In comments you (OP) make the analogy of raising a child from a parents perspective to describe users here on meta being passionate. Or at least votes (did you mean voters?). Either way, there is a sort of glaring issue with that analogy - many of the users who receive downvotes or blunt responses don't participate or contribute often or even stick around for the long haul.
There is no gentle guidance available for people who are intent on bypassing many different written sources of guidance already composed and curated over many years. The only reason the phrase "RTFM" is (perhaps was) prevalent is because anything longer than that probably didn't get read.
The high rate of drive-by rants coupled with users often not caring to either be attentive to the topic they raise or even remain on the site is why some posts may seem to get a curt response.
Also, to be blunt, Stack Overflow isn't designed for everyone. Otherwise it would be Yahoo! Answers. It was targeted at "professionals and enthusiasts" and I would offer this as a better analogy - a think tank.
We are in here bouncing ideas off of each other, and in order to efficiently get to the good ideas we need to be efficient at explaining the criteria for both good and bad. Perhaps sometimes that efficiency looks excessively blunt or "passionate", but that is only because there are users here who have had years to practice this type of brevity.