To expand on one of things @JeffGohlke's mentioned in his answer regarding the unthinking derision of users for rep farming "Give me teh reps":
This sentiment is incredibly common, but thats what the rep system exists for: incentive. In a Coding Horror post that I can't for the life of me find now, Jeff Atwood is describing the phenomenon of SO's rise and refers to SO as "an expert economy".
SO's currency is recognition, and it is both a boon and a curse. A boon because it is the incentive for activity in the community; a curse because it places active membership out of the reach of new members.
As a fairly junior rep member, I have posted on Meta before about wanting to give back to the SE/SO community because I can not imagine surviving in my career without it. But my rep level prevents me from contributing in any meaningful way (I can not yet vote to close... etc... etc...) so my options with regards to off topic questions are extremely limited.
My point (if I have one): I do not support the idea that users who answer off-topic questions are somehow damaging to the community: there is a culture eating away at this site that the time people spend answering questions (on and off-topic) is not to be valued and applauded.
As is my prerogative, I occasionally upvote answers that are not entirely correct, given the time spent on the answering.
Devaluing participation (of whatever kind) on SO is a cancer that will, given enough time (and competition from other sites), eat away at SO's integrity and status.
EDIT (in response to @jmac's comment: I certainly agree that there is widespread concern on mSO for the quality of content and its relationship to the site's integrity and I am not at all advocating for filling SO with unhelpful information - my primary concern is for a kind of succession planning and I most definitely didn't explain that well enough.
There are a new generation of programmers, starting programming every day, who will use SO as arguably the most important sources of information and education. If we devalue their participation by reacting punitively because they answered a question that is off-topic (either due to rep-farming OR inexperience in site policies), we are potentially driving away an incredibly important element of the changing SO userbase. And we are doing this before they even have a chance to engage with the community and make their case for change heard (for instance by participating here in mSO).
Community moderation is the backbone of SO, so the closing of off-topic and inappropriate questions is right, but I can see no merit in advocating for punitive action against junior members providing answers for off-topic questions.