As everyone can see from the history, I'm the moderator who originally applied a content lock to that question. I did so because there was a delete war occurring on the primary answer. This was discussed extensively in the comments on the Meta Q&A. I'm not going to rehash that here. The summary is, I had a good reason for locking it at the time (the person who posted the answer was trying to remove the answer because they felt attacked by the community), but now that problem has been addressed: the person asked me to unlock it and promised they wouldn't try and vandalize it, I believed them, I unlocked it, and there haven't been any problems since.
Locks get applied by moderators to solve immediate problems. A content dispute lock is not warranted just because the post is being discussed on Meta. We use that lock to stop people from vandalizing the post (e.g., removing its content, editing in spam), engaging in delete/rollback wars, having noisy extended debates in the comments, or other types of things that are extremely disruptive and harmful. That isn't happening here, so there is no point in having it locked.
It's also worth pointing out that, even though I had a pretty good reason for locking it at the time, to solve an immediate problem, as described above, the decision to lock was not immediately obvious to everyone and was therefore itself controversial. A couple of people called me out about it on Meta, wondered why it was locked, and asked me to unlock it. With that reason completely obsolete, it would be really difficult to justify a lock on that question.
So, I declined this flag. Why, exactly, does this flagger want me to lock this again? Didn't we already do that? Hasn't the problem already been addressed? Did they not even bother to read the Meta discussion, or or are they just not aware of it? If they haven't seen the Meta discussion, how else did they find this question in order to flag it?
Frankly, reading the flag message, I was very confused about what you wanted to happen and why you wanted it. You said:
While this question was locked and unlocked after some time, the content of the question is still deputed [sic]. A Community Manager (Shog9) reviewed the question (in the close vote queue) and selected 'Leave Open'. The review can be found here: https://stackoverflow.com/review/close/22199031. Please lock the post.
I've already addressed the first sentence. The rest of the flag, though, is self-contradictory. You make the point that Shog9 indicated the question should remain open via review, and then you ask me to lock the post. Why would locking be appropriate for a post that a CM thinks should be left open?
(Also, just because Shog9 kicked the post out of the review queue doesn't mean that he was trying to make an official decision regarding the post's appropriateness for Stack Overflow. Don't read too much into that. Again, we are discussing this on Meta; that is the appropriate way to handle Q&A where the suitability and/or topicality are in dispute.)
And more broadly, I want to echo, underscore, and set in bold what Nicol Bolas said:
Since a lock has similar effects as closing, you're essentially asking the moderators to pick a side, to unilaterally resolve the debate in your favor.
[ . . . ]
Let the debate play out, allow a resolution to be reached, and don't try to draft the referees to call the game before it's done.
I'd make it <blink>
if I could. It's actually even worse than Nicol suggests, because the effects of a lock are far worse than closing. Closure can be undone by the community, a closed question can still be edited, etc. Locked means...locked. It's the nuclear strategy.
Please don't try and use flags this way to "enforce" a conclusion to a particular controversial issue, especially when the community is still active discussing it. Moderators do a fair job of keeping up with Meta discussions. We only step in to subvert discussion when there is a problem. Otherwise, if we have an opinion, we contribute in the Meta discussion by posting it as an answer, just like any other community member.
There was nothing here that a moderator needed to do anything about. A lock was completely inappropriate. I had absolutely no idea why you were bringing that question to our attention via a flag. If you have such a strong opinion about its disposition, you should post an answer to the Meta question about it. Your point of view is not so special that it should be immediately actioned directly by a moderator, bypassing and foreclosing all community review.