Closing questions as opinion-based is something you should be careful about. There are many perfectly valid questions regarding best practice, which are of great interest to a lot of people.
Even if something may seem subjective, usually there is an "industry de facto" way of doing something. So even if a question can yield subjective answers, there is usually one correct de facto way which is widely regarded as correct.
A question which yields an answer describing the "de facto" standard way of doing something is valuable and objective.
Been forever since I coded anything in Java, but it seems to me that the "catch throwable" question is a perfect example of the above. The correct answer in this case seems to be "never do that, because...".
Now if someone feels like they should come up with a different answer, then the problem isn't really with the question, but the answer. If there is a good question and a good "de facto standard" answer, and then someone else comes in and posts a crap answer, then where is the actual problem?
There are always SO fundamentalists who are eager to close the question when this happens. Don't be so eager to jump on that bandwagon. Consider simply down-voting obscure answers and up-vote good ones instead.
Here is another example of a question which in itself seems terribly subjective, yet has ended up as one of the canonical duplicates for C and C++. It is a question of interest to pretty much every single programmer, and there is a de facto standard answer (always avoid global variables unless you have very good reasons). The question has yielded some nice canonical answers, but also a lot of crap answers. The problem is not with the question, it is with the crap answers.
Overall, I think such questions would benefit from getting turned into community wiki and then have the answers cleaned up.