This original post included a Django solution prior to Django version 1.6:
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings(
'error', r"DateTimeField received a naive datetime",
RuntimeWarning, r'django\.db\.models\.fields')
I suggested to edit this to make it work with Django > 1.6:
import warnings
warnings.filterwarnings(
'error', r"DateTimeField .* received a naive datetime",
RuntimeWarning, r'django\.db\.models\.fields')
and included a comment to this effect. The edit was rejected on grounds of "deviating form the original intent". Needless to say, the OP made the very same change just a couple of weeks later.
Why should I invest time in suggesting useful edits if they get rejected, with all due respect, by people who quite obviously don't understand the subject matter?
Is there an appeal system to rejected edits?
Edit: feature request
Following up on below comments, I'd like to suggest that the review rights get revised.
Instead of allowing reviews by reputation only OPs, previous editors and authors of accepted or positively voted answers on the same question as the edit-suggested entry get first-reviewer rights. If the review doesn't get voted on in some fixed time, the review rights could be extended to people who have a demonstrated knowledge of the topic, e.g. by matching up tags and previous comments.
That is the final vote on whether a suggested edit gets accepted or rejected should be by those who are actively involved in a thread, rather than just about anyone. This way edits actually get peer reviewed.