Unfortunately, network communities tend to be more and more closed, and strict by time. It is because the ratio of the people who are here since years, is always bigger and bigger. And they tend to force the rules and customs invented by them, here, which are non-trivial, and sometimes even nonsense for a newbie.
The result is an inbred community where only an uncritical, conformist attitude can provide longterm survival. People with creative or new ideas experience a constant downwind.
There is another structural problem, and this is that forcing these non-trivial, and sometimes even nonsense rules means the continuous, large-scale destruction of the content created by good-standing newbies. Normal people won't do this too long, it requires people enjoying that.
And it is not about the crap. It is about the high level content which would be ontopic on the common sense, but not on the non-trivial house rules. And it is about any idea or suggestion to make things better.
Of course, there is a terrible mass of crap as well, but I am not talking about this. I am talking about an unfortunate social selection mechanism of the system.
The collective mentality of the community is going into a direction which is maybe more destructive as needed.
The only excuse is that the site stays against the siege of an overwhelming crap. Unfortunately, I can't see a solution against this. Maybe if the SE used a more strict control, it could help, but I think, they would risk to lose the voluntary work in the fight against the crap.
On my opinion, the best would be if a race would be created between the different SE sites. The fortunately growing number of the new SE sites are going into this direction. I think, a "doubly connected graph" should describe the topics of the sites of SE network - I understand on this, that practically every question would be ontopic on at least 2 different SE sites. So the users would slowly move from the worser sites to the more friendlier.
For example, the unix SE is a very friendly, well-organized SE site, but it probably wouldn't be so if they didn't need to stay against the "concurrence" of the askubuntu (partially hostile) and the serverfault (very hostile).
In case of the SO it would mean its parting into a network of smaller sites, smaller communities, who are racing with eachother for the (qualified) content and (qualified) users. I suggest to take part in the work of the area51, you would make the world a little bit better place with that.