I'll argue it is an answer to a question even to the question asked in the title. The title reads:
How can I make sure the question I'm going to post is not going to be duplicate?
The deleted answer makes a case for exhausting all conceivable options before even considering posting an question.
Yes, that is an extreme edge, maybe far sought. I don't think it is invalid advice, specially for new users to the Stack Exchange Network. I honestly believe we should explain, teach, coach, prepare question askers that asking a question on Stack Overflow is not a human right. The motivation behind How am I not going to post a duplicate is off. New askers should be bothered with: Is my question unique, relevant to the scope and valuable for future visitors. To reach that goal, you have to go way beyond what Google serves up. And that is the advice I read in the deleted answer.
The answer (scoring +21/-9) should not have been deleted, specially not by a user with a diamond. If you dislike the extreme case / grim look the answer poses, down vote. If you think it is not useful, delete vote once you can. Let's not abuse Not An Answer flags to get rid of posts we don't like / deem not useful. We don't do that on main either, no need to do that on Meta.
The answer should be undeleted, (no edits needed) and normal curation should have its way. If the community decides to delete it, so be it.