1. Spell correctly. This site has a spell check built in, please use it. 95% of what you post should be typo/spelling error free. In this day of computerized spell check there is no reason I should be correcting those sorts of mistakes.

Spell check can be very unhelpful to someone learning the language. Say, for instance, a person hears an English word and they don't know how to spell it, and thus they come here and write kwench, asking for a meaning. My spellchecker underlines that in red, and gives the following possibilities to correct to:
wench
k wench
french
backbench
hench

Well, that's hardly helpful, considering that any native English speaker could tell you the world they heard is probably 'quench'. Spell check didn't help much there, did it? Not everyone is as familiar with the phonetic lunacy of the English language as you are, and there's no good reason for you to expect them to be.


2. Punctuate correctly. If you don't know English punctuation, learn it please. You should learn that as part of learning the language. Several recent requests have included writers admitting they don't know how to punctuate. I want to scream "Go look it up then!" Sites exist in English and in Russian. Use them.
Learning is a process. You can't expect someone to learn an entire language's system of punctuation before asking questions. Think about how you learned English punctuation--you were in school, you went over the topic, and then you made a ton of mistakes that a teacher corrected. After being corrected over time the proper usage of punctuation was more and more integrated into your writing style. But you expect someone starting from the exact same place you were to 'look it up'. How would you feel if every time you had a question in school your teacher told you to look it up? If that was the manner in which people learned, we wouldn't need teachers. We could just dump books on kids, and let them sort it out themselves.

4. Don't waste my time with something you could look up on your own. My time is valuable and I'm not being paid for it. So please remember that the person on the other side of the computer is busy just as you are. Try to ask questions that a native speaker really is useful for. Those I love to answer.
Exactly. You're not being paid for it, so if you don't want to help, you don't have to. If someone posts something asking for help but their question doesn't fit into the neat little box you've made, ignore it. Not everyone can afford to go out and get an English teacher, but that shouldn't discourage them from learning English. There are people here other than you that have been to happy to correct basic English mistakes, and likely will continue to.

I have not seen anyone complaining about the lack of help with English corrections, so I am at a total loss as to why you made this post. If people were complaining, I could understand why you made this, it would've been a handy list of tips to help people learning English on how to get more responses to their questions. But I think that everyone that has a question on English pretty much gets a satisfying answer. It sounds like you have written this to complain. I understand you recently joined the site, and I can appreciate that, and so I give you the benefit of the doubt that you're not just complaining to complain, and I can see that you genuinely want to help. But I heavily disagree with your approach and attitude to this issue.