The thing is, most people who are brand-new to programming as a practice should probably not be asking questions on Stack Overflow. The kind of tutorial or mentoring help that they need just doesn't fit in to this format. It generates long comment threads and answers that are very, very specific to their exact code, because aside from the actual task-oriented problem they're having, almost without fail there's minor syntatical or practical errors that need to be cleaned up or explained. Why is can i not use a conditional property where a string should be? is a recent stellar example of this phenomenon.
In many cases, they won't understand how to apply the proffered solutions (or existing solutions, when other questions with the same problem are pointed out). Two good examples of this:
Again, this leads to messy back-and-forths, and leaves a document that is quite unlikely to help, and maybe likely to confuse, the next person who comes across it. We're looking for the opposite: the clearest possible expression of a problem and its solution.
This is why we used to have the "lacks minimal understanding" close reason. Questions like these don't generate material that makes this site better.
The thing is, "newbies" aren't being judged directly for their experience level*; they're judged because the stuff they're producing isn't adding positively to the knowledge archive here. For those who can ask a reasonably direct, clear question, and can understand the answer: they're welcome whatever their experience level. But for the rest, we don't really need "forgiveness" for them; we need to respectfully tell them that this place is not going to help them at the moment, and to come back once they've done some reading and mastered some basics.
*By and large, in aggregate, as a rule, on average, etc. -- I'm sure there are some jerks on the site who like to "newb-hunt".