Increasing the weighting of a highly subjective element is exactly making it like Ice Dance
Well, increasing the weighting of a subjective element in singles skating does increase the subjectivity of the scoring, no argument there.
If by "like Ice Dance" you mean "the judges' judgment determines results more than the difficulty of the elements performed," then yes, that can happen. And if you mean that judges can rely on their biases more than their expert judgment when scoring those subjective elements, then yes, that can happen too. But probably not as often as fans with their own biases and less expertise assume.
On the other hand, if by "like Ice Dance" you mean "all about skating skills and musical interpretation and not much else counts," then no.
If the singles discipline is supposed to include a balanced program blending skating skills and artistry (to use a handy word to some up everything covered in the current Composition and Presentation components) AND jumps and spins and steps and turns and other skating moves, then there should be a good balance of all those things.
Right now the balance seems weighted too heavily toward jumps and especially toward the number of rotations in the air. No one is suggesting that singles skaters should no longer do jumps or that they shouldn't challenge themselves and each other with the maximum difficulty the human body is capable of with today's technique. Just that there can be better ways to balance the importance of on-ice skills with the current overimportance (IMO) of above-the-ice skills.
- especially when the supporters of that move offer no reason whatsoever as to why it has to happen at all in singles skating, when no one argues about lack of jumps in ID.
My argument is that, first and foremost, all figure skating contests are rooted in the techniques of figure skating -- controlling the glide of blades on edges and all the many different ways of transitioning from one edge to another.
Different disciplines have developed other skills that are included along with those fundamental skating skills. In singles skating, jumps and spins have progressed in difficulty and importance throughout the sport's history across the 20th century and into the 21st.
But that doesn't mean that the difficulty and importance of the skating skills need to REGRESS in difficulty and importance to allow for the progress in other aspects of the discipline. There is room for progress in all areas.
Or do people here somehow randomly expect athletes to possess all the energy in the world where they can do high jump content AND still skate like ice dancers?
They can skate like singles skaters (i.e., without partners, and often without focusing on rhythmic music, while executing jumps and spins along with their skating skills) and still maintain excellence in fundamental skating ability.
If fundamental skating ability no longer counts, then it's not really the same sport any more.
You threw figures out, and skaters started having enough time and money to practice greater difficulty and better choreography. That was progress, at least in my mind.
Well, around the time figures were eliminated it also became more common for figure skaters to hire professional skating choreographers rather than just putting their programs together themselves along with their coaches. So -- at least for those who bothered to invest in expert choreography -- we did start seeing more coherent programs.
But other skaters, or some of the same skaters, also started focusing on adding more rotations in the air. Two or three different triples was no longer enough for women to win medals. Triple axels, triple-triple combinations, and soon at least one quad soon became necessary for men to do so. And often the result was emptier programs. Even for skaters who were good at interpreting music and enjoyable to watch for that reason (e.g., Oksana Baiul, Nicole Bobek at her best).
Kurt Browning at his peak could deliver difficult jumps along with complex, highly musical choreography. And he did win two world titles with school figures, so he wasn't bad at those either. But his best choreography probably came after his jump content started to decline. E.g., he may have won 1991 Worlds on the strength of jump content at least as much as the transitional skating content, but by 1993 it was the program and the on-ice content the prevailed over others' jumps.
Most of the medal-winning programs in the decade that followed were much less complex and less "artistic" in my opinion. But soon there were more quads.
My favorite programs in all eras are those in which there are interesting things happening on the ice. Transitional moves, step sequences, musical interpretation while those things are happening and not just while standing/dancing in place or doing simple stroking to get to the next element.
I can give examples from all of the last 4 decades.
I can also give examples of boring programs from all decades.
And programs that were impressive because of clean jumps and musicality/charisma, and strong simple stroking, but didn't really have much interesting going on with the blades. I don't want that to be the best the 2020s have to offer because the focus is on what happens in the air.