I recently commented on [this](http://stackoverflow.com/q/29029897/1075247) question, and it occurred to me that there were some red flags that should have stopped it form being able to be posted. 1. All caps title 2. 'HEL.P' was clearly used to get around the 'HELP' restrictions. 3. All code question 4. There's already a deluge of question in the form of '<language> code is not working', and they all appear when you type that in as the title - it looks like everyone else is posting them and it's ok. Do these items not stop the user from posting ? I feel like they should. Do they not enter a VLQ queue before appearing on the site? I'd imagine that would be more helpful that it getting 10+ downvotes (deservedly so, in some sense) but whereas that sort of reaction should be for when someone established tries to get away from something terrible, it shouldn't be used on someone who probably doesn't understand the question. Could we: a) Get the above points I mentioned in to the system to block posting before they're fixed? b) Especially hiding suggested questions that might support them thinking 'this is a good thing to post' c) Notifying the user when they get below a certain vote count (-3?) d) Hiding the vote that from them to stop them form being put off. Perhaps we need to only do this for users under a certain rep score. I'm really certain how we should handle this properly. Clearly we want the user back, to ask good questions and improve their question. Nipping it in the bud now would help create better programmers and better question-askers both of which benefit the system. Can we do something about this, to help?