The new Code of Conduct applies to the askers of questions, not only answerers and curators:
If you’re here to get help, make it as easy as possible for others to help you. Follow our guidelines and remember that our community is made possible by volunteers.
A question that does not follow our guidelines on how to ask a question, or does not respect that the community consists of volunteers, fails to meet the expectations of the Code of Conduct.
Curators who become frustrated and are a bit snarky in a comment are judged as not welcoming, and can have their comment easily flagged "for moderator attention" as an "unfriendly or unkind" violation of the Code of Conduct. This quickly leads to deletion of the comment. The Code of Conduct notes that this will be accompanied by a warning and "repetitive misconduct" will result in account suspension.
Of course, there should be no double standards for moderator intervention and deletion of contributions when there are violations of the Code of Conduct. Therefore it should be easy to flag questions as violations, and bad questions should be deleted just as rapidly as bad comments.
Some of the standard close reasons for questions (in whole or in part) indicate failure to meet expectations of the Code of Conduct by a question asker:
- Unclear what you're asking: does not "make it as easy as possible for others to help"
- Too broad: for gimme-teh-codez requirements dumps and zero-effort homework questions does not respect "that our community is made possible by volunteers".
- Questions seeking debugging help without including the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself: does not "make it as easy as possible for others to help", does not respect "that our community is made possible by volunteers".
So, I guess we should now be flagging some (or most) questions closed for those reasons as breaches of the Code of Conduct, so the moderators can apply sanctions against the question askers with the same severity and rapidity sanctions are applied to curators who allow snark into their welcoming comments.
But, rather than requiring manual flagging of those bad questions, why not recognize that closure of a question for one of those reasons (which requires 5 votes by curators) is prima facia evidence of a breach of the Code of Conduct, and automatically raise a moderator flag for those cases, so the question can be rapidly deleted?
Yes, bad questions are sometimes, eventually deleted. But bad questions that do not meet the expectations of the Code of Conduct should be deleted with the same rapidity as snarky comments.