User talk:Noelephant213: Difference between revisions

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I think Jamal meant to keep the character order in the order it was locked. Simply reverting it to the order just because you disagree with people is unproductive, I do agree about that. The character order though was kept for over a year before the 4th intro was added. I feel finding a consensus before changing the order is more corteous to the other users that did not mind having the characters listed that way. I would be patient and let the discussion happen than reverting edits. [[User:Noelephant213|Noelephant213]] ([[User talk:Noelephant213|talk]]) 01:07, 12 March 2022 (UTC)
I think Jamal meant to keep the character order in the order it was locked. Simply reverting it to the order just because you disagree with people is unproductive, I do agree about that. The character order though was kept for over a year before the 4th intro was added. I feel finding a consensus before changing the order is more corteous to the other users that did not mind having the characters listed that way. I would be patient and let the discussion happen than reverting edits. [[User:Noelephant213|Noelephant213]] ([[User talk:Noelephant213|talk]]) 01:07, 12 March 2022 (UTC)
:so your stance is it should stay that way because it’s been that way the whole time? Take a look at older lists and you’ll find the order is how I explained it. This list was at best overlooked and should stick to how every other page is shown. Check my comment on the song to see what I meant by order[[User:Pikablu|Pikablu]] ([[User talk:Pikablu|talk]]) 01:10, 12 March 2022 (UTC)
:so your stance is it should stay that way because it’s been that way the whole time? Take a look at older lists and you’ll find the order is how I explained it. This list was at best overlooked and should stick to how every other page is shown. Check my comment on the song to see what I meant by order[[User:Pikablu|Pikablu]] ([[User talk:Pikablu|talk]]) 01:10, 12 March 2022 (UTC)
== Doctor Oz 2022 ==
  As a child, I grew up just a few miles south of Kennett Square, the mushroom capital of the world. This fact was never lost on my father who would often say, “don’t be a mushroom.” By that, he meant: don’t sit in the dark and be fed manure your whole life, just to get canned at the end of it all.
  I learned a lot from my father who grew up on a dirt floor in Turkey. His story demonstrated how lucky I was to be born and raised in America: the land of freedom, opportunity, and justice for all. It was he and my mother who taught me that America was the shining city on the hill and that through hard work, perseverance, and a little bit of luck, I could achieve my own version of the American Dream.
  After graduating from medical and business school in Philadelphia, I operated on thousands of patients and invented a tool to fix heart valves that has saved many lives while cutting medical costs. And, as a television host, I focused on empowering individuals to take control of their own health and pursue their dreams.
  However, for many across our country, it seems like the shining city has grown a little dim as of late. People feel like they no longer have agency over their lives, no choice in their communities, and no say in the increasingly radical policies coming out of Washington. All the while, hardworking Pennsylvanians are being told they can’t say what they see happening all around them.
  In short, people feel like they’re being kept in the dark and being fed manure.
  I’m running for the United States Senate to turn the lights back on in America. That’s the first thing I do in the operating room, and it’s how we’ll start shining a light on what’s wrong with our country.
  Over the past two years – under the Joe Biden and John Fetterman agenda, violent crime has surged in our communities. Just last year, Philadelphia broke its all-time homicide record with 562 deaths, and is maintaining that pace so far this year with more than 400 homicides and over 1,000 carjackings for the first time ever.
  The rise in violent crime has to stop, but far-left radical extremists like my opponent, John Fetterman, would make it worse by putting criminals ahead of victims and law-abiding citizens. John Fetterman has also advocated for disarming the police and releasing of one-third of Pennsylvania’s inmate population – including violent first- and second-degree murderers.
  Worse yet, John Fetterman has supported decriminalizing drugs like heroin and fentanyl, which have already poisoned too many of Pennsylvania’s youth. Such radical policies have no place in Pennsylvania, especially when we have the fourth highest number of fentanyl deaths in the country.
  To tackle crime, I will vote to fund our police and support communities with the resources they need to stop crime and ensure vulnerable populations have the help they need. I’ve been endorsed by the Pennsylvania State Troopers Association, the Pennsylvania Fraternal Order of Police, and the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police because they know I am committed to making our commonwealth safer for everyone.
  But even if we had safer streets, 40 year high inflation is still crushing the middle and working classes and driving down real wages. Over the last two years, the cost of living in Pennsylvania has skyrocketed, gas prices have gone through the roof, and simple necessities like baby formula have become harder to get than fentanyl in our cities.
  My opponent, John Fetterman, will be a rubber stamp for Joe Biden’s failing policies and make these problems worse. John Fetterman has advocated for a moratorium on Pennsylvania’s natural gas production, which he calls a stain on Pennsylvania, and he believes more government is the solution along with more tax-and-spend schemes. Together, these policies will rob our working class of their financial security and economic freedom, causing stress and illness.
  In the U.S. Senate, I will fight to lower inflation and cut taxes. I will work to make Pennsylvania a leader in energy production, decrease healthcare costs while improving outcomes, and provide better schools with more choice. I will give power back to you, because you are the best person so make decisions about your family and home.
  I believe we can solve these challenges together and help those who have been hurt the most. Pennsylvania can be a leader in Washington for the rest of the country, but we need bold leadership with fresh ideas – not the same radical politics that have gotten us to this point.
  I believe we can solve these challenges together and help those who have been hurt the most. Pennsylvania can be a leader in Washington for the rest of the country, but we need bold leadership with fresh ideas – not the same radical politics that have gotten us to this point.
  Together, we will turn the lights back on in America.

Revision as of 16:48, 8 November 2022

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  → PikaTepig999 05:23, 5 December 2015 (UTC)  
 

Anime articles

As Professor Kukui, Lusamine, and Faba are anime focused articles, they use anime screenshots as the infobox image rather than their artwork. Artworks are for articles that focuses on the games.--ForceFire 07:20, 18 September 2019 (UTC)

But doesn't Giovanni use artwork for his anime page?, and I know Professor Oak used art for it before the Sun and Moon seires --Noelephant213 16:20, 18 September 2019 (UTC)

Worthy

When it is worthy to be noted in the trivia of SS012, it is worthy to be noted in the trivia of the series. If not which of the series has introduced it's Champion in very few episodes? Dhiwakar (talk) 05:18, 9 February 2020 (UTC)

M23-related edits

Hey! Just so you know, Coco is the Japanese title of M23, not the English one (as of now), and if the English titles for works are unknown, then we don't post the Japanese titles in their place. We simply use the basic links. Once M23's English title is confirmed, it can be added in to all of the M23 links. Thank you. GrammarFreak01 (talk) 08:23, 3 March 2020 (UTC)

Oh! Will do! - unsigned comment from Noelephant213 (talkcontribs)

Signature policy

Hey! Whenever you sign a talk page, any talk page, use four tildes (~). Those will automatically code in your signature for you. Thank you! GrammarFreak01 (talk) 05:42, 4 March 2020 (UTC)

Edit warring

Please do not continually revert an edit, it falls under edit warring and is a blockable offense. In this case, whilst the file should be moved to the new filename, don't change it until after the image has been moved to its new name. Thank you.--ForceFire 15:50, 8 March 2020 (UTC)

Voice Actors

Neither Imdb or BehindtheVoiceActors are reliable sources for VA confirmation. The only way to get a source is to ask the voice actors themselves on twitter or any other social media platform. Thank you.--ForceFire 06:27, 9 May 2021 (UTC)

Edit warring

So I did take it to a talk page and you still undid my edit, further making it an edit war. Why is it only okay when you do it? Please go to the discussion instead of continuing the undoing--Pikablu (talk) 01:00, 12 March 2022 (UTC)

I think Jamal meant to keep the character order in the order it was locked. Simply reverting it to the order just because you disagree with people is unproductive, I do agree about that. The character order though was kept for over a year before the 4th intro was added. I feel finding a consensus before changing the order is more corteous to the other users that did not mind having the characters listed that way. I would be patient and let the discussion happen than reverting edits. Noelephant213 (talk) 01:07, 12 March 2022 (UTC)

so your stance is it should stay that way because it’s been that way the whole time? Take a look at older lists and you’ll find the order is how I explained it. This list was at best overlooked and should stick to how every other page is shown. Check my comment on the song to see what I meant by orderPikablu (talk) 01:10, 12 March 2022 (UTC)

Doctor Oz 2022

 As a child, I grew up just a few miles south of Kennett Square, the mushroom capital of the world. This fact was never lost on my father who would often say, “don’t be a mushroom.” By that, he meant: don’t sit in the dark and be fed manure your whole life, just to get canned at the end of it all.
 I learned a lot from my father who grew up on a dirt floor in Turkey. His story demonstrated how lucky I was to be born and raised in America: the land of freedom, opportunity, and justice for all. It was he and my mother who taught me that America was the shining city on the hill and that through hard work, perseverance, and a little bit of luck, I could achieve my own version of the American Dream.
 After graduating from medical and business school in Philadelphia, I operated on thousands of patients and invented a tool to fix heart valves that has saved many lives while cutting medical costs. And, as a television host, I focused on empowering individuals to take control of their own health and pursue their dreams.
 However, for many across our country, it seems like the shining city has grown a little dim as of late. People feel like they no longer have agency over their lives, no choice in their communities, and no say in the increasingly radical policies coming out of Washington. All the while, hardworking Pennsylvanians are being told they can’t say what they see happening all around them.
 In short, people feel like they’re being kept in the dark and being fed manure.
 I’m running for the United States Senate to turn the lights back on in America. That’s the first thing I do in the operating room, and it’s how we’ll start shining a light on what’s wrong with our country.
 Over the past two years – under the Joe Biden and John Fetterman agenda, violent crime has surged in our communities. Just last year, Philadelphia broke its all-time homicide record with 562 deaths, and is maintaining that pace so far this year with more than 400 homicides and over 1,000 carjackings for the first time ever.
 The rise in violent crime has to stop, but far-left radical extremists like my opponent, John Fetterman, would make it worse by putting criminals ahead of victims and law-abiding citizens. John Fetterman has also advocated for disarming the police and releasing of one-third of Pennsylvania’s inmate population – including violent first- and second-degree murderers.
 Worse yet, John Fetterman has supported decriminalizing drugs like heroin and fentanyl, which have already poisoned too many of Pennsylvania’s youth. Such radical policies have no place in Pennsylvania, especially when we have the fourth highest number of fentanyl deaths in the country.
 To tackle crime, I will vote to fund our police and support communities with the resources they need to stop crime and ensure vulnerable populations have the help they need. I’ve been endorsed by the Pennsylvania State Troopers Association, the Pennsylvania Fraternal Order of Police, and the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police because they know I am committed to making our commonwealth safer for everyone.
 But even if we had safer streets, 40 year high inflation is still crushing the middle and working classes and driving down real wages. Over the last two years, the cost of living in Pennsylvania has skyrocketed, gas prices have gone through the roof, and simple necessities like baby formula have become harder to get than fentanyl in our cities.
 My opponent, John Fetterman, will be a rubber stamp for Joe Biden’s failing policies and make these problems worse. John Fetterman has advocated for a moratorium on Pennsylvania’s natural gas production, which he calls a stain on Pennsylvania, and he believes more government is the solution along with more tax-and-spend schemes. Together, these policies will rob our working class of their financial security and economic freedom, causing stress and illness.
 In the U.S. Senate, I will fight to lower inflation and cut taxes. I will work to make Pennsylvania a leader in energy production, decrease healthcare costs while improving outcomes, and provide better schools with more choice. I will give power back to you, because you are the best person so make decisions about your family and home.
 I believe we can solve these challenges together and help those who have been hurt the most. Pennsylvania can be a leader in Washington for the rest of the country, but we need bold leadership with fresh ideas – not the same radical politics that have gotten us to this point.
 I believe we can solve these challenges together and help those who have been hurt the most. Pennsylvania can be a leader in Washington for the rest of the country, but we need bold leadership with fresh ideas – not the same radical politics that have gotten us to this point.
 Together, we will turn the lights back on in America.