It's hardly the first time I've said [something like this][1]... > Personally though, I don't think it matters. A question that struggles to get even 100 viewers period isn't exactly poisoning the air on the site - no one's looking at it! The most problematic posts are the ones that *get in the way*: clog the recent questions lists, show up in search results but don't actually reflect what was searched for, keep getting bumped to the front page, etc. There are countless questions on SO that are borderline off-topic, but since *no one ever runs into them* they don't cause problems. Meanwhile, there are questions being posted *right this second* that are *blatantly* inappropriate, and they're clogging the home page and pushing reasonable questions off of the recent questions lists. That doesn't mean questions should be automatically protected from closure after they gain some age. But going *out of your way* to look for borderline questions when there are so many that aren't even close to the border... That's just a waste of time. In particular, flagging for closure when it takes *at least* three people to process that review under normal circumstances is borderline abusive, a waste of very precious community resources. That's why [as of last week][2], questions that no one sees or cares about are silently dropped from close review: we need to focus our efforts where they can actually make a difference. When you see a problem, fix it or close it or raise a flag - but [make damn sure it's actually a problem][3] and not just your own quest for [foolish consistency][4]. [1]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/111734/26-000-questions-have-close-votes-now-what/111738#111738 [2]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252584/enough-fuzzying-lets-let-everything-into-the-close-queue-and-age-out-questions [3]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/231413/should-i-close-questions-which-were-on-topic/231439#231439 [4]: http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/353571-a-foolish-consistency-is-the-hobgoblin-of-little-minds-adored