I would imagine that without closing, it would be harder if possible at all to establish and grow specialised sites like CR, CG, SR...
If you check help center articles at these sites, you may notice that their norms on asking and answering differ a lot from those at Stack Overflow (and also differ a lot between each other). You will probably notice that questions that fit their norms would likely be closed at Stack Overflow (and, conversely, SO kind questions would likely get closed at these specialised sites). If you dig deeper, you will also find that these sites have fairly active, strong and mature communities.
If there were no closes, questions of this kind would likely stay at Stack Overflow, first of all because there are solid communities supporting these.
In particular, establishing separate sites would be much harder than now, because of tension that inevitably would be there for it would be unclear why adding and maintaining a dedicated site when questions are okay at Stack Overflow (and they would be okay, again, simply because there is a solid and active community behind these).
Would that be better than what we have now? Let's see...
Imagine someone willing to ask a good ("good" in common sense, not as "one that fits SO norms") question about troubleshooting, or about code review, or about code golf, or about software recommendations. As of now, they can pick the appropriate site and look at their Help Center to check what they need or what they could missed.
If these questions would be part of Stack Overflow, askers would have to search and identify guidance applicable to their kind of questions among many different ones. If, in addition, there would be a separate site, it would complicate things even further, because askers would have to additionally decide where to post and why. As far as I can tell, current way is simpler and more convenient for askers.
Now, let's look from answerers perspective. Imagine someone preferring to focus on answering particular kind questions, be it troubleshooting or code golf or code review etc.
As of now, answerers simply pick respective site and stick with it (additionally filtering questions by tags that match their technical proficiency), fine. If their kind questions would all be on a Stack Overflow, they would have to find a way to somehow filter these (looking through 100 troubleshooting questions to get to one about code review, give me a break).
To make sure that expert answerers stick (see pearls-not-sand), system would likely have to adopt meta tags, along with additional burden to determine and maintain "necessary" from "useless" ones (why homework isn't okay when software-recommendations are).
Not to mention additional friction that would be there because of inevitable tagging mistakes.
Wow, what a great software recommendation question! Oh, why it's voted down to -10? Ah, that's because it's tagged troubleshooting. Okay, let's retag, fine. Now... how to get its score recovered from -10. How to convince readers that this is only because of wrong tag and not because it was bad from beginning?
If there would be additional "specialised" site, this would also somewhat complicate answerer's life for they would have to track both "their" meta tag at SO and that site. Given my experience of answering at different sites, that probably wouldn't be much harder but still, current way looks simpler and more convenient - you pick a site and stick with it.
Now that we're done with less important folks, :) let's think of the most important ones - the readers.
Current way is simple and straightforward for them: go to appropriate site, find appropriate content.
If it would be all at Stack Overflow, it wouldn't be much harder they would have to additionally filter by meta tags (give or take inevitable tagging mistakes), fine. The issues here could be for answerer's reputation. In a perfect world, it wouldn't matter much for readers, but it really does (and reasons for that make some good sense, if you think of it).
In our thought experiment though, this could bring additional problems. If you see an answer from 100+K reputation user, how could you tell that their reputation is relevant? What if that answer is just a random drop into code-troubleshooting from someone who acquired their 100K by giving software recommendations?
Note how adding a specialised site would make life of readers even harder, for they would have to look for stuff they want at two places instead of one. That would have to search through both the specialised site and respective meta tag at Stack Overflow.
FWIW readers needs pressure would probably make introduction of meta tags inevitable, even if SO team would somehow decide to ignore interests of answerers. Thing is, forcing web search audience to look through random mix of golf/review/recommendations in order to find needed troubleshooting question and answer would make a fairly severe disadvantage (and I bet there would be competitors out there, ready and willing to leverage it).
As far as I can tell, closing is typically considered a means to only shut down any content that doesn't fit site model. It is probably worth thinking about how it works in a really long term.
Given the history of specialised sites mentioned in the beginning of this answer, one can see it also as means to motivate building more appropriate place(s) for the kind of content that is good per se but has the only drawback of not fitting the Q/A model and norms of a particular site.