Moreover, I feel like when people are met with downvotes, they feel like they are doing something bad even though it is not necessarily their fault. Yes, they could have read "how to ask questions" and studied already answered questions and etc, but most beginners neither have the terminology vocabulary nor the required experience and information to ask the types of questions that more experienced programmers can ask.
They can, indeed, read How To Ask, and take the tour, and in fact are expected to do so. How is it not their fault? Someone who goes on vacation in another country with different laws, similarly, should expect to be held to those laws for the duration of the trip.
Stack Overflow is not a discussion forum. It is not a help desk, code-writing service, debugging service, tutorial centre or any of the other things that people pithily point out in the comments.
Stack Overflow is a place to ask questions - one clear, specific, focused question per post. This is admittedly a difficult task. It is, in many cases, more difficult than answering it, even for people who know the answer. It may seem like a cruel joke that this responsibility gets pinned to people who don't know the answer, who want the answer, who don't know the terminology, who are in short not in the right position to ask. But this is the fault of the company, not the community. They're the ones advertising this as a place to get answers "to every question about programming" (fine print: except those which fall afoul of any of the standard closure reasons, only one of which is "not about programming or software development"). They're the ones concerned with page views. They're the ones with a financial stake in this (unless of course you count the value of unpaid volunteer time).
(It's also, of course, largely the fault of third parties promoting the site in inappropriate ways, or failing to understand how the site is supposed to work. It seems as though everyone expects a discussion forum because there are forms to submit user content, and a page that's structured with a question at the top and answers at the bottom, and comments underneath each. But there are a million discussion forums out there already. Why should we have to be one, too?)
We can't do anything about someone else's lack of information, except to provide information. By policy, the best way to provide information on previously asked and answered questions is to link those as duplicates. This is not a punishment. It is keeping the site clean. We can't do anything at all about someone else's lack of experience. We can edit to fix terminology, but only if we can figure out what was intended. Many beginners have so little understanding of terminology (and seemingly no appreciation of why terminology is important) that it becomes impossible to understand what they want. A huge fraction of questions are based in misconceptions that are difficult to address because there is no realistic way to understand the beginner's thought process.
Sympathy, courtesy and politeness are all admirable traits. But the fact remains that a bad question is a bad question. No amount of desire for "niceness" can override the necessity of good questions in order to "build a library of detailed, high-quality answers".
But, I cannot underscore this enough: absolutely none of that has anything at all to do with the difficulty of questions. Asking a really good question about how to do something any beginner should be able to do is still, itself, not necessarily beginner-level. The site is not here to accommodate the person trying to ask the question. The site is here to store well-asked questions and their answers.
Have a look at the top-voted Python questions of all time, for example. They certainly aren't perfect, but there is a pretty strong correlation with question quality. What I want to highlight, though, is that most of the top questions are straightforward, basic matters of general knowledge. A lot can be asked in a single sentence. Things like "What does if __name__ == '__main__':
do?" should be covered in any proper tutorial.
But they're well-asked. They're asked in the way that those who know what they're doing would ask them, for teaching purposes. (In some cases, after extensive editing. There is still much to be done on this front.) They're asked with purpose and direction. There's an organized thought process behind them. They aren't about looking for help with debugging, which is supposed to happen ahead of time anyway. Instead, after finding the source of a bug, a good question will highlight the specific cause in a MCVE. Compare the first code block there and the corresponding output, to the amount of code most beginners will paste when asked to show code for the problem they're vaguely describing. Look at the output there, and notice how succinctly it explains the problem being described. That's how you end up with a question with over a thousand links. And, you know, there's still considerable room for improvement there.
I cannot think of any way to resolve this issue but to change the community's attitude toward such matters. Maybe a specific tag could be opened for beginners which would prevent their questions from being seen on the main page, which would certainly decrease the attention they would get in which case they won't get a meaningful answer anyways. Either way I feel like this is an issue that has to be addressed better than "just close the question" to support new programmers in their journey instead of killing their passion for programming, especially for questions that show a genuine request for help where the question is easily answerable.
Ideas like this have been proposed countless times before. "Just close the question" is the appropriate response (although I maintain that questions should start closed, and be required to meet standards before being opened), because "support[ing] new programmers in their journey" is not part of our mandate, except insofar as it "supports" them to have access to a top-quality library. The amount of "attention" (in the form of experienced users looking at the question and sighing) paid to poorly asked questions doesn't address the quality problem. Editing them does. Doing the expected research and debugging before asking (ideally, coming up with a question that doesn't relate to a debugging effort) does. Creating a MCVE does.
Being a "genuine request for help" is not relevant. Questions here are not about the person asking them, or about any individual's need to have the question answered. That's how we can say that we downvote questions/answers and not users. It's why there is no sense of urgency here. It's part of why we want questions about homework, not questions which are the homework. It's why answering your own question is not only allowed, but should be strongly encouraged in many cases. This is fundamental to how the site works. We are not rejecting "easily answerable" questions out of any sense of superiority. We are rejecting them because they do not contribute something new to the library.
The tour says that the site is "all about getting answers". That does not necessarily mean an answer to a question that you ask, regardless of the question quality. The point of maintaining these standards is so that you can get answers from Stack Overflow by using a search engine, without even needing to put together a complete question.
Bad questions make that harder, by appearing in search results when they shouldn't. If someone has misidentified the problem and thus put a misleading title on a question, that's bad for you, the Stack Overflow searcher; now you will find a Q&A that's unhelpful because it's unrelated to what you're trying to figure out. If someone's code has multiple issues, having just one of them in common with yours, that's bad for you, the Stack Overflow searcher; now you get distracted by that other stuff, if you can even find the question. If everyone's question is "help me debug this plz", that's bad for you, the Stack Overflow searcher; how could you ever find the right on? If someone tries to explain the problem but is incomprehensible, that's bad for you, the Stack Overflow searcher; it's harder for you to verify that the Q&A is applicable. If the question uses terminology wrongly, that's bad for you, the Stack Overflow searcher; even if you also don't know correct terminology, you'll just as likely have it wrong in a different way, and worse yet the question might accidentally teach you wrong terminology.