We no longer use the terminology "not constructive". It remains visible as a close reason for questions that were actually closed for that reason, back when it was an option. It wouldn't make sense to change it out for something else, and it wouldn't be fair to put words into the mouths of the original voters.
New questions like this would be closed for one of two reasons:
Off Topic
Questions asking us to recommend or find a tool, library or favorite off-site resource are off-topic for Stack Overflow as they tend to attract opinionated answers and spam. Instead, describe the problem and what has been done so far to solve it.
Primarily Opinion-Based
Many good questions generate some degree of opinion based on expert experience, but answers to this question will tend to be almost entirely based on opinions, rather than facts, references, or specific expertise.
The word "best" in the title of that question you linked is a red-flag.
To the rest of your points, I don't actually know what you are arguing. I think we can all agree that Stack Overflow is one of the best resources on the Internet for programming answers. The way we maintain that position is by defining our scope narrowly. Stack Overflow, and its associated Q&A format, does not work as a recommendation engine. That has been tried, especially back in the early days, as you can tell from the question you dug up from 2009, but we've since learned better.
If that doesn't convince you, take a good long look at the answers to that question and consider whether any of them meet your three guidelines:
- save diversity of Internet
- outperform sluggish and outdated solutions such as Google Groups
- bring some love to developers :)
Nothing about "hey, you should totally try jQuery" provides diversity to the Internet. Neither do largely link-only answers to libraries that may no longer even be maintained contribute to diversity or provide benefit to developers.
Billy21's answer stands out as actually contributing something worthwhile. He provides expert experience, based on actual problems that he's faced, and explains how he solved them. This is good stuff, the type of stuff we like to see on Stack Overflow. Except that it is arguably not an answer to the question being asked. Oh well.