Congratulations! You are the <insert arbitrary large integer>
th reviewer to have fallen foul of the seriously
Flawed Automated Review Queue Audit System (FARQAS).
Now, although I strongly sympathize with your frustration and anger over this event, let's try to add some context …
Unless you should fail multiple audits (typically, at least 3) in a short spell of time (30 days), then your review queue privileges will not be subject to suspension. To encounter one such terrible audit (and that was terrible) is an all-too-frequent event; however, stumbling across three in a month would be extremely unlucky and is (hopefully) very rare. 1
Despite the fact that the current audit system is seriously flawed – as has been discussed often, at length and on multiple Meta sites – it is, nonetheless, a vital part of the review system. The potential damage caused by bad ("robo") reviewers far outweighs the "slings and arrows" suffered by good reviewers (such as yourself) from an occasional bad audit.
Whenever a reviewer encounters such an audit, they should – as you have done here – raise the issue on the particular site's Meta. That way, moderators and other community members can take actions (like voting, editing or closing/reopening) on the post that will prevent it from being selected for future audits.
So, what can be done about this issue? This has also been discussed ad nauseam on Meta sites. I don't want to speak for the moderator team, but one suggestion (with at least some support from the mods) has been to have them (or even staff) manually select posts to be used as Review Audits. This may work for the smaller sites but, on Stack Overflow, the sheer scale of the review system (many thousands of reviews each day) would likely make this task far too much of a burden. (I don't know how many posts are in the audit pool at any given time, nor how often that pool is refreshed; however, even as it is, I have been presented with the same audit multiple times on numerous occasions.)
Another point worth noting is that nothing was done to address or improve the audit-selection process in the 'recent' round of changes/improvements to the review queue system. This is notable in that it sends (to me, at least) a strong signal that SO Staff aren't especially concerned about the issue.
And, to end with a suggestion: Maybe keep the automatic selection process as it is, but add a step that requires a moderator to manually assess each selected post and approve its use, before it becomes active. That may be a workable compromise between the current "score-based" system (which will always be prone to errors such as the selection of the post you raised here) and a fully manual process that would simply add too much work to the (already overloaded) moderator team.
1 There was a short period when a bug in the processing of audits in First Questions and First Answers caused multiple failures and, consequently, some otherwise good reviewers to be suspended. But that has now been fixed and, as far as I can remember, moderators were able to lift any suspensions that happened because of that bug.