Yes it's silly. It only becomes a moral issue with an intent toward fraud. Nobody here antiquing rifles to any extent is posting photos or selling to buyers under false pretenses and you know it. Those who may be fraudulent are the people you've never heard of and sure as he ll aren't posting their work here.
Nothing is stopping someone from taking one of your rifles or my rifles after either of us croaks and working it over to make it a fake. So now we have to assume responsibility for every piece and every owner until the end of time so as to meet your personal definition of morals? Give me a freaking break. False antiquing has been going on forever; revisit the Shroud of Turin. If you want to be absolutely moral, I guess the only thing you can do is build an erector set black rifle because if you are building an "old style" flint or percussion gun someone 200 years from now might mistake it for a true antique and your long-since-deceased self might be responsible. Or judged, by excessively judgmental people.
What someone does with my rifle, or my car, or my house, or my bag of trash, or my land, or my kitchen knives, or my pencils after I have sold or passed my belongings on is not my business or my responsibility. If they choose to do ill, I will wish that they hadn't done so, but it sure as puck isn't on me for someone else's bad actions.
BTW your story about Don King and Blue Jacket is interesting - I truly mean that - but who cares what Don King thought after he sold the rifle? He sold it, he was paid, it was the Blue Jacket dude's rifle to do what he wanted with it. If he wanted to use it as a campfire prod as one of mine was used, well so be it. It's his property, his to do as he wishes. It's not my job or anyone's job to dictate how someone else uses something he owns as he sees fit. To do otherwise is just being a nosy richard.
It's clear you and I see things quite differently. I'm not going to argue over this any longer because I have aged-up, antiqued rifles to finish before I descend into the realm of fire and brimstone to forever regret my "immoral" behavior.