I'm kind of amazed that that answer made it this long. I'm absolutely shocked that it made it this long without any edits! For the top answer on a heavily-referenced meta question, that's rare... And in this case, unfortunate.
The core message is sound: search and research is essential, now more than ever. Even among our harshest critics, this is undisputed. We should do everything in our power to teach and encourage these skills!
However... The tone of the answer subverted that message. It was not written to be the general-purpose guide that it has been treated as. If our goal is to encourage folks to actually do that research, speaking to them like lazy children is counter-productive; if we want folks to aspire to be better we need to treat them like they can be.
Let's face it: the answer was more catharsis for frustrated teachers than a useful tool for learners. It reminds me more than anything of this famous XDA video...
That's funny stuff right there! Makes me smile every time. But even XDA doesn't blast that in the faces of their new users... They provide an easy-to-read, calmly-written list of guidelines, starting with...
Search before posting.
Use one of our search functions before posting or creating a new thread. Whether you have a question or just something new to share, it's very likely that someone has already asked that question or shared that news.
That's it. No hyperbole, no snark, no world-weary ranting. Just the facts and reasoning.
Let's do that too. I've re-written that answer, trying my best to preserve the message while ditching the nonsense. I think it's a clear improvement... How 'bout you?