I mostly agree with Kevin's answer post. For language-specific question posts, leave it at having language-specific canonicals. Every language is its own thing. It has its own grammar and semantics, expression evaluation order (whether language-defined, or implementation-defined), boolean coercion / automatic type conversion (or lack thereof), its own wider feature set (providing alternatives), and its own conventions and idioms.
If you make a language-agnostic Q&A for the purpose of duplicate-closure, you lose out on saying "this doesn't work because this language works like <this>. take your pick from <alternatives>, given <tradeoffs>", which is a whole lot of useful content.
Sure, this may be a common mistake, and it might look messy to see a lot of language-specific Q&A about the generalized point of confusion, but as I already said, each language is different. There's no law that says I can't create a language where this is syntactically legal, meaningful, and does what these askers probably expect. And I could do it in an infinite number of ways with syntactic variations.
Why is there a language-agnostic canonical for a very similar issue but not for this one?
Why does non-equality check of one variable against many values always return true? is a boolean logic and expression evaluation question, so I think it's just fine. I didn't initially realize due to the large amount of examples with code in specific programming languages (I'm a bit surprised there's no mathematical notation in the Q&A (at the time of this writing)). I don't see an issue with it being used as a duplicate target as long as the question being closed is about a programming language expression that follows compatible rules for evaluating boolean expressions (which is a pretty vapid statement: "close as a duplicate if it's appropriate to close as a duplicate"). Compare to the types of question you're linking to here, which are programming-language-specific.
What should I do if I find a question that is caused by that mistake but no language-specific canonical exists?
Let that one become the canonical. See if there's any way you can edit it to improve its clarity and make it a better minimal reproducible example. If you don't have the subject-matter expertise, leave it to someone who does.
The part where I possibly diverge from Kevin is that I don't think a language-agnostic question is necessarily not useful (as long as it's not used as a duplicate target). There are specific types of language-agnostic questions for things like this that I think are useful to have. Ex. Why do many languages not support nested block comments?, which I think is a good design+history question.
n
is the number of programming languages that exist, as much as that may irk programmers (in practice,n
is a small number). The "language agnostic" canonical would quickly devolve into dozens of language-specific answers starting with "in Ruby, ...", "In Python, ...", etc, and become chaotic.x == a || b || c
mistake is a syntactical mistake, and syntaxes are language-specific.