My advice is to link to questions that might look like dupes and articulate why they aren't.
Based on your reference to closers not reading both questions, I'm assuming you're not arguing that duplicates are ok, but rather that your post shouldn't have been viewed as one.
If you care about not posting duplicates, you're searching for possible dupes before you post.
If you identify questions that appear to be dupes, but you believe are not, you should link to them, indicating something like, "I know that a similar issue was raised in this question, but mine is different in that [whatever]."
This achieves two things:
- It allows you to frame it in a context that makes the differentiation clear, helping others to see that it's not a dupe.
- At a minimum, it shows others, even if they don't agree with your take in point #1, that you understand the system, and respect it enough to make an effort not post dupes.
If #1 is effective, you're covered, but #2 will often be enough, and just linking as described above will always get you to #2.
In my opinion, very few questions are closed as dupes because voters don't accept someone's argument for why their post is different. (This is assuming they included it and a link to the "non-dupe" at the time of posting. You don't get as much credit for your argument after the closing, as it's less credible that you searched up front.)
The general assumption that triggers fast closing tends to be the belief that you didn't even bother to look for dupes, or found them and didn't care. If you simply indicate that you made a genuine effort, and believe that your question is not a dupe based on non-ridiculous differences, you'll likely escape close votes.
As a semi aside, this Meta post is a good example of how linking more can help make the community give you more of the benefit of the doubt. Your post here is, I believe, asking about what happened to this question, which responders will want to see to provide context to help them assess whether your points seem valid, but I had to click your user profile, then go to accounts, then guess which site you had the problem on to find it, all of which makes me slightly more likely to make assumptions like, "this poster doesn't bother to check for dupes". I'm not saying that's fair, but it's human nature.