Have you informed your customers that they need to KNOW that those questions are ones THEY need to ask? If you haven't, then what are you standing on that allows you to assert that those are questions the buyer knows they should ask? Did you come out to womb knowing those were the questions you needed to ask? ...or did you learn over time? Do you not feel like there is a responsibility to OFFER help to relevant customers if it seems they don't even know what questions they should be asking?
Face it. Good or bad, many people go to buy snakes without knowing as much as they should. It happens. MANY walk in the door never even knowing they NEED to ask if it was feeding. Do you ask a person selling a 9 week old puppy if it eats or needs to be force feed? Of course not - those questions don't even enter their minds, and many beginning buyers think a pet is a pet. We've all pretty much heard the idea from a beginner that a snake will eat when it gets hungry - it won't let itself starve. Why do they think that way? because they are used to dogs and cats.
I agree with you that the buyers SHOULD ask those type of questions, but to say the breeder has no responsibility to OFFER up relevant information that the buyer seems to be lacking is incredulous to me. It is delinquent. It embarrasses all responsible breeders.
....or do you just think a breeder doesn't need to say "You know that is a hybrid, right?" because it just might (gasp!) reduce their chance at making a sale? Maybe my interpretation of your posts are in error, but the main feeling I get from them after reading them is that the SALE is more important than educating a potential customer who just might be buying a snake that isn't perfect for them. Buyer beware, eh?
(For the record, I'm sure I've sold snakes where the person should have been told something they didn't already know....and I missed telling them. Nobodies perfect, and you never do KNOW what a person is lacking in their education to date. However, I do still feel that we should try to inform people of the important things they may not know.....ESPECIALLY when they send out "I'm a newbie" wave! Obviously, there is a difference between someone buying a Jungle corn as their first snake and someone saying they are buying their 20th snake and already have 5 creamsicles at home. One person should be considered to be MUCH more likely to NOT know what they are getting than the other. Duh. Still, this could be the opening for a mistake on the part of someone like me. I'm not arguing perfection - I'm questioning what an honorable seller should or should not consider their responsibilities on a case=-by-case basis.)