You seem quite impressed with your own whitetail knowledge, starting thread after thread, postulating conclusions that are often incorrect, based on your own limited observations... but the clincher is that your mind is shut to the observations/conclusions od others or much of the whitetail science that has been done.
I agree with you on several points regarding this new topic and disagree with others. First, I hunt long and hard, regardless of rain, sleet, snow or wind, I am out well before legal light and don't return until after legal light is over... regardless of conditions "the deer are in the woods, not next to the woodstove." I disagree with your conclusion that less deer are taken on windy days because "there are less hunters in the field." It is a fact that deer move less and have completely different patterns when high winds hamper their senses, ALL animals are affected by high winds, as it robs them of their ability to detect predators... they become nervous, they change their patterns, sticking to heavier cover and limiting movement. Knowing this, if you adjust your tactics and locations, you can take advantage of the situation. High wind is the best time to attempt to "spot and stalk" deer, the chance of catching them unaware is much higher at those times. In general it is best to move away from open communal feeding areas, such as alfalfa fields, and closer to bedding areas, as deer will generally stay closer to the cover they feel safest in and the possesses the most escape routes. The point is that deer and all animals are intimately connected to their environmemt, they maximize their movements and patterns for survival, understanding those patterns and "adjusting" for them means a hunter will be more successful over the long haul... of course there are always exceptions because deer are as uniquely individual as people, and these exceptions are what the ill-informed point to as evidence to refute solid factual understanding... long story, even longer... do deer move LESS in high wind, heavy rain, blizzards? YES... and they move "differently," but they do move....they don't have a choice if they want to survive, but it is overly simplistic to just say "I go hunting anyway..." don't just hunt longer, hunt smarter.