Andrew - the problem is that previous discussions have left a bad taste in the mouths of many here. Attacks have never been a one sided thing with these discussions, so it is a little unfair to point the finger at any one side. Once one of these discussions start, silent members crawl out of the woodwork - 'strength in numbers'. It's like being attacked by a zombie - it starts off with one, but pretty quickly you have a whole horde trying to take a bite out of you. There's the usual personal attacks and character assassinations to try and render any opposing discussion null and void, and plenty of descriptive sensationalism. Apparently, records have "horrendous distortion", for example. They may well have more distortion than digital files, but that doesn't mean they sound naff, because they don't.
An example from earlier:
With passive speakers, the upper end of bass driver's break up is masked by the crossover and the inevitable overlap HG sees as desirable. It isn't, it sounds bloody horrible.
So do all passive speakers sound "bloody awful"? No, they don't. Manufacturers do things differently, and two-way speakers can have crossovers wildly varying between just over 1,000Hz to almost 4,000Hz. That gives manufacturers a wide window to work with.
There's a vast history of all this here, and 'over there', so all you need to do is a bit of research, which might help explain for you the animosity between both sides.
No single loudspeaker designer can get everything right, otherwise it would wipe out the rest of the speaker industry. That'll never happen. Partly because there is no perfect loudspeaker out there (and never will be), and partly because preference plays a role for the majority of people.