The number of delete votes that are required to delete a question by high-rep users, depends on the score of the question and its answers. From the help center:
It takes 3 votes, minimum, to delete a closed question. However, the number of delete votes required scales to the number of votes on the question and all its answers.
This makes perfect sense, since we generally don't want good content to be deleted.
However, this rule seems to apply for un-deletions too! For example, this question has already received three undelete votes, but hasn't been undeleted, due to the high score of the question and its answers.
So the "better" a Q/A is judged by the community, the harder it is for the Q/A to be undeleted. If the above question had been downvoted, it would currently be undeleted based on the undelete votes it has received.
I believe that it should be easier to undelete "good" Q/As, than "bad" ones. Therefore I am requesting for the current system to change regarding the undelete votes requirements. My proposal would be to have a starting value of 3 undelete votes maximun, with fewer undelete votes required when the score of the question and the answers is high.
So the question is this: What is the rationale for requiring more votes to undelete "good" questions/answers than "bad" ones? Wouldn't it make more sense for "good" content to be easier to salvage that "bad" content.
Note that I don't believe that there is a perfect correlation between post quality and score, but this is the metric the system currently uses, and I don't think that anybody has proposed a better metric.
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