I started to think about this after the recent reputation "adjustment". It seemed weird that you would lose reputation when a question is deleted (or an answer you posted with upvotes gets merged into a comment).
Obviously those contributions (questions or answers) had some value to somebody at one time - otherwise they wouldn't have been upvoted. It is my fault that some question I asked 3 years ago - which was popular at the time - is no longer relevant or doesn't meet the current direction of the website? Or that I answered a question which was later deleted or deemed to be a duplicate of another. My answer still got up votes so it was useful to someone.
I guess what I'm most angry about is that some of my contributions to this community have been treated like scrap, with their existence permanently expunged from the record. The loss of reputation is minor when compared to the lost of my activity in this community. For many of my answers and questions, I've spent a lot of time communicating what I've done or my thought processes. Some of my intent was that I could direct prospective employers to my "body of work" to see what I've done, my experience, and my thought processes. My StackOverflow contributions have mostly taken the place of my blog posts which used to serve the same purpose. Now I'm thinking that my approach has been wrong and I should direct most of my efforts to my blog instead of Stackoverflow - where I can be the sole judge of when to expire my content. I don't believe that any content with upvotes should be able to be removed by anyone other than the originator of the content.
I do happen to believe that the current moderation process is too heavy handed at times and I don't really understand why StackOverflow needed to be subdivided into Programmers, but this permanent loss of "thought content" seems absurd - and I'm wondering if I should continue to contribute.
was later deleted or deemed to be a duplicate of another- Questions with answers closed as duplicates rarely ever get deleted. They are mostly left in-tact as an "alternate route" to the question it duplicates. – animuson Mar 2 '12 at 19:02