No matter what we do, we will always have those in our community that look for faults first. They are put off trivially and that's not going to change. While many follow the golden "if you can't say anything nice .." adage of antiquity, some simply can't resist. I've suspended accounts owned by people that made it their life's work to inform as many others as possible that they are, in fact, morons. A site as huge as Stack Overflow can't avoid being used as an opportunistic soap box on occasion.
Those are the people that are not served well with engagement. Avoid them, don't confront them and let us know when we need to deal with them. They are, fortunately, a minority with typically short attention spans and move on rather quickly. The rest go in the basement.
Let's move on to the majority of the users we've retained over the years, and new users that will likely stick around for years to come. Put simply, the users we care about.
The price of our obsession over quality is angst.
The site, and the quality that it is notorious for producing, began in a proverbial bubble - a bubble that lasted long after the site went public. When the rest of the world went beyond taking notice to actively participating one thing became abundantly clear:
If we lose our quality, we're done. This engine is useless if sub-mediocrity can flourish.
This elicits a somewhat self defeating emotionally driven call to arms in people that really care about the site. In an effort to maintain the quality and integrity of the resource they helped to build, some users lose sight of the fact that we're in much deeper sh** if our core of contributors doesn't grow in proportion to our extremely long tail. You can't alienate people as a test to see if they'll return and become 'good', that's extremely broken thinking.
Stack Overflow should be a little intimidating to a newcomer, but that intimidation needs to be mostly implied by the level of quality that we're striving to maintain. We've done things such as the summer of love to try and get the community to buy into being a little nicer when dealing with newcomers. Moderators are also studying cultural differences to identify ways to better help newcomers. It's a problem we're actively engaging.
We're not just the largest community of great programmers, we're also a giant tantrum-prone, crackly-voiced pimple-faced adolescent that gets angry at the world.
Answering your question directly, no, rudeness is not sanctioned or encouraged. However, it's not something we can just disallow and call it a day. Remember that we're growing, and we all did things as kids that turns our faces a little red today.