SO can be downright depressing sometimes. As someone who doesn't always have the thickest skin who kinda pours everything I got into some of my answers, I go from being in love with the site to hating it back and forth. I haven't really encountered the name calling you have encountered. Even the people who disagreed with me and down-voted but took the time to comment were generally civil, at least on the surface. But I have gotten into some debates with people in the past on engineering topics, probably because I'm deeply opinionated and some of my thoughts are out there as one into data-oriented design. For example, I actually believe it's superior in some cases for dependencies to flow towards data rather than abstractions, as in the case of entity-component systems often used by game engines. However, that violates the DIP aspect of SOLID, and naturally a number of people are going to disagree with me. But I have noticed a pattern typically when I disagree with someone and they down-vote me and we have our little civil debate that, minutes after, many of my unrelated answers get down-voted, and this time with no comments about why I got down-voted. And I don't know for sure if it's the person who debated me who did that or if it was just some kind of coincidence, but that's the part that drives me crazy and paranoid. Maybe someone else just saw our disagreements in the comments and decided to down-vote my other answers. I have no idea who did that or why, and it feels so incredibly spiteful to be doing that just because we disagree on some engineering ideas. As for the issue about the fastest guns in the west, I see it as an inevitability and don't really blame those people. I'm even guilty of often doing it myself but not to rack up points. It's because sometimes I invest a whole lot of time in an answer believing my answer to be great and potentially a canonical one, only to have it down-voted from people who give me no feedback, and for seemingly bizarre reasons. I've even been down-voted on questions for which I have 30+ years of experience on the subject and have published books about it, and then I get down-voted. And my immediate response is like, *"Wait, did I actually write something wrong? Could I be incorrect about this?"* And so I double-check with other resources, colleagues, and everything and everyone agrees with my answer, but I still get down-voted. I even got down-voted answering a question related to a software whose development I lead (though I didn't mention this since I'm trying to preserve some anonymity). Ironically, I likewise sometimes get many up-votes on answers for which I had far more limited experience and wasn't nearly as sure if it was such a good answer as the ones that got a down-vote. So these days I don't try to provide an elaborate answer until it starts getting some up-votes because I can't predict the pattern of what is and isn't going to be deemed by a good answer by such an unpredictable group. Then if I do get the up-votes, I'll keep editing it and editing it to try to make it better and better. Otherwise I fear spending a great deal of time and energy providing an answer which is just going to get lost in the shuffle because some people didn't like the answer for whatever reason and decided to down-vote it. For newbies I imagine the site would often feel extremely hostile, even if there's no name-calling whatsoever, with the aggressive moderation. I used to participate in that for a while, joining a tag-team of people coordinating close votes and such, until I realized the whole futility of it. It's like trying to filter out low-quality content from the entire internet -- just absolutely futile. What isn't as futile is putting a spotlight on the quality content, though even that is tough when the site seems schizophrenic about what it considers quality content where some of the highest-rated questions might have been closed if someone else looked at it first. One of the things that cheers me up sometimes is just write answers or questions for which I have no emotional investment whatsoever, so it doesn't really matter if they get down-voted. As an example, I've bountied off thousands of points before asking some basic questions for which I already knew the answer, but to make it interesting, I requested the answers be written in Haiku. And that really cheered me up for a while but then the mods closed and deleted those questions too and it got all boring and depressing again.