Just now, I got answer-banned because someone flagged my answer as "too unimportant" (see link) as to be rated as an answer.
No, your answer was deemed to not be an answer. And it wasn't; it was a comment.
That this led to an answer-ban is not the fault of the person who (correctly) flagged your comment-as-an-answer. Nor is it the fault of the people who (correctly) downvoted your answer. ItsIt's your fault for repeated violations of our quality standards for answers.
And to make sure you understand, you don't get answer banned for one answer. It takes repeated violations to get a ban. That this was your last straw is not the fault of the people (correctly) downvoting your answer.
Now I feel a little – very much – awkward, because I tried to help and also to increase my worth to the community and instead got further blown to the limits of the sky.
Then you should have learned to help within the limits of the powers you have. If you're not allowed to comment, that means what you wanted to say as a comment cannot be said. If that comment were complete enough to be an answer, it shouldn't be posted as a comment. And if it isn't, then it shouldn't be posted as an answer.
You should have just moved on to something else. There are plenty of questions on the site that don't need comments before you could answer them.
I am trying to highlight a design flaw in this structure, which seems to be known in the upper floors of the hierarchy.
Not allowing you to comment is not a "design flaw". We have a reason why commenting requires 50 reputation. And it is not a "design flaw" to prevent people from circumventing this restriction by using answers as comments. Answers are for answers to the question. People should be able to read an answer and actually get an answer. Allowing users to use answers as comments works against that.
None of this is a "design flaw". You wanted to do something, what you wanted was not allowed by your current reputation, so you did something wrong instead of accepting your limitations. Punishing this behavior is not a "design flaw", anymore than arresting someone for mugging people is a "design flaw".
Just because you believe that you ought to be able to do a thing doesn't mean you can do that thing.