I feel that punishing people who are only trying to have fun and learn defeats the purpose of programming.
I know for lots of people the purpose of programming isn't to have fun and learn. Most of the people here are professionals. Programming is our job; our livelihood. We may enjoy programming; I know I do, but I don't do it because it's fun. It's not the reason programming exists.
More importantly though, the "purpose of programming" isn't relevant to the purpose of the site. The purpose of the site isn't to have fun or to help you learn how to program. The purpose of the site is to create a repository of knowledge for the larger programming community based on quality questions with quality useful answers. Your contributions clearly weren't contributing to that goal, even if you were having fun posting them.
I feel like the only reason i got banned was because the questions weren't researched in the perfect manner that a stack overflow programmer thinks they should be asked,
If your questions weren't well researched, that's certainly an appropriate response, yes. Your questions likely also had other problems as well, for example, you have a question that's closed as "unclear" because people couldn't understand it.
which methods aren't as obvious the people running the forum think it should be.
So you read through the help center, and the frequently asked questions, you got feedback on the posts that you made, informing you that your posts were problematic and why, and then you still continued providing problematic content anyway. This seems to be rather clearly a case of you knowing that you were posting problematic content, but not caring rather than it not being clear to you that you were performing problematic actions (especially after the first few).
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 because you all have defeated the purpose of having an open forum.
Given where it seems you're at, that's almost certainly what you should be doing. SO isn't designed to take the place of an intro programming book, and doesn't try to. Use the right tool for the right job; if you want to learn the basics of programming, a book like that is the right tool.
Maybe you should start charging money to reinforce the career mentality of the forums, and prevent stupid n00bs from getting frustrated?
I'm not sure that'd actually accomplish that goal. It'd result in less questions being asked period, but I don't see it as discouraging bad questions more than good questions. If anything it would encourage the behavior that someone asking a question deserves help from others, that the question is only there for them; this is essentially asking for private tutoring or hiring a consultant, and that's simply not the job SO is attempting to solve. One of the main reasons the site's founders created the site was that one of the main sites in the field of programming Q/A did use this paywall model, and that angered the site's founders greatly.