I answered a question a while ago on a Stack Exchange site, maybe Webmasters. Recently it was transferred to Stack Overflow - which has a totally different user base. (I'm not going to link the question or I'll get lots of meta downvotes - which is a problem for another question.)
My answer was edited for the new audience and got many downvotes. The tone of the answer was written for a different audience, and it had a line that was called a trolling answer, that was removed. It probably was, but I felt was a poetic response to a flawed question, and highlighted many problems with the questions. I felt that the answer needed the comment and was lacking the full point without it.
I got the first editor to put my comment back up. And then another editor removed it again, and removed all the comments of me asking to keep the comment there! So I deleted the answer as it was clear I would not be allowed to give my answer. And to top it I got the peer pressure badge! NO, I removed it because I am not allowed to have my answer, not because people don't like it.
Why bother with downvotes if editors have so much power? Anything you don't like just edit it till it's good. Downvotes allow me to help others with a point that maybe most won't understand and can indicate to others by downvoting. But the few can learn from.
I would have answered differently if the question was on the Stack Overflow site, yet the audience of the question was moved behind my back. To answer a question the same for all sites is a bit silly, as technical skills differ across the sites. And my answer is changed in a fundamental way, so I have no control over the answer. So in the end the answer that the user downvotes (or upvotes) is not my answer. So why should I get the downvote? And not for example the editor or whoever moved the question?