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Why do I have to wait before nominating a question for deletion?

Is it necessary to wait 48 hours to delete a question like this: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/1775/why-can-you-not-take-back-an-upvote-on-a-comment-closed

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I would swear this question itself is a duplicate, too. – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 13:14
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CLOSED AS DUPLICATE FOR GREAT HILARITY! – Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 13:14
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closed as exact duplicate by Jeff Atwood Jul 2 '09 at 13:14

This question covers exactly the same ground as earlier questions on this topic; its answers may be merged with another identical question. See the FAQ for guidance on how to improve it.

2 Answers

There are cases where a question needs to be removed asap. I think these are rare cases and closed questions usually do no harm.

If you think it does then you should contact the team.

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I really find this annoying at times, especially for questions that are exact duplicates.

However, I've seen more than one question closed as exact duplicate when they were in fact not duplicates at all. Often times they appear to be duplicates on the surface but it takes an expert in the area to understand why the questions are in fact different.

Having a 48-hour cooling off period allows for experts to get in there and point out the flaw in the duplicate argument. Not having a 48 hour cool off means that 5 non-experts in the area could duplicate, close and delete a question before an expert ever got a chance to point out the flaw in their reasoning.

That being said, I think it should be legal for a 10K+ user to delete a question closed as Spam immediately. Doesn't take an expert to know spam

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But I posted that duplicate ... I should be able to delete it, it really ads no value. And it is not spam. – waffles Jul 2 '09 at 12:42
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