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There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.


This question has been closed, then reopened, now closed again

I can no longer vote to reopen (it is bugged and says I've already voted) so I'm posting this here. To the admins, simply stop closing it, or read the full comment thread. It's long, but don't close if you're not going to admin properly. Otherwise, let the community vote to close/reopen as they see fit, this topic is more important than one admin coming through and closing it by their lonesome.

The first time this question was closed, it was regarded as a duplicate, but I addressed that concern and the community reopened the question. Now @Martijn Pieters closed it again for another suggested "duplicate" which was already brought up in the comments by @Brad Larson. My feeling is Martijn saw the link and said it was similar, but didn't question the differences and then didn't bother to read my response, so here it is:

####Brad Larson:

See also: "What is the policy for Stack Overflow and political matters, such as the logo color change?" , which covers your question more directly.

####Me:

@BradLarson That question is a little closer to a duplicate as mine, but still not close enough. It's better in that it's more objective as "What is the policy?"; however, my question is still "should it be the policy?" Another question is "What determines the policy?" Apparently if something gets enough votes from the "community" (because let's be honest, it's not the whole community that saw or voted for that answer), then it goes directly into action? Any motivated group can get users to come in and vote something up. The creators' biases are showing, but this site should be free from bias

Basically, Brad suggested that my question is a duplicate of another question. I refuted. The suggested duplicate is asking for clarification of the current policy (how it's written). I'm asking for clarification in what the policy should be, or how it should be interpreted.

This is more a call to order to evaluate the current policy, open up a line of questioning so answers can be presented in order to determine if the current policy is acceptable, and from that determine if the policy should be changed.

Reading other, related posts there seems to be justifiable reasons to keep this question opened. For instance, there are license disputes about what Stack Exchange is legally able to do. I would think that the creators would be interested to at least hear and consider that line of reasoning, even if they disagree or decide to ignore it.

There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.


This question has been closed, then reopened, now closed again

I can no longer vote to reopen (it is bugged and says I've already voted) so I'm posting this here. To the admins, simply stop closing it, or read the full comment thread. It's long, but don't close if you're not going to admin properly. Otherwise, let the community vote to close/reopen as they see fit, this topic is more important than one admin coming through and closing it by their lonesome.

The first time this question was closed, it was regarded as a duplicate, but I addressed that concern and the community reopened the question. Now @Martijn Pieters closed it again for another suggested "duplicate" which was already brought up in the comments by @Brad Larson. My feeling is Martijn saw the link and said it was similar, but didn't question the differences and then didn't bother to read my response, so here it is:

####Brad Larson:

See also: "What is the policy for Stack Overflow and political matters, such as the logo color change?" , which covers your question more directly.

####Me:

@BradLarson That question is a little closer to a duplicate as mine, but still not close enough. It's better in that it's more objective as "What is the policy?"; however, my question is still "should it be the policy?" Another question is "What determines the policy?" Apparently if something gets enough votes from the "community" (because let's be honest, it's not the whole community that saw or voted for that answer), then it goes directly into action? Any motivated group can get users to come in and vote something up. The creators' biases are showing, but this site should be free from bias

Basically, Brad suggested that my question is a duplicate of another question. I refuted. The suggested duplicate is asking for clarification of the current policy (how it's written). I'm asking for clarification in what the policy should be, or how it should be interpreted.

This is more a call to order to evaluate the current policy, open up a line of questioning so answers can be presented in order to determine if the current policy is acceptable, and from that determine if the policy should be changed.

Reading other, related posts there seems to be justifiable reasons to keep this question opened. For instance, there are license disputes about what Stack Exchange is legally able to do. I would think that the creators would be interested to at least hear and consider that line of reasoning, even if they disagree or decide to ignore it.

There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.

Post Reopened by user1864610, ohmu, Patrick Hofman, Mureinik, false
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vol7ron
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There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.


This question has been closed, then reopened, now closed again

I can no longer vote to reopen (it is bugged and says I've already voted) so I'm posting this here. To the admins, simply stop closing it, or read the full comment thread. It's long, but don't close if you're not going to admin properly. Otherwise, let the community vote to close/reopen as they see fit, this topic is more important than one admin coming through and closing it by their lonesome.

The first time this question was closed, it was regarded as a duplicate, but I addressed that concernedconcern and the community reopened the question. Now @Martijn Pieters closed it again for another suggested "duplicate" which was already brought up in the comments by @Brad Larson. My feeling is heMartijn saw the link and said it was similar to that, but didn't question the differences and then didn't bother to read my response, so here it is:

####Brad Larson:

See also: "What is the policy for Stack Overflow and political matters, such as the logo color change?" , which covers your question more directly.

####Me:

@BradLarson That question is a little closer to a duplicate as mine, but still not close enough. It's better in that it's more objective as "What is the policy?"; however, my question is still "should it be the policy?" Another question is "What determines the policy?" Apparently if something gets enough votes from the "community" (because let's be honest, it's not the whole community that saw or voted for that answer), then it goes directly into action? Any motivated group can get users to come in and vote something up. The creators' biases are showing, but this site should be free from bias

Basically, Brad suggested that my question is a duplicate of another question. I refuted. The suggested duplicate is asking for clarification of the current policy (how it's written). I'm asking for clarification in what the policy should be, or how it should be interpreted.

This is more a call to order to evaluate the current policy, open up a line of questioning so answers can be presented in order to determine if the current policy is acceptable, and from that determine if itthe policy should be changed.

Reading other, related posts, there seems to be justifiable reasons to keep this question opened. For instance, there are license disputes about what Stack Exchange is legally able to do. I would think that the creators would be interested to at least hear and consider that line of reasoning, even if they disagree or decide to ignore it.

There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.


This question has been closed, then reopened, now closed again

I can no longer vote to reopen (it is bugged and says I've already voted) so I'm posting this here. To the admins, simply stop closing it, or read the full comment thread. It's long, but don't close if you're not going to admin properly. Otherwise, let the community vote to close/reopen as they see fit, this topic is more important than one admin coming through and closing it by their lonesome.

The first time this question was closed, it was regarded as a duplicate, but I addressed that concerned and the community reopened the question. Now @Martijn Pieters closed it again for another suggested "duplicate" which was already brought up in the comments by @Brad Larson. My feeling is he saw the link and said it was similar to that, then didn't bother to read my response, so here it is:

####Brad Larson:

See also: "What is the policy for Stack Overflow and political matters, such as the logo color change?" , which covers your question more directly.

####Me:

@BradLarson That question is a little closer to a duplicate as mine, but still not close enough. It's better in that it's more objective as "What is the policy?"; however, my question is still "should it be the policy?" Another question is "What determines the policy?" Apparently if something gets enough votes from the "community" (because let's be honest, it's not the whole community that saw or voted for that answer), then it goes directly into action? Any motivated group can get users to come in and vote something up. The creators' biases are showing, but this site should be free from bias

Basically, Brad suggested that my question is a duplicate of another question. I refuted. The suggested duplicate is asking for clarification of the current policy (how it's written). I'm asking for clarification in what the policy should be, or how it should be interpreted.

This is more a call to order to evaluate the current policy, open up a line of questioning so answers can presented to determine if the current policy is acceptable, and from that determine if it should be changed.

Reading other, related posts, there seems to be justifiable reasons to keep this question opened. For instance, there are license disputes about what Stack Exchange is legally able to do. I would think that the creators would be interested to at least hear and consider that line of reasoning, even if they disagree or decide to ignore it.

There are a lot of current events and social issues taking place in the world.

Is it a good idea for Stack Overflow to become politically active, especially for events that have nothing related to programming?

Questions are flagged for having opinions and being off-topic. Should those rules be enforced if the site itself is being hypocritical. Perhaps this is setting a bad precedent for the future?


Note: Personally, I commend what is happening in the U.S., but don't feel that Stack Overflow is the best forum for it.


This question has been closed, then reopened, now closed again

I can no longer vote to reopen (it is bugged and says I've already voted) so I'm posting this here. To the admins, simply stop closing it, or read the full comment thread. It's long, but don't close if you're not going to admin properly. Otherwise, let the community vote to close/reopen as they see fit, this topic is more important than one admin coming through and closing it by their lonesome.

The first time this question was closed, it was regarded as a duplicate, but I addressed that concern and the community reopened the question. Now @Martijn Pieters closed it again for another suggested "duplicate" which was already brought up in the comments by @Brad Larson. My feeling is Martijn saw the link and said it was similar, but didn't question the differences and then didn't bother to read my response, so here it is:

####Brad Larson:

See also: "What is the policy for Stack Overflow and political matters, such as the logo color change?" , which covers your question more directly.

####Me:

@BradLarson That question is a little closer to a duplicate as mine, but still not close enough. It's better in that it's more objective as "What is the policy?"; however, my question is still "should it be the policy?" Another question is "What determines the policy?" Apparently if something gets enough votes from the "community" (because let's be honest, it's not the whole community that saw or voted for that answer), then it goes directly into action? Any motivated group can get users to come in and vote something up. The creators' biases are showing, but this site should be free from bias

Basically, Brad suggested that my question is a duplicate of another question. I refuted. The suggested duplicate is asking for clarification of the current policy (how it's written). I'm asking for clarification in what the policy should be, or how it should be interpreted.

This is more a call to order to evaluate the current policy, open up a line of questioning so answers can be presented in order to determine if the current policy is acceptable, and from that determine if the policy should be changed.

Reading other, related posts there seems to be justifiable reasons to keep this question opened. For instance, there are license disputes about what Stack Exchange is legally able to do. I would think that the creators would be interested to at least hear and consider that line of reasoning, even if they disagree or decide to ignore it.

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vol7ron
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Post Reopened by vol7ron, nicael, Christian Rau, HaveNoDisplayName, AdamL
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vol7ron
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vol7ron
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