Oded's already posted an adequate answer to the Meta question that you are ostensibly asking here, so I won't belabor that.
Rather, it seems to me that you are just complaining about the closure of your question. And that's perfectly valid, so in the future, consider just asking about that on Meta, instead of calling the entire voting system into question.
To save you the work of opening a new Meta discussion, following is an analysis of the problems with your question, as it stands now. Rather than one, it actually asks three questions:
- "How did they achieve that goal?"
- "[W]hy is Scala compile time so slow that it was unacceptable for the Kotlin creators?"
- "[W]hich features of the Scala compiler make it slower than the Kotlin compiler?"
Question #3 is rather broad; there might be a reasonable question buried in there somewhere, but you'll need to unpack it. Use the "edit" feature; this is what a closure is supposed to motivate.
Question #2 appears to be opinion based. However, this is mainly because of the reference to the opinions of the Kotlin creators. Without asking them, no one really knows what they consider "unacceptable" performance. Nor does it really matter. That said, once again, it seems to me that there might be a perfectly reasonable question buried here, and the presentation caused people to miss it. Perhaps consider asking why Scala's compile time is slower than Kotlin's compile time. That's an objective question that you could easily back up with facts, and it's something to which someone could provide a balanced, insightful, and technical answer (I imagine, although to be fair, I'm not knowledgeable about either of these technologies).
Question #1 is a completely valid question. Full stop. "How does Kotlin compile as quickly as Java?" is a perfectly valid question as far as I'm concerned, and if you had simply asked that as a standalone question, closure would have been inappropriate. Now, some might argue that this is rather broad, too, but so are lots of good questions. The general rule-of-thumb for "too broad" is whether you'd have to write an entire textbook to adequately answer the question, not could you write such a textbook on the topic. It seems to me that an expert on the Kotlin compiler/architecture could easily write a few paragraphs explaining how it achieves its performance goals.
As it stands, your question is borderline. I considered voting to reopen it, but the problems that I observed above kept me from casting a vote. I'll happily reconsider if you modify the question.