How can Stack Overflow meta be relevant when half a decades worth of posts were removed and now have no plan to return (New Custom Close Reason: Specific Only To A Certain Site)?
There are only 400 posts left out of 60,000 for the largest community in the exchange. It took 5 years to accumulate that level of coverage for a depth of issues.
The truth is that Stack Overflow meta, home to issue solvers for literally millions of questions, 6.6 million users per day, and 8 thousand questions asked daily, needs that content to maintain some semblance of order.
Before it has been argued new users did not even find Meta Stack Overflow. How are they supposed to find Meta Stack Exchange to know to look for old Meta Stack Overflow content in order to figure out why downvoting costs reputation (Why does downvoting an answer cost reputation while questions not? - asked 4 hours ago)?
These types of questions - of which many have been previously asked, answered, closed, dealt with, or had the help center edited - are now very hard to do anything with but answer. A tedious process considering the volume of the site and the repetitive nature of these type of duplicate questions.
They can no longer be closed because there are only 400 posts to choose from. Users no longer get help preemptively because they don't know to look on Meta Stack Exchange instead of Meta Stack Overflow.