How can I ask a question without it being manipulated into a perceived war with another user?
Short answer: You don't.
Longer answer:
If someone wants to see a rat where you're presenting a ladybug, you're unlikely to convince them otherwise. Don't bother trying. So long as they don't take the question off-topic, you might as well ignore their comment about "wars" with other users.
Now, if it does derail the comments, okay, you have a problem. But that has two possible fixes:
You can edit your question to clarify that it has nothing to do
with whatever the comments are carrying on about, then flag the
offending off-topic comments and explain to a mod that they are not
relevant to the question. They are not needed for the post to
continue, and they do not critique or request clarification.
You can also, with or without doing the previous (though I find it
works better with) ask in the comments for the off-topic comments to
end, and point out that it has nothing to do with your question.
This is almost always easier if your question has been clarified,
but sometimes the comments are so wildly off that you really
shouldn't have to clarify. If the comments continue, you can usually
flag for a mod to clean up the off-topic comments or remind folks
that the comments are for critique/clarification, not for off-topic
discussion. (This could even happen without a flag, if a mod wanders
by and notices.)
As for persistent bullying, if someone is actually bullying you, definitely flag and explain to a mod. Link to examples, as best you can. But keep in mind that someone showing up on multiple posts you've made in a community with a small number of active users doesn't mean they are bullying you, even if you disagree with their comments or they read too much into your question. Remember that just because they're wrong/off-topic does not mean they are bullying you, it means they are wrong/off-topic.
Nothing you've linked to or shown us so far has come across as more than a misinterpretation, off-topic comments, or just a clarification or critique of the post. They are blunt, sure, but not everyone (indeed, it seems to me like a majority of the Meta community fits this, from my experience) would see this as rude. Some will, sure, but some will also see me saying "I'm a cat person" as rude.
Just for completeness, this is the full extent of each comment. Yes, this context does matter:
Comment 1:
The OP is not "gone", he visited the site 16 hours ago. Perhaps unimpressed with the answer, him seeing hi-rep SO users that don't like each other messing with his question can't impress him all that much either. Is there any chance for this nonsense to stop or does it take having one of you give up and not come back?
This was indeed an attempt to critique/clarify your question. It was blunt, sure. Perhaps a tad harsh. Rude? Not what I would call rude, no. Bullying? Most certainly not. I see nothing wrong with this comment. Could it have been worded differently so that it did not come across so bluntly or harshly? Most certainly. Most comments on the sites (all of them, not just Meta) can be. That does not make them rude, however.
They do not attack you. They do not act like you are stupid, they do not curse or insult anyone. They are blunt. The "nonsense" comment is, to my reading and the reading of at least a couple others in the comments above, in reference to the blooming edit war on the post you linked to in that question. The user has definitely seen pointless edit wars, and indeed, some of them do go on until someone gives up and does not return to the post. Others go until a mod steps in. Could've been worded better, but I still do not see it as rude.
Comment 2:
A tag that is favorited by 75,500 users and 95,000 questions does not have an exposure problem. There is something going on between you and another hi-rep [python] contributor, having that spill over into meta like this is not productive. Learn to live with each other, be tolerant.
Yeah, I see no relevance between this comment and the question it was posted on. Perhaps they posted it to the wrong question, perhaps they misread the question... However, I still do not see it as rude (Being wrong, misreading things, and such are not rude and the comment still does not attack you in any way, shape, or form. They simply misunderstood. If misunderstanding was rude, I'd be offended every minute of every day by the people I work with.) and it most certainly did not derail your question. This was the only comment about this topic on the question.
Please remember that rudeness is highly subjective. As I said earlier in this answer, someone could very easily find "I'm a cat person" rude, and what am I supposed to do about that? Refrain from being a cat person? In the end, if the mods disagree that it is rude, the only thing you can do is raise a question on Meta about how you don't understand how it isn't rude, and people will either agree and you'll get an apology, or people will explain that they also don't find it as rude (as has happened here) and you'll have to decide how you want to take things from there.
In the end, if you feel like the "Be Nice" policy and its enforcement disagree? That's a completely different Meta post, and you're going to want more than two examples for sure if you want to prove it. A lot more than two.