I’m adamantly against arbitrary speed or power limits. Here in the US we don’t use speed or power limits to regulate much faster and heavier vehicles like cars, motorcycles, snowmobiles, etc.. Instead we regulate behavior. We should do the same with bicycles. See a need to slow riders down on the trail? Then start ticketing riders for going too fast- analog or electric. This idea that you’re guilty because your bike has a specific capability is absurd and offensive.The lack of respect that you confess is exactly the problem.
As for the trail damage, I agree that class 1 bikes do not damage the trail more than the regular bikes do...eMTBs are what? Worst case 20lbs/10kg heavier than the average unassisted MTB? Realistically 10lbs/5kg more.
I am 190lbs/86kg, should I be banned from trails till I go down to 180lbs/80kg or whatever? That's ridiculous. Nobody says that.
BUT, throttled bikes can and do damage the trails, and especially throttled bikes with RIDERS that ride trails after the rain and do "burn outs" in the clay mud...it is not a "cuttie" here and there we are talking about. My local trails are riddled with these riders, even though there are trail closures and directives that suggest not running the trails after the rain...screw etiquette. This is the lack of respect that is the problem.
And when I volunteer to go for trail work (not in Arizona, would love to ride Hawes), I will go there on my eMTB too...I don't want to arrive there panting before I even do any work.
Again, because I guess I am bad in my writing : I have no issues with class 1 bikes, and I agree that the gate-keeping that cylists do against it, is based on stubborness and/or ignorance or "earn the pain up" whatever trip they are on. I am not trying to appease any of these peeps...they don't get it, it is fine. Snowboards vs. Skis.
I have clear issues with class 2/3 bikes and even worse, de-restricted emotos that cos-play class2/3 bikes, that run the trails day and night, ripping them up. Majority of those people in my area, are teens. They will never show up to dig or repair anything, but even if they did, that doesn't absolve them of doing what is clearly not allowed, and the "F-U I won't do what you tell me" attitude, is what might risk access to our trails.
I don't know how hawes is per se, but here in SoCal, lots of the trails are within city limits, with lots of homeowners that have political connections and lots of time to pursue their pet projects, spend time either hiking, or riding their horses in their neighboing trails. And you don't want these peeps petitioning or outright extorting local goverments kicking "eBikes" out. And if they do, I want to have a case to make about my Class 1 / 20mph "fast enough" eMTB, being worlds apart from the Class 2/3 bikes the "bad ones" (sorry, a line will be drawn anyways, I will have to be on the "right" side) are riding. If companies are allowed to pursue "more than 750W" and more than 20mph, then why not more than 3000W and why not more than 40mph, etc etc? We will end up being universally banned.
This is what DJI and all these "tech-bro-move-fast-and-break-things" mentality is risking for us.
Of course the real liability is the rider who is whiling to buy that tool and ride it with bad etiquette, but I cannot pursue individuals, not can I rely on shaming the shameless. I can only try to apply pressure and petition the source, perhaps try to be the good example infront of my local goverment/trail management bodies etc.
The motor manufacturers are going to have to limit power because limiting speed is only going to drive riders to unground workarounds to unlock more speed. We already see these hacks as commonplace.