A user recently asked a question, which was asking about the order of answers displayed in one's activity tab in their profile. Screenshot because it's deleted (credit to dbc). The question itself was worded perfectly. It had good grammar, and was asked in a constructive manner.
The premise of the question was something like this:
In the answers tab in my activity, if I sort all of my answers by votes, answers with the same score are sorted. But if one answer is accepted, and the other is not, they are sorted randomly.
Shouldn't the accepted answer be on top? Or is this such a small thing that there is no point in fixing it?
This feature-request was received negatively, which is fine. Personally, I disagree with the premise of the question and I did downvote it. That's not the point of this question, though.
Later, a user with a gold badge in the feature-request tag closed it as a duplicate of this question, and this question. These two questions ask for the accepted answer to be unpinned on an actual question. Like in this case, the accepted answer shouldn't be pinned. That's what the two questions ask for.
To me, the two questions do not seem to be duplicates. They are barely related, and it shouldn't have been closed. Closing a feature-request as a duplicate of another feature-request which isn't related is wrong. It shuts down the discussion, and is sending the message that an unpopular feature request should just be closed and shut down, without any discussion whatsoever.
After the duplicate closure, the user deleted their question, likely because the question was dismissed in this way. So one can say that the closure was just a way of shutting down the discussion.
Is it OK to just close down a discussion which was previously never brought up? Isn't that wrong? Can the gold badger please tell us why they thought the two questions were duplicates?