I don't expect everyone to be able to write museum-quality questions. I try hard to look for ways that I can edit and answer before I look for reasons that something should be closed or flagged. I'm saying that because it's important to me that people know we're not out looking for any reason under the sun to not like something, we just get a lot of unanswerable questions, and it wears on folks.
With that said, all of the text in the world isn't going to help someone that doesn't see their question as a contribution, or doesn't grasp the level of research they really need to know how to do. They're not trying to annoy anyone, they just want some help, and they see their question as the hardest thing they need to do that day. It's huge to them and they don't yet know how to break the problem down.
When people develop a history of doing this over time, especially in short succession, their ability to ask is diminished. There are people that just don't care about their effect on others and we actively discourage them with automatic limits and even automatic question blocks - and moderators tend to look out for these folks continuing to find ways to drag mud on the floors.
But most folks do improve over time. They may not ever ask those thought-provoking REALLY interesting questions, but they get the hang of it. The best thing you can do is just use your votes.
I like to remind folks that the vast majority of questions are pretty well-received:
It's important to keep in mind when you see a train of 100 hastily-written questions missing lots of needed info roll by. Old questions still get votes too, so that's not representative of just new questions, but you can see how things settle.
The best thing you can do is as Makoto suggests - downvote if you want, cast a close vote if you can and think you should, edit if you think you can help something get over the edge where it's answerable and remember it's a marathon we're all running. This is supposed to be rewarding.
I think we could be doing more for people to help them (early on) understand this. I think there's a value proposition in it that we could capture in the editor for folks new to getting programming help (the Wizard was a good first attempt). I think "it" is out there, though it continues to elude us.
Walls of text and forced delays just infuriate people when they're in a hurry; I don't think that's the "it" we're trying to find.