I request that the Stack team please stop blocking and closing posts
This is never going to happen. Stack Overflow is, per the tour, "a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers", and one of the ways SO rose to its current prominent position is by removing posts (and, in some cases, users) that do not fit that model. There are plenty of other resources elsewhere on the internet, but if you want to participate on SO you need to do so within the existing guidelines.
Note that the majority of reasons for putting questions on hold specifically mention how they could be improved. It is not the end of the line for that question or its user, it just means that they might need to restate or clarify or add some additional information. The question can then be reopened, upvoted and answered and everyone involved is better off.
I feel very sad that people are been banned, or their posts have been closed, for asking questions.
Then you misunderstand what is happening. We like questions on Stack Overflow, and people who can ask on-topic questions are very welcome. Users who get their accounts banned have repeatedly demonstrated that they are not in this group. The exact algorithm to trigger an account ban is not made public, but my understanding is that it requires multiple posts with multiple downvotes, not just the odd slip-up. And there is plenty of material in the Help Center to aid new users in writing good posts, if they can be bothered to read it.
People come to you with a hope, help them by not blocking and demotivating them.
The problem is that lots of people come to SO, with varying levels of hope, competence and willingness to do their own homework. SO is not for every user to ask every question, and a lot of effort goes into keeping it that way.
In terms of your specific point about duplicate questions (required reading on why duplicates are a good thing: Dr. Strangedupe: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying And Love Duplication), note that the usual case is something like the following:
- New user wants to know "How can I
foo
the bar
?"
- If we're very lucky, they bother to search for it and find the answer "Use the
baz
library".
- They think "but I can't use
baz
because [reasons]", so they ask "How can I foo
the bar
?" and are, for some reason, astonished when it gets closed as a duplicate.
Can you spot the mistake? Had they asked "How can I foo
the bar
without baz
?", and the first paragraph included "I've read 'How can I foo
the bar
', but I can't use baz
because [reasons]", then we're away. Try another one:
- New user wants to know "How can I
foo
the bar
?"
- If we're very lucky, they bother to search for it and find the answer "there's already a
Fooing
class for bar
s".
- They think "but I don't know about the
Fooing
class", so they ask "How can I foo
the bar
?" and are, for some reason, astonished when it gets closed as a duplicate.
This time, they should have done some research into Fooing
classes, reading related tutorials and reference documentation. If they can't figure it out, then they could either comment on the answer or ask a new question about their specific issue, starting with "I was reading this answer about foo
ing bar
s, and I came across the Fooing
class, but I can't figure out [specific query]".
Obviously, there are other, similar cases. Be specific about what you didn't understand, and mention the source material so others can understand your problem. If you just ask the same question again and it doesn't get put on-hold, you will probably get the same answers and still not be able to understand them.