No.
Question: Which of these channels are acceptable, "organic", ways to arrive at a SO post and vote on it?
Google search
Stack Overflow search
Hacker News
Reddit
Discussion forum
Bug tracker
Email from my long-lost rouge hacker cousin Gerald
SE hotlist
curl -L https://stackoverflow.com/questions/$RANDOM
Related SO post
Related MSO post
A. All of the above
B. All of the above, except for the last one
Drop in the ocean
And there's the Reddit-effect, the HackerNews-effect, the Hot Question effect, etcetera. Singling out the meta-effect doesn't make much sense.
Hans Passant
The Meta effect is overrated. Hacker News will blow up a question more than Meta.
If How to append something to an array? were asked today, it would get downvoted to oblivion. And yet in the months that it has been linked from Meta, it had 4 downvotes (probably not even from Meta).
Why vote at all?
You don't understand what downvotes are for.
Josh Caswell
Or upvotes for that matter. Upvotes and downvotes are how the community communicate the usefulness and accuracy of question and answers.
They aren't a slap in the face or a pat on the back. Well, maybe they are, but they are primarily for the next person who comes here with a question. The first (or second) answer they see is the one with the most votes. No system is perfect, not even voting, because it depends on (shock) voters, but this one is pretty good.
Four out of five stars
The more people vote, the more confident you can be the post is high quality or not.
A question with +192/-4 votes doesn't mean it's phenomenally good. Well, it sort of means that...but really means "a lot of people voted on this and a significant part think it's good." Technically, it doesn't say how good, just how confident we are that it's good.
Really, a lot of the arguments for "fairness" approach an averaged rating system, e.g. four out of five stars. It's not the weirdest idea, but it's a lot different than what we do now.
Just don't be deluded into thinking MSO is a special case of "too much" attention. If you really wanted to normalize across SO for biases, a more common bias in attention is the amount of time the question has been around. (Though I don't support that either.)
tl;dr
(1) On the Internet, the meta effect is small. (2) We need more voting, not less.