In general, I agree that deleting potentially useful content is bad and should be avoided. The last time we had the big "deletion" debate, I came down strongly on the side of preservation. My side won, kinda—we got the historical lock feature implemented, which at least saved some of the old, albeit useful, no-longer-on-topic material from outright burnination.
Anyway, my point in leading with all of this is not to toot my own horn, but to lend credibility to the fact that I disagree with you here.
You don't point to any examples, and I don't know what you have seen in the Community Bulletin, but I can't recall any questions on Meta lately concerning the deletion of content that is even remotely borderline. The stuff that we discuss deleting, advocate deleting, and (generally) actually delete is stuff that should never have been on the site in the first place. It is just absolute garbage, wasting the time of anyone who ever has to cross across it. Time that they will never get back. That's the whole point of deletion, to minimize the amount of time others have to waste wading through the garbage.
You are an active participant on the site (or, at least, I've read many of your answers and found lots of them to be helpful), so surely you've noticed that there has been a lot of garbage getting posted recently. The things I've read on Meta recently from other high-rep users have confirmed what I've long feared I suffered alone: the volume of noise on Stack Overflow has gotten so high that it has made it difficult for me to find halfway-decent questions to answer and zapped my will to participate. I would be extremely surprised if your experience was substantially different.
We aren't talking about deleting stuff that might help someone in the future. We're talking about deleting stuff that is just making the site suck.
To quote myself:
I see absolutely no point in keeping garbage around, but I think we should do everything within our power to keep potentially useful information alive and accessible on the Internet. I realize that this is incredibly subjective, but I think, like pornography, most people know it when they see it.
[…] And in the edge cases, we should err on the side of preservation, rather than obliteration.
If I thought there was some kind of out-of-control deletion going on, I'd surely be throwing a fit about it.
It is possible that I've missed it. If you have examples to which you can point, I'm happy to reconsider.