Just for posterity here is my personal point of view and what it looks like from an involved party:
About the user in particular
I have reached out to the user in person and collected feedback as well as invited them to share more information about their experience. Here is our public discussion in chat.
Chris was offended and I think they felt better after the discussion or at least that's what they wrote on twitter. They have also been kind enough to reach out via email. Due to privacy I cannot disclose anything from there without permission but I think things are better. They have also posted an encouraging message on twitter.
I have invited them to participate in the room at a future point after reading the room rules and they're welcome to do so at their discretion.
We have further discussed this in chat and on our GitHub yet. Unfortunately it was done in a private repository due to the privacy of humans involved. We have made the entire discussion available to SE moderators via two moderators who are also room regulars.
I generally agree with the statements in the upvoted answer regarding whether the discussion itself was OK but I'm not a fan of how we handled it and we're working towards a better process.
Regarding the prior room owner in twitter
I also approached the previous room owner who tweeted name calling the room. They had no problem being very unwelcoming to users before and then disappeared from the room during the time of our shift towards a more open culture. It is possible that's where their impression was from.
It is unfortunate that they felt compelled to mock this community who has helped them in public. They promptly resorted to name calling and attacking me so I've regretfully had to block them and let them know they're no longer welcome in the room after they called me a "bad person" for trying to understand why we were attacked.
I have again made the entire discussion available to SE moderators as well as a few of said user's more troubling messages from the past.
About culture in general
Quoting Loktar:
Past, present, and new users, we have a repo for issues related to room culture, if you have issues with the room please post there we welcome the discussion!
That repo is here: https://github.com/JavaScriptRoom/culture/
We try our best to be respectful. Here is our additional code of conduct which is in my opinion at least more restrictive than Stack Overflow's (and of course, comes in addition).
Mistakes happen
A fellow answer pointed out misguided discussion from some time in chat. I would like to encourage any user who sees a message as problematic to speak up. We do not censor respectful discussion of touchy subjects and we care a lot about not letting people express themselves.
However, we have a strict policy regarding off-topic: drop it immediately if another user asks you to.
Indeed, the discussion was dropped - however instead of communicating that fact to the user above we started a discussion about what's appropriate. This is unfortunate though I don't hold Jhawins or ssube at fault for it.
I think we're getting mixed signals of "kick often" and "be welcoming" due to our exposure to abuse from trolls and we've become too trigger happy. I intend to try and reach a more friendly culture overall.
About sensitive topics
As the most upvoted at the moment answer states:
If you don't like the topic, say so respectfully. If you get a rude response, flag it. But flagging the lines he disagreed with doesn't help, because the messages are shown without context.
Again, we'll do our best to improve, you are also encouraged to reach out. Be willing to accept we might not be 100% in agreement with you.
About chat in general.
We like chat. We've had some cool things happen in chat over the years:
- We've had two room owners become boyfriend and girlfriend, they've been together for quite some time now and I look forward to be in their wedding. They both wrote some pretty popular open source projects.
- We've had room owners go on to write popular libraries you've probably heard of and used. I can name at least 3-5 in the top 1000.
- We've used the room to coordinate education efforts and push canonicals.
- We've used the room to promote good answers and reference material.
- I've personally met a bunch of friends in the room - leading to working together with two in my job and I'm not the only case.
In fact, I'd attribute my 700+ answers in the promise tag to the room and in turn the fact Node.js has good promise debugging support. I talk about this (and the room) here.
I think a nice reminder about the room is that as unwelcoming as we are we have a nice and helpful representation of people of Indian descent, LGBT, women, middle eastern and white and it has never been an issue.
I'm definitely in favor of the JavaScript room - although like any big space it has its issues. We realize we can go elsewhere on slack/irc/miaou/whatever - we just like it here and hope you like us back.
This and Stack Overflow
We're trying to minimize Stack Overflow's staff involvement in this particular instance. Not because we don't like them - because we do. We mostly think it's a waste of their time and if I were them I wouldn't want to deal with it.
Whenever a community manager gets to chat it means we've caused trouble - and even if it's not our fault it's our responsibility to try to minimize that which is why we're open to feedback.
I don't know, I guess I'm a little post traumatic due to random people on twitter abusing members in Node.js and I don't want to encourage a situation like that here. In Node.js people actually had to take time off due to mental stress and it had a severe impact on their mental health at times.