I flagged that post as "not an answer".
I did not think you were asking for clarification; I thought you posted a list of (rhetorical) questions, which did not answer the question.
An analogy would be a question on codereview.stackexchange.com "Is this coded well?" and the answer is "Does this follow language/framework conventions? Is there duplicate code? Does this follow the single responsibility principle? What security implications are there?" And left it at that. It's a generic checklist that could be applied to any code review.
Or if you asked your mechanic about a rattling sound and he "answered", "What about your tires? Have you considered the head gasket cover? Maybe the glovebox?" and proceeded to list every part of the the car, I hope you would not consider that an answer.
If the OP's series of questions would be considered an answer (I say it is not), this post would also be an "answer" to virtually any sort of Java performance question ever.
I considered downvoting as simply a low-quality answer, but concluded there really wasn't enough on-topic information to be considered an answer; hence the flag. If -- for example -- you had explained at all why the temperature of the JVM mattered or related to this question, I would have considered this an answer, even though it was mostly incorrect (see the top-voted answer).
It was piece of commentary, not a answer in any sense that I would consider.
Rhetorical questions are usually fine, sometimes effective, and occasionally great. But they shouldn't be left as teasers to an answer; there should be enough information in the post to properly answer the question.
EDIT: To be clear: the presence of rhetorical questions is a red herring. This post was flagged for its content, not for its style.
Consider the post without questions:
Consider other processes on your machines. Consider the JVM warming up. Maybe it was garbage collection.
This is likewise commentary or discussion, not an answer.