You're certainly welcome to leave a comment if you want. I find that most people just get angry at you for calling them out and have no interest in reforming their behavior, after all, answering these questions earns them way more rep than closing them. If you want to try though, feel free.
You're certainly allowed to downvote these posts, although I find that they're that much more likely to get pity upvotes if you downvote them when they don't already have a positive score. The If the community as a whole didn't upvote these answers and, as a group, consistently downvoted them, then it would actually deter them. Sadly, it tends to not do so. Answers like these only need to get 1 upvote for each four downvotes to come out ahead, which they usually will end up doing. So as much as I wish this was the solution, and it certainly is in theory, in practice it's often counter-productive. (There are of course occasional exceptions, such as meta-effect cases, as is happening here, but while these answers are occasionally downvoted, they're still not consistently downvoted.)
You shouldn't be flagging the answers. There is no corresponding flag for answering a question that should be closed.
The one thing not on your list, which is the one somewhat (but not hugely) effective tool that we have to deal with this problem, is actually deleting these types of questions (they of course need to be closed first). If answers know that questions like these will consistently be deleted, they'll learn to not waste their time answering them. The problem here is that in most cases these answers get upvoted first, and the rep is removed later. Many people don't realize when these posts get deleted, or if they do, the diagrammed positive feedback is more physiologically overwhelming than the usually long deferred removal of that positive feedback, meaning that it can often take a while (up to forever) for people to learn to not answer these types of questions.