First of all, there's nothing "abusive" in marking a question as a duplicate. Second, neither the number of views nor the age of a question are relevant factors when determining whether or not questions are duplicates. Third, you have no way to prove that the user who marked it as a duplicate did so "blindly". In fact, there is pretty good evidence that they didn't, since they are obviously an expert in the topic and were able to post the accepted answer to the other question. Assume good faith unless you have evidence to the contrary. Nothing smells funny to me here.
So…what we have here is merely a case where you disagree that your question is a duplicate of the other one. Which is fine, you are allowed to do that. However, you have failed to provide a compelling argument on technical grounds that your question is not a duplicate. This is what you should be doing, and as the "duplicate" banner advises, you should edit this information into your original question.
Note that "the answer provided…doesn't solve the problem" is not an argument against a question's duplicate status any more than it would be a valid question. Why doesn't it solve the problem? What went wrong when you tried it? Did you see an error? Did it not compile? Et cetera.