I have been around Meta.SO for a while and one of the things that I have noticed is that the community is very quick to dupevote questions about getting out of post bans (question bans and answer bans) to point to the "wall of text" question What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”?What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”?. In many cases, such as herehere and herehere, the question poster acknowledges the "wall of text" post ban question but indicates that they are seeking more specific guidance about their own situation and/or they are seeking more information about the ban that is not provided in that question.
Should we be so quick to mark these questions as duplicates? I can see that there could be a valid pedagogical reason to dupevote these - i.e. to force users to figure things out for themselves, but that seems to me to be a passive-aggressive strategy, as if we were to start closing all main site Stack Overflow posts about c syntax with the argument that everything one needs to know about C is already available in K&R and/or the ANSI C standard document, and anyone too lazy to read, interpret, synthesize, and implement those documents is unworthy of help.
In some cases, an argument has been made that the "wall of text" question is literally the entirety of the public body of knowledge about post bans. If this is the case, then it makes sense for questions seeking information about post bans that is not in the document to stay open, waiting for the day when someone will come along with a helpful answer.
This is not a question about post bans themselves or how to get out of them - only a question about how we should handle questions about them.