I am looking at Executing a perl script with ProcessBuilder whose author has deleted his post and scurried away, either because he is embarrassed to have asked a question with such a simple answer, or because he thinks the page is no longer of any use to him, and he doesn't imagine the wider impact.
I think this particular question warrants undeleting, and I have voted accordingly. But it seems strange that highly-experienced people can single-handedly suspend a question while it takes (I think) three votes to resurrect a question after the OP has deleted it.
Deleted questions aren't generally on most answerers' radar, and a deleted question is unlikely to be seen by anyone doing an ordinary daily scan.
This is wrong. The Stack Overflow rules, as they are, unreasonably favour very poor requests that most of the senior subscribers would prefer to be prohibited, while intelligent questions from diffident people may be answered and deleted without any continued value to anyone who would search the site.
I'm not sure what the solution may be, but it would seem obvious to disallow posters from deleting their questions. Dreadful questions will soon be vote-bombed enough to vanish immediately or be vacuumed by Roomba. And after all, a "deleted" question never goes away, but simply has different privileges applied to it.
What is a better solution?