Why not just allow a question to have both a more specific tag and a broader "umbrella" tag--
Examples--
Both "class-e-airspace" and "airspace"
Both "stability" and (some broader tag-- seems like we're still trying to decide which one to keep and which one to "burninate"-- either flight-dynamics, or flight-mechanics)
This doesn't seem to be against the ASE help center guidance as I'm understanding it-- I see the caution against "meta-tags", but looking at the specific examples given, which serve essentially no useful purpose, that doesn't seem to be the same to me as these somewhat broad, but still useful, "umbrella" tags I've used in the examples above.
This idea that tags should not be subsets of other tags is coming as a surprise to me. I don't support it--
Sure, some tags have arguably gotten too broad (e.g. aircraft-physics?). But the idea that we need to "do something" about all cases where a question carries two tags, one of which is clearly a subset of the other, seems the wrong approach. Both tags often potentially play a useful role to someone searching through the question database.
Another example has just occurred minutes ago. An edit was made to delete the tag "instrument-procedures" from this question When can I proceed inbound in a hold in lieu of a procedure turn when cleared for the approach? . How is this not an example of a question about instrument procedures? The idea, apparently, is that it should not bear the "instrument-procedure" tag because it has also been given the "iaps" tag which references instrument approach tags? This sort of anything isn't doing anything to make the "instrument-procedures" tag less vague or more specific, it's only making it occur less frequently, which is not the same thing.
If the community consensus is that this sort of thing is the right way to go, then we need to really think twice about creating new, more specific tags, because of their huge potential to degrade the usefulness of established tags. But it doesn't need to be that way, if we allow a question to have both a more specific tag and a broader tag.