First, let me state upfront that I do like Stack sites and mostly find them useful and there are many knowledgeable and friendly people among the Stack communities. However, in general I have experienced throughout various Stack sites some rude behavior both by those asking questions and answering them.
People Asking Questions
Sometimes people asking questions can be rude and impatient, almost demanding timely solutions as if they're paying for support, totally negligent of the fact that people are helping voluntarily.
People Answering Questions
Sometimes people answering questions can be rude and forceful, essentially chastising people as incompetent (both verbally and in tone basically calling the questioner a moron in a very personal way) instead of politely pointing them in the right direction.
Commenting, Up/Downvoting
The very fact that these exist and have human nature applied to them is a guarantee that they will sometimes be abused for subjective, petty and personal reasons.
Subjective Vs Objective
Being objective is great, but impossible to do so 100%. The level and scrutiny of trying to attain perfect objectiveness often sees questions closed in way of rule over helpfulness, regardless of whether it was helping anyone.
General Examples of Rude/Nonconstructive Questioners
"Umm, hello, is anyone going to help me?"
"Nope, doesn't work!"
General Examples of Rude/Nonconstructive Experts
"Why would you want to do that?"
"Go read a book."
I'm not going to exhaust examples and I'm certainly not going to list specific examples, provide links or name names and I ask that anyone who responds with examples also keeps things general.
My Overall Concern
I had a question posed to me if I thought Stack was any worse than any other forum (forum is a broad and correct term mind you - but I do understand the Q&A format). Certainly, wherever people are found you're going to find rude people. And the popularity of Stack has to be factored in as far as density.
But, in my experience at least, I have found that because of the strict nature of Stack sites this has caused a bit of over-protection which inadvertently causes rude behavior in tones, snippy attitudes and blatant "You're a moron." type comments and answers.
Conclusion
I'm not hurt or retaliating for anything or trying to get people in trouble. As a blogger, I have very thick skin as I say what's on my mind regardless of the backlash I'll receive. And I do receive some heavy backlashes for a lot of the opinions I publish. If I didn't have thick skin I certainly wouldn't be posting this. I expect 100 negative marks against this post.
The problem is I'm frustrated by the overall Stack experience. So why don't I stop using it? Because I do see the value and would like gain the knowledge available from those that offer it, that is politely.
What is Stack Exchange on paper?
Most simply described as "expert answers to your questions"
What Stack Exchange better be (the attitude given off by many)?
"expert answers to your expert questions"
So, I open the floor. Is it just me? Or do I raise legitimate concerns that others have witnessed/experienced?
UPDATE - Examples
I knew the fact that I wouldn't provide exact examples would be a catalyst for discrediting what I'm saying. But I will just pose the questions. In a way each time someone says something overtly subjective in a personal nature (name calling / sarcasm) it proves what I'm talking about.
In any case, even if I had any remaining examples from deleted topics I wouldn't EVER share them publicly for moral and defamation reasons which I did indeed learn the very hard way in the past.
In any case, there will be probably zero positive comments or upvotes to what I'm saying for the very fact that the general end-user is never going to be in here reading this. It's just me and a wall of experts taking this all way too personally instead of taking a step back and at the very least acknowledging that there may be some knowledge-elitists about.
UPDATE - Goal
This is a meta discussion after all. Besides gauging where the community stands on the subject which is my primary goal I am looking to learn if just I personally have had a bad experience or if it's more of an issue. I certainly wasn't expecting people to agree with me and pat me on the back. I stated that upfront.
The point is to stand in my conviction and post how I feel about this subject regardless of the backlash. I realize it will be IMPOSSIBLE to get an unbiased reading of the issue considering there will probably only be 0-5% user-only people reading this, that might not even have the courage to agree with me seeing the backlash I'm getting.
Essentially, I'm in the lion's den and I'm certainly not accusing anyone specifically, but the nature of the discussion will inevitably create a pack mentality.
UPDATE - My Rudeness
If I'm being rude in any way I do apologize. That is not my goal. I'm not trying to go to war here. It was suggested to me by an expert that if I wanted any sort of reasonable means to an understanding that I should post here.
In Closing
I don't feel any incredible understanding of any sort has been reached, but it is what it is and there's really nothing left to say. The only way this could have been a more meaningful and fair discussion is if there were an equal numbers of users engaged in this conversation, not experts who are also users, but just users.
I realize that's a bit like going to a Women's Rights rally and hoping for an equal number of input from men. But, I tried. I said my piece about something that was bothering me about Stack Exchange. I hope everyone realizes this is in no way personal. I don't dislike anyone because they don't agree with me. I hope no one else holds a personal grudge just because you don't agree with anything I've said either.
This was just a discussion regarding the overall politeness on Stack sites. I've personally not had the best experience as well as others. And I'm not even talking just about my own questions. When finding answers on other questions I've seen some uncalled for comments. And of course many of you have had the nicest experience using Stack. Neither of us are right or wrong, we've just had different experiences.
But the issues I'm stating are very real and confirmed by the moderators (that have a much better and broader view of the entire picture than any of us):
So, just because you've not had many or any bad experiences at all, does not in any way mean it's not a bigger problem overall for others.