On another meta discussion, I came across this highly upvoted comment:
Spending your free time in the [c] and [c++] tag is like taking vacation in Syria. You have to participate in the jihad and shall pick a side. Taking a break on the breezy [c#] coast is not a bad idea, it has a lot less religion.
Now, I get it. This is tongue-in-cheek, metaphorical, humorous, not-taking-life-so-seriously, etc, etc. I did not find it offensive personally, but I can absolutely see that it can be offensive to a wide range of people. In fact, I know people who would find it offensive, for their own reasons.
There are plenty of ways to be humorous without having to reference sensitive issues such as politics, war, religion, gender. Burnination request titles are good examples of humor that avoids these topics.
I flagged this comment as Rude / Abusive. My flag was declined. Does this comment have a place on (meta) SO?
Update / Context:
I skimmed around 20 pages of comments each for 4 users who are active contributors to Meta. It took a couple of hours. I did this because I wanted to see whether offensive comments really are upvoted by the community: is the problem systemic or isolated? I chose users who are active contributors to Meta. Three had nothing offensive. The remaining one had an unenviable number of infractions, many very highly upvoted. Frankly, I was shocked the vituperative stream I found was held in such high esteem. Trust me, it wasn't all humour. The fact that moderators largely agreed with me only suggests I was right to flag.
I selected the comment in this question because I know people who find it offensive and it was declined and it has a huge upvote count.