What you're seeing when you see 'Double Standards' is really the collision of three separate schools of thought: The Purists, Democracy-Advocates, and People who Just Don't Care Either Way.
Each School of thought takes its direction from a different aspect of the site:
The goal of a site like Stack Overflow is to somehow share the correct knowledge wherever it may be as it is scattered throughout the universe, and to cause that to be voted up and to be spread amongst us. There's this big universe of dumb programmers, and I'm one of them, and we all have a little bit of knowledge. I may know how to do this thing in VB6 which may be useful to somebody one day who's trying to maintain some ridiculously old piece of crap code. We all have these little tiny pieces of information and if we can just contribute a little bit, that information gets amplified, and maybe a thousand other dumb developers will benefit from my one little piece of good information. (Emphasis Added)
Later on in that same blog post, Jeff writes:
It's a place where a busy programmer can invest a few minutes with as little friction as possible, and get something tangible from the community in return. (Emphasis Added)
The Purists take this to its logical conclusion, and vote to close any topic that doesn't enhance the 'useful programming knowledge' of the programming community. Which include the questions you mentioned (The Jon Skeet Facts question was closed and opened many, many times over).
- Democracy-Advocates - The Democracy advocates advocate (for lack of a better word) the practice of including everything on the site that is voted up by users.
Therefore, anything goes.
As you notice, the 'fun' questions get the highest votes, so they must be what the community wants, Q.E.D. This school focuses on the Reddit nature of Stack Overflow to let votes determine what ought to be on the site; and they point out inconsistencies in question closings vociferously (rightly, I might add, since there's an apparent incongruity).
This group also tends to be the same group that wants to severely curtail moderation powers, for two reasons (that I can see):
- It's inherently unfair that some questions that garner 'easy' reputation and badges stay open, and others do not.
- It's a community, and should be treated as such. It's not fair that only the 1% of users can determine what can stay on the site and what cannot.
This group permeates across all reputation levels. There are users with high reputation that hold this viewpoint, and users with lower reputation that see questions like this that are already posted, and subsequently think it's "Ok" to post more questions like this, much to the anger of the Purists.
- Those that Don't Care - The third group simply doesn't care either way. They're just here to get what they need, and can tune out the noise rather easily.
Solution
For this problem to be resolved, we are going to need to have a benevolent dictatorship over top of the community driven moderation. Otherwise, you'll continually have these battles because each side has a valid point, and neither Jeff nor Joel have come out and explicitly supported one side over the other.
My opinion is that Jeff believes that this will 'work itself out' and that letting the community duke it out by itself is the best idea; but this pre-supposes that neither side is given an advantage. Right now, the Democracy-Advocate side has the advantage for the following reasons:
- Closers can now only vote to close a question once
- Questions default to an 'open' state, and need 5 people to close them
- Closers only get 12 votes a day. Out of 637 users that can close questions, a lot of them would have to be active during the day to keep the fluff out
As a purist, I understand and sympathize with your plight. I would rather Jeff come down one way or the other so we could stop having these incongruities.