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replaced http://blog.stackoverflow.com with https://blog.stackoverflow.com
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I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crackhas started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

replaced http://stackoverflow.com/ with https://stackoverflow.com/
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I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherenthad been edited to be coherent (vs. its original stateoriginal state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

explain this is about moderators closing, not voting to close
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I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", onemoderators should have the same attitude with closing. Closing A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the originaloriginal question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state).

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", one should have the same attitude with closing. Closing a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

I would have understood the original, and edited about as others did to help it along.

Not only that, you unilaterally closed it after it had been edited to be coherent (vs. its original state). I want to be clear I'm speaking about moderators closing questions...not communities voting to close questions...because I think the bar is higher and a line was crossed here. It's a poor choice to pick on, and especially to then choose it to complain on meta as a candidate for "why you shouldn't be challenged...because the question obvioulsy should be closed by one individual with power".

Last I checked, a question doesn't have to be fascinating--morbidly or otherwise--to be welcome and kept open. It just has to be a on topic and answerable. In the spirit of "innocent until proven guilty", moderators should have the same attitude with closing. A one-button click to close a reasonable question from someone willing to participate in refining what they mean is bad karma. This was a plausible question from a non-native English speaker, edited to a reasonable question, then closed by one person.

Bear in mind that people can help out in different ways. Some people might be reading questions more to learn, and see these as opportunities to "give back" by clarifying the question...even if they don't know the answer. It's always nice to help people along with their "programming English" (even if StackOverflow has started smoking crack on that particular issue).

For anyone bothered by even the original question, may I suggest loading up Harder Better Faster Stronger and play it loud. Look over the question and the history. Is it not a futuristic-feeling, cool experience of seeing a "new way" of how dynamic improvements can be made in real time? Versioning and collaboration...from low-quality to quality-enough-to-be-useful for future visitors...

Telling people they suck and beating them with a mallet doesn't have that futuristic feeling. By comparison, I think that's been around for a pretty long time.

mention state of question at time of closing.
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