One of the particular advantages that Stack Overflow once enjoyed (and now copied by Q&A type sites across the internet) is the ability to 'pin' an answer. This is done on Stack Overflow by the checkbox next to a given answer.
This confers a few advantages to that answer:
- It's the first answer seen by a user from Google
- It has the best chance of getting upvotes
- no one can change an accepted answer except the OP.
Moderators are really glorified janitors, our job is described as:
It’s deleting obvious spam, closing blatantly off-topic questions, and culling some of the worst rated posts in various dimensions. (emphasis mine)
Even further than that, one of our guiding principles is:
The ideal moderator does as little as possible. But those little actions may be powerful and highly concentrated. Judiciously limiting your use of moderator powers to selectively prune and guide the community — now that’s the true art of moderation.
So in those twin sentences we have our charge: Get rid of the really bad stuff; and try not to be overbearing in what we do.
Deleting an accepted answer with a ton of upvotes doesn't strike me as judicious, nor is it a janitor's job.
Clearly the community finds utility in the answer (otherwise it would not have that many upvotes).
When an answer is flagged, we really have two practical options:
- Delete the post.
- Do nothing.
For accepted answers, a member of the community has a lot more practical options at their disposal, especially if they organically find that answer:
- Leave a comment for the OP to fix the issue in their answer.
- Edit the post with relevant information.
- Downvote the post.
- Go to a chatroom, drum up support for downvotes and comments (or asking someone to fix the issue if it's their wheelhouse)
- Flag.
We're at the very bottom of those list of things to do for a reason: Moderators are not a substitute for the everyday work that is required to keep the site clean. We are too few. There are many more effective things to do (and things that are in keeping with our purpose) than flagging these sorts of answers for us to delete.
It's easy to flag; it's a little harder to do something -- but the 'do something' part is exactly what keeps a community thriving. If you see a broken window, help repair it when you can -- that's much more useful than saying, "Hey, there's this broken window. SOMEONE FIX IT."