Ok, so the crux of the issue is there is no name uniqueness imposed during registration. We can, and do, have thousands of "John Doe"'s, etc.. So the only way that you can determine if this "John Doe" is the same "John Doe" you helped earlier in order to better tailor your answer for this "John Doe" is to go to his profile: and
- check if he (or she) has been here long enough to be the same "John Doe";
- if so, check (I presume searching by user_id) whether he (or she) was the same "John Doe" you helped earlier; and
- if the original question doesn't appear, you can't necessarily presume it isn't the same "John Doe" because the question may have been deleted.
From the standpoint that I should have been able to deduce the non-uniqueness in user name, the downvotes are justified. However, from the "Discussion" tag standpoint of this question, it raises a larger issue of "Why isn't name uniqueness imposed (as in done elsewhere)?"
I'll consider the question closed based on the non-uniqueness revelation, but name uniqueness may be something to consider imposing to avoid just this type of uncertainty when helping answer questions.
Thanks to all that replied, and I would encourage going easy on "Discussion" questions (I know I do) for fear of discouraging future questions that may very well be helpful to the site, but will remain unasked.