Because you don't want to push on-topic content away. It's considered rude.
When evaluating a question, you shouldn’t be looking to push it off on some other site; instead, ask if it could be appropriate and on-topic for you, the experts who the author decided to ask. Be a bit jealous of your site – don’t blithely turn askers away simply because their question could be asked somewhere else. Don’t hit them over the head with your scope, help them tailor their question to fit into it – and if that means your site’s scope overlaps a bit with another site’s, so be it.
Ideally, let an on-topic question stay where it is. You can post a comment informing the OP about Code Review, but not in the form of
ask on codereview.SE
Instead, something like:
We have a site specialized on Code Review. If your question doesn't get too much attention or the answers are insufficient, you can request to migrate it there by clicking "Flag", and informing a moderator
Then, the OP can decide where to keep their questions. Don't forget that some deliberately choose to ask their questions on the site they're most familiar with.
It should be the duty of Code Review to create their own community. You don't create this community by constantly migrating stuff from other sites, as long as these questions are not off-topic for the sites they were migrated from.
Similar discussion on Meta.SU about migrating on-topic Apple questions to Apple.SE: Is it okay to inform users to stop promoting Apple.SE when a question is fine to stay here?
The only times a user should be encouraged to have their question migrated to [insert SE site here] are if the question is one of the following:
- off topic here, but on topic there
- getting very few views and no good answers, and you believe it might get better answers there
the user who asks the question requests it to be moved because they think it would do better there