@Jacob
Thanks for the response. I "grok" the differences between FIRE, ERE, even if I've yet to fully practice the later. This "a la carte" idea is a bit new to me, as from my perspective that is part of what makes ERE great. The ability to pick a lifestyle, then learn the skills needed to manage it with low levels of resource/consumeristic usage. For each person it'd be different. Unless you mean something like partially living off investments, partially off job income, partially off skill where none of them really equal more than the sum of their parts. Would that be Semi-Re-FI-ERE?

just kidding.
I can see where your points regarding needing very low WR can potentially impact folks in the direction of choosing instead to place their bets on the lifestyle component of ERE vs financial. I hadn't thought of that. I was instead looking at it from the perspective J+G pointed out, that everyone must keep working to save even more.
I also get that the ERE lifestyle component will create ERE FI component, even at very low wages. The problem seems to be, how to get someone (like me and others here) past the pareto optimization thoughts of earning more money, and move forward to learning more skills. If the Wheaton levels flow in this direction, it's an easy sticking point if income is rather high. Also, I believe there may be an audience ripe for moving very quickly to the lifestyle component, who may not want to stick around long enough for the FI component. People who don’t earn 80% incomes and are willing to do almost anything to get out of what they view as a dead-end lifestyle. Asking for extreme change in lifestyle is hard, but asking for that PLUS five or more years devoted to continuing in the same miserable situation makes anyone who follows an outlier. I couldn’t quite do either (complete lifestyle change or five years, although I purposely "doubled down" on FI by making my situation even less desirable to earn more income), and I consider myself above average in tenacity and open-mindedness. However, cut out a big chunk of the five years and I believe the audience expands significantly (see all the arguments about humans discounting the future).
My anecdotal viewpoint is one of someone who wishes he had focused less time maximizing income/pareto optimization/investing, and more time ERE lifestyle designing over the past two years. Both for the resilience and pleasure of that lifestyle. I am very much a person who had limited life energy resources and found "do both" very difficult. So I did half of each, a la carte I guess. However, once I drew a line in the sand wrt to accumulation, my attitude and energy level towards the ERE lifestyle ideas started shifting dramatically. I can't help but wonder, am I the only one in this boat? and if a decision to stop accumulating money at maximum rate is a lever for that change, then continuing to encourage more accumulation could prevent transitions to higher wheaton levels. So, that's where I'm coming from, as opposed to someone who liked their work, lived ERE, became FI before work related issues creeped into life.