I'm not totally sold on the whole "Stack Overflow is a mean site" thing. But yesterday a new user posted a frustrated question to Meta asking why every question is either closed or ignored, and they were promptly piled-on, tone-policed, and had that question closed and deleted.
I'll totally admit that the meta post was on the hostile side, but it was clearly out of frustration. Instead of having it read in good faith, they were asked - in the most upvoted comment - "Mind rewording your question to sound...less confrontational?". The commenter apparently understood the question and was probably capable of answering it, but chose instead to ask them to change the way it "sounds" because it was too "confrontational". Very welcoming, thanks for your help!
Then after 29 downvotes in the first hour, a moderator steps in with "I've closed this, as it reads like a rant and it's based on false assumptions". Yes, it does read a little ranty. Or if you want to be more charitable, it reads like it was written by someone who had a frustrating experience on the site. Maybe change "based on false assumptions" to "based on the limited experience of someone struggling with the site" and you'd be spot on.
I'm embarrassed to see that this is the way SO treats newcomers. Part of that is because I thought it didn't happen. I didn't take into account the fact that questions can be closed and deleted and invisible to me and the majority of users - thanks to Martijn Pieters for doing a little digging, and determining that this is a semi-regular occurrence. I think it's possible to read the question in good faith and answer it as-is; I wrote an answer that got 6 upvotes before the question was closed.
I get that people are tired, and they feel like they are doing unpaid support work. There seems to be an interesting dynamic where the users who are the most tired are still so active and quick to delete. I'm not volunteering to hand-hold or mentor every user who's had a bad experience, but I wonder if there isn't enough untapped patience to help out. The tooling support isn't very good and it probably wouldn't work out, but that's the ideal I'll try to keep in mind.
It's been pointed out that the only real question here is the mostly-rhetorical "Is this how we want to treat newcomers?". I feel like the community has had its say, so I'll leave it at that. Consider it answered.