To start off - we are paying attention to the feedback loop in Documentation, and I do think there's considerable room for improvement still. Some of the features we have for it are subtle, accordingly underutilized (like inviting folks to chat about a draft) - and thus aren't working out like we'd hoped. We also definitely have a "what's this topic/example's history"-problem to solve.
That said, there are reasons that there is no commenting on examples.
Reading comments shouldn't be necessary
Tell me if this sounds familiar: you're using an answer, but it doesn't quite work - you read it again to see if you missed something, and this time notice a comment that explains what you're doing wrong (implicitly the answer is out of date, or omits a caveat, or what have you). It's not hard to find examples if you haven't seen it.
Honestly this is a flaw in Q&A, one made worse by how relatively hard and discouraged* editing is. I think it'd be much better if these comments had resulted in edits improving the answers, so just reading the answer gave you everything you needed. We're explicitly encouraging this is Documentation, by making it much easier to propose edits (while still requiring review for most changes)... and removing comments.
*One subtle discouragement we'll never be able to fix is the very notion of ownership. People feel, understandably, awkward about editing something that "is" another person's.
The "owner" of an example isn't the only one who can improve it
Commenting on a question or answer notifies the owner (ignoring @replies for now), which makes sense because they're the person having the problem/creating a solution. However that logic doesn't really apply for examples.
Examples, like all of Documentation, are meant to be collaboratively edited - having several contributors, all on a relatively equal footing. In addition, there are many more potential future contributors to an example than their are for a question or answer - this stands to reason, since we are documenting relatively general topics.
This is why we have improvement requests, and why down voting prompts you for an explanation. Those are routed to many people, not just the owner or previous editors.
This is also why we do have commenting on proposed changes. That's a place where there is a single person who can take feedback on something they produced and improve it.
Comments make versioning and historical referencing much harder
One of the basic tenets of Documentation is that you can always get to the page you were using when you wrote the code - that's why all topic pages get a #t=######
-slug on them. If you ever copy/paste a link into a comment, stumble across a link in blog, an old tweet, or whatever - we want that content a click or two away for you. We've all been in the "my docs are gone!"-boat before, we'd rather not be there again. This is the root reason why edits in Documentation conceptually happen at a "page"-level - so the whole page is always sensible, and thus rewindable.
If we had comments on examples, editing (and reviewing edits) would get much trickier. For example, if an edit incorporated a comment into an example you'd want to delete the comment. Moving, combining, or splitting examples might necessitate moving comments. Actually making good edits (and determining if edits were good) would accordingly get more complex.
This also explains why, in Documentation, improvement requests are handled with edits. They're basically comments that are deleted alongside your a change, and exist out of band from the topic/example so we don't have to include them in older versions.
We need stronger quality control than just votes and comments
oh, I don't necessarily disagree. But comments seems like an obvious first step.