I'm not sure I understand exactly what your objection is to the specific questions you've called out, and certainly not enough to draw out a general problem, since I don't know beans about Perl. So I might be wrong here in the conclusions I'm going to attempt to draw, but I'm going to give it a shot anyway.
Yes, I think low-quality questions are a serious problem, and no, I don't think enough is being done about them. As Kevin B commented, there used to be a "lacks minimal understanding" close reason, but that got dropped along with an accusation that we were "misusing" it. I guess we lacked a minimal understanding of what that close reason was designed to be used for?
Anyway, since the "Summer of Love", we haven't had a good way of getting rid of questions like this. You can't flag them, because moderators will claim that this is something the community should handle on their own, even though we don't really have the tools or the scale to handle it. You can downvote them, but that doesn't make the problem go away—at least not soon enough. Eventually, it will lead to the source of these questions getting blocked from asking additional questions, but they can do plenty of damage to the community of experts assembled here in the meantime. In order to get enough downvotes for a ban to kick in, a lot of smart people have to waste their time reading the question, assessing its value, and expressing their evaluation with a downvote.
I think you should continue to downvote them, of course, but that isn't enough. We need a way to get rid of them. Fortunately, the ability to close questions hasn't been taken away from us altogether, so you will just need to apply a bit of creative thinking to the closure reasons that do exist. Here are the three you will want to use:
Off-topic because… "Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers. See: How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example."
"unclear what you're asking"
"too broad"
The bad questions that I believe you're describing, the ones where the author is the problem, are virtually always closable for one of these three reasons. If they're debugging questions, then you can close them for reason #1 because they lack an MCVE and/or a clear description of the problem. If they're more general questions, then you can close them as being "too broad" because an answer would need to be the length of a book or entire tutorial in order to cover all the necessary background information. Otherwise, they can be closed as "unclear" because they are.
This isn't ideal, since it still takes at least 5 highly-valued community members engaging with the question in order for it to be closed. I've recently written at length about better ways to deal with our current quality problems, and that's hardly the first time it's been discussed or solutions have been proposed. So far, no evidence that anyone with the power to do something about this is listening. The site's overall quality is festering, and there is ample evidence that this is driving experts away, yet the focus has been on adding new features of questionable utility and redesigning the user interface, which is akin to rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic post-iceberg.
Closing these types of questions as a duplicate will also work—sometimes. There are a couple of problems. First, finding a good duplicate target is hard and takes work. Second, it may not even be possible, since the problematic questions are often multiple questions in one, covering far too many bases to be answered adequately by a single duplicate. The upside, though, is that if you find a plausible duplicate, a gold tag badge holder can close the question as a duplicate immediately. This often makes it worth the effort to find a duplicate, and may even justify an "imperfect" duplicate closure.
As for the rest of your question—in particular the last two paragraphs—it reads a bit like an incoherent rant to me. Is "these pages" supposed to be Meta? What does it mean for someone to be "politically minded"? What specific "politics" do you think are at play here? And perhaps even more importantly, what do you think the solution should be? You haven't proposed one (maybe you did in the comments; I didn't read all of those).
The problem with a "do my work for me" close reason is, essentially, all good questions ask for someone to do work for the asker. That part is not what makes it a bad question. What makes it a bad question is it is vague, underspecified, incomplete, and/or would require an answer that is pages and pages long. Well, we do still have close reasons for these things. We just need to address the scale problem: the number of users with asking privileges vastly exceeds the number of users who have and exercise their moderation privileges, by at least two-fold.
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