I deleted [the answer](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/revisions/357965/1) for two reasons:

 1. It did not appear to be an answer to the question that was asked.
 2. To the extent it was vaguely relevant to the question, it was not even remotely constructive.

As has been pointed out in the comments, portions of [my answer here](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/358036/why-was-my-answer-on-the-question-template-meta-discussion-deleted/358038#358038) are relevant. In particular:

> The question itself was an honest attempt to solicit feedback from the
> community on something that we've been asking the team to implement
> for a *very* long time—something that many hope will improve
> question quality, an issue which is very near and dear to the hearts
> of veteran users. I, for one, am very pleased to finally see an
> indication that the team is doing ***something*** on this front, after
> years of promises that they would...someday. It might not be perfect,
> it certainly won't solve everything, but it's way past time to do
> something, and this is an idea that has garnered quite a lot of
> support. Clearly, people think it's a good idea. Now, the team who
> will be responsible for implementing it has come to the community,
> seeking further input and refinement. This is exactly what they
> *should* be doing.
> 
> When community members respond to this with hostile, biting sarcasm,
> if not outright trolling, it's just totally unwelcome, unhelpful, and
> toxic. It also discourages the team from bothering to ask us for our
> input in the future, which is a precedent that I feel pretty strongly
> about avoiding.
> 
> If you have an idea on how to structure the template message, or even
> a thoughtful reason why we shouldn't do that at all, then you are
> welcome to post it as an answer. We won't be deleting those. But if
> you just want to rant, trash-talk, or insult an abstract population of
> users, then we *will* be deleting that. The pruning will be more
> aggressive when it appears in the answer box than when it appears in a
> comment, but the "Be Nice" policy applies on Meta, too.

There isn't much more I can say by way of explanation than that. Or the comment I left underneath it:

>  I generally much appreciate your sense of humor, but I don't think it's especially helpful or constructive in this case. I'm glad that the team is finally trying to do *something* in this regard, and I'd prefer to keep the noise level to a minimum. If you have something more concrete to propose with respect to encouraging searching, rubber-ducking, etc., then that would be an acceptable answer. "GTFO" is not.

No matter how hard I strain, I cannot imagine any way in which that answered "What can we put in a question template to help people ask better questions?", nor can I see any interpretation for the post other than a hostile, sarcastic way of saying that we need to figure out a way to get (certain) users to stop asking questions altogether. This has [been](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/254194/a-tiny-barrier-to-entry) [proposed](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252829/brief-educational-quiz-before-posting-first-questions-in-popular-tags) [before](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/252061/what-effect-would-introducing-a-small-barrier-for-new-users-to-ask-a-question-ha), [many](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/256624/make-it-harder-for-new-users-to-post-questions-on-so) [times](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/253168/low-rep-users-should-not-be-able-to-ask-questions) [already](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/256396/should-signup-on-so-be-closed-for-a-while), so it's not a matter of suppressing discussion. It simply has no obvious relationship to the question that Jon was actually posing, unless the suggestion was actually to add text that proactively discourages people from asking questions, which falls squarely into the "GTFO" territory that I mentioned in the comment.

Contra conspiracy theories, this isn't one. No community manager or team member asked moderators to keep a close eye on that question (short of the obvious signal conveyed by attaching a [meta-tag:featured] tag), and certainly didn't request that we delete specific answers. This was merely something that a couple of us agreed upon ourselves, after looking at an influx of answers shortly after the question's posting that were either non-answers, excessively sarcastic, otherwise non-constructive, or all of the above. 

The answer wasn't relevant, wasn't constructive, and was crowding out discussion that *was* relevant and constructive. It didn't deserve to stay, in my opinion. It is more than a little bit ironic that someone who advocates heavy-handed moderation in terms of decreasing the number of questions being asked would have such a problem with [heavy-handed moderation in terms of decreasing the number of answers being posted](https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/357951/what-can-we-put-in-a-question-template-to-help-people-ask-better-questions/#comment524076_357951). Why should different rules be applied to you than you seek to have applied to others?

In more familiar terms:

The best way to improve answer quality is to reduce the number of irrelevant and unconstructive answers that are posted. Moderators should aggressively suggest that the poster NOT answer, and instead search, think, Be Nice, get a new job, or whatever.