Recently, I've voted to close a meta question, which got instantly reopened by a CM after reaching 5 close votes. The question I'm referencing is this one.
This question is about curating the new "Discussions" feature, and asks about how to design the flag dialog. It explicitly contains a load of subquestions, such as "How should we deal with duplicate discussions?" and "How should we handle questions that don't belong in discussions?"
There are also a couple of implicit questions, that need to be answered when determining how to handle flags, like "Who will handle them, and confirm a discussion is a duplicate, or belongs better elsewhere?". On Stack Overflow main, this is often a point of contention, and requires subject matter expertise, so the current "CMs handle everything unilaterally" does not sound feasible to me if we want to flag duplicates and stuff that would be better asked in the Q&A section of Stack Overflow, even though it was fine for spam/rude/abusive content.
There's some content that hints that collectives should be self-governing, e.g. this discussion on NLP. If the collective can broaden and narrow its scope by itself, that has consequences for these flags.
Another implicit question in my mind is "Should all discussion sections be handled similarly, or are collectives allowed some self-governance?" which is particularly important since we have some company sponsored collectives with a "not that great" track record in sticking to the rules. If we don't have consensus on this, designing a flag dialog seems silly, since we won't know if we need collective-specific reasons in there.
In my opinion, asking such broad questions is counterproductive to the discussion. This can also be seen in the answers, some of which only consider a single aspect, while others question the usefulness of the effort as a whole. If we want to properly discuss this, I think these points deserve separate discussions.
I want to figure out if I was in the wrong here. In particular, I'd like to know if questions asked by CMs are exempt to broadness rules, as some more about the NLP collective essentially contain a list of subquestion, which IMO deserve their own Q&A if we want to properly discuss each one.