First, a quick side note: it's hard for me to understand the problem from your example screenshots and textual description. You say "It should be blurring the text but it doesn't."; but what I see is that text that was black has now become grey with a lighter grey cloud surrounding it. The CSS you show says blur(10px)
in it, and the cloud seems to be plausibly that thickness around the letters. So I can't really envision exactly what you want it to look like instead.
As for the cited reason for closure: there's a theme here. We do not offer "help"; we answer a question. Every question needs to be self-contained. If it is a question about existing code, then the relevant code needed to demonstrate the problem (as described in How to create a Minimal, Reproducible Example) needs to be in the question itself.
I mentioned it was for an Electron app and provided the name for it.
The question here isn't about you and isn't about your app. If you're trying to figure out an issue with CSS, the question is about that CSS.
Questions about CSS should generally include some HTML in the example, because to the extent that using CSS is "programming" (it's not conventionally what programmers think of as such, but...), the HTML is the "input" for that program.
I decided not to include HTML in the post because neither the HTML nor CSS is in a vacuum. There's other CSS in the app that could be getting in the way of what I was trying to do.
Before posting, it is your responsibility to test that hypothesis. Open an editor and create an example with just the CSS that seems to be causing the problem and some corresponding HTML. Send it to a web browser.
Does the problem appear? Nice, you've already made great progress towards an MRE. Figure out whether you still have a question; then start narrowing down what part of the CSS is causing the problem, and what minimal HTML example is needed to demonstrate the problem.
It doesn't? Then go back to the app, open the debugging tools and see what the computed properties are for the things that have the wrong layout. Can you directly write CSS that specifies the final result? Can you reproduce the problem that way? Do you understand why there is a problem with those computed properties? Then, figure out:
Do I have a question about why these final properties behave this way? If so, narrow down which properties are relevant, and proceed as in the first step.
Do I have a question about why the properties get computed like this? Then figure out what CSS sources are interacting to get combined in this way, and make the example based around that.
Etc.
According to the specific thing that confuses you about the result, narrow it down further. As much as possible.
I thought it was possible that if someone provided a CSS solution with HTML I would've included, that there would be a chance of it not working due to interference from other CSS in the app.
There's a electron tag, and you already explained that much about the context. Developers familiar with common Electron gotchas (assuming there are any) would naturally take that sort of thing into account when answering.
But again: our goal is not to make the CSS in your Electron app work. Our goal is to provide an answer to a question about:
You can ask multiple such questions, one at a time, as long as they meet the site standards. But it is your responsibility to a) check for already-existing Q&A for those questions; b) translate the problem you are encountering into such questions, and the answers back into a working Electron app.