This question is prompted by a vote to close on a recent posting (not mine!) that seems well interesting and useful.
Rather than point out the precise question, we will probably mostly agree there is a heightened vigilance vs a few years back. One can simply look at the questions from that timeframe that were closed or migrated months or even years later.
Here is an illustration from the earliest days: over 2000 upvotes on a straightforward question.
What does the "yield" keyword do in Python?
Now I have personally managed to get a basic minimal quorum of reputation that permits me to work well enough within SOF (a bit over 1400) so this question is more of curiosity.
Given the heightened scrutiny and restrictions, what is the rationale for not increasing the point scales in the present relative to (at least several years..) past - to reflect the higher bars to hurdle?
UPDATE The anser provided focused too much on the specific example of question that I put here. So, how about this one? Over 1000 upvotes, by virtue of it being basically near the inception of SO. This is what I mean by "older questions have relatively higher associated reputation independent of their quality".
Difference between URI and URL
My contention is not that the question were poor or not useful. Rather that it is obvious and straightforward. I think all of us reading this question have put many ones out there requiring well more thought and planning and have received, well, less than 1000 upvotes ;).
Let us at least agree that older questions had a better chance of attaining high votes/reputation scores.