I recently voted to reopen a question because it was, in my opinion, closed erroneously. Two people downvoted, three people offered completely incorrect (now deleted) answers, and five people voted to successfully place the question on hold. I believe that's because they were somehow unable to infer the issue or they mistakenly wrote it off as a duplicate selector specificity question.
Unfortunately, the question is actually about the counter-intuitive behavior of !important
CSS styles inherited from ancestor elements. Now, the OP didn't know that... and neither did most of the people who read his question. So, I voted to reopen after revising it for clarity (although, I thought it was pretty clear to begin with).
With so many failures surrounding the reception and understanding of this question, I felt that maybe a moderator flag was warranted for reopening. However, I received a canned rejection:
should only be used to make moderators aware of content that requires their intervention
I'm a little perplexed. When am I supposed to engage a moderator if not when there's a community failing? From the help center:
To be fair, the question has gained two more reopen votes; so, maybe there's hope that the review queue won't let it die over the weekend. Apparently it's dead already.