> You cannot handwave away problems by promising you'll fix them with X in Y months, when you consistently fail to deliver X.
You are free to reject such appeals to your patience and choose to use other products and services. Yet, people are also free to ignore your opinion that "blockchain is bad because of X" when they believe they are able to solve X.
I'm not free to ignore their externalities, though, am I? If my next door neighbor burns motor oil to stay warm in his backyard while promising that he'll switch to something better in six months, "just choose to not live next to him" is not a plausible argument!
The difference, in my mind, is that you are suffering under your neighbour's actions directly and the person on the other side of the argument can do something about it.
Arguments about when/if Ethereum will switch to PoS are different, because neither you are I can do anything about it either way; it comes an argument merely about predicting the future.
If you are talking with your elected presentative who wants to vote against a PoW ban who is holding out for a switch, then that is a different story.
You are free to reject such appeals to your patience and choose to use other products and services. Yet, people are also free to ignore your opinion that "blockchain is bad because of X" when they believe they are able to solve X.