SO isn't so much a community as it is a collection of smaller communities centered around languages/topics.
Particular languages, tools, topics, etc. (a.k.a. tags) tend to develop communities over time. People tend to follow particular tags, in many cases a fairly small number of them; these tags have regulars, and as the same people begin interacting with each other they develop relationships, start to create common values, etc. To a degree, the direction of these communities can be influenced by the design of the site, but only to a degree. The communities within each site can, in some cases, vary fairly widely in their values.
Once a community begins to take hold, it builds up inertia; the values of that community tend to strengthen over time. People interested in that topic/language but who's values tend to differ strongly from the community will either begin to assimilate, or leave and find a different site that they feel is better suited to them.
Of the things that SO communities value, is the quality of posts. They'll also vary in how they reflect those values. Some of the tag communities in SO have developed a very high standard of quality, and posts that don't meet those standards will be downvoted, closed, etc. People that like being on a site with higher standards will stay, and continue to vote in line with those standards, and those who would prefer to be much more lenient will often get frustrated, and will often leave.
Conversely, some of the tag communities have developed around a much lower standard. Questions asked in one language that might get downvotes and close votes in one tag may get upvotes and no close votes (and reopen votes if it gets closed) in another community that has developed much more lax standards. People who get frustrated at a lack of quality will often leave, thus reducing the number of people downvoting and voting to close low quality content. Since these people are much more likely to leave, it means low quality questions get upvotes, not downvotes, and stay open, further pushing the community down that direction.
Because of these, you'll find that the users who were the most active just as the tags were just getting started on the site were those that shaped the initial values of each community, simply because it's so hard for them to change over time. If the people answering [android] questions when that tag first started growing on SO were people willing up upvote anything, answer anything, and who weren't closing questions meeting close criteria, then those were the values that would spread to other new users.
Note that the vast overwhelming majority of moderation activities performed on SO is community moderation. Elected moderators perform a minuscule portion of the actual moderation done on the site. As far as a macro level trending of how the site is moderated, how the elected mods choose to handle various situations tends to be insignificant.
Another factor is how quickly that tag's community develops. Communities that spring up really quickly (a.k.a android) end up with a much higher percentage of lower reputation users that don't have the moderation privileges than communities that are built more slowly (in particular, tags that had communities being built when the whole site was much smaller, such as java/C/C++/C#. By growing very quickly there simply aren't enough people with the ability to close questions to close all of the questions that merit closure, so the people asking close-worthy questions continue asking them, getting upvotes, and then becoming the people who are deciding what questions should be closed.
It also takes time for newer users to assimilate into SO and begin to understand its goals, and how it's different from other sites. When a community is growing quickly then new users tend to be interacting with other new users, rather than more established users that might have higher standards, understand how moderation on the site works, and who realize that SO isn't meant be like other forums where its okay to ask any kind of question.