I posted a question some months ago on an Outlook VBA topic, duly tagged as outlook-vba. Within a minute, another user edited the question and removed the outlook-vba tag with no comment or explanation (leaving the other outlook and vba tags in place). A few days later I noticed the edit, and rolled it back to restore the outlook-vba tag, which happens to be the single best fitting tag among the three. Then a month later the same user edited the question again, and removed the outlook-vba tag the second time. I only noticed that last week, and once again I put the tag back, also leaving a comment to ask "why". The next day the user removed the outlook-vba tag for the third time, again without any comment or explanation. At that point I raised a moderator flag, though it doesn't look like any action was taken since.
I consider such edits to be "question vandalism", and not respecting OP's choice of tags plain rude. As long as the outlook-vba tag is in good standing, and as long as it clearly is the most appropriate tag for the question, I expect it to be left in place, though I don't have the means to enforce that as an end user.
P.S. A search in the meta archives found several discussions about the perceived duplication of the excel-vba/outlook-vba tags vs. the separate excel/outlook + vba. There does not appear to exist a consensus on the matter, see e.g. here.
However, it looks like certain users took upon themselves to impose their preference and systematically "cleanse" the combination tags. The outlook-vba tag, for example, had 3,100 questions in Nov '19, while it is down to 2,800 today, with an year-long gap due to systematic deletions of the tag from previously posted questions.
outlook-vba
as a legitimate tag. Now, after I used the tag in good faith for precisely its intended purpose, you are saying that it should never be used. If that's the case then, sorry, but it would moderators' job to make that crystal clear upfront, and carry out whatever remediation they deem necessary. Leaving it to random users to do it unchecked and with impunity does make it look a lot like bullying.outlook-vba
the only such "poison tag", and how is one supposed to know? If it is, indeed, then it should be made read-only (if technically possible), and/or adorned with a big official warning. Barring that, arbitrary removal of the tag from qualifying questions is not any remediation, at least it surely doesn't look like one to an unsuspecting user.