One more thing. For all those people who will think that this is just more arrogance coming from "hot-shot" climbers, let me remind you that The Gunks was once a world class climbing area. I mean world class in the sense that world class climbers were actually climbing there on a regular basis and putting up what were considered world class routes at that time. "Hot-shot" climbers like Lynn Hill, Hugh Herr, Russ Raffa, Jeff Greunberg, Jack Meleski and Kevin Bein used to project routes on a regular basis. Sure everyone knows that Lynn Hill and others put up a few world class routes essentially onsite solo because they wanted to do them in good style and more than likely to one-up the other guys. Also there was the occasional accidental X point- such as "Death's Head Mask" and "Yellow Crack Direct". However, everyone always forgets that these legends also projected the crap out of many other difficult climbs, bolting, nailing pitons, hanging fixed gear and slings all over these routes for many months even years at a time before they finally went free. They used yo-yo tactics, TR hangdogging, pinkpointing, hanging in slings- you name it.
Route examples include "Iron Curtain", "Diplomatic Strain","Talus Food" "Tweazle Roof" , "Twilight Zone" , "Girls Just Wanna Have Fun" "Vandals", "French Connection" (they even chipped this one-- yuck!) even "Bone Hard" which isn't that hard anyway. If you do the math, the majority of the hardest climbs in the Gunks were projected extensively before they were ever freed.
My point is: nowadays, there are hardly any world-class climbers visiting or climbing in the Gunks. Possibly, they figure there aren't any hard lines left to pick out. Or more than likely, there is no longer a conducive atmosphere for elite climbers in the Gunks. Weekenders and gumbies crowding the crag, rangers who carry handguns and write tickets like YNP tools, fixed gear and projecting frowned upon by locals with mediocre climbing abilities. (Except of course all those moderate routes that they can actually climb that are loaded up with fixed pins and even god-forbid bolts. ) So why not let the relatively few dinosaurs of difficult trad-climbing continue to push the limits of hard climbing in the Gunks in the best style that they can muster ( a few removable fixed pieces of gear hanging here and there). In the end nobody gets hurt and their style is no worse than the legendary Gunks heroes that have been indemnified as godlike figures.