I don't think simple questions are worthless. As long as the questions meets general standards, they can serve a useful purpose. This includes:
- They are not duplicates on SO. Many simple questions were asked before, and should be closed because they are in fact duplicates.
- They are on topic for SO. This includes that they are not just debugging help for trivial mistakes.
- They don't have any of the other common problems (opinion based, too broad, etc).
There is a difference between simple questions and bad questions. If simple questions meet all the requirements, they can still be good questions.
SO is used by people of various skill levels, so a topic that looks trivial to you can be useful to somebody else. That applies even to a single person when they explore areas they are not very familiar with. For example, I write a Python script about once a year, and do a lot of searching and documentation reading every time because I forgot the little I previously learned about it. When I do Google searches, very often SO questions show up as the very first search hit, and there is an answer that tells me exactly what I was looking for. While I could certainly have found the information elsewhere, SO is mostly the place with the best and most accessible information. In cases like this, the question was useful to me, even though it would be laughably easy for a Python expert.
IMHO, information being available elsewhere is not a reason to exclude it from SO. The problem these days is rarely that information does not exist. The bigger challenge is mostly that there's so much of it out there, that finding the right information can be very difficult for people. If SO can present this information in a form that people can find easily, it is current, correct, of high quality, and explained in language that most people understand, those questions and answers are useful.
I know people here sometimes find it unfair that simple questions and answers get the most upvotes, and posters can get a lot of rep for them. But maybe this really means that those simple questions help more people than the ones that might seem more interesting to some of us.