In general though this is old news. It's happened before; it will happen again. It's at best a symptom of the culture. Nothing to get worked up about on its own.
@MonicaCellio No problem. I don't like editing people's titles, generally, but this one (and some other from the same author) just really rubbed me the wrong way. How am I supposed to know what the question is about from his titles?
@Shokhet I actually think titles are one of the more important things to edit -- they're what's on the front page, so if they're unclear or incomprehensible or thoroughly ungrammatical or whatever, and you can figure out what the fix is, please do it.
@YeZ Okay, but I see everything that's posted on this site, or close to it. I usually don't vote on those questions, because each one by itself is okay, even though when taken all together they're problematic.
@Shokhet If a user asks bad questions, consistently, then people should be more proactive in exercising their voting privileges responsibility to teach that user. This doesn't mean attack every post that user ever posted. It means when that user asks a question which deserves to be downvoted, he should be considered to be warned and should get a downvote.
@YeZ So the graph I linked to above has a conditional red box around the user, which turns green should the user in question choose to ask a large amount of low-quality questions?
(I know that graph isn't official, but it sure does make a lot of sense)
@Shokhet No - lets say that you add to that graph a 1-year-old comment below which says "Your post royally stinks for the following reason: ..." That would be boxed in green. Some users have that comment auto-posted.
@Shokhet I know comments weren't in the graph. That's why I'm adding it. If a user has been warned for making the same mistake in many posts, he doesn't need the comment pointing out that mistake in every post. It's nothing against the user - it's against making a mistake which has been pointed out and still ignored.
I would like to present Mi Yodeya to a potential new reader/contributor. The Q&A aspects and the SE mechanics are all explained in the Help Center. What I'd like to collect here are examples (posts/comments/edits/etc.) that illustrate why our site is a particularly unique and effective Torah stud...
Why did Kohenim take off their shoes on the bimah during a certain prayer on Rosh hashana? Why did they also hold their tallit up over their heads more like tents with their arms raised?