Your desire to encourage people to look for dupe targets is laudable, but I'd prefer it if you were a little more diplomatic in your approach. Those three comments from you on that answer all have a rather negative tone, and although I can't see the answerer's deleted comments in response, I can imagine that they felt justified in dismissing your criticism simply due to your tone.
(BTW, it's generally not possible for normal users to view deleted comments (except maybe on a cached version of the page, if you're lucky); only diamond mods (and I assume Stack Exchange employees) have access to those).
Maybe I'm being overly optimistic but I believe that people are more likely to accept (and act on) criticism when it's constructive and presented in positive language. OTOH, the persistent offenders are unlikely to change their ways no matter what criticism they receive, or how it's framed.
I must confess that I have posted comments like "Don't you think it might have been a Good Idea to search for an appropriate dupe target before attempting to answer this?" when I see an answer posted to a question that must have been asked many times before, written by someone who's been around SO long enough to know better.
Occasionally I've found myself enthusiastically answering a dupe question, and only after I've posted do I think to myself "Hmmm... maybe I should look for a dupe target for that...". That can happen when it's a slow day and most of the questions are rubbish, and then you see a well-written question with good grammar and spelling; a clear, coherent problem exposition; a properly-formatted MCVE, complete with sample input data and expected output, and an error trace (also nicely formatted); and a summary of the OP's attempts to solve the problem. When you see such a gem how can you resist answering it? :)
Sometimes it's actually quite ok to post an answer to a duplicate question. If the answers in the dupe target apply to the new question but the question itself isn't a close match to the new question, then it can be helpful to give a specific answer to the new question. This is especially true if the OP is clearly new to the language / framework / problem domain, so they may not fully understand how the dupe target applies to their particular situation. Sometimes that can be adequately dealt with in a comment or two on the new question, but not always.
However, that situation is relatively rare compared to the vast number of answers to dupes that get posted by FGITW rep-farmers. New users see people with high rep doing it, so they figure it must be ok, and so they also adopt this undesirable behaviour. But of course those high-rep users would only have a fraction of that rep if they didn't FGITW everything in sight. :(
No amount of persuasion, constructive criticism, or downright insulting language is going to stop such people. The only thing they respond to is rep, and obviously they're happy with their average upvote / downvote ratio. But perhaps they might be persuaded to modify their habits if they could actually earn rep by finding good dupe targets...