Harsh but understandable
While I appreciate the frustration to a new user of not getting directed feedback on a poor submission you should try to see it from the down-voters' perspective too.
All the information about how to ask a good question and what is or isn't on-topic here and other well written resources that many people spent significant time creating and working out how to best to offer it to new users is all freely available material that you are directed to in many different ways and at multiple times during the course of asking your first few questions.
If a user doesn't go the the trouble of reading the most basic FAQs about the site before throwing a vague or commonplace duplicate post out why should active users spend/waste their time trying to educate a user who has shown (that to some degree) they are too lazy to help themselves?
Delete the post?
Many argue that anything with the level of downvotes you are hinting at just contributes to the "noise" in the signal to noise ratio battle and deserves to be deleted regardless of whether the user opts to remove it themselves.
In fact it more than likely would be given enough time for the community response to kick in and for the post to make its way through the appropriate queue.
Also, when you delete a post any rep you may have lost gets returned to you. Be careful here though as deleted Questions are not ignored when considering whether or not you should be allowed continue to ask new Questions.
Minimum required effort
You asked in the comments:
Who's to say who has, and who hasn't done their research through-and-through.
We are. All of us. The community. If you don't show us what you have done the majority will assume the amount is none and will respond to your post in the ways you are describing above for being pre-maturely asked or a waste of our time. Trying to pry piece after piece of clarifying info from an asker can be a frustrating experience.
How to ask a question does a great job of explaining what constitutes a well asked Question but I'll summarise a couple of the more important (IMO) points here:
- Word your post well.
- Language, spelling and grammar matter. They are the all important first impression for your post. Like in real life, first impressions count. People will assume many things about a post's quality based just off how it looks.
- A lack of effort to attempt to write correctly is a big indication of a low quality Question (discussed in the most recent podcast).
- Lack of English fluency is not looked down upon and shouldn't put a user at (a significant) disadvantage; many users are happy to help and will attempt to improve the post but correct capitalisation, 1337 or txt speak are not well tolerated.
- Be concise but descriptive.
- Include any and all relevant background information about your situation.
- If the problem involves code we need to see it to help you with it.
- If there are errors or exceptions being thrown then you must include it. Do not paraphrase or give a general
NullPointerException
. Give is the actual logs and if relevant indicate referenced lines in your code. We can't see your line numbers.
- Point to similar posts you may have come across and explain why they may not fit your situation or how yours differs from them. If someone thinks it looks like a duplicate they will flag it as so. You need to pre-empt that by showing us you're aware of other posts' existence and why they didn't help you fix your problem.
- Participate in your own Question
- Stick around for a while after asking your Question.
- If potential answerers require clarification or more details you should be there to supply them and improve your Question.
- Many people may down-vote your post in frustration over their attempts at helping going unanswered or ignored.
- You don't need to babysit it all day but a 20-40 minute period is a suggested minimum time to set aside. You'll get notified from anywhere on the Stack Exchange network of activity on your posts, you may wander around just stay online.
We need all the information to help and many users are too jaded after seeing the umteenth post of the day that does not help anyone formulate an answer let alone help the OP get a solution. If you do the asked preparation work people will usually respond well to your post regardless of how basic the issue was or if it has a duplicate.
Respect the community and what it asks of you & your perception will more than likely change for the better as you will receive more polite and helpful responses.
More on-topic
I'm not really for or against the suggested cap for down-vote rep losses. As Servy mentioned it's a bit of a non-issue. Posts don't usually get such a huge level of down-votes (on Stack Overflow, meta treats votes differently and doesn't affect rep anyway). and if they did it would likely be for a deserved reason.
Final note
By just coming here and asking for guidance in improving your submissions, contributions to and standing in the community you are already more valuable than 95% of the new users that come to Stack Overflow. The vast majority (which is an ever increasing number according to most) just show up, dump a question without any research and expect (some even demand) to be handed a full, complete and working solution by psychic users. It is these types that lead most to default their opinion of posts from new users to a negative one.
There are many discussions on combating this negative mentality or improving the quality of new submissions here on meta.SO and over on meta.SE. Stick around and contribute; your views are as valuable and appreciated as any other user's.
Further reading
(In no particular order, with many probable valuable omissions and just from a cursory search)
More effective closing / downvoting of junk questions to help with the signal-noise ratio?
Why the backlash against poor questions?
Should SO have a prequalification process for membership to weed out the 'noise'?
How to react to unfair downvotes that seem to be from the same user
Using upvotes to fight bad questions