I am not arguing with you KWRBT... Some people have assigned different weights to different mitvot... You must agree that there is a mitzvah to not 'round the corners of the head', you have said this yourself... So you just don't interpret this command to mean that you should let your peyot grow... Maybe this is because some rabbis don't consider the importance of some mitzvahs and elevate the status of other mitzvahs.
Muman. Please cease this sheker. Your amount of cognitive dissonance is absolutely mindboggling. Your childish display in this thread is just getting worse and worse. There is no "downplaying" of any mitzvah here. Because how could they down play it?
IT IS EXPLICITLY WRITTEN IN THE CHUMASH AS A NEGATIVE COMMANDMENT. No one is ignoring this mitzvah. On the contrary, the argument is about the PARAMETERS for fulfilling the mitzvah. Did the Chatham Sofer say that this mitzvah is "not important" CHaS VESHALOM!? No. He said that there is no source for the chasidic custom with which they fulfill this mitzvah. He said that the halacha, the Jewish law, of how to fulfill the mitzvah, requires something much different (less) than what they do. Granted that what they do is certainly permitted and also fits the bill. But it is not required. You need to get over the fact that the chassidic 'stringency' or 'beautification' of this mitzvah is NOT what is required to fulfill it. And I'm sorry if someone misled you by giving you that impression. But please cease the distortions.
Many fine Jews wear chassidic style payoth. And many fine Jews (religious, even very learned rabbis) do NOT. And those fine Jews that do NOT sport the chassidic style payoth are loved no less by Hashem, and fulfill their halachic requirement in that mitzvah no less.
Should I now post picture collages of Jews throughout history who did not have payoth? How about the talmidei chachamim of Germany and other places in Europe in the 1800's and 1900's? Would that be constructive? No, that would be silly and pointless. But I have seen many such pictures just so you know!
This is not about promoting hairstyles. Anyone is free to sport whatever they like as long as they do not violate the commandment. Just don't tell me that your preferred haircut is the real deal, and anything else violates. There is a halacha in Judaism!