TL;DR
The new users who care and are affected by downvotes will learn and once they understand how Stack Overflow is different (which sometimes can take a few posts), these users usually go and follow the guidelines on how to get bans removed, etc¹. These aren't really the users that junk up the system (and review queues) and I personally believe that the review system works very well with handling this common situation.
There are, however, users that don't give a crap and just try to get around the rules regardless of how many times they're banned, punished, downvoted, etc.
Afterthought: I probably need a tl;dr for my tl;dr
So, I think the real question is:
How can you thwart low-quality posting authored by users who don't care?
I think this is the question that these posts are really trying to get at. And, it is hard for people who do care to understand because, if I tell someone who cares about SO
"You stand to lose rep when you post low-quality crap!!1!"
then the reaction most likely is
"I am going to try really hard not to post low-quality crap!"
This doesn't really matter to a help-vampire though. So, back to the question, what do help vampires value and how can we use this to our advantage?
In my opinion, I think the answer is fairly clear, time. I hit on this in my related post, Thwart publishing duplicate and low quality questions.
The suggestions aim to slow down new users which could easily be extended to "bad" users. In Chris's amazing answer, he addresses this with a type of wizard approach to the asking process.
Now, I know the pessimistic (and realistic) bunch are going to say
"Can't they just click through the wizard and post?"
Yep. But, almost any process on Stack Overflow can be done in one or a handful of clicks For example:
- reviewing
- moderation
- posting
- comments
- answers
- questions
I provide other ideas in my post that aren't so easily circumvented but, based on Robert Harvey's informative answer this isn't really something that Stack Overflow is worried about.
The review system is set up to handle posts that are not handled by automatic processes. I kind of think that it is backwards logic to put the responsibility on people who have proven via reputation and good behavior (ie not getting banned and/or failing reviews) rather than new users who are asking to be helped at no cost but this obviously isn't up to me.
So, what can you do?
There are review queues that aim to handle low quality posts (as well as first posts) based on internal algorithms that sniff em out.
¹: A good example of a user that did care and there are plenty of new users like this one.