Oh come on. That's just silly. For years and even last year, people had been arguing that the quad and multiple quads were too dangerous, and that they were taking away the artistic side from the sport. Yuzuru has proven that wrong for years now. Shoma and Javi also proved that at GPF. It's true that the scoring needs to be updated, but that's because people like Yuzu are pushing the sport great places. To stagnate anything is never good. To stop trying to advance a sport is the exact opposite of the concept of sport and competition. They used to say that a quad couldn't be done, yet look where we are now. They used to say women couldn't do 3As and 3/3, but history tells me differently. The sport told Midori Ito that she couldn't do a 3A, but that didn't stop her. There is always someone who does it first (Vern Taylor, Midori Ito, Dick Button, Kurt Browning). It always seems impossible until it's done.
The big news is that Yuzu keeps pushing the technical, but he's pushing the artistic too. He may not be as lauded as Patrick or Daisuke, but he's showing the absolute beautiful possibility of combining art and high technical (entrances to jumps, choreo with jumps, flow between choreo and jumps-lack of setup). Evgeni is considered one of the greatest skaters of all time, yet lbr he didn't really have much choreography.
And the idea of the ISU limiting technical leaves a bad taste in my mouth because of its history of limiting female skaters who were pushing boundaries because they didn't have stereotypical figure skating aesthetics. Figure skating needs to stop being so conservative and embrace the possibility of human ability.