I think telling new fish keepers that they 'fail' and that it's a good thing they're suffering is way too harsh. Imagine walking into a pet store and asking about a problem you have, and the clerk saying to you, "You fail, you don't understand basic biology, andI hope you suffer."
That's not a very good way to teach new fishkeepers. Of course most of the info people need has been discussed on these forums, but that doesn't mean that ignoring them or insulting them is going to fix the problem.
If you want to help new aquarists, my suggestion would be to reply to threads with the correct information to the best of your ability, or give them a link to the information. If they're here, they obviously want to learn and ignoring them or telling them they've already screwed things over isn't going to help.
I also have to disagree with you on your article. I don't think reading every post and every article is nescessary. I think there's a far more basic approach to it...in my opinnion, the basic information that people need is...
Know the requirements/needs of your fish - Do they like to be in a school? Alone? Are all your fish compatible? Will they fit in your tank? Do they require any special dietary needs, temperature needs, hiding places etc.?
Know the basics of water chemistry - Know that ammonia -> nitrite -> nitrate. Nitrate isn't really toxic in levels below 30-40 ppm, but it's a good indicator of other junk building up in the water. Plants utilize nitrate, so if you have a planted aquarium you can't really use nitrate as a gauge for water changes. If ammonia/nitrite go above zero, consider a water change. Keep up with regular water changes depending on your fish load/aquarium filtration and setup.
Know your water/what to add to it - Along with the thing above, it's always good to know whether your tap water is soft/hard, what pH it is out of the tap etc. so you can gauge potential problems. If you're not too sure what's in your water, use a water conditoner like Prime that does it all (gets rid of chlorine/chloramines/heavy metals/detoxifies ammonia/nitrite/nitrate). Don't try to regulate pH excessively unless you really have a problem.
I think some of the articles on Aquaria Central are unnescesary for people to read. Some people just want to setup tanks, change water every once in awhile and be done with it, while others want to go deeper into the hobby. I don't think it's nescessary for people to know every single process that goes on in their aquarium, but learn information as nescessary for when something goes wrong (and that's where the experts here come in handy
)
That's not a very good way to teach new fishkeepers. Of course most of the info people need has been discussed on these forums, but that doesn't mean that ignoring them or insulting them is going to fix the problem.
If you want to help new aquarists, my suggestion would be to reply to threads with the correct information to the best of your ability, or give them a link to the information. If they're here, they obviously want to learn and ignoring them or telling them they've already screwed things over isn't going to help.
I also have to disagree with you on your article. I don't think reading every post and every article is nescessary. I think there's a far more basic approach to it...in my opinnion, the basic information that people need is...
Know the requirements/needs of your fish - Do they like to be in a school? Alone? Are all your fish compatible? Will they fit in your tank? Do they require any special dietary needs, temperature needs, hiding places etc.?
Know the basics of water chemistry - Know that ammonia -> nitrite -> nitrate. Nitrate isn't really toxic in levels below 30-40 ppm, but it's a good indicator of other junk building up in the water. Plants utilize nitrate, so if you have a planted aquarium you can't really use nitrate as a gauge for water changes. If ammonia/nitrite go above zero, consider a water change. Keep up with regular water changes depending on your fish load/aquarium filtration and setup.
Know your water/what to add to it - Along with the thing above, it's always good to know whether your tap water is soft/hard, what pH it is out of the tap etc. so you can gauge potential problems. If you're not too sure what's in your water, use a water conditoner like Prime that does it all (gets rid of chlorine/chloramines/heavy metals/detoxifies ammonia/nitrite/nitrate). Don't try to regulate pH excessively unless you really have a problem.
I think some of the articles on Aquaria Central are unnescesary for people to read. Some people just want to setup tanks, change water every once in awhile and be done with it, while others want to go deeper into the hobby. I don't think it's nescessary for people to know every single process that goes on in their aquarium, but learn information as nescessary for when something goes wrong (and that's where the experts here come in handy