@CodyGray Where the question contains two problems which are both clearly and obviously covered by separate duplicates, I see we have five options:
A) Close as a duplicate of both dup-targets. It may be a good idea in this case to leave a comment for the OP that we prefer questions which cover only one issue, and that breaking problems into their component issues is a key component of problem solving.
B) Close as a duplicate of one & edit the question down to a single problem (which may or may not be possible & may require considerable time on the part of the SME who happens to see the question). Ask the OP to create a new question which is just the other problem, which they may, or may not, know how to do, or they may chose not to do. If the OP does create another question, it will (hopefully) just be closed as a duplicate.
C) Close as Too Broad; Ask the user to break the question into two questions, which they may have no clue how to do. When the user does break it into two questions, then (hopefully) each of those questions are individually closed as duplicate to one of the dup-targets.
E) Do nothing. Any of the above results are possible, with, IMO, the most likely thing to happen being that it gets answered addressing both issue.
IME, for cases (B) and (C), the probability is quite high that the new question(s), which are obvious dups of simple problems, will be answered prior to being closed (which substantially reduces their usefulness as duplicates). Both (B) and (C) are quite negative for an OP: we asked for extra effort from them just to (hopefully) close the new questions as duplicates. That's not going to feel good.
The marginal (and/or average) value to the site of a duplicate (even of a decent duplicate; i.e. one that gets closed to a single dup-target without having been answered and without more than 1 comment) tends to be very small. Most such duplicates provide nearly no value to the site and are deleted by Roomba, unless the question has been answered, there are multiple comments, etc.
Also note that the dup-targets for such questions tend to be ones which already have multiple duplicates. That's not always the case, but often is, but does result in the marginal value of additional duplicates being even lower.
Overall, yes, in a world which is perfect for Stack Overflow, we would end up with two questions which are each covering only a single discrete issue, both of which are closed as duplicates of separate questions.
My opinion is that in most cases the additional marginal value to the site of having separate duplicates isn't worth the extra time and effort which is put in by our SME volunteers and/or the OP in order to go from the single combined question to two questions, both closed as duplicate. That marginal value is also not worth the additional negative experience for the OP.
So, in many, even most, cases, my opinion is that closing as a duplicate of two targets (i.e. option (A)) is the best trade-off. There are, of course, times when that is definitely not the correct choice. As with nearly everything, it is situational.