I have to admit that over the years I've gone from highly engaged, to mostly meta, to hardly ever. Now I just tend to pop in when I've got a question.
I used to fret over this, but now I consider that I've "done my time" and moved on. However I do recognise those feelings of helplessness: seeing the unending pile of carp* that my close votes never seemed to even dent.
I think it's important to remember that lots of things have been tried and added over the years, though us 'old' users may forget - or never even see them. New users get lots of automated 'hand holding' before asking their first questions. (Of course, the ones who just go 'click-click-tldr' are unhelpable), and all the review tools, flags, close votes are so many different layers of defence. There's even an AutoReviewComment plugin out there, or so I've been told :)
There is a trade-off between 'being nice' (which there have been regular calls for) and quality. Automated quality in any case. I suspect the only way to 'be nice' and assure quality is to have real humans doing the triaging and guiding people individually. But that is not everyone's idea of fun.

UPDATE: I'm not thinking so much of a LearnerOverflow for beginner programmers, but more of a 'naughty step' for persistently low-quality questioners.
Maybe one idea could be to have a 'learners' StackOverflow? A bit like the English Language Learners for English Language & Usage, or Mathematics for MathOverflow? A persistent 'naughty' user on StackOverflow, rather than being banned for life, could be gently nudged/pushed/shoved onto 'Learners'.
Of course, this is not without problems: as it could just be seen as a 'trashcan' for rubbish questions. But I would consider it more as a purgatory for 'rubbish' askers.
It would also require a cohort of motivated 'helpers', but personally I think that it could work better, because it would provide a clear mental demarcation between StackOverflow where I come to ask and answer interesting questions and LearnerOverflow where I come to help newbies learn how to ask interesting questions. I mean, wouldn't you rather go and help clean up a riverbed every few months, rather than have effluent flowing into your bathtub?
And you could even imagine that once the user on LearnerOverflow gets to a given reputation, they gain access to StackOverflow again.
(My apologies to the dev team who are staring at the screen thinking "#$%&! another £$_%ing exception!")
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