A question in a tag that I follow had some "color commentary". Excerpts from this revision for context (please be wary of the meta effect before voting or intervening too harshly):
Title: "Dagger 2 and dependency injection hell?"
How on earth do you use dagger?
Is this really too much to ask?
Why the heck do I need to [...]. This is plain stupid
Now I see why it's called dagger, you feel like you are getting stabbed by a dagger as you try to use this thing
Though I'm sure it was cathartic to the poster, I think that a majority of that language is unhelpful to future readers and searchers. Typical remedies would be to downvote and comment, or to simply edit out the noise. (Without the additional text, there is a valid problem to be solved, though it's currently phrased as several broad questions.)
However, one could also argue that the commentary is a little more than unnecessary, and strays into unprofessional. It's not quite profane (if we count phrases like "DLL hell" as terms of art), and it's not directed at any person on the site, but it's a little more acerbic of a rant than I'm used to seeing on SO. This would imply that it might be better marked rude or offensive, or flagged for moderator attention (if only to keep track in case it recurs or worsens). That said, if it's appropriate enough to keep in, I don't want to rob anyone of the opportunity to write their question in their own voice.
I've looked elsewhere on Meta for guidelines on this (e.g. What makes something offensive?), but most of the responses I've seen are about person-to-person offense, or offensive edit summaries or source code.
How should we treat product-targeted insults or rants like these? Are they far enough below community standards to flag, or are they forgivable turns of phrase that should simply be edited out and left in the post history? Or is this too a mild case to intervene, but perhaps more-aggressive insults to a product/library/language should be flagged?