2010 Oklahoma State Question 755 is currently a Politics and government
good article nominee. Nominated by
Elli (
talk |
contribs) at 04:02, 23 April 2024 (UTC)
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A fact from 2010 Oklahoma State Question 755 appeared on Wikipedia's
Main Page in the Did you know column on 15 May 2024 (
check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as
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I personally think the first hook is great. It certainly got my attention. The article itself is long, was moved to the mainspace just today, is based on reliable sources, and looks fully complete. My only potential concern is that the hook doesn't explicitly state that it was struck down in court, but I think that can probably be inferred as is.
Pac-Man PHD (
talk)
08:27, 23 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Though Earwig found likely copyvio, it's basing that off of a direct quote from the contents of the proposal, an open and free document that is properly attributed to, so it shouldn't be a violation. I think this is all in order. Still, felt it should be mentioned in case the author wants to paraphrase the contents of the proposal or if an administrator takes issue with it.
Pac-Man PHD (
talk)
08:46, 23 April 2024 (UTC)reply
Yeah as the author I generally don't think quoting the direct ballot title of the proposal is a problem (and imo paraphrasing would be less informative to our readers than seeing what voters saw).
Elli (
talk |
contribs)
09:09, 23 April 2024 (UTC)reply
@
Thebiguglyalien: sorry about the delay; my personal life has gotten quite busy so I haven't had much time to dig in and work on this more. I should have more time this week if that's alright.
Elli (
talk |
contribs)
15:51, 5 July 2024 (UTC)reply
Lead:
Nothing in the first sentence here is actually supported by the body: "State Question 755", "Save Our State Amendment", "legislatively-referred", "on November 2, 2010", and "alongside the 2010 Oklahoma elections" are all unique to the lead without any mention or source in the body.
Background:
The amendment was introduced – Since this is the first paragraph of the body, it shouldn't refer to anything previously mentioned. There are a few ways this could be reworded, but the first mention of the amendment/measure should introduce it.
This section would be a good place to describe when and how it got its name. Something like "the measure was added to the ballot as State Question 755". Maybe something about when/how it took the name "Save Our State Amendment" as well.
Was there any political activity or debate about Sharia or international law specific to Oklahoma before it was put on the ballot, or was it just the New Jersey incident?
The second sentence has two clauses in a row that start with "with".
The amendment was supported by most legislators, with only ten in the House and two in the Senate voting against the measure – Is there a party breakdown on this? Where Republicans and Democrats fell would be helpful information.
I suggest a descriptor for ACT for America, otherwise the reader doesn't know what kind of organization it is unless they click the link.
Islamic groups also opposed the measure – Who is "Islamic groups"? Right now only a guy from the Islamic Society of Greater Oklahoma City is mentioned.
Polling:
This feels like it could be part of the support and opposition section, or at least a subsection, instead of its own very short stand-alone section.
Maybe this use warrants an exception, but it's best to avoid external links in the body. The polls can be formatted as references.
Is there no other information about voter demographics or turnout?
Maybe this section could also say the date it was voted on and that it was in conjunction with the elections.
Aftermath:
"Clearly" sounds like editorializing unless it's specifically part of the legal finding. I suggest taking an exact quote of "abundantly clear".
Any information about why the Senate had so little interest relative to the House?
Spot checks:
Schlachtenhaufen (2010) – Good.
Banda (2011) – The amendment was part of a nationwide movement against Sharia law, following a case in New Jersey is contradicted by ACLU's Daniel Mach said Oklahoma is the only state to specifically target Sharia, as well as international law.
Weigel (2011) – Good.
Toensing (2018) – Good.
Reilly (2013) – Good.
Broad coverage:
Looking through the sources, it seems that a lot of additional information is still there. The article doesn't have to be comprehensive, but I personally advocate
WP:SOURCEMINEing. It's not like there's a risk of the article getting too long with lots of details.
I don't see any sort of scholarly analysis or legal commentary. A Google Scholar search says that it definitely exists. Again, I'm not going to ask that all of it be added (though that would be great), but at least a basic overview of legal/scholarly analysis is necessary for GA.
Was there any campaigning for or against the amendment, besides Gabriel's speeches?