I've only been around for about a year and a half, so I may not be a very good representation of the Long Term Community, but let me share what brought me in initially, what's kept me here, and what I need to stay (or rather, what's pushing me away).
Why I appreciated Stack Overflow from the get-go
My first question on Stack Overflow was a mess. I had something I needed to do at work, and I thought "It would be so much easier to do if x were possible." The main issue was this; I had experience with scripting languages, and recently had gotten this new job, and although most of my work could be done in scripts, some of the main components of the product are coded in C, which I had almost no experience with. And there was one process that had two versions; a C library function that was called routinely, and a script that did almost the same thing that could be called on demand. But there was an error in the script that worked in the C code, and I needed to fix it, and didn't know what I was doing.
So I made my question, posted it, and I remember clearly a user commenting "No offense, but it seems you have no idea what you are doing." At first I was taken aback. In my pride, I thought "How dare you accuse me of not knowing what I'm doing?" and I was upset for a couple hours about that. I'm both a proud and a sensitive person, and I don't ever like being told I'm wrong. However, after I let the steam boil down for a bit, I realized that yeah, I had no idea what I was doing. I had called C functions methods, I hadn't used the term Library correctly, and I had tried to hand wave away the possibility of just modifying the C code in my question to do what I want because I had no idea what I was doing and didn't want to deal with it.
Once I could swallow the fact that I was overreacting to someone who just pointed out the obvious reason why I couldn't solve my own issue, I realized what I needed to do. That I couldn't just hope people here would do my job for me, so I read up on the docs, figured out what I needed to do, and solved my issue.
So what of Stack Overflow? What was my opinion of them if I ended up solving my own question? I left that first day with a tremendous respect for the community who actually did help me help myself, and I deleted my poorly asked question. And I understood that if I had a question in the future, I needed to find out all I could about it before hand.
What's kept me here
From my first experience I learned something valuable: the importance of research before asking a question. And you know what? Nearly always I started asking a question, I never made it to the "Post your question" button. This is because as I tried to adequately explain my question so that it was simple to understand and showed that I had done my part in researching the question, and it turns out, as I would streamline the question, I often found my answer here on Stack Overflow already.
You see, I wasn't scared of asking a question, I was scared of not doing my research before asking a question, because how embarrassing would it be to ask people to waste their time helping me when I could find that same content with a few more minutes on google.
I learned that Stack Overflow has an amazing repository of high quality questions and answers, and often my searches turned into "xxx concept site:stackoverflow.com" instead of general google searches, because whenever I ended up on Quora or Reddit or Yahoo Answers or any other forum or other medium on which answers were posted, they often didn't work or were low quality or were correct but surrounded by spam. Sure, I would search the documentation, but I found strong, succinct, and understandable questions and answers here on Stack Overflow. Probably daily I was on here, not posting questions, but finding answers.
I've also enjoyed answering what I can. The gamification of rep didn't last long for me as something I was explicitly trying to attain, but when I see something I could answer, I did. With time, as I realized how the site works, I found that many of the things I could answers should be closed as duplicates instead of being answered, or that they were off topic to begin with, and I began helping with moderating. The more I moderated, the less I answered because I realized that often I was answering things that I really shouldn't have been, rather, I should have closed as a duplicate. Well, a few steps on the learning curve later, and I found Meta.
I've become very active and vocal on Meta. My introduction to Meta actually was a huge misunderstanding on my part, and I got into a bit of an argument with Servy, which, if any of you have gotten onto the wrong end of a discussion with Servy, you'll find out a few things; Servy is always extremely respectful no matter how you reply, and Servy is basically always right. I wasn't very respectful, and even though I had people upvoting my content, I eventually deleted my answer when I realized how wrong I had been. But I stayed around and have amplified my understanding of how Stack Overflow works, and why it is so amazingly good at what it does.
I've spent a lot of time on Meta since then, trying to help users understand what they're doing wrong, helping evaluate questions or answers that are getting downvoted, giving opinion on proposals for feature requests or other site changes, helping to verify bugs, and so forth. The reason being that I respect Stack Overflow and find it an essential tool at times to find the answers to things that I need to do my job, and I want to help preserve it and keep it high quality.
What I feel is pushing me away
Then the first welcoming blog came out with the big 'ol title: "Stack Overflow Isn’t Very Welcoming. It’s Time for That to Change."
What? What on earth was this talking about? What are we doing wrong?
I was confused because I hadn't ever seen anything on Stack Overflow that was trying to chase people away. I had only seen productive content and good moderation that helped to encourage good content and improvement to bad content. I also had no idea what people were talking about when they said that people are scared to post on Stack Overflow, because I had friends in school who used it without ever saying anything negative about it, and now at the workplace most people use it and no one has ever made any sort of comment about getting offended or treated badly by someone here. I mean, it's not like we chat about Stack Overflow over the water cooler, but with all this supposed negativity that is being emanated by users, I had at least 50 examples of people in real life who use the site and 0 examples of negativity.
When I asked about that, somebody linked me to a Reddit Rant about someone offended because their question was closed as a duplicate. Maybe it's because I'm a member of a church that has been persecuted greatly and I've come face to face with how misinformation about my faith gets distributed and thrown in my face with hate added in, but I'm immediately skeptical of some random person or people becoming very vocal about how bad something is. I do the same with politics, news, social media -- I let the rant pass by the wayside and try to find the evidence for myself. And the sore truth was that we had a few people on Reddit ranting about something that was ultimately the OP's fault for not searching their exact question title first. (Any why wouldn't they do that? Reading has always been a faster operation than writing)
I've gotten many more examples put into my face of Stack Overflow being unwelcoming, and I understand now that there are plenty of people who feel that way, I guess I was just in too small a sample size to see it for myself.
But here's the thing: The statements in the article make it sound like we as members of the community are at fault for being unwelcoming, that we must be doing something wrong, because people are getting offended. And that's insulting to people who are just here to help and have never bode any ill intention to users, new or otherwise. And the article and those that have followed have never placed any burden on the users who feel we are unwelcoming because they post bad quality content and get offended when we point it out and offer them suggestions for improvement or close their question as a duplicate. The people who are getting blamed are the users moderating and helping those users who are getting offended.
And even though we've had our quibbles about it, I think that the members of the Stack Overflow Community have been trying our best to be more welcoming.
But it's not working, reason being, people will get offended and take things as personal attacks if the want to, no matter how welcoming we try to be.
Take for example this question posted to Meta last week: Why are drive-by downvotes taken seriously when it is obvious what happened?. It's now deleted, so here is what I scraped before it disappeared for the <10K users like myself:
Nobody posted anything mildly offensive, and the OP had a couple comments removed that were offensive (If I recall correctly, their first comment had a term like "Dickheads" or something like that, but it was swiftly deleted). However, the OP managed to get offended at everything people had to say, and proceeded to insult people, calling them hostile and patronizing, no matter how much users tried to help.
And, to make things worse, that very same Welcoming blog got thrown in our faces again, as "evidence" that the person was right and we were all wrong for trying to help.
This isn't an isolated occurrence, I see it a few times each month and probably a few more get by me undetected. And the flow is always the same. A user who doesn't understand the rules posts an off topic or bad question. People comment with improvements on the post and downvote their question. The person comes over to Meta to ask why. The person receives responses as to why, and gets offended.
But instead of anything being done to help address this problem of long term users trying to help and being verbally abused for it, we get the Corporation telling us that we're wrong and being rude and mean and getting a few users' comments thrown at us as evidence that we're mean people and banners forced down our throat telling us that we don't understand the Be Nice policy.
Quite frankly, the more I'm told that I'm being mean no matter how nice and respectful I am, the less I want to participate. The only reason why I'm still around is because I know that Stack Overflow is an amazing repository of high quality questions and answers, and I don't want to just abandon that because the people in charge are forgetting the purpose of the site and are giving into trolls who refuse to follow the rules that keep the site high quality.
Disclaimer
Of course there are some bad apples. Just as there's this small very vocal community of Stack Overflow Haters who post all over the internet about how offensive Stack Overflow is, there are also a few members who get their kicks by trolling people and being rude to them. But lumping all of us Experienced users into the same group as those people and telling us that we're being unwelcoming, that we don't understand the code of conduct, that our moderation techniques are harmful, while at the same time validating the people who claim that downvotes are personal attacks and that closing a question is offensive... Well that hurts. And it's very discouraging.
What needs to happen
At this point, I really don't know. I've been vocal against certain changes and propositions that demonize the community for a while and have seen the changes stay and the propositions get implemented. I've tried to be a lot more diplomatic in my phrasing as of late. For example, in my recent post on the Meta Stack Exchange, which spurned from what was a criticism that there had been no publication about any sort of metric by which to measure the efficacy of the New Contributor Indicator, I tried to be more diplomatic. Instead of criticizing the issue I saw, I offered a solution, with the invitation for people to share their ideas on how we could gather data to evaluate the utility of the New Contributor Indicator: Let's use the Snark Detector to actually find out if the Contributor Indicator is having any effect where we want it to. But that post has been met with upvotes from community members and silence from any developers or people on the Welcoming Committee who could have said "We will do that" or "We are planning to do it another way way" or some sort of indicator that they care to evaluate if the New Contributor Indicator is useful or not. Maybe I'm at fault for not making that purpose direct enough, but more direct critiques of the feature aren't really getting much of a response either.
At the end of the day, I don't know what to do. I only can recognize the fact that I think you, Yvette, are the first person to openly recognize that much of the movement "has amounted to shaming much of the active community, the brunt of which has been felt by our active meta community." It feels nice for someone to finally recognize that all these efforts to make Stack Overflow more welcoming has been having a negative effect on the users who are making it more welcoming.
TL;DR
Yeah, this is really long and I don't really expect you to read all of it, especially in one sitting. So if you're just scanning for the TL;DR, here's the point:
Stack Overflow is an amazing repository of high quality questions and answers, and helps many many people. The general community is very welcoming, helps people improve their questions, and does a good job moderating the site. But people are still getting offended at things that basically aren't offensive at all. In an effort to help those users who turn away from the site, the long term users and their attempts to help people are getting labeled as unwelcoming and mean. And we don't have a very good recourse to do anything about it, and changes keep getting implemented to help the people who are getting offended at the site and validate their concerns, which at the same time validates their criticism of members of the community.
What people need to understand is that we don't get our kicks by being mean to people and downvoting and closing questions. We're earnestly trying to help, and we aren't attacking users. And I sadly don't know what we need to do to make that obvious to the users and the Management who keep implementing changes and features to tell us that we don't follow our own Code of Conduct.