Unfortunate that consensus is more important than reality.
"This fruit is healthy. You should eat it." "I'm allergic to it." "Eat it."
That's why I'm saying it's disjointed from reality. Most restaurants see no problem with serving bread, but if a customer makes it clear that they're allergic to gluten and then orders a salad with no croutons, a cook who tosses croutons into their salad is going to get a talking-to.
According to these rules, though, the customer would simply be told "well, I'm not allergic to gluten, so stop complaining about the croutons."
Yes; now extend that to the rude/offensive "consensus."
Most people aren't allergic to X, so deal with it. Most people aren't offended by X, so deal with it.
The whole point of those rules is to try to prevent people from being hurt.
Like, the relevant characteristic of "I would be offended by X"?
The current rule doesn't generalize that.
That's a hard-coded "offense."
The n-word is a well-known offensive word. There are all manner of ways to be offensive without hitting a hot-button issue.
Passive-aggressive language and sarcasm generally do it. For example, "I'd love to explain these basic concepts to you, but I have more important things to do. Check a tutorial while I'm gone, and maybe you'll learn something."
Now imagine it coming at the end of a long argument.
Someone dancing at the edge of rude/offensive, trying their best to be offensive as possible without getting a flag, isn't being nice. But they're not going to get their comment removed for being rude/offensive, either.
There's a difference between assuming good intentions and ignoring context.
As long as that question gets closed and deleted, I'll feel a little better.