What is your point? This does not contradicts anything that I said.
My point is that the muscles and other soft tissue are not just stretched, new soft tissue is created. Of course in some cases the tensile strength won't be the same. I even gave one example in my post (scar tissue due to too fast lengthening).
This is well researched (lots of academic papers about this, experiments done in rabbits, etc...) and one of the things I was careful in researching before I decided to do LL. I would never had done LL if it only stretched the soft tissues.
I see, with all the "I was careful in researching" you did before undergoing LL, the only thing that ticked you off and that you absolutely needed to make sure
wasn't the case was soft tissue stretching. Not the other heap of potential dire straits such as :
1) tensile strength reduction of ligaments
2) susceptible to tendon/ligament tears and ruptures
3) unwieldy center of mass that holds back potential
4) uneven weight distribution of new artificial bone formation
5) Ultimate reduction in stamina/power/flexibility