefit from expressing my opinion. Filing actual complaints against Bailey (as Jokestress has) gives one prominent involvement as a major stakeholder.
  • Regarding whether my review is notable: Jokestress, like everyone else is entitled to their opinion. I point out only the WP policies, which (in my opinion) restricts page content to reviews that appear in high-end outlets, which my review did not.
  • To correct an error of Jokestress': The National Academies did not change their attribution in "a wake of complaints." They changed their attribution because *I* asked them to use my name instead of the name of the groups that published my review. I have no idea on what basis Jokestress thinks that it was complaints that had any effect...except that Jokestress was one of the complainers.
  • My expressing my interpretation that WP policy is for using high-end sources in the discussion of controversial issues is not an "attempt to eliminate the extensive published criticism." To the contrary, it is more than plausible that Jokestress is pushing for the inclusion in WP of low-end reviews because those are the ones she agrees with. Regardless of which of those explanations is correct, the question for WP and Bearian is: Which course of action best meets WP's needs and policy, including or excluding reviews in non-professional sources?
  • As for Dreger, me, or anyone else trying to intimidate anyone, one can always tell when Jokestress is making things up by when she says things like "are well-known for," etc. but provides no actual evidence beyond 'someone said so'. I can recommend to Bearian only to read the New York Times coverage of Jokestress (Andrea James) posting on her website photos of other people's children with obscene captions and then deciding if it is actually Jokestress to uses intimidation as a political tactic. (Incidentally, I have no idea what power Jokestress thinks I have that I could use against anyone.)
  • I appreciate Hfarmer's desire to deem Conway's and McCloskey's opinions relevant, because those two people are highly educated and openly transsexual; however, neither of those criteria pertain to whether their comments should appear on a WP page. That is, WP policy does not say that greater weight should be given to opinions from people just because they are members of a relevant demographic group or because they have a PhD in a non-relevant field (Conway is an eletrical engineer and McCloskey is an economist). (Incidentally, I appreciate Hfarmer's willingness to disagree; I have never met two people who agree on everything.)
  • I agree with Hfarmer that the reviews by Conway and McCloskey have no greater qualification to be on this page than mine does. I am saying only that the standard for including reviews here should be the same as the standard for including reviews anywhere else...those that were published in high-end, professional outlets by a person with relevant knowledge of the topic.

— James Cantor (talk) 21:00, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Dr Cantor- ". Psychologist -"His clinical activities focus primarily on the assessment of persons dealing with illegal or clinically significant sexual behaviours and interests." Your work is in PEDOPHILES ! Not transgendered or transsexuals ? And Ray Blanchard associate and collaborator ! No bias huh ? Tell me Dr, was using the name "MarionTheLibrarian" your way of experiencing the transsexual world or was it merely to invoke the empathy in critics that a woman would ? =) It would be embarrassing if this book was discredited wouldn't it since you are one of the people used to promote it's wholesome goodness and value . You have been editing this from the day I got here sir and now I know why. It's seems to me I am virtually the only one here without direct ties , well, I'm gender variant so I must be one of two kinds of transsexual right ? Guess which wont you Dr,? . By the way , have you ever cured anyone ? Ever ? --DarlieB (talk) 20:40, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
  1. Yes, my clinical activities are as described in the bio of mine that you have quoted; and yes, at the moment, I am in a clinic with specialized expertise in pedophilia.
  2. Yes, I do some clinical work with people with gender dysphoria, but not as much I have in the past.
  3. Yes, Blanchard and I work together on several projects. I have never said anything of Blanchard that is not already part of some public record where anyone may check it.
  4. No, I used the name "MarionTheLibrarian" because (1) a lot of my editing was about adding sources from medical libraries that most people don't have access to, (2) "Marian The Librarian" is from a famous Broadway musical (I am a fan), and (3) I changed the spelling of "Marian" to "Marion" in order to masculinize it without losing the rhyme.
  5. I publish professionally on several topics in sexology on a regular basis. It is unlikely that every word that any scientist writes will be correct. I have no issue whatsoever with anyone disagreeing with anything I say or think. However, people should disagree only with what I actually say or think rather than disagree with some misinterpreted version of what I say or think, but don't.
  6. You are not the only one here without ties. Moreover, there is no rule against editors having opinions; it is our edits that must remain neutral. If you have a particular edit of mine you would like to discuss, you have not referred to it.
  7. I have no idea who you are. Your next sentence is too agrammatical for me to interpret.
  8. Finally, neither transexuality nor paraphilias change after any known intervention. People who have come to me with other concerns, however, have had those concerns alleviated over the course of treatment. However, I do very little treatment. As it says in your quote from my bio, most of my clinical work is in assessment, not treatment.
— James Cantor (talk) 21:24, 10 October 2008 (UTC)
Alleviation of symptoms isn't isn't a "cure" , correct Dr ? Though , yes , I note you mostly do assessment . So what would be your area of expertise in gender dysphoria that makes your review noteworthy  ? Have you established some relationship between pedophiles and transgenders ? Yes, I'm familiar with The Music Man and that Shirley Jones was the character you changed the gender on. Fascinating with so many male names to choose from you chose to gender change a known female character =) It's ok, I simply asked you to guess which of the two Bailey/Blanchard type transsexuals I was =) Humor , you wrote a positive review after all. I find nothing wrong with you having an opinion , nothing at all. Could you post a link , or could someone post a link to Dr Cantors review ? I'm not that smart Dr, I'm a cartoon animator so I'll have to struggle with the terminology I'm sure. Please WAID , post those positive reviews by transsexuals. --DarlieB (talk) 21:49, 10 October 2008 (UTC)

Let's leave it at this. Anyone who wants to read about James Cantor's tactics can do so here, or they can email Dr. Madeline Wyndzen or call up Kyle Scanlon at the 519 in Toronto. Or look at his Wikipedia contributions under each of his three names. They all promote the work of his employers and attack their critics. Every single one of them. Or just ask around among psychologists you know to get the scoop. Anyone who wants to read about Dreger's tactics can read the Anderson-Minshall and Hendrick reports sourced in the proposal above, or pretty much any commentary on her paper. Bailey has been replaying his narcissistic injuries on his site since 2003, so anyone who wants to read about my tactics can go there for his take on things. To read about Bailey's tactics, I recommend the reports on his 2003 Emory and Stanford lectures, his mockery of "Juanita" in his book, and his various threats to critics. I think that covers all the accusations, etc.

Now that that is out of the way, does anyone have comments on the proposed draft while we await ProudAGP? I'd love to get this back on track and focused on improving the article. If anyone has a counterproposal, please put it up for discussion. Jokestress (talk) 01:03, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Dr Cantor. "Cantor refers to transsexuals based on their birth gender. Therefore, what any modern, reasonable person would refer to as a transsexual woman (a woman who was assigned the gender "male" at birth), Cantor and the CAMH refers to as a "transsexual man", or even, later, a "male homosexual transsexual.""
My my Dr. you are a little devil aren't you !I find it to be ridiculous to be here editing this with a Dr who intentionally misgenders me and my community. --DarlieB (talk) 07:41, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
DarlieB, many of the comments above are violations of our policies here. Please keep comments focused on improving the article. If you wish to share your opinions or have a debate about James Cantor, there are all kinds of public and private places online where you can find others doing just that. I really want to get this discussion back on track so we can move on to some of the other problematic articles on this site. Thanks! Jokestress (talk) 06:25, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
Then do it Jokestress . I'll opt out and let you all post uninformed opinions as "balance" , innuendo and fabrication as fact and anything else to please the agenda's of the battling sides. --DarlieB (talk) 07:26, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
That could have been said in a calmer way.  :-/ To be honest perhaps both Jokestress, and James_Cantor should step away. This isn't a "policy" but WP:COI does say...
A good thing to keep in mind.--Hfarmer (talk) 11:42, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
Several editors here have already had formal COI complaints made regarding this. Everyone here except WAID has stated their interest in this topic. Most editors here are quite knowledgeable about the details, and I believe that is when articles improve fastest: when people with differing views and high levels of expertise in a topic work to negotiate a version based on consensus. ProudAGP and I are the two most directly involved editors, followed by Hfarmer and James Cantor. I feel it's important we all contribute to the discussion, even though we all have a clear stake in the outcome. We have been making good progress until things got a little far afield this week. If we can all agree on the key elements of the controversy, I believe we can take the unabridged version and condense it into a clear explanation of the issues. If we invoke COI on everyone, this whole series of articles will sit here as a hopeless mess for a long time, which is not in the interest of the project. Though people have strong points of view, it seems that we are all trying to keep the interests of Wikipedia ahead of our own interests. Jokestress (talk) 16:14, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

To keep an eye on the ball, I've intended my prior comments to review for Bearian the relevant long-standing issues here, and not to recapitulate the oft-repeated arguments. So, unless Bearian thinks it would be useful, I hesitate to repeat the demonstrations that Jokestress' claims are mere rumor-mongering (and that she is actually a primary source of the rumors). Of course, I am also aware that silence on my part after a volley of her insinuations might suggest to new readers that there is merit to them. So, unless Bearian says that more information would be helpful, I'll instead point out that Jokestress' comments follow the pattern I already described:

  • As I wrote, when asked, Jokestress produces no evidence in support of her claims. In this particular case, I asked her for evidence that it was "in the wake of criticism" that the National Academies of Science changed their attribution of my review, and Jokestress remained entirely silent, while changing the subject with a volley of new claims.
  • As I wrote, what Jokestress claims to be evidence is merely some unverified or unverifiable statements from someone else. In this case, that was "email Dr. Madeline Wyndzen", "call up Kyle Scanlon at the 519", "ask around among psychologists" and so on. This, of course, is not evidence; basing opinion on an opinion and having no evidence at the base is rumor-mongering, and it has no place in WP.

The way to separate rumor from substance is, of course, to restrict WP pages to content that appears in RS's. Jokestress continues to push for information contained in non-RS's Jokestress' claims will appear to have merit (at least, superficially) only when one drops the bar low enough to allow rumor into WP. Despite that Jokestress refers to non-RS's with peacock terms such as "reports" or "investigations," they remain non-RS claims, without evidence, reiterating what Jokestress keeps on her personal website. Incidentally, although Jokestress refers Bearian to a variety of "sources" (making the claims seem independently verified), they are all contained on her personal website (tsroadmap.com). Refering Bearian to her own website, however, would have revealed her own level involvement in spreading the rumors that she now wants included in WP (but without mentioning herself as the source).
— James Cantor (talk) 16:23, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

OK, you win; you are faultless in every way and above reproach in all that you do. Any future discussions of you can happen offsite. Now, do you have any comments on the combined proposal 1 above or on the proposed key elements below? Do you have a counter-proposal? Jokestress (talk) 16:37, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Empty words of sarcasm are hardly going to help.

Regarding the proposal, Jokestress is doing exactly what editors should not. She provides a list of topics you want covered and then search for sources to support them (looking to unqualified sources when necessary). That is exactly the reverse of good editing. Instead, one should >start< with a list of what the RS’s are and then summarize what >they< say, not what any one editor wants the article to say.

In my opinion, the only RS’s here are the book itself, the reviews of it published in professional outlets for such reviews, the NYTimes coverage of the controversy, the articles in the Chronicle of Higher Education (although I believe they made several factual errors, it still is generally considered an RS), Dreger’s article about the controversy (although Dicklyon and others believe that it is biased, it is still an RS), and comments about the book or controversy made by its author or publisher (including SPS’s for those, as if we were writing a bio about them themselves).

That the opinions that Jokestress wants included do not largely appear in any of the above is not relevant to WP. In fact, one would reasonable ask why, despite that it’s been over 5 years since the publication of the book, that none of these allegedly many and highly educated people have ever published their comments in any outlet professional enough to be an RS.

The WP thing to do is write the article on the basis of the existing RS’s, and should any other RS’s with other points of view merit high-end publication, then the WP page can be modified as needed.
— James Cantor (talk) 18:29, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

You and Dreger do not seem to comprehend that this is not an academic dispute. It's a dispute about academia, specifically academic exploitation of oppressed minorites. By trying to limit the citations to "academic" responses and reports on the academic angle of things, you are trying to limit the article to just one side of the dispute, thus repeating the original problem. Jokestress (talk) 22:10, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Actually, this is neither an academic dispute nor a dispute about academia. It is a wikipedia page about a book. It is inappropriate for Jokestress to use WP as a battleground for whatever type of dispute she thinks this is. Jokestress and I can go around in circles endlessly about what she supposes my motives to be and why I think her suppositions are wrong, but none of that changes the actual content of WP:RS. (Ditto for what I suppose her motives to be.)
— James Cantor (talk) 03:59, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

Again we agree. As long as you don't try to draw the line that defines WP:RS in between the different articles in the Archives based on which ones are so-called "peer reviewed," as that would be way too biased. Dicklyon (talk) 05:31, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

That Dicklyon and I both recognize this as a pivotal issue is certainly progress. I hope that others will agree as well.
Distinguishing whether I am 'trying to draw a line' (in Dicklyon's opinion) or merely 'applying WP policy to tell me where the line is' (in my own opinion) is not a question likely to resolved; however, I do not believe that that question needs to be answered in order to obey WP:RS.
I have already summarized why I interpret WP:RS to say that the commentaries should be out and why you believe the commentaries should be in. I agree with Jokestress that asking for input from uninvolved editors (such as Bearian or the RS noticeboard) is a logical way to go. If others here agree, I would be happy to draft a question for RS/N that we can modify and come to consensus on before posting it on RS/N.
— James Cantor (talk) 14:20, 12 October 2008 (UTC)


The key issues

Below are what I believe are key points that should be covered:

  • TMWWBQ reviews (pro and con)
  • LGBT political response (pro and con)
  • NAP/JHP marketing and response
  • CAMH employees and colleagues/supporters
  • IASR incident 2003
  • NU response and investigation
  • HBI connection of reviewers (SPLC commentary)
  • WPATH response and counter-response (letter to NU, resignations, etc.)
  • LLF nomination and recission
  • ASB involvement in Dreger sub-controversy (NYT, commentaries)
  • Bailey's response
  • Publication status of the book

That's what I tried to cover in the proposal so that we might condense it. Comments welcome. Jokestress (talk) 01:03, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

I think the real key issue is what sources we can build the article on, and what kind of statements each source can support. Primary sources can be used to support the opinion of the author, and not much more. Good secondary sources are hard to come by in this controversy. And the big mess is the Dreger piece, which is a so-called "peer-reviewed" opinion piece, while the 23 responses to it in the same journal are argued (by her friends) to be not in that same category and thus less suitable; the key issue for me has always been this bias, that based on a few casual words from Kenneth Zucker we can put more weight on the Dreger opinion than on others, or treat hers as if it's fact or a secondary source. In other words, the key issues in getting to a good article hinge on a settlement here; otherwise we'll continually fight it out on each detail. That said, I have to agree with Cantor that Jokestress does go pretty far the other way in incorporating her own interpretations where plain sourced facts is where we should stop; I wouldn't call it rumour mongering, and I'm not saying it's wrong, but we need to stick to reliable sources or we're not going to converge. Dicklyon (talk) 16:36, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


Although Dicklyon and I disagree on much, I am glad we agree on using RS's as the basis for WP articles. To fill Bearian in on the Dreger article and Dicklyon's concerns about it as an RS:

  • Alice Dreger published a summary of the whole controversy in the Archives of Sexual Behavior.
  • The Archives is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology, the editor-in-chief of which is Ken Zucker.
  • Zucker issued an open call for commentaries on the Dreger article, all of which were published in same issue of the Archives together with the Dreger article.
  • In the Dreger article, Dreger says she was initially ill-disposed towards Bailey and his book, but after going through all of the relevant material she could find, came to the conclusion that Bailey was, for the most part, in the right.
  • In total, 23 commentaries were published along with it. Their opinions varied from quite positive to quite negative, and others made comments about the issue without explicitly taking any side. Some people want to suggest that the proportion of positive versus negative comentaries is evidence that that side is more valid, but, of course, there is no way to know to what extent the people who wrote in are representative of anyone else.
  • In Zucker's editorial introducing that issue of the Archives, Zucker said that the Dreger article was peer-reviewed, but that the commentaries were not; specifically, all commentaries that were submitted were published (except for one which did not actually address the issue at hand).
  • Finally, Zucker (editor of the Archives), Blanchard (whose work is given high praise in Bailey's book), and I all work in the same hospital. Blanchard, Bailey, and I (and 60-70 other sexologists) are on the editorial board of Archives. Most sexologists tend to know each other, through involvements in things like that, conferences, and email.

To me, Dreger's article is peer-reviewed (and therefore is an RS), because that is what the editor of the peer-reviewed journal said. To Dicklyon, Dreger's article got a free ride into Archives because: Dregert said good things about Bailey, and Bailey said good things about Blanchard, and Blanchard is a friend of Zucker's (and Bailey's).
To me, the commentaries were not peer reviewed (and therefore not RS's) because that is what the editor of the journal said. To Dicklyon, the commentaries appeared in a peer-reviewed journal (regardless of whether they themselves underwent peer-review) and therefore have the same standing as the Dreger article.
Personally, I believe that Dicklyon has every right to believe whatever he wants about the editorial process for any article in any journal anywhere, but that without any substantial evidence of actual wrong-doing, his belief does not outweighWP:RS. To Dicklyon (a long-time friend of Lynn Conway, another prolific anti-Bailey blogger), my reasoning is merely because I am a colleague of the sexologists involved.
— James Cantor (talk) 17:38, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

The real key issues: When considering his respect for reliable sources, it should also be noted that James Cantor originally hid his identity and affiliation, and editted as User:MarionTheLibrarian, inserting vicious attacks against Andrea James and Lynn Conway in their biographies. Like inserting untrue and unsourced claims like Some scholars have likened James to "the Al Sharpton rather than the ML King sort" of activist: here and here – he tried to attribute that to Dreger, but even she says nothing of the sort; rather she repeats, with attribution, a statement sent to her by – wait for it – James Cantor!. The Dreger blog makes it very clear that both Alice Dreger and James Cantor are principals in the arguments with Andrea James and Lynn Conway, so keep that in mind when interpreting his wikilawyering and comments on policy, contents, and other articles. When he says "The Archives is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology" he means well regarded among his friends and peers, the insiders who take one side in these issues. When he says "To me, Dreger's article is peer-reviewed (and therefore is an RS), because that is what the editor of the peer-reviewed journal said," he relies on a person on one side of these issues to reinforce his desire to suppress opinions from the other side. In fact, the article may have been "peer reviewed" in some sense, and if the argument was within that community of peers that might carry some weight; but since it's between that community of peers and others mostly outside of that community, it makes no sense to rely on that distinction as a way to filter the argument. The commentaries in the journal must at least be given some status as reliable representation of opinions on the other side of the issues. More than half of them blast Dreger for her hack analysis, whether they take a position on the underlying issues or not. Any attempt to hold up Dreger's piece as a "history" while suppressing those responses must be seen for what it is: biased POV editing. Dicklyon (talk) 21:14, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
Yes, it's my opinion that the attempts to dismiss criticism in verifiable sources because it's not "high-end" are a reflection of the institutional power imbalances that led to the controversy in the first place. This, in my opinion, comes down to one group of people (CAMH employees and supporters) using every means available to them to assert their power and authority and identity, and an opposing group (most of the LGBT community and non-CAMH academics) doing the same. The means each group has at their disposal are different. One group controls a number of academic instruments of power. The other group primarily had to appeal to systems in place to curb abuses of that power, as well as to a populist political movement.
I believe citations in the combined proposal above meet requirements for WP:V and WP:RS. They were published in third-party sources and can be confirmed by any reader or editor. If you or anyone has specific concerns about a citation above, please list them. Jokestress (talk) 16:52, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Jokestress is entitled to that opinion. However, for better or for worse, her opinion does not change WP policy. We can argue until the cows come home over whether academics are abusing their/our power. But, no conclusion to that changes WP policy. Even if Jokestress were correct in her characterization of this discussion being a fight between powerful academics and the oppressed (which it is not), it would still not change WP policy. WP is not a battleground.
— James Cantor (talk) 17:51, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

It seems very odd to argue that one of Dreger's articles is reliable and the other one appearing in the same issue of the same journal is not. Both are verifiable (available for purchase) and in a reliable source. Dreger did not write a scientific paper. It's her interpretation of what happened. The commentaries on her interpretation and her rejoinder all sell for $32.00 each, so the publisher considers them all to have the same weight and value. They are all listed the same way in PubMed and other databases of academic output. If the Archives of Sexual Behavior is a reliable source (which I think it is), then any articles appearing in it are reliable as well. Many are papers written by pretty prominent people, so the attempt to disinclude them here seems directly linked to other attempts to suppress or discredit criticism made by CAMH critics. Claiming that LGBT news outlets are low-end or that the Haworth Press will publish anything (and is thus not worthy of inclusion) speaks to the very power imbalance and attempts at control that caused this controversy in the first place. Jokestress (talk) 18:44, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
Everything Jokestress says above is either irrelevant, an incomplete telling of the truth, or an unsubstantiated supposition. I am perfectly happy to provide the specific rejoinders to each of her claims. However, because I am providing information for the benefit of Bearian (who has just come into all of this) and not for Jokestress (who has already read them in previous rounds of this debate), I will await Bearian's input regarding whether such rejoinders would be helpful in coming to an assessment about the current issues. (I suppose it need not be Bearian; I'd be happy to summarize what Jokestress has left out for anyone who asks, but there is little point to my typing it out for the folks who have seen it already.)

— James Cantor (talk) 20:04, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

It's quite simple: publishing a target article is a common practice in academia, undertaken for the express purpose of soliciting commentaries to be published with that target article. That's what happened in this case, the fourth such issue of Archives of Sexual Behavior. To claim that the solicited commentaries that comprise the rest of the issue are somehow invalid for citation on Wikipedia because they are not reliable sources defies reason. We can open up a discussion on the noticeboard, but it seems pretty clear what's going on here. Jokestress (talk) 20:49, 11 October 2008 (UTC)

Proposed question for RS noticeboard

Peer commentaries on target article in Archives of Sexual Behavior
The Archives of Sexual Behavior (ASB) is a prominent academic journal on sexology. ASB recently published the fourth issue in their history containing a target article and numerous peer commentaries on that article. The June 2008 ASB issue is devoted to the controversy surrounding the 2003 book The Man Who Would Be Queen (TMWWBQ). The target article is by Alice Dreger and the peer commentaries discuss Dreger's target article. A dispute has arisen here involving two points of view. One is arguing for exclusion of the peer commentaries from Wikipedia, arguing they are not reliable sources under Wikipedia policies. The other is arguing that both the target article and the peer commentaries should be considered reliable sources. The involved editors are seeking outside opinions on this dispute.
Arguments for including peer commentaries

  • Target articles are published with the express purpose of generating peer commentaries.
  • Peer commentaries are verifiable (published and available for purchase in print and online)
  • Peer commentaries are in a reliable source (Archives of Sexual Behavior) alongside the target article.
  • The target article and each peer commentary separately sell for $32.00 each, so the publisher considers them all to have the same value.
  • The target article and peer commentaries are all listed individually the same way in PubMed, as well as other databases of academic output.
  • Peer commentaries are written by notable people, including John Bancroft, Ben Barres, Ray Blanchard, John Gagnon, Richard Green, Deirdre McCloskey, Charles Moser, Seth Roberts, Julia Serano, and ASB Editor-in-Chief Ken Zucker.
  • The attempt to exclude the peer commentaries on Wikipedia appears to be based on their content, which is frequently critical of the target article and the book TMWWBQ.
  • By the argument to exclude the peer commentaries, Dreger's target article is reliable, but Dreger's reply to the peer commentaries in the same issue is not.

Arguments for excluding peer commentaries

  • They are not peer-reviewed, where the target article is.
  • reason 2
  • reason 3
  • reason 4
  • reason 5
  • reason 6
  • reason 7
  • reason 8

We would appreciate your input, and an explanation of how you came to your conclusion.


Comments welcome. Anyone is welcome to make changes to the draft proposal above. I'd like to work it out here before posting it to the noticeboard. Jokestress (talk) 16:50, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

My comments: where you say "One is arguing for exclusion of the peer commentaries from Wikipedia, arguing they are not reliable sources under Wikipedia policies. The other is arguing that both the target article and the peer commentaries should be considered reliable sources." I'm not sure that completely captures the alternatives accurately. I think WP:RS is too crude a concept here. The issue is one of symmetry. All of these (Dreger's and the commentaries on it) are opinion pieces, and need to be treated as such; that is, they should be fine reliable sources for the opinions of their authors (is there any dispute on that point? I'm not sure). The contention comes in when Dreger's opinion are treated as more reliable in some sense, as in treating her paper as a history and citing her findings as if they are facts. If we're going to seek opinions on the RS noticeboards, we probably ought to make it more clear that people on Dreger's side of the argument (naturally) want to treat her article as "more reliable" in some sense, using WP:RS as their tool of wikilawyering, while people on the other side (naturally) want to give Dreger's opponents equal voice. Dicklyon (talk) 17:19, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
I see your point, but I am trying to keep this as simple as possible for the noticeboard. I doubt any reputable history journal would have published Dreger's opinion piece as is. At least one professional historian (McCloskey) was not allowed to review the draft upon request. Another professional historian called the draft "misguided and misframed" and urged major revisions which did not occur. For a bunch of sexologists to claim Dreger was subject to appropriate peer review is about as believable as the claims that Bailey's book was subject to formal peer review. In both cases, a bunch of cronies just logrolled for each other. I am sure every single reviewer in both cases is a stakeholder in this debate. But how can we explain that in the information above? Is that too much information? I'd appreciate any suggested language changes for discussion. Jokestress (talk) 17:39, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
OK, probably starting simple is best. We can add these other subtleities and viewpoints in the ensueing discussion. Dicklyon (talk) 17:43, 12 October 2008 (UTC)
Putting this up on the notice board sounds like a good idea. I disagree with Dicklyon there really are two (or three alternatives) include both the article and commentaries, exclude the whole issue of ASB, or exclude the commentaries. It's likely that the Admins will come up with something on their own. I'll bet they would say well the peer reviewed academic article can speak to the facts while the commentaries can only be a source for what was in the commentaries themselves (or some such).
Dicklyon the seeds of this dispute run deep through academia. Wikipedia reflects this. Read the pages here about citing sources and they lay out a hierarchy of sources with peer reviewed academic publications, newspaper articles from reputable newspapers as being the gold standard and with personal websites, blogs, etc being almost always unacceptable. A similar hierarchy exist throughout academia. This has lead to the condition we have now. People who may have more direct first hand information on the matter aren't listened to while academics get to write their versions. Usually the system works but in this case it is really broken.
I hardly think that a review by the illustrious McCloskey would have made any difference. Perhaps it would have given her the opportunity to dismiss Bailey's various informants and nothing but hispanic drag queens and prostitutes.
Let me digress for a bit. What would have been better in the place of dreger's work would have been to have a totally neutral third party, or a team thereof com in, interview EVERYONE involved, then produce a historical record. Just the fact that dreger worked for NU cast suspicion on her work. :-/ --Hfarmer (talk) 17:54, 12 October 2008 (UTC)


I believe the question proposed above is too long and unfocussed for the very specific purpose for which we need it. I propose instead:

A small group of editors has come to an impasse regarding whether a group of published commentaries meet WP:RS and should therefore be summarized in the article we are working on, or fail to meet WP:RS and therefore should not be included on the page. We are hoping to have the input from otherwise uninvolved editors to help us resolve the issue. (In the interests of disclosure, the editors most involved in the disagreement are user:Dicklyon, user:DarlieB, user:Hfarmer, user:James Cantor, user:Jokestress, user:ProudAGP, and user:WhatamIdoing.)
The agreed upon facts are:
  • Alice Dreger published in the Archives of Sexual Behavior an article about a controversy.
  • The Archives is a well-regarded peer-reviewed journal in sexology, the editor-in-chief of which is Ken Zucker.
  • Zucker issued an open call for commentaries on the Dreger article, all of which were published in same issue of the Archives together with the Dreger article itself.
  • In Zucker's editorial introducing that issue of the Archives, Zucker wrote the Dreger article underwent peer-review, but that all commentaries submitted were published (except for one which did not pertain to the topic).
The disagreement is:
  • To some editors, the commentaries meet WP:RS, because they appear in a peer-reviewed journal. That is, these commentaries should be treated as peer-reviewed articles.
  • To some editors, the commentaries do not meet WP:RS, because they themselves did not undergo peer review, according to what the editor of the journal wrote. That is, these commentaries should be treated as letters-to-the-editor.
So, our question is:
  • Do we treat the commentaries as reliable sources?
Any input would be appreciated.

I recognize that I am not asking about whether the Dreger article itself meets WP:RS. If that question needs to be posed, I suggest doing it in a separate post to RS/N, after this one has had time to receive input. If all the various disagreements are rolled into a single entry on RS/N, we will wind up recapitulating the whole series of arguments again ourselves, with no real input from the uninvolved editors from whom we are hoping to receive guidance.
— James Cantor (talk) 17:57, 12 October 2008 (UTC)

Collected references

  1. ^ a b c d Becker, Robert (November 18, 2003). NU investigates charges over book. Chicago Tribune
  2. ^ a b c d e Beirich, Heidi and Bob Moser (Winter 2003). Queer Science: An 'elite' cadre of scientists and journalists tries to turn back the clock on sex, gender and race. Intelligence Report
  3. ^ Sailer, Steve (july 20, 1999). Roster of Human Biodiversity Discussion Group Members.
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