I presume the majority of community members would prefer to have chatGPT content allowed to help them earn reputation faster so why would they want to visit a post that states it is banned?
Yikes! If the majority of community members care about nothing more than getting rep without any consideration for adding value, that's an extremely sad state of affairs. It's basically the opposite of the site's mission statement, which is to curate a high-quality resource of programming questions and answers. What led you to the rather extreme assumption that most users see the site as a game to accrue fake internet points?
(And, even if this was the case, ChatGPT is a poor tool for rep farming--most answers it spits out are obvious, wrong and wind up downvoted. Ironically, the best way to rep "farm" is learning to program, solve problems and write clearly. Askers who want a ChatGPT answer are smart enough to go ask ChatGPT. They're clearly here to speak with a human, so answering with a copy-pasted AI response is about as rude and valuable as answering by googling the question and copy-pasting the first thing that comes up. But I digress.)
Part of the reason the post has so many views is because banning ChatGPT was groundbreaking at the time. SO was one of the first major sites to create a full block on generative AI content, less than a week after the release of ChatGPT. The post gained press and was linked from many other places (tweets, news articles, blogs, reddit, etc). For example (picked randomly):
These sites brought in a good deal of traffic from non-Stack Overflow users who'd likely never otherwise visit a meta post, much less the SO site itself. The ban post is newsworthy for programmers who don't use SO, non-programmers with technical interests, and arguably even for non-tech enthusiasts who care about the implications of LLMs on, for example, the content creation economy, like writers.
Aside from the exposure outside of Stack Overflow's userbase, it was a featured post on Stack Overflow's in-application sidebar for something like 6 months, leading to higher-than-normal exposure to SO users. The reason for the abnormally long duration was, presumably, to help inform users who don't normally visit meta of the policy.
Furthermore, it's the most significant post in years, so why shouldn't it have many views? Since that post, LLM abuse has run rampant on the site and SE backpedaled on allowing moderators to actually enforce the ban in May, leading to an ongoing (at the time of writing) widespread moderation strike that may be one of the largest and longest-running in the network's history, if not the largest (I've only been around since 2016). The ban post is the foundation for everything that's come after it and is referred to continually throughout the discussion. The moderation strike is also newsworthy, even for non-Stack Overflow users, leading to further mainstream news articles linking directly to the ban post in question.
Page views only indicate exposure of a post, not support. Votes are used to indicate support. As this comment indicates, support for the ban is overwhelming, with 97% of votes in support--about as unanimous as one could expect (caveat: the post is locked, so the votes are a historical snapshot of approval for the ban at the time).
Now, here's to hoping SE goes back to allowing the ban to be enforced instead of following the AI hype herd and extinguishing its value proposition (i.e. a resource curated by subject matter expert humans).