The tags are not the same, though they are about the same subject.

You say:

> *I don't think someone looking to answer mutability questions is going to look only for situations where they are being asked if something is immutable, because... well... they're opposites.*

That's exactly the point.

If I'm working in a mutable language and wish to implement an immutable object, then I'm asking a question about [tag:immutability]. That is, I need to implement immutability in an environment where that is not the norm and, thus, requires some effort. I need expertise specific to my environment and someone who understands immutability, what it means and what its purpose is. Examples:

* http://stackoverflow.com/q/36603998/211627
* http://stackoverflow.com/q/36427530/211627

If I'm working in an immutable language and wish to implement a mutable object, then I'm asking a question about [tag:mutability]. That is, I need to implement mutability in an environment where that is not the norm and, thus, requires some effort. I don't need someone who understands immutability... I've already got that. I need someone who knows how to implement mutability in an immutable language. There's a whole class of techniques designed for this scenario that are completely irrelevant in a mutable language (see [state monad](https://wiki.haskell.org/State_Monad), as an example). Examples:

* http://stackoverflow.com/q/34688575/211627
* http://stackoverflow.com/q/33233003/211627

It would make no sense to tag my question with [tag:mutability] when it is *immutability* that I desire, and vice versa. The audience for each tag is different. If we were going to do merge these tags, then we'd have to merge [tag:stateful] with [tag:stateless]. Yes, it's two sides of the same coin, but if my question is about "heads" then it doesn't make sense to tag my question with "tails".