All questions on SE must be self-contained. If the OP can't (or won't) reduce the code (and data) required for a question to a MRE, then their question is just not suitable for SO.
The problem is that it's often hard to get new members to understand this. They expect SO to be a help-desk / discussion forum, and they simply don't get that we're trying to build a Q&A library.
So even if they do take the Tour, and read the relevant Help pages, and perhaps even some FAQs on MSO / MSE, it may still not sink in that we aren't a help-desk and that their question has to be crafted so that it fits our Q&A library format.
IMHO, the existing Help pages do a reasonably good job of explaining the requirements of a suitable SO question. But if the OP has the help-desk mentality, it doesn't matter what Help pages etc they read. It can be hard enough trying to explain this stuff in an actual conversation in the comments or a chatroom. OTOH, it's certainly useful to have these requirements listed in an easy-to-find Help or FAQ page.
Once the OP understands the Q&A library principle, then it's easy for them to understand why question code must be a MRE. If they want to link to their full code on pastebin, or Github, etc, that's fine. But they need to realise that it's just supplementary information, and that their question has to be understandable (and answerable) without that supplementary information.
[mre]
only to have the asker respond by adding the complete program or code butchered to the point that it can't possibly compile in order to make it shorter, I'd say the odds of the link having been read are generally quite low even when you point the asker right at it.