What sort of question will get me reasoned and intelligent answers here on Meta?
Well, the first part is to do research before asking for something. For example, the question "Relax syntax for inline hyperlinks" is poorly researched. Why? Because SO did not invent the syntax for inline hyperlinks, or for most of what we use. SO simply adopted Markdown; this pseudo-standard is what defines our syntax.
That changes the nature of the question. It isn't a simple, "let's make a small change". It is actually, "let's make this change in defiance of the widely-used Markdown 'standard'." That requires a lot more justification than personal preference for shorter lines.
To people who've been on the site, who've done the research, asking for such things is annoying. Just like it is on SO. So it's no surprise that a question that demonstrates little research effort received downvotes and no answers.
It is also a good idea to think through the effects of an idea before posting it. For example, "I should be allowed to answer closed questions" was railed against because it would have the effect of making question closure utterly meaningless. The OP did not seem to realize that the primary purpose of question closure is not to put "[on hold]" in the name, but instead to stop people from answering. That's a failure of research, but it would also be a failure of thinking about how such a change would impact the site.
Similarly, for people on this site who understand how the system works, it's rather off-putting for someone to appear and start claiming that we should make radical changes when they're unaware that their changes are indeed radical. These sorts of things tend to draw downvotes and bile.
It's also a good idea to focus on solving problems, rather than having meta-meta discussions. For example, "Questions where the author is the problem" is essentially a complaint that an issue that a long-standing issue hasn't been addressed. Well... yeah, we know that. Is the complaint going to get that changed? Odds are good, no, it will not. The case for the feature was better made on the original question, so the post amounts to very little.
Obviously, you've probably noticed that all these examples are highly downvoted posts of your own. There's a reason for that.
the comments don't dispute that my case is rock solid.
This is also the sort of thing that is likely to cause a negative reaction. You classify this feature request as a "rock solid" case.
Ignoring what was said about this post earlier... you didn't actually make a case at all. You merely declared that it should work the way you want it to. You state that the syntax exists as it does "for no ambiguity reason that I can see". But that's not a case for changing it.
Even if such a change wouldn't create ambiguity (and I don't know that it does), that's not an argument for actually making that change. It's merely an argument that, if the change were to be made, the grammar would still work out.
If you're going to argue for a change, you need to argue that the change is necessary. And the only need you show in that post is your own personal preferences.
That's not a "rock solid" case by any reasonable definition of that term.
I don't expect to have to provide "evidence" in my posts.
Well... why not? Evidence always helps. When you're asking someone to do something, it is never wrong to provide more than simple words. Evidence is how you can separate BS artists from people who actually know what they're talking about. Evidence makes arguments a lot more functional.
Evidence makes it clear who does and does not have a "rock solid" case.