then I guess you also don't like fuses, or what about circuit breakers in a house? Maybe we shouldn't have those either. All these things are purposefully engineered failure points to prevent excessive damage or in some cases catastrophic loss of life.
You have tried to equate fuses and breakers to be equivalent and if I don't like this dumb shackle idea, then I shouldn't like fuses and breakers. Here is why that is incorrect. In order for them to be equivalent, you'd have your electrician show up to wire in your home.
He wouldn't know the voltage coming into the panel.
None of the appliances would be labeled with their voltage and power consumption.
There would be no way for him to buy an off the shelf panel to put the breakers in.
He would have to figure out the wire size based on his experience, not an approved and proven set of rules and codes.
Fortunately for those of us that need and use electricity, none of those things are true and we have breakers etc. that are all very well designed and built to work in an exact set of parameters. Unfortunately, they burned down a few things figuring that out based on experience. You may not know the history of the use of aluminum wire in residential but the understanding to know exactly how to prevent bad things from happening took time and experience with some failures before they figured it out.
When you walk up to a recovery, you have none of the similar parameters spelled out. You don't know how hard it is stuck, you have no provenance and proven strengths for any of the stuff you might attach to. Without that, the best we all have is some experience, and some educated guessing until we start in and see what happens.
You don't want your electrician to install a 10 amp breaker to run your 5 ton AC unit where it is hot and tell you to try it and see if it trips and if it does, he'll step up to a 15 for you to try and I don't want a shackle to fail before I get the job done.