In any discussion of this kind it is important to keep in mind that some opinion is unavoidable, both in science and life in general. Stack Overflow is no
exception.
Personally, I think that a reproducible programming question needs more than just providing a reproducible example. As I explained in a comment here, I strongly believe that a question, which aims to be useful not just to the OP but also to other users, additionally requires good technical writing, code comments, variable names and commands in the code to be free of typos, debugging code trace where necessary and so on. This is particularly true for questions where the end goal is the statistical analysis of data. In general, high quality reproducible programming questions should include all the things I go through in my "How to ask" post.
Perhaps I should had given to the question part a bit more technical flavor. However, in the above context, I still think that my question (and the two others after which it is modelled) adheres to Stack Overflow's on-topic policy. I suppose I have a more holistic approach, which clearly is not shared by everyone here. And that's fine. In a democracy everyone is entitled to his/her own opinion.
The community I think was too strict in enforcing this policy and voted to
migrate my question but I am perfectly happy with that. The idea was always to create an one-stop Stata resource for newcomers and convert this to a wiki post once a stable form was achieved. This question is necessary to give specific advice to newcomers in stata and provides practical examples using Stata's programming language. The How to Ask and MCVE links are useful but are more general and a bit too long so new users typically do not make an effort to read them.
However, strict interpretation and enforcement of the on-topic policy is not the
only problem in this case. Another problem is the selective enforcement. Either all similar questions should be closed and moved on Meta Stack Overflow or none. The only real difference of the Stata question with the ones in r and pandas is that the latter are in more popular tags.
The argument that the other two questions are too old to be migrated would make
sense if the migration concerned another Stack Exchange site. This policy was primarily instituted to curb migration of low-quality questions towards other Stack Exchange sites, which created conflict. In this case, we are talking about very helpful questions moved on Meta Stack Overflow. Let us not use a policy created with good intentions as an excuse not to give a fair solution here. The fact that the other two questions remain on the main Stack Overflow site, in my opinion, provides further proof of a double standards mentality and bias towards smaller communities.
In accordance with the principles of equality and fairness, the other two questions should be moved by the site moderators/owners on Meta and until that happens they should stay closed (but not deleted). Alternatively, the Stata question should be moved back on the main site.