My question is inspired by this question: Deleted question audit 2018.
So we can see what are the well-received questions (defined by either having high number of upvotes or many views) that are deleted, rightly or wrongly.
Stack Overflow's goal is to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming and I don't see how we can achieve this goal by deleting questions and answers that are proven to be useful to programmers.
If you feel that the question no longer belongs on the site, you can always close it, instead of deleting it. Deleting it results in net information loss.
Since those deleted questions are still accessible by users with reputation >10k, obviously Stack Overflow are not deleting them in order to save some bandwidth or disk space.
So why is Stack Overflow even deleting well-received questions?
Some say that close is a temporary state that will eventually lead to either reopening or deletion. No middle ground. In that case, we still don't have to delete any questions, we can just put a historical lock on them.
Won't that be more appropriate?