OK, after days of fighting back against the blog allegations etc, and listening to various possible solutions for the problem of real/perceived 'unwelcome/rude/hostile' comments and downvotes directed against questions from new accounts, (note careful choice of words). I have come to these conclusions:
The problem cannot be solved across the SO site because it's ineherent in site operation.
The problem cannot be minimised across the SO site because it cannot be measured.
Reduced to it's essentials, the 'unwelcome comment' issue often boils down to this:
The OP posts a question.
The OP does not get an answer,
That must be someone else's fault.
If one userXXXX has commented something, anything, that's the only name in front of them.
It must therefore be the fault of userXXXX.
It's illogical syllogism, but that's what happens in so many cases.
It does not matter how hard you try to 'be nice' in your comments - all that matters is that the OP did not get their answer, and you commented, so it's your fault.
The only effective difference between 'Use your debugger', or several friendly sentences explaining nicely that the OP needs to take steps to reveal more about their bug, is that the latter takes more thought and more typing. The first may be described as short/unhelpful/hostle, the second perhaps as too patronizing. Doesn't matter to the OP because both become just targets as soon as the OP realizes that they have no answer.
So, I have developed a strategy for minimizing the effects on one set of users: user-moderators.
Don't comment at all, ever, on a post from any user with displayed rep <50. If the question is bad, just down/close vote it, (or flag it, of course, if it's spam/whatever).
This solves the following problems for new accounts:
Real hostile comments: they cannot happen.
Perceived hostile comments: they cannot exist.
Complaints about canned comments: there cannot be any.
Street-fights over downvoting: cannot happen because the OP cannot see who downvoted.
Time/money spent on developing mitigation measures, eg. mentoring etc: not required.
Side-effects from mitigation measures: there are no mitigation measures.
External perception: non-members cannot see any 'unwelcome' comments.
Implementation delay: none.
Meta fights over 'rude and abusive' treatment: stop.
Per-question cost: reduced - no time spent commenting.
Site-wide cost: none, no extra software required.
Chances of getting suspended for bad comments: none.
Effect on good question handling: more time available to spend on it.
Potential for fraudulent use: none
Effect on skilled users joining to answer questions - none.
Opt-out: inherent, since it's a voluntary measure.
Chance of comments appearing on cherry-picking blogs/tweets: none.
Downsides?
It's not then possible to ask the OP for clarification - a big issue, for sure.
Still get moans about no comments on downvotes. No change there.
Users will have to read the help/FAQ/rules/policy/tour and figure out for themseves what went wrong, instead of having someone else copy/link the relevant section for them.
Has no effect on the racism/sexism (zero*anything is still zero).
Is effectively user-profiling, something I have never liked. Still, at least it's not profiling based on sex/race/colour/religion/age/whatever.
Requires willpower to not comment a 'quick answer' sometimes, or when the OP comments 'what did I do wrong?' I suggest no exceptions, ever.
I lose the ability to drop in a quick answer as a comment, as I have done so many times. I will miss that.
It's sad that it's come to considering such measures, but it seems I don't have any choice:(
What would be even better would be if all those users who have complained about bad treatment of 'new users' could be auto-mailed the link to '<50' user questions with 3 or more downvotes. They could then comment and explain the rules, or what is missing, or whatever as, I presume, they would wish to.
I doubt that would happen, after all, helping new users, and the massive aggravation, directly and on meta, that come with it, always seems to be a task for 'someone else', rather than the the one complaining.
With this plan, I can ensure that, at least, I can avoid it being a job for me, and avoid all the unwanted meta hassle that goes with it.