On one hand, you claim the reason for this is comments, but also that it's to help new users interact with the site. The problem is that you can also get users who nonow focus on that button instead of upvoting. People already don't know about the accept feature in spite of it being outlined in the tour.
Bhargav has done a fantastic job on dealing with NAAs, but how much time to do you think goes into that? I have a SEDE query that tracked down regex-matches "thank you" comments with a very high precision. Those don't hit the moderator workload - the hundreds of NAA answers posted on the site daily, however, do.
I also flagged a lot of NAAs until I decided to stop in protest of SE's actions. One of the things I often saw was "I'm new, I didn't know I couldn't post a question as an answer" (intent-wise - not a direct quitequote because there were a lot of comments like that). Here's a selection of 100 comments containing "new to stackoverflow" (slowpoke DB; getting more rows causes slow results or a timeout).
I have no idea what scale comments asking about site features are on, but there'sthere are a lot. That is a problem - not being able to thank people without 15 rep isn't in comparison.
To draw a bit of a parallel, the first time you join a site or look at something, it can be terrifying. It's like a complicated game - the first time you look at it and get started, nothing makes sense or has any form of logic. When you get used to it, and learn how it works (for an instance through a tutorial), it doesn't seem as horrible. Stack Overflow is the game. The tutorial is the thing you neglected to implement properly. The end result is what you're not getting.