In all honesty, the concept of negative reputation is something that is .. hard to design around properly, if you're going to employ it. While the two are arguably the same signal - receiving zero votes and little attention is quite a bit less jarring than receiving a down vote. But it's not you that they're voting on, they're voting on the perceived usefulness of your question as added to the collection that is the site. That's .. subjective.
Folks could be voting because they don't like jQuery, and think questions about the library diminish the perceived quality of the site for JS programmers (or, perhaps dilute the usefulness). It's hard to say, I don't think there's anything wrong with your question, I'm also a bit amazed that it received down-votes.
Anyway, my point - if you're going to thrive here, in a system that employs the concept of negative reputation (albeit with guard rails) - you have to be able shake it off if you're certain there's nothing wrong with the question. We don't want to require a reason (though we do firmly suggest that users give one) because that opens up a can of yuck.
- "You made me leave a comment, and he went and down-voted all my recent posts to get revenge!"
- "I'm not down-voting stuff because in the time I have for the site, I don't have time to engage with the authors that deeply, can't I just vote on what I think is useful or not?"
- "We're volunteers, but 8,234 comment flags per day for us moderators to handle is just too much."
.. it goes on. When you see a down vote, it could be signal - it could be noise. It's up to you to take a look at your post and decide. Most users are helpful and will leave at least a clue as to why they down-voted, but some don't.
If there's nothing wrong with your post, chalk it up to phases of the moon and just move on - the actual point hit is negligible, yet worrying about it is so very costly.