This question is a serious question for anyone who believes there is still just as much importance in understanding the core JavaScript language, even in the post-jQuery world.
In the last seven years, I have followed the development of jQuery and truly appreciate what it does for developers. I have always appreciated writing modular and reusable code like jQuery, as someone who has continuously developed JavaScript applications for 14 years. Everyone who used JavaScript in the pre-jQuery days knew how useful it would be to have a standard JavaScript library that did common things well, and the amazing popularity of jQuery showed just how real that need was.
But it is nothing short of scary to see the unexpected negative side, particularly, the detrimental effect on the overall skill level of programmers.
Some JavaScript programmers with six years of tenure or less are spending more and more of their time learning jQuery, gaining less and less knowledge and understanding of the JavaScript it is based on.
Not long ago, a polished final product was one that contained a small script doing exactly what was needed, although in development it might rely on 10-100 KB of jQuery code with the associated network overhead. But just the opposite is true today. jQuery seems to be an artificial requirement for almost any project large or small, and I shudder every time I see a JavaScript program rely on jQuery when there is no reason.
A perfect example of how bad the problem is: How do I redirect to another webpage?
Already in just six years, I sense a preference for any solution that uses jQuery, even if it actually takes more lines of code to implement in jQuery than in native JavaScript! Worse, there even seem to be a few who automatically consider any code not using jQuery to be suspect.
I am concerned that the same thing will happen with JavaScript that has happened with knowledge of CPU instruction sets, machine language, etc. It is not too much of an exaggeration that if a select group of 1,000 people disappeared, no one else in the world would know how to continue the development of computer chips, and society would change drastically. Web development could certainly reach the same point within 15 years if the knowledge of core languages is not preserved at the level of popular "consumer"-level use.
Is there a way to define a dividing line between appropriate and inappropriate uses of jQuery? And how can we who answer Stack Overflow questions begin to observe that dividing line for the sake of the long-term preservation of JavaScript knowledge in the next 15 years of this important programming language?