The duplicate target suggested by gnat provides relevant framing for this discussion. The question we are talking about is a canonical, or, as the answer over there puts it, "a broad question/answer [set] that is intended to be a duplicate target for commonly asked questions". In my view, the crucial point here is that we are not considering a mere historical artefact from the formative days of Stack Overflow (by the way, it was created in August 2013, around the time the site turned five), but a post that was manifestly created as a tool for curation.
Now, it might be the case that this specific tool is not as efficient as one might like. Perhaps a canonical structured in a different manner would be more useful as a duplicate target -- and, given you do use it as a target, you likely have a few things to say on the matter. While that would be a perfectly reasonable discussion to hold, it is not what you are putting on the table here, if I understand it correctly. Quoting a comment of yours:
I get their purpose, but how can higher rep users promote better asking of questions when these historic questions, which are highly upvoted etc., are of bad question-quali.. feels like it goes against the point of how-to-ask when we use these questions as dupe targets
The concern seems to be with setting a bad example, or, as in Robert Columbia's answer, giving users arguments to defend problematic questions. On that, I'd say that anyone who uses a canonical Q&A which is manifestly a purpose-built tool for curation to argue in support of an ordinary question that skirts the guidelines is comparing apples and oranges. From this perspective, using the canonical as a target is not a mistake; adapting curation practices to conform to flawed arguments is.
On a final note, there is another point worth addressing in that comment I quoted:
and it's not just the canonical questions, view the linked question and my dupe target
If you think a potential duplicate target -- old, popular, highly upvoted, or whatever it might be -- is irredeemably not good enough as a target, don't use it. Find an alternative target; if you can't find one, consider answering the question so that there will be a good enough target in the future, or just let it be. I, for one, have closed questions against a duplicate of the obvious target question due finding said target too messy to be useful. (Regardless of what I have argued in the first part of this answer -- which was primarily a meta-meta argument -- this also applies to canonicals: if you don't think a canonical, no matter how venerable, is not good enough, don't use it.)