I hate VAR as it currently exists and I don't trust the individuals in charge to make the right adjustments so that the good outweighs the bad. So I'm all for getting rid of it completely.
Prior to VAR, I don't remember objectively wrong calls occurring that often. Maybe once every 20 games, if that, and even then it was usually a close offside call in a complex sequence which isn't that egregious to me. It was rare that the ref ever made a massive unquestionable mistake (like sending off Gibbs instead of Oxlade-Chamberlain). I'd much rather have things like that happen once every 100 games if it means the flow of the game ceases to be interrupted by VAR, and if referees will no longer be influenced by slow motion replays of a sport that's played in real time.
That's not to say refs didn't make wrong calls more often than that, but most of those wrong calls that we complained about pre-VAR were subjective to whatever degree. And it's clear that VAR isn't solving those issues; the same subjectivity is still being applied and calls are still being complained about. If anything, these calls are actually being complained about more now, because there's an expectation that with replays and extra time to think it over, refs can do a better job. But they're not.
If VAR were implemented correctly, you'd only ever hear of it once every couple games at most. Not the 5+ times a game we have now.