I think what we've seen happening with questions like this (excessive downvoting, close-voting and delete-voting) is a knee-jerk reaction. The question strikes a nerve because it's so ... useless. Yes, that sounds harsh, but read on.
It's like every other "Why was this API/language designed like this?" question to me, and I don't like such questions on Stack Overflow. The upvotes, positive comments and reopen- or undelete-votes on such questions and their answers always seem to be coming from people who know the answer to it and would want to post it, or who know the posted answer is correct and would want to keep it visible on the site. That does not make it a good question though.
Yes, it is a question that is related to programming. Yes, there are ways to write an answer for it that is a couple of paragraphs long and explains the issue at hand.
But nobody who is at the moment working on programming something is going to search for that question, other than out of sheer curiosity, and the answer isn't going to help them any further.
So perhaps it's time for you, the moderators, and/or us, the community to for once and for all answer the question:
Is a language design questions a "practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development""practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development"?
I mean, the answer to almost every question in the language-design
tagalmost every question in the language-design
tag is "because". I'm not denying most of these are fun to read, and their answers are informative, but they're not going to help you any further when you're stuck with a programming problem.
And I was living under the assumption that the latter was a criterion for a question for being on-topic. I'd love to be proven wrong though.