While I think you make a fairly compelling case, I have one counterpoint—and, unfortunately, it's a critical one:
Users who are new to the Stack Exchange model of Q&A are not the ones we want deciding how our content should be ranked.
New users don't understand how this site is supposed to work. They don't understand or appreciate how it's unique from the web forums and discussion sites that came before it. They don't understand that votes are a content-rating system, or what the implications of that content rating is.
Lots of users come from social media networks, assuming that an upvote is akin to a "like" button. A downvote button has no counterpart, because on social media, you're rating people, not content (and you aren't supposed to dislike people, or so they tell me; I don't know much about that world). In fact, my lack of knowledge about how social media sites operate is why I shouldn't be allowed to make decisions about how content is presented or organized there, just as new users' lack of knowledge about how Stack Exchange operates should disqualify them from influencing our ratings.
An answer might be objectively clear and correct, but a new user might decide to downvote it for largely irrelevant reasons, like the person stopped replying to their comments. Or the person has an ugly avatar. Or the person says in their profile that they hate jQuery. Or whatever. This is not useful signal to us.
It's not ideal that new users have to resort to leaving comments to say "thank you" and "this doesn't work for me", but at least the system does allow them to comment on answers to their own questions, even when they don't have full commenting privileges.
And, like others have said, a downvote to say "this doesn't work" is a lot less useful than a comment explaining why it doesn't work, which is, I imagine, what anyone who asks a question is going to want to do anyway.