Major General James G. Blunt

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Usage of Second person

All usage of second person, statements about who may edit the article, etc. need to be removed and cleaned up. Article also need better citiation and POV cleanup. Waya sahoni 21:47, 12 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Blueotter is making excellent progress

Excellent progress is being made on the Red Hat Duke article. Cleanup tag removed. Waya sahoni 22:21, 12 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Page name changed to John Red Hat Duke

Changed based on information provided by blueotter. Waya sahoni 23:29, 12 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Please cleanup article

cleanup of links, citiations, and sources needed. Article also needs to be wikified. Waya sahoni 23:40, 12 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Article cleaned up and wikified

Completed. Waya sahoni 01:55, 13 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Duplication and confusion

There is so much duplication between this article and that on the Keetoowah Nighthawk Society that it is very confusing to try to discern where one ends and the other begins. As this is the current society, it should not duplicate all the history of the society formed in the nineteenth century, including cut-and-paste sections from the other article. It's questionable whether there is sufficient content on this society to stand alone as a separate, notable article. Sources other than the tribal website should be added.Parkwells (talk) 20:54, 22 November 2011 (UTC)[reply]

Multiple levels of weirdness. Cleanup

This note was added to the "Origin of name" section by a logged-out user who has been blocked and topic-banned for over-flagging articles for cleanup: THIS ORIGINAL SECTION WAS PLAGIARISED FROM THE WORK OF TAKATOKA (MANATAKA AMERICAN INDIAN COUNCIL, HISTORY OF THE KITUWAH PEOPLE, https://www.manataka.org/page838.html, AND IS REWRITTEN HERE FROM THE SOURCES CITED, OR OTHERWISE. Actually, manataka.org is notorious for copyright violations, posting people's work without permission and refusing to take it down, along with posting accurate info via copyvio right next to wild fabrications about Native cultures written by those clearly unfamiliar with Native cultures. So, it's probable the manataka page is the copyvio. It is not an "American Indian Council", despite what they say on their pages. It should be considered the same as a personal blog or personal website and, worse, one known for copyvios, unsourced essays and inaccurate content. I actually came across this while cleaning up the well-meaning but unusable cites to manataka on WP, along with links to the site that look to be linkspam. Proceeding now with long-overdue cleanup. - CorbieV 20:02, 15 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]

This desperately needs more sources because right now it's an essay about one guy and that guy's perspective on this history, interspersed with notes by one user who promotes that guy, shouting at other editors, about misunderstood policy, in excessive notes in every section. - CorbieV 20:31, 15 July 2018 (UTC)[reply]