(Update: apparently the decline message was a canned response, thanks @Cerbrus for helping me see this from the moderator perspective. Apparently people waste moderator time asking for non-useful comments to be restored; I hadn't considered the possibility that my flag could look like such a request to a moderator. I assumed it was obvious that deleted comments should get undeleted if someone asked, because comments get over-zealously deleted all the time. In hindsight my flag could have made a clearer argument for undeletion. But I still stand by the position that comments can be useful, and are better than nothing for info that people haven't found the time or energy to fit into the answer proper.)
(I also didn't realize that the deleted comments had been moved to chat, just a glitch in the script also deleted the moved-to-chat comment. So there was never a moderator intent to fully delete them. Thanks to Martijn restoring that comment; I've updated my answer to link the chat transcript. If I have time at some point, I might add a section to the answer summarizing the discussion.)
My answer on Is there a way to "unfetch" a cache line? says "See discussion in comments: this might perform significantly worse. ..." in bold. I wrote it in 2018, and don't still remember what the comments said exactly, but I assume the comments under the answer were interesting enough for me to write in bold that readers should have a look at them. And I assume they're still relevant now.
I happened to look at that answer again while searching for something else the other day, and noticed that there are no comments under it now. Obviously that's not good, there was useful info there for future readers. So I flagged for a moderator to restore them:
Please restore comments under this answer that says "see discussion in comments" in bold. I don't recall what that comments were, but I assume when I wrote it that I thought they were valuable
The flag was declined with an utterly unhelpful message, in terms of doing something about the situation now with the comments already gone. I said in the flag I don't remember what was in them, so I can't now add them to my answer.
declined - Comments aren't for extended discussions. If it's important, extend your answer.
Which is true, but it didn't happen at the time, due to limits on the amount of time & effort I was willing to put into that answer then. I know comments are nominally ephemeral, but usually useful comments don't get nuked, especially on obscure answers. (They do on popular canonical answers where new comments tend to accumulate over time).
Am I supposed to go digging on archive.org to see if I can find a copy of the page from before the deletion?
This "your ball is in my yard now and you can't have it back" attitude is not something I'm ok with. I hope that wasn't the intent behind the phrasing of the decline, but that's how it comes across to me. That's part of why I'm bringing this to meta.
But also because the comments shouldn't have been deleted in the first place. There's just no need for it. Whoever flagged them "no longer needed" was wrong, because the answer hadn't yet been updated to contain that info, and it was highly relevant (IIRC) to the question, and to most future readers who found the answer useful.
If they'd submitted an edit to add a new section that covers whatever had been discussed in comments, that would have been good. (As long as it wasn't just a blockquote of all the comments; at that point it would be better to leave them as comments). Then, once the edit had been accepted, the comments would no longer be needed. When the answer says in bold to see comments, that's a textbook case of comments that are still needed.
I know I'm not the only person who thinks Stack Overflow's comment policy of being subject to arbitrary deletion at any time is not good, for example @zwol has expressed this multiple times on meta. I'm ok with that being a possibility, as long as the judgment is made by reasonable humans who don't delete useful comments that are directly relevant to the answer, only off topic or chatty stuff like "I'll edit when I get back from my Ultimate frisbee game :)".
The comments on that one answer aren't that important in the grand scheme of things, but the general principle here is a huge deal to me. Getting useful comments moved to chat is bad enough (many people will skim at least the high-voted comments to see if there's something interesting to them, but chat loses voting, and almost nobody opens it in the first place). But deleting and refusing to restore when it's pointed out that they were useful is way way beyond that. To me, that shows total disregard for Stack Overflow being a repository of useful information.
There are only so many hours in a day, and we don't always have time and energy to include everything commenters have to add. Comments make useful footnotes. This works great unless/until people come along and delete comments just because they can, without care for them being relevant and useful. Everything that's directly relevant to answering the question should be in the answer, and usually is, but not everything is perfect.
If even useful comments are at real risk of deletion, I guess every time I see an old answer with anything wrong with it (especially by an inactive user), I should just edit it as well as / instead of commenting, despite "intent" of the author? e.g. changing code or adding sections explaining why something earlier in the answer is actually not a good idea? That seems messier and way more intrusive, but apparently if we don't want our efforts to help future readers to vanish because someone randomly pressed a button, we need to make sure everything helpful is in answers.
I often add a comment to warn future readers of a possible problem or downside with an old answer, often to explain why (part of) it is wrong if I downvoted. Because editing "this answer is wrong" into an answer doesn't seem good, nor does deleting whole paragraphs. (If the answer has previous upvotes, one downvote won't make its score negative, so won't signal to future readers that it's not fully correct.)