Let's get this out of the way first: the questions are bad. They lack a self-enclosed MCVE and expect people to delve into code on a 3rd party website (that is clearly destined for production after it gets out of the test phase). This is reason enough to downvote, close vote, and delete vote by itself.
That said, there's some things that are good in the questions, too. Let's look at one paragraph from one of the questions:
In summary: background-image wont properly scale within parent container. Secondly, (which I believe is probably related) Why the big empty space between the divs going down the page?
This demonstrates the following positive qualities:
- On topic programming problems involving specific elements of HTML and CSS
- Effort attempting to understand, diagnose, and fix the problem themselves
- Scoped to a narrow behavior of the page (There's a small addendum about something they believe is related which might warrant a second question, but it isn't some huge diatribe about a totally separate problem.)
- Description of current behavior vs. desired behavior
The questions overall have a similar level of quality, which isn't high but is far from the worst posts I've seen.
The fact that the question is obviously basically on topic makes it clear enough that we have no reason to suspect ill intentions here. The user clearly misunderstands our normal practices and expectations, but I see not a single line of evidence that their primarily motive is to get traffic to their site. They even offer the following poor excuse for why they didn't include an MCVE:
Would be way too cluttered for something someone can easily see via the above link.
This doesn't excuse them, of course, but it offers a believable explanation for why they're linking to the site. There is no reason to believe that the primary motivation for linking was to get traffic to their site.
So what do we do about it? Downvote, close vote, delete vote as normal. Flag for moderator attention since there's a problem pattern here, and moderators probably need to communicate that self hosting example code rather than putting it in the question is not acceptable. (Make it custom so you can explain the pattern.) Maybe point out the existence of the snippet feature. But putting aside any technicalities about what is and is not spam, these questions do not warrant losing 100 reputation per post. On the contrary, the good things (especially the increasingly rare demonstration of effort) I do see encourage me to think that with some education, they could eventually become a productive member of the community.
(Granted, their deleted reaction here pretty much wipes away that encouragement, but my answer is about the questions linked, not the user.)
'to save your day'
.. But looking at the reaction of Stuart that just got deleted here on meta I think he ran out of humour anyways ;)