This is a fairly solipsistic arguement. You establish boundaries according to what you like and then denigrate people who go beyond that as ludicrous and, by inference, the way you think things should be done is the right way.
Some images
are overworked in that they have not much worth to start with and 'effects' are piled on in an attampt to make them something more. This is much like adding spices in an attempt to make an ill-tasting dish more palatable.
However many people see the initial image as just a waystation in the progress of their art. If the end point is good, then the path is irrelevant. The final result is all that's important.
The image I use on my cards (
http://lewlortonphoto.com/p332362737/eea5d025 ) took an enormous amount of work to recover from its color state - and indeed, I did what I wanted to do - but I don't think the amount of work that went into it is represented as excess in the final image.
I like prints and think the worth of nicely done prints of nicely done images has appreciated as people become sated with the digital image. There is something about the color and composition on a heft piece of paper that seems to mean more as a creation when it is taken out of the digital area where we have become accustomed to expect that anything can be done.
This may be, in the ultimate sense, wrong because I am giving the medium some weight. Just as images taken with a film camera are 'given extra credit' because some weight is given both the the effort of using film and a nod to tradition.