These aren't moderator-set rules, they are rules set by CMs—i.e., staff. It is also, by a chance, a rule that at least the majority of the moderator team agrees with*, so we're happy to continue enforcing it, as we do with all the other site policies.
If it were really true that we thought the rules/guidelines were wrong, then we'd be attempting to make logical arguments against them and trying to get the standing policy changed.
* I hedge this statement not because I specifically know of any moderators who disagree with this policy, but because I am aware that I do not know the positions of all moderators and certainly haven't conducted a poll.
This is becoming ridiculous
I'm sorry that you don't like clear, unambiguous communication, but I don't want there to be any confusion or "I didn't know" excuses.
Maybe I'm biased, since it's my comment, but I really don't think what I said counts as anywhere in the vicinity of "ridiculous".
They have unilaterally decided that "rules" need to be enforced with the maximum effect
No, just that serial offenders and rabble-rousers who are encouraging other users to break the rules need to be stopped. If rules were being enforced with the maximum effect, all accounts belonging to rule-breakers would be suspended for 1 year or just deleted outright. That's not happening, so maybe the hyperbole is wrong.
those rules are basically made up to make processes as painful and cumbersome as possible as possibly
Well, sort of. The rules were made up by staff to create a significant barrier on the removal of tags. That was by design; there needs to be a high bar for the carrying out of tasks involving the destruction of content. So, yes, there are a lot of rules, and they're somewhat cumbersome.
Tag burnination: from the tame Shog guidance to the absolute monstrosity that the SO burnination "rule"
The officially-stated rule that tag burninations must go through Meta is from Taryn (bluefeet) (who was staff at the time, for those who don't know), not Shog. But semantics aside, the burnination rules were developed largely by and in close consultation with Shog, and they are consistent in every way with his guidance and thinking—note many direct quotes and near-exact paraphrases. They are also widely supported by the community, including the "silent majority" which you attempt to invoke in defense of your position.
Edits: from the help center reasonable "Any time you see a post that needs improvement and are inclined to suggest an edit, you are welcome to do so" to the totally absurd "change the question into something different [even if no one has answered it]" is not ever allowed.
First, if you're trying to position "you are welcome to do so" as giving yourself a carte blanche to ignore all other rules/guidelines/constraints, then I'm going to dismiss that by borrowing your word: "ridiculous".
Second, it's not a novel interpretation, or even a moderator-created interpretation, of the editing guidelines that users aren't allowed to completely replace an existing question with a new one. That's not editing, that's de facto deletion. I explained this to you already just a few hours ago, and others have been explaining it to you for years.
If you have a new, different question, then you should ask a new, different question, not edit an existing one into something completely different. It's really not all that complicated, and it doesn't require any nuance. The Help Center article that you, yourself, quoted is pretty clear about the circumstances in which one should edit posts and what edits are meant to accomplish.
I actually agree with you that too many people are too hesitant to edit questions. I completely endorse radical edits that make major changes to a question if those edits mean the difference between a question that would need to be closed/deleted for failing to meet our minimum standards and a question that is a valuable contribution to our knowledge base. But still, the minimum expectation is that the author's intent be respected and the fundamental topic of the question remain the same. If it was a different question entirely, it should be asked as a different question entirely.
In about 30 seconds of searching MSO, I found this answer from 2015, posted by a non-moderator, explaining that it is "absolutely not" allowed for the author of a question to make an edit that completely changes it, observing that they "should've asked a new question, instead". There are many others I've seen over the years (oh, look, here's another one!), which I don't have the desire to go look up at the moment, and many more even older ones over on MSE.
I would also like to point out that, contra your accusations about moderators not using common sense and slavishly enforcing rules, I didn't take any steps to enforce what I am on record believing is a rule that the author of a question should not make an edit that completely changes it into a different question. In this recent case, I merely explained to the user that this is technically a rule violation, but chose to permit it based on my subjective assessment of the totality of circumstances. I guess that's what tyrants do, too.
Explaining how the site works: this doesn't need explanation due recent events.
I've been told that this is what moderators do. Ironically, "explaining how the site works" was used as the primary justification for why commenters should be able to leave comments that moderators wanted to ask them to stop leaving.
No one, ever, has been suspended by not following the help center to the T. Nor has anyone ever been suspended by not following meta.
No, of course not. However, users have been suspended for knowingly breaking the rules and continuing to do so even after being asked to stop. You, personally, have been warned about this exact thing on multiple occasions. Ignorance is not a defense here.