IMO, the real issue with this notice (and with many other parts of the meta interface) is that it's talking about "asking a question", even though a significant fraction of the "questions" on meta are really bug reports, feature requests, proposals for a new policy or action, etc. — lots of things that are not, and aren't meant to be, questions.
(A quick SEDE query indicates that bug reports and feature requests alone make up about 1/3 of the "question" volume here on Meta.SO over this year. Of course, that figure doesn't include things like tag renaming or burnination requests that aren't really questions, either.)
If the SE meta site interface really reflected the way these sites are actually (meant to be) used, the "Ask Question" button would be relabeled e.g. as "New Topic" or something else similarly vague and forum-ish (since there really isn't enough room for that button to read "Ask Question or Start Discussion or Make Proposal or Report Bug or Request Feature or Whatever"). And every other part of the interface that referred to "questions" and "answers" would be similarly rewritten to refer to, say "topics" and "responses".
I'm not holding my breath for that to happen, though. For the time being, we'll just have to live with the fact that meta is different and looks and behaves like a Q&A site, even though it's really not.
In the mean time, here's my modest proposal for rewriting that entire notice you quoted:
How to use Meta
Are you here to talk about the Stack Overflow website?
Meta Stack Overflow is a place for discussion about the Stack Overflow website itself. Here you can discuss policies and community decisions, report bugs, suggest new features, ask about how Stack Overflow works, etc.
If you have a question about programming, ask it on Stack Overflow instead.
For more information, see What is "meta"?
This should hopefully even transfer reasonably well to other per-site metas, with appropriate substitutions for the site name and topic.