Stack Overflow is...a complicated beast.
There are a lot of rules to it - both spoken and unspoken; a lot of nuance, style, innuendo, and truckloads of community-centric issues that crop up every so often.
Someone that just shows up to Stack Overflow probably doesn't understand a lot of that, and will easily get buried by the norms of the site. Here on Meta, we're given a chance to discuss (via discussion) and challenge the norms, as well as clarify how we should be helping out around here.
In fact, many of the policies that are in effect today - notably, the removal of meta tags like "homework", how we deal with questions which are off-topic, and how burninate-request are dealt with - were forged here. This helps users who have a few more privileges to deal with questions understand how to deal with them better, as well as gives users a place to ask about their specific-question or specific-answer to see if it falls in scope.
It's also the place where reporting a bug for the site is allowed. If you do encounter bugs, please do report them - we don't want to use a buggy site, and most of us do get agitated when we see programming bugs since, well, we're all programmers, and we know what it's like to have a bug escape into production.
Remember when I said you could challenge the norms? In part, that's what feature-request is for; we can suggest changes to the site or the way a certain feature behaves with this tag. It offers us a lot of power, but even then it's subject to what the company needs to focus on most.
You really don't bother coming to Meta because you're interested in internet points. You bother coming to Meta because you're interested in Stack Overflow and its inner workings. I should also say that users should come to Meta as well, just to keep up with how the site works.