Print the negatives on paper, then scan the print.
Andrew doesn't do standard prints - all his final prints are in various Alternative processes, like Carbon prints, which often don't scan well.
While encouraging darkroom printing, APUG happily accepts un-manipulated scans of negatives and transparencies.
You are free to make your own choices, but so are we. I am the first to advocate darkroom printing, but I would never criticize someone for making the considered choice to scan rather than print - people's circumstances differ widely.
It is always appropriate of course to make reference to the often unwanted effects that are added when one introduces a scanning stage to a process .
In my case, for APUG sharing, some scans are of prints, some scans are of transparencies and some scans are of negatives. At least in some cases, I have elected to use a negative scan because it is a much more faithful reproduction of my prints than I have been able to achieve with a scan of a print made with that negative.
In my opinion, scanning is as much a difficult craft as printing in the darkroom (and way less fun).