That is not the right approach. We have been discouraging meta-tags for over 10 years.
Every tag you use should be able to work, more or less, as the only
tag on a question
As Robert said, you should be making a canonical duplicate target for this.
It completely depends on the overlap between the problems people are asking related to keywords -- I'll defer to you as the expert on that -- but there's nothing to say you have to squeeze everything into one question. You can make as many canonical questions as make sense. Whether there are some logical groupings that exist, or whether you make 1 question per keyword, I'll leave that up to you.
Better yet, rather than creating a load of questions from scratch, if you're seeing these questions all the time then you should be able to find the best/most general one, edit it to improve it, and make that the canonical question for all future close votes. You have plenty of answers already, I'm sure you can salvage something from them.
Once the canonical question/questions exist, you will need to be consistent about closing duplicate questions to point to them, so that other users active in the tag will know that they exist and will start to do the same.
It would help a lot if you or someone in your community had a gold badge. It would allow you to single-handedly close a question that you know is a duplicate. If I were you, I'd be looking for a way to get enough rep to be able to do this. Maybe if the jsonschema tag's not active enough, you could try to get a gold badge in a tag which is commonly used in combination with it, like json.
If you can't get a gold badge or until you get one, you should become active in SOCVR. This is a chatroom where you can request other users vote to close a question. In addition to your personal vote, you would only need 2 additional close votes from people in the chat.
You could also see whether 2 or more people involved with JSON Schema community would be happy to participate in moderating the tag with you casting close votes. It doesn't seem like a hugely active tag, so it would only take a few minutes a day.
Some things to be aware of, based on my experience dupe-hammering in the java tag:
People are disappointingly lazy. If you link to a huge question which addresses multiple issues, or multiple causes of the same problem, you will get people complaining "that doesn't answer my question", and most of the time they won't have even read it thoroughly.
People also hate having their questions closed. A lot of the time, the reason why they didn't just Google the answer in the first place is that they want someone to spoon-feed them a solution that's precisely tailored for them. Do not tolerate it. As far as I'm concerned, you're the expert on which questions are a duplicate and which are not. If someone doesn't want to read a dupe target after you've taken the time to point them in that direction then that's their problem, not yours.
properties
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