There are a few things that make it inappropriate for certain people to participate on Stack Overflow. One is wasting experts' time with badly written or off-topic questions.
Another is expecting answers and then expecting those answers not be shared with future visitors (defacing or deleting the question and answer once received). Right now, a moderator can ban the user for that bad behavior... and so can the majority, sort of. By downvoting that user's question, other users can push them closer to question ban (there is evidence that this is happening). Unfortunately, that provides an inaccurate assessment of the content itself (after all, what we're objecting to is their attempt to deprive others of that valuable content).
If we believe that
One of the central tenets of this site is that we vote based on content, not on the owners of that content"
as expressed in Stop mob-downvoting users on the main site for their actions there and their opinions on Meta, shouldn't their be an alternate outlet for the masses to express dissatisfaction with the conduct of a particular user? Having an explicit method for doing so would:
- Protect the validity of content voting
- Allow a different sort of penalty than "permanent question ban" to be handed out by the community consensus. I believe mods usually respond to bad behavior with a limited duration timeout.
Some other benefits of voting feedback on a user's behavior is that it can work independently of the rep system. Heavily downvoted questions often lead to sympathy upvotes and actually increase the troublemaker's site privileges. Voting on user behavior could be done without impacting reputation or privileges (up to the point that a short-term ban is assigned).
Or, should everyone just flag the bad behavior and wait for the flag to get through the queue and reach a moderator?