I left my feedback here and now people are downvoting my feedback - that is kind of pathetic
You seem to misunderstand how voting works on Meta. While the tooltips are the same as on the main site, in reality the voting as more about agree/disagree than useful/not useful. And for better or worse, one of the risks of expressing an opinion in public is that people might disagree with your opinion. And for what it's worth, I do disagree with your opinion. But let me explain why…
First, let me emphasize that I do understand your frustration. It is in fact annoying to spend any non-trivial time of anything, only to find that time has been "wasted". But I have found that it helps to look at the question more philosophically: is the time truly wasted, if some good comes from it?
Maybe homework one stayed up late doing turned out to not be collected by the teacher. Or maybe one lost several hours of progress in a computer game due to a bug. Or maybe one carefully composed a reply to some question, only to find that reply was ignored or could not even be posted. But in each of these cases (and any case like them) there are things to be gained from the experience; the practice alone is helpful and improves one's skills.
One might be able to ask the teacher to grade one's homework anyway, to receive feedback on needed areas of improvement. If you're playing a game that is so bad you really don't want to have to play some section of it again, maybe you picked the wrong game. And I have found that helping answer others' questions is an excellent way for me to expand my knowledge and improve my own skills in an area.
So as a general rule, I think it's helpful emotionally to look at such experiences as opportunities rather than wasted time. One almost never comes away from such experiences having gained nothing, so "don't worry, be happy". :)
Now, all that said, I think it's also useful to consider, if this is really happening to you on anything close to a frequent basis, maybe you should be rethink how you choose the questions you answer. I'm not saying this is your problem for sure, but it's worth considering whether you are succumbing to the temptation to be The Fastest Gun in the West.
I say that, because for those who are following the FGITW strategy, it's quite common to focus on answering as quickly as possible, before stopping to think whether a question should be answered.
The most obvious reason a question shouldn't be answered is that it's already been asked and answered! While Stack Overflow strives to develop a repository of useful questions and answers, it also strives to present exactly those questions and answers exactly once. It is not useful for there to be a great deal of redundancy, especially in the answers (for questions, leaving them as bread crumbs to find the real answers can be useful).
I think there are a number of good reasons for this, but to me the biggest one is a thorough researcher is going to have to read through every single answer to figure out what information is most relevant to them. If 80% of the content is just a reiteration of the other 20% of the content, they are going to have to spend five times as long figuring out their answer than they otherwise would have.
The easiest questions to answer are also the ones that are the most general and the most likely to already have been asked and answered. If a question seems simple for you to answer, maybe you could do the site a favor and spend some time looking for the duplicate, rather than writing yet another answer to it.
Note that "duplicate" is a stock close reason. Indeed, you can save yourself a lot of trouble by looking at questions skeptically and voting to close instead of answering, if you can. Overly broad questions, unclear questions, opinion-based questions, are all likely to be closed.
And if you are unable to do a better job predicting what questions are likely to be closed, you might want to take a break from answering and spend more of your time refining your understanding and intuition of what gets questions closed.
Finally…if all else fails, type faster. :)