An evaluation of what's best really depends on how one weighs different tradeoffs. For example, Debian and Arch are basically polar opposites in terms of two questions:
1) do you want an intermediary between you and the upstream? for example, to patch out telemetry
2) is it important that what you're using continues to work the same way so you can focus on your actual work?
No answer to either is consequence-free, e.g. for 1), see the Debian SSH patch event, or for 2), if the answer is "it doesn't work", then that kinda forces one's hand.
An evaluation of what's best really depends on how one weighs different tradeoffs. For example, Debian and Arch are basically polar opposites in terms of two questions:
1) do you want an intermediary between you and the upstream? for example, to patch out telemetry
2) is it important that what you're using continues to work the same way so you can focus on your actual work?
No answer to either is consequence-free, e.g. for 1), see the Debian SSH patch event, or for 2), if the answer is "it doesn't work", then that kinda forces one's hand.