I feel that this question can't be answered by anyone other than a core member of Stack Overflow who has worked in or has taken part in the architecture's creation and is being misinterpreted/misunderstood.
I happen to find a question (on Stack Overflow) that was listed under "Related", being:
In the answers section, there contains quite a few (deleted) answers given by (obviously) the same person which contained hateful/obscene messages.
Note: These can now only be seen by 10k+ members. For those who cannot see them, they contain the "F" word and a few others (not so hate-related, but spam nonetheless).
Sidenote: I can provide a screenshot on request by lower than 10k members, but I don't see it as really being necessary.
Why is it that those answers are still viewable/accessible and why can they not be deleted altogether?
I have to note that yes, I did find a related Q&A:
but more specifically this answer in that question
And I can understand that. But why is it that posts which clearly contain "hate, obscenity, etc." can still be viewed by some who have that privilege and not (really) deleted from the Stack Overflow database?
I seem to remember a time where deleted answers were in fact "deleted" from the Stack Overflow database and this being a 10k+ rep at the time.
IMHO, they take up space for nothing and they have no use to be seen whatsoever. Plus, it could encourage a younger generation to do so, as well as exposing them to such language/behaviour.
I realize that it would take a lot work for them to be really deleted yes, but I guess what my real question should have been; why is it that answers (or even questions) with such language not erased altogether from the beginning?
Anyway, that's just my two cents, and I stand by my values on this.
feel that this question can't be answered by anyone other than a core member of Stack who has worked in or has taken part in the architecture's creation
-> I find that a strange requirement for your question. Arguments to keep these answers as "soft-deleted" or to permanently delete them can be formulated by anyone, not just by the person who implemented it.