Aside from the fact that the getting started tag is applied to low quality or not constructive questions, it's important to note that the Getting Started tag is at its core a meta tag.
Meta tags don't tell someone viewing the question on the front page whether or not the question has any relevance to anything that he or she would have experience with. A question tagged "Getting Started" could be about something I'm intimately familiar with, like JavaScript, or it could describe something for which I have little experience, like Underwater Basket-weaving.
The Best practices tag is another example of a Meta tag that has been placed on the chopping block. Like the Getting Started tag, it tells me nothing about whether or not it's something I'm interested in or something I can help with.
In other words, to gauge the topic of the question, I still have to actually view the question. Tags should help us quickly identify questions we have an interest in while also helping us avoid the ones that have no value to us personally.
Tags, like everything else on Stack Overflow, should be devoid of distraction and clutter, and this means that any tags that don't specifically identify the question subject-matter should be banned, blacklisted, and escorted off our network.