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This question "Using LINQ as foreach replacement", is clearly a duplicate and I found the duplicate just by putting “LINQ foreach” into Google.

Yet it has two answers both posted after I voted to close and both have been up voted. As the answers were posted after I voted to close the up-voters must have know that there were written by people too lazy to check for a duplicate before answering.

It is reasonable to conclude the most users of Stack Overflow don’t care about duplicates and that therefore Stack Overflow is “past saving”?

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    because it isn't deleted yet of course... and i don't think we should prevent those upvotes, as the dupe close vote may very well be wrong. though... even closed questions can receive up/downvotes on the answers.
    – Kevin B
    Mar 7, 2016 at 15:59
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    We'll never find out. Herding cats is difficult
    – Jan Doggen
    Mar 7, 2016 at 16:04
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    I don't think that's a reasonable conclusion, considering "most users" are new users who may simply not understand how the site works, rather than not caring about duplicates.
    – Kevin B
    Mar 7, 2016 at 16:05
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    At this point in time, the question has been down voted, but yet the answers are STILL giving rep to the people that should had FIRST checked if the question was a duplicate. Mar 7, 2016 at 16:17
  • and... what do you want to do about it?
    – Kevin B
    Mar 7, 2016 at 16:33
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    @KevinB, if the 45 people that have view this question down-voted these answers, it would be a start.... Mar 7, 2016 at 17:07
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    I'm not so sure this new answerer bashing is ever going to catch on. Not like this anyway. Spit some bullets at the OP, the deadbeat lazy sonofabitch that started all this. Mar 7, 2016 at 18:33

1 Answer 1

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Because that's how they decided to vote.

While we try to provide guidance on how to productively use votes, at the end of the day, voters can use their votes however they want, so long as they're not engaging in voting abuses such as serial voting or ring voting.

You can't say in one breath "Your votes are yours to do with whatever you wish," and then in the next breath legislate how they are used. It doesn't work that way.

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