I would do twotwo three things:
- Get rid of downvoting on questions.
- Invest heavily in policing comments, perhaps by giving higher-rep users the ability to remove offensive comments directly rather than simply flagging them.
- Allow all users to see close votes so that downvotes are not needed to signal quality problems
I don't believe that downvoting of questions is materially important and it often serves as a mechanism for purely negative feedback, particularly for new users. I understand the value in removing bad questions but there are two strategies for that: removal and improvement. Downvoting is effective only at the first and we already have the ability to close and delete questions. Downvoting does not, at least with any real effectiveness, encourage people to improve the questions. Generally it only makes people feel bad about their experience.
In my experience comments on poor questions, while some help the asker by pointing towards resources or asking clarifying questions, generally fall into the class that I would call bullying. At the very least they don't move the conversation forward. I'd like to see this aspect of the culture change and I think it starts with a zero-toleration policy for comments that aren't helpful. Today I routinely flag these when I see them. I'd like to see it go further and emphasize how destructive these are by giving higher-rep users more ability to directly delete these - perhaps with some negative consequences for those whose comments are frequently deleted.
I recently had the privilege to talk to some aspiring developers about Stack Overflow. While they recognize and use Stack Overflow as a resource, their primary concerns were about being perceived as stupid and having a negative experience if they asked questions. You can not learn effectively if you're afraid to ask questions and for many new users, that is is the experience that Stack Overflow has become: fear.
I get the broken window theory - but if I can take the metaphor a little further - we also need to be concerned about the roving gangs of vigilantes who bully people, thinking that they are planning to break a window when they only want to look inside.