I completely agree with the premise of the question, but after a myriad of Q&A following the blog post and the be (even) nice(r) initiative, my current understanding is:
99%ish of people using SO just read answers that are useful for them and love the site. They have no idea about the flame-anti-SO war going on (basically a few bloggers who do not like the site). They do not care, and shouldn't - they are the masses this site aims to serve (this is my opinion).
Of those who bother to actually participate actively by asking, 99.99999%ish are first timers or almost that, without the very important understanding that writing a question is an important job that comes with big responsibility, with often more work needed to be done on creating the question than answering it. I think this is the typical feeling more experienced users have about questions and their askers
The most important part - after reading some SO history as well, I am no longer sure SE management agrees with SO veterans on point 2. I may be wrong, but at least that is the feeling I get from all these posts. Even if this is not true, I think in any case many experienced users feel this may be the case, and as someone mentioned, there is no arguing with generalized, non-backed-up claims like that.
Thinking about a solution to your specific question, I wonder if a new user coming to ask a question and sees:
Welcome to SO. Questions here are expected to be very high quality and within parameters listed in the help section. This often entails much more work than new users expect. Questions must be researched thoroughly, carefully worded, and clear. If you have the slightest doubt your question is of this quality, reconsider your post until you are better prepared.
would feel welcome? Even if not, and we do manage to stop a lot of the low quality questions, should we care? Users and management may differ on the answer. There is also the issue of people with good questions - are we sure enough of these do not get frightened by such a message? I am for it, but it will require some beta-testing in my opinion.
Addendum
As some of the experienced people mention in the comments, another realization of many is that
- Those 99.999%ish new users will ignore all text thrown at them.
Perhaps there is no hope, without drastic measures.