Just to make sure it isn’t three in a row…
I actually agree that the NO is valid so should not be called evil.
However, the arguments for the TLM go far beyond (and don’t really touch on) how it makes people “feel.” Granted, we probably have not read some of the same authors, but I can assure you that those authors who advocate for the TLM don’t base their arguments on how it makes people “feel.” And I would say the same for many of the posters here. It is about which liturgy most strongly presents the Catholic faith and helps lift our hearts and minds to God.
For example, here is a snippet from Dietrich von Hildebrand’s article “The Case for the Latin Mass” on exactly the subject you mention, reverence:
**"I should like to put to those who are fostering this development several questions: Does the new mass, more than the old, bestir the human spirit – does it evoke a sense of eternity? Does it help raise our hearts from the concerns of everyday life – from the purely natural aspects of the world- to Christ? Does it increase reverence, an appreciation of the sacred? **
Of course these questions are rhetorical, and self-answering. I raise them because I think that all thoughtful Christians will want to weigh their importance before coming to a conclusion about the merits of the new liturgy. What is the role of reverence in a truly Christian life, and above all in a truly Christian worship of God?
Reverence gives being the opportunity to speak to us: The ultimate grandeur of man is to be
capax Dei. Reverence is of capital importance to all the fundamental domains of man’s life. It can be rightly called “the mother of all virtues,” for it is the basic attitude that all virtues presuppose. The most elementary gesture of reverence is a response to being itself. It distinguishes the autonomous majesty of being from mere illusion or fiction; it is a recognition of the inner consistency and positiveness of being-of its independence of our arbitrary moods."
latin-mass-society.org/dietrich.htm
I think it’s safe to say that this type of argument is a step above “Gee, I really like the TLM because it makes me feel more reverent.”
And notice his last sentence which states that reverence is actually independent of our arbitrary moods. In other words, if something is worthy, you reverence it whether you feel like it or not.