The problem with vanilla javascript is compatibility. jQuery (almost always) works with all javascript interpreters (browsers).
So if someone answers your question and supplies a vanilla javascript that was tested and works in chrome, but the person asking the question is using opera, ie, or firefox (or worse, a mobile browser), there is a pretty good chance there will be a problem if you are doing more than alert("some text"), string manipulation or math. This is especially true if the answer includes the use of a library outside the ECMA standard, such as for AJAX, or needs to reference DOM elements.
Using jQuery just about guarantees the code will work on anything, or at least will gracefully degrade.
IMHO there's no good reason to use vanilla javascript anymore. It causes far more problems (10's of thousands) than it solves (absolute 0). So unless you want to chase down browser compatibility issues and spend a huge amount of time doing it, use jQuery.
Here are a few advantages:
No need to regression test every control on your page in every browser after a change
Far better documentation
It's easier to do complex stuff
Far more maintainable
No need to test 20+ browser versions, types, and iterations when debugging
I, like you, used to be a javascript purist. Then one day after fighting fires related to javascript compatibility for a few weeks straight (a few years ago), I said F it, learned jQuery, and have never looked back.
Vanilla javascript is for the birds. I spend my time writing useful code instead of trying to figure out why it won't work on Chrome 45.0.67123.112p or whatever, but works everywhere else.
As well, vanilla javascript that used to work, will break, frequently. There are tons of users out there in restricted environments that can't upgrade their browsers due to system administrator lockdown. Most government agencies, fortune 500 companies and hospitals are like this.
So you end up spending a lot of time doing workarounds for broken browsers if you do vanilla.
If you insist on bucking common sense, specify that you want the answer in vanilla javascript in your stack exchange question posts. There might be someone out there that will answer. Just make sure to post your browser and version, so the answer will work ;-)