and my not-friend, wouldn't it be better to open a classroom and teach students the things you know?
And at the beginning of the class, tell 'em "I know everything and will tell you all even if you wouldn't ask me or like it" ?
Oh no, I'm your "Not-Friend" - How can I sleep tonight knowing that!
I do actually help a lot of people with programming (and other subjects) and back when I was in school, during free periods I helped out in the first and second year computing classes. I did not teach pure programming in this (In our education system that starts in third year) but I taught them "Scratch" which I believe is a brilliant learning tool as it teaches kids the concepts of programming and the structure of code, but without errors caused by simple typos. I'd also say that having a small game they can then play and show friends is going to engage them a lot more than having a message print out on the screen. These kids at this point have not chosen to study this computing class, it's compulsory so they are not all that interested in raw-code. But during this I saw some amazing stuff, I saw people pick up stuff so quickly I could see straight away that they were going to be a good programmer including one girl who, without any instruction, removed parts of her "code" in order to help herself locate a bug.
I do not know everything, nor have I ever claimed that I do - There is loads of stuff I don't know, or only know parts of.
that "We" couldn't even give the right answer to the main question.
That is true, as I did not know the answer to your original question (Which contradicts your claim that "I know everything"). I did however feel that, as a new programmer you were starting on C with no good reason that you were going down the wrong path as there are many jobs and more practical uses with other languages as compared to C. I thought, as a nice person I would just let you know this so that you could make a decision about what was best. You then came out with your ridiculous claim of "Creating the best Mobile-OS of all time, with the highest security system, and with the thousands of apps." I felt that this claim was unrealistic (and still believe it is). As before I saw this as a regular mistake/belief held by new programmers so I felt I should help guide you onto a path that would be a lot better.
Of course you stay stuck in the mindset of "I know best, I won't listen to anyone else, other programmers don't make OSs because they are scared and modern programming languages make programmers stupid" so ignore all this advice given to you.
Oh yeah, and you missed a question again:
Please, explain why "Hard to read code is better"