When I first saw this question:
What factors should be considered when using urllib vs urllib2 vs requests vs http.client
I thought "uhoh, this is going to be an opinion based recommendation frenzy".
I decided not to flag it because technically it does ask for facts not opinions, so instead I posted a comment to this effect, intending to encourage folk to post factual responses.
Not long after a very senior poster posted a recommendation for their favourite library. The answer they gave does allude to some of the architectural factors, possibly, that lead to this recommendation but is very opinionated rather than factual.
I don't know whether to downvote and comment to this effect, or to flag as "not an answer", or whether I have the wrong idea about this, and really Stack Overflow is accepting of this kind of thing? I hesitated to find out by flagging and seeing if a moderator approves, or even commenting there in the question because I don't want to be flagging/hassling senior folk wrongly!
Clarification: my question is specifically about the dealing with answer, not the question.
To paraphrase:
"This answer, from a very senior person, appears to indicate that it's OK to answer a question that might draw opinions with ... opinions. My understanding is that "something should be done about this" in a community moderation sense, and I am not clear what it is. I don't want to do anything in the case of such a senior poster without being clear that it's the right thing.