The only reason for which it has any value is that it is not reasonably safe (if possible at all) to move BCH to an exchange and dump it.
"then your BCH is likely (but not guaranteed) to remain associated with the current private keys due to BCH's pseudo-replay-protection;"
can you elaborate on this....under what conditions could your BCH not be still associated?
If the replay protection isn't adequate, someone could simply rebroadcast your BCH transaction to the BTC network and your BTC would also be sent away. Additionally, I am unable to find an adequately tested wallet that I'd be okay enough to transact with.
Wait wait wait let me get this straight......you mean replay protection on the BTC network?

what should this have to do with BCH/BCC network.....
I though at this point he blocks were different......
but I see what you mean......but its sold as psuedo replay protection is implemented on the BCH network........
what are the logistical hurdles to a replay attack in your view?
can this ever be safe.
can you explicitly elaborate?
presumably if I have already sent by BTC to new addresses on the BTC network then this would not work,
but that seems not to be what to be said here ""then your BCH is likely (but not guaranteed) to remain associated with the current private keys due to BCH's pseudo-replay-protection;"
what if:::
I move my BTC to a new BTC addresses
then move my BCC to new BCC addresses
then it should be immune to replay as there would be nothing to move in a replay attack?