From the blog post, here's the relevant section:
And little makes me sadder than comments on answers saying, “Don’t answer questions like this – it encourages them.” Now, some questions are off-topic. (I’m genuinely sorry, but we simply can’t explain how a glass pitcher can smash through a brick wall with no apparent injuries; we are a programming site.) But it’s totally cool to answer questions without giving a grilled poop sandwich about exactly what’s allowed. It’s fine to volunteer in one way without being expected to read and enforce every rule and meta discussion since forever.
A draft of this blog post was briefly circulated to moderators for feedback before it was posted, and I thanked Jay personally for this section. I've been arguing this for years, but comments berating people for simply trying to be helpful are counterproductive. Volunteers who answer questions are the most valuable resource for the site, and this works to drive them away while doing nothing at all for the quality problem.
Bad askers will keep coming, whether they get their questions answered or not. The number of question-ban-evaders I've dealt with who never got any answers, yet kept coming back with new accounts, illustrates this. As long as Stack Overflow sits on top of Google search results, people desperate to have their questions answered will keep coming. On the flip side, I've talked with good answerers who decided to reduce their participation on the site because of negative comments they received telling them not to answer certain things.
Does this conflict with the How To Answer guidance?
Answer well-asked questions
Not all questions can or should be answered here. Save yourself some
frustration and avoid trying to answer questions which...
...are unclear or lacking specific details that can uniquely identify
the problem.
...solicit opinions rather than facts.
...have already been asked and answered many times before.
...require too much
guidance for you to answer in full, or request answers to multiple
questions.
...are not about programming as defined in the help center.
Don't forget that you can edit the question you're answering to
improve the clarity and focus - this can reduce the chances of the
question being closed or deleted.
Does "save yourself some frustration" mean that we should guarantee that those doing this experience some frustration? That's not my reading. This is advice for those answering, not for those moderating the site. Rather than going after people trying to be helpful, address the problem at the source: the bad questions.
This might lead to "some frustration" as answers are deleted along with bad or off topic questions, or those answers languish with no votes due to poor visibility. That's what I see this documentation warning against. Its goal is to give answerers the best chance of having their contributions be positively received. However, I can think of ways that this page could be worded differently to convey this in a clearer manner, and I can see why it is being read by some as moderation policy.
When it comes to enforcement, the wording in that blog post is consistent with the way that I and other moderators have reviewed flags on comments like this for the last several years. I delete almost all flagged comments that criticize people for answering questions the commenter did not like.