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Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Blood libel (novel usage)

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The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was delete.  Sandstein  07:34, 9 August 2016 (UTC)[]

Blood libel (novel usage)[edit]

Blood libel (novel usage) (edit | talk | history | protect | delete | links | watch | logs | views) – (View log · Stats)
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Original research/synthesis. Honestly not sure if it's intended to be a dictionary definition or a list of appearances in political commentary, but either way it's not an encylopedia article. Kolbasz (talk) 16:35, 1 August 2016 (UTC)[]

    1. As always with natural languages, presuming "independen[ce]" would be not just dubious but naive. In Palin's case, one must suspect deliberate misuse; she disavowed having come up with the phrase, citing a WSJ journalist (who could not be proven to be writing at her campaign's behest). (That makes not two, but three usage-participants).
    2. User #2 is Palin, (Koch -- another right-wing political activist -- is, chronologically, #4 in my personal count) while #3 is the ever-unpredictable lawyer/scholar/activist Alan Dershowitz, who seemingly went out of his way to speak up for her -- consistent with his always-a-new-surprise semi-pro-Israel liberal contrarian role -- with an essay or interview advocating tolerance for what many who are Holocaust-aware would call poisonous misappropriation and trivialization of the original blood libel usage.
   I'm answering (not endorsing) the criterion of usage count, and my group of 4 is not twice the supposed mere 2. I put far greater significance in the chain of 3, suggesting that the phenomenon is not a handful of 2 (or many more) instances, but part of a largely neglected but demonstrable trend of discourse. I dunno if Palin's usage is a dumb (or a dumb-like-a-fox) effort by her or her Svengalis to stir up controversy between her and the liberal Jews whom her constituency love to hate, but i think there's evidence of a new but verifiable trend in usage, and sufficient reason to support further research by compiling the info i've just stumbled on.
--Jerzyt 03:33, 2 August 2016 (UTC)[]
  • Delete - Per WP:NOTDICTIONARY. However, I want to keep or extend the "traditional usage" in the original blood libel article: all the cases where a group accused another group of (mis)using blood for political reasons. See its page history, where my proposal was rejected. Zezen (talk) 07:31, 2 August 2016 (UTC)[]
Note: This debate has been included in the list of Language-related deletion discussions. • Gene93k (talk) 00:31, 8 August 2016 (UTC)[]
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's talk page or in a deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.