The link to questions (almost) always points to the question, since all deletions are soft deletions. Very rarely is something ever hard deleted.
It's just that often you don't have privileges to see the question as the privilege to see deleted content is only for the OP, moderators, and 10K users. So to answer the unasked part of your question, you should still always link to the post in question because there are a number of people who can see it.
However, beyond that, if you feel the particular text of the question is extremely relevant to answering the question, then you should also quote the post. An image would be the 2nd choice for cases when a text version does not help.
The reason why I think quoting is a better option is mostly personal preference for readability, as well as for availability.
- Images may capture more information, but are extremely difficult to read in many cases. Ultimately it really depends on the message that is trying to be conveyed in the meta question.
- Some corporate firewalls lock anything coming from imgr.com so those users will be left completely in the dark.
Is the text more important or the overall picture of everything going on in the post. If the content of the post is the only thing relevant (which it usually is), then I think making it easier for everyone to read is the driving factor.
But in general, unless the content of the post is necessary to answer the question or provide the appropriate context for future users, then a link is all that should be needed. Simple curiosity as to what prompted the meta question isn't usually enough to warrant going the extra distance to preserve the question's content for all users