Problem Statement: Each time someone makes a bad close vote, 3 people spend their time - waste their time - to reject it.
I'm not aware of any "corrective pressure" in this situation - I mean: what happens to stop the well-intentioned bad-close-voter from repeating their mistake?
Can we add something to do this - one or both of
- education (it's highly likely that they are unaware that it happened)
- penalisation (I don't know what form that would take, but removing the privilege to close vote seems obvious)
Background:
I'm curious what, if anything, happens when a close vote is rejected through the close vote queue?
Something that I'm finding irritating is the number of questions nominated for closure as "unclear what you're asking" when it is patently clear what they are asking.
This happens for a couple of apparent reasons that I've started to see repeatedly:
- Carelessness: the question looks like something else - for example, a homework question, or a question that is too broad, and the close-voter has not looked carefully enough to see that actually there is a solid question. e.g Which object does name "g" binds to?
- Nitpicking: The question text doesn't contain an explicit question statement with a question mark ... but it's usually blindingly obvious that the question is "why am I getting this error" or similar.
In the context of the ever-swelling close vote queue, this feels to me like something that needs some back pressure applied. Otherwise, the close-vote reviewers are subjected to time and again rejecting votes from the same source.