so I get it, the "why?" is they don't want the negative habit transfer of ignoring a stall warning horn and instead want to reaffirm a positive action and call out upon hearing it. Makes sense. We can still accomplish "maneuvering" during "really" slow flight while teaching stalls to a full break and beyond.
What? CFI Corner not good enough for you?
You're going 110 knots in a skyhawk.
Who are you to assume my speed?
I get it. The training as they currently see it is teaching people to almost disregard the stall warning. So, let's teach them to fear the stall warning, not the stall, keep them farther away from the stall before the fear sets in. They haven't advocated not to teach stalls, just to be more mindful of not getting close to it (i.e. the stall warning) and be okay with it.
Why make it such a hard concept to understand. Explain why, when and what to do about stalling. Stalls are bad unless intended to stall. Is it much harder than ?
I don't always stall, but when I do I maximize elevator deflection, go full rudder, add power and some aileron too.