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added link to Tweet. Note. I have great respect for April and hope the community can be respectful.
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The penny dropping moment that I've been gleaning the site to find out what was wrong was Tim Post's post -> Are we creating divisions in our quest to make new users welcome?. It gave me the answer to why they were so vigorously acting upon external feedback. The in/famous tweettweet (and by a lady I respect for the record). I was so upset that it took a tweet for the site to finally do something about the obvious rudeness on the site. All these years of rallying for some changes and a tweet and that's it. Well now it's clear. The tweet was a symptom. What was really going on was the user attrition rate. It was no external prompt that compelled these changes, it was the site's internal stats. (this is all my thoughts and opinions).

The penny dropping moment that I've been gleaning the site to find out what was wrong was Tim Post's post -> Are we creating divisions in our quest to make new users welcome?. It gave me the answer to why they were so vigorously acting upon external feedback. The in/famous tweet (and by a lady I respect for the record). I was so upset that it took a tweet for the site to finally do something about the obvious rudeness on the site. All these years of rallying for some changes and a tweet and that's it. Well now it's clear. The tweet was a symptom. What was really going on was the user attrition rate. It was no external prompt that compelled these changes, it was the site's internal stats. (this is all my thoughts and opinions).

The penny dropping moment that I've been gleaning the site to find out what was wrong was Tim Post's post -> Are we creating divisions in our quest to make new users welcome?. It gave me the answer to why they were so vigorously acting upon external feedback. The in/famous tweet (and by a lady I respect for the record). I was so upset that it took a tweet for the site to finally do something about the obvious rudeness on the site. All these years of rallying for some changes and a tweet and that's it. Well now it's clear. The tweet was a symptom. What was really going on was the user attrition rate. It was no external prompt that compelled these changes, it was the site's internal stats. (this is all my thoughts and opinions).

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I'm writing too many long comments, so thought I should turn them into an answer.

I myself am feeling drained and exhausted. The community started off with enthusiasm all those years ago. It was like walking into a den of lions at times true, but there was life and energy on the site. I've noticed this change, it's been gradual. People in particular rallying for the tool to reduce the close vote review queue. To burn unwanted tags.

The tools we were given were inadequate. People felt the need to form groups to moderate the site to delete crap.

Gnat's answer on MSE sums it up What does constructive criticism of a design change look like?. Interestingly I went through my meta posts independently around the same time as he posted that answer and deleted some of the feature requests as I could see they were clearly a waste of time. As were many of my posts.

These days it's starting to feel like the Network heads are an elephant and we're not going to move it unless it stands up and walks. I feel for the community team. They're the same people we loved and respected all these years. To me it seems the organisation they work for is unrecognisable to the one they started with (I could be completely wrong here).

The thing that has changed is the legal and financial structure of the organisation. I don't know the ins and outs of it, but have been around long enough for when they were accepting venture capital and I have noticed definite changes (I first lurked/joined here in 2011 or 2012). I wonder how much of the corporate culture has helped to kill off the site. With people pulling the strings and knee capping the community team, so they really cannot implement the things they know might help the site.

The penny dropping moment that I've been gleaning the site to find out what was wrong was Tim Post's post -> Are we creating divisions in our quest to make new users welcome?. It gave me the answer to why they were so vigorously acting upon external feedback. The in/famous tweet (and by a lady I respect for the record). I was so upset that it took a tweet for the site to finally do something about the obvious rudeness on the site. All these years of rallying for some changes and a tweet and that's it. Well now it's clear. The tweet was a symptom. What was really going on was the user attrition rate. It was no external prompt that compelled these changes, it was the site's internal stats. (this is all my thoughts and opinions).

So something that could have been clearly circumvented if a few things had been put in place years ago has turned into a crisis.

Give the users the tools they need to moderate the site. To keep the site clean of rubbish. To help maintain the quality.

Yes we need to be nice to new users. I've never argued with that. If the UX experts say a helping hand is going to help "prevent" people from striking out with impatience, use it (I and only one other person I've spoken to on the network like the helping hand). But the issue is deeper.

Support your core community and watch the site improve.

I for one am tired of posting suggestions, pushing the team in chat and emails to make changes. Spending time and energy asking the community what they want and having to endure the usual obligatory downvotes and occasional snarky comment. And I'm trying to actually get the tools these same snarky users need to clean up the site. I'm tired of them. They're tired of me. We're all tired of rude people coming onto the site with an attitude of entitlements. Your core users are tired!

The flip side is, it breaks my heart when I see a new user trying on the site and witnessing people being nasty. The person turns themselves inside out and tries to give the users what they want. Let's face it. The site is not that intuitive. When people ask, why don't you read the help centre? It because reading the help centre is like reading a text book. It's not exactly short.

I'm starting to feel dejected and losing hope for the site. If it wasn't for profit, I'd be less concerned. As it stands it feels like too little too late.

I'm tired. I want to see what the network decides to do. I'm sure I'm not the only one giving this whole thing a lot of thought. Sometimes I think maybe I should just focus on answering questions. It was going through the front page looking at new questions that brought me to meta and use of my mod privileges as a new user all those years ago. Maybe this site isn't a good fit for all programmers.

This is the question I fear many people may be asking themselves.