I agree. If the bullet will stay together I don't think you would have to be worried about stabilization.
There may be a point of diminishing returns, or break point, if you will. I started using 6mm 12 twist bbls a few years ago and after a couple of national championship yardage/grand aggs with them, I'm sold on the 12 vs the more common 13.5-14 twist barrels for 62-68gr bullets and 12 is fast enough to use 80's too. They seem to be consistently good. if not better, ime. Nothing earth shattering here, mind ya but one of the natty yardage wins was with 80's at 200. The grand agg natty was with 68's, both in a 12 twist. I'm not telling anybody what they should do but I'm not going back to the 13.5's unless something changes.
Since the 12s work so well, I'm still testing a 10 twist now. Contrary to what you read on here and other forums, that bbl shoots 68 and 80s better than any of the roughly 8-10 different bullets I've tried in more "twist appropriate' bullets from various factor and custom makers.
This leads me to believe that regardless of stability, it's just harder to make longer bullets shoot as well as shorter bullets. This does not factor in bc for longer ranges but does make me consider say mid weight bullets for longer range in smaller cases, like a BR or Grendel variant. It makes me take a closer look at bc vs velocity vs accuracy. From what I'm seeing, in "normal" conditions, I think there might be enough accuracy difference in those cases to reconsider strictly going with heavier for caliber bullets.
Just something else we have to test to know for sure. But, I'd suggest to anyone that cares, to test 90-95 class bullets, even for 1000 but certainly so at 600 and in, to see how things stack up..consistently, especially in the smaller cartridges that have their tongue hanging out to push the heavies to their full potential. I don't think one barrel is enough to proclaim a definite winner either way, so it'll take some time and effort to come to a reasonably reliable answer to this. Even then, you'll have that voice in your head and especially on the internet, that you MUST use the heavies to be competitive at longer ranges.
I know it's been done before. I also know that human nature is to work hardest on what we hope or think is best, for whatever reason. This puts the "untested" stuff at a disadvantage to the other stuff unless we really and truly put the SAME work into both. It's easy to stay with the status quo unless the difference is big enough to really jump out at you and it's not, but I think it might be enough to be very worthwhile, at least in some guns.
Just run the numbers and go test is the best thing I can add to this. Keep an open mind and just read the dang target over the internet. The target won't lie but the internet is full of well intentioned but wrong advice.
Testing is how we know stuff!
At the very least, a more stable bullet will yield a slightly better and more consistent bc vs one on the edge. That may be enough to offset the bullet imbalance that others brought up above. It might be that jackets are enough better that what used to be true in that regard, is no more.