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The only part of the criticism section that was actually encyclopedic is the part sourced to the Brookings Institute, but even there that quote is cherry picked and presented out of context. That is also the only source that *may be* worth restoring if the text is rewritten to properly reflect the actual source. Volunteer Marek 00:28, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
Re restoring of the section because “it’s been here for many years”. Doesn’t matter how many years junk has been in an article, it’s still junk and it needs to be removed. Wikipedia is the encyclopedia that is always changing and improving and removal of old policy-violating stuff is part of that process. WP:ONUS is on those wishing to include. Volunteer Marek 00:36, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
North Korea's state-run Korean Central News Agency has referred to Radio Free Asia as "reptile broadcasting services."
RFA transmits to North Korea but the opinions of North Korea about the broadcasting is not suitable for inclusion?? Burrobert (talk) 07:39, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
Kim Chol-min, third secretary of North Korea, in statement submitted at the United Nations, accused the United States of engaging in "psychological warfare" with the Democratic People's Republic of Korea through RFA.CPCEnjoyer (talk) 13:14, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
/News/Press, labeled
For information mediaat the bottom considered not "published by reliable source"? I believe if the "one random comment" didn't carry necessary weight it wouldn't be included in the UN article either. CPCEnjoyer (talk) 16:06, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
I'm going to jump in and play the administrator for a moment. FYI, I just blocked that Greek IP for edit warring. Volunteer Marek, I appreciate you getting this going, though the discussion has meandered a bit. I'm a big fan of "small" RfCs that propose specific things, but I think I can distill a bit of consensus out of this already, a consensus that I think is in agreement with policy:
But I want to add that some editors here are too trigger happy. Volteer1, you made this revert on 11 June, 00:33, but 23 minutes later you agree, here on the talk page, that the reptilian quote was silly; 13 minutes later you agree that a criticism section is not the way to go, and 20 minutes later you confirm all this again. So the revert, from my perspective, was unnecessary (the argument from "SILENCE" is really always weak), and only raised the temperature, as did the earlier false claims of VANDALISM (and thank you for confirming that that was indeed incorrect on the part of CPCEnjoyer). Finally, CPCEnjoyer, it is clear from elements of this discussion that there are some finer points here that you simply were not familiar with, including things about due weight, and some more elementary things about secondary sourcing, and about which particular sources are secondary and which aren't. That's fine, we all had to learn this at some point, but it does not behoove one to either start or continue an edit war if, as was made clear, the arguments simply weren't there. And if one accuses other editors also of vandalism and makes other edits that veer into the personal, one invites scrutiny.
I don't think all discussions on article content are done here, but I hope that a. someone will take up the "Response" section seriously, to cover the subject matter from the beginning and b. that editors will take each other a bit more seriously, and study the matter carefully before making blanket reverts of individual, well-explained edits. Thank you, Drmies (talk) 19:43, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
This revert: . What consensus are you talking about? That phrase was only recently included to the page , and without any actual consensus, as one can see from discussion you mentioned . More important, the lead suppose to summarize some content from the body of the page. What section of the article this phrase summarizes? I do not see any, not in the present version, nor in the version that existed when it was included first time to the lead. My very best wishes (talk) 17:33, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
CPCEnjoyer (talk) 21:20, 11 June 2021 (UTC)[...] in a separate category, the ‘non-profit, grantee corporations’ Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) and Radio Free Asia (RFA). Although it is claimed that this arm’s-length structure acts as ‘a firewall, protecting editors and reporters from government and congressional censorship’ this is something of a fiction as the broadcasters are funded by Congress and expected to serve clear foreign policy purposes-which they do, in the case of the surrogates in particular, with missionary zeal. [...] Catharin Dalpino of the Brookings Institution has called Radio Free Asia ‘propagandistic. It focuses on dissidents who articulate western values and democracy'
— Smyth, Rosaleen (2001). "Mapping US Public Diplomacy in the 21st Century". Australian Journal of International Affairs. 55 (3): 421–444. doi:10.1080/10357710120095252. ISSN 1035-7718.
EuanHolewicz432, you were the one to point out that NPOV discussion. I just read it: there is NO WAY that you can say "This was reached by consensus". It was not, and it is quite clear that in that discussion all kinds of problems were raised, including the singling out of RFA. And you were dealing with some pretty seasoned editors there, including User:The Four Deuces and User:Masem. Now is not the time for me to go into detail on how RfCs can work, and how it is frequently administrators who close them especially when matters are contentious, but I will say that you are not correct, and I will reiterate that the NPOV discussion gives you no warrant whatsoever to claim there was consensus on this wording. And, speaking as an editor, it should be clear that the wording you reinstated is really vague and undue, and that the sourcing is pretty lame: that archived version of the NBC article, where the only rationale for the claim is "slew of recent news headlines" about the BBG, not even directly about RFA. Drmies (talk) 20:12, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
that suggested language is fine., so I can't consider that particular point of yours valid. If it proves this much of an issue I can withdraw this claim of consensus, even though I still strongly believe we found common ground in that discussion. Regardless of this consensus I do not agree to the edit herein, MarkH21 showed a good couple sources that backed up the claim and I'm not sure why some of them were left out in the final sourcing, which was quite enough for due weight in context of an attributed minority viewpoint. I stand by the views expressed above regarding the solution to the issue presented here. --EuanHolewicz432 (talk) 20:29, 11 June 2021 (UTC)
Following the discussion above, I want to say that this edit by CPCEnjoyer is actually a misrepresentation of the source he used . According to this source,
The station was born in controversy ... Catharin Dalpino of the Brookings Institution has called Radio Free Asia "propagandistic. It focuses on dissidents who articulate western values and democracy". On the other hand US Rep. Ed Royce, a member of the House Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacifc, who authored a bill to expand the scope of Radio Free Asia, claimed that the role of the station was to counter the propaganda of the Chinese government: "Radio Free Asia is the only free press in China. Chinese citizens have been without an honest form of journalism. The creation of RFA and its expansion has allowed the Chinese people to finally hear what’s really going on in their country rather than hear from government propaganda." Hopkins noted that RFA "while factually accurate, give s special space to Chinese dissident news and internal strife in China", a point also made by Senator Joseph Biden (1998) in support of an amendment to expand the station’s budget
Although it is claimed that this arm’s-length structure acts as ‘a firewall, protecting editors and reporters from government and congressional censorship’ this is something of a fiction as the broadcasters are funded by Congress and expected to serve clear foreign policy purposes-which they do, in the case of the surrogates in particular, with missionary zeal.
He included as inline quotation only words by Dalpino, but omitted everything else to support the statement that "Some commentators have characterized Radio Free Asia as U.S. propaganda". This is an obvious misrepresentation by omission, because the source provides a balanced description and puts more emphasis on words by people who held an opposite position.This is false, the reason I shortened it is because of stylistic issues, if I put in the whole thing proposed by MarkH21, the box that appears when hovered over would get even more stretched, (see here for example), however I do not object if you wish to add the whole thing in and can make it look good, my only issue was the box stretching anyway. CPCEnjoyer (talk) 10:30, 12 June 2021 (UTC)
[...] the ‘non-profit, grantee corporations’ Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) and Radio Free Asia (RFA). Although it is claimed that this arm’s-length structure acts as ‘a firewall, protecting editors and reporters from government and congressional censorship’ this is something of a fiction as the broadcasters are funded by Congress and expected to serve clear foreign policy purposes-which they do, in the case of the surrogates in particular, with missionary zeal.
The U.S. is propagandizing the world with a jumble of wasteful, redundant radio and TV programs - Voice of America, Radio Free This-and-That.
[...] The difference now is that VOA's one-time purpose to report objective news is being replaced by congressionally-favored political programming with clear ideological agendas.
The header is misleading. The two subsections are oppression and persecution of the agency and its journalists by china govt. I 'demoted' the sectioning but was reverted. Please reconsider.- Altenmann >talk 22:29, 13 June 2021 (UTC)
@Paragon Deku:, I've reverted your insertion of material into the lead. I don't think that the number of citations (3) over the entire span of the life of the organization is due there (more than a score of years), and the notion that it's good to include because reflects the body seems to be a bit off when there is an acknowledged need that the reception section needs to be expanded so as to not be slanted one way. — Mikehawk10 (talk) 20:23, 26 June 2021 (UTC)
(edit conflict)To respond to a few things above:
absurd. The disruption on this page was, in fact, explicitly mentioned as a possible concern by Chipmunkdavis in the discussion that preceded the proposal that led to the creation of the general sanctions.
slow and deliberate with how we make changeswhile re-adding long-standing content, but somehow stand behind the removal of 4K bytes on a whim within 7 minutes. CPCEnjoyer (talk) 15:06, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
This draft RfC is not yet open for comments. Please discuss changes to the format of this RfC on the talk page, but do not comment on the topic of the RfC itself until it opens. |
Should the lead section of this page state that some commentators consider Radio Free Asia to be propaganda?
— Mikehawk10 (talk) 01:20, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
@Paragon Deku, Burrobert, BSMRD, My very best wishes, CPCEnjoyer, Volunteer Marek, RenatUK, and Thomas Meng: Hello all! This is a draft RfC regarding the question of how to handle the lead, and I've pinged you because you have either participated in the procedurally closed RfC in the section below, or because you've commented in the section above. Are there any objections to using the question and options above for an RfC that would pertain to the lead? — Mikehawk10 (talk) 01:20, 29 June 2021 (UTC)
There is disagreement over whether or not a reception/criticism section should exist within the article to describe the characterization of Radio Free Asia by certain analysts as a propaganda outlet for the United States.
Paragon Deku (talk) 21:00, 27 June 2021 (UTC)
Some commentators have characterized United States international broadcasters such as Radio Free Asia and Voice of America as U.S. propaganda.
Some commentatorswho?
such as Radio Free Asia and Voice of Americawhy is it necessary to mention Voice of America? This article is about Radio Free Asia, not about Voice of America. Voice of America has its own article. --Renat 01:58, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
I was told an RfC may be in order by another editorjust because someone told you to create RfC, doesn't mean that you need to do it. --Renat 02:14, 28 June 2021 (UTC)
forefront of newsgatheringin Xinjiang and comments positively on their reporting. The New York Times [repeatedly https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/01/world/asia/a-voice-from-chinas-uighur-homeland-reporting-from-the-united-states.html] refers to it as a
news service. The Guardian reports that RFA is a
news group whose journalists have produced some of the most detailed reporting on the heavily securitised region of Xinjiang. None of these reputable sources refer to it as propaganda, and in fact they seem to indicate quite the opposite. To state that a reputable news agency is propaganda is, therefore, an extraordinary claim, and it requires extraordinary sourcing. We simply don't have that here. Mentioning this in the lead seems WP:UNDUE.
some people say, which bears a resemblance in form and function to the use of
Some commentators have characterizedin the version that some editors prefer; these are exactly the sorts of phrasings that would ordinarily get tagged with a {{By whom}} template.
Shouldn’t we have more information on the organization’s first iteration that began in the 50s? As is we’ve maintained the founding date as the initial org but haven’t explained much about its existence. Paragon Deku (talk) 18:07, 2 July 2021 (UTC)
The onus to achieve consensus for inclusion is on those seeking to include disputed content.So, what Horse Eye's Back said is accurate. I think the other editors that you “consulted off-wiki” with are mistaken. OhKayeSierra (talk) 22:33, 3 July 2021 (UTC)
In my attempt to research the topic and find more sources, I’ve discovered that between the first iteration of RFA and the modern iteration of RFA, yet ANOTHER broadcasting service existed called “Radio of Free Asia” that specialized in broadcasts to Korea and Vietnam. It was a product of the Eisenhower administration in the same way that the modern iteration was formed under the Clinton administration. All three have had the same goal of broadcasting American reporting into Asian countries seen as having oppressive regimes. Ultimately, this seems to be an organizational issue. Do all three organizations (which have similar goals and similar relationships to the federal government) need their own pages, or should they be gathered under the same name? Maybe Radio Free Asia should lead to a disambiguation page for the three outlets. Paragon Deku (talk) 22:36, 5 July 2021 (UTC)
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