I don't mean to point fingers or cast blame on an individual, but I've noticed that PHP chat has a lot of cv-pls requests on questions that I believe are valid, to varying degrees.
See here
While I am all for cleaning up questions that don't belong, are off topic, etc, I worry that this cv-pls method is becoming a powerhouse for quickly closing questions that only one or two people disagree with. I don't think it's a healthy way of going about things. The request is posted, the high rep users swarm the question, and it gets shut down in seconds.
This is only an observation but everyone seems to be close in that room, which is good. There seems to be a "scratch my back, I'll scratch yours" kind of feel to it, which comes in handy when an individual needs help. However, my fear is that some of these users are voting to close questions largely because one of their "friends" said so. It's hard to tell if these questions are being shut down because they don't belong here or because the high rep PHP users don't like it because it's too juvenile and "bully" it out.
This is not in all cases but it does happen.
Often the questions are easily answered or class 101 questions. This doesn't disqualify them from being good questions. If they're duplicate or google-able etc, I understand, but it is occasionally not the case.
An individual compared this cv process to be the equivalent of an extra mod, but I think mods are appointed for a reason.
This is just my opinion. I tend to stick out for the little guy so when I see a question get shot down a minute after it's asked just because the asker is new to development I can't help but feel bad for him. Often some good, quality answers get in that not only help the asker, but others could benefit from it to, so it's a shame to see expansion of knowledge get edged out so quickly.
This is just a concern of mine and I don't want to see it get worse.
[cv-pls]
tag rather than flagging a question and allowing it to show up in the stackoverflow.com/tools?s=1&tab=flags&daterange= flagging tools for everybody?