I have to agree with Wulamoc. I've seen a lot of these discussions on others sites, and they usually go down the tubes pretty fast.
On another note, I'm not sure where the idea that a recurve or longbow automatically makes one more ethical or dedicated came from, but I haven't seen it myself. I've had the pleasure of hunting with a lot of geat folks over the years. Some of them used trad bows and others chose compounds or even firearms.
In contrast, there are a number of people I choose not to walk a trail with again. A lot of them carried stickbows. I was on a hunt out west a few years ago where a guy with a maximum 15-yard effective range (and that's being generous) took a Hail Mary 40-yard shot on a bull, wounded it and then didn't have any real desire to follow up the trail. He hunted with a recurve, by the way.
I could post a laundry list of other things I've personally seen over the years, including trespassing and hunting in no hunting areas of state parks. I even once had some traditional bowhunters intentionally drive deer out of an area they knew I was hunting. Why? I have no idea.
Now, obviously these folks are in the minority. But it doesn't serve us well to blindly think a fellow hunter is ethical just because they can unstring their bow at the end of the day.
These days I tend to choose my hunting companions very well. And I can assure you, whether or not they have wheels on the ends of their bow limbs doesn't come into play.