Im always fascinated by this point of view (which usually comes from people who wouldnt know a Squarepusher track if it bit them on the ass).

Sure Tom Jenkinson said a few stupid things in a few interviews that pissed off a lot of jungilists... I recall a similar episode involving General Levy. That doesnt make his music any less relevant or vital, and in Squarepushers case, it was a direct result of resentment at his rejection at the hands of 'the scene'.
These 'its not
REAL jungle' or its 'wanky experimentalism', or (my favourite) 'you cant dance to it' arguments, whilst possibly applicable to some of the artists of today (Venitian Snares springs to mind), betrays a total lack of knowledge of the origins of the genre in question. Listen to early drill + bass like: Feed me Weird Things/Big Loada/Vic Acid/Hangable Autobulb, and many of SP's remixes (The DJ Food one in particular), and whilst there are some experimental (and wanky) bits, there are also a shitload of mindblowingly good
ardkore dancefloor moments... check out 'Cardhore' from Jega for some serious breakbeat acid business, or listen to a few minutes of the 'Chaos AD' LP by Squarepusher. The continuity from hardcore/jungle is self evident IMO, and simply because a producer is not 'urban' or part of the scene (and I think this is the crux of the matter), doesnt mean that their contributions will/should be ignored (What about Boymerang's meteroic rise for example)
Has it occurred to you that maybe it was possible to do both? After all, Dillinja wasnt exactly the most prolific of artists in his 'golden era' was he? When Squarepusher/AFX et al started coming out with drill+bass tunes in 95/96, D+B was already starting to stagnate, so what were the options back then? replay your old Dillinja 12's till they wear out? become an overnight fan of Optical and Decoder? or look for something new, exciting and (dare I say it), experimental that seemed to recapture some of the 'anything goes' vibe of hardcore jungilism...
And what, pray tell ARE those 'good' Squarepusher tracks?
I may be wrong here, but I get the impression that most of these criticisms of Drilll + Bass come from people who have only superficial knowledge of the genre. Not to say there arent plenty of valid criticisms you COULD make about it, but i have yet to see one in this thread....