Closing questions as opinion-based is something you should be careful about. There are many perfectly valid questions regarding best practice, which are of great interest to a lot of people. Even if something may seem subjective, usually there is an "industry de facto" way of doing something. So even if a question can yield subjective answers, there is usually one correct de facto way which is widely regarded as correct. A question which yields an answer describing the "de facto" standard way of doing something is valuable and objective. Been forever since I coded anything in Java, but it seems to me that the "catch throwable" question is a perfect example of the above. The correct answer in this case seems to be "never do that, because...". Now if someone feels like they should come up with a different answer, then the problem isn't really with the question, but the answer. If there is a good question and a good "de facto standard" answer, and then someone else comes in and posts a crap answer, then where is the actual problem? There are always SO fundamentalists who are eager to close the _question_ when this happens. Don't be so eager to jump on that bandwagon. Consider simply down-voting obscure answers and up-vote good ones instead. [Here](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/484635/are-global-variables-bad) is another example of a question which in itself seems terribly subjective, yet has ended up as one of the canonical duplicates for C and C++. It is a question of interest to pretty much every single programmer, and there is a de facto standard answer (always avoid global variables unless you have very good reasons). The question has yielded some nice canonical answers, but also a lot of crap answers. The problem is not with the question, it is with the _crap answers_. Overall, I think such questions would benefit from getting turned into community wiki and then have the answers cleaned up.