Nice disclaimer at the end

Confusion regarding average size of 5-10 in the qqq's. Average pit volume size will be significantly larger than that. By the way, the 500,000 was in reference to the qqq etf.
You have referenced European and Asian markets - of which I am not an expert - Have they really done better now that they have been automated? Do the markets have depth or are they superficial? How do they react when they are really needed (in times of panic)?
I seriously question your claim that anyone in the recent market conditions has been trading record volumes...I think we can agree that the past few months have been tough.
As for the electronic vs floor trading debate:
Undoubtably the future of the markets is toward automation. I also believe that the floor will survive though, because having the interaction between broker and trader/specialist will ensure that the customer's order will be filled irregardless of the market conditions, and you and I both know that the faceless electronic trader simply wil not provide liquidity when the market requires it.
I disagree with your belief that for option trading, electronic mediums are superior. I've seen them both and as I addressed, the problen is liquidity for sizable markets. If you are a 10 contract trader then electronic is probably better.
Another problem for option traders on an electronic exchange is any type of spread order. How do you execute them? One leg at a time - this defeats the purpose of engaging in the spread to begin with.
With regards to trading reform:
The 90 second rule needs to be abolished. With the technological advances that are available today, 10 seconds delay time to decide whether to execute an order is more than adequate.
Secondly, all options quotes should be at least 100 contracts up, except in a fast market.
The uptick rule should be abandoned.
Listed issues should also be dually listed - this will provide market participants with an alternate execution method.
With regards to the exchanges "getting it right", I think that the various exchanges are making concerted efforts to meet consumers demands regarding fair dealing and fill notification.
I agree that no system is perfect, but I would be concerned if my only trading medium was electronic.
I also question your journal reports asserting that electronic trading is superior to the exchange. These are probably also the reports that advocated .01 cent spreads - that has worked really well hasn't it?
To anyone else reading, feel free to chime in...
The Knight