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The sentence “Falk began his teaching career at Ohio State University and Harvard expressing his communistic beliefs in the late 1950s.” was sourced to Martin Griffiths, Fifty Key Thinkers in International Relations, Routledge 1999 p.74
Well, it is not there. Not on p. 74, anyway; Falk is not mentioned. If we are going to have such a statement in the article (“expressing his communistic beliefs”) it should be impeccably sourced. Seriously, folks. Huldra ( talk) 22:07, 4 December 2015 (UTC)
When reading this article for the first time, I was struck that the article's final paragraph (before the list of published works) duplicated an earlier passage. The ordering of footnotes seemed to confirm this -- after note 129, it ended, strangely, with note 100. So I was tempted to remove the duplicate passage, which had the ring of an editing error (or, more cynically, as an attempt to promote a point of view). On closer inspection I discovered that the quote was indeed duplicated, but its introduction was modified. And I could see the reason for the duplication: the quote, in which Falk's comments on the Boston marathon bombings are described as "anti-Semitic", is included under both relevant sections: 3.6 "[Notable opinions:] Boston marathon bombings" and 4 "Accusations of antisemitism".
As a first step, I decided to leave the quotation duplicated but I changed the introduction to its second appearance to reflect that it has previously been quoted, so it sounds less like an accident of poor editing. Also, I added a second footnote to the quote's second appearance, one derived from the original and far more extensive discussion of Falk's comments on the Boston marathon bombings and some of the reactions they provoked (both negative and positive). This footnote leads to Falk's original commentary which provoked the quoted accusation of anti-Semitism, and its inclusion could help a reader to judge whether the accusation of anti-Semitism is merited.
I hope these changes make the article both more professional and more neutral, but I still wonder whether the duplication of a quote -- especially a controversial quote -- is appropriate in an encyclopedia article, and if not, how best to handle this case. Any thoughts or suggestions are welcome. -- Macam14 ( talk) 17:20, 2 July 2016 (UTC)
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Aaronovitch lacks the qualifications to credibly assess the validity of Griffin's thesis or Falk's support of the book, and his comment should be removed as unsupported personal opinion. He is a journalist with an undergrad history degree, with no qualifications in science or engineering. There are many people who actually do have relevant scientific and engineering qualifications whose expertise convinced them that the evidence supports controlled demolition. That group used to include the late Danny Jowenko, a Dutch expert in controlled demolition whose company operated around the world. Shown a video of the WTC7 collapse without being told what building it was, he said without hesitation that it was an example of expert-level controlled demolition and pointed out the relevant stigmata. When finally told what building it was, it took him a long time to accept that the interviewer was being truthful. 184.56.20.130 ( talk) 22:23, 6 February 2021 (UTC)
@ Cambial Yellowing regarding the short description, I don't see how my change violates WP:BLP with unsourced content, as it states in the article that he is both a professor, as well as a part of many UN boards, etc.. I could see how he might not be considered a true "politician", but that certainly isn't unsourced. ~ Eejit43 ( talk) 17:35, 20 December 2022 (UTC)