Requests for Adminship is probably one of the most contested processes on Wikipedia to date. Over the years it's attracted controversy, arguments and a couple of "prima facie" laughs along the way...
Basically, we have RfA's to judge if a candidate can be seen to be suitable for administrative powers by the community. Judging a candidate can be as simple or as difficult as you allow it to be.
We've all seen many dozens of different controversial opposes... the "young admin" one, the "hungry" one, and, of course, the "I just don't like you" oppose. To me, these are just said by people who want to cause trouble and are better left ignored.
The root problem of RfA's is of course users' opinions. Remove this thing called an "opinion" from the human mind and we'll have a beautiful encyclopaedia. It'll rid the Wiki of crap things like: "people" or these beings called "editors"...
But seriously for a moment, isn't it logical to assess a candidate on their abilities on the Wiki, and their capacity to interact with the community in a logical, rational and positive manner? Taking irrelevant factors such as "age" and "power hunger" (for Christ's sake it's just a couple of buttons, how wrong can you actually be?) and blowing them up from a molehill to Mount Everest just seems incredibly silly to me.
The amount of questions pumped out at candidates also seems overly dramatic. Majorly went as far as to write a cheat sheet to assist candidates. I wouldn't be surprised if candidates started pulling the plug on their RfA's half way through even with 100% support for being asked too many questions. Here's a tip: Instead of asking a blatantly obvious question, how about you actually look through their contributions? Maybe it'd save several hundred kilobytes in the process.
One interesting thing is that supports are practically never questioned, but, opposes often are. At least, from a logical point of view, we're aiming to promote candidates rather than bring them down. Lord knows we need more admins.
!Vote... what's that about? Everyone knows that it's a vote. There's no hiding behind an exclamation mark (Some crazy folk even stick two in front). People slam their names down on a list, sometimes without rationale, which, in my book, is a clear out and out vote. Rarely do RfA's come down to consensus. It's all about the stacking and the whacking... who cares about the principles Wikipedia was founded on?
In all honesty, Pedro gives the best RfA noms and RfA supports/opposes. He actually looks through a users' contributions and "researches" a candidate (to some degree). That is good practice. In my opinion, that's the way all remarks/comments/votes/whatever should be made on RfA's; through careful thought and fact based decision making.
Nothing apart from their contributions (or lack thereof) should be considered.
Unless, of course, we see an RfA like this...