I was going to stay quiet, on the basis that I always try and avoid an argument, so despite my misgivings, I'm going to identify myself as someone who uses this as an introductory sentence to an answer quite frequently. In fact I was sensitive enough to worry you were talking about me specifically, but a wiser me knows that is just normal paranoia. (But then in another meta discussion, someone was talking about me specifically....)
I wrote that sentence as a reaction to feedback from other users (who may have been around on SO longer or have higher rep scores than me) who gave me indications that they had strong negative reactions to quite old questions being bumped up by my answers; irrespective of whether the answer was useful.
I felt it said "yes, I know this is an old subject but I didn't answer it by accident, I felt it useful and informative to answer it; so please don't treat me like a some idiot who is answering at random...."
Another reason that I might use a question preamble is to explain why a question was answered when it is not obvious that answering would be the best action. A question could be editing, downvoted, flagged or commented, separately or in combination. I've sometimes looked at a question for weeks thinking what is the best approach to something that has not been addressed by anyone else, but is clearly an issue for the questioner (or the wider population of users). Many are so highly upvoted that it indicates that several people thought it was good enough for an answer. I've flagged quite a few for which the flags aged away (> 200). The remaining option would be to improve and/or answer. For those who may not have done the investigation that I did, an explanatory preamble would help in understanding why an answer was being seen at this late stage. I did get input from another higher rep user that said that such hints might be helpful, when what would otherwise have seemed like an answer "coming out of the blue".
I have discovered (for myself) a technique of sitting with the "active" questions in a browser tag and noting any new activity. This was how I noticed the appearance your question, for example. I suspect many sit on their favourite tag and use it like intellectual social media site. They see someone answering an old question akin to re-tweeting some old fact from many years ago, or sharing some out of date fashion tip, and consequently react negatively to what they see as someone acting outside the norms of the clique. A kind of xenophobia if you will.
I think it a little unfair to say it should be banned, but then it was useful to highlight it.
Several of my answer had preambles which were a kind of meta-answer. I've take more recently to putting the meta-answer in a comment immediately after the answer. If I adopt that trend then perhaps you might get less irritated by the behaviour.
I do still have misgivings about putting my head above the parapet for this brief period, and will go back to quietly generating answers. I might add, that my experience at such interactions goes back to the dawn of usenet and before. This experience causes me to type carefully....