User:Fabrickator/sandbox


reference on Sexual orientation

Consider the following url for the reference to the paper titled "Bisexuality: A contemporary paradox for women":

http://docplayer.net/43268398-Bisexuality-a-contemporary-paradox-for-women.html#show_full_text

hu-berlin.de no longer redirecting to sexarchive.info

Several pages having links to hu-berlin.de that had been getting redirected to sexarchive.info. A wikipedia search with the following search term can help to identify these links:

hu-berlin.de AND sexology

This is entirely speculative, but I have some recollection of some "kinsey" site also doing links and using "sexology" in the url (though a quick search has failed to turn this up). Consider also looking for refernces to the International Encyclopedia of Sexuality.

Update: The external links section on International Encyclopedia of Sexuality includes "IES Online" linking to hu-berlin.de and "Continuum Complete Encyclopedia ..." linking to kinseyinstitute.org/ccies/, neither of these links work.

A google search on (site:kinseyinstitute.org "ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SEXUALITY") returns some 70+ hits, at first glance, it looks like these are PDF versions of each chapter. One can argue whether these are to be preferred to sexarchive.info or not.

7daysindubai.com (fixed as of 2018-04-21)

The 7daysindubai.com website is offline. Google's most recent cached pages seem to be from around 15 February 2017.

Here are the results of a search of articles as of 2018-03-19:

privateline.com pages are online

Previously (in March 2017), it had been reported per http://privateline.com that most web pages from privateline.com should now be accessed through the wayback machine.

This appeared to have been offered as an interim workaround pending a reconstruction of the site in wordpress form, but in fact, it looks like at the time of reporting, much of the site had already been back online. Then again, maybe most stuff didn't come back online until the middle of 2019. I'm not sure, but anyway, a cursory review makes it seem that all (or at least most) of the pages are online now, and were probably online as of mid-2019.

armytimes.com excluded from wayback machine as of 2017-03-20

Most articles on armytimes.com are removed within a fairly short period of time (TBD). An exception is articles in the /news/your-army directory.

Exacerbating this is that armytimes.com is now "excluded" by the Wayback machine (this is evidently by "direct site request".)

The original issue involved "http://www.armytimes.com/story/military/pentagon/2015/06/09/military-equal-opportunity-sexual-orientation-transgender/28740207/" referenced on Sexual orientation and gender identity in the United States military.

I would have hoped that this had been archived in archive.is, but it was not. However, the following page (note the similarity of the url) is live and there are several copies in the Wayback machine:

http://www.militarytimes.com/story/military/pentagon/2015/06/09/military-equal-opportunity-sexual-orientation-transgender/28740207/

A wikipedia search of armytimes.com has 162 hits.

However, availability of armytimes.com pages on militarytimes.com is quite limited.

For instance, on XM806, there is a link to http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/04/army_light_50cal_042709w/, which returns a 404. Changing to militarytimes.com also returns a 404. Did not find anything in the wayback machine, but was able to find it on archive.is: http://archive.is/http://www.armytimes.com/news/2009/04/army_light_50cal_042709w/

List of disability-related terms with negative connotations has a reference to http://www.asha.org/publications/journals/submissions/person_first.htm.

People-first language has a reference to the following archived copy:

https://web.archive.org/web/20150511071056/http://www.asha.org/publications/journals/submissions/person_first.htm

I contacted asha.org using their contact form on 2017-03-31 asking them about this broken link. Here is the response:

The page you are looking for is unfortunately no longer available. More streamlined information regarding bias in language when reporting research can be found on the ASHA Journals Academy Manuscript Submission page. In general, we adhere to the APA Style Guide (Sixth Edition) for guidelines on person-first and bias-free language. A link to the APA Style blog is provided in the Quick Resources box of the previously linked page.

So evidently, from the perspective of ASHA, they perceive their page was used exclusively as a style guide for ASHA publication. No matter, since copies of this content are available online.

Nevertheless, Google finds about 270 pages with references to the original url.

Here are some other places this reference is available:

ft.com

Gettingft.com links to work for non-subscribers seems to be problematic. When found in a google search, the links will work, but the url of the page that you go to does not work if entered directly. It also looks like wayback links are useless. It would appear that ft.com specifically allows these redirects from google, whether there's some way to achieve that outside of google is yet to be determined.

glbtq.com

This website closed on August 1, 2015, but its contents have been preserved on glbtqarchive.com. It appears that everything is converted to PDF, but there's evidently no direct mapping to the PDF path names.

moga.mo.gov

2017-04-17: Links to Missouri statutes in the form www.moga.mo.gov/statutes/c500-599/5660000034.htm do not get properly redirected. They can be put in the form www.moga.mo.gov/mostatutes/stathtml/56600000341.html. Using a search string of insource:www.moga.mo.gov/statutes currently finds 84 matches.

2018-03-18: There's been yet another change to the Missouri statute links. Both forms of the urls shown above are now redirecting to revisor.mo.gov/main/Home.aspx, which is the main page of the Revisor of Statutes web site. In the new form, the url for section 566.034 would be revisor.mo.gov/main/OneSection.aspx?section=566.034, though the pages indicates that the appropriate url to use is revisor.mo.gov/main/PageSelect.aspx?section=566.034.

bad redirects for worldnews.nbcnews.com

As of 24 May 2017, some urls for worldnews.nbcnews.com were redirecting incorrectly. Here's an example of a url which erroneously redirects, through newsvine.com, to msnbcvvd.nbcnews.com:

This link is redirecting to:

It should instead be redirecting to:

dukechronicle.com path change

Paths have changed for historical articles to include year and month. Google searches do not seem to find the article directly; instead, the page is found as part of a page of dukechronicle.com search results.

Following pages appear likely to be affected:

While the following pages have links to urls with domain media.www.dukechronicle.com, which can usually be resolved by doing a "title" search on dukechronicle.com, I notice that some of them can be found on the wayback machine at the original "media" url, and this may provide a nicer presentation. For instance, compare archived "Secret Societies" story to the live version of the same story. Solution would be to include the live url and the archived url, but specify "deadurl=unfit" to force the archived version to be displayed. Can we include a "prefer archived version" comment in the "cite" template to help to reduce the likelihood that someone would remove the "unfit" parameter?

iom.edu domain change and missing files

What a mess!

The iom.edu domain is no more, even though a google search returns about 150 hits.

When using archive.org, everything on iom.edu/localpath gets redirected to www.nationalacademies.org/hmd/localpath, but often the new url is a 404. Additionally, the redirect effectively prevents access to the archived copies. Eccccch!

As of 2018-08-01, redirects are no longer causing a problem for wayback links.

unep.org

The domain is still with us, but most urls don't seem to be working. Mostly available through archive.is, which in most cases can be used to find "live" sites that host the content, if that is desired. And of course, archive.org is also likely to have archives.

Many or most of these links have been rescued, but there are exceptions.

Here are identified issues:

  • Kabul: Kabul wetland declared new protected area for migrating birds (fixed; rescued perm dead link)

phpwebhosting.com (fixed as of 2017-07-21)

There are a handful of subdomains of this web hosting service referenced in Wikipedia which are now dead. Among these are:

ah.phpwebhosting.com moved to buffaloah.com (fixed as of 2017-07-20)

The following pages are affected:

guilfordnative.org (fixed as of 2017-07-20)

The Guilford Native American Assocation web site, guilfordnative.org, is now dead. The only page referencing this is Guilford Native American Association.

www.pewtrusts.org site reorg

About 30 articles (evidently all PDFs) have been moved to new urls, with no well-defined mapping. The affected references in wikipedia can be found with a search on "insource:wwwpewtrustsorg". The search available on the pewtrusts.org web site seems to be generally useless. A gooogle search of "site:pewtrusts.org" along with words from the page title seems to work pretty well at finding the new url.

ecfr.gpoaccess.gov changed to ecfr.gov

The only change required is the domain. This affects approximately 400 pages. There is also one page with ecfr.gpo.gov which should be updated to ecfr.gov.

ftp.geostor.arkansas.gov moved to geostor-imagery.geostor.org.s3.amazonaws.com

There are about 20 pages with links to ftp.geostor.arkansas.gov, which have been moved to Amazon Web Services. For instance, ftp://ftp.geostor.arkansas.gov/geostor_raster_02/AHTD_MAP_SERIES/HISTORIC/Pope_County/mpope_1964_townships.pdf becomes http://geostor-imagery.geostor.org.s3.amazonaws.com/Maps/AHTD/HISTORIC/Pope_County/mpope_1964_townships.pdf.

To find the mapping, navigate to a page with the appropriate links starting from http://geostor-imagery.geostor.org.s3.amazonaws.com/index.html.

transportation.org documents moved

Documents under http://cms.transportation.org/sites/route/docs/ have been moved to http://sp.route.transportation.org/Documents/.

This affects about 30 wikipedia articles.

wwwcf.fhwa.dot.gov domain change

Documents in domain wwwcf.fhwa.dot.gov are now under domain www.fhwa.dot.gov. There are about 40 wikipedia articles affected.

rotaryfirst100.org content moved to rghfhome.org

The site rotaryfirst100.org has been usurped, and though it retains a large amount of the Rotary-related content, is isn't under control of Rotary members and the pages are "polluted" with unrelated content.

In some articles, "wayback" links are included, but it seems that a site owner can introduce redirect links potentially creating problems with pre-existing archived copies, so there's value in replacing the "rotaryfirst100" links with links to current content.

It appears that all or most of the content is hosted at www.rghfhome.org. Please do a search to find the right url.

restricted access to oxfordstudent.com

The site oxfordstudent.com returns a "403 Forbidden" error from the general internet, or at least, from my ISP in the U.S. Although google has cached pages for this site, those pages seems to contain links to unrelated content, and they are not even usable. However, archived copies from the Wayback machine and from archive.is are fine.

The site administrators have confirmed that outside access is temporarily being blocked as of 2018-04-16 and expect this to be resolved in a few days. (Problem was resolved as of 2018-05-02.)

There are some instances where deadurl=yes has been specified due to this problem. These should be changed to specify deadurl=no.

christianpost.com pages display as blank

This section has been moved to User:Fabrickator/christianpost pages display as blank.

gc.bebif.be moved to www.gracillariidae.net

The Global Taxonomic Database of Gracillariidae has moved from gc.bebif.be to its own domain www.gracillariidae.net.

Although about 40 Wikipedia pages point to the new domain, there are over 1600 affected pages that reference the old domain. When editing these pages, the local part of the url also needs to be changed. For instance,

http://gc.bebif.be/species/show/1995

could be changed to either:

http://www.gracillariidae.net/species/show/2066

or

http://www.gracillariidae.net/species_by_code/PHODDOLI

The latter is intended to do a redirect to the page which matches on the first 4 characters of the genus and the first 4 characters of the species

generic page displayed for diarioperfil.com.ar

The diarioperfil.com.ar domain is essentially non-functional. In some cases, pages may be found on http://www.perfil.com, but have not yet determined whether or not this is commonly the case. There are about 40 affected pages.

citizenlink.org redirecting to unrelated familypolicyalliance.com page

About 35 public pages (including at least one template) include links to citizenlink.org or citizenlink.com, which redirect to a generic familypolicyalliance.com page. A fair number of them already have archive links.

"over time" misspelled as "overtime"

This section has been moved to User:Fabrickator/"over time" misspelled as "overtime"

rferl.org path change

Radio Free Europe has moved a bunch of content around.

At the moment, there are 1936 articles referencing urls in the form www.rferl.org/content/*.

These seem to have been moved to something under www.rferl.org/a/.

cert.org path change

Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute's cert.org site has undergone some changes. Though the home page on cert.org and www.cert.org will redirect to www.sei.cmu.edu, the "advisories" directory remains available, but unfortunately, the content of the pages has been changed, and not in a good way.

One example of this is http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2001-13.html. The preferred url to replace this is https://www.kb.cert.org/vuls/id/952336 ... this is suggested because it actually contains relevant content whereas http://www.cert.org/advisories/CA-2001-13.html will force you to take additional steps to find the relevant content!

An alternative approach would be to specify an archived url and indicate the uselessness of the live url with deadurl=unfit.

dailyprincetonian.com path update

Older articles in the dailyprincetonian.com domain which have paths including "yyyy/mm/dd" are no longer recognized.

There are some 350 articles with this domain, but most of them seem to already have archive links.

Live pages can be found by using the "search" field on http://dailyprincetonian.com. These live pages are notably missing both date and author.

www.reagan.utexas.edu moved to www.reaganlibrary.gov

For example: http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1986/12886b.htm has been moved to https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/speeches/12886b . Currently, 424 hits.

lrc.ky.gov moved to legislature.ky.gov

Urls using the old host get redirected to the home page of legislature.ky.gov, which prevents auto-detection by Wikipedia and google (i.e. google continues to index these redirected urls).

Generally speaking, things have not been so much re-organized as they have just had the intermediate directory levels changed.

Just for reference, note that the home page for the directory of statutes has been moved from http://www.lrc.ky.gov/Statutes/index.aspx to https://apps.legislature.ky.gov/law/statutes/.

As of May 2, 2019, there are 357 hits on insource:"lrc.ky.gov".

osce.org path update

Pages in osce.org under the "documents" directory have been moved. As of May 20, 2019, there are 124 hits on insource:"osce.org/documents".

shodhganga.inflibnet.ac.in changed to sg.inflibnet.ac.in

About 800 pages are affected by this change.

Pages formerly accessible through the "archive.gulfnews.com" domain can be located using the search page at https://gulfnews.com/search ... suggested search argument is the article title. Note you just type or paste in the text, it will search automatically without pressing enter.

Approximately 200 articles are affected.

english.aljazeera.net moved to aljazeera.com

Accessing pages on english.aljazeera.net will redirect to aljazeera.com but discards local part of url, making this unfit. Simply changing the domain from "english.aljazeera.net" to "aljazeera.com" displays okay, but it seems that fairly often, a portion of the article text gets dropped. Therefore, using an archive copy is preferable. Fabrickator (talk) 08:52, 4 March 2021 (UTC)[reply]

heritagewnc.org usurped (resolved)

Donmain heritagewnc.org has been usurped. About 16 articles are affected.

The "Heritage of Western North Carolina" was site had been maintained by "Special Collections" group at University of North Carolina at Asheville. The domain was usurped sometime after 16 November 2012.

As of 3/1/2021, all references to heritagewnc.org have been resolved to archived copies.

Per 10 June 2020 IAbot edit:

sources requested for Ron Popeil

citations requested per these recent edits of Ron Popeil:

Other notes:

  • Weird Al evidently stated that the song Mr. Popeil was about Ron's father, Samuel, apparently under the impression that Samuel was responsible for the first TV commercials promoting products such as the Veg-O-Matic. He seems to have made this assumption based on "Ronco" having been formed at a later date, but Ron had been doing such TV commercials prior to the formation of Ronco.

References

questionable source for Pictet Group

See 13:35, 30 June 2015 revision of Pictet Group citing "Pictet Group Historical Archives, ref. AHP 1.1.7.1". The best candidate I could find for this citation was a document titled "The Pictet Model" as a PDF named Pictet-model-Witten-study-201907-EN.pdf on the Group Pictet website, attributed to the Witten Institute for Family Business (Wittener Institut für Familienunternehmen) of Witten/Herdecke University. Best guess as to "AHP" is that it is a reference to "Pictet Historical Archives", the title of the page that contains the link to the PDF.

Some more details about the content of the PDF:

  • Subtitled "A company that continuously reinvents its family ownership"
  • Described as "A case study by Torsten Groth and Fritz B. Simon" (Fourth Edition, July 2019)
  • Originally published in 2005 in Mehr-Generationen-­Familienunter­nehmen (Multi-generation family business)

Torsten Groth is cited on Brandstätter Group as well as various articles on German Wikipedia. Fabrickator (talk) 20:24, 22 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

wikidata entry for cited book: From mainframes to smartphones: a history of the international computer industry

  1. Claude S. Fischer
  2. Louis Galambos
  3. Lana Rakow
  4. Steven Levitt
  5. John A. List
  6. Cheris Kramarae
  7. Valerie Frissen
  8. Christian Licoppe fr:Christian Licoppe
  9. Martin Campbell-Kelly
  10. Bancroft Gherardi Jr.
  11. Paul Israel (historian)
  12. James Peoples
  13. Brian Winston
  14. Agar, John (historian) ru:Агар, Джон (историк)
  15. Robert V. Bruce
  16. Herbert Newton Casson
  17. Steve Coll
  18. Alfred D. Chandler Jr.
  19. Ithiel de Sola Pool

edits for Monte Zovetto

  • Within the article, be consistent in usage of Monte Zovetto or Mount Zovetto; my suggestion would be to rename to "Mount Zovetto" and create a redirect from "Monte Zovetto".
  • Correct typo: herbaveous (herbaceous?)
  • word usage: "people leaving the area to Germany ..."; replace "to" with a different preposition, or perhaps change to "people migrating to ..."
  • Use a standard date format for enwiki, e.g. day-month-year format (no ordinals, 4-digit years) or American date format (see MOS:Date).
  • Suggest revising this peculiar claim: "... population of approximately 4,299 residents"
  • Add {{interlanguage link}} or a wikilink for the following (consider this as just a sampling):

I Caduti della Provincia di Savona nella Grande Guerra Fabrickator (talk) 07:14, 8 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

  1. Ian Black (journalist)
  2. Kenneth Roth
  3. Wendy Pearlman
  4. Lizzie Dearden
  5. Anne Barnard
  6. Robert Fisk
  7. Oula A. Alrifai
  8. Yezid Sayigh
  9. Joshua Landis
  10. Anthony Cordesman
  11. Scott Pelley

(presumably complete) Fabrickator (talk) 17:04, 10 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

April 2016 (v. 3 no. 4)

Fabrickator (talk) 22:54, 9 December 2024 (UTC)[reply]

wikidata scratchpad

We have two main usage variants: one in which we explicitly list each language version for which we wish to provide links, and the other in which we want the complete list of available interlanguage links to be displayed.
@Mathglot: I'm going to suggest you take a look at how this is handled on Polish wikipedia. Let's see if I can summarize this in a few points:

As has been noted, something like 98% of the the usage of {{interlanguage link}} is of the former variety, and the remainder 2% or less is of the latter (presumably deprecated) variety.

  • Any link for which there's no local entry but which has a wikidata entry (presumably with an article on at least one Wikipedia, the list of the available languages is easily viewed.
In those cases where there's an English-version language of the page, we provide the complete list of languages. If there is not an English-language version, then we can provide a dynamic list of the links from wikidata (which has a history of being objected to), or we provide a static list of language links.
  • The list is dynamically updated as the availability of versions in different languages changes.
Some people advocate using a curated subset of this list, feeling that we're improving the user experience. I consider this to be objectionable, because I want to encourage access using interlanguage links. Placing this burden on the editor both discourages incorporating interlanguage links and creates something that's both contentious (different editors would select different language versions to list) and presumably would require updating, as the "best" language version would vary as the content of the various language versions changes.
  • In the event that the set of languages becomes empty, it will indicate this when you click on the link.

Fabrickator (talk) 22:11, 19 March 2025 (UTC)[reply]

NPA Code Assignment History

The code assignment history table in the Keevers article lists the number of "x"s (i.e. original assignment) by column (last 2 digits of area code) as shown below:


00: 0
01: 8 (201 301 401 501 601 701 801 901)
02: 7 (302 402 502 602 702 802 902)
03: 7 (203 303 403 503 603 703 803)
04: 6 (204 304 404 504 604 704)
05: 5 (205 305 404 505 605)
06: 3 (206 306 406)
07: 2 (207 307)
08: 1 (208)
09: 0
10: 0
11: (invalid for NPA code)
12: 7 (212 312 412 512 612 712 812)
13: 7 (213 313 413 513 613 713 913)
14: 7 (214 314 414 514 614 814 914)
15: 7 (215 315 415 515 715 815 915)
16: 7 (216 316 416 616 716 816 916)
17: 5 (217 317 517 617 717)
18: 4 (218 418 518 618)
19: 3 (219 319 419)
total: X0X: 39 X1X: 46 (omitting 219 since this was not actually assigned until 1948

(By way of explanation, this shows the number 'x's in each column of the code assignment table. thus, in the "07" column, there are 'x's under rows 2 and 3, indicating the two area codes, 207 and 307, were in the table of "original" assignments.)

Per Keevers' memo:

The first official issue of the North American numbering plan area map appeared in 1947. See Map 3. Initially 86 assignments were shown. Almost immediately it was decided to assign a separate code (202) to the District of Columbia, rather than include it with Maryland (301).

The "original" number of area codes should exclude 202. These 85 codes were established "simultaneously".

anomalies in the area code list

Area code 202 (Washington DC) is shown as having been assigned in 1947 (i.e. later than the other codes, since originally, Washington DC had been included in Maryland's 301 area code).

Area code 219 is shown with an "x" in the Keevers memo, indicating that it was actually in the original table, but in reality, this was an early "split" from Indiana, which presumably was determined in 1948.

Excluding these two area codes (202 and 219), the original list would consis of 85 area codes. The set of agreed-upon area codes reached 86 at the end of 1947, and reached 87 based on the 219 split.

Observe that "Map 3" in the Keevers memo includes area code 219, yet it omits 202 (Washington DC). This is best explained as an oversight ... i.e. when area code 219 was added to the map, it would suggest that they started with a map that pre-dated the addition of 202. In the accompanying area code table, instead of having x in the position for 202, it has "47".even though the table had area code 219, which was not added until 1948.

To make this understood I make a list for interwikies for article fi:Suomi (=:en:Finland): The default interwikies are arabic, danish, icelandic, swedesh, northern saami, estonian, english, german and russian. These languages are relevant ib finland, but these are not all the relevant languages. Finnish and swedish are the two national languages and northern saami is a m inority language and the two other saami languages skolt and inari saami are too small to be seen.

But then arabic has 21 000 speakers in Finland and somali 19 000, and then come kurdish, chinese, persian, thai, spanish, vietnamise and turkish with sometrhing between 7000 – and 12 000 each. – And now there is only arabic given in the default list and the others must be picked from the lists of different continents instead of being able to see them directly from the list. (And then there are speakers of russian, english, estonian and gereman as well, which are also either languages of neighboring countries or languages widely taught at schools)

And of the languges of the neighboring countries there are swedish and estonian and russian, which is ok, but norwegian (the two languages norsk and nynorsk) is lacking even thouhg it is a neigboring country. Instead there are are danich and icelandic that are relevant as languages of nordic countries but norwegian is just as relevant or even more brcause Finland an norway have common border unlike finland and denmark or finland and iceland.

And of the languages that are in some greater amount thaught at schools in finland there are swedish (also one of the national languages and a neighboring country), english (the most widely taught first foreign language and understood by moost of the younger people), german (also taught at schools), russian (neighboring country and also taught at schools). But of the languages that also have tradiotinally been taught at schools at least french and spanish are lacking and must be picked from here and there in the menu.

And then, because people usualyy can understand sometthing of the languases that are related to their native language or languages that are related to some languge they speak as foreign language, this gives you still more relevant languages.

For finnish speakers languages that are closely related to finnish are the baltic finnic languages, of which estonian (also languager of a neighboring country) is on the list. But again, of the smaller languages karelian, livvi and veps must be searched from the depths of the menu with an immense effort (and the rest probably are so small that tey are not listed). And because most finns speak english that has something like 80 percent lation vocabulary, the romance languages are not totally incomprehencible. But they must then again be picked from here and there.

And because swedish and german arve widly taugt at schools, those who understad them can also understand quite a bit of other nordic languages of which there are for some reason icelandic and danish but not norwegian. And same with german and other germanic languages, most notable of which is dutch.

And still same with russian and other slavic languages and french, spanish and portuguese and other romance languages.

And third, the languages of neighboring countries in a wider sense than the nearest neighbors if they are related languages or not, may be relevant. In finland, this makes relevant such languages as Latvian, lithuanian and polish (and there really are quit relrvant amonts of speakers of these languages in Finland as well).

And, of course as an european country, the national languages of all european countries are relevant for finnish speakers and should by no means be hidden in the the depths of the menu! And also relevant are the minority language´s of neighboring countries and the more distant related languages of ones own language for historical and cultural reasons.

In case of Finnish these include at least komi (other uralic languages are maybe too small or alternatively i did not find them from the depths of the menu) and hungarian (historically and culturally very important for finnish speakers and alsoi a native language of an european country).

And in case of other languages in neighboring counries (or to be sure, the whole Europe including russia) this includes their particular minority languages, which now must be picked one by one from the dephts of the menu instead of just checking them from the list directly. Especially the many different languages of the neighboring Russia are of course relevant for finnish speakers, but now they must be picked from the depths of the menu by a tremendous effort.

And so, the only way to make make the user interface usable, is to sign in and unchek this option totally.

While in a direct list the readers can directly see the languages that are relevant to them and also get an overview at one look. Fabrickator (talk) 17:14, 7 March 2026 (UTC)[reply]

The Politics of Slavery (The 1619 Project)

This regards a series of stories published in the New York Times in August of 2019, titled What the Reactionary Politics of 2019 Owe to the Politics of Slavery. See The 1619 Project for details. Fabrickator (talk) 02:03, 26 April 2026 (UTC)[reply]

See the full list of stories. User "view source" to find the "hdl" (headline) value.

See the 1619 Project complete set.]

Listing (links to be added as time permits) of the individual stories:


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).

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