TL;DR: Please reconsider the idea of a quarantine for new users' questions.
Consider two pictures.
Our first contestant is a person with a problem, and a disinclination to do any real research or even build a decent question. Perhaps this person is lazy. Perhaps he or she did not get very much professional training. Perhaps this person has some other reason to worship at a cargo cult. Whatever the background, this person has a problem, has no solution, and is looking for the fastest, least-effort, path to 'a solution,' defined as some codez.
But, there is a light in the darkness. This person has heard of a wonderful place on the internet. A place where, amongst the buzzing of the bees in the cigarette trees, there are suckers people who will send the codez. So, of course, our person buzzes over to stackoverflow.com and deposits a question.
Let me give you the bad news. You can't prevent them from coming. The lure is too strong. And you can't discourage them with downvotes, close votes, or nasty notes. They have nothing to lose, and something to gain. Even if you do manage to discourage any single individual (or block that individual), there are millions more where that person came from.
Time for our second contestant. Here we have a person who is not a unreformable cargo-cultist, but has not thought very hard about what it means to ask the entire bloody internet for help. And to make matters worse, this person has read the word 'community' here and there in relation to stackoverflow.com. So, when the person writes a question that is incomplete, somewhat incoherent, or off-topic, the response may be swift and negative, because the responder is completely fed up with dealing with people like the first contestant.
Rinse, lather, and repeat, and then read endless postings here from people decrying all the questions from the first species and other people decrying the rough treatment accorded to the second.
We get nowhere debating whether downvotes are mean, or a 'weapon', or even whether acerbic commentary has a place. What the site needs is mechanism that spares the answering experts from the former group while leaving some slack for the later. It seems to me that various long-standing suggestions could be reconsidered in this light. One that springs to mind is some sort of quarantine for new-user questions: don't even put them on the front page until they have been reviewed. People with patience and inclination can review them, and can, if they choose, try to help the help-able to ask questions that deserve to be on the front page. People who are fresh out of patience can ignore this queue.