I was right, you just like arguing.
A point of failure is a place where it CAN fail. There are lots on a bike, You seem to believe a mid motor bike has an extra one - I assume the chain. However a mid motor bike can have hub gears, and a stronger chain (or belt), and chains are not hard to fix anyway (a rear hub motor will not function well in the absence of a chain, if it is torque sensing controller).
There are prod and cons of mid motors vs hubs (but 'single point of failure' isn't a major one, compared to cost, ease of bike conversion, wheel removal, etc etc), there are prod and cons of suspension vs hardtail, wide vs narrow tyres, V brakes vs discs, and plenty else. Your unwillingness to go beyond 'single point of failure' religion is just big endian vs little endian (see Jonathon Swift) bigotry. Get off your hobby horse, and stop the religious wars.
<plonk>
You ought to read up on what a single point of failure really is! Its not a religion as you appear to feel, it is solid thought out fact!! There is even a Wiki page, which I have linked to below for you!!
But because you are obviously missing the point (your single point of failure maybe?), until you inderstand why I call it that.
Your example about brakes, think, a good bike has two, so one failing, unless on a very steep hill, will not preclude riding home!!
Having them both fail at the same time would be called "coincidence"....not SPOF.
With regard to mid motors and hub bikes, the mid motor has several failures, all of which cause a "walk home" situation:-
1) Chain breaks and you have no spare, or tools to place it in position, or light to see by, or you have, but its pissing down!
2) Rear cassette fails, and you have no spare, or tools to place it in position, or light to see by, or you have, but its pissing down!
3) Drive sprocket on motor fails/breaks, and you have no spare, or tools to place it in position, or light to see by, or you have, but its pissing down!
All 3 of these errors do not stop a hub motor running and driving you home (assuming that the battery is also not empty!), for 1) removing the rest of the chain, then either by fooling the PAS with empty peddling (the PAS is usually on the crank), or simply, like my bike, using the throttle! But empty peddling does it as well!
Read here:-
A single point of failure (SPOF) is a part of a system that, if it fails, will stop the entire system from working.
I hope that you now fully understand.
By the way, the system in my example is driving either wheel, to get home with either a mid or a hub motor.
Of course its even more obvious if you have a bike with a front hub, that the chain, the cassette and the motor drive cog (does not exist in any hub bike), so it cannot break at all!)
I hope that the "penny has finally dropped!" and you now know and fully understand, what a SPOF is!!!
You really need to know this, assuming for a moment that you own and ride a mid motor, (as i am almost 100% sure that you do), or my talking about it's problems would not get you so rude and het up!
Andy
PS. I was in my Grammar school's debating team over 60 years ago, and I never lost a debate (one a week for two years!), because I always informed myself fully with easily provable facts.
So the only place where you were correct in your critic above, is that I enjoy an argument/debate, but I only argue/debate, when i know all the facts correctly.....dead simple!
PPS. I have kept it simple and only mentione one SPOF, but both Bosch, Yamaha and some others use CANBUS or similar, on mid motors to brick the battery or the motor (or possibly both!), if private repairs are made. So the list of SPOFs on such bikes, is getting even longer, and longer, due to greedy OEMs!!