tl;dr: fix it... or forget it
Review the guidelines for subjective questions:
- inspire answers that explain “why” and “how”.
- tend to have long, not short, answers.
- have a constructive, fair, and impartial tone.
- invite sharing experiences over opinions.
- insist that opinion be backed up with facts and references.
- are more than just mindless social fun.
The first two are explicitly about the type of answers that a question is expected to attract; the last three imply that the question itself will restrict answers to those that are constructive... and even #3 is geared towards avoiding flame-wars.
This should tell you something: no matter how much you might like the question itself, ultimately it will be judged by how it is answered. Unfair? Maybe. But like it or not, some topics, no matter how carefully-worded, will always attract answers that not only fail to contribute anything of real value but also increase the amount of noise to the point where they interfere with finding and ranking good and useful content!
Noise hurts
This question certainly accomplished that. The top-voted answer, with 106 up-votes, makes no attempt to explain "why", is short, and cites no experience (either personal or a publicly-verifiable instance as requested in the question). The first answer to even come close is on page 2, with only 2 votes... And even this doesn't directly cite anything more than someone else's list of personal favorites. This is a pretty clear sign that despite its author's best intentions, this question is simply attracting "bikeshed" participation - answers are being posted and ranked based on familiarity, with little effort being made to write or judge them based on the criteria set forth.
The question was migrated to Programmers', perhaps in the hope that, since the site has struggled so mightily with these sorts of topics in the past, its users would be better equipped to manage such a beast. But it continued to collect poor answers... and duplicate answers, a clear sign that respondents were no longer even bothering to read what had already been written.
If it can't be answered well, it serves no purpose
How is this supposed to help the asker or anyone else in his situation? If his goal was to find a huge dump of mistakes that he could sift through, there were plenty of them already available. He wanted a well-reasoned, well-referenced set of errors, and utterly failed to obtain it.
What then is the point? The question simultaneously obtained an unwieldy quantity of answers, and wasn't answered at all! We have the worst of both worlds, a time-wasting quantity of noise with precious little signal to be had at the end.
There is absolutely no reason for such a tragedy to be preserved on any of these sites. And so it was deleted.
Desperate times call for desperate measures
It's not the role of the site moderators to carefully review and curate each question and answer. Stack Exchange depends on users working together to produce high-quality content. When this falls apart, the best a moderator can do is stop the bleeding.
If you want high-quality answers, it's up to you to make it happen.
And here's your chance, should you choose to take it. I've undeleted the question, but left it locked to prevent further answers. If you honestly feel there's value to be had, then make it manifest - every answer to that question is Community Wiki, so edit in the "why", add references, personal experience, authoritative content of value to the teachers it is intended to serve. Combine answers. Down-vote poor answers. Flag duplicate answers. Take out the trash...
...Or don't. In 12 hours, if the question is still in the same sorry state that it was when I found it, it'll be deleted again. It took less than a day for it to reach that point - if it can't be salvaged in that time, then there's no point to seeing it live on.