Does Stack Exchange really want to conflate newbies with women/people of color?
As for that blog post, I personally had my own opinions about it, that were not favourable when they wanted to post it, and I made that clear. As the blog was specifically about women, coloured people and new comers, as a female programmer, I believe I have a right to have a voice about it, as I have stayed on the site, despite not understanding the culture much of the time. The reason I don't understand it, it's predominantly male, as is the programming industry, that is not actually the fault of this site and I have poor people skills, so I misunderstand things and take them literally.
This is what we need. Site responsibility and personal responsibility and that applies to every person who reads this. It applies to every single person who uses the site, new or not, whatever your skin tone or gender.
If you choose to have social responsibility, that's your choice, and it's not mandatory for the site, but denigrating people who want to improve this world is also not OK.
As far as I can see there's a blurring of two separate issues here.
The world is full of bigotry and there are marginalised people everywhere. Stack Overflow is not responsible for fixing this, but it does have a wide influence and the potential to be a force of good. (This is also where the tenuous and explosive debate about positive discrimination raises its ugly head, but I'm not going there right now.)
Stack Overflow has a very small bunch of users who are regularly rude to new people.
Bigotry based on race, gender, religion, anything is bigger than Stack Overflow and beyond the scope of the site to fix. It's part of our ethos that we do not allow these things. If you see it, flag it.
The one thing that we have been allowing is pile on in the comments and a small bunch of users to regularly comment around the site in sarcastic and rude manners. With the exception of people who struggle with English as a second language, this bunch of users doesn't care where you're from or who you are. By exception, as they're known to be rude to people with poor English skills.
The vast majority of users on the site are fine; it's a small, small percentage of the site who are regularly rude and kick people around in the comments. This small bunch of people who frequent their tags of choice and are regularly sarcastic and rude to newcomers, regardless of the person's race, gender, sexual preferences, skin tone, or anything else. These people are not selectively rude; they are just rude and will frequently pile on comments under a post and generally give the site a bad name.
On meta, this type of thing occurs more frequently. A, relatively, small group of users feel the need to jump in to get their point of view across, often repeating and arguing the same points over and over in the comments.
No one, no one, enjoys pile on in the comments under their post. No one, takes kindly to that type of overwhelming criticism.
Does this mean everyone can jump onto to Stack Overflow meta and cry - "Hey, Stack Overflow admits they're awful - so don't be awful to me!" and use this as a way to avoid any form of critique? No. It means simply that people are entitled to fair feedback, without being jumped upon and accused of being lazy or whatever usual accusations that are being tossed around.
If you're tired of seeing crappy questions, skip those questions and focus on the better ones. Use your votes. Stop abusing people. If you're continually pulled up for being rude or abusive perhaps stop and consider - maybe people think you're an asshat and you really do behave like you're one.
It's time for the small group of rude people to stop making the site unpleasant for everyone else. If you do not have the patience to be polite to someone, don't comment. We don't want to know how wretched you think a post is. If a post is crappy, we can all see it's crappy, except the OP. It doesn't need to be reiterated over and over in the comments.
We advise people to come to meta if there are issues and the pile on in meta is worse.
If you're worried about the quality of the site and what sort of dreadful content we might end up with, you're not helping by abusing people. Some people take time to work out how to post a decent question, and scaring them off does not help. If the post quality does not improve, they will receive post bans.
So the issue isn't what your skin tone is, your gender, your religion or whatever. It's the fact a small bunch of loudmouthed participants who make people feel unwelcome. As Tim Post said, marginalised people may be more sensitive to this type of behaviour. But from all accounts, I cannot see that it is only marginalised groups who feel Stack Overflow is unwelcoming.
As a lobbyist from way back to encourage women into programming I can say this. I never thought Stack Overflow was a specific problem in this issue; it's the IT industry generally and men and women in societies globally. There's sexism in the world! Women are sexually harassed globally. It happens. Yes, it also happens to men. As far as I can see, the vast majority of users on the site don't think this is OK. Unfortunately there is only so much the site can do to safeguard its users. I've been stalked around the Internet, including on Stack Overflow. For three reasons: I'm a woman, I'm outspoken, and I'm good at upsetting people. The last one I can work on, and the first two I'm not changing.
The issue on the site is NOT gender or colour; it's rampant, unchecked poor behaviour and a lack of intuitive question guidelines. We're always going to have poor quality posts come onto the site, and there isn't any reason to get out the pitchforks and exclaim outrage over it. Simply downvote, close vote, flag or delete vote. If you have nothing constructive to say, don't say it.
And before people carry on in the comments, read this post properly. It was a discussion about the declining numbers of women in programming and what, if anything Stack Overflow could do to improve that. It was not holding Stack Overflow responsible for the decline. There are many complex issues surrounding why marginalised people would not want to participate on the site, and, as I said before, Tim Post covers that briefly. It could take up a research paper to address it adequately.
For the record - people are not black or white - the shades between these are grey - we're all on a continuum of colour. Remember that next time you see a difference in skin tone in any direction. My bit of social responsibility