User talk:Sugaar/Archive 5
WithdrawnI appreciate your support, but have decided to withdraw from consideration for a position as an arbitrator. The community has overwhelming found me to be too controversial to hold that position. Thanks again for your support.--MONGO 19:56, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Thulean/Lukas19I see that you are one of the roughly 10 people who has had trouble with this user Lukas19 in about a one month period. I have noticed a disturbing pattern. Take a look at his talk page for more details.--Filll 23:31, 6 December 2006 (UTC)
Minor pointHi Sugaar, I was just reading your observations to LSLM. I have to say you can be more tolerant than I am sometimes. If I had not refrained from replying to him (on the Basque people talk page or anywhere else) I would have been a lot less respectful than you are. I don't think he deserves it (not because of his ideology, which I abhore, but because of his own attitude and discourse style), but I value your conciliatory efforts, for the sake of convivencia I suppose. Just one minor point, though: would you please stop telling people I'm Canadian! I have nothing to do with Canada (except that I am of course sympathetic to the Québecois in their anti-Anglophone resistance). I was born in England (as it says on my user page). People already get confused enough about where I am from, and it is not a matter of great importance to me (contrary to what LSLM seems to think), but let's not get them even more confused! By the way, how am I doing with the BP cleanup? Maybe it's going a bit slow for your liking, but that is all the time I can offer. Pixkanaka pixkanaka... --A R King 08:23, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
I have never lived in Canada. I lived in the United States (California) as a teenager, but returned to Europe as soon as I was old enough to have the personal autonomy to do so. I slept in Canada (Vancouver) for one night thirty-three years ago. It was on my first journey back from California to England (the flight from Vancouver was cheaper, so I took the train up from Oakland, near San Francisco). I was nineteen then, and now I'm fifty-two. That is my only "Canadian connection". Some Basques hear me speaking Basque and assume I am from the Basque Country; I've had some funny experiences like that over the years. I don't think it's because I don't have a foreign accent (I do), but some people (unconsciously) seem to prefer to override the information they are getting from their ears rather than believe that someone can speak like me without having been born here. I also don't look very much like a northern European, no doubt because I am not one, genetically. Of course my friends and colleagues know where I'm from but I think they more or less treat me as they would if I was from the Basque Country, so I don't have many complaints about Basques being racist (or "fascist") at that level at least. I was recently shown a page in a book published by AEK in which I am quoted as having said at some time (I'm afraid my memory's not very good):
On the other hand, when Spanish people meet me the first thing they do is classify me as a foreigner. That is my experience. I put it down to a Spanish habit of thinking that requires them to classify the entire world into two pseudo-categories: Spanish and not Spanish. Probably deep, deep down in their collective subconscious this comes from an inability to swallow the bitter fact that their concept of Spain (Una, Grande y Libre) is nothing more than a concept, unconsummated and unachievable. They come to this country and think they are the natives and I am the foreigner. Whereas the Basques think that they (the Spanish visitors) are the foreigners and treat me like a native. So the Spanish visitors see me as a "foreigner" even though I know I belong here more than they do. The difference between a Dutchman and a Spaniard on holiday in Euskal Herria is that the Dutchman knows he is "abroad" whereas the Spaniard imagines he is "at home". Anyway, enough about that. As regards the Basque people article, first of all let me say I think it's a good article and I can see a lot of hard work has gone into it. I think of what I'm doing at the moment as something like polishing a very good stone to give the surface a good shine, as it deserves. I make no pretensions of being a historian, not even an amateur one: what I know is what comes from what is called cultura general in Spanish or else the kind of information that rubs off on you when you live in a given place, and I have lived in this country for nearly thirty years now, so I should know something, but I've learnt quite a few things from reading this article as I work through it. Probably it would be a good idea to split off the history section and make it into a separate article. That should not take much extra work as the text is already well filled out. --A R King 11:34, 8 December 2006 (UTC)
Translation of EHAK
Last night I had to answer you very briefly because I was short of time. Here are a few further thoughts on the EHAK question:
I have never heard of Euskal Herriak (other than as the singular ergative subject, of course: Euskal Herriak behar zaitu, 'The Basque Country needs you', for example; but not used as a plural). I'm not saying it's never been said, only that I've never heard of it or read it, and it sounds weird. As for Krutwig, something tells me that he was not the source of inspiration (directly, at any rate) for the people who were thinking up EHAK! My own memory (which is fallible, however) also tells me that it was first announced as Euskal Herrietako Alderdi Komunista, and if you follow my reasoning above carefully you will see that I am implying that this was probably the original name. If you're going to change a name (even unofficially), you're probably doing it to make it better, not to make it worse, and the advantage of Herrialdeetako is that it makes (a bit) more sense than Herrietako, so if some part of the Basque press has "improved" the name it would probably be from Herrietako to Herrialdeetako rather than in the opposite direction, which implies that the original was Herrietako. At least that is the reasoning I was applying in my above comments. But I wasn't relying on my memory about the party's name(s); my statements are based on a quick survey using Google that I carried out after reading your original question, before answering, so it was an empirical observation, but if you like you can replicate the experiment and do your own search on the two forms of the name (with herrietako and herrialdeetako) to see whether it is true that they both exist on the net and who has been using which! By the way I've done some translating (into English) for Gara myself and have needed to translate articles mentioning the EHAK, but since the name is not often spelt out in full, I didn't normally need to worry about translating the name, other than to gloss it (following the distinction I made above - so you see, I was actually speaking about that from experience, not just hablando por los codos for the sake of it). As for your final comment, "I'm even more confused than when I started with this," that's sort of the way I feel too :-) Alan --A R King 11:10, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
It should be Euskal HerrialdEEtako, not HerrialdEtako, although there are some (fewer) hits with the single E too (because for some Basque speakers there is no difference in pronunciation and only one e is pronounced, but it's still a misspelling). But for some reason I don't get the same results as you: there are a lot more than 18 hits (for "euskal herrialdeetako alderdi komunista" I get about 2,850), and there are pages in Basque too (perhaps there are more in Spanish than in Basque simply because there are more websites in Spanish than in Basque). Urko's "Zazpi Euskal Herriek bat egin dezagun" is obviously referring to the seven Basque provinces and is metaphorical, such as when you say in Spanish "En 1936 existían dos Españas, la republicana y la fascista"; it is not intended literally, as the beginning of the second stanza shows: "Agur eta ohore Euskal Herriari..." (singular). The second reference you mention (the slogan "Euskal Herriak bere eskola") is very clearly singular, with ellipsis of an understood verb such as "behar du", "nahi du" or "exijitzen du": "The Basque Country needs/wants/demands its (own) school (system)". (If it was in the plural, it would be grammatically wrong, or it would mean something like "The Basque Countries are their school", which makes no sense.)" Your third reference is again a singular with ellipsis of an implied transitive verb: "CAT domeinua lortutakoan, Euskal Herriak zein?" means "Now that the CAT domain has been obtained, which should Euskal Herria (have/get/ask for...)?" If there were any doubt (and there isn't), the question is spelt out in full a few lines later in the article: "Baina, orain, neure buruari galdetzen diodana honakoa da: ea zer domeinu lor dezakegun euskaldunok gure kultura eta hizkuntza nazioarte mailan ere ezagutua izateko." "But now what I ask myself is the following: what domain we Basques can obtain in order for our culture and language, too, to be known (or recognised) on an international level." Following the parallellism, the elliptical title (such ellipsis is a common Basque textual device which is quite easy to interpret for Basque speakers - if you think I'm wrong, ask somebody!) could be expanded to something like: "CAT domeinua lortutakoan, Euskal Herriak zein (domeinu lor dezake)?", i.e. "Now that the CAT domain has been obtained, which (can) Euskal Herria (obtain)?" As for your 667 Google hits for "Euskal Herriek", I had a look, and while I don't have time to examine all 667 of them, of the first ten, at first sight most are obviously referring to the same text, the Urko song we've already talked about, and as I said before, that's a poetical metaphor. --A R King 12:36, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Question on Basque identity by anon. userWhat, pray tell, makes a person "Basque" in your mind? Is it the fact that they speak Basque with fluency? If so, then by this definition you yourself would not qualify as Basque. Is it the presence of "Basque" surnames por los cuatro costados? Again, if so, by this definition you would not qualify as "Basque." Is it the fact that you were born in El País Vasco? If that's the essential qualifier then your good friend King could not be considered Basque. Is it subscription to a belief that El País Vasco should have ever greater autonomy or even total independence? If so, then some fluent Basque speakers of ancient Basque ancestry would find themselves in the absurd position of not really being Basque. So I ask you, with an open mind and without prejudice, who or what (other than the cliffs, the stones, the trees) is Basque? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 4.245.143.127 (talk • contribs)
Asian peopleReplied on my talk page. :-) --Ling.Nut 22:20, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
Article in need of cleanup - please assist if you canMila esker!Thanks for the barnstar. ¡Qué ilusión! I don't think I've done all that much yet, but this will egg me on to keep at it. I think you deserve one more than me, but I see somebody else beat me to it! Jo ta ke irabazi arte! --A R King 08:33, 14 December 2006 (UTC)
Wikipedia:Naming conventions (common names). Not the common name in Basque. Not the common name in Spanish. The common name among English speakers. That's it. Bye. Grant65 | Talk 17:41, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
Pinay06 has smiled at you! Smiles promote WikiLove and hopefully this one has made your day better. Spread the WikiLove by smiling to someone else, whether it be someone you have had disagreements with in the past or a good friend. Happy editing! Thank you for the rating. Please let us know what else to do, or the next steps. Please keep me updated, too. Best regards! --Pinay06|talk 20:27, 15 December 2006 (UTC)
KaixoHi Maju, Nice to meet you.I was wondering if you could host Basque music on Wikipedia.I'll write it on a CD. Do Basques play cricket? File:Http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/7/78/Pic7811.jpg
Ethnic groups projectHi Sugaar, I was just looking at Wikipedia:WikiProject Ethnic groups for the first time and wondering whether you are already aware of this and taking it into consideration. My guess is you probably know about it but just in case, I thought it wouldn't harm to ask. I haven't had time to read through it and assimilate the proposals, but it looks like it is relevant! Alan --A R King 09:33, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
Evaluations on WP:ETHNICHi Sugaar, Of course we've nodded at each other before, and I have seen your many recent contribs to WP:ETHNIC. I saw your recent reevaluation of Basque people in the large table on the WikiProject page, and i was wondering if you know that we are phasing out that table. If you evaluate an article using the template on that article's talk page, then you can remove that article's entry in the table on WP:ETHNIC. The (eventual) goal is to evaluate all the articles in that table, and remove the table completely. ;-) Thanks for all your hard work! --Ling.Nut 02:27, 18 December 2006 (UTC)
Hey Maju.How do I see whether u've replied my comment? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 59.144.190.212 (talk • contribs)
Basque Portal InquiryBetcha gave up on a reply ;) As a matter of fact, I'd be very interested in helping with the Basque Portal/Wikiproject. I'm an absolute wikidunce when it comes to editing/formatting/bells/whistles, though, so I'll do what I can. Thanks for the invite. - Madler 02:41, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
QuestionYou seem to be knowledgeable about Basque tpoics and I had a question. Is the surname Aranzabal of Basque origin or is it Spanish? If it is Basque do you know how common it is? Thanks 24.254.92.184 08:42, 24 December 2006 (UTC)
Basque toponyms: please give me some timeHi Sugaar, As I said last week, I will be happy to enter into a constructive discussion about your Basque toponyms proposals. I haven't started yet because I've been away and/or busy for the last few days, so please give me time. To give you an idea what to expect, I support you as far as the overall idea goes and also agree with most of your suggestions, but there are some points where I'd like to make alternative suggestions and also to explain my reasons for making them. Since I can't do this in two or three lines, I prefer to wait until I have a bit more time. So, we'll talk later, okay? As regards the Gernika/Guernica issue, it looks like things have gone the wrong way because of a combination of some people's belligerent agenda and other people's misguided judgments based on a lack of full appreciation of the facts of the case. I think your arguments are correct and balanced but there are obviously still people around who don't understand (and others who just don't want to). Perhaps with time some of them will be won over. I am convinced it is a long-term problem of general education, and that not only is this problem not limited to Gernika (or a "handful of place names" either), but it is also not limited to the Basque Country, by any means. Therefore, there are moments when it may be tactically advisable to concentrate on the general issues, and I see the Basque toponyms proposal as a step in that direction, which is why I support it. --A R King 08:40, 28 December 2006 (UTC)
GipuzkoaHola, sí, los articulos con guipuscoa en el tiulo sí son validos en la wikipedia, pero se trata de simplificar todos los redirects en uno solo. El otro dia vi el articulo gipuzkoa/guipuscoa con dos nombres diferentes y tuve que redirigirlo a gipuzkoa. Solo se trata de redirigir todas las entradas a una. Si tu me dices que es mas correcto utilizar Guipuscoa, pues se redirigen todos los articulos a Guipuscoa y listo. Ahora mismo hay mas articulos con Gipuzkoa en su titulo que Guipuscoa. --Raymond Cruise 12:33, 30 December 2006 (UTC) Saludos, Amigo.
Hi, you might want to have a look at the Wikipedia essay on the wrong version. When an article is protected, it's not an endorsement of the version that gets protected. I simply moved the article back to its original title (it looks to me like you first moved it on 11/16, and then moved it three more times in the last ten days, never with a consensus behind you) and then move-protected it. If you're going to go against a Wikipedia guideline (Wikipedia:Naming conventions), that's fine as long as there's consensus, but there didn't appear to be one, so I moved everything back to where it was at the start so that the discussion could take place without the backdrop of a contested page move. Therefore, if you're not happy with where the article is now, work through the article's talk page to form a true consensus to move it to Gernika-Lumo, and then let me know so I can remove the move-protection from the article. | Mr. Darcy talk 16:39, 1 January 2007 (UTC)
Re. Barnstar awardHey Sugaar, thank you so much for the Barnstar of National Merit! :-) That was a very kind gesture. Oh, and by the way, I have proposed a Basque Barnstar of National Merit two days ago (see here). If you like it, maybe you can just replace the barnstar in the award that you just gave me, as suggested. I'll postpone placing it on my userpage until you decide if you'd like to replace. I made the barnstar similar to others of the kind [1], although I could not make the background transparent due to lack of a good pic editor in this computer. Still, I like it. I must run now, later I'll comment on the amendments you proposed for the rotation system in Portal:Basque. Best regards,--Húsönd 13:59, 3 January 2007 (UTC)
The award has now a transparent background so I can finally give it to you as well. You truly deserve it. :-) Best regards,--Húsönd 20:34, 3 January 2007 (UTC)
Hey, thanks a lot! I'm copy-pasting it to the user page. --Sugaar 07:23, 4 January 2007 (UTC) Eskaya on peer reviewHello! Just wondering if you can take a second look on Eskaya as a peer review? . Maybe you can also ask your network of wiki friends to take a look. Any comment will really be appreciated. Thank you. --Pinay (talk•email) 07:31, 7 January 2007 (UTC) Geneticsyou seem to be knowlegable of european prehistory, i recommend you read "origins of the british" by stephem oppenheimer, a far superior book to blood of the isles ( he breaks down r1b into 14 subclades and analyizes mtdna into greater subclades too and works out where and when these subclades first appeared. --Globe01 19:00, 7 January 2007 (UTC) Template:Catholic-linkA deletion discussion in which you voted, that of Template:Catholic-link, is up for deletion review, where the template may be deleted or retained depending upon the review discussion. You are welcome to comment and/or vote at Wikipedia:Deletion review#Template:Catholic-link. The key point of this discussion is whether the "default keep by no consensus" result was correct; discussion of the template itself is secondary (but may still be important). — coelacan talk — 04:35, 16 January 2007 (UTC) I'm offI'm off because of this. I'm unhappy here anyway. You are an excellent bloke. Have a good life. Love. Alun 02:20, 28 January 2007 (UTC) Euskarazko wikipediatikKaixo Sugaar, Aste honetan euskarazko wikipedian Euskal Astea ospatzen ari gara. Ideia da ahalik eta eduki gehien jartzea Euskal Herriaren inguruan, asteko herrialdearen ideiaren baitan. Beno, harira. Gauza da historiaren inguruko artikuluak egiten hasi naizela eta nahiko zaila da guztia nik bakarrik egitea. Gainera aukeratutako gaiak agian ez dira egokienak, hau da, zatiketa nola egin den. Ni ez naiz historialaria, baina suposatzen dut gauzarik garrantzitsuenak jarri ditudala. Zure laguntza eskatu nahi dizut, beraz, orrialde hau ahalik eta gehien hedatzeko. Prest al zaude? -Theklan - Discussion 20:29, 13 February 2007 (UTC) Long time no seeHey, I haven't seen you making many edits lately and I just thought I'd see how things were going.--Joebengo 01:26, 30 March 2007 (UTC)
LSLM's RfCI noticed your comment on LSLM's RfC and the Arbcom case. But the descision has already been made. Lukas19 has a one year ban from wikipedia, as has LSLM. See Wikipedia:Requests_for_arbitration/Lukas19-LSLM/Proposed_decision#Proposed_remedies, seven arbitrators were needed for a descision, and seven have voted, all for the ban. I think that this means that Lukas19 and LSLM are both banned for a year. I suspect neither of them will be back. All the best. Alun 11:07, 3 April 2007 (UTC) Images in CommonsEgun on. I tried to use your maps in tha catalan wiki, but I was unable 'cause it seems they are not loaded in Commons (just in the English wiki). Don't you think its a pitty? (See i.e. the article Regne de Navarra, there is at least two blind images...) I am not good in these things... and you, as "The author", perhaps could help me/us. Eskerrik asko. User:Tonipares
Basque sailorsHi, I'd like to know if you wrote the Basque sailors article in the History of the Basque people? And if so, where did you get the dates of 670 and 1412 for certain events in Basque whaling history?Jonas Poole 18:44, 25 April 2007 (UTC) ThanksThanks, I really appreciate the info you provided for me. I only know of Etienne Cleirac’s claim, and a little about the 1412 claim, which appears to have been false, as noted by Einarsson (1987), who said it was actually in reference to 20-30 foreign fishing vessels seen sailing off Iceland in 1412, not 20-30 Basque whalers. Can I use you as a source for this info on my History of the Whale Fishery I’ve been writing for my group on Myspace? Due to the language barrier I can only access a limited amount of info in the English literature, so I’m really glad to have received this info on Basque whaling. Again, thanks!-Jonas Poole63.3.66.9 01:04, 27 April 2007 (UTC) Here's the site: groups.myspace.com/whalinghistory I'm guessing I would cite the info as a personal communication? -Jonas Poole Jonas Poole 01:18, 27 April 2007 (UTC) Spanish MarchI note your comments, the map was created to illustrate the text of the article, and show how the Counties related to each other geographically. The text identified Pamploma as being a political entity and at some time forming part of the March. Irrespective if it was a different entity from the Basque Kingdom it should be marked. May I suggest you look at the text to explain the position of Pamploma. Kind regards --Vivbaker 12:43, 27 April 2007 (UTC) Basque whaling"[The Basques] did this first of all on mixed ventures for both cod and whales, returning apparently not with barrels of whale oil but with whale meat in brine (which did not require the more complex and costly setting up of ovens to produce whale oil). Then, after a period of development they organized large-scale ‘industrial’ ventures aimed essentially at whaling for whale oil (alongside other ventures purely for cod)." p. 18 http://journals.hil.unb.ca/index.php/NFLDS/article/view/973/1325 This is in reference to Basque whaling in Terranova during the 16th century, generally the accepted date of the start of Basque cod fishing and whaling by most whaling historians, as there's archeological and historical documents that back up their presense there from the 16th to the 18th century. The text below, on page nine, last paragraph, speaks of the Basque-Icelandic glossaries as from the 17th century. I don't believe there are any documents that speak of Basque whaling prior to the 17th century in Iceland. http://www.galdrasyning.is/baskarnir.pdf —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Jonas Poole (talk • contribs) 18:08, 27 April 2007 (UTC). Cite?Since you were the one who found the info on the shipping of whale oil or blubbber to Jumieges I believe I should cite you, along with the book in question, as my source. I can understand why you wouldn't want to give your real name here, but you can email me if you'd like your real name so I can properly cite you as "blank, personal communication." cetacea8313@aol.com If you just want me to cite the book and not you, then message me. Jonas Poole 01:03, 28 April 2007 (UTC) Basque whaling, con.Yeah, that Basque whaling in Iceland pdf I cited mentions that massacre of about 31 or 32 of the 80 or so Basque whalers that came ashore in the Westfjords in 1615. I believe the other 50 or so whalers escaped on a fishing vessel the following sping of 1616. Hate to be bothersome with all these questions, but what did the encycopedia say about Basque whaling in southern Ireland? I only have mention of it in the 14th century by secondary sources , and I know virtually nothing else about the Basque presense there. Jonas Poole 02:57, 29 April 2007 (UTC) Lukas19Hi, you have had some dealings with this editor. I'd appreciate your opinion regarding a suspected sockpuppet if you have time. Wikipedia:Suspected sock puppets/Lukas19. Cheers. Alun 14:25, 29 April 2007 (UTC) If you are interestedIn case you are interested, there is a proposal to move an article about a 97% ethnic Hungarian settlement in Romania to its native Hungarian name. The town is called Székelyudvarhely by locals and Odorheiu Secuiesc by Romanians. For more, see the talk page of the article. Please remember that this is not a vote; comments must include reasons to carry weight. Information about Hungarians in Romania can be found at Székely, Hungarian Autonomous Province, Hungarian minority in Romania. --KIDB 06:27, 2 May 2007 (UTC) GipuzkoaI notice that the Gipuzkoa article has gone through a number of title changes without discussion. I had always seen the name as Guipuscoa in English publications, prior to 2000. See the 800 or so hits in Google books. I suspect that Gipuzkoa is closer to the original Basque pronunciation, but is there a reason that we are not using the common English spelling in accordance with Wikipedia naming conventions? –Bejnar 20:26, 18 July 2007 (UTC)
The Legal status of Hawaii PageAloha Sugaar -- I could really use your help as a member of the CSB project to take a look at this page and give your mana'o (thoughts). I am in an edit war with someone who insists that his POV can be pushed and I cannot counter it, because of "undue weight" (it is true that Hawaiians are now a minority in Hawai'i, and those both knowledgeable in history and willing and able to speak out about it are a relatively small group, but I don't think the indigenous viewpoint being squashed is ok either). I am not asking for anyone to participate in the struggle itself, but there needs to be a broader perspective, so if you can take a look at it and give your thoughts (it's okay not to know anything about the subject; it might be better that way), it would be really appreciated! Aloha, --Laualoha 04:34, 4 September 2007 (UTC) Image source problem with Image:Batasuna logo.jpgThis is an automated message from a robot. You have recently uploaded Image:Batasuna logo.jpg. The file's description page currently doesn't specify who created the content, so the copyright status is unclear. If you did not create this file yourself, you will need to specify the owner of the copyright. If you obtained it from a website, then a link to the website from which it was taken, together with a restatement of that website's terms of use of its content, is usually sufficient information. However, if the copyright holder is different from the website's publisher, their copyright should also be acknowledged. As well as adding the source, please add a proper copyright licensing tag if the file doesn't have one already. If you created/took the picture, audio, or video then the {{GFDL-self}} tag can be used to release it under the GFDL. If you believe the media meets the criteria at Wikipedia:Non-free content, use a tag such as {{non-free fair use in|article name}} or one of the other tags listed at Wikipedia:Image copyright tags#Fair use. See Wikipedia:Image copyright tags for the full list of copyright tags that you can use. If you have uploaded other files, consider checking that you have specified their source and tagged them, too. You can find a list of files you have uploaded by following this link. Unsourced and untagged images may be deleted one week after they have been tagged, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If the image is copyrighted under a non-free license (per Wikipedia:Fair use) then the image will be deleted 48 hours after 14:13, 12 September 2007 (UTC). If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. If you believe you received this message in error, please notify the bot's owner. OsamaKBOT 14:13, 12 September 2007 (UTC) |