For the most part, the issue of low quality questions and homework posts have been present for many years.
As far as being the unwelcoming one, I disagree.
Saying please, respectfully disagreeing, downvoting, closing, following the posting rules, etc.
These should not be called "unwelcoming", and you shouldn't have to shoulder the burden of being accused for simply providing full range to the signal.
Recently, it should be noted that the tone has been much more level, although, that could just be the result of a lull in messaging than the result of a change in messaging.
The fundamental design of the site is to have high quality content bubble to the top, and that cannot happen with only positive signal. Downvotes were deemed a critical part of of communicating the quality rating of a post.
"In building Stack Overflow, we realized the intrinsic informational value of full range post scores. Downvotes give you the critically important ability to distinguish between the good, the bad, and the ugly. Without downvotes, how can you possibly tell the difference between a post that is harmless but uninteresting, and one that is actually wrong or harmful? Sure, it stings a bit to get downvoted. I’ve been downvoted myself on Stack Overflow. And each time, it makes me pause. But that’s good! That’s necessary! You have to believe there are potential consequences for every post you make — both good and bad. This is how things work on real playgrounds; why would we expect our web playgrounds to be any different?" -Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow Co-Founder)
In addition, the system was acknowledged overall as containing some level of anxiety to use.
"I've heard people describe the process of asking a question on Stack Overflow as anxiety inducing. To me, posting on Stack Overflow is supposed to involve a healthy kind of minor "let me be sure to show off my best work" anxiety:
- the anxiety of giving a presentation to your fellow peers
- the anxiety of doing well on a test
- the anxiety of showing up to a new job with talented coworkers you admire
- the anxiety of attending your first day at school with other students at your level
I imagine systems where there is zero anxiety involved and I can only think of jobs where I had long since stopped caring about the work and thus had no anxiety about whether I even showed for work on any given day. How can that be good? Let's just say I'm not a fan of zero-anxiety systems."
-Jeff Atwood (Stack Overflow Co-Founder)
If you see someone demeaning others for actioning posts, then that should be flagged, and appropriate action can occur. Frustration is common though, in situations where there is anxiety, so it is important to consider that there is another person on the other side of the content when it comes to actioning it.
It has also become very cliche for a certain group of users to blame the site, and the community, for their lack of research or ability. This group is actively harmful. While some of it can be attributed to cruft from recent events, there is a very large external dynamic that plays into this as well which I will avoid pointing fingers at.
Going forward, as overall messaging improves, this should tame down a little; it is impossible to remove altogether though, as false positives are detrimental to those who are well-intentioned. In the long term, as the external contributing factors even out, the field overall should become less tumultuous... the downside is we will probably all be retired by then.