In my answer to Should the mod team tighten up moderation on Meta comments?, I have argued that, while Meta can benefit from tighter moderation of problematic comment threads, there must be sufficient clarity about what makes comment threads problematic. The most effective way of establishing that probably is by poring over test cases, so here is one.
Under Magisch's answer to Creating a system for featuring posts. Tell the mods what you want, you can see the following two comments:
We should also look at an option to define "hot" as being something heavily discussed and therefore possibly with lots of downvotes. The announcement to this change certainly deserves to be "hot", but it wouldn't meet the "net score of +5" requirement. Looking at the "total votes per hour" or something like that might be a better indicator for "hotness". – Secespitus Jul 24 at 12:52
Echoing @Secespitus, considering how votes work on meta, wouldn't it be better to count the total number of votes? Meaning that -0/10, -10/0 and -5/5 posts all would be seen as equally important. – AkselA Jul 25 at 11:08
There used to be three further comments there addressing it, posted within a span of about two days. I will now paraphrase from memory:
@AkselA This would feature all the unremarkable downvoted questions. – duplode
@duplode Well, it would also feature all the unremarkable upvoted questions. Clearly additional criteria are needed. – AkselA
@AkselA Downvoted questions are far more likely to be unremarkable, though. In any case, featuring questions that at once have lots of downvotes and upvotes is a good idea. – [A third user]
Was there a need to delete those three comments, or of other moderator intervention?
(My own views on the matter are in a self-answer below.)