But instead of going back and changing questions that were perfectly reasonable to ask at the time, I've since wised up and started learning Microsoft Basic out of a book designed for absolute beginners and stop going online to ask anyone questions
That is beautiful - because it's exactly what you were supposed to do. Congratulations! (I say this with only a little bit of snark.)
Stack Overflow is not there to replace learning resources designed for absolute beginners.
It's something it can't do, doesn't want to do, and was never designed to do.
Maybe you should start charging money to reinforce the career mentality of the site, and prevent stupid n00bs from getting frustrated?
That's not an unreasonable idea on its own: tutoring and teaching does follow that formula, after all. Teachers deal with the same "newbie" questions every day, and they get paid in return.
It's not something Stack Overflow is likely to ever try, though. The consensus around here is that creating money incentives to answerers would destroy the place. The current model is for programmers to donate slices of their time, for free, on at least somewhat challenging and interesting questions - something a complete newbie is likely to have problems with.
The model's worked tremendously well and is unlikely to ever change here. A paid model would have to find a home elsewhere.
Approaches in that direction certainly exist, although none is as big as SO. There is Codementor, for example, but most of the mentors there charge a pretty hefty hourly rate, so it's normally more for businesses looking to "rent" certain skill sets for a short period of time.