To answer specifically your title question1
Why is the community so vindictive about non-programming questions?
Because we are a site for questions and answers about programming problems.
Let me quote the tour2 for you:
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's built and run by you as part of the Stack Exchange network of Q&A sites. With your help, we're working together to build a library of detailed answers to every question about programming.
(emphasis original)
Now, the What topics can I ask about here? page of the Help Center:
Stack Overflow is for professional and enthusiast programmers, people
who write code because they love it. We feel the best Stack Overflow
questions have a bit of source code in them, but if your question
generally covers…
a specific programming problem, or
a software algorithm, or
software tools commonly used by programmers; and is
a practical, answerable problem that is unique to software development
… then you’re in the right place to ask your question!
(emphasis original)
So... Non-programming questions are definitely a no-go.
Regarding your specific Stack Overflow question
Just because a question doesn't have code does not mean it's a "non-programming question" by any means. Code is not a requirement to ask questions here, depending on what you're asking, and we don't only accept debugging questions.
As far as I can tell, your question is a programming related question, it's just not a debugging question. However, being generally unknowledgable about your question, I can't say how well it meets our standards or guarantee that it is on-topic, so I can't say why you were downvoted. Really, only the downvoters can explain that. I've been wrong before about on-topicness of questions, so do take my thoughts on this matter with a grain of salt.
Regarding tags
Please keep in mind, just because we have a tag on the site doesn't mean that everything applicable to that tag is on-topic here. For example, just because we have the tag windows doesn't mean we'll help you troubleshoot a non-programming related issue you have, such as figuring out how to non-programmatically change a setting in Windows. Like wise, the tags theory and practice don't necessarily mean every question that could possibly fit under those tags is on-topic here.
Regarding Flags
Also, my flags for intervention didn't work out either.
There really isn't anything on your question that you could've flagged for. It wasn't closed or deleted, so that means the mods can't do anything for you. They can't say "Hey, no, bad users, don't downvote this!" because that's just not how the site works. The mods can't see who downvoted your question, and they can't revert the downvotes on your question.
So, with this in mind, there really wasn't anything for your flags to work on.
1 Based on the original title of the question.
2 By the way, you should give that a read when you've got a chance. It really explains a lot about our mission and goals, and you get a badge for it.
theory
that is used over a thousand times. Does that mean all those questions are invalid then? I used the tags as appropriately as I could. You can't say I am off-topic if you can't explain why.theory
tag clearly says there are some questions which can be programming-agnostic and "questions that focus on theoretical aspects rather than practical implementations" Am I missing something here when my question exactly fits into this criteria? So why am I not allowed to use this tag if 1.5k+ questions have used it? Why is my question not welcomed by so many? I cannot find an answer except for the fact that people in this community do not like such questions.