Short answer to question as asked: 1) SO culture has become toxic and elitist (which Joel and others admit and are tackling head on as priority this year), and 2) admins are suffering from burnout.
Long answer:
1) Reading the comments here is extremely frustrating to me as a user. It seems that this year's giant smackdown from on high, https://stackoverflow.blog/2018/04/26/stack-overflow-isnt-very-welcoming-its-time-for-that-to-change/ has passed some people completely by. If you have not read it yet, please do.
There is a definite problem in SO with elitism and hostility.
This has been acknowledged at the highest levels.
Having our first questions downvoted until we learn the "right" way to ask is a very clear part of that problem.
Why, then, are people arguing against this obvious truth with the openly fallacious and toxic idea that "well, if you've answered a lot of newbie questions, then it's OK to start downvoting them once you get sick of them"?
That's not OK.
That's arguably a violation of the code of conduct (https://stackoverflow.com/help/be-nice). “Be welcoming, be patient, … and don’t expect new users to know all the rules — they don’t. And be patient while they learn.”
2) I see people asking "is it mean to get annoyed when asked the same question 1000 times?" (if it'd be mean after once, then yes: repetition in your experience changes nothing in a usr's first experience), and saying "you'll get tired and go down the same path", their "patience runs thin", they "get very jaded" and suffer "literal FATIGUE", to the point where they are behaving in a negative way to those new users who do not ask "good questions" on their first try.
These are descriptions of burnout.
That's awful. Please don't let SO do that to you.
And don't do that to yourself, using SO as a blade.
But what can be done?
While Andreas brings up some good points (things like: newbies can't even comment to ask for clarification on what they did wrong), I think item 1 there is being dealt with well enough by Joel et al, and I'm excited to see what comes out of it this year.
But item 2 is perhaps something that only the burned out admins can fix, for themselves.
And the fix is to step away. Pet our cats, walk our dogs, blow stuff up in a computer game.
Here's Joel (https://www.joelonsoftware.com/2018/04/23/strange-and-maddening-rules/), explaining that, yes, it is fine for newbie programmers to ask questions, and if that bugs anyone, then they can just walk away, even if that means forever:
We understood that this might mean that some of the more advanced people might grow bored with duplicate, simple questions, and move on. We thought that was fine: Stack Overflow doesn’t have to be a lifetime commitment. You’re welcome to get bored and move on if you think that the newbies keep asking why they can’t return local char arrays (“but it works for me!”) and you would rather devote the remaining short years of your life to something more productive, like sorting your record albums.
Forever is, I suspect, far too long. But "until the burn of the burnout has faded" is probably wise. We should avoid admin tasks when we're "annoyed" - we're all worth more than that. Give yourself the space you deserve to get your head in order.
If burnout makes us affect even a small slice of the community negatively, even if our effect is generally positive for the ones who ask what we decide are "good questions", then it's time to step away for a while, if not for our own sanity and wellbeing, then for that of SO.
SO will still be there when we return. We'll still be awesome if we help later rather than sooner. It's not a race to help the most.
stackoverflow.com/posts/<POST_ID>/timeline
where<POST_ID>
is the number in the question's URL.