I do, it's the whole fire a round clean, fire a round clean, that makes me roll my eyes. I'll buy that initially the state of the bore will cause an excessive amount of copper to build up double quick. The whole cycle described by most break in procedure's just seems like voodoo. Here's a break in procedure if you feel you must do it. Go to the range and zero and start working up a load. At the end of the range session go home take a good quality lunch baggie and throw it over the muzzle and wrap a good thick elastic band around it to seal it and keep it in place, take out the bolt and with the muzzle down fill the bore with CR-10 (or whatever), let sit for 10 - 15 min then swab her out. If a CR-10 soaked patch comes out blue at the end repeat. That should have most if not all copper out of the barrel without spending most of the first day at the range shoving a rod in and out of your tube. The only thing that makes any sense about the whole break in process is the idea that you get a premature build up of copper in the bore. I see no reason why you MUST get it all out after each of the first five, ten, or whatever shots assuming you get it clean before it becomes a problem. I've read the articles on this topic and the shot, clean, war dance, repeat will be no more effective then sitting in front of the tube later that eve giving the bore a good cleaning.
As someone already pointed out there has not been any study done on this topic to prove or disprove it. When your reading Lijas article your reading about his opinion and nothing more. There's a very big difference between what someone believes to be true and what is, expert or not...
Just to be clear I'm NOT an expert but I do wear my critical thinking cap most of the day.