I see this all the time, where a user will ask a question, but many of the comments and answers are actively trying to question the user's methodology. It's a bit hard to explain, so I'll try again:
If I don't use Emacs, don't repetitively explain how it would be "easier" if I did. All I wanted to know was {something totally unrelated to Emacs}.
An example where a user is asking about one program, but another is recommended. The question clearly asks for a remote file system that can mount on their local fs, but the answer does not provide this and is clearly changing the subject from sshfs.
And also this type of criticism:
"I don't think Python is the fastest language for that, use C++" "But I want to use Python"
I know, sometimes this is useful, but most of the time it's annoying and counterproductive, yet these comments and answers remain put.
Is there an official policy on this? Also, sorry if this is a dupe, it's a hard thing to search for.
Related, though I'm not sure how close:
What is the best way to deal with toxic/unhelpful comments?
What to do in case a user is spreading negativity, instead of answering the question