One of the flags was my mistake. I voted to close as unclear, and then I looked again, and the question does make some sense. However, two of them I believe I was right in flagging, because the questions were later closed for a very similar reason.
So the system worked? Our tempered collective judgement ensured a legitimate question was not improperly handled, and the illegitimate ones were properly closed?
It's good to treat these cases with a certain level of caution, because it is good to avoid false positives. What if we as a community had been overly head strong and mishandled that one legitimate question?
If you had an overly aggressive spam filter that got 100% of spam but also mistakenly deleted 10% of your important emails, that would be really bad. Of course we are not talking about the same kind of automated process, but basically it's good to temper our aggressiveness and try to give the benefit of doubt. Judgement calls aren't always clear, or sometimes various factors such as subject matter expertise result in false positives.
Bottom line, is any changes to this really would have to take a detailed look at many of these specific scenarios and see if it would make them better or worse. I don't think as a generalized guideline we should be trying to be more aggressive. There might be specific scenarios we can address and provide concrete guidelines (and often on Meta those are addressed and serve as a reference for handling those scenarios in the future).
can't we make it a privilege to ask questions so that only those who help others get helped?
No. Many people are not yet at the skill level yet where they can contribute useful answers that are born from practical experience. I remember when I was first learning to program, and perusing C++ programming forums, long before Stack Overflow, I thought to myself: "Man it would be great if I knew enough to help others out they way they've helped me." After a year or so I could help answer some of the more straightforward posts dealing with: "Why am I getting this compiler error?" Up until that point, I had nothing to contribute.
Additionally, Stack Overflow is such that the more common and simple questions are often a resource to future visitors, and duplicates are likely to be closed. So unlike what you you might see in forums where novice users can at least answer some of the more common simple questions, on Stack Overflow there are less and less of these types of questions. For older, well-traveled tags, a lot of the questions left open for answers are more complicated and nuanced and would be out of reach of a novice user to answer.
With the mechanic you propose, it would isolate them to only more experienced programmers, and I don't think that is what Stack Overflow is about. We do want them to understand what is appropriate for the site, and how to ask good questions. However, simply preventing someone from asking questions until they prove themselves through answers, will alienate a large audience of legitimate users only to avoid a few bad apples.
the difficulty in getting rep in the tags I follow
not as one of the many many help vampires
I think you are setting yourself up for disappointment with this mentality. This is kind of a life lesson in not letting your enjoyment of an activity hinge on outcomes that are out of your control. Contribute the way you think is best for the community, but realize it is a community, and the outcome will be a collective result of the community.
Focus on doing what you enjoy, and don't concern yourself with the outcomes. If you feel like someone is a "help vampire", then simply don't answer their question. Yes it adds minor clutter to the site, but if they are a help vampire, then their question is probably overly specific and unlikely to benefit others. If so, it will not be very prominent and the clutter will be minor as it gains no votes. If someone answers, that's their time invested. You have invested nothing other than perhaps time making a quick skim of the question. If many people ultimately come to the question and upvote it, you might think: "OMG how horrible this awful question and it's answer are getting upvoted", but usually people upvote when they find the question and answer has helped them in some way.
In the long term, they make their way to the question via googling, and quickly leave it if it doesn't help them, and when it does help them, they upvote. If it's getting upvoted, then it is serving as a useful future reference to others, and isn't as terrible as one might frame it to be. The site is fairly self correcting based on voting alone.
If you think it is a bad question and feel a downvote or flag is appropriate given the site's guidelines, do so. If you feel your one or two reputation is more valuable than issuing a downvote, then that's a value/benefit choice you make. If however you feel like this frustrates you to not see the outcomes you hoped for in all cases, perhaps you should invest your participation some other way.
When me and my brother used to get mad and scream at video games, my dad would always poke his head in the room and say: "Maybe you should do something else for a little bit?" We were usually pretty annoyed at this advice, so you're probably pretty annoyed at my advice, again probably not the response you hoped for, but I think in retrospect my father's advice was probably good advice.
It's the same reason I try not to get into political discussions with people, because no one is going to change their mind as the result of an argument, and so the outcome will never be one I am happy with.
Participate in a way that is rewarding to you. Don't think so much in terms of reputation or what others are doing, and more in terms of the value to others you can offer. Offer that value where you see it is valued and appreciated.
/me runs away cackling
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