If you could quantify the "usefulness," which is being measured in voting, you probably do see normal distribution. However, that does not make the mean usefulness of entire Stackoverflow to be zero mean neutral: neither useful nor harmful. We have self-selecting group of people who is going out of their way to tell people some information. The mean usefulness of the answers and questions are way higher than zero.
To put it in terms of money, say some people make more than they spend while others spend more than they make. If you look at the general population, there's no guarantee that the median population spend exactly they make (hopefully not).
Besides, even if the distribution of the perceived "usefulness" of the questions/answers are distributed in Gaussian way, that does not guarantee symmetric human reaction towards "useful" behavior and "harmful" behavior even discounting the penalty. Geeks are still subject to basic human psychology.
So, no, upvotes and downvotes won't be symmetric.
Edit: How does this have anything to do with how an individual should best behave? If 50% of the people told misleading and/or false information, the society wouldn't function, let alone programming Q & A.
Edit2: Another factor is the asymmetry of knowledge distribution about a given topic. By nature of public voting, the topic of the question/answer first needs to be understood by the electorate. Most people can appreciate funny jokes and cartoons, but not too many people even be interested in some weird hack in Scheme or writing Mozilla plugin using Delphi. That may not reflect "favorite joke" question 1000 times more useful than others; rather it heavily reflects that there are 1000 times more people who gets it.