No, we were talking about architechts making decisions that you characterised as poor. I was pointing out that your statement was over-general and that there are many instances where making the informed decision to ignore HA is a completely reasonable thing to do.
By your last sentence, it appears you agree with me.
If you meant to say that your statement only applies to cloud architects who are attempting to maintain an uptime SLA with multi-az/region redundancy, then sure, AWS has lots of levers you can pull and those complaining really should spend some time studying them.
As for legacy applications, I would not have brought up them up at all if you hadn't suggested pushing things into lambdas as a solution to multi-az. Once again, there are many many situations where this is not appropriate. Not everything is greenfield, and re-architecting existing applications in an attempt to shoehorn it into a different deployment model seems a bit much. Unless I'm misunderstanding what you meant.