Okay, status quo apologists. You've got middle of the road consensus and the ISU on your side. Obviously, Bradie and Vincent have to make it so that the judges stop reviewing their jumps. The difficulty is that when you get that reputation it's hard to shake, because whenever the judges review, they are going to find something.
It doesn't matter if the tech specialist on men's side is an American. Lots of Americans bend over backwards trying to be fair, and Vincent did have some URs. And Davis was not the only tech specialist on the panel. I think in general there is a prevalent attitude within the skating community that U.S. athletes somehow have advantages other athletes don't have, which is not always the case. More attention needs to be paid to making the sport better for all athletes.
In terms of politics, European-bloc judging was notorious down through the years. And clearly country-based politics and quid pro quo politics and conflicts of interest on judging panels are quite ingrained in the history of the sport, right down to today. There's a p.r. front about everything being fair, but the politics still goes on behind-the-scenes in different ways. I don't see any of that changing. How one rises in the sport is not just through talent, it's also through rep, buzz, political advantage, and luck. I'm sure many judges' intent is to be as fair as possible, but there are simply too many built-in factors allowing manipulation of scores, especially when competitions are tight.
The skaters realize they have to keep their heads-down and their noses to the grindstone and smile and say all the right things, so Bradie and Vincent will not be complaining. Overall, U.S. skaters did well at SA, with Hub/Don, Lorraine/Quinn, and Nathan as stand-outs, (and C/L toughing it out for a bronze medal) but generally SA was not the greatest competition, and some of the judging as usual was suspect. I guess as the first GP, it's generally the case that SA ends up with skaters still working out some kinks in their performances.