Unfortunately, Stack Overflow just does not work well for beginning programmers, regardless of age. (Although some emotional maturity is certainly a boon to successful participation.) The problem is exactly the one you have identified:
Mostly all the questions he's asking me would be very much likely quickly marked as "unclear what you're asking" or "too broad", or simply downvoted to negative infinity.
These are the types of questions that beginning programmers often have. They want to know what language they should learn first. They want to know what their first project should be in that language. They want to know why every line ends with a semicolon. They get frustrated after trying for a half-hour to get their toy app to compile, and dump their code on Stack Overflow begging for help. The system is just not designed around answering these types of questions, and they are not going to be well-received. A Q&A site cannot provide tutorials, which is what beginning programmers really need. Your advice to your brother and other young programmers should be to get a book on a language that sounds interesting to them.
By "not well-received," of course, I mean that they will be closed and downvoted. Rude comments are inappropriate, as always, and should be flagged. You seem to be advocating that we avoid closing these questions, or at least defer the closing of these questions, but that just doesn't work. As long as questions remain open, they attract answers, and that is precisely the effect we are trying to avoid.
I just see bad feedback in instant downvoting and closing of questions without explaining it to that person, especially if it's a kid.
In fact, this is exactly the point of instantly downvoting and closing questions. It provides immediate, unambiguous feedback. It is much more confusing to have one or two people comment that the question is off-topic, but then also receive an answer. Moreover, the closure reasons that appear in a yellow box underneath the question are already well-explained in a much more constructive tone than we can expect from one-off comments. If you think those explanations can be improved, please post a feature request to that end. But there is just no point in having people post comments that regurgitate the information already provided.
The user on the other end of the wire being a kid is of course irrelevant. It wouldn't matter if they were a kid or a dog. Everyone is held to the same standard on Stack Overflow. It is a meritocracy. If you ask good questions, provide good answers, and otherwise contribute constructively to the community, then you are very welcome here, whether you are 13 or 31 or 131. Many young programmers have found this to be extremely welcoming and encouraging. Here, they are not looked down upon merely because of their age; they are judged on their skills and ability.
It is possible to learn a lot as a beginning programmer on Stack Overflow, but you have to be a tenacious self-starter. Most people are not. The people that can learn things on Stack Overflow are the same people that used to, before the Internet was invented, learn just by hacking around and figuring things out for themselves. Richard Feynman taught himself trigonometry, calculus, and other advanced mathematical topics at the age of 15. Obviously this is unusual; the rest of the normal people need guidance.
telling them to write their age is not bulletproof
Of course it isn't. But the problem here isn't really grammar or syntax. A young person who struggles with the language is no different from someone who hails from a distant corner of the globe and first learned English two weeks ago. All content here is collaboratively edited, so these problems can be easily and quickly remediated. If they are asking good-quality, on-topic questions, then they are good. I see no evidence of age-related discrimination. If there is discrimination against beginner programmers, it is for the reasons I have enumerated above and decidedly unrelated to their age.
how can we improve the experience for these young kids so that they feel welcome and are educated without negative feedback?
Well, negative feedback is how the world works and can be just as valuable as positive feedback. If you are old enough to use the Internet (age 13 according to US law and the ones that Stack Overflow follows), then you are old enough to take negative feedback in stride. Remember that it is the user's responsibility to follow the rules, regardless of age. If you walk into your aunt's house with muddy shoes, she's going to provide plenty of negative feedback regarding your behavior. Similarly, new users need to learn how to search and ask good questions on their own. We provide as much help as we can, if they are willing to accept it. There is little more that we can do short of literally holding their hand while they do it. And that is just not how the Internet works. This is one of the major advantages of a traditional education system.