Disclaimer: I am one of the posters who've tried to give an answer to the question. I have also flagged two of your comments on my question as not constructive.
I actually don't mind your rant, not at all. I know your pain, often I often have such cases and sometimes I bang my head against the table silently screaming "why on earth this stuff just refuses to work".
But I'm not here to educate you on the anger management. Here are my two cents on how (maybe) could have done it better.
You came with the premise that "it is broken". Some people probably got uneasy with the tone (not me by the way). It looked more like you were trying to make your point rather than asking for help to fix it. Friendlier tone would make people more eager to be willing to help you.
You've posted some code, this was not a bad start. Would've be good to have full exception stack traces. Sometime it is possible to figure out the problem from the stack trace.
Not everyone would want to invest time to create a project in order to reproduce the problem. A ready-to-clone project on GitHub would have better chances, I think.
Still, you might also be a victim on your own research. What you report looked very much like a bug report. But SO is not a bug tracker for Xerces. Assuming this is a bug - what would you want from us next? To fix the Xerces code? Not in scope. So I'm not sure which help you expected.
It may also very well be that you're facing a complex problem and it would take a lot of resources to investigate. For me presonally the problem was not so interesting that I'd want to invest much time is it. I also remember that what you claim to be broken actually worked for me. So the devil is probably somewhere in details. So my balance was: either its a bug, should be a bug report. Or too localized and requires thorough debugging, too effort-consuming and not so interesting. At the same time you were showing disturbing patterns in communication and it looked like you were more interested in making a point than in actual help. So the whole thing had a good smell to end up not very good. I had such cases here on SO.
Look at your proclaimed goals:
I had 2 goals of this post: to point out java's schema validation is broken (the sample schemas and sample test class show that), and to provide a better way (my provided schema resolver class).
From my point of view, none of these goals actually fits SO.
Making a point that something is broken? Definitely not.
Providing a better way? You could have made it a Q&A-style question, asking a question and answering it right away, thus sharing your experience on the topic.
You also said you wanted to fix it. My point here is that you don't fix it by ranting on SO about the problem. You fix it by providing a good bug report to the vendor and (ideally) a patch to fix the code.
I think that if you'd route the energy of your rant into the fix, you've probably already had a patch by now.
I find it very good that you've asked for the feedback on meta. Don't mind the downvotes, it's just a sign of "we think you did it wrong there", also a part of the feedback. Try to reflect on the situation when you calm down, I hope you'll see one or another point worth considering next time. SO has its own format. If you're interested on results (I mean getting the answers you want, not the rep), it is good to know this format and flow with it. Otherwise you'll end up in frustration.
Best wishes and good luck next time.