Hi Rodd,
As you call me here, let me give you my personal vision on this subject. Please don't take the following as an attack, but only as the truth about my idea of what is astrophotography, which is also the underlying philosophy behind the PixInsight project. I am not trying to convince you or anyone else; this is only my personal opinion.
You don't really need reasons to stay here. What you really need is to ask yourself why you are doing astrophotography, or in other words, what do you think is astrophotography and what can it give to you personally.
PixInsight has not been conceived and designed, and is not being developed, as a tool to paint images. If you want to paint, PixInsight is probably one of the worst tools you may find for that task. Photoshop and similar applications are much better for that. Photoshop will always win to help you build absolutely stunning and wonderful pictures, simply because nothing can compete with arbitrary manipulations to give you exactly what you want to achieve, when and where you want to achieve it.
An accomplished imager just posted an image of Markarians Chain taken with an FSQ 106--a 4" refractor--wide field. BUT, he inserted long focal length data captured with a bigger scope into the galaxies.
There are different ways to do this, and in some cases it could be more or less justifiable, depending on the context where the image is going to be used and how it will be presented. But this is painting, and the resulting picture as a whole is not a fair representation of the acquired data. It has been arbitrarily manipulated without a global criterion based on physical properties of the represented objects. It has been painted this way just to make it look 'nice' without any documentary criteria.
Yes, this can be done in PixInsight, and some users have described procedures that should work well. However, nothing in PixInsight can compete with Photoshop to achieve this. A couple layers, a few brushes, a put this here and move that there, et voilà, job done.
PixInsight is a tool to help you develop your astrophotography through the knowledge of image processing. Astrophotography, with all the technical and artistic challenges involved, is a path of personal growth. The why and the how are much more important than the final product.