I get the extreme "antipathy" (under-exaggeration, anyone?) toward stand. Tried it once, lost interest myself. I do understand the idea behind it and the mechanics of why it "should" work.
But for me, judging stand developed negs (or any negs) via a web scan seems somewhat pointless, without "the math" as mentioned here. My take on evolving my process has been "does the neg print easily on my setup? Is dodging and burning going to be 100% a creative tool vs. a rescue mission?" I don't feel qualified to make any empirical statements about a process (or especially a negative) I haven't taken from scene to final print. (Which is why I can firmly say things like "Rodinal dilution affects visible grain, whereas reasonable temperature adjustments do not" - because I've tested the hell out of it.) If I felt a need for stand devloping, I'd have to read up everything I could and start testing it. I just don't feel the need right now; I really want repeatable results.
I spend a fair amount of time coaching the new generation of kids-getting-into-film, and they all seem fascinated by stand - "it's a magic bullet, you don't need thermometers or timers or process controls or experience or testing", and - I think - the same differentiator that made them shoot film in the first place: "It's different", and in that difference is some fast-track secret-sauce to special images. The same reason they buy up expired film - "it might have some groovy unique look!" A look that's not repeatable and is a product of chance, but will make them look like they've pulled off something artsy. Not saying this is universal, but I see enough of it to understand how that could piss off an old-timer. (And I know expired film for some people is simply for cost savings - talking high school and college kids to a great degree. And most of them are scanning, not printing).
I imagine people who've empirically tested their film and dev combos for ISO and dilution and time get put-off by the "I can't be bothered to agitate a tank" or whatever attitudes? I dunno, but sheesh, if there are people who've tested and dialed in and found specific reasons to do stand for specific image qualities (or people that like shooting but don't like minding a timer), let 'em at it, chill out, and focus on advising the next generation of shooters on the facts about the process. If one fact is "throw the film in and an hour later you get negs that are - at least - scannable", hell, let 'em try it. At some point we'll have people that want more control and understanding, and there's a world of inarguable, solid info out there when the time comes.