Rod, this is all very much worth discussing. Thank you for your thoughts. I have been asking about these matters for several years now, although not as an unbiased journalist. My point is that we need to see a list and explanation of these commonly practiced deceits before we condemn them, and wines that use them, with generalities. Of course there's plenty of romance in wine, but there has always been technique; they are irreversibly intertwined. Which techniques are permissable, and which not? Where are lines drawn? Here's a simple example. Just recently there has been an uproar over the EU permitting rose wines to be blended, and a huge pushback from "traditionalist" skin-contact only producers in France. Who's right? Who's more honest? Who's more traditional? Wine practice when delimited can easily become ossified.
And unless some examples are identified and shared, how can anyone really sort out the differences between a pseudo-natural wine and a hyper-manipulated one? I want to taste a Mega Purple/Purple Haze/Purple Rain/Deep Purple/Purple Feet (whatever) wine next to one from the same region and other key stats that eschews the steroidal juice. Then I can learn something.
Or is it like porn: it can't be defined, but as the Justice had it, "I know it when I see it!"