((essay|WP:CRUFT2|WP:CRUFTCRUFT))
Cruftcruft (a portmanteau and reduplication of the word cruft), is a term used to refer to editorial and policy issues often encountered in the course of dealing with Articles for Deletion.
Before moving on to "Cruftcruft," one must first analyze "Cruft" on its own.
Cruft, originated in hackerdom where it was used to mean "something which [is] badly designed, poorly implemented, or redundant." It was picked up in popular culture, where it has been defined as "useless junk or excess materials" and ultimately, "to describe material which is typically lacking in quality, selectively biased, of a poor nature and of interest only to a small audience."
Unfortunately, this definition's complete and utter lack of any objective criteria leaves "cruft" in the eye of the beholder. Rather than being anything meaningfully nonencyclopedic, Cruft becomes any topic, subject or article that the beholder is uninterested in.
Having turned up their nose at a topic, the article must be deleted, and must be disposed of without any meaningful discussion. A wave of the cruft wand is all that is necessary to pass off one's subjective ennui on a subject into a delete vote on an AfD. Other members of the cruft police are drawn to the scent and toss their own nonsensical cruftspeak into the mix.
Various essays have been created to describe supposed variations of the "cruft" problem:
Cruftcruft covers editorial and policy issues including the following, though anything corresponding to relevant Wikipedia policy is traditionally ignored:
Quite challenging. The cruft police is often too busy deleting articles to engage in any meaningful discussion, nor do they feel that anything more than throwing around the word "cruft" is necessary in any discussion.