## tl;dr It's tautological: removing a tag (especially from an already-closed question) adds — literally — *nothing* new. It does not make the question more clear, more on topic, more answerable, or more specific. And it's easy to detect. So why ask to reopen it? ## background Inspired by [this discussion][oy]. The intention *behind* downvoting-to-deletion was to remove [burninated][consummatevs] tags from circulation. The questions were being set up for [auto-deletion][roomba], in part to avoid landing in the [Reopen Review Queue][rrrrrr] — as would occur if the tag were simply edited out of the question. There have been previous discussions regarding [bumping due to very minor edits][saddestkey], and the rationale for doing so (or nominating for reopening) is sound: minor edits are still edits, and there's no blanket way to know that even a tiny edit didn't improve the question or add information. Except in this case. [oy]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/307009/clean-up-by-downvoting-a-ridiculous-user-experience "Clean-up by downvoting? A ridiculous user experience" [consummatevs]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/tags/burninate-request/info [roomba]: http://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/5221/how-does-deleting-work-what-can-cause-a-post-to-be-deleted-and-what-does-that [ity]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/tags/bump/info [saddestkey]: http://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/267623/should-very-minor-edits-not-be-bumped-to-the-top [rrrrrr]: http://stackoverflow.com/review/reopen/9688271