Preface
I am glad we seem to be ready to move on from battling over a mediocre post dissatisfied with how the voting system currently works to try to find a way to salvage this discussion in a productive and civilized manner.
Finding information on Meta is hard if you haven't been around for a while and do not meticulously bookmark and triage important posts on topics (only a few of which are sufficiently covered by FAQs). My bar looks like this already, but it just scratches the surface:
It is especially hard to do when one takes to Meta to seek satisfaction for being wronged (and let's be honest - apart from tag requests and bug reports most users come to Meta when they feel they wronged: by peers, by moderators, by the voting system, you name it). Those users are not inclined to spend hours digging through a decade of history and carefully analyzing arguments being made. They want to deal with the issue right here and now.
And then all they see is their posts getting butchered in minutes without ever realizing why this is happening or what they did wrong. We then start a fighting contest over their posts until a moderator just locks the post to forever serve as a head on a pole for everyone who dares to approach Meta.
What we could have, is a gentler and more educative way of dealing with posts like the above - we could have a handy explanation of the history of voting, of the policies currently in place (and while we do that - understand if even have a policy).
I see a lot of users when being directed to clear and reasonable explanations of policies and features of both SO and MSO in FAQ are thankful for being provided with a coherent point of reference. Sometimes they still disagree - and this is the point where we can start having a productive discussion.
FAQ items and canonicals
As it seems, there seems to be a conflation of an idea to create a canonical Q&A about downvotes and a FAQ entry. Arguments for and against each one intertwine, but let's not throw all our eggs in one basket.
A FAQ entry is (hereinafter I cite the Uber Meta dictionary):
any meta post linked with the moderator tag [faq]. The Official FAQ is a community-moderated post that attempts to annotate the features and behaviors of all Stack Exchange sites in one central location
Which is precisely the place for an in-depth explanation on "why Stack Overflow has/uses/allows downvotes", because this is a feature of a Stack Exchange site, and this is undoubtedly a behaviour that keeps causing so much confusion about it.
A canonical, on the other hand, is:
One question with one or more high quality (often authoritative) answers which serves to answer the most common (sub)questions about a certain topic. Other questions about the same topic can then be closed as a duplicate of this question
which a FAQ entry might be, but not necessarily is. Should we create a canonical, though, it should not only address how the policy works but also provide responses to common misconceptions and questions users have about the practice of downvoting.
This also means it should be used as a duplicate target when a post does not exhibit any understanding of the workings of voting, but it also should not be used as such for posts actively seeking reevaluation of the guidance listed in such a Q&A. But to be able to reasonably distinguish those they must acknowledge acquaintance with the canonical.
Addressing George's points specifically:
This would apply if and only if decisions were made based on facts on meta. They're not. They're based on a lot of factors
I hate to break the news, but all decisions are based on a large variety of factors subject to change on a whim. And yet, we, as humans, do not embrace the chaos of changing sentiments and opinions but try to make sense of them, to reason about them.
There are always reasons behind the way things work the way they do. Granted, they might be flawed, they can become obsolete, they could just simply be trade-offs (take being able to see voting scores, for example).
Lest we become a mob where decisions are made and discussions are held in a manner where the loudest shouting ("emotions" and "sentiments") or the last one speaking ("the people who visit meta") wins, then we must be able to ground ourselves in reason.
For this ground to exist, we must have a place where reasons for our policies (merits of these policies aside) and systems are laid out in clear and concise language. This is exactly what FAQ-style Q&As provide.
The stated policy is to do that. No one has ever downvoted that policy. Ever. No one has tried to correct that policy to say that canonicals are just signposts that we want people to read
This is wrong three-fold. Firstly, you are yet to provide an answer to the question which puts the "stated policy" part under question:
why you used a faq-proposal-status post never officially marked as faq?
Secondly, and more to the point, no one downvoted the "policy" because the answer is absolutely correct. Here is the part of it you actively choose to ignore:
we aren't posting variations on the same question/answer pair over and over again
This is exactly what the proposal of a canonical for reasons why downvoting exists strives for: to prevent reiterating the same reasons over and over again in different forms.
You keep saying that by this we aim to shut down "new discussions that tread the same ground", but you never say what makes these discussions new if all they do is restate the same reasons on both sides.
Thirdly, you seem to find being "duplicate targets" and serving as "signposts that we want people to read" irreconcilable roles of canonicals, but you seem to ignore that if the post addresses the points in the canonical and contains something unique about the issue aside from circumstances (be it a new argument or a new set of data), then such a post is not a duplicate and should not be closed as such.
And that brings us to the point of intentions. If you sincerely think that the post will be used to shut down any new discussion, this is exactly "assuming bad intentions upfront". Shutting down discussions is an abuse of the close-voting system and should be treated as such - dealt with swiftly by moderators (you were one not that long ago, after all!) when and where it happens, not in a hypothetical situation.
Or are you saying the issue is so dire that the current moderators will not be able to deal with the abuse when it happens?
The rest is a variation of the same premises:
holding to a policy that is 10 years old because it's 10 years old is possibly the worst reason to shut down new conversation
just mixes in two incorrect assumptions. The first one is equating not accepting rehashes to holding to a 10-year old policy, which is not the same thing. The second one is claiming these posts are new discussions while all they do is repeat the same old things again.
Finally, a quick note about this:
should be included in the comments as "Hey, read more about this if you want to hear what we talked about before."
True, they should be included in comments as "please read what we talked about before and address that first" on new discussions. However, restatements of the same old arguments not addressing anything from those canonical posts should be closed against them until they are sufficiently edited to show the requestor understands the history of the problem, but still disagrees with the points being made.
There is also one other thing I would like to receive some clarification on:
Why do we even have FAQ if "answers about policy .. on Meta are counter-productive"?
[faq-proposed]
, but it lacks all the meat. A canonical is not a "feature", though.