Update:
Following off of torazaburo's comment to Nicol Bolas's answer, I want to make clear that my intention was certainly to evoke the "Be Nice" rule as the reason for the deletion. I apologize if that was not clear from the comment that I left. I ran into the character limit, as always seems to happen for me. Some day I may learn to be concise yet expressive, but that day is not today.
The edit that Josh Caswell made was certainly a substantial improvement over the tone of the original post (as is ever the case with his edits), and addresses many of my concerns.
I've undeleted the answer now, because it no longer violates the "Be Nice" policy on its face, and the discussion here has served to convince me that there is a basis on which it can be reasonably considered an answer to the question. Personally, I'd like to see it fleshed out a bit more to make the relevant suggestion more obvious, but that's obviously not a reason to delete an answer.
Again, I apologize if my original comment was unclear. It was not my intention to cause anywhere near the confusion or hurt feelings that this seems to have evoked, and I remain quite puzzled about why it did. Answers that are non-constructive or irrelevant are regularly removed, and there is never any offense meant by that.
I am only just now looking back on this, because I was very upset by the sour course that this very Meta discussion took, with the rage-quit threats by torazaburo and the insults to my character by others. For the record, I don't have a problem with people disagreeing with moderation actions that I've taken, and it's perfectly valid to ask questions about them. I do, however, have a problem with people who assert things about my character, my willingness and/or interest in moderating fairly, and comments of that nature. I also find it very hard to step back and look at a situation objectively in circumstances where my character is being questioned, and/or someone is attempting to coerce me into taking a particular action by making threats.
For something that started over concerns about the non-constructive tone of a post, the direction that this meta-meta-discussion took is not only ironic, but also deeply troubling.
In case it was not already clear by my initial comment quoted below (the one that started all this), I want to reiterate that I am generally much appreciative of torazaburo's sense of humor, finding it quite similar to my own and therefore obviously of high quality (:-p), but more importantly, of his extremely high-quality contributions over the years to the main site. It would be a loss to all of us to lose him as a contributor, and I certainly don't wish to be the cause of that. At the same time, I don't like being threatened like this, and refuse to accept the blame for any sort of rage-quit. Any such decision is the sole responsibility of the actor who makes it, and clearly has causes/motivations beyond isolated events.
I think everyone here knows that I am deeply committed to maintaining the quality of this website, both as a technical resource, but also as a civil, respectful place. It is why I nominated myself as a moderator, and I can only assume why so many of you placed your trust in me. Nothing has changed on that front. I believe that what makes Stack Overflow different is not only our focus on quality, but the way we achieve that: by elevating content above individuals. In no way do I want to suppress constructive efforts to improve the quality of the information on this website; in fact, quite the opposite. I support every venture to that end, and contribute to it in every way that I possibly can. By the same token, I feel that it is my responsibility as a moderator to enforce the "Be Nice" policy, not only so that the important messages get through, but also so that we don't degenerate into yet another elitist kingdom where only certain veterans are welcome. We have standards, and that's what makes us great, but standards and inclusivity are not at odds with one another.
I deleted the answer for two reasons:
- It did not appear to be an answer to the question that was asked.
- To the extent it was vaguely relevant to the question, it was not even remotely constructive.
As has been pointed out in the comments, portions of my answer here are relevant. In particular:
The question itself was an honest attempt to solicit feedback from the community on something that we've been asking the team to implement for a very long time—something that many hope will improve question quality, an issue which is very near and dear to the hearts of veteran users. I, for one, am very pleased to finally see an indication that the team is doing something on this front, after years of promises that they would...someday. It might not be perfect, it certainly won't solve everything, but it's way past time to do something, and this is an idea that has garnered quite a lot of support. Clearly, people think it's a good idea. Now, the team who will be responsible for implementing it has come to the community, seeking further input and refinement. This is exactly what they should be doing.
When community members respond to this with hostile, biting sarcasm, if not outright trolling, it's just totally unwelcome, unhelpful, and toxic. It also discourages the team from bothering to ask us for our input in the future, which is a precedent that I feel pretty strongly about avoiding.
If you have an idea on how to structure the template message, or even a thoughtful reason why we shouldn't do that at all, then you are welcome to post it as an answer. We won't be deleting those. But if you just want to rant, trash-talk, or insult an abstract population of users, then we will be deleting that. The pruning will be more aggressive when it appears in the answer box than when it appears in a comment, but the "Be Nice" policy applies on Meta, too.
There isn't much more I can say by way of explanation than that. Or the comment I left underneath it:
I generally much appreciate your sense of humor, but I don't think it's especially helpful or constructive in this case. I'm glad that the team is finally trying to do something in this regard, and I'd prefer to keep the noise level to a minimum. If you have something more concrete to propose with respect to encouraging searching, rubber-ducking, etc., then that would be an acceptable answer. "GTFO" is not.
No matter how hard I strain, I cannot imagine any way in which that answered "What can we put in a question template to help people ask better questions?", nor can I see any interpretation for the post other than a hostile, sarcastic way of saying that we need to figure out a way to get (certain) users to stop asking questions altogether. This has been proposed before, many times already, so it's not a matter of suppressing discussion. It simply has no obvious relationship to the question that Jon was actually posing, unless the suggestion was actually to add text that proactively discourages people from asking questions, which falls squarely into the "GTFO" territory that I mentioned in the comment.
Contra conspiracy theories, this isn't one. No community manager or team member asked moderators to keep a close eye on that question (short of the obvious signal conveyed by attaching a featured tag), and certainly didn't request that we delete specific answers. This was merely something that a couple of us agreed upon ourselves, after looking at an influx of answers shortly after the question's posting that were either non-answers, excessively sarcastic, otherwise non-constructive, or all of the above.
The answer wasn't relevant, wasn't constructive, and was crowding out discussion that was relevant and constructive. It didn't deserve to stay, in my opinion. It is more than a little bit ironic that someone who advocates heavy-handed moderation in terms of decreasing the number of questions being asked would have such a problem with heavy-handed moderation in terms of decreasing the number of answers being posted. Why should different rules be applied to you than you seek to have applied to others?
In more familiar terms:
The best way to improve answer quality is to reduce the number of irrelevant and unconstructive answers that are posted. Moderators should aggressively suggest that the poster NOT answer, and instead search, think, Be Nice, get a new job, or whatever.