First of all, Stack Overflow deleted the first part of this comment automatically. I am trying to write "Hi Everyone on Meta" in the beginning.
There is never a reason to start posts with "Hi", including on Meta; that's why it is removed automatically.
I thought I would blow some of my reputation points by asking this question.
Reputation doesn't exist on Meta, so you can't lose anything.
I'm super frustrated because I have a 501 reputation, which apparently gives me rights now to approve or not approve new users' questions or something. (I have a queue now).
But I myself am so frustrated on this site that I can't even ask a question without freaking out that it's going to get shut down.
I really think something needs to change. I'm fed up.
You need to be a lot more clear about what exactly it is that's making you "frustrated" or "fed up".
Having a question marked as a duplicate is not a punishment or anything bad. It just means the question has already been asked and answered on this site. Yes, sometimes the duplicates are obvious, and your own research should have turned them up. But other times, they're not at all obvious, and someone with expertise in the topic/domain is needed to find them. That's OK: the system is designed to allow that. The advantage of having your question marked as a duplicate is that you can immediately get an answer. Furthermore, you know that the answers have been vetted by the community over time, accruing votes and edits that a brand-new answer to your question wouldn't have the time to get.
Tag questions as "novice" or "newbie" so that people who are getting oriented in programming aren't just shut down by users who have poor communication skills, but high "stack overflow reputations."
This has been proposed multiple times, but isn't going to happen. We don't close questions on Stack Overflow because they are "too newbie". That's not a problem. We do, however, have strict quality standards and other specific requirements for questions, which you can read about in the Help Center. We have these requirements because experience has taught us that these features are required in order for a question to work in our Q&A format. Thus, a newbie site wouldn't solve anything anyway, since it would still use the same Q&A format. There is the additional problem that a newbie site wouldn't be able to attract experts to answer the questions, resulting in a quality vacuum—and since high-quality content is probably what brings newbies to Stack Overflow anyway, this would kind of be shooting ourselves in the foot.
(Speaking of duplicates, you can easily find many questions covering this topic by searching Meta.)
Also, please stop accusing people who help to curate this site of having "poor communication skills" or operating with less-than-pure motives. We have a very engaged community of users who volunteer their free time to maintain the quality of this site. We should all be thankful for the work that they do. Mistakes may sometimes be made, but they are also easily corrected. There is absolutely no evidence that anyone who works to moderate this site is motivated by reputation, and, in fact, moderation/curation activities don't gain you any reputation, so ascribing that motivation doesn't even make sense.
Maybe allow one question to have multiple titles added to it, so that it is more likely to show up in all of the various searches that people do.
This is almost literally the way our "duplicate" system is designed to work. You see, each new question that is marked as a duplicate serves as a pointer, redirecting to the "master" question. Thus, the "master" question does actually have multiple titles associated with it, making it more likely to be found in the future, regardless of which search terms are used. Eventually, the idea is that a question will be asked in all of the common ways, providing complete coverage of the associated search terms. We want all of these different permutations to redirect back to the "master" question in order to keep the answers all in one place for easy maintenance.