Leaving aside the fact that these type of meta questions are pretty much rhetorical,
I think you missed the point of Meta. The rules that we follow on the site are based on discussions here. This is a place for discussion. People post questions about what to do with content on the main site, and we discuss it.
I am talking about the fact that these questions reference parts of [Stack Overflow] which are promptly deleted. Generally these items will be deleted before they are archived by any third party service, leaving a question that has zero context after a minimum of a couple of hours.
10k+ users have the ability to see deleted posts. If there's a question here that you feel is missing context, you can always post a comment asking for a 10k+ user to post a screenshot. Sometimes however, you'll see questions here where the asker has explicitly avoided linking to the post being discussed to avoid the Meta Effect.
Q: Hi, should this question be allowed?
I'd vote to close that question for being too broad. There's nothing to discuss, so the discussion tag is not really there, and they didn't state any reason why they think it should or should not be allowed.
There are bucket loads of them, and they all seem to have no long-term significance. There's one of them trending right now. In fairness to the author it quoted the answer (to a question which isn't quoted). The actual meta question is "whether a single word answer is good", which doesn't bear asking in the first place.
Actually, and here's the important bit, the question is explicitly NOT about single word answers. It's about what to do when someone posts an answer with "NO" repeated multiple times, and why a flag was declined. The question is asking whether it should be considered rude or abusive to answer like that, and what the proper course of action is in that case.