You are correct that it's not good to give bad advise. The thing is, no one did that. Please stop making up stuff and picking fights over nothing. Would love to see you help answer some of the new folks questions.
Thank you for continuing to express your personal opinion; one I do not share. I have not made anything up and made a case for why I believe telling new members who have no idea how to handle coins to take them out of their cases is a bad idea. Clearly we do not see eye to eye on this, so kindly agree to disagree and maybe move on and also stop picking fights as you suggested.
There's a big difference between GOOD advice and thinking that someone should follow there advice, one of those is self centered, the other isn't.
Please clarify this “big difference”. I assume that if someone gave “good advice” they’d reasonably think that someone should also follow [their] advice. Otherwise, what is the point of giving advice at all?
I see nothing better about your advise compared to what was given. The point is that you want your advise to be the best. And in this case I don't see that it was.
I don’t want my advice to be the best (which is not at all what you said with your statement, for the record). I want his advice to be better. I believe it poor advice to tell someone who doesn’t know how to handle a coin, doesn’t have a flat clinch stapler, and knows very little about photography to take a coin out of a protective case. If you think that is solid advice, then we are going to have to agree to disagree. I can do that, seems others cannot.
What makes you the advice police. You can't just pick a person and tell them that they need to change the way they give advice. Not to mention that your attempts to do so have fallen on deaf ears. What's the point to being right and calling someone else wrong?
Everyone involved in this thread is invited to read this thread, consider it wisely, and take it to heart: https://www.cointalk.com/threads/stop-the-bickering.322981/