If you browse python, chances are that you've come across a user that answered 1,000 questions in the past month, most of which ended up being closed. Most of these questions are closed within minutes, but this user is making it their personal mission to write an answer to any and every question (averaging more than 15 answers per day since their account creation), most of the time receiving no vote, and often writing outright wrong answers (frequently voted down to -3).
Browsing python feels like playing cat and mouse, where one needsclose votes need to cast their close vote as fast as possible because someone will immediately jump on the possibility to farm easy reputation points from a user who doesn't know how to append a list. As a result, it feels almost useless to go through the process of finding the right duplicate because there will be at least one answer and the automatic cleanup script won't be triggered.
I'm using my privilege to vote as often as I feel appropriate, for instance when said person answers a question about a typo when there are already two close votes, but it's not a deterrent when offset by a new contributor that upvotes and accepts an answer to their duplicate question.
I flagged this user for moderator attention, but no action was taken. It's understandable because these are not severe violations, and that someone would need to browse python to really know what's going on. This user has been banned twice in the past month for vote fraud and sock puppeting, but my concern is about all the other "unwritten rule" breaking that counters all the efforts to keep the site clean.
tl;dr Is there no recourse against users who consistently violate rules of etiquette, assuming that they are not deterred by several downvotes every day?