BC is the most overrated feature in console gaming, you'll have people shouting from the rooftops about BC every single time but how many people really buy a console to play old games? about 0.1%.
Do you have any actual evidence to support his claim or is it entirely made up?
I don't want to presume here, but it sounds like you just made that up based on nothing.
I bought a 60GB PS3 and never used BC, yet, so many people who loved BC were crying that the console being too expensive.
Okay? This is an irrelevant anecdote.
The easy way this is solved is to keep your old consoles hooked up or pay to play. Sony tried offering full BC last gen and got burnt. I think their approach is sensible, you can still play on the console you bought your games for.
Are you so ignorant on this topic that you actually believe this? I almost prefer to think that you are just lying to yourself.
Sony charged $600 for a console and BC had very little to do with the high cost. As has already been pointed out in this thread, Sony did not remove BC due to it costing a lot, but rather as a means of pushing stagnant PS3 software sales.
When Sony dropped the price of the PS3 and removed PS2 support, there is no reason to think they did so because they had somehow reduced manufacturing costs enough to make that move profitable. Rather, they dropped the price due to the same reason the XB1 dropped, which would be under-performance relative to their competitors.
In fact, based on Tretton's candid statement on the issue, one could infer that Sony felt people were actually using PS2 backward compatibility so much that it was hurting their PS3 sales. It is worth noting that at this time, the PS2 was still selling better than the PS3. There is not, nor has there ever been, any reason to believe that PS2 backward compatibility had anything to do with the poor performance of the PS3 in its release window or afterward. Nor is their a basis for the claim that it was responsible for the high initial price.
It is also worth noting that the PS3 ONLY DROPPED PS2 support, and never dropped backward compatibility for PS1 games, which further illustrates how utterly fallacious and mistaken your entire argument is.