... how does
banning me for 7 days help me become a better reviewer?
It forces reviewers to re-evaluate their reviews. After all, it prompted you to write this meta question. In my experience, reviewers typically go through this re-evaluation immediately after their first failed audit. This helps them learn what the current SO standards are and make better decisions in their reviews. Many times, they will post a meta question for failed audits to better get a grasp of what the community feels is appropriate. The review ban is a last-ditch effort to help reviewers align their reviews with what the community feels is appropriate.
But regardless, the value of the answer is debatable ...
It's really not. This is a clear case of a very low quality (not-quite) link-only answer. That is, reading only the text (without an active link) yields this answer:
To simplify things here's a jQuery plugin that does that without the hassle: https://github.com/haggen/readonly
This doesn't even contain a readily-understood name for said plugin. That text is useless as an answer and should (IMO) be deleted as Not-An-Answer. Regardless of the minutiae of NAA, it definitely lacks and explanation or other redeeming qualities as an answer. In the context of the First Post queue, informing the new user by commenting on the post and/or downvoting are also acceptable actions. No Action Needed is definitely the wrong choice.
For more information, read this Guide to Reviewing in the First Post Queue. It's long, but fairly helpful.