I realize that this is specifically addressed in "What is "meta"? How does it work?":
Voting is different on meta.
Like normal Stack Exchange sites, Meta allows members to vote on questions and answers. For most posts, votes reflect the perceived usefulness: well-written, well-reasoned, well-researched posts tend to get more attention and more upvotes. Highly-voted and frequently-linked posts may become part of the community-curated FAQ or codified as part of the site’s Help pages.
Unlike normal Stack Exchange sites, Meta invites the community to discuss, debate and propose changes to the way the community itself behaves, as well as how the software itself works. On posts tagged feature-request, voting indicates agreement or disagreement with the proposed change rather than just the quality or usefulness of the post itself.
Downvotes on feature requests are supposed to represent disagreement. Yet I consistently feel like downvotes are also used to express disagreement on non-feature-request questions (and the answers on those questions). I myself have used downvotes this way, though I don't remember off-the-top of my head on which questions/answers.
So how are users supposed to use downvotes on Meta really? I feel like it's kind of ambiguous and vague right now. Are the downvotes that I get on non-feature-request questions because the quality of the questions are poor, or because people disagree with the questions?
I feel like lumping together both the expression of agreement/disagreement and the expression of good-quality/bad-quality into the same voting system is very confusing to users (like me).
:/
:P
reddiquette states that downvotes should be used for irrelevant comments, not ideas you disagree with. Also, don't be afraid to upvote a comment you disagree with if you think it is furthering the discussion. This will result in the most interesting and relevant discussions moving to the top of the comment page.
Moderate based on quality, not opinion. Well written and interesting content can be worthwhile, even if you disagree with it.
I'm not saying that Meta should adopt Reddit-style guidelines, I just want to point out that some people handle voting differently.