@toni, I am not here very long, so I may not know the instances you are talking about. I have not come across what you describe. I see art photography as a particular branch of photography where the intent is not to capture "reality" as camera interprets it, but instead tries to creatively reflect thoughts, ideas, emotions, sense of humour etc. of the maker. When I am reading in papers about a fire somewhere, I do not want the artists feeling about it but a photograph that competently documents the event as it happened (to me that is craft). The same is with photos of war correspondents. And I also want to see Picasso's Guernica, which gives me a body blow each time I see it and which reflects the artist's reaction to the bombing of civilians without documenting it. There is room for both. I am as a hobbyist more interested in art, but I could have ended up a wildlife photographer trying to learn about animals and birds and documenting their life. Why the ranking?
After much research of various kind, I came to a conclusion of what art is to me. There are wide range of opinions on that. I sometimes submitted the same image to more than one juried show and only once was the same image accepted in 2 shows. Obviously professional art jurors do not agree with each other either. That is good!!!! Imagine going from one gallery to another, all representing the same taste!! Boooring! There is actually too much fashion in art. It washes over like a wave. Usually, these fads promote something that everybody (at least in the art world) will consider motherhood and apple pie. Pre-pandemic, it was art made from recycled materials and woman empowerment. Next time, the fad will be something else.
I am the OP on this now sizeable post. The reason I started it was not in a hope that my view "wins"

but rather to hear wide range of views. The idea that I could convince people of my view was in my view a nonstarter. My idea was that I and all participants will have a chance to learn something from each other. My father introduced me to a debate as a learning tool when I was about 5. He would take on the view opposite to mine and defend it vigorously (regardless of what his actual view was). By the time I was about 8, I was onto him. We stuck with it until Soviet invasion when I was 19 and I left the country. I learned a lot from the debates. My father could have nailed me easily to the wall but he did not. 5 minutes after the debate ended, I would not remember who argued for what, but my understanding of issues was far greater.
I consider these debates very useful as well as fun. There should be no winners and losers and the differences of opinion are unlikely to be resolved. We should participate in debates only if we can keep it mostly cool and mostly not infuriate the others. If we do, the discussion looses its purpose. Nobody should feel that their views are being put down. But that is a 2 way street.