On the one hand, there are a bunch of proposals that are obviously not going to go anywhere.
On the other hand... My experience with burninate-requests here has convinced me that folks are often quite terrible at determining whether or not a tag is useful even when they're looking at the questions in the tag. Expecting folks to make useful decisions on whether a tag can be effectively documented before any documentation has been written or requested will probably just lead to a lot of stress and pointless arguments.
We struggled with this for years on the Area51 site where new Q&A sites are proposed: folks would bicker over topics all day long, even when they had no hope of getting traction. We eventually settled on a system that lets all but the most blatantly-inappropriate proposals have a go of it, but kills them off if they fail to gain any traction in a set period of time.
I think a similar system might end up working out for Docs: if a tag is proposed (but not created) in a few days, kill the proposal. If a tag is created but fails to garner a sufficient number of edits within a few more days, kill the tag. This would then just leave "popular nuisance" tags as the only things needing discussion and manual moderation... Which they would assuredly need anyway.