"People are staying on [previous Windows] due to problems and questionable choices made with [new Windows]." The claim stays the same, but the version keeps incrementing. I'm not convinced this is a thing in meaningful numbers.
The numbers are quite easily available to check. On Steam, Win11 is at 10% vs Win10 at 81% (december 2021). Look at how long Win7 stuck around (it's still above 3%!) and back then, Win10 had actual benefits over Win7. This time, the upgrade is a regression across the board.
Yeah, 11 is currently just a buggy beta for some bad UI changes. That will hopefully change in the future, but right now it has basically nothing on its feature list to counteract the problems. If you don't use WSL2 then... there's better HDR support sometimes? And the android app thing doesn't count until it's in release builds.
Multi-monitor support that...removes the clock from non-primary displays... Also still no sign of tray icons, keybinds for moving windows between monitors or anything else that was already possible since Windows 7 using DisplayFusion.
Search that is significantly slower than win10 while being "vastly better" only because win10 search was straight up non-functional and win11 can at least find what you're looking for (whether it's in a reasonable order and doesn't reshuffle with every keystroke seems to be a gamble each update).
"Nicer UI" that only a minority of users actually like, removes support for very common configurations, some of which are objectively more efficient for certain use-cases (side taskbar, ungrouped windows...).
Don't get me wrong, if it works for you, that's great! But make no mistake, Windows 11 is a complete dumpster fire from a UX perspective.