This was a really good opportunity to get some things that people have been feeling and expressing in quite a few places into a single, consolidated space. There's no great way of deliberately prompting folks to do that but you managed to pull it off extremely well despite that. This was a great way to talk about things that just aren't working in a way that helps make them better.
As promised, I'm going to give my own thoughts on what's breaking down along with what we've been contemplating, planning or designing on the back end. This is going to be long, and there's no tl;dr;
version; I'll separate concerns with headings so you can skip whatever doesn't interest you as much.
Meta is exhausting.
Fbueckert captured this well in his answer when he said "We're tired." The combination of repetition of content and the absence of anything that isn't emotionally-draining to do here is leading to burn-out. We take breaks and continue coming back out of a sense of purpose and obligation and it becomes a vicious cycle. It's this way for the people that spend blocks of time volunteering here, it's this way for people that are paid to work here, and the combination of mutual exhaustion is becoming profoundly evidenced the dynamic between employees and serious users who treat their work here like a part of their identity, just like we do.
Everything else, every single thing that I talk about in this answer is shaped around acknowledging that meta has become exhausting for most uses and for some uses, that exhaustion has led to the system as it's currently built being untenable long-term.
There's no single fix for this. Alleviating as many instances of disappointment and frustration as a whole is what fixes this. But, introducing new stuff (like, say, polls) and Friday open-mic tomfoolery with substantial guard rails around it could help provide a more satisfying and enjoyable vent.
While few actively talked about it like it was a deliberate construct, our early light-hearted shenanigans did provide some needed comic relief especially for people who were dealing with Jeff Atwood at the height of his conversational intensity as he was doing ten jobs at once. I just mentioned this in another unrelated answer on MSE.
Think of a tall, mossy cliff facing the ocean. For a long time, the ocean would hit the cliff hundreds of times a day, breaking apart every time, and wearing the cliff down. But, neither the cliff nor the ocean seemed to mind. That was 2008 - 2009 when we were struggling to make UserVoice work.
Now we're like Owww, ocean, stop getting us all wet and wearing us down! and you're like I'M AN OCEAN I CAN'T HELP IT NOW GET OUT OF MY WAY! and the only thing that substantially changed is how long everything has been, essentially, the same, and breaking in plain sight.
Meta over-encourages punditry at the cost of constructive engagement.
We need to make the default path to be writing an answer if you care about an opinion enough to say something and really get out of the habit of using a comment system that was designed to hold ephemeral suggestions for edits as our primary discussion mechanism. No system is perfect, but if you don't care enough about what you want to say to express yourself in an answer that can be engaged separately, you don't meet the standard needed to express an opinion beyond using your votes.
Furthermore, the code of conduct has to be enforced consistently here. This is a dynamic in which we (the people that make the stuff) hold the ultimate power and authority so we try to go out on limbs to assume good-faith when passion starts to look a lot like personal attacks. But while the intention there is good, it sends sets a poor example of the worst we'd ever want someone that doesn't work here to tolerate, and quite frankly, those that do work here struggle to come here. We need to create a space where people feel that their identity as a (designer, scientist, developer, marketer, new user, academic researcher, someone upset with a way their question was handled) is intrinsically safe from the experience that they have here. In other words, it needs to stop feeling personal.
We may consider changing how comments on meta works, because the majority of the 'hurt' comes from them.
Meta doesn't convey presence.
You find a bug. It's irritating as a face full of insects on a hot day. And then .. nothing. You check it a few times a week, nothing. This hurts because you spent 40 minutes ON MOBILE trying to get screen shots and context needed to help someone that gets PAID to fix this stuff.
A year later you noticed it was fixed. Nobody thanked you, no progress toward a meta bug or status-completed badge, nothing.
That's not because we're horrible people. It's because meta is a lousy bug tracker that doesn't communicate 'presence' (think of someone turning from yellow to green on your favorite IM client as they became active).
The same thing goes for features, though the community team is generally pretty good at declining requests that aren't ever going to be feasible pretty quickly.
To fix this, we're going to specify out a bug-tracker agnostic API that correlates meta post IDs to a back-end task (be it an Azure board, Trello card, FogBugz ticket, whatever) and relays information back to the front end meta post. This will also make sure updates get posted even if humans fail to do it. We have to keep meta for bugs, there's no realistic way of undoing how hundreds of sites rely on the per-site meta, which means we have to get creative in order to make that work for us somehow. I'll be posting a rough draft of a spec for this to MSE in the coming weeks.
Support is onerous. It doesn't have to be.
My colleague Donna is doing a ton of research and discovery into common pain points that lead to support incidents, and how easy it is for other people to help them (including our support team!). She's got the beginnings of a much better just-in-time help system and the experience to know what to test to figure out where things break. Let's face it, this thing we all built together can be a bit of a Rube Goldberg machine that we don't see because we built it and know how it works. The reason you see the same old stuff all the time is because it keeps happening. The biggest bang for the buck in alleviating the pressure it builds here is in the new user experience.
That said, the flow for folks that still end up here could come in the form of making it much easier to mark and merge duplicates here. This is all stuff we're looking at in 2019.
A thousand stings and a sudden 1:many dynamic
Watching the real-time vote counter rack up in the negative is awful if you're not expecting it, and kinda horrible when you are. And then 10 people suddenly post comments with negative language and you're expected to process all of that in real time? That's .. not going to work long-term, and hasn't been working well for years. We do need to own our role in why it sometimes stinks to be an active contributor here, and part of doing that entails looking at how we encourage suboptimal behavior by enabling it to be gratifying. We need to look at what down voting and disagreement should look like when it's healthy and making most people feel like they have a seat at this table, and we'll have those conversations soon. We don't want to take away your votes, but we can't have hornet nests dropping on people with the park police showing up and just telling them how it's all their fault.
Meta isn't engaging when we need it the most.
TAGS. Oh, do I have some stories about TAGS and being only one of a few people trusted with the ad-hoc tools Jeff Atwood built to handle large-scale maintenance. That's why I really hated using them when I got pinged to look at a year-old burnination request with only five votes in something I knew absolutely nothing about.
If you're active in foo and someone says "Let's bar [foo]!" - you need to see a notification of some kind in the sidebar, or something. Meta isn't coupled with the main site very well, and all the glue is made out of people (the same stuff they use to frost Soylent Green).
Folks are also, for reasons above, reticent to throw their hats into broader discussions about topic, elections (how many great moderators aren't running because they don't want to deal with everything I'm describing in this post?). The impression that people see in the form of resentment of the day-to-day cruft is creating a broader perception that isn't true, but is difficult to disarm. Things look hostile and intense and therefore so do we, but we're not. Well, not all the time, anyway. We're just really passionate about this thing we've given over a decade to supporting (I'm just lucky enough to have gotten paid for some of that).
Consensus is totally broken.
People post stuff. People vote on stuff. Sometimes, we (employees) post stuff to indicate our position on something, and people vote on that too. Here we go back to human glue with stuff not making its way to that fantastic just-in-time thingy Donna has been chewing on. You see where I'm getting?
That's on us. We need a policy czar and it needs to be that person's job to watch discussions, negotiate and compromise so our goals as a business are represented in how we go forward, and make that stuff official. We're bringing on at least one more CM early next week and .. hopefully at least one more by the end of the year.
In conclusion:
There's no good answer to your question. The intensity is both helping and hurting. We need to make sure stakeholders are people actually invested in something about the way the site works, but that intensity has made the bar to participation too high in many cases, and for those that meet it, the experience can be .. well, not great.
What matters is we're fixing it. And fixing it means looking at how much better the whole gets as you fix individual pieces. It has just gone on way too long, but it's not irredeemable, it's just going to be work. Most of that work is on us, including the part where we talk to you so you feel as good about our plans as we do, and doing our best to adjust when you don't.
I signed on in 2011 to serve this place and that's what I've done ever since, and it's great that they pay me for it, but the work still has to get done. And, well, sometimes you just need to take stuff apart a bit to figure out how you put it together incorrectly.
We're at that point with meta.