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Claim in second paragraph of lede

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As of this writing, the second paragraph of the lede reads:

"Coverage of The Grayzone has focused on its criticism of American foreign policy, its misleading reporting, and its sympathetic coverage of authoritarian regimes, including those of Syria, Russia, and China." Right now I want to focus on the "misleading reporting" claim. The two sources for it (here and here) are both behind paywalls. There are quotes from both of these sources, which read as follows:

Number 1: "These grassroots communities are particularly evident on Twitter, where they coalesce around individual personalities like right-wing activist Andy Ngo, and around platforms with uncritical pro-Kremlin and pro-Assad editorial lines, like The Grayzone and MintPress News. These personalities and associated outlets act as both producers of counterfactual theories, as well as hubs around which individuals with similar beliefs rally. The damage that these ecosystems and the theories that they spawn can inflict on digital evidence is not based on the quality of the dis/misinformation that they produce but rather on the quantity."

Number 2: "The Grayzone, a publication known for misleading reporting in the service of authoritarian states..."

Do we actually have any examples of such misleading reporting? Do the two sources elaborate at all on this? Are there any freely available articles that can attest to this and give specific examples? Professor Penguino (talk) 08:43, 8 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

The examples are described throughout this article in the "History" and "Reception" sections. — Newslinger talk 23:09, 8 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Where, exactly? I've read through the whole article. The closest thing I saw to something that could be called "misleading reporting" was some of their claims about the Russia-Ukraine war. EDIT: To clarify, I can't find anything on a lot of their reports, which seem pretty well done and verifiable. Specifically, their Marioupal theatre bombing article was criticized, but whether their human shields story was really "debunked" is questionable. Professor Penguino (talk) 00:17, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I've been bothered by this for years, @Professor Penguino. The three things that are usually brought up are:
1) misleading reporting about the Syrian chemical attacks. Aaron Mate has spent more time than any other journalist in the world on the topic, and he dissents from the mainstream narrative (that Assad ordered his military to gas his own people). Sources will describe Mate's reporting as "misleading", but they do not bother to explain why it is misleading, or to address any of the concerns Mate has raised.
2) misleading reporting about the war in Ukraine. One example from the article is the "debunked" claim that Ukraine used human shields. It was "debunked" by a Ukrainian open-source intelligence company with ties to the government of Ukraine. Not a source that should be taken at face value - I'm sure Hamas has "debunked" the claims that they use human shields, too, but only pro-Hamas or anti-Israel POV-pusher would put that in Wikivoice.
3) misleading reporting about the Uyghurs in China. They have "downplayed the genocide" or some variant of that. Again, this is generally asserted without evidence. Even if we accept the hypothetical that the Grayzone has "downplayed" the "genocide" against the Uyghurs...many mainstream outlets have arguably "downplayed" the "genocide" of the Palestinians, but we don't use Wikivoice to call those outlets "misleading".
Overall, I have not seen evidence that the Grayzone has a higher rate of "misleading" or factually incorrect statements than any mainstream newspaper. Sure, they're not perfect, but every RS makes mistakes, too (like when the NYT repeated CIA propaganda that said Iraq had WMDs, oops).
But, because they rock the boat by making sustained, systemic critiques of US foreign policy, other, more pro-establishment outlets frequently attempt to manufacture consent by simply asserting that the Grayzone is "misleading", without bothering with the details. Pro-establishment outlets have a vested interest in making sure the Grayzone is regarded as "fringe" and "misleading", so they regularly recruit know-nothings to write sloppy hit pieces about the outlet, like the recent Washington Post piece that had to be corrected. Such hit pieces should be understood in the context of Manufacturing Consent and the business model of corporate media, IMO, they should not be taken at face value and regurgitated without context, any more than we should take an RT article about the war in Ukraine at face value.
Some editors feel very strongly about making sure this article bludgeons the reader over the head with negative insinuations, so I don't think you'll have much success in your current line of inquiry, @Professor Penguino, but I commend you for looking into it. An entire essay about systemic bias on Wikipedia could be written, just about this one article. Philomathes2357 (talk) 00:48, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Very, very well put. Thank you. Professor Penguino (talk) 01:43, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wong (2022) cited an example of misleading reporting: a Grayzone article claiming that Hong Kong protestors are aligned with the US far-right. Your comment overlooked The Grayzone using false AI-generated information to criticize the Navalny documentary and publishing a false confession by student protester Valeska Sandoval. Philomathes2357 mentioned several other topic areas in which The Grayzone' has published misleading reporting.
Although you and Philomathes2357 may disagree with how reliable sources describe The Grayzone's misleading reporting on a range of topics, disagreeing with reliable sources is not a policy-supported reason to remove them from this article. Also, if you disagree with how Wikipedia covers other publications and events, that is irrelevant to this article; feel free to add your perspective to the talk pages of the relevant articles and be sure to cite reliable sources that support your position.
Your opinion of The Grayzone's reliability differs from community consensus. A 2020 RfC found consensus to deprecate The Grayzone because it publishes "false or fabricated information". — Newslinger talk 05:18, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
1) I am aware of the 2020 RfC.
2) Honest question: what was supposedly misleading about the Hong Kong article?
3) Although using AI isn't something I support, it seems weird to then say the Grayzone is primarily known for "misleading reporting" based just on that. I believe the Grayzone removed it from their website, too.
3) From the Business Insider article on the false confession, which I have already heard about: "Although the campaign revealed Monday was largely aimed at a domestic, Nicaraguan audience, it had an international reach. The student protester's false confession, for example, was circulated by a British supporter of the government, John Perry, who adopted a fake identity to publish commentary on the episode at The Grayzone, a US-based fringe website that has promoted the Ortega government's line on social unrest in the Central American country." This is certainly a notable incident, but I still don't think you could say the Grayzone is known specifically for "misleading reporting" just from this. It also seems that The Grayzone removed it from their website after learning the confession was fake.
4) I did not propose removing the sources, but I would very much prefer if there were better evidence to back them up. Professor Penguino (talk) 06:28, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The Grayzone article accused protestors in Hong Kong, including politician Joshua Wong, of supporting their "far-right sponsors in Washington" and also claimed that Donald Trump was a "sponsor", with no evidence of such sponsorship.
According to SimilarWeb, The Grayzone is the 60,643rdth most popular site in the US and the 141,678th most popular site in the world. As a fringe site with relatively little traffic, The Grayzone isn't covered by other publications in detail very often. The available reliable source coverage, which is cited in this Wikipedia article, explicitly states that The Grayzone publishes misleading reporting. Per the policy against original research, it is not our role on this article talk page to independently assess whether The Grayzone's coverage is misleading for the purpose of including our assessment in the article, since such an assessment cannot be cited in Wikipedia unless it is covered by reliable sources (as the 2020 noticeboard RfC was). — Newslinger talk 09:48, 9 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I second the comments and concerns of @Newslinger:. Not only is it a violation of original research, it is also forbidden advocacy of fringe POV to now defend The Grayzone in the face of RS criticisms. If a RS defends them, we might be able to use that RS as a counter POV, but what editors must not do is push their own defense of a fringe source. Don't independently assess The Grayzone. Simply document what RS, and only RS, say about it. It's worrying that you don't see the many flaws in their coverage of political events and POV and then come here and question the views of the RS used in the article.
It's best to drop the stick, and if you still feel a need to defend fringe sources like this one, then do it elsewhere, because Wikipedia is not to be misused for advocacy and defense of fringe POV. If you don't feel at home here (that seems pretty obvious), then stick to other topics and do some constructive wikignoming. No one will fault you for that. -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 18:54, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Wikipedia sides with RS. To side with unreliable sources is to oppose WP:RS and WP:V. Never do that. -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 20:00, 10 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
It seems to me that @Professor Penguino and @Philomathes2357 understand just fine the importance of an encyclopedia based on reliable sources. Their complaint here seems to be that dubious, unsubstantiated, non-notable or otherwise unsuitable claims by typically reliable sources are included in this article. I agree with their concern. This page is not at all what I expect from a Wikipedia article about a news source, even a fringe one. It reads primarily as a laundry list of grievances about specific controversies that have received coverage in RS, with a lot of insinuations and loaded language smuggled into wikivoice from the source. In some cases, where the content is well developed and presented neutrally, the criticisms of The Grayzone from RS are informative. However, it seems to me that this article suffers from the assumption that nearly anything published by a typically reliable source is suitable for inclusion. In reality, we know that even reliable sources routinely make mistakes and are vulnerable to systemic bias. As editors we can assess the suitability of material from reliable sources.
The article also hurts its credibility by parroting the bias-laden framing of its sources, for example through the use of language like "conspiracy theories" and "authoritarian regimes" which is intended to disqualify its subject from legitimate debate. It comes off as patronizing and insecure. If the case against The Grayzone has merit, wouldn't it be better to just list the governments, or describe the theories, and let the reader decide for themself how to categorize those things?
Let's compare two parts of the article to illustrate my point:
The Grayzone promoted the Nicaraguan government's narrative on the 2018–2022 Nicaraguan protests and the November 2021 Nicaraguan general election. The platform also conducted an "unquestioning interview", according to The Guardian, with Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega. Blumenthal and Norton expressed their support to the regime dancing to "El Comandante se queda" (English: The Comandante Stays) a cumbia song composed in support of Ortega during the 2018 protests.
This is a great section. It explains The Grayzone's relationship with the Nicaraguan government in neutral terms and substantiates claims about that relationship. Nothing is insinuated and no pejorative language is used. Despite the fact that the coverage is critical, a reader who supports the Nicaraguan government might still find this section informative.
The website also downplayed the scope of China's Xinjiang internment camps and other widely reported abuses by the Chinese government
This section, like the source it draws from, treats the strongest allegations about a hotly contested, complex geopolitical and human rights issue as if they're indisputable historical fact. Although it has been "widely reported" as the article says by RS, the scope being "downplayed" here is not widely accepted outside of the West. The contentious nature of the topics covered here should already make the language of downplay or denial unsuitable for this article in the absence of a stronger substantiation of what exactly is being downplayed, what claims have been made, etc. This article, already a source for the section, actually does go into considerable detail about The Grayzone's POV on the issue, as do a number of the other sources in this article that push back on their claims. It may indeed be the case that Grayzone is downplaying China's true actions in Xinjiang, but treating that statement as if it's already certain in the absence of any further evidence is just bias, which our sources are allowed to have but Wikipedia shouldn't, even if the sources do.
I think there is plenty of room to improve the article through a more judicious presentation of the information in reliable sources. Let's trim the use of loaded language, substantiate the claims made in RS that have merit and remove sources that make unsubstantiated claims (such as ones that simply say something like "the grayzone publishes conspiracy theories" without any evidence). Finally, I think that some inclusion of The Grayzone's POV, without laundering the website's reputation, would help make the article more informative and credible. Unbandito (talk) 05:27, 11 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Reliable sources are not biased or mistaken just because they consistently assess The Grayzone's content unfavorably; such an argument presupposes that The Grayzone should be assessed more favorably than reliable sources do, which is a personal opinion, i.e. original research. The contents of this article are in line with articles about other publications that have been identified as questionable by both reliable sources and the Wikipedia community, e.g. Breitbart News (RSP entry) and InfoWars (RSP entry). The article mentions The Grayzone's favorable coverage of authoritarian regimes because The Grayzone is a political website, and one of the most defining characteristics of a political website is its political orientation. Likewise, it is common for news websites known for disseminating conspiracy theories to be described as such in their Wikipedia articles. The Grayzone's political orientation and history of publishing conspiracy theories are both elements of "The Grayzone's POV". — Newslinger talk 07:28, 11 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Venezuela

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WP:OR says that Wikipedia articles must not contain original research. On Wikipedia, original research means material—such as facts, allegations, and ideas—for which no reliable, published source exists.
I don't think the policy prohibits editors from assessing the credibility of information from sources that are typically considered reliable, and using discretion in determining what content from RS is suitable for inclusion.
Let's take the case of Venezuela here. Here's what the article and its sources claim about Venezuela:
1. Grayzone publishes conspiracy theories about Venezuela.
2. Grayzone covered the 2019 shipping of humanitarian aid to Venezuela and claimed that US Government reports of a fire started by pro-government forces were unfounded. This claim turned out to be likely true, and is now supported by reporting from the New York Times and other RS.
3. A source used in the article (the article does not reproduce this claim, it just borrows the conspiracy theory label from it) says that Grayzone cited GlobalResearch writer William Engdahl’s conspiracy theories about the “oily hands” of George Soros pertaining to Serbian pro-democracy group Otpor, in this article. However, the article itself doesn't say anything about oily hands or Soros; Engdahl's work is quietly hyperlinked in the following sentence: CANVAS is a spinoff of Otpor, a Serbian protest group founded by Srdja Popovic in 1998 at the University of Belgrade. Otpor, which means “resistance” in Serbian, was the student group that gained international fame — and Hollywood-level promotion — by mobilizing the protests that eventually toppled Slobodan Milosevic. The article as a whole is an analysis of Juan Guaido's connections to Western governments and NGOs. If it contains other factual inaccuracies, not to mention conspiracy theories, the cited RS doesn't meaningfully critique them.
So I think we have a case here where, though the RS is saying something, it doesn't stand up to scrutiny. I think the best way to fix this would be to move away from vague, accusatory terms like "conspiracy theory" in favor of specificity about the claims being made by Grayzone and why and to what extent they're rejected by RS. This is also what I meant in my previous comment by including some of Grayzone's POV without laundering their reputation. For another example, take a look at this passage from another cited article about Grayzone:
US online outlet The Grayzone published a lengthy hit piece, calling CIJA “the Commission for Imperialist Justice and al-Qaeda”, claiming we were collaborating directly with Isis and Jabhat al-Nusra affiliates. It was reproduced in other alternative media outlets and among social media enthusiasts. But, more worryingly, calls from the people who work in the field of international criminal justice and Syria started coming in. These are not the types who would normally believe in conspiracy theories, and the majority of them are apolitical. However, the more the hit piece circulated, the fewer people focused on its source – a Kremlin-connected online outlet that pushes pro-Russian conspiracy theories and genocide denial – and focused instead on what was being said about the people in their field who are so rarely in the media.
Here we have two ways to present the information from this source. We can say:
1. The Grayzone pushes pro-Russian conspiracy theories and genocide denial
2. The Grayzone claimed CIJA was working with ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra affiliates, a claim which has been rejected by XYZ reliable sources for ABC reasons
I would say the second option looks far more encyclopedic, credible and informative than the first. Unbandito (talk) 13:40, 11 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
We can do both at the same time: The Grayzone pushes pro-Russian conspiracy theories and genocide denial when it claimed CIJA was working with ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra affiliates, a claim which has been rejected by XYZ reliable sources for ABC reasons." -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 19:20, 11 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Exactly. When reliable sources state both A and B, it is a false dilemma to ask Wikipedia editors to choose between covering either A or B, but not both. — Newslinger talk 08:30, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The text by F. William Engdahl (a blogpost on his personal site) which Blumenthal and Cohen cite contains these words: "Many in Hungary smell the oily hand of Hungarian-born regime-change financier George Soros behind the Popović appearance now in Budapest." Blumenthal and Cohen link to Engdahl on this topic a bunch of times from GZ (as well as from Twitter, as the footnote in the cited journal article notes).
But that's irrelevant, as we're citing a reliable source which gives significant coverage to the topic of our article, and we ourselves don't quote the "oily hands" line. What matters is that this RS is one of the many, many RSs which tells us that GZ "published conspiracy theories about Venezuela, Xinjiang, Syria, and other regions".
The fact is that this is the language that RSs consistently use, and no RS contests or contradicts it. The closest there is to an RS doing so is Greenwald in The Intercept, which we also cite even though it's an outlier among RSs. BobFromBrockley (talk) 08:11, 12 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I've restored "Venezuela" to the phrase "published conspiracy theories about Venezuela" in Special:Diff/1229125533, as the claim is supported by the citation. — Newslinger talk 01:08, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Let's take a closer look.
The source says that The Grayzone has "cited William Engdahl's conspiracy theories about the 'oily hands' of George Soros pertaining to Serbian pro-democracy group Otpor". But The Grayzone's article does not mention George Soros (or hands, oily or otherwise) and, as @Unbandito pointed out, Engdahl is not invoked, the Engdahl work is only briefly hyperlinked in passing, and Engdahl's work is not cited to make any claims about Venezuela.
So, while "Alexander Reid Ross" has asserted that The Grayzone spreads conspiracy theory narratives about Venezuela, none of those narratives are mentioned - the allegations made in citation 134 are not about Venezuela. So we have one source, with an author of questionable integrity (see below), making an accusation without evidence. That might be worth a mention in the body, in the form of an in-text attribution. But it's definitely not sufficient for Wikivoice in the lead.
Alexander Reid Ross has a history of...excessive excitement, shall we say, when it comes to slapping labels on people. From our own Wikipedia article: "In 2018, Ross published an article titled "The Multipolar Spin: how fascists operationalize left-wing resentment" in the Southern Poverty Law Center's (SPLC) blog Hatewatch. After receiving complaints, the article was taken down and an apology was extended to "those who believe they have been falsely described" as "white supremacists, fascists, and/or anti-Semites". I'd hesitate to use any contentious or loaded label that Ross applies, unless other, more reliable sources corroborate his claims with evidence.
I think Unbandito already laid out the solution: " I think the best way to fix this would be to move away from vague, accusatory terms like "conspiracy theory" in favor of specificity about the claims being made by Grayzone and why and to what extent they're rejected by RS." Philomathes2357 (talk) 02:28, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I feel that my edit here was justified. I tried to sum up the claims made about Grayzone's publishing on Venezuela in my comment above. There is the claim about the aid truck fire, and the claim about hyperlink to William Engdahl on Serbia in an article about Venezuela.
Which of those claims supports the phrase published conspiracy theories about Venezuela? Did you find something in the source that I didn't?
On the other hand, I find @Valjean's take on Grayzone's claims about Syria more agreeable. The other sentence from the source, US online outlet The Grayzone published a lengthy hit piece, calling CIJA “the Commission for Imperialist Justice and al-Qaeda”, claiming we were collaborating directly with Isis and Jabhat al-Nusra affiliates. seems to portray straightforwardly conspiratorial rhetoric from The Grayzone. I intend to investigate the source of this claim a bit further, as it seems possible to me that “the Commission for Imperialist Justice and al-Qaeda” is more of a rhetorical flourish than a literal claim, but if the source is being honest in its portrayal of the Grayzone hit piece, then I'd agree that we can include both the longer exposition of their claims and the conspiracy theory label. Unbandito (talk) 13:23, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The source (an academic, however excitable, in peer reviewed webjournal, b2o, says that GZ "cited William Engdahl's conspiracy theories about the 'oily hands' of George Soros pertaining to Serbian pro-democracy group Otpor". True, original research reveals that the Grayzone's article does not mention George Soros by name or his hands, but it does cite Engdahl, an insane piece in which he uses that exact phrase, and as the same footnote points out, it was not only in that one article that the authors drew on this conspiracy theory. It's very solid.
WP editors' views on the quality of the author's level of excitement aren't relevant to that. The SPLC piece, by the way, contained not a single factual inaccuracy; SPLC bowed to pressure when threatened with expensive lawfare after already having been targeted by conspiracy theorist Maajid Nawaz over an article by a different author.[1][2][3][4][5][6] BobFromBrockley (talk) 13:58, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Bobfrombrockley: very well said. -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 17:46, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Note: not only Reid Ross says this. Results of very quick google:
Coda Story: “While the number of left-wing voices denying China’s ongoing repression of the Uyghur people is few, those that do exist are vociferous and well-organized. Of these, The Grayzone is by far the most influential. In recent years, it has taken a variety of contrarian stances on world affairs, from supporting the Assad regime in Syria to backing Venezuela’s authoritarian leader Nicolas Maduro.”[7]
The Insider: “The Grayzone, founded by American journalist Max Blumenthal in 2018, presents itself as an investigative media organization. However, the outlet has been accused of denying the existence of human rights abuses against Uighurs, propagating unfounded conspiracy theories about regions like Venezuela, Xinjiang, and Syria, and actively promoting pro-Russian propaganda during the Russian invasion of Ukraine.”[8]
Pulse: “Are purveyors of fake news endangering the lives of real journalists? … Univision journalist Jorge Ramos and his crew were detained by Venezuelan authorities... It took little time for Maduro’s American supporters to initiate a smear campaign against the journalist. At the vanguard of all this is Grayzone Project editor Max Blumenthal, a blogger with a history of ethically questionable behavior.”[9]
Efecto Cocuyo, via ProBox Digital Observatory: “In June 2020 an investigation published by IPYS Venezuela already told how The Grayzone, which defines itself in Spanish as “independent media dedicated to investigative journalism and analysis on politics and empire”, coordinates with RT, Sputnik, Telesur and Misión Verdad to disseminate political disinformation in favor of the Maduro regime. … GrayZone’s editor-in-chief, Max Blumenthal,… is a well-known Chavista propagandist in the United States who interviewed Nicolás Maduro as Red Radio Ve broadcast.”
[10]
University of Texas at Austin – Global Disinformation Lab: “The Grayzone News… frequently runs articles sympathetic to China and other authoritarian regimes such as Russia, Iran, and Venezuela.”[11] Note: no allegation of dis information, but highlights significance of Venezuela
See also:
IPYS Venezuela-Provea: [12][13][14]
Efecto Cocuyo fact check [15]
Devin Beaulieu Medium (possibly SME SPS) [16]
Joshua Collins Medium (possibly SME SPS) [17] BobFromBrockley (talk) 03:46, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Excellent finds. They should be added to the article. I knew The Grayzone was a bit "off", but the more I learn, the more dangerously misleading it appears. No wonder it's deprecated here. It's a goldmine for learning what are lies. It pushes them. In that regard, it's like Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS). These groups of propagandists have a distorted worldview. That's what happens when one recycles Russian/Trump propaganda. Nothing but lies. With VIPS, it's sad, because their beginnings were good. -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 04:48, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
This was a quick google using the word "disinformation". I realise the disputed text is published conspiracy theories about Venezuela, Xinjiang, Syria, and other regions. I note only one of the sources I cite actually uses the term “conspiracy theory/theories”. So I had another quick google and didn’t come up with any more with that do. I therefore wonder about reinstating Venezuela (as there is no consensus to remove it, and it’s long standing content) but changing to “conspiracy theories and misleading reporting”. (I’m bolding the terms used in the sources: fake news, disinformation, contrarian positions, propaganda, slander.)
See also:
  • Institute for Strategic Dialogue: "There are various far-left alternative media outlets, such as The Grayzone... [whose] content and campaigns push pro-authoritarian positions towards mainstream audiences and undermine the credibility of human rights and democracy activists. The far-left media outlet The Grayzone is one of the key examples of this trend. Founded by journalist Max Blumenthal a month after a visit to Moscow, The Grayzone consistently takes a supposedly anti-imperialist position, regularly defending Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Vladimir Putin and Venezuela’s Maduro for their alleged resistance to U.S. hegemony86 and denying the Uyghur genocide87 as well as chemical gas attacks in Syria.88 Blumenthal has also spoken at anti-lockdown and antivaxxer rallies."[18] (footnote 86 cites the Pulse Media text above]
  • New Lines: "Also ubiquitous [in providing pro-state spin about elections in Nicaragua] was the U.S. journalist Ben Norton, affiliated with the website The Grayzone, which has made something of a cottage industry of defending dictators and their crimes."[19] This doesn't support the claim of conspiracy theories about Venezuela but perhaps does about "other regions"; the article also talks about other disinfo campaigns in Venezuela which is why it came up in my search. But it's another indicator that the second sentence claim in lead is due per opinion in RSs.
  • Dan La Botz in New Politics: (For context only, not a usable source.) Also not about Venezuela but includes mention of their support for its government, but makes strong allegations of slander in relation to Nicaragua.[20]
  • DiMaggio, Anthony R. Fake news in America: Contested meanings in the post-truth era. Cambridge University Press, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009067362.009 Has a lot of content about Grayzone but I can’t access it.
BobFromBrockley (talk) 13:38, 18 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, @Unbandito. Bullseye. Probably the most careful and sober comment that's appeared on this talk page this year.
I think the article falls prey to the fallacy that "we must be non-neutral if the sources are non-neutral". That is true, to a point. We can and should use biased sources, when they are the best sources available, and when an overwhelming majority of sources holds similar biases, we should make that dominant view clear to the reader.
But we should not, and cannot per WP:NPOV, mindlessly parrot those biases by smuggling loaded language from those sources into Wikivoice. If this article has any hope of becoming a B or A-class article one day, it will be because of carefully thought-through advice like Unbandito's. I think the specific examples you cite are illustrative of what is meant by "Wikipedia should describe disputes, but not engage in them". I think a culture has developed in recent years on Wikipedia that gets a little too excited about using Wikivoice to engage in disputes. For instance, under no circumstances should Wikipedia ever accuse a group of living people of "genocide denial" in Wikivoice. @Unbandito, I don't have the time to work on this article right now, but I applaud and encourage your efforts. Philomathes2357 (talk) 00:34, 15 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
You write: "we must be non-neutral if the sources are non-neutral". That's not only a misunderstanding of NPOV, it's a misleading caricature of those you don't agree with. We must be neutral in the way we document how non-neutral sources (IOW most sources) describe things. That means we do not interfere with, especially by neutering, what a source says. We present it, warts, biases, and all. Describing and documenting what RS say is not "mindlessly parrot those biases". It reveals editors have not interfered by using their own POV to tweak content. Our opinions of what is a "neutral" position is not reliable. It is much safer to examine the POV of a RS and then try to accurately convey that POV into the article. If the opinion is a widely-held factual opinion, then we can do it in wikivoice.
When opinions are clearly factual, and the opposing views are fringe ones pushed mostly by unreliable sources, we state the facts and ignore the fringe by giving the fringe the type of weight it deserves, which, in some cases, means no mention at all. Framing factual opinions as mere "opinions" poisons the well and serves to undermine the factual nature of the content. Such improper framing is a false balance that implies that facts are mere opinions that can be ignored at will (when they should be accepted as facts), and it frames debunked conspiracy theories as factual and worthy of consideration. It opens the door to BS. Wikipedia should not be used to "un-brainwash the masses". Instead, we inform the masses about attempts to brainwash them, and we use RS to do that.
In the East-West political conflicts, that means the sources in Western democracies, where there is an uncensored free press, have more due weight, and can be trusted much more (but not blindly), than censored sources under the control of dictatorial states like Russia, Turkey, and Syria, where state censorship and killing of journalists is the norm. Anti-American, pro-Russian, anti-Ukraine apologists and propagandists are unreliable sources. Their narratives and POV are false propaganda that we constantly expose here, and editors need to get their own POV into line with the facts documented by RS and stop defending unreliable sources like The Grayzone and those associated with Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity and Useful Idiots (podcast). -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 19:28, 16 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'm not sure about all this unbrainwashing the masses stuff and "factual opinions" vs. mere opinions, but reading here from WP:VOICE, Wikipedia aims to describe disputes, but not engage in them. Let's apply that to the paragraph in question:
Coverage of The Grayzone has focused on its misleading and false reporting, its criticism of American foreign policy, and its sympathetic coverage of authoritarian regimes, including those of Russia, China, Iran, and Syria. The Grayzone has downplayed or denied the Chinese government's human rights abuses against Uyghurs, published conspiracy theories about Xinjiang, Syria, and other regions, and published disinformation about Ukraine during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which some have described as pro-Russian propaganda.
This looks like textbook engaging-in-the-dispute to me. If there's such a thing as a "factual opinion" that deserves special weight, it should not include which governments are classified as authoritarian regimes. I totally disagree with the final paragraph of your comment. This isn't USApedia and we can't disembody the POV of an ecosystem of western commentators and political researchers as if it were truth handed down from God, nor can we discount the entire opposing perspective in the "East-West political conflict" as if it's some sort of flat-Eartherism unworthy even of a balanced description. If everyone on Wikipedia has already decided that only the Western press can be trusted (which I somewhat doubt is the case) then fine, it doesn't absolve us of our responsibility to describe disputes but not engage in them, and we can do that by judiciously making use of information on both perspectives as presented in the RS.
I think the crux of this disagreement is that while I agree that non-Western sources can sometimes be unreliable and that's worth covering accurately, I don't agree that the so-called Reliable Sources are always all that reliable, particularly at describing political disputes with the West's geopolitical adversaries. The Western press is extremely fallible and has all sorts of problems. @Philomathes2357 did a good job summarizing the most common critiques of a free press under private ownership above. Media interpretation and criticism about a fringe geopolitics blog is a topic where we can't trust any source to give us the whole truth and nothing but it.
This article is an example of the RS at their worst. Because The Grayzone is deprecated and has no right of reply, the every bias of the RS is carelessly indulged. I would propose the following revision to bring the lead more in line with Wikipedia's policy on describing disputes:
Coverage of The Grayzone has focused on its criticism of American foreign policy, and its sympathetic coverage of the West's geopolitical adversaries, including Russia, China, Iran, Syria, Nicaragua and Venezuela. Many Western commentators and researchers have criticized The Grayzone for its false and misleading reporting, saying that it downplayed or denied the Chinese government's human rights abuses against Uyghurs, published conspiracy theories about Xinjiang, Syria, and other regions, and published disinformation about Ukraine during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which some have described as pro-Russian propaganda.
I think the second half of that paragraph still needs some work, but since that's likely to be more contentious I'm just going to focus on embodying all perspectives in the dispute for now. Unbandito (talk) 14:08, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I have no problem with the attribution. -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 16:53, 24 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree with the changes in Special:Diff/1230750798/1230843302, especially the removal of the phrase "sympathetic coverage of authoritarian regimes", which clearly describes a key aspect of The Grayzone's political position that is obscured with the changed text. It is inaccurate to frame The Grayzone's media coverage as coming from only "Western" sources, when the article cites sources such as South China Morning Post and Al Jazeera; The Grayzone itself is a "Western" source published in the English language, so it is not surprising that most of the cited sources are also "Western" sources. I've reverted per WP:BRD as there is no consensus to implement these changes. — Newslinger talk 01:26, 25 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
"This looks like textbook engaging-in-the-dispute to me" - it looks like that to you, because that's what it is. This article reads like it comes from an alternative version of Wikipedia wherein NPOV states "engage in disputes, rather than describing them." NPOV, flawed and neutered as it is, was written the other way around for a reason - to avoid articles turning out like this one.
I support Unbandito's revision, but am open to some sort of reasonable middle-ground. Does anyone have access to the SCMP article? I don't want to give them my money. What, precisely, do they say about The Grayzone? Philomathes2357 (talk) 04:36, 25 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I was able to read the article. It's about someone unaffiliated with The Grayzone who was on a panel with them once. It says the following about the site: Blumenthal’s website has been accused of whitewashing the crimes of authoritarian countries, from Nicolas Maduro’s Venezuela to Bashar al-Assad’s Syria, while failing to highlight flaws in regimes that are staunchly opposed to US foreign policy.
Doesn't strike me as particularly strong evidence that non-Western sources are making these claims. SCMP isn't making the claims in SCMP-voice, they're attributing to a vague other. And we can use our brains to reason that the parties doing the accusing here are largely Western sources.
I found 2 Al Jazeera sources in the lead. The first is a citation for the US foreign policy bit, which remains unchanged. The second is an opinion piece, which per WP:RSOPINION should almost always be attributed. This source should probably be removed from the lead and given more exposition in the body of the article, regardless of what else we decide to do. However, AJ is certainly a non-Western source, and if I had said that the claims in the lead were made exclusively by Western sources, the presence of this citation would be a good reason to revert. But it remains the case that Many Western commentators and researchers have criticized The Grayzone. I believe this is still the most accurate attribution for the claims in the paragraph. The exception does not disprove the rule in this case. @Newslinger do you have a counter-proposal for a more accurate attribution?
I also think that sympathetic coverage of the West's geopolitical adversaries, is a more accurate summary of the article's contents than authoritarian regimes. Along with @Newslinger's suggestions around campism in the other thread, I think this is helpful in characterizing Grayzone's POV. I don't think the authoritarian label matches every country that The Grayzone covers favorably and it criticizes a number of US-aligned countries, like certain Central and South American dictatorships, Israel, and the US itself, for actions and tendencies that could be described as authoritarian. As Newslinger suggested, it's much more about a country's camp than their ideology for The Grayzone. For what it's worth, the inclusion of authoritarian regimes, which naturalizes a view of "East-West political conflict" as taking place between "authoritarian regimes" and "the Free World", seems to me like campism for a different camp and also whitewashes a lot of crimes and fails to highlight the flaws of countries in that camp. That's the bias that I see as predominant in this article and worth removing. I think we could improve the lead by combining my previous revision with some material from the other thread. @Newslinger if you feel strongly that authoritarian regimes should stay in, can you advance some case as to why it merits inclusion? Unbandito (talk) 13:56, 25 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for providing a relevant quote from the SCMP source. The AJ source (not the opinion piece, the one about GoFundMe) says:
"The Grayzone is known for its critical coverage of US foreign policy and anti-war views, but has been accused of spreading misinformation and Chinese and Russian government propaganda, including debunked claims about the conflict in Ukraine and whitewashed accounts of Beijing’s repression of ethnic minority Muslims in far-western Xinjiang. The move by GoFundMe is the latest case to underline thorny questions about the role of Big Tech in adjudicating truth online."
So both the SCMP and AJ use the "has been accused of" language, while refraining from doing such "accusing" themselves. It is Western sources that are doing the accusing, while the non-Western sources attempt to describe the accusations, without engaging in them (which is what we're supposed to be doing). In fact, AJ's tone is significantly more sympathetic to The Grayzone than coverage from Western corporate news and government-funded outlets, calling The Grayzone "anti-war" and framing GoFundMe's actions against the outlet in the context of Big Tech censorship: "Free speech advocacy groups like the American Civil Liberties Union have raised concerns about tech companies suppressing unpopular speech given their “utility-like” status and role as “gatekeeper to the modern-day public square”."
I think those facts supports Unbandito's revision. I also agree with @Unbandito's argument against saying "sympathetic coverage of authoritarian regimes" in Wikivoice. Given the outlet's campist approach to international politics, it's pretty obvious that their "sympathetic coverage" of certain countries is due to the fact that those countries oppose US foreign policy, not because The Grayzone has some sort of innate affinity for authoritarian politics. If Venezuela became a liberal democracy tomorrow, and the democratically-elected president was a staunch opponent of US foreign policy, The Grayzone would still be sympathetic to their view - they wouldn't suddenly become anti-Venezuela because Venezuela was no longer sufficiently authoritarian.
In the "reception" section, we can certainly discuss the various points of view that outlets have expressed, including the notion that The Grayzone supports authoritarianism.
Here is an interesting source, published by Routledge. I don't have access to the full text yet, but one relevant quote that lends weight to the "Western" framing is: "Grayzone, an independent news website that has been highly critical of the Western criticisms against China’s Xinjiang policy." Philomathes2357 (talk) 19:55, 25 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Unbandito and Philomathes2357, your recent comments cover too many different topics to respond to in a single section, and you are posting lengthy replies too quickly for anyone else to get a word in. This has the effect of discouraging other editors from participating in the conversation. I'm going to use a new subsection to discuss each substantive change proposed, starting with the "Western" descriptor below. — Newslinger talk 08:58, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

"Western"

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Describing the authors of the cited reliable sources as "Western" is original research that is not supported by cited reliable sources; this alone is sufficient to exclude the descriptor.

Even if we were to perform original research to verify the legitimacy of the "Western" descriptor, there are quite a few cited sources and journalists that cannot clearly be described as "Western":

Sources cited in this article for which the "Western" descriptor is inappropriate

In addition to South China Morning Post (Hong Kong), Al Jazeera (Qatar), and Reorienting Hong Kong’s Resistance (Singapore), the article cites publications based in Eastern Europe and Latin America, including Ukraine (VoxUkraine and MediaSapiens) and Nicaragua (Confidencial and La Prensa). The article also cites Russian news outlets that are based in other countries for legal reasons, including Meduza and The Insider. (According to the Western world article, there is "some debate as to whether those in Eastern Europe and Latin America also constitute the West".)

Also, on the author level, there is not enough reliably sourced information on many of these authors to determine their national identities.

Regardless, the bottom line is that using original research to label authors (many of whom are living people) as "Western" is not appropriate; this type of descriptor needs direct support from reliable sources to be included in the article.

There are many articles for which descriptors similar to "Western" have been proposed to label cited authors who criticize the article subject, when reliable sources do not use these descriptors to categorize these authors. These descriptors are generally rejected because their inclusion would rely on original research to imply that criticism from reliable sources in general is biased against the article subject, which would non-neutrally slant the articles to be more sympathetic to the article subjects' point of view. For example:

Examples of non-neutral descriptors for cited authors
  • In the lead section of the article Breitbart News, we do not say that "liberal" or "left-wing" academics and journalists claim that the website has "published a number of conspiracy theories and intentionally misleading stories". Although it is true that liberal academics and journalists have described the website that way, such framing would obscure the fact that reliable sources in general describe Breitbart News the same way.
  • In the lead section of the article Love jihad conspiracy theory, we do not say that "Muslim" academics describe "love jihad" as an "Islamophobic conspiracy theory". Although it is most likely true that the cited academic sources include works written by Muslim authors, such framing would obscure the fact that scholars in general describe "love jihad" this way.
  • In the lead section of the article Gamergate (harassment campaign), we do not say that "female" journalists describe Gamergate as a "misogynistic online harassment campaign". Although it is true that many of the cited sources are written by women, such framing would obscure the fact that reliable sources in general describe Gamergate the same way.

If attribution is used in this article to summarize the coverage of The Grayzone, the unadorned phrase "Academics and journalists" would be an improvement over any attribution qualified with the word "Western". — Newslinger talk 08:58, 26 June 2024 (UTC) Edited for accuracy. 18:30, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Agreed. Attempting to introduce a POV based on pure OR is a no-go. I think participants should be gently reminded this article is under quintuple sanctions. This article needs to be edited cautiously, making sure edits conform to established WP:CON and are free from bias. Dr. Swag Lord (talk) 20:36, 26 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Newslinger, very good argument. You've persuaded me to change my mind. "Western" is not appropriate in Wikivoice in that context. I want to compliment you on the detail and rigor of your argument. I respect you for it, and I wish such detailed, careful comments were more common on Wikipedia. When I saw that your comment was over 4,000 bytes, I thought "oh, good, this will probably be a serious, non-snarky comment", and I was not disappointed. Hats off. Philomathes2357 (talk) 02:25, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Hmm, I'm still on the fence regarding opposition to the "Western" attribution. The source on HK that you consider as Singaporean has mostly US-based authors. Meduza is not quite Western but its source on Navalny is cited to Eliot Higgins Confidencial receives funds from the NED even if it isn't a Western-based outlet. One of the authors for the SCMP source, Eduardo Baptista, is also a Reuters journalist, but nonetheless SCMP and the Al Jazeera articles are the closest thing to non-Western sources here.
I also think comparisons to the Breitbart Wiki article have merit but Gamergate or Love Jihad should not be compared b/c they are phenomenons not news sites. It seems that with the exception SCMP, Al Jazeera and MediaSapiens (a smaller outlet that gets less international attention), and a couple of Nicaraguan opposition outlets, the vast majority of sources criticising Grayzone are Western-based. Donkey Hot-day (talk) 06:39, 27 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Newslinger You're right, the use of the "Western" descriptor is too broad to be appropriate. I think that per @Donkey Hot-day's research a more accurate descriptor might be "Western-aligned" but you are also right that we'd need a source to support that designation. If we were able to find one, how would others feel about the descriptor, @Philomathes2357 @Valjean?
I've taken a look at the Breitbart article and compared it with this one. I agree with @Donkey Hot-day that your other examples, not being news sources, are poor analogies. Even the comparison to Breitbart is not a perfect analogy in my opinion.
Breitbart has published climate change and COVID-19 denialism. Every (almost every?) government had a response to COVID and has a climate change plan, no matter how inadequate. There is a 99% scientific consensus on climate change. The strongest claim I've seen that The Grayzone published a conspiracy theory involves their reporting on the Ghouta chemical attack, which was based on a document published by Wikileaks and was promoted by the Russian and Syrian governments (though they later reversed their position, IIRC). As I've said above, treating geopolitical perspectives critical or skeptical of the West, even dubious or unpopular ones, like they're flat-Eartherism hurts the encyclopedia. I'm fine with calling all of these things conspiracy theories, since they definitionally are unproven assertions of illicit coordination between powerful actors. But conspiracy theories can range in veracity from completely delusional to not officially true yet but everyone will pretend they believed it a decade from now. I think The Grayzone's claims on the Ghouta attack are dubious at best, but they are by no means equivalent to climate or COVID denialism, and I don't believe they should be dealt with as dismissively on Wikipedia. With other issues, like the persecution of Uyghurs in China, the way The Grayzone's stance was originally framed served to naturalize the opposing perspective as fact. I think that between my recent edits and @Bobfrombrockley's, the lead has come a long way toward addressing my concerns. I still think the use of authoritarian states in the lead is inappropriate and given that a number of arguments against this phrasing have been presented here, and I'm not seeing a strong argument in favor of keeping, I'm going to remove that, leaving the names of the governments in question without labeling them in any way.
The Breitbart article also contains a great deal of neutral, descriptive material about the website and its sections, coverage, etc. This article on the other hand, is overwhelmingly about criticisms of The Grayzone. In order for Breitbart News and The Grayzone to be consistent in their coverage of their topic, this article would need to vastly improve its neutral coverage of the blog, its contributors, etc. For what it's worth, other news sources like the New York Times and Fox News typically have a controversies section separate from their history and basic facts about the organization. As a long term goal, I'd like to see this article look more like the article for Fox News or Breitbart in terms of a balance of neutral and critical coverage. I think this is achievable using the sources we already have, including critical ones, but we are also permitted to (cautiously!) use The Grayzone as a source about itself according to the guidelines outlined in WP:DEPS and WP:ABOUTSELF. This may come in handy to support a more balanced presentation of their position. For example, if we can find something published by The Grayzone that says something like We're so proud of our sympathetic coverage of America's geopolitical adversaries, we can then present the controversy over their position with something like the following sentence: The Grayzone says its journalism focuses on a positive depiction of America's geopolitical adversaries - a position which (western aligned?) academics and researchers have said whitewashes the actions of authoritarian regimes...
I apologize if my replies are too long and too quick. I am trying to be as thorough, thoughtful and responsive as I can. Unbandito (talk) 18:19, 3 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
The only source I know of, off the top of my head, that uses the word "western" to characterize coverage of The Grayzone is this one. It says "...Grayzone, an independent news website that has been highly critical of the Western criticisms against China’s Xinjiang policy."
That source isn't in the article, but it ought to be. Do you know of any other sources that use the word "western" or "western-aligned" to characterize criticism of The Grayzone?
I agree on "sympathetic coverage of authoritarian states". That's a fairly bold statement to make, it's somewhat loaded, and I don't think sufficient sourcing exists to put that characterization in Wikipedia's voice, rather than as an attributed opinion. Philomathes2357 (talk) 22:57, 3 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Unbandito: I like your thinking. You've done a lot of good-faith hard work, and I think you should try to implement your ideas, if possible. There may be bumps in the road, but at least some form of road will be built. If there are problems, someone will object, but that's okay. We know you are trying your best. Vive la collaboration! -- Valjean (talk) (PING me) 01:47, 5 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you for looking at this from a neutral perspective! Professor Penguino (talk) 05:31, 5 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]

Overall tone of article

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Whatever one may think of The Grayzone, this article reads like propaganda trying to deride a dissident website. It's almost comical. The structure of the article doesn't give even a short section on what the website has reported on without starting each sentence with how wrong and Russia-friendly every report is. It says: "Grayzone staff Blumenthal and Aaron Maté acted as briefers on behalf of the Permanent Mission of the Russian Federation to the United Nations at UN meetings organized by Russia" without mentioning what they testified on. Pure guilt-by-association. To realize how ridiculous the article sounds, just *assume* The Grayzone *is indeed* friendly to Russia and Iran and then consider how silly the article reads.

Just wanted to point out to whoever wrote this ridiculous piece that they didn't do themselves any favors. This article sorely needs a more objective rewrite, if the goal is to be informative. If. Julian Mehnle (talk) 02:45, 12 August 2024 (UTC)[reply]