There's many ways to say any given thing, this includes saying things like That's .. not a very good idea. A lack of up-votes could, certainly, have the same net effect as a bunch of down-votes - the idea never gains enough forward momentum to even get close to implementation.
But would it really be nicer? - I tend to think .. no. Giving people a means to actively disagree with something without requiring them to type words into text boxes keeps words from being angrily typed into text boxes. I think you can see where I'm going here, it would actually be worse by orders of magnitude.
However:
I wilt a little inside when someone is asking for support and gets down-voted into oblivion because they didn't know what they should have searched for.
I get really irritated when people that are trying to genuinely be helpful by reporting bugs get dumped on for similar reasons. Especially when bug reports get closed erroneously before engineers get a chance to see them.
I think feature requests, or ideas that are more than trivially transformative to the way that the site works are always going to need a yay or nay mechanism. That's the biggest reason why there's no concept of negative reputation on meta sites, yet down-votes still exist. Kendra gave a really good explanation of why that is in her answer.
For bugs, we'll eventually need to move to a more robust bug tracking system because relying on just using a tag isn't working, and we need to take a stronger look at what's actually useful as signal from others in the community. For bugs, this basically boils down to "Me too! I can make this happen too, and it's not supposed to happen!" It needs to be on us to handle duplicates / merging / etc.
For support, we'll eventually make the help center a bit more robust, and funnel people that still feel lost to us directly, so we have / take full responsibility for their experience.
So in short, we've probably reached the point where (at least for Stack Overflow) "meta" as we know it just isn't fitting the need on its own. We've got no immediate plans to make any changes, but we know we're going to need to make them, and likely make them this year.
Once we strip the use down to just what upside down Q&A meta is really good at doing (feature requests) and kinda good at doing (discussion of site policies), we can look at how we present the concept of disagreement in the system itself, and make it a bit less like:

Image credit: Deviant Art
However, identifying consensus for any given thing can be quite difficult even with down votes active and visible, so anything we do can't make that worse. A bit complaint about just reading meta is it's difficult to know what discussions actually resulted in policy that's actively enforced on the site.
It is a problem, and we can't ignore that people aren't engaging because feelings are being hurt (or at least the perception that they probably will be can't be discounted). But the path to fixing that really begins with less duct tape, not more :)
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