You just love to argue with me lol. I guess that's why you're a lawyer and I'm not.
All I said was that there's nothing worse than running good all night in limit, then taking one beat in a NL game and losing all your profits only to have the games switch back to limit, giving you "no chance" to grind it back. This has happened to me on several occasions. Of course "no chance" is just a figure of speech here. Yes, you have a "chance" when this happens, but the point is it's a very slim chance. Sure, sometimes there's another NL game shortly around the corner, but not always. I've played in several games where I lost my winnings on one bad beat from a NL or PL game because someone was down big and decided to take a big gamble in hopes to double up at the end of the night, only to have the game switch to a HORSE rotation a few hands later. Meanwhile, it's 2am and on the last orbit with zero NL/PL games left to play. This is what I'm referring to obviously. Note, I said that "there's nothing worse than" this occurring. In other words, I'm saying that it sucks. Of course, I can actually think of several things that are in fact worse than that.
To address you arguing with me about saying that you "can't make the two games play equally"... you're entitled to your own opinion, but you're not entitled to your own facts. The fact of the matter is that the games are fundamentally different. They cannot be played equally. It wasn't a subjective statement. It's also not particularly challenging to demonstrate that it is true mathematically. If you want to match variance and ROR, your average pot sizes will be drastically different. If you want to match average pot sizes, then your variance and ROR will be drastically different. There is a mathematical trade-off between the two games that prevent them from "playing equally". However, that doesn't mean they can't all be played together in good fun and everyone still has a good time.
But who cares right? Like
@bergs says; "math takes all the fun out of everything". It couldn't possibly be useful for making claims and answering questions could it?
We all play poker for different reasons. Your approach to these situations and questions is likely to hinge on why you play poker to begin with. If you play merely for fun and social interactions, then I'd say just play whatever games your players enjoy most and take your best stab at whatever stakes you guys feel comfortable with.
But if it's competitive at all, and you care about leveling the playing field and optimizing your game, then you stand to benefit from not mixing limit games with NL/PL ones.