Welcome to Meta. The rules are a bit different here. In particular, we allow open-ended discussion about topics that are related to Stack Overflow. So…yes, the "question" was absolutely on-topic by Meta standards.
You cite the following two guidelines:
does not appear to be about Stack Overflow or the software that powers the Stack Exchange network, within the scope defined in the help center.
does not appear to seek input and discussion from the community.
waving your hands as if the question self-evidently meets both of those criteria. I'm sorry, but I just don't see it. To me, the question was self-evidently about Stack Overflow—in particular, about the Stack Overflow community. Which naturally means that it was soliciting discussion from the community.
These "off-topic" close reasons exist on Meta sites to allow closing programming questions, support questions for sites other than Stack Overflow, and completely irrelevant nonsense like that. They're not meant to shut down discussion about issues relevant to the site, even those that don't look much like traditional questions, like "thank you", complaints, and so on.
The accusation of "abuse" got bandied about in the comments. You want to talk about "abuse"? Sure, let's do that. Let's talk about people who abuse their close votes on Meta to shut down discussions that they personally disagree with, like the people who keep closing this announcement. Labeling that announcement as either off-topic or opinion-based is either an attempt to make a statement or is motivated by such a myopic interpretation of the rules that I don't even have any further words to address it.
Furthermore, it's not "abuse" when a moderator reverses a decision made by the community. This is one of the jobs of the moderators. The mob doesn't always get it right. You have the right to disagree, but not to label it as abuse or anything untoward. Or to interpret the disagreement of a moderator as an insult to your cognitive abilities.
Moderator flags aren't the correct place to get a reasoned discussion. If nothing else, there's a character limit placed on our responses, which I run into all the time under normal circumstances. I certainly am not going to try and provide an exhaustive explanation of my reasoning. Your flag asked a moderator to take a look at something and see if there was a problem that merited moderator attention. There wasn't, which is why the flag was declined.
Aside from all that, I'm pretty miffed at the reaction here. We've had a lot of negativity on Meta over the past year. Putting aside whether or not the negativity was justified, someone wanted to post something positive for a change, and you decided to come out with the pitchforks and accusations. I decided to let us have a little bit of Christmas cheer. Shoot me. I would stand up for a "question" like that on Meta on a normal day.
Related reading: Why we should allow open-ended discussions about Winter Bash (and other topics) on Meta, rather than in chat