The question is clearly and obviously helpful (a good signpost) and should not be deleted.
I locked that question1 when handling a flag intended to bring the question's potential deletion to the attention of the moderators. I locked the question in order to prevent people from deleting a question which was clearly and obviously useful. With 207,199 views, the question is clearly serving well in a duplicate question's primary role of being a signpost to the dup-target question. That's 2,496 people per month that view the question and get a link to the duplicate, which is an average of 82 people every single day.
In fact, the question and its highest upvoted answer are arguably more helpful than the question it's closed as a duplicate of. This question's highest scored answer has a score of 265, which is 0.001279 votes/view. If this question had the same number of views as the duplicate-target, then the score would be 701, which is 4.25 times as many votes as the highest scoring answer on the duplicate target.
Why did you want to delete a question which is clearly helpful to people?
From your earlier question, it appeared your primary issue was with the negatively scored accepted answer, rather than the question. Deleting a question which is useful to thousands of people every month just to get rid of an answer you don't like is inappropriate. Deleting answers is a privilege given at 20k reputation. Users with >20k reputation could delete-vote the negatively scored answer, if they choose.
Deleting useful questions shouldn't be a surrogate action for deleting answers which you don't like. Frankly, I view doing so as an abuse of the 10k delete-vote on questions privilege. However, please note that I don't mean you shouldn't vote to delete poor questions, just that you shouldn't be using deleting a helpful question as a way to delete an answer, particularly when that question is obviously helpful to a large number of people.
To reiterate what the 10k delete-vote on questions privilege says:
When should I delete questions?
Closed questions that are of no lasting value whatsoever should be deleted.
Before voting to delete, please check whether there are any good answers; if so, then the question should be flagged for moderator attention as a potential merge candidate. We don't like to lose great answers!
Also, be cautious when deleting questions closed as duplicates; they can serve as a signpost, directing users to useful answers on another question.
In this case, merging is a potential alternative to locking
In my opinion, it would be reasonable, and probably better, to merge this question into its duplicate-target. I did not do so at the time because merging is irreversible. Given the number of people who had voted to delete and the fact that there was previously a Meta question about the accepted answer, I considered it likely there would be a Meta question asking about how the question was handled. I didn't want to have performed an irreversible merge prior to everyone getting a chance to say their peace.
The comment you quoted
While I agree that problem questions tend to beget problem answers, the existence of a problem answer doesn't inherently mean the question is a problem. This question is not a problem question. Other than the fact that the question is a duplicate, there's nothing inherently wrong with that question. The logic used in that comment is flawed.
We don't delete duplicate questions which are good signposts. They still serve a useful function.
- I also cleared the delete-votes, because A) it looks poor to have a question sitting at 9 delete-votes indefinitely, and B) leaving a locked question with delete-votes makes the 10k tools less useful.