Overall, I honestly do not think so. As others have mentioned, the issue is usually due to poor questions being asked then getting downvoted. However, in my view that's not where the accusations come. It's when the question gets downvoted **but no explanation is given as to why.** When I first joined Stackoverflow, I get exasperated at this a lot. Sure there's a guidline, but guidelines don't really explain the problem for your particular question, especially when starting off as a new user; guidelines don't explain how your question is bad, reading thousands of other questions do. The high rep users complain about accusations of elitism, but they never bothered to give a simple, 5 second explanation on why they downvoted the question and help the new user. If you look at other stack exchange sites, for example [this][1] question on history.stackexchange, a simple 1-liner was typed up by a veteran user on why the post is downvoted. Took him no more than 5 seconds (although curiously even that exchange site has [something similar][2] to this question). However, when I got into the flow of how to ask a good question on SO, I've rarely gotten a downvote since even though I'm a relatively new programmer and my questions are quite basic. A [super basic C++ question][3] I've asked was graced by not one but two 100k+ rep users. This to me shows that the community largely isn't elitist, but just suffering from lack of communication from the old and the new. That being said however, I can think of a few users on this site who can be branded as 'elitist' through and through - just read their profiles. One guy is even elitist about his favourite language... [1]: https://history.stackexchange.com/questions/15158/what-if-facebook-existed-throughout-history [2]: https://history.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/1944/why-does-every-post-here-gets-downvoted-and-disregarded [3]: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14204458/removing-a-node-from-a-linked-list-in-c