Points are about reputation, and reputation should be about skills, experience, problem solving potential, invested work, commitment, etc. This is a very strong goal of SO I think, because this is one of the things that establishes its value.
It definitely should not feel like a collecting competition, and the luck, the early bird effect, and the good collector sense should not play a role. Although there is nothing wrong with these factors in many areas in real life, they are not appropriate when we would like to measure (objectively) one's professional reputation.
For example, the early share holders of IBM are billionaires now. I am happy for them, many things in the world work like that and we are OK with that. For SO reputation this simply does not work, as it goes against one of the current main goals: measuring skills.
We all see two-liner questions like "how can I find a substring..." (I intentionally do not link any). Only this question from six years ago is worth 15k. You will not be surprised the answer is worth more than 55K.
A simple method could solve this, and is applied in many systems where competency and reputation measurement is the goal: after some time the achievements become obsolete and do not count. The industry-leading IT companies' certification systems work this way. Outsourcing portals, where measuring skill, commitment and competency is essential, also work this way.