By "educated" I mean: "be aided in their personal improvement as a developer, and their use of the site" but that was a bit wordy. I don't mean it in a condescending way.
This evening I happened upon the following question which is essentially a question about the this keyword in javascript, which changes scopes in ways that aren't obvious. Naturally, I marked it as a duplicate of this protected question because reading it would not only solve the current problem for the OP, but also prevent future related problems.
OP complained about "***** duplicates", and after querying what was wrong with a duplicate, I tried to educate the OP on why a post being marked a duplicate of that kind of protected question is a good thing.
Now, perhaps the mod read as far as the first responses to the above, since OP replied "dude it's like 100000 lines long and this is a simple problem", so in a similar vein I had replied "dude do you understand the nuances of the this keyword? No, because you're having this problem. Read the duplicate so you can understand it and prevent future problems." I understand that mimicry may not have been the best way to respond, but it was more meant as a "look, this will help you fix it. What more convincing do you need?"
I then went on to elaborate by saying something along the lines of this:
The reason that we mark questions like this as duplicates of those kinds of protected questions isn't because we're lazy, or we don't want to answer, but because it's more of a "give a man a fish and he's fed for a day, teach a man to fish and he's fed for the rest of his life" kind of thing. You can either be a bad developer, and ask a question every time you have a problem, and never understand the causes, or you can be a good developer, you can learn the nuances of the language you are using, and understand the root causes of these issues, and maybe even help other people one day."
Looking back at the question again, I find that a mod had deleted all the comments including the duplicate link* meaning that OP can't even investigate the topic in more depth unless 4 other people agree to mark the question as duplicate.
* Since writing this, I note that Cerbrus has marked it as a duplicate so OP can now see the link to the other question should they want to read it.
I don't entirely understand why this was branded as a slinging match, unless there were other comments afterwards that I didn't see? Is trying to simultaneously solve OP's issue and encouraging them to be a more self-sufficient developer by learning about the technologies they use now something we can't do? If we can do it, how can we not have it branded as a slinging match?
The mod's advice was "No more comments here please. Use your votes", but the question in and of itself wasn't bad. Maybe not even poorly researched, since the behaviour of the "this" keyword isn't necessarily obvious. It doesn't deserve a downvote. Maybe it even deserves an upvote.
this
keyword. Something in between was probably called for. Maybe something that highlighted the specific issue they were having?