I watched RG's interview last night. I'm not sure if I'm for or against the idea of extra points possibly dying off. That being said--
-RG is the commissioner of the NFL. The owners of the 32 franchises hired him. He speaks for them. Every rule change and every proposed rule change isn't his brain child. If the owners go to him saying they want something done about something, by definition of his job, he's supposed to do something.
-The league does countless "exploratory scenarios" every year. The extra point idea, is just that right now-- an idea. They're looking into it.
-Sure, extra points were a part of the game we grew up playing and they're still part of the game we love watching. People complaining about the pussification of football should save their complaining for actual rule changes aimed at pussifying the game-- as this is not. 99.9% of PAT's are converted. A player getting injured on a play that is as automatic as they come in football sucks. That was RG's point. Why risk an injury on essentially a meaningless play? Under one of the scenarios being discussed, if a team scores a TD, they can automatically take 7 points...or take 6, with a try for 8 by running an actual play to convert. If a player were to get injured on the conversion attempt in that scenario, at least then it would have been a meaningful play.
-Under this logic, I'm not sure there are any owners, GM's, coaches, (or even players-- but it's a bit different with players since they aren't directly represented by the commissioner of the league), who would argue against exploring an idea that ensures every snap is meaningful. The idea is at least somewhat based in putting the best product out on the field that they can for their audience. By my experience, I can't fault any company or entity for trying to do that.