Some sympathy first
I am hesitant to ask new questions because the experience is so jarring.
I understand your frustration, really. Every social media site ever that offers any explicit functionality for expressing disapproval of anything - anything that's automatically gathered as a statistical measure, and doesn't require the effort of typing out a response, I mean - has discovered that users hate it when content they generated is on the receiving end.
It doesn't matter what the practical consequences are. It doesn't matter how the feature is labelled, or described in the site documentation. It doesn't matter what the "regulars" say about the feature in meta spaces.
Users hate it.
It's bad enough that YouTube removed the feature after years of having it - and before that change, there were categories where if a video got more than 1% or so dislikes, that was evidence that something seriously controversial had occurred in the related community. Reddit seems to have solved the problem - at the cost of a lot of community trust - by publicizing that they add tons of fake votes in both directions to highly-viewed content, ostensibly so voting bots can't easily verify that they're having the desired effect.
It would be nice if we didn't have to downvote and close incoming bad questions to get them out of the way, to try to prevent users who steadfastly refuse to Get It, even with years of experience from chasing the perverse incentive of answering those questions. It would be nice if the site enabled us to advertise better, up front, why the most common kinds of new question that people attempt are in fact completely unsuitable for the site, so that they don't then run afoul of expectations.
In short, it would be nice if we could set a lower baseline, so that new users wouldn't constantly have to have the experience of being told their content is below that baseline.
But that's bad for business.
And then some perspective
Nowadays my questions seem much more likely to get closed
Somehow the consensus opinion of Stack Overflow off-site is that it's a toxic hell-hole where everyone downvotes everything all the time and is nasty to new users for no reason, and obviously those downvotes mean nobody is enforcing the Code of Conduct, yadda yadda.
Do you know what percentage of up/down votes cast on Stack Overflow are down?
11.8%. That's counting all the downvotes automatically cast by the Community user when someone flags spam.
Yes, it's gone up a little bit over time. Since the beginning of 2023, it's been 13.4%.
How about votes cast on questions asked in 2023 (never mind answers, and never mind adding to the pile of upvotes on old popular questions)? Surely those get obliterated?
Still only 32.9% down.
Do you know how many users cast more downvotes than upvotes?
About 14000, out of nearly two million who have voted.
The highest all-time question and answer scores are in the tens of thousands. The lowest only reach to around -100 or -200, and are really exceptional cases.
The voting culture on Stack Overflow is, in fact, extraordinarily positive. This is helped along by the fact that 125 reputation is required to cast downvotes, but only 15 reputation is required to cast upvotes. More than two million users are in that range - more than the number who have ever voted.
For comparison, "anonymous feedback" across the site history is about 40.4% down. When people aren't affecting the site's vote tallies and are just responding naturally to what they found with a search engine, they're considerably more harsh. (TODO: filter this to 2023 and/or questions only)
But you also are talking about close votes. Do you know what fraction of questions asked in 2023 got closed?
68.8% have stayed open. Of the ones that aren't open, 89.2% got deleted while a minority linger in the closed state. Most of that deletion [TODO: can this be evidenced?] was done by a very conservative automatic policy.
That's nowhere near enough cleanup relative to the quality of questions we receive.
Why not
and it is impossible to get them reopened or moved to the correct substack.... People vote close/down and move on.
I agree that it's very rare for closed questions to get re-opened, and that there are a lot of questions that potentially could get re-opened that are being missed. However, in absolute numbers, that seems to be much rarer than the case of questions that should be closed sitting open and gathering dust. There have been many times that I got some inspiration to try a search on Stack Overflow for, say, some fragment of an error message, and found hundreds if not thousands of unclosed, near-zero-score, mostly-unanswered, low quality questions with nearly identical titles. That is clearly not the site operating as intended.
Aside from the technical issues - Stack Overflow doesn't get to use a separate code base, as far as I know; a change like this would need to be rolled out for the entire network, and then possibly disabled in config for others who don't want it - many questions can't be fixed, and people who downvote questions often realize this at the time. They won't want to be bothered about it later.
If there's an obvious typo causing the described issue, for example, editing the question probably can't make it suitable (it would have to become a question about why something can't be typed a certain way, and that would have to be a serious question that a programmer could reasonably actually ask).
If the question was marked as a duplicate, that judgment is usually not entirely wrong. Sometimes a slight bit of interpretation is required. Sometimes a how-to question has an obvious answer by applying a well-known technique, but could also be answered in other ways because of specific details of the setup - and, yeah, those probably should be re-opened in general. But please first try reading the duplicate carefully in order to try to see how it applies to the issue that motivated your question.
The elephant in the room
This takes a pretty big emotional toll, as I often invest quite a bit of time to describe my problems.
This sentence is very revealing. I want to make two points about it.
First: "investing quite a bit of time" to investigate problems is part and parcel of being a programmer; getting others to be able to help with the problem requires communicating with them; communicating effectively about a problem entails describing it. These steps are really unavoidable, and thus expected. If time investment in a core part of your work results in emotional toll, that's not a problem we're equipped to deal with. (I understand that nowadays it is considered mean to suggest that others pursue a different line of work; but I think in some cases, in the long run, it would be less cruel.)
Second: referring to "my problems"... is problematic. Stack Overflow is for everyone... every question is for everyone. Questions are supposed to help to build a library of high-quality, detailed answers; high-quality answers are those which can be understood and helpful to many people, not just yourself. This entails that people should be able to encounter the same problem, as you describe it; recognize it as the same problem; and discover the question via searches informed by the problem.
Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum, nor a help desk or tutoring centre. We only tailor answers to you, insofar as "you" represent a typical person who would encounter the issue being addressed. We aren't interested in finding a bug for you, for example, because debugging is a standard task with common steps regardless of the underlying issue that everyone should learn to do, but the actual debugging process for any non-working code is idiosyncratic to that code. Failing to debug hinders both discovery (which you are supposed to attempt first as well) and recognition.