When you move to a new town (at least where I'm from), there's something called the Welcome Wagon. They connect with you, touch base, spam you with ads for local businesses, and they offer minimal help in getting you feeling comfortable/connected in your new town.
Over the years that I've been on Stack Overflow, I've seen the site evolve in ways that attempt to correct the eternal problem of newcomers using the site very badly. At one point, I remember a proposal to make a "how to post a question on Stack Overflow" SE site. I believe it was eventually withdrawn when we realized that the mathematics to solve the number of recursively required "how to how to how" SE sites just didn't exist.
Anyway, this problem continues and every day I see new people post really terrible questions and you know, it's not entirely their fault. But even if it is their fault, what do we do about it? I think the current solution is vote close and try to explain why. This pretty much just shuts the user down, and they're left crying alone in the rain feeling booted out of the club.
My suggestion is a sort of welcome wagon. What if we had the system assign a trusted (higher rep) user to one or two (at most at a time) new users and, when they post a question, the welcomer gets a flag the same way we get message notices now (for at least the first couple of posts, not forever). The welcomer can then view and review the content of the newcomer before they get hammered to death with "WHY DIDN"T YOU READ THE FAQ?!? BLARRRRRRRGHHH" comments combined with close votes and flags, and actually mentor/help them into integrating into the community successfully.
Also I personally think the name welcome wagon is silly; I'm not suggesting we create something and call it that. I'm just drawing from the example of it to provoke discussion about an issue that we've tried to solve but persists.