It is clear that there are egregiously bad questions that deserve more than one downvote ... to get the message through to the person who posted the Question.
But it is also clearly a bad experience for someone who has made an innocent mistake. Under most circumstances one downvote is enough to let the user know that they have made a mistake.
So how do we stop people just piling on the downvotes?
Here's a suggestion. Make downvotes on Questions have a variable cost on reputation.
If the Question currently has a net vote score >= zero, the reputation cost is zero.
If the Question currently has a net voting score of -1, the reputation cost is -2.
If the Question currently has a net voting score of -N, the reputation cost is -2N.
This would discourage most people from dumping yet another downvote.
Now I can see that there would be difficulties in implementing this. For a start, it would be necessary to record you much each down-vote cost the down-voter in case they decided to reverse the vote. (But the easy solution is to make the reputation non-refundable!)
What do people think?
UPDATE - Maybe the threshold of -1 is too high:
What do people think of only penalizing "piling on" behavior if the threshold was beyond -3? Or -5?
What if there was a popup that said: "Dear user: this downvote is going to cost you -100 reputation points, do you really want to do it?"
Is anyone here arguing that "piling on" the negative votes is actually helpful / good for the StackOverflow community? If so, why? Put it in an Answer please, so that other people can express their opinions on your arguments by voting on your Answer ...