tldr; People get misunderstood a lot on here, existing users trying to help, and new users with the overall goals of the site. New users need redirected instead of boiler plates, other sites exist for new programmers and should be recommended. Main point of contention is attitudes on both sides.
I strongly believe Stack Overflow has a problem, and that it isn't just a loud minority of elitist users, but instead the reputation the site has gained as a "go here, get help" forum.
Most new users coming to this site are rookie programmers or at least new enough that their code and posts will have duplicates, but not exact enough that all the answers fit. From what I've seen and read in the small time here, the rules, and the general meta of the forum push a narrative that Stack Overflow is an archive of questions and answers, which itself is a ridiculous goal to pursue as you've got to ask stupid questions from time to time to get a build up of good answers and faux-elitism means nobody will come here after asking a single question and getting downvoted because they misunderstood an answer or criticised someone with high rep who treats the forum like a job and therefore has no chill for lack of better phrasing.
I think a solution for all the misunderstandings is either to drop the pursuit of the idea of turning Stack Overflow into a resource, as that's not what forums should be designed to be, and it seems to be a community guided thing that the very community fails to make obvious to new visitors, or, make it clearer that this is not a place for new programmers to ask for help. To clarify, a new programmer does not want to hear "Oh god why are you using x, that was made bad practise ages ago, use y instead", unless you're willing to also explain why not to use x and why y is better practice, so people can actually learn. Make it clear what the community intention for the forums are and kindly redirect new programmers or folks with basic problems to better resources where they can get support and not rampant criticism.
Edit: The main issue I think needs to be looked at is a combination of newcomer perception, and existing users' burnout: New people aren't looking at the tour or reading the help desk, these should be made much more obvious, have some sort of pop up that's not a pop up for all new users that practically fills the screen detailing the goals and intentions of the site and community, this should dissuade anyone treating it like a help site for new programmers which it's often confused for. Have existing users understand that this is not their job, they are volunteers, they do not have to answer every question and therefore they cannot rely on "I saw this x amount of times before" as an excuse for being unkind or brazen. The community would be improved drastically if people had an ounce of sympathy popped into them intravenously before they posted a comment or an answer, as mentioned in the comments, people are often frustrated when they make a post here, they are not always in the best of moods, users should be understanding of that.
Further Edit: After making this post, users have used it as a pivot to go to my StackOverflow posts and downvote them, this is clearly not because they are just bad questions, but as a reaction to this meta post. This is only evidence of a problem in the community, they might not have been perfect posts, but the negative attention is purely vindictive in nature and acts as downvote bombing.