Code is already written, and efforts are spent
It is also unnecessary. If you do not use it for anything, it is (by definition) useless, regardless what it does or how much effort was spent on it.
Code may be tested on syntetical and real environment
If it's useless, it is still useless even if you have tests on it. If the code is useless, the tests for it should useless as well (so keeping the commented code there, creates ambiguity - do you keep the tests? if you had client code of the commented code, do you comment the client code as well?)
If organized well (grouped, separate package, loosely coupled etc) it doesn't disturbs you on overall code analysis or refactoring
Not so. All your tools (source control, static analysis, documentation extractor, compiler, etc) will run slower, because they have to process more data (and a bigger or smaller part of that data is noise).
If the code is not organized well on the other hand, it will mess up static analysis, refactoring, and any others.
You're introducing noise to your tools input and hoping they cope correctly with it.
What if your static analysis tool computes a comments/code ratio? You just messed it up, with something that was relevant up until yesterday (or whenever the code was commented).
Most relevant of all, commented blocks of code introduce delays in understanding the code for maintenance and further development and such delays almost always cost a lot. Ask yourself this: If you need to understand the implementation of a function, what would you rather have to look at? two lines of clear code, or two lines of code and another twenty-six of comments that are no longer actual?
Code may be used in future
If it is, you will find it in your team's SCM of choice.
If you use a competent SCM and rely on it to keep the dead code (instead of cluttering up the source), you should see not only who deleted that code (commit author), but for what reason (commit message), and what other changes were made along with it (the rest of the diffs for that commit).
When deleted, author may feel uncomfortable
So?
You are (I assume) an entire team of developers that gets payed to make the best software you know how to, not "the best software you know how to without hurting the feelings of X".
It's a part of programming, that most code written will ultimately be discarded; for example, Joel Spolsky said at some point that for his company, approximately 2% of written code sees production.
If you prioritize the ego of developers over the quality of the code base, you will sacrifice the quality of your product, for ... what exactly? Preserving the immaturity of your fellow developers? Protecting the unrealistic expectations of your colleagues?
Edit: I have seen one valid reason to leave commented out code in the source, and it is a very specific case: when the code is written in a weird/un-intuitive form and the clean way of re-writing it doesn't work for a really subtle reason. This should also be applied only after a repeated attempt has been made to correct the issue and every time the attempt has re-introduced the same defect. In such a case, you should add the commented intuitive code as a comment, and explain why it doesn't work (so future developers will not attempt the same change again):
// note by <author>: the X parameter here should normally
// be a reference:
// void teleport(dinosaur& X);
// but that would require that we raise another dinosaur and
// kill it every twelve hours
// as such, the parameter is passed by value
void teleport(dinosaur X);