Gary,
Sounds like I have touched a raw nerve which was absolutely not my intention. Of course I am fortunate to have a planer thicknesser and many people are less privileged in that respect than me. I do not for a moment seek to denigrate any woodworker or their methods; I simply put forward my own methods of working which work for me. I too enjoy working with hand tools but the pieces I make are (for me) complex and challenging and I am not a quick worker. At the age of 70 I have neither the time nor energy for hogging off large amounts of timber by hand, so I use my machines, even though I dislike the noise. For me it is drudgery, but it saves me time for the fine handwork which is what I really enjoy.
One of the irritations of all woodworking fora is that there are always people (and I am not suggesting that you are guilty of this) who seem to want to insist that the only valid method is their own. I only join in these discussions to make the point that there are other ways and everyone has to find what suits them from the full range of possibilities. Some get pleasure from maximising machine work so as to finish pieces as quickly as possible, others like to do everything by hand, still others enjoy the finest tools or devoting time to fettling old tools or machinery. It's all valid because we are all different with different likes and pressures. I am very fortunate; I don't have to earn a living from my woodwork and I have enough money to buy the tools and machines that enable me to work in the way I like best. Would that all woodworkers were so lucky, but it is an imperfect world.
Jim