I hope that someday we will all get along and realize that not one soul on this planet has to use Morse Code. OK, maybe some still in the military have to be able to for their job, but Amateur Radio Operators do not. Over 80% of the Amateur bands offer sections that allow for some if not all of the other 7 or so types of transmission(CW, RTTY, Phone, Data, MCW, SSB, Image...).
The hobby is and always has been the breeding grounds for the strange and unusual forms of invention that now fill our everyday life. Just consider the similarities between the binary language of computers an the binary language of morse code. One uses 1's and 0's, the other a long and short section of transmitted carrier/sound. Morse code as a hobby itself may not be that interesting, but neither may be using binary code as a means for communication. But they both have played vital roles in where we all are now.
Morse code is not required anymore. That doesn't mean it doesn't deserve any merit. It is amazing, however. My grandfather(now silent key ex-WØDW) during the latter years of his life had a lot of difficulty hearing anyone who spoke to him. It was very frustration for everyone, to say the least. We made a discovery one Thanksgiving while listening to CW before dinner. Grandpa, who had been regulalry proficient at 30 WPM, was telling my father and I exactly what the other operators were saying in CW even before we could. The Morse code sound was as clear as day to him, and it made him feel like he could be involved in conversations again. Now that's merit.
Do CW if you want. Don't do it. It's always been up to the individual. Either way, I'll see you down the log...73