You say that moderation tools are only given to users on the basis of reputation. That may be true, but we also "moderate" those tools in many ways.
If a user has a history of bad moderator flagging, their flags get lower priority in the moderator queue, and eventually don't get shown to moderators at all.
If a user has a poor record of reviewing posts, they are given a time out.
In general, if a user has a good record of using moderation actions such as flags, we give them more to use.
Diamond moderators are elected by the community. There is no significant reputation barrier, although the ones that succeed in getting elected on Stack Overflow generally have at least 10K of reputation.
As to getting high rep, there's a significant void on Stack Overflow for users that have the capability and desire to answer questions thoroughly, accurately and completely. Those kinds of answers always win against the correct, but average answers over the long haul.
Sure, you can try and compete for the softball questions along with everyone else, but folks with good programming knowledge who know how to communicate it will always be in demand, and the competition in that arena is almost non-existent (you'll be competing with the small number of high-reputation users who aren't always here).
Finally, you can get 2/3 of the way there by simply reviewing suggested edits. At 3000 rep, you'll be mostly functional from a community moderation perspective; you'll have full editing privileges, cast close votes and perform most review tasks.