This is an interesting thread. I think the problem lies with the education. High schools cannot afford a full darkroom setup anymore. When I was in school I had access to a fully equiped darkroom, with a large format graphics camera, plate burner, lithographic press, hand crank letterpress and all the paper and film I could ruin. I was taught how to make a silkscreened print, how to make a print from an acid etched plate, how to make multiple exposure prints and why positives were important. It didn't matter if I wasn't good at alot of the techniques, I had a firm understandings of the fundamentals and the history. Kids now get short changed. Its alot easier and cost effective to put the kids on a computer and teach them digitally. All that equipment was replaced by a computer and inkjet printer. The tactile processes were never experienced by this generation. The mistakes meant less, they didn't lose a whole week of work by not paying attention. Recopy the file if there is a problem, takes seconds.
I don't know that I have the time or money for a darkroom, I sold all my equipment years ago as it was too bulky to keep moving with me. I only owned the equipment for several years but spent twice that amount of time using it. I have digital prints from negatives and fully digital prints. They are all mixed together.
The strange thing is that I find myself making prints through photoshop and questioning their authenticity. I wonder if they can be produced in a darkroom. I know curves in photoshop corresponds to underexposing and pushing film, or overexposing and using filters. I know many of photoshops filters are derived from darkroom techniques, but wonder if filters like solarization are nearly as unpredictable as they would be in a darkroom. Plus the combining of filters has me wondering if a shot would be doable in a darkroom. I know I could just keep making positives after each round and just do the final effect on the paper, but I know in a darkroom this would take weeks, and undoubtably cost alot of money in film and paper. I just slide a button, click save and throw it in a folder with the twenty or so other prints I made in the last hour that would have taken me months of trial and tribulation in a darkroom. I don't know if the feeling of success I get from these prints is nearly as great as the feeling I got from the darkroom. I wonder if that is why I don't trust them as much. I do know the pain and suffering I went through in my darkroom are nowhere to be found in my digital experience. Its over in seconds, far too fast for any disappointment, I never even have to walk away frustrated, the process simply moves along too fast for those feelings to arise. I ended up losing all those photos anyway, so really I have to ask myself, why go through that again? Just some thoughts.