In the true meta spirit of pissing on all proposals, no matter how potentially helpful, for reasons ranging from something similar was proposed before and somebody didn’t like it, or I’m in a bad mood, or it won’t solve all our problems so we shouldn’t even think about it any more, or it violates some written or unwritten philosophical precept of SO, or it has the theoretical potential to be abused in some contorted hypothetical scenario, let me say that your proposed warning is a very small finger in a very large dike with a very large number of holes.
The problem in the majority of the cases is not that the OP does not look at the console, it is that they don't even know what the console is. Their ignorance of the console is part of a larger pattern of ignorance, lack of curiosity, refusal to read the most basic documentation or tutorials, lack of comprehension of basic debugging techniques, and frankly pure laziness, all of which is what is behind their posts in the first place. For them, saying in a warning "please view console errors before posting" is the rough equivalent of saying "please frobnicate the thingamajig before posting". Are we also going to add to the warning that they should lint their code, and that they should try to, uhh, debug their code? What is the motivation for them to spend half an hour finding the problem themselves, when they can post in 30 seconds and get three answers pointing out their typo 30 seconds after that?
If we do add more suggestions about things for them to do before posting, at that point, the warning will essentially turn into a tutorial on how to find problems in your JS code. Or, we could point them to a canonical answer on standard ways to do that, yet a proposal to do exactly that was rejected as being "too broad" and/or being a "list-type question". Or we could wait for Documentation, and hope and pray that someone actually bothers to write something on this topic, but what's the point? Why would these newbies suddenly start reading some documentation here when they don't read any of the other documentation which is out there?
I personally believe the best but not only (we need an "all-of-the-above" approach here) solution to the cancer of "my code doesn't work" questions is to close them as quickly and simply as possible, most likely by giving more close powers to people who know the tag. We've been over this territory ad nauseum. These proposals are invariable shot down by naysayers whining that for every 100 questions justifiably closed, one question might be closed in error, hurting some poor user's feelings, and that the mechanisms for re-opening and flagging inexplicably won't work, or that some rogue high-rep user might go berserk and start closing everything in sight and there would be no way to stop him or her.
The meta question, which I have no hope will ever be solved, is how the community can coalesce around simple, reasonable steps with good potential for solving the problem, without every suggestion or initiative being shot down by snipers.