There has been a lot of noise recently about bad answers and people incorrectly flagging them for removal and a wave of responses saying "use your downvotes, idiot. Flags aren't for wrong answers!". And then they link back to Shog9's canonical piece.
I'm just confused why removing an answer is wrong? The Stack Overflow Tour page says
With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.
Okay that's great, but I don't really think that's supposed to mean a library full of wrong answers. So yes, it's great that I have downvotes and can use them to push answers I think are 'bad' to the bottom, but still...they're there, being wrong, potentially confusing the next person to have the question and detracting from valid answers.
Do answers eventually disappear off the site if they're negative1? What is the value of keeping things that the community has decided are wrong/bad/valueless?
1 I guess I couldn't know if they did (because, y'know, disappearing), but I've seen plenty of negative answers so they definitely don't disappear immediately upon going negative.