The logind developers went against the established wisdom of experience (that big rewrites are generally a bad idea) with the predictable result: high costs (both in migration and in handling outright bugs) for nebulous benefits, with the result that desktop linux is flakier and (understandably) less popular than ten years ago.
> This is the kind of toxic behavior that makes communities non-inclusive and leads to impostor syndrome.
Is that supposed to be a bad thing? We should be less "inclusive" of people who want to rewrite everything. They should feel like impostors. You can't produce good quality if you're not willing to call out bad quality; Linux succeeded (for a time) because Torvalds had high standards and was willing to maintain them.