There's a variety of things at play.
People want to strongly identify with - and become part of - something that they deeply believe in. They want to be part of something bigger than themselves, something likely to last, something that's doing some good. That's what they see when they look at the site, while someone stumbling through the first few chapters of their beginner's guide to Java just sees a place they can type questions and get answers; it's this discrepancy that can cause things to deteriorate:
... Do you even debug, bro?
You're being rude!
... No, you're being flippant, Can't you see I'm trying to help you?!
All I did was ask a question! Can't you just answer it without berating me?
... YOU AND YOUR KIND ARE RUINING THE INTERNET!
It basically goes downhill from there. Put simply, the middle ground between people that come here to give something and people that come here to get something isn't yet centered properly. The person asking didn't realize that they just walked into someone's church with muddy feet, and the person greeting them didn't realize their pillow fort only looks like a castle to the kids that helped to build it.
The other thing to consider is the way people learn how to program has fundamentally changed over the last 20 years, more so than ever in the last five. We're effectively slashing the time it takes for someone with the potential to be competent to get up and running with a language - if they can learn how to communicate effectively.
Yet, some equate someone not struggling and suffering as much as they did to learn something with someone else being lazy, and that's a tragic mistake because it doesn't allow for the process to become better. I'll stop reiterating the obvious before we go walking to school uphill, in the snow, for 20 kilometers, with no shoes.
You can't force people to be nice, but you can ask that they not be rude. That's what I was hoping to get out of the summer of love - you don't need to go hugging everyone, but try to refrain from throwing mud every time you find yourself annoyed. It's very true that we spend only a few years of our lives learning how to talk, and the rest of it learning how to shut the hell up when it would well suit us to do so.
If you walk into enough people while texting your BFF on your way to work in lower Manhattan, someone is going to tell you off. Stack Overflow is a big city and any expectation that everyone is going to prefer silence over negativity is at best unrealistic. That doesn't mean we shouldn't continue to try and do something about it, but let's have realistic goals in mind.
Changes in help new users receive that ask ... potentially okay ... questions should help this significantly. At least, it should help to the point that if you're barked at, it's pretty easy to explain why and not hand-wave it off with 'they're just always rude to everyone!' (did you know that water is also fatal? 100% of the people that drink it eventually die). People not seeing stuff like:
plz see dis codes and kindly supply ur fix
.. on the front page at all will help enormously. They'll be less inclined to lump someone that probably just didn't know what to search for in with someone that simply can't be bothered to earn their own paycheck.
I want to see if we manage to do everything we're setting out to do with the quality project (MSO background | MSE background) before we start considering other things. If I'm right, and while I'm wrong about lots of stuff I'm usually right about these sorts of things, the problem will right itself for the most part once we're done.
Still, you'll always have old geezers, and you'll always have lawns - however small - in this rapidly growing pillow fort we're building.
:P