Please consider this answer to a question from 2011. I added this answer today originally because all the answers on the page were misleading in an important aspect. After perfectly good push-back, I updated my answer to actually completely address the original poster's question instead of just the one problem with the other answers.
Now I'm receiving some additional push-back that because I said the asker's statements didn't make sense, I shouldn't answer but should close the question as "unable to tell what you're asking". However, I see a distinction between "unable to tell, at all, what you're trying to ask in a way that prevents me from answering" and "unable to tell what your exact misconception is, but I think I can definitively clear up your confusion."
If the question is so bad (it has 5 upvotes) then indeed it should be closed. Additionally, if all the answers are improper because they can't possibly tell what's being asked, should they not receive downvotes like my answer did?
I'm not asking for your upvote. I'm merely asking if you think that my answer is appropriate. I think it's a very informative answer, and I'm pretty darn sure it's correct (feel free to point out any errors in it).
Remember the scenario at the beginning of Stack Overflow where people were trying to figure out if duplicate questions should be deleted, or if they should be closed? The answer from on high came back that they should be linked, and closed, not deleted, because there's value in the differently-worded questions being accessible to people using search engines, who may use the terms from one question rather than the other.
I see this as similar. The question may not be stellar, but it presents a clear enough problem (confusion between static and singleton and how one or the other can or should be used) that a good answer is of value to anyone else searching the Internet for these terms together.