There's no badge or special mark we could put on someone's account that would fix the multiple problems with the question itself. That we're being used as a primary form of support is fine, but we require that standards of quality be kept.
My head hurts after trying to read that question several times. It doesn't contain a verifiable example, it's painful to read, it lacks punctuation, formatting and capitalization and apparently it takes the author of the project to even understand what's going on. The fact that his answer was vague and couldn't really be fleshed out much speaks to the fact that the question stinks.
Even though you really want to support everyone that asks something on the site, we have higher standards than a forum or a slack channel. If you're not willing to even help your users by editing -- we can't help you provide them with better support. If after hitting the privilege to edit you don't recognize that question as something in dire need of help then .. well .. we might not be the best place for you to provide folks with help.
But wait, there is a flip (more human) side to it. We need to own it.
His complaint is technically correct. Stack overflow was supposed to be feature complete (or nearly feature complete) back in 2008 when it launched (hilarity ensues). When quality began taking a nose dive after the world (and not just the rather skilled programmers who were also decent writers that followed Jeff and Joel) poured in, a whole lot of stuff got bolted on. This resulted in a really disjointed, and to the uninitiated, unintuitive product especially from the use case of the new user.
That's fair feedback and we should listen to it. I have hopes that all the testing we've been doing on the ask question page is going to bear fruit, and I really look forward to making review something that appears to be part of the original plan instead of something we later bolted on after some resources free up once we ship channels. I hate to see people have these experiences and I wish that they didn't.
But they're still the minority. This graph fresh from the 25k+ tools:

Look at upvotes and down votes. Way more contributions are appreciated and rewarded than questioned or ultimately removed. I could post more numbers around that, but despite the fact that you occasionally hear about plane crashes, flying is still the safest way to go.
Sure, it's regrettable and a bunch of stuff could have happened, starting with the owner of the project using their edit privileges :) If you're going to use SO for support, you have to know when to jump in and salvage a gem in the rough, so to speak. I'm not pointing fingers here, this could have been handled better overall, but I do take issue with presenting this as a typical case where everyone else seems to be to blame.