Obviously, I'm talking about the recent hot topic:
(Link to a screenshot of the latest revision for <10k users, in case the question is deleted).
It is yet another "downvotes bad" rant (still, even after the edits). It got downvoted to smithereens, closed and eventually deleted.
That mess of a question was then picked as the subject of a "Meta is too eager to delete" question.
That single action caused the original question to go from "quickly forgotten" to "highly contested territory".
Whether you agree that the deletion is justified or not is completely irrelevant. What we got is that the revision history on it looks like a war zone:
If we're all trying to do the right thing, why was this:
- Re-opened before it was edited into something coherent.
- Re-opened by gold badge holders while it's very clearly a controversial situation that no single users should force their will on... Twice.
- Re-opened despite the fact the OP clearly isn't interested in a coherent discussion.
- Re-opened despite there being duplicates that clearly explain why downvotes are necessary.
- Dragged onto TWITTER of all places (I'm not gonna link this), a place well known for understanding how SO works and forming coherent arguments, instead of going all mob mentality on an issue. /s
The only reason that question is getting that much attention, is because someone wanted to make a point.
This is the meta effect on Meta itself, and it's really making a mess of Meta curation.
Can we please just judge a question by its own merits?
(Don't re-open junk because you think it shouldn't be deleted. Completely forget about the meta question you were linked from, just look at the question itself.)