Disclaimer: I wrote this question, and here's my opinion on the matter. It is far from definitive, and more than anything, I want to see others' opinions, too.
Recently, there have been some squabbles over what to do about old, highly-upvoted content that doesn't really belong on the site anymore. There seems to be a cabal of users that have decided that deleting this content is a good idea, and I completely disagree. The historical lock exists for a reason, and I would not hesitate to use it instead of simply nuking an entire thread outright.
Still, the issue is really more nuanced than that. Let me outline my general philosophy.
Things that are "too broad" but have good answers are probably still on-topic. These don't even necessarily need to be locked, though protecting them is probably a good idea. This was discussed on a recent SE podcast, and it's an ongoing problem, and I'm very interested in helping to find the right solution.
On the other hand, things that are mostly opinion based or are otherwise not constructive should usually be locked. As long as the content is good, it should be kept around...
...unless it's destined to be outdated. Questions that ask "what is a good library to do X" eventually rot to the point where they're just providing misinformation. The historical lock doesn't help here because it prevents inaccuracies from being fixed but keeps them around for all to see. Sometimes, I endorse deletion of these kinds of questions.
There are some questions which are "timeless", at least to a point, even if they're very broad subjects. The current reason we close questions as "too broad" is because we feel like the OP is asking far too much of the members of this site. Really, it's to discourage those sorts of questions from being asked.
It doesn't work. There are lots of questions that are very broad but have fantastic answers. Should we be feeding all new questions like that to the Roomba? Is there any more room for great answers of sizable scope on Stack Overflow?
I don't know. I don't have a good solution. The problem is that, yes, it's true, a large portion of the overly-broad questions on Stack Overflow are terrible, almost impossible to answer, and should be closed. But are we foreclosing on a type of question with potentially stellar answers? Aren't we a repository of knowledge in addition to a Q&A site?
Just like "too localized" was too easily abused, I'd posit that "too broad" is similarly broken, though in less obvious ways. Just like "too localized" was forked into various more specific counterparts, it's time to do the same with "too broad". I don't know exactly what the replacements should be, but I'm beginning to be relatively convinced that this policy needs to be adjusted to keep this kind of content, some of the best content out there, on the site.