I will agree that the way downvotes are used, especially as it fits within the rest of the site, is somewhere between not ideal and deeply flawed and can make well-meaning users feel unwelcome. I will not agree that *removing* downvotes entirely is a good way to deal with that, because downvotes exist exactly because not everyone is well-meaning and we need different ways to deal with different types of offences. We also don't want to send the wrong signals (i.e. that some content is acceptable, when it isn't) to those who might be well-meaning. Better ways to deal with downvotes not doing what they should would include some of the many proposal around here about: - Improving the new user experience in order to make them clearly understand the rules, ideally *before* their question is even posted. - Improve the after-posting experience, i.e. how the question and any interaction on it is displayed, how and what the asker is told and how and which resources the asker is pointed towards to help them understand any problem with their question. - Improving the help center so it's more clear what sort of content we expect and that the rules are in fact rules and not just advice to make it more likely that they'd get an answer. - Changing the question-posting process to stop users from posting unwanted questions or to help them fix their questions before posting. - Changing the moderation/closure/deletion process to make it easier to deal with unwanted questions when they do get posted. - Possibly addressing the pile-on effect where a possibly-misguided-but-not-malicious asker may get a dozen plus downvotes (although trying to directly address that is probably fairly controversial, and likely unnecessary if all of the above is working as it should).