This is one step of many.
The scenario that you mention is one that I quite literally think about late at night: "Erroneous duplicate closures are one of the biggest antagonists of engagement and one of the hardest problems we need to solve."
Well, actually, de-duplication and proper categorization and indexing at our scale is something more than a few could build nearly an entire career out of improving.
If interacting with the site makes you so angry that you feel justified in chiding someone publicly, we want you to blame us, not them, because you've hit a product pain point that we haven't fixed.
While giving someone a good 'talking to' and 'setting them straight' might seem as effective as it does cathartic, it's not the proper way to go about resolving conflict. You're angry because we didn't give you a button you could push with some sincere confidence that it would have a positive effect.
It's going to take a long time to fix these pain points.
We're eventually going to need to hire a PM just to work on portions of the product that cause people to disengage, or refrain from engaging based on what they've heard. Right now, it's in DAG's wheelhouse because we're using their developers to do it, but the 'welcome wagon' needs to become an autonomous team. We're actively recruiting, we're actively hiring, and we know what we need to invest to fix this stuff.
Our relevance could be the cost of our outbursts, and that's scary.
We're pointing the finger inward here, but to fix this, we need everyone's help. I need you to email me and scream like a pissed-off chef in a walk-in if you really need to get stuff off your chest instead of letting it burst out at someone else on the site publicly, because it's my fault that we haven't fixed the part of our product that set you off. And if some of that also happens to be your boss putting unrealistic expectations into scheduling, well, I'll take it too.
Just don't take it out on the people that really look up to the people that find success on Stack Overflow. And honestly? There's no new rules here, we're just codifying what we've been loosely and inconsistently enforcing for the past 5+ years (another big problem is groups of users making new rules without any mechanism for clear consensus, we need to re-work meta, too).
But, it's not over the top. In fact it keeps with our tradition of being just the minimum amount needed. We're going to see how it goes over time, checking in through tests and quick surveys every 6 months or so.
I feel like this is asking moderators to be babysitters, "Now be nice, children!"
oh I hear you. It's exhausting.