At the risk of being accused of taking your "bait" again, let me give you another opinion.
Bowling is an environmental game. We all adapt to our environment, and the predominant environment for most league bowlers is a wet dry pattern typically referred to as the THS. It is possible to develop a game that allows a person to average 200+ on such conditions without having the versatility to adjust to different patterns.
Sport patterns with their flatter characteristic edge to edge have been around for almost 15 years now. They are still not the predominant environment. As an old geezer who still likes to bowl for money, I go out of my way to bowl on tournament patterns as much as possible. As a result I find a lot of tournament patterns play as easy to the pocket as a THS. I have probably given up a bit of carry on THS to maximize my game on tournament patterns. Again, that is my environment, and it rewards me for the adaptions I have made.
People bowl the best on what they are most accustomed to. Most people would average higher in nationals if they got a steady diet of sport patterns in league. Would some people quit the game. Maybe, but not nearly as many as people think. Would top league averages go down. Sure, but again, not as much as people think.
Bottom line most people average a lot higher on house shots than sport patterns. The best bowlers, a difference but not nearly as much. USBC is designed to reward those bowlers.
Just as an aside, the conditions today in nationals play like a house shot compared to what they were like from the mid 70's to the late 80's. AMF HPL surface ushered in the high scoring era in nationals. This forced them to soften up the shot a bit on Brunswick lanes. Then the resin ball came in, and it opened up the shot to everyone who could find a way to the pocket. I averaged about 195 for 6 trips to the ABC prior to 1988. Over 210 for 20 trips since 1995.